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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-07-24 - Orange Coast Pilot- • Witnesses Describe Suspect ' I " Dan·gerous Coyote Bites a•year•old In CleJDe·nte Park . DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * TOESOAY AFTERNOON, JULY 24, 1973 voe..~ NO. ru. 2 SECTIONS,,. '"G'S MnrrJer . r· COMPOSITES SHOW SUSPECT IN LINDA ANN 0'K£1iFE SLAYING Ca u.casi1n, 24 to 30, Brown Curly Hair, Droopy Eyes, Tanned New Clues Disclosed In Slaying .of Girl, 11 By JOHN ZALLER Of I~• 0.llY PllOI Sl11! .Newport Beach police tod8.y released an artist's composite drawing of the man they believe may have abducted and kill· ed 11-year-old Corona de) ~1ar school girl Linda Ann O'Keefe two weeks ago. 'Police said information for the draw- ings came from two witnesses who observed Miss O'Keefe getting into a late model van driven by a curly haired man Csti mated to be 24 to 30 years old. Witnesses said the incident took place about 3 p.m. on Marguerite Avenue, the street the young girl normally walked on her way home from summer classes she was attending at Uncoln Intermediate SChooL She disappeared on Friday. July 6, and was found dead Satun!ay tn a dlldt along Back Bay Drive by Upper Newport Bay. Cause o( death was strangulation. Police said they have had tnronnatlon abOl.n the suspect and hia turqooi!e-col· ored van since "early in the in· vistlgation," but were reluctant to make I publlo. "We didn"t want the suspect to know '\'t tuid any information about him," es· plained Capt. Donald Oyaas ol theldetec- tlve division. Oyau .. Id that r the susp<et became worried, he might nee lhe area. Dul aller following up lltctabyhulldttds" of leads in the two weeks si nce the crime, Capt. Oyaas said a decision was made lo release informaUon in the hope that the public would provide additional clues. "Wha.t we want now is for someone to recogni:!e the man in the picture and tell us about it ," he said. "He has ·a very distinctive face." Oyaas said the ma n was estimated to be 24 to )) years old, with medium length curly brown hair and an unusually "long face." A distinctive feature, he said, was the suspect's droopy eyelids. "If anyone knows a man like , this, they should recognize him from our composite draw- ings." Oyaas said the witnesses observed the O'Keefe girl gett-ing into the suspect's van wblle driving past in a vehicle of their own. He said they did not stop. but were certain they reoognized the girl get· ting into bright turquoise van. He added. however , that the two witnesses had never before seen the O'Keef,e girl. Oyaa.s sakt the girl apparently got into Ille \ian 11Mu-1r..-·own po-•Dd..tld not seem to be under duress at the time the wltnea.ses observed the event. Oyw ur1tecl anyoM with infomu1tion about a penon resembling the suspttt to call Ult Newport 8elcb detective division at 67W211. Viejo Child Next Victim Of Coyote By JOllN \'ALT ERZA 01 th• 0111y ~11111 s1111 San C\eniente State Park's un- predictable coyote struck again today - inflicting dangerous bites to a 5-year-old boy from f\ .. lission Viejo \\'ho had been sleeping on the ground. The youngster. \Vayne Allan Preheim. immediately began the painful series of antirabies injections. Of grave concern to authorities is the location of the bites -on the small boy's forehead. Authorities stressed that it cou ld not be determined if 1he coyote v.•as rabid, but that. as a preeaulion the in· jections would have to start immed iately. Tile latest in a series of incidents -a gri m repetition of attacks on campers by foxes la st summer -occurred as the youngster slept at space 74 lhis morning at about 6:30. The boy's mothe r. i\frs. tvlary Alice Preheim of 22772 La Quinta Drive, called rangers immediately after the attack. Local police were sum1noned as ~·ell. Little Wayne suffered two minor puncture wounds and a few scratches in the allaek Hnd \vas given emergency treatment at San Clemente General Hospital. The attack marked lhe second ti1ne in little over a week that a youngster at the park has been bitten by a coyote. On Mooday of la st ,.,.eek Denise Pimper, 8, of Norwalk, ~·as bitten on 1he leg -apparently by the same wUd canine. Park rangers and other authorities im· (See COYOTE, Pagti 'Z) Mutilated Bod y Found Near Y11ha YUBA CITY (AP) -Sutler County authorities are seeking the identity or a brown-haired young \\'Oman whose body was found with 29 stab wounds on a rural rood south ol Yuba City. Investigators said the \\'Oman wa.~ wearing a brown and white polka dot nUnllklrt over a bikini !Wlmsult. .ffer body was found Sunday along Pleasant Valley road by a Usherman .• She was describod as being in her la1e teens or early 20s and wore a St. Christopher's medal and a "Christ in Peace" medallion around her neck. Aide Ehrli~hman Contradi~ts Nixon On Ellsber·g Issue • I ~oas •neroine~ Dies H er Story 'Saved Father's Life' ESCONDIDO (AP) -As he looked al the kidnaper holcijng a pistol to his head tha~ day, industrialist James Hawthorne ·f.alked aloud abol,l.l his daught ~~ 1:-inda Carol -"sort of plump and happy. ''rith a truly beautiful life." "I told hi1n about Linda and how she wa s operated on for brain cancer," Hawthorne says of that moment of terror Oct. 6. "Suddenly, there was a rapport. llis attitude towards nlc changed completely. I know that Linda saved my life." Although a ransom of S186.500 was del ivered. Ilawthorne escaped and a n1an suspected in the kid naping wa s arrested before the n1oney co uld be picked up and was later convicted. The story of Linda Carol Hawthorne ended less happily. Aft er -suffering 14 ntonths "'i lh a mal:i gnant bra in tumor. the 9-year-old girl died Sunday i1t' Palon1ar ~,lemoria l ~l ospital. The funeral was today. Ellsherg Foray OK'd? Ehr-lichman Disputes President on Break-iri \VASHINGTON (AP) -John D. Ehrlichman today quoted President Nixon as saying in tvfarch that the 1971 Ellsberg break -\\'3S "a vital nat ional secu rity inquiry'' \\•ell \Vithin his con· st itutional powers and obligations. Nixon said r..ta y 22 that he didn't authorize the break-in. didn't know about it until recently, and would have disap- proved it if brought to his attention . Ehrlichman denied trying to hide the incident from FBI agents investigating last year's Watergate burglary and wiretapping. saying he had been told that tfle Ju stice Department already had the: 'information . Ile said the brcak·in at the office of Daniel E\l sberg's psychiatrist \Yl'IS a prop- er way to track down those "'ho betrayed government secrets. said any government official would understand that and keep the break-in confidential. and sald even the public would agree if only ne,vs media Y.'ould properly inform them of all the fac1s. Testifying before the Senate \\'atergate committee, Ehrlichman al90 accused ousted White House Counsel John \Y. Dean Ill in general terms of lying to the committee. Ehrlichman said he believes he is ptrsooally innocent of any \\Tongdoing. He said he ~·ants to answer a number or acc usat ions a~alnst him. Saying thal nationa l security con· skterations still prevent him from 3nJ"'ering some questk)~. Ehrlichman said tbc E.llsberg break·in was performed by the \\'hite !louse Spec i a I Investigations Unit. popularly kno"'TI as the "plumbers," tha t Included G. Gordon Liddy and E. lfow ard Hunt. Both were later (.'Onvict(.'<l in the Watergate wiretap- ping_ Ehrlich man said he didn't find out about the break-in until afte r it happened Sept . 3. 1971. But he said he didn't con- sider it a potential embarrassment for the \\'bile !louse because it was a proper way 10 investigate leaks of nat ional secu rity information. By contrast. former Ally. Gen . John N. r..titchell said he considered the Ellsberg break-in one of the "Wh ite fl oue:e hor· !See. BREAK-IN, ~age ti KISSINGE R ASKS OF BELLY DA NCER \\'ASlllNGTON (UPI ) -Presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger had only one question \Vhen the shah or Iran Rrri\•ed :it the White ~louse todoy : "Where's Nadia~" Kissinger was referring to'the Iranian belty dancer who plopf>('d herself In his lap at a night club In Teheran '1.'hen he accompanied President Nixon to Iran on a state visit n yea r ago. After the Incident. Kissinger quipped he "·as "trying to make the "orld safe for belly dal'K'ers." e ase High Speed Flight E11ds In Niguel By JACK CllAPPELL Ot l1'tt DIUy ~llol 511ft A high-speed police pursuit from Newporl Beach to Laguna Niguel ended in death ~londay as the man police from three agencies chaS<'d placed a gun to his he3d and firC'd. .Jerry II. Grenoble. 28, of Alameda . Ll icd at S'luth Coast Community Hospital a~ 5:45 p.1n. slightly niorc than·two hours after the chase brgan in Corona del ,.1ar. An autopsy "'as scheduled today to dett>rmine the c·xac:t cause of death. The chase began in Corona def ~iar after JX!lire v.·ere alerted by residents or Cam eo Shores. 1\ v.·oman told officers the bearded man had been making in4 coherent statements lo her a.year-old grandson and had told the lad he was God . A!'i the ~,·ornan \vent into her house, (;renoble reportedly called out that he "·ould conic in and get her if she didn't come out. f'olice slopped the ca r minutes late r but the gaunt drive r sped away as they !See Cll ASE, Page %) Orange Coast We ather Coastal skies \Yednesday will again be cloudy during night and morning hours, but the sun is ex· peeled to break through about 11 a.m. Temperatures will range In the high sixti es v.·ith a sunny after· noon forecast. The low "·ill be 60 degrees. \Yater temperature will be 64. INS IDE TODAY 1/ijackers b/fw up a Japa nese )l't/nitr ot tile Benghazi Airpart ~hor//u after tliey ancl their 137 hos tage.~ slid rlown un emer· ge11c11 chute, See story. Page 4. l..M, •• ,. I AMI LN141tfl Ir C•llt.fllll• S ""9"411 tt-J.1 Cl11llfie. *Ill Mdfl:llt hM• 11 C-k • IJ W•tlllfl1I H..-. .. , (......,.. II ..ot-.. C:WlllY U 0..111 ... tic" II S,1"11 hrlw U lditwllt P191 I '-fl lf.'1 Enl1r1llM'lt111! "''' SIM' Mlr1t1h 1 .. 1s ''~•M• ,,. ,,.,, r....,.11... n '"° lflt ll:ecw• 11, 14 T...-,..., 7'·11 ....,__ 11 w-·• ..... u .11 .,, 5ff'liC• ,. W#lll ...... ... , l • • ---------~--· -- T1.1tMlil;t, J1.1b 24, 1971 Ola S11bpoetaas Nixon to Abide By Court Ruling WASHINGTON (AP) -The White House · today prtSmised that President Nixon will abide by an eventual court ruling his precedent-setting battle to withhold Wa~rgate e\•idencc. The J>rcsident abides by the la.,..·," Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. \\'ar· ren said. He would give no hint what legal tac· tica Nixon "''ill take in response to sub· poenas from the Senate \Vatergate com· rnittee and special proseaJtor Acchibald Co1, except to say a decision would be .lMOWlced by Thursday. Meanwhile, Atty. Gen. ElUot L. Richardson said be believes Nixon has "substantial legal and constitulional foundation'' for refusing to give up the sought-after documents and ta pc recordings, which Nixon cOncedes can't prove his innocence. But Richardson called for Nixon, his 'VITA!-SE~URITY INQUIRY' Ehrfichman Testifies Fron• Pqe 1 BREAK-IN .... rors" that he consciously bid fr<>m the President (or fear Nixon would '1lower the boom," disclose everything and lose the election to Sen. George McGovern. Ebrlichman said Nixon didn't consider it embarrassing. either. boss. and Cox, his technical buL In· deptndent subordina te, to "1ry lo work 0111 sonH· practical rncans of rl'conclling the (.'Qmpcting interests :1t stake." Hichardson thus secn1cd to he sug· i;csting an out-of-court comproinise. 1'he Wh ite !louse, by agreeing to ahidc by even1ual court rulings, seemt..>d lo clarify the ground rules In the unfolding constitutional confrontation. The U.S. Supreme Court now appears to be cast by all sides as the ultimate referee in the historic disputl'. Asked at a news bricting how the \\lhitc House would respond to lhe subpoenas. \l'arren said lhe office of the prcsiden!ial counsel was studying the "very complex legal situation involved" and that •:after such study will t.:ike appropriate ac!ion .. _ with in the time specified in the .sub- poenas." He reported that all three documents call for a response by Thursday. In respo nse to a question . \Varrcn said that Nixon of course would 1na kc the final decision on actiOns to be tuken. Newsmen tried lo glean from Warren some hint as to the course Nixon will adopt. "I can't speculate for you what ap- propriate action might be." he replied. He. pron1ised newsmen ""'OUld be furnished detailed information once ac- tion is taken. Asked if Nixon might simply Ignore the subpoenas, Warren said he did not want to get into a lega l discussion about available options. A newsman asked if Nixon ""'ould pro- duce the materials sought by in- vestigators should lbe courts eventually order him to do so. Warren at first said he was "not able lo get into a hypothetical discussion." Later, however, he said, "there's no question that be would abide by court rulings .•• The President abides by the law." To other questions \Varren said the tapes cove ring two years of presidential confe.rences and telephone calls "are being adequately protected " and arc secure. "They have not been edited," \Varren said in a response to another query. He declined to say where the tapes are now located. HUD Money Renews WASH!NCTON (UPI\ -The 11.S. Department of J1011Sing and Urban Development· was under court order to- day to start processing immediately more than $431 million in hou sing funds ror-low and moderate income families that were shut off Jan. 8. U.S. District Judge Charles R. Richey ruled hlonday lhat the Nixon administralion unln..,.·ful!y suspended the programs. !'-; ., l "-;·:< I - CHASE ALONG PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY ENDED IN LAGUNA NIGUEL; DRIVER SHOT HIM.SELF Newport Beach Patrolman Charles Morin lnve1tlg1tes Scene After Speeds of 90 MPH Through Traffic 'First-rank Statesman' Nixon Welcomes Shah Of Iran Amid Trumpets From Wire Services \\'ASl·JJ NGTON-ln a blare of trumpets, President Nixon welcomed the shah of Iran lo the White House today, calling him a "~'orld statesman of the firsl rank" ""'ho can help to bring peace and stability to the oil·rich Persian Gulf area. Speaking for~fully on a red-carpeted platform, NL'Con told lhe shah ii was "par· ticularly important that we meet at this time because of all the areas in the 1vorld," lhe Afiddle East poses !he great· est potential threat to peace. "We "''elcome you as good friends and old friends," Nixon said. Both lhe President and the shah wore dark suits. Nixon, 'just recovered from viral pneumonia, appeared in good spirits and seemed to gel an extra lift from lhe shah who shook his hand wami1y and expressed concern over the Prcsidenl 's health. Shortly after the shah's arrival, the 2 leaders began two days or talks . The shah was underslood to be carrying an urgent appeal to purchase nen', F14 super- sonic jets Crom the United States. · The shah emphasired the need for his country to remain militarily stroog in response to Nixon's remarks. "We have got to be in constant contact to peserve lhat for which v.•e have work· cd -and in our case -for which w·e are ready to die," he sa id. The shah. ac:companied by his \vile , Empress Farah, arrived at the \\lhite 11oUS;.e at mid-morning following an over· night stay at Williamsburg, Va. He made an WlSCheduled tour or Wil· liamsborg's histcric colonial area before leaving for Wasbingtoil, brieflf delaying the White H0119e ceremooy. Mrs. Nixon was on band with the Presi· dent to greet the royal couple. Screwdriver l1npales Mari Fro1n Page l CHASE. • • walked toward him. Police units from Newport Beach, LagWla Beach and ttie California 1 lighway Patrol racl'd in pursuit o( a late model Volkswagen driven by the bearded suspect at .speeds of 80 to 90 miles per hour through heavy ·summer afternoon traffic in downtown Laguna Beach. 'fhe chase ended at the entrance to The Shores development at Niguel Road on Pacific Coast Highway in Laguna Niguel as the foreign car skidded out of control off , the road and the Newport Beach police unit careened into a block wall beside it. Grenoble apparently shot himself at tha t lime by placing lhe muzzle of a .22-- caliber H and R revolver in his moatb and pulling the trigger. Not hearing the shot police officers from Laguna Beach and Newport Beach closed in, guns drawn, and ordered the man to exit the vehicle: When he did not Laguna Beach patrolman T rry Temple appro3ched the suspect who was holding the gun in his Ieft hand and took the weapon. B g rrom the .. mouth ,and ears "-"Gn,,,.blie \\•as lifted from the car, handcuffed and laid face down on the grass where ambulance attendants pick· ed him up later and rushed him to the hospital. - Pe11tagon: U.S. Deaths Falsified WASHINGTON (UPl)-1be Pentagoji . disclosed today lhat 8l U.S. servicemen died in Laos and Cambodia on sccrel in.~ telligence missions since 1965 and S8i(I. their deaths were falsely reported to. families and to Congress us having OC· curred in South Vielnam. Defense Departmellt spokesman Jerry W. Friedhelm said the false reports were discovered Monday in a review of Vietnam war statistics provided 10 Qmgre& in the wake of last week'• dlsclogure that the Senate had heeo misled oo a l.f.mootb secret bombing campaign in Cambodia.: The report listed 3,630 B5l bombinj raids actually conducted in Cambodia iit 1969 and 1970 as having been carried out in Soulh Vielnam. Friedheim said Congress \\"8S informed loday about the false account of lhe dea ths. Since the fall of 1965, Fricdheim sai~ 55 U.S. servicemen have died cooductinc "covert military recoonal!sance acti~· ities" in Laos. He said since 1967, an ad- diUonal 26 have been killed on secret missions in Cambodia. : Their families v.·ere told "the dtath5 occurred oo classified missions along the border of South Vietnam ," FriedheirR said, and the report to Congress listed alt 81 deaths among U.S. battle casualtld in South Vietnam. Friedheim said the agents were operat-- ing ,on missions so classllied that even their places of death had to be kept secret He said the cover story, showing they died in Soolh Vietnam, w~ fed into Pen· tagon computers and the cir~ums~s surrounding each death v.'ere kept m "paper files ." . Friedheim said infonnation was still being checked when the spy missions end· ed and when the last deaths occurred. The families of the 81 men are being notified of the true circ\DllStances under which their sons and husbands dled, Friedheim said, and no names will be an· nOW1ced until nolificatioo was completed. Most or lhe agents were Army Green Berets, be said, but some might have been Marine or Air Force persoMel. Friedheim said their spy missions In· volved primarily observing activity along the Ho Chi Minh trail, gathering lnror· mation in North Vietnamese base areas inside Cambodia, and assessing the re~. suits of the secret U.S. bombing raids ~ these base areas. * * ·* Cambodia Bomb : Decision· OK'd At Highest Level?· ' WASIUNGTON (UPI) -Delense "On the fisst occasion when I did discuss this with the President, which was in J\1arch. he expressed essentially the same view that I have just stated," Ehrlichman sald. "That this was an im· port.ant. a vital national security inquiry and that he considert.'CI it to he well within the constitutional. both obligation and fun ction of the presidency." UC Irvine Officially Ends ST. ETIENNE, France (AP) Two men drove a screwdriver through the hand of a Swiss painler, pinning him to the frame of one or his paintings, police said today. "We really don't know why he ran. We went to investigate a report and when we got there he ran," Newport Beach detec· tive Capt. Don Oyaas said. Oyaas said he doesn't know what the suspect ,was doing in Newport Beach ~nd declined 1o speculate on a connection between the dead man and the death of II-year-old Linda Ann O'Keefe found slrangled in the back bey early this rr.onth. Secretary James R. Schlesinger said t°t day the secret bombing raids over Cant' bodia in 1969 and 1970 "were authorized at the highest-level.'' . ,. "1bere has been no usurpation oi; civilian authority," he said. "Military()(;. ricials have meUt1J1011Sly foUowed the orders of civilian authorities." : ' At another point, Ehrlichman said. "I ooosidered the special unit's acti vities lo be well within the president's inherent constitutional powers. And this particular episode, the break.in in c:;a1,ifomia, likewise, to have been wuh1n the President's l n here n .t constitutional powers." • Dtivnlier in Charge PORT All PRINCE, HAITI (AP) - President Jean-Claude Duvalier assured c:ountrymen Monday that he remained in "lull command" following a seri es of e:-:- plosions that damaged the presidential palace. Jn a taped broadcast aired cvl·ry half-hour. Duvalier said the explosions originated in a munitions depot near the palace. OU.NGI COAIT " DAILY PILOT l'!I• 0T8'!ft (Dltll 0"1l.Y I'll.Of , wllfl """le" it CMllllMd "'• H•W1·Prn1, 11 flll&l l"*' 1t1'" llM Or•'IO• C:o.11 1'111:1111,.inV c°"'""~· s.~ r1!t lldl!llln1 ''' po,rOl/1,.., M_,, 111'°"9'11 Ftloil•Y• !Dt (D$1• Mhl, l'ff"'llCH"I llr-..:1\, Huri!lng!(tn lleKf'llF-11111 Vt!l•y, Ltg...,.. (l .. dl. 1 .... i..t1S.1clc:n-c• -$.tn C~n!tf i.n J111,. C111~tr1na. A 1lntt1 •eo•on•I •Ilion 11 PllllJl•llld S1h1rtlty\ •"" Su'lcl1y1, fl\t prlfl(1~1 ""'°1!111""'1 Pltnl !\ •! 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Ct11tw111t.' ~1#1\eol 91' '°"""' UAS -11iy1 .., ..... n u .11 -1'111Ji ... 11111o., •1t1M11W1t lUI ,._"'''· Fraternity, Sorority Ba11 UC Irvine officially has ended its ban on f,"atemities and sororities by inviling six to fonn~ colonies on the campus !his fall. None of the six is Phi Gamma Delta, the social fraternity to .... ·hich Dr. Daniel G. Aldrich •Jr .. UCI chancellor. belonged v•hen he was a student at the University of Rhode /stand. · · The six Dr. Aldri ch has invited \Vere sai d to have been chosen because of their open membership practices and reasonable costs. '11iey are: t~ralerollles: Beta Theta Pi. Phi Delta Theta and Sigma Chi. Sororllies: Delta Gamma. Gamma Phi Beta and Pi Beta Phi. Sintc UC f opened in 1965 there has been a policy in force which in effe<:t From Page 1 COYOTE ... mediately set traps and extra p.'1\rols in an eftorl to catch the coyole. Over the weekend officers shot and ""'ounded one coyo te in the area and un· confirmed reporls stated la1e Monday that the animal's carcass had been found . Bu! Iha! coyole obviously was not !he one thnt attacked this morning. As In the case or the foxes last year . (none of which was found to be rabid). the attacks generally occur in the preda\vn hours . Rangers said they can only lbeor lze 1 hat 1he foxes and royotes w·hirh live in the rugged areas of the park have lost their fear of man after living for months off scraps of food at !he park, hence arc c:ipablc or unprovoked attacks on sl~p­ ing CRmj)fl'J. The precautionary orders for Rn· lirabies shots come from tlx! Orange County Veterlnnry Public Health office Rnd invol\'t-14 injcdiort'i, one a dBy, of a duck senun which lmmimi:r.cs a ~!lent against the dread disease . HeaJth official!' lx!come moirt coo- ctmcd when bites occur in the are:ls of the head and faCt Hccause the disease af· f<'Cts the bnun. ~Y ha\•f! de.scrtbed the lnjecilons ns discomforting, but not as painful os the orl1inal lype of aerum whlcii cnused \'lolent side effects. banned fraternal social groups on the grounds such groups discriminated in the scle<:tion of mell'lbers. A 1972 U.S. Supreme C.ourt ruling pav- ed the \\'ay for the change in UCI policy. The court held that national affiliation alone is not a permissible reason for de· nying an organization access .to a cam· pus. Some national fraternities require in \h('lr charters lhat local chapter!'! exclude certain classes of students. Such charter provisions would violate UC I ad· rninislrative and faculty policies. tn writing to the si x national societies, Dr. Aldrich emphasized that can1pus organizations may have nothing in their constitutions, rituals or practices that could be interpreted as discriminating againsl any student in lhe selection of their members, a crunpus spo kesman said. Robert S. Lawrence. assistant \'i ce chancellor for student affairs said na- tiona l social !raterniH_e.s _and sororities 11·i II be given the same support and privileges as all oth<'r student organize· lions on the Irvine campus. "\\le are happy to be able to provide this additional social OPoPrtunity for UCI st udent s." he said. The chosen six are not the only na· tiona( Greek societies ~·hlch meet the UCI non-diS<'riminalion criteria . Quak e Jostles 30-mile Area LAKEPORT (A P l -A moderate earthqut1ke jostled at least a 30- mile area of Northern California to- day. No damage or injuries '~·ere r~Ported. Doug Rhoades. program dlrtetor of radio ~tioo KBLC. said the temblor shook objects In his studio at 6;50 a.m. At about the ~ame time, Mike O'Neil of Ukiah radio station KUKT experleneed "a rolllng sensation " Md "took a look at lhe radio lower and ll wa!I weaving back and forth a rew limes.'' 4 .. • The painter, Pierre Strapp, was left unconscious in his car on a lonely country road over the weekend . His other hand was lied to the body of the car and he was gagged. Strapp, who was admitled to a hospital at Fleurs, said be had no clue as to the identity of his assailants. The 41-year-old painter "''as found Saturday with his left hand pierced by a screwdriv~ buried in the wooden frame of his painting, "The Crucified Clown." "There is no indication that there ts any connect On," Oyaas said. Grenoble used a pistol stolen from Los Angeles along with a number or other weapons, sheriff's Sgt. Bob Reed said. No other weapons were found in the vehicle, officers said. Reed said a crime lab report on the gun and exact number of shots fired would be forthcoming. Reed sa id that other than an arrest in 1966 for pel~y theft Grenoble had no. record that officers knew of at this time. WALi{ SOFTLY! Schlesinger disa.lssed the secret raids on Cambodia border sanctuaries witb reporters after testifying at a Senato hearing. . . · Schlesinger "''as called to testify befor~ an appropriations subcommittee on ' controversy over 3,630 If.tacks by B52s Oil Communist sancluaries in Cambodia ob. the South Vietnamese border for ll months prior to May I, 1970. · He contended lhat some key membeQ of Congress were informed about th~ raids a~ the' time, but declined to iclpntif1 them . • Many times we talk lo people who fBel that carpeting al $5.00 lo $8.00 (carpet alon .. ) per square yard is expensive. • . . A hou1ewife who buys dress ,,.;aterials knows that she is unlikely to buy good materials for less than $3.00 lo $4.00. Also, • man might pay $1 .00 for a fool-square handkerchief, which works out fo $9.00 a squ~re yard. Can you imegine how these maferiels perform if you placed heavy furniture and walked on them 7 woukJ .Consequently; when you spend $3.00 to $4.00 for carp•ling, regardless of where you buy ii, don't expect too much, walk very softly ! ALDEN'S CARPETS e D~APES 1663 _Placcntla Ave. COSTA MESA 646-40~0 HOUIS: Moo. T1"1I Tllvn., t to 5:30 -Fill. t to t -SAT. 9:30 IO 5 . ' .- • • , were Pollu ing nine, trol Fit ings the and 0 to tr fr 8 • s DAILY PllOr :j Seyen Air Pollution Warnings Issued in June By JACK BROBACK Of .. 0111¥ ...... ''"" Seven air pollution health warnings were issued by the Oran~e County Air Pollution Control District tn June bring· ing the total warnings (or the year to nine, WilUam Fitchen1 air pollution COO· trol office said, Fitchen noted that on two dan warn- ings included the north coastal area of the county. This marked only the second and third limes that such warnings were .__/ . Issued for Ibo coastal area. No wammp were nectSSU')' for the 1DUtbwesl area of the COWlty. The Jed<ral oxidant (ozoae) st111dard of .118 parts per million (ppm) wu u - ceeded on-it-days-during Jme;--lhe-•il'- pollution officer said: Of these, 19 were at the La Habra air monitoring station, 15 at Anaheim, 10 at El Toro and aeven at Costa Mesa. 1be highest reading wu shown at La Habra oo June 20 when .33 was recorded. The federal standard for nitrogen d1ox· Ide of .2$ ppm was o.ceeded once at L.l Habra and once at Anahdm. The carbon moooxide 35 ppm was ~eeeded at the La· Habn-.ataUon41-&.WO-dayJ. No...otbe.r _ statkln recorded ca rbon monoxide levels above the standard . Fltchen said two smog periods in June resulted ln requests that citizen,, volun- tarily reduce driving to an absolute mini- GREG LEE SPIKES ONE AS TEAMMATE RON :VON HAGEN LOOKS ON IN PkACTICE SESSION They Took Second Place Last Year in LaglJna Beach's Annual Volleyball Tournament Tourney on Tap Lagu1ia to Host V olwyball Event Top setters and spikers from Southern California will be on the sands of Laguna Beach's Main Beach Saturday aod Sun· day for the 19th.annual Volleyball touma· menl. Play will ~gin both days at 9 a.m. with final playoffs scheduled for 5 p.m. Sub.day. Officials 'say 32 teams will Participate this year. Bob Clem and Matt Gage last year defeated Ron Von Hagen and Greg Lee ih -·the--finals:-it-was the second-year-in a rqw-Ui:3fClem captured first place. Von Hagen has played _in UM: tour:na· ment since 1964, captunng five hrst place awards, two for second place and one third place trophy. Other top players to watch for are Ron Lang (winner of eight tourneys since 1957), John Vallely, Tom Chamales, Bob Jackson, Mike· Carey, Woody Brooks, Henry Bergman, Rudy Suwara, Buzz Swartz and Toshi Toyota. ·John Lund of Laguna Beach will serve as master of ceremonies. 'The annual competition is sponsored by the Laguna Beach Recreation Department. You Can Get Justice- If You Can Afford It By LEE PAYNE 01 !tie D»llY 1"1191 11•11 ~tOST OF US try to keep clear of the law. Our courts here along. the Orange Coast· have a good.reputation and although we al_! try lo have as ~Ille to do with them as possi ble, we naturally assume that 1f we sh?uld get into trouble, we wi ll encounter a legal system that is both fair and r~tlonal. Keeping this assumption in mind, let us consider the curious case of a friend of mine who recently got a ticket in Huntington Beach for speeding on Coast Hig hway. He was cited for going 90 miles per hour in a 55 mile zone. r.JY FRlEND WAS willing to admit that he was speed· ing and only disputed the 90 mile per hour figure which he thought was excessive for his Rambler station wagon .. He reported to the West Orange County courthouse m Westminster at the appointed time intending to plead gui.llY with the explanation that he thought he was only gomg • around 70. PAYNE The judge informed him, however, that ii ~-pl~aded guil~ to the origi~l charge of 90 miles per hour, he would go to J81l s.mce ther~ is an automatic Jail sentence in thi s instance for anyone found gutlty of going mor~ than 20 miles fa ster than the ~led speed limit. ~1V FRIEND HAD only two choices: plead guilty and go to jail or plead innocent and go to trial. He chose the trial. Now he needed a lawyer. And guess what, there are lawyers who specialize in speeding cases. He" found one of these specialists who took his case for $350. The lawyer asked for and was granted several court delays and when the case finally came to trial, he arranged with the District Attorney 's Office for my friend to change bis plea from "not guilty" to "guilty to a lesser offense." MY FRIEND PLEADED guilty to going five miles per hour over the speed limit and paid a $10 fme. At the beginning of this little late, we noted that most of us try to keep Clear of the law but when we do fall into its clutches, we assume that it will be both fair and rational. I'm not sure that ei ther of these criteria were ob- served in my friend's case. First. he has no quarrel with his -lawyer. He was paid to get him off, BJld he did. But what about the court? After six months or paper work and sup- posedly crowded courtroom time, it allowed him to enter the plea that he wanted to enter in the first place and instead of fining him $200 whlch he would gladly have paid rather than 10 to jail, the court coded up by accepting a fine of 110. AS TAXPAYERS. l tbinl< we got Ibo short end of Ibo deal And what aboot the case itself? Either m.Y friend was going 90 as the police- 11u1.n charged, or he witsfi't. \Vhy did the District Attorney allow him to plead guilty to going (JO? Nooe of the facts In lhe case had changed. BUT I THINK !he most import.Jnt question is the last one. What about all the people who can't afrord $350 for a lawyer? Apparently ~Y go to jail. Shouldn't justice be a questton of guilt or innocence rather than a question of $350? Gunma11 Wounds Tlvo NY Off ice rs, Shot ·to Deatl1 NEW YORK (UPI) -A young gunman carrying tv.·o ~1olotov cocktails y,•alked into a poliae station house ~londay night. screamed "I'm going to kill cops," and shot and v.'OWlded two officers before being shot to death. Lt Frank Dartonti, 41, shot While trying to sulxlue the gunman was in serious condition at Lenox Hill Hospital. Sgt. Dan Brennan, 38, wounded during the initial burst of gunfire. was in good condition. Police officials discounted any politi cal motive in the shootout at the precinct stationhoose, located across the street from the Soviet mission to the United Nations. "Clearly the man had a deranged mind," said Police Commissioner Donald Cawley. Other eyewitness accoonts said the gunman was "obviously very emotionally distraught." The gunman was identified as Victor Luis Camacho Rivera • .25 . .Details about the dead man's backgroW"ld were sketchy. Police gave this account of the in- cident: The casually dressed, slender gunman entered the stationhouse at about 9 p.m. The sergeant was seated behind the main desk while officer Edwin Gonzalez man· ned the switchboard . Shouting "incoherent obScenities," the man reportedly placed a paper bag con- taining the two Molotov cocktails on the desk and, an instant later, pulled a .2'l caliber "Saturday Night Spe c i a 1 '·' revolver and fired three shots, one of them strtlriRgA3rennan in the throat. The two policemen dived for cover, and the gunman climbed over the desk and began fighting with Gonzalez. Darconte, in a back room, heard the :shooting, rsuhed oot, and joined the switchboard officer in trying to subdue the gunman. The man pulled away and fired about two more shots. One of them struck Darconte in the left side of the stomach and was deflected up to his chest. By thi s time, the inspector had run in from the back room and a clerical of· flee r. Michael Callahan. rushed in from his office. 1'-1cGowan, Callahan and Gonzalez fired a flurry of shots at the gunman who stag· gered into the clerical office, where be collapsed and died. Woman, 72 , Held For Extortion PAGE 3 I -Woman, n ~1•rJ VAN NUYS (UPI) -Susan Reid was ~ntenced Monday to 120 days in jail and three-year probation for attempting to extort money from a Nonb llollywood grocery store. Mrs. Reid pleaded guilty to charges she walk~ ll'lto the store and demanded a shopplng hag full of money, saying the needed It to free her grandchildren, who were being held hostage in a motel. She returned the money later and wu arrested. . -Mrs. Rekt Is 12. She is on probation for a similar offense in Nevada. mum to alleviate serious c<1twUllOM in t1ct' and prosecut ion . Filcht:n s..·ud Riverside and San Bemardno counties . Of ti romplaints Investigated during On June fl when the highest one-hour June, four concerned Orange Coast area ozone reading in Orange County WM .26. installotions. A dust complaint aga1MI a record .60 ppm was recorded in Upland construction at the Nev.· Sears Center in and . .39-a~llive~de.. _ _ .... -·-·-. \Vesu:nio.ster \\•as. nuJlifjed • .b1 \\'.a.termg A new BU' pollution control rule hm1hng the slle. In the sanlC co nln1unity, Chil i the carbon monoxide fro1n stationary Products Coryorat ion ""'as wnnicd follow. sources became effective July I. Any ing numerou.s rom 1>laints of odor nnd dust. sources found to exceed .2 percent carbot1 11\e Huntington lntercommunity Hos· monoxide will be subject to violation no-pltals incinerator .,.,•as issued 11 viol:it ion M WD Fears Short Supply Of Chlorine The Metropolitan Water District uses 3,000 lo •3,SOO tons of chlorine yearly lo disinfect the more than one billion gallons or water processed daily at its three treatment plants and is faced with sho rt supply of the chemical. MWD General ~1anager Frank ~f. CJin. ton has urged the federal Environmenta l Protection Agency to take steps to assure the availability of chlorine to safeguard public drinking wate r. Clinton said the water district received only one bid e;trh for the chlorine re- quirement at two of the plants and no bid for the third . Inquiries revealed the reason was a shortage of chlorine processing capacity brought in part by the energy crisis and also due to increased demand. The MWD has asked the EPA to adopt appropriate procedures to assure that chlorine is available on a priority basis to provide for the purification of drinking water. Clinton said that of The nearly three million acre feet of watar produced in the !\l\VD service area during the past fiscal yeat about 1.9 million acre feet came from sources of district member agen· cies (pumping from the underground basins) and 1.1 million acre feet was Colorado River and Northern California wa!er delivered by M\VD. In either case the water require<! chlorination. • notice reg1Jrding operation of the facU · JI~ ·s incilX'rator. 1\ San (,1emente p~unling fir m whlc~ had. been operating without a .,,em1it ceased operations following comp laints of llilint fa llQ!.U. /(OllL.il .seri!Y. JQO.ffl, Tht~ hrrn 11·a~ S & P S1>ecialty Coating~. F itchl..~n said control devices installNl nn stJt1onary sources cost $230.624 in Junt· brini;:in~ the yearly total to date to $1.2 n1il!ion Khadafy Still Ruler Me1nories of Eddie CAIRO tUPIJ -Col. !\-loa mmar Khadafy ,.,.ithdrew his resignation as chairman of the ruling Libyan military junta !\1onday after l2 days, saying he was do ing so under public pressure. Tens of thousands of Libyans had shouted for his return in rallies all over the oil-rich coun· try. Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker, \Vorld \\'ar rs "ace or aces" who shot down more enemy aircraft than any other pilot, stands in the cockpit or his plane (top) and beside one or his 26 enemy aircraft in these 1918 photos. Rickenbacker died of a heart attack at 82 ~londay. (See story, Page 4.) ------------- ~1~ BANK OF COSTA MESA -i111r Is pleased to announce the HIGHEST INTER EST RATES perm i tted NEW INTEREST RATES ON EXISTING DEPOSITS REJROACTIVE TO JULY I AUTOMATIC. REGUl..AR PAS S BOO K ............. 5 O/o • GOLDEN PA SS BOOK .... "' "" "•'"'' 51;,01. f ·RE E· 90 DAYS TO ONE YE AR (Min. $500) ... 51;,0;0 ONE YEAR TO 21/i YEARS (Min. $500) 6 O/o che ckin g accounts .. 2 'Ii YE ARS TO 4 YEA RS (Min. $I 000) 611>0/o no m1n1mum FOUR YEARS (Min. $I 000 l 7 •1. bal ance BANKING HOURS: MONDA y THRU THURSDAY q:Jo T 0 5:00 • FRIDA y 9:30 To 6:00 SATURDAY q:JO To I :<Xl HARBOR & BAK ER -979.4200 • • I --, - OAILV PILOT T11tsd17 , Jul1 24. 1973 • Ill St. Louis Crash c.!~::0g~ Lightning Blamed ~ . with Tom u.rphine -~ .. ~ ·;.·. Do11't lVlonkey • With Stree ts TO TIIE 81\RRICADES: Some of the good folks do"·n ~fission Viejo y,·ay are y£'lling these days for the scalp of Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers. All thi s just because a trio or streets got blocked off. . The iss ue involves traffic floy,· in the Viejo commwiity. It developed th.'lt some residents fe lt that streets like Carranza Drive, Cordillera Drive and 1-lontilla Lane were beeoming raceways for through traffic as folks cut out oolo Jeronimo Road on their v.·ay to shopping and school. · Ul'IT•~ Complaints relative to this alleged con- dition brought a look from the Orange County Road Departmenl. The road peo- ple decided that a solution might be to barricade the three streets so people couldn't speed out ooto Jeronimo Road anym.ore. RESCUE WORKERS EXAMINE TURBO-PROP PLANE IN ST. LOUIS SUBURB Witness S1ys She Heird "Boom Like Lightning Followed by More Booms" \\'Ell, THAT DID IT. Pretty soon you've got neighbors marching at the barricades demanding that the streets be opened again. Some of them are carrying placards with uncomplimentary slogans about their Fifth District supervisor. Some :lre mounting a cry for the recall of Caspers. Hijackers Blow Up Plane So the solution is simple. right? All Caspers has to do is order the barricades tom down and the street reopened. WEU. l\tA YBE. But after the reopen- ings. just wait until the first kid gets hit by a fast-moVing auto and the other side -the folks who .,,,.anted the roads closed in the first place -"'ill be oot there car- rying their own placards. calling for Caspers' hide. Thus_ Gaspers is ~~ming anofi.er great truth in local poht1cs. You may jack around with !he tax rate. fiddle in the governmental personnel department and make grand speeches about the en- vironment. But close. somebody's street. ~y. and you've bought yourself real trouble. Clearly, a neighborhood street and where it goes -or doesn't go -is a real gut issue. It rompares to messing around With the pickup dates for garbage and trash or the increasing of charges for servjce thereof. INDEED, mESE issues are not just 9IX"Oe theoretical musings in government ha11s. They deal with the neighbhorhood. the family , and the American \Vay. '{ou mess around with !hese and v.·hole governments can be tossed out right on the left ear. You don't need a \Vatergate. Just fid- dle with the water rate. Even the Mission \'iejo Company is nervous about v.·hat's going on in the streets of their ~mmunity. ~Iarty Russo, dJreetor of commun ity re!ation.s for the company. surveyed the street barricade situation and thoughtfully commented: "I think these barricades may prove lo . be an un"·orkable solution to our traffic problems ... "' Thal may prove to be the understate- ment of the ye-<1r. P.1EAS\YH ILE, observers arc reminded !hat streets and roads have long been an issue 1n !he Fifth Super\'1sorial District. Opponents used photos of l\'ide . vacant and unused coun ty roads around I.aguna Niguers Rock"ell plant in !he ca mp ;iign agatnst fo rmer supervi sor Alton E. Allen. Now llon Caspers has the seat. And he has some ro<id problems. too. You sus:pect Alton .!\lien might be ~i~­ gllng a hi !. calculating how lucky he is to be out of 11 all BENGHAZI , Libya IAP J -The hi- jackers of a Japanese jumbo jetliner blew up the Boeing 747 at the Benghazi airpOrt a few minutes after they and their 137 hostages slid down an emergen- cy chute. The hijackers were arrested. Passengers and crew members who had been held hostage since Friday had nm about a quarter of a mile from the plane when explosive charges set by the four hijackers went off in the cockpit. Libyan troops anned with submachine guns arres1ed the four hijackers. " TIIE HIJACKERS \\'ho seized the plane . sbor1ly after it took off from Amsterdam last Friday kept it on the ground with 139 other persons aboard for nearly three days at Dubai . a Persian GuJf sheikdom. t-.1ooday they released an elderly Services Slated For Flying Ace Rickenbacker MIAMI I AP) -The body of Capt. Ed- die Rickenbacker, \Vorld War I daredevil hero of the skies wllo became one of the leaders of American aviation . is being . cremated and will be returned to the United States Wednesday for burial. Rickenbacker died f\fonday of heart failu re in a Zurich, Switzerland, hospital. He was 82. Eastern Airlines, the company Ricken- backer built from a small operation into a major corporat ion, sent a plane to bring back the ashes. Members of the family y,·ere reported aboard the plane and will join ~1rs. Ric_kenbacker, who was at hf'r husband's bedside when hr. died. The ashes will be buried later this week in Columbus, Oh io, Rickenbacker 's birthplace. Rickenbacker "·as called "the ace of aces•· in honor of his exploits during World War I li e was credited with d~stroying 26 Gertnan aircraft. including a number of the famous Red Baron's Flying Ci rcus. In 1941. he \\'as seriously injured ,1:hen !he co1nmercial airliner on v.•h1ch he was rirhng cra shed near Atlanta . Japanese couple from among the passengers, had the plane flown to Damascus and, after three hours there, ordered it on to Libya. Everybody aboard slid down the emergency chute after the plane came to a stop at Benghazi, on the Mediterranean coast. Members of the crew said no one was hurt during the evacuation; but blood was spurting from a cut above the eye of one old Japanese woman and her glasses were smashed. ALL TIIE HOSTAGES looked worn out by their 31h-day ordeal, and some ap- peared on the verge of collapse. Ooe young Japanese hostess kept tell· ing Libyans trying to help her ; "I'm all right, I'm all right." Then her knees buckled, and a policeman carried her away in his arms. Security men kept n~wsmen and photographers away from the wreckage of the plane while the passengers were loaded into sma11 buses and taken to the terminal .. Benghazi airport was closed to civilian traffic after the blast. WHILE L'I DUBAI . the hijackers iden- tified themselves variously as Sons of the Occupied Territory, Mt. Carmel t-.1artyr Sada and the Japanese Red Arm y but never made clear whether they were af- filiated with any known Arab guerrilla group . Nor wer£> their demands ever made public. But there \\·ere unconfirmed reports that they den1anded freedom for DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Delivery of the Daily Pilot 1s quarantted M....,.,.iotkll J: II ••v do ~ol ~IWI l'tvr 11,...-t J S:)O p,m., (I ll '"" l'Ollr (...., will ae 0<•119111 le ''"· t1••• 1r1 111"" 11ntlr l :ll p.m. SllVnlfJ l ftCI S11l\41y: 11 l'fll ff .... rte•IYt ,,..., C•PJ ., ' ...... S11unhJ. •r I ...... SulHl1y. Cl ll and I C<>P' will It# l,.WtM 19 , .... C1!h ltt !Htn until 11 1.m. T t!tptlonr~ Mt1I Or11>9< CownlJ .l.r•ft ......... 1.oi1 ...... 111 .. 11 Munlin1!on lt><h Ind Wt>lmlft1ltr $1n Clemtnlt, C1pl1!t1,,. •toch, Sin J•an C1pitlt1M, O..nl "9!fll, 1...,111 L1111n1. 1.11~111 Nl1Mt • • m -uit Tornadoes Spread Havoc 10 f/11rt Sliglitly in South D"kota's Capital • f a .... ANC•I CO \.\. (o~., 1 •O• &N&l •r• ~ -w•,•,M_J,""~ IOWIU lllOl"l"1UllS " ~ 0 "'1 WIAt"'t f()'IO(,f,.U S ........ Constnl W<'nlher Nigh! 1nd mornl"ll low ti-• •lonO the co111, olMrwlMI 1unny •!t•r-1 Ind cle1r nl11ht1. C0111t1I h!Ohl 1111r 10. Loom SS. Norlll..........,lnd1 U to 10 lnoll off Point C~t-pll~ .ind OUIM ClllnMI l\l1nd1. Ll1M to model"•!• cl!Oll 111 1ft•rnoon. 1..i1r111 1trnper1tuf"91 r1119e from 60-«I. Wiler tet11P9f'•lun "· Sun, /lloon. Tide • TUli$0.l.Y, Jilllf 71 'KO!ld MIQh J 07 p In. I 1 s.ec-low n il!l.m. 0:11 WEONE,OAY, Jiily U Flr>I 11•th I ll 1.m. 13 f i11! Lew 11 2• 1.m. 16 SrtohO High ' 10 pm. 1.2 SOfl rlMt 1:511.m., Mii 1•00 p.tn, -tttl ). 1~ p,ITI. l'I Wt1t111r 11 3 Japanese terrorist serving a life term in Israel for the Tel Aviv airport massacre and that they alsO y,·ere seek· ing $5 million ransom. A w()W1tjed Japanese crewman who was released· after the plane landed ill Dubai said the hijackers included a Japanese. a Latin Anerican, a European. an Arab and a Latin American woman who blew herself up accidentally with a hand grenade in her dress soon after the takeoff from Amsterdam . Bui the pilot of the plane, Capt. Kenzi Konuma, told ney,•smen at Benghazi that there were three Arab men, one Japanese 8nd 1he Ytoman. MON ., THURS., FRI. 10:00 -9:00 36 Perish .; Pi~t Says He Flew Into Tornndo ST. LOUIS (AP) -The pilot of an Ozark Air Lines plane that crashed in a St. Louis suburb think s he flew throu gh a tornado and is sure the plane was hil by lightning. Authorities say at least 36 persons died. Oz.ark Flight 825, which originated in Nashville, Tenn., and was carrying 41 passengers and a crew of three, craShed into a wooded ravine Monday night dur· ing a violent thunderstorm. The Federal Aviation Administration said Arvid Linke, pilot of the turboprop Fairchild 227, radioed shortly before the crash that he believed he was in a tornado and that he had been hit by lightning. Authorities recovered tapes of conversations between Linke and the control tower at Lambert Airport and began today to attempt to determine the cause of the crash that "lit up the sky." A WITNESS TO the crash, Debbie Schwab, said she heard a "boom like lightning followed by more booms." Mrs. Schwab said her husband ran from their home and saw a ball of flame . "I heard a loud crash and then another crash," said Howard Porter. a resident of the area. "It sounded like an ex· plosion." Porter said he leaped. a !ence, ran to the scene and assisted 8.J\Of.her man in removing bodies from the tom fuselage. ".I saw a bolt of lightning conle from no\\'here," said Joan Weber, who was on her back porch at the time of the crash. "Then I heard a high whine, a scream, and the t'rces exploded. I couldn't see a plane." A BRIEF FIRE follo\ved the impact at 3:-45 p.m. (PDT) as the plane disin- tegrated, knocking down trees and strew- ing power lines in its path. An FAA spokesman said the control tower at the airport lost sight of the aircraft on radar about a mile from the airport as it descended to an altitude of about 600 feet. Authorities said today they-had reports of eight survivors ~ several area . hospitals. ./. / Among the , injured was Linke, who authorities said was carried from the plane's wreckage. The extent of his in- juries was not immediately known. The Red Cross said Beth Williams, the l SPORTSWEAR Tuesday • July 24th plane's stewardess, was among the vic- tims. The plane left Nashville' Monday en route to St. Louis. It had made in- termediate stops at Clarksville, Tenn.; Paducah, Ky.; Cape Girardeau, Mo; and Marion, Ill . Winds peaking at 37 miles per hour ac· companied a downpour of nearly two inch· es of rain during the brief. stonn that came at the time of the crash. TWO GIANT OAK trees stopped the plane's descent just short of an unoc- cupied gymnasiwn 00 the campus of the University Of Missouri-St. Louis in suburban Normandy. Conditio~ at the airport, although bad, were described by an FAA official as "not bad enough to close down opera· lions." - * * * Passenger List On Ozark Flight ST. LOUIS IUPIJ -Htrl II I 1111 ol 1119 3l pnse119er11 end one stew•rdrll klll9d In Ille crl•h Mondly 11)9111 ot 011rk Air LlnH Flight IOt •I St, Lou It: I. JIU Beth Ann Wlllltrm. SI. Loull •tewlrOeu. 2. Mrs. H1v1n1 Rulledg9, Murr1y. Ky. l. Mitt P•mel• Runedl)1, MurPty, Kv. '-Jotln Gius, Cape Gfr1rOe1u. Mo. s. R. M. R11h, M1oleton, Ill. 6. 8vf Hill, Mwllftl'Mtofo. Ill. 1. Wl!ll1m Welford, Chtr\Dttt, N.C. I. Mark Wllh1t1, u, .l.m1rl!lo, Te•. 9. NOf"m•n Allen, Cl1rk1vltll, Tenn. 10. M1rk Boerlo. 11. J . Gr1mblhler. 12. H'nry TJbtls ll. Elmer Haog..,. ''· Sob Boucller, Pllduclfl, icv. 1$. Robert Fletcher. 16. L. OUW.llu1. 11. Armando Pere1, 1,, Ho..,,!on .. 11. Gerald Tucker, Buena Park, Cellr. 19. John Diebold. 20. Mr"I. John Diebold. 11. Ru•sPll Lane. 21. BUI Phllllps, Del~lt. ti. Frank Wllll•m S•1tl011. 14. Mr11. Shlfft.11. 2.S. John Barton, Se1tllfo. 2S. Dorl1 Cordln. 27. J•ne Doyle. 211. Or • .I.. K1lr1n!cin, 29. Mr11. R. Moore. JO. Jeffrey Moo.-., Mr IOl'I. ]1. 00.M M•ybfn'y. 32. Pa<gt Siad,. Ptduc•h, Kl'. n. R()9e"" Mltct>ell, Ct'llnu•e. UI. 34. Mr. Rogtr. as. Mr. Leo. 3'. Mr. T""'""' or ThomlllOll· Tt>e tUNlvon were: l. Arvld Linke, SI. c..arla, MO .• IM pl!ol. 2. Mk hffl Wlltl11111. St. Louis, the cOPl!ot. l. s1-1rt Slktvlli. lO. ChlclQO. 4. J1'"" Freem•n. ]9, .l.rlln11lon, Te•. s. 81rb&r1 Roberl50I!, C•ntwood. MO. 6. Tanzi COf"dln. 6, Oetroll. 1. Mlcke"Jf Cordln, 5. Oelroll. 1. An unldfflllfled IHn~ girt. TUES., WED., SAT. 10:00 -6:00 '"(""' ot '"''" 1n -"°"' 111\1 l)ffor• lf'!!)f'<Oll! Wlruh 1111 .... M iit ' IM'f" ""Ur 1,, (111,-. n1tvv rains '"'•n• !~·ovall •h'lr m1C11lt'll<!. CtV\ll!O 10•1• 1100011111 tnd b<t•~lno llO« ... llM\. l'llf lo r1rllv (IOll(lf t~l•\ ll••••lt9<1 -n.1 rtOIOl'lt ovhl<l• 1,.,. ~d· tor1!1-t. .Westcliff Plaza • 17th and Irvin e • Newport Tt.,.l.'9tll1trt1 Mlor. o!~wt1 •~llQ~1 trllo"l'I 1.1 1! Af'Clfl, C.tll , IQ " 11 "'~'' /\•Ir 1116 N•ldlt\ [41•• •, - 'Re J SAN ·Finan1 giant filed ~ in fcC stay in The targd chang has hi submi Distrl• reorgi XI of Act. The pany with i it fror: bankr the co recei1,1 or ass U.S. petitic pay it and I financ tion i! A S Diego U.S. issuin recen toom Al TJ 0 : SA' One men fered leged at C< "·eek R<> to 11' mont died c Coon His c 25, ' tory tried Po victs ag6. ·~ cc ·have inv~ shoo pare t\I.'-~ Th gel, 28. h Sche foun1 blooo Poli~ arrc~ fl . LC lop: 'Vils mai1 "bu1 ed I Tt Clar Dav stab tioru Rile SUP< frorr Rile: fert> • Si ··~ big! Nor pre: dea1 po~ G \Val "" Bed eas· the cau! •• t. rclt Joh dor pe!" th• to I voo s \VS; urt cer sa\ :'I.ff nal ry, plw of DAii. V PILOT 5 Reorganization :Plea UFW Jail Protesters Dispersed Financial House day Seeking Survival VtSAlJA CAP) -~ltn, wom- en and chUdnm protesting u~ am.'sts of more than 250 t.:nilcd io""ann \\'orkers Vnil)IJ pickets were dispenl"d by Tu· lare County sheriff's office!"! in riot gear, olficcrs said. and chanting "Hutlga," the Spanish word for strike The dento1L'5tr<1lors said they \\'t re supponing union mem - ben arTeSted for viol11ling picketing Injunctions .:il ranth· cs in,volv~ ip A la.bl.c.._grnpe gro"·er dispute. Delano. birthplace of the uruon rrgani?ed by C~nr Ch;\1 C'L nine years 11go. I F\\' SP<Jl.~"i- 1n:u1 Jal'k IA'I }' s.1Jrf it 11 a~ 1•'.\.· peeled a 1 ote ~oulcl bt.· 1aken to nuthor11e n ~tnkt.· if nr" fOOlrat·t~ arc not 'IJ:lh'1I 11t1h t=iblt: grnp.: gru11er.s li) Suri "\\11"rt out of space."' San- c-hcz sn1d :ift('r U1L' latest ar· rests. SAN DIEGO 1APJ -U.S. ·f'intnci<!I ··Inc., a ·floundering 1tiant of housing finance, has filed a reorganization petition in federal court in hopes of staying in busmess. The debt-ridden company, target of a Securities :md Ex- change Commission probe that has halted trading in its stock, submitted a petition to U.S. District Cour1. Mohday seeking reorganization under Chapter XI of the Federal Bankruptcy Act. The chapter allo"'s a com- pany to seek arr::ingt>ments with its credi tors and protects it from lawsuits. 1£ it fails. the bankruptcy referee can place the company in the hands of a receiver and order liquidation of assets. U.S. Financial said in the petition that it is "unable to pay its debts as they mature" and adds that "!he precise financial condition of the pcli· lion is presently unknown.'' A SOURCE close to the San Diego-based company said U.S. Financial, which was issuing rosy foreca sts as recently as January, had "just too many bad invest1nents, too Alleged Thief Dies Of Injuries SAN BERNARDINO iAP \- One of two severely burned men has died of injuries suf· fered in the crash of an al- legedly stolen two-engine plane at cable airport in Upland last v•eek, officials reported. Rodney Crane, 25, believed to have moved to Norwalk a month ago from Red1vood City, died Sunday at San Bernardino ( BRIEFS ) County Hospital, officials said. His companion, ~1ichael Perry, 25, was reported in satisfac· tory condition. and is to be tried on theft charges. Police said both ~-ere ex-con- victs who were paroled a year ag6. e 3 Die, 5 Held CORCORAN (AP) -Police have booked five persons for investigation of murder in the shooting deaths of lhr~ ap- parent victims of a feud be· t11•_een_t1vo families. The bodies of Dominj!o Ran- ~el. 32, his brothe_r. Emesl. 28, OOth of 11anford and A\~1 I Schenz Jr., 21. Corcoran, 11·ere found in and ii round lheir blood • splattered car Sunday. Police said ?\1oodav they had nrrcsted seven persons. fl Aide• Re•i!JH LOS ANGELES I AP ) -T11·0 top aides to state School Supt. \Vilson Riles h..1vc resi~ncd mainly due to frustration with "burcaucr.!lcy," it \vas report- ed today. 'The resignation!' fro1n Dr. Clarence L. Hall. 46. and Dr. David Evans. 41. the report stated. sho"·ed "cle:'lr in1p!ica- tions of unhappiness "·ith Riles' appointments of thei r superiors" \\'ho 1\·crc rctain<'d from previous dutv un<lcr Riles' predecessor Ma:< Raf- ferty. e Bi11/1or11 Dearl SACRAMEN'l'O (APJ -A e~-e -one of 20 rare California bighorn sheep on ii special Northern California breeding preserve -hns been rounr! dend . state game offici;ils rc- port. Game offici:.ils rn akinc: ~ walking inspection of lhe 1.101 1- RCT(' preserve at the La1·n Beds National Monument in eastern Siskiyou County found the ewe's bodv. The exact cause has not been det ermined . • • Chlfcl1r.tff! Win~ LOS ANGELES (AP \ -Tho release of "Solediid Brother·· John Clutchctte hl', bcetl or· dered by a Los .A.ngelcs Su- perior Court Judge \rho said 1herc m s insuffi«nt ~ounds to hold him for alleged parole violation . Several weeks al{o ClulC"hctte was 1aken into custody in sub- urban Compton by peml!: olil· ce" and police.' Authoritl~ said ht' vk>h1ted pProle rules a11alm t assoclnllon with C"riml· nal clements or wlth "-'e8DOTI· ry. They used as ('Vide.nce a phob>t!nlph ol him In • group o( persons holdin~ "-capons. many high.fl iers, too much de6{ a00 iOO Jittfe CflSh rfoW."~ In its petition, the cornpanv listed long-tenn debts or $74.S million, current liabilities d. $62.8 m i ll i on , and stockholders' equity of $31.6 million. An ongoing study of all company .transactions for the la.st two yea rs could result in ''.further reduction of net "'orth," the petition said. The company's t r o u b I e s surfaced last November wilh the resil{'_lation of C"hainnan and chi ef executive officer Robert H. \Valier after the SEC had ordered a halt in tradins of U.S. Financial stock. WALTER HAD helped the company build assets from $4.2 million in 1965 to $.'.JIO millioo last year, with housing projects iD 22 states and threl foreign coWltries. Officials sa id the rompany led all hous- ing finance firms in the nation in assets last year and was fifth in sale's. The SEC ordered U . S . Sheriff's officers moved in ori fhC cMntlng denlOO.Sl'fafOrS 1'.-tonday "'hen they refused to h('fd a warning to stop their ;,tctivilics. Nine persons \vere nrrestcd , Sheriff's Sgt. Jess Sanchez said. 11e said there \\'Cre no report..<i oC violence. Sanchez said these arrests and those of 57 farm workers earlier 1'.1onday brought to about Z50 the number of pick- ets arrested he.re since last Thursday. A CROWD OF about 21)() pickets marched on a green oppos ite lhc j3il here, carry- in~ placards and union n ags Sherirf Bob \llilv .said hl' \I'll" conferring 1\ith T11l:1rc Coun11· Superior Cow-I judgl\S ul a11 crfort to gl'I an inj unction bar· r ing rn ass pickel111,1Z ill the jail to prevent "possible injury to inmates. pickPls or rny ffi('n " li!ore than 1,500 UF\\1 p1l'k- ets have been arrestt.'d in the San Joaquin \'allry since thf' union launched a rnass11·e campaign of civil rlisobedif'TlCf' to !cs~ court inJLUlC!lon.s in1 oh· cd in the !able grape dis.pule I UFW l\U::'\IB EP."i 1r r ~ '" scheduled to m~t loni~ht 1111 * * * * * ·:1 Unio11 Aide Charges Beatings in Jail PSA wants to go north (or sou th) with you r money. Oth er Grinn ingbirds to Son Franc isco and San Diego. Over 200 flight s a day connecting all of northern and sou thern California. ' Call you r travel agent or PSA and let's migrate. PSA gives you a lift. Financial to restate its 1971 earnings. questioning profits listed in the sale of eight( mobile home parks to Coasta l l Land Corp. of San Diego. \Valter played a central part in financial dealings allowing the company 1o list sale prof- ils in 1971 instead of spreading them over 26 years, the SEC asserted. Smull Problern l!Iiss Adele "Twinkles" Chambordon of Bir- mingham, Ala., attend· ing the 15th annual convention of Little People of America, in Oakland. demonstrates one of the people prob- lems of being small as she stands on a stool to reach a pay telephone in hotel lobby. FRESNO (AP ) -Nine ar-.. stagnant ," filthy pools ufi res ted United Farm \Vorkers "'atcr created by Ol"erflo"·ing Union me mbers have been toilets." :-.lost "'ere no! allo1v- bcaten. and jail conditions arc ed !O make telephone calls, he I deplorable. a unioo spokesman claimed. --'--''====---'-'--'----======---=====-----------' charges. But ~eriff ~leh•in A. ---- S1nith Stays Westgate Suit Peridirig \V illminh says the aC"CUsatioos are "despicably f11 lsc and blatantly irresponsible.'' !\1eanwhile. the 3heriff's of· ficc ·was taking steps ?i.tonday lo clear the jail of most of the 435 UF\V prot esters stil l there from last ~·eek's mass arres ts on invesligation of violating rourt orders r es I r i c Ii n g pi cketin g. SAN DIEGO (APJ -C. Arnholt Smith may remain as chairman of Westgate· California Co rp. pending trial of a Securities and Exchange Commission civil suit against lhc San Diego-based con· glomerate. a judge has ruled. li.'!any o! those in jail had been cited and released last Thursday for a first offcn~e but were jailed on second ar- rests Friday. They \\·ere to he released without charge on the second offense but ordfred to appear in court on the cita-I dent Nixon has denied SEC tion. Ass t. She riff Anrcrico a!lcgalions of v i o I a I in g Papaleo said. securities la1vs. The government commission UFW ORGA~lZER Ra yi accuses Smith, bu s i n e s s Huerta of Cho\\'Chil\a echoed a associates and related com· charge made by UF\V leader panies of scheming to defraud Cesa r Chave'l. Sunday that Wes tgate of about $20 mill ion. nine arrest<'d union n1embcrs The defendants got the money ~·ere forced to run a gaun tlet in loans from Unit ed States or officers and \\"Cre ·beaten National Bank, of wh ich Smit h and hosed Saturday. In a hearing Monday. U.S. District Court-Judge Leland Nielsen scheduled a pretrial hearing Oct. 1 and a trial date of Oct. 16. Smith, a multimillionaire in· dustrialist and friend of. Prcsi-- is controlling stockholder , and Huerta also charged that fictitiously listed it a s some jailed pickets had to \Vestgate profits, the suit sleep on concrete f Joor s alleges. 111ithout blan kets and others in ~~~~~~~~~-=-~~~~~~~~- Presenting the Centinela Bank Preferzred Account wherelJ ~lJs~ Centinela Stnk's PREFERRED ACCOUNT is a new concept In personal banking that glvn you a total package of banking services at lh• lowest rates in California. And, if you Sank..f>y·Mail, we pay the poslage bolh ways! Here's ho1r you gel 1 + 1 = 4 wtlh the PREFERRED ACCOUNT: When you open• Centinela Bank (1) Checking Account, plus {1) Master Ch1rge Account, you quality for (3) Automatic Reserve Accoi.int and {4) Check Guarantee C1rcL PREFERRED ~ , t®· • • CHECK ~ CHECKING -. GUARANTEE LJ ACCOUNT 0 'Cl" ' ' CARD 0 Opening your personal checking account is !ho first slep in gelling your PREFERRED ACCOUNT star1cd. 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MID·SUMMER VALUE General Jato Super 100 \ The 40,000 Mile General Calibrated " (Q)lUJ(R)lb=~~~lk ~~(Q)ll(R)lb •Steel belled pro1 ec11on against punctures •Radial ply construc110n Get •II lhe !.1c:s l'IOW about 1iie tcn<Je•: ,., £!<1 J" passen3er car Inc Gcl'leral has ever Miltle GOLF BALLS • Culle~s cove, • High tension winding • Energized cenler _--:: ...... $ 33 3-BALL PACK DON SWEDLUND GENERAL TIRE ----.. COAST G~ fttAl TIRE ... t<.l>d •• """" fl Ge,.t r11 I •It 585 WEST 19th ST .. COSTA MESA 646-5033 -540-5710. -7:30 to 6:00 Daily Sto•t1 Colfloe i.11 .. 1¥ 011ced •1 l..Oep111d•"t d•llt'1 d'IO"f'"f tro. o.,.. ... l lf"· ._ ___ Sooner or later, you'll own Generals ___ ...._ • D ARY PROT ·EDITORIAL PAGE An Unfortunate Step Jn forcing the Senate invesU~ating committee and \Vatergate special prosecutor Archibald Cox to resort to the subpoena procedure to obtain access to documents au<!llpes· pertlneni-to 1:be-ase, President-Nixon -has .. k-, en another unfortunate step that can only further erode public confidence in the White House. U, as his letter to the committee stated. the tapes of recOrded conversation$ in the Oval olfice do no more than confirm the truth of his previous statements on the Watergate matter, It is difficult to understand why he would be averse to .sharing this evidence with the com- mittee. His refusal to .. do so can only arouse suspicion that the tapes and documents contain adverse information which he seeks to conceal. Al best. it cac::t.~ further doubt'i on hi s earlier solemn !\latements of willin l!'ne~c; to make all efforts to uncover the trulh in Waterp:ate. · ·1n resoonrlin l? to the committee'$<; reriuei;;t. ror the evidence. the Pre<:i rlent. rlid not reoeat his e<1rlier int ima- tion that mattel"<i or n:tti('ln~I <:ecuritv miizht be contai nP.d therein. He now ma intain<: that. !'Orne of the rran1r and informll commenti;; on the tane<: could be mi<:internre.ted. Obvioui;lv oer«:oni;; who are tallrin~ freelv. without the knowled~e that their remarks are being recorded (a procedure in it<:elf H!el!al ror the re~t or u~ common citi- zens). would be inchned to speak tn an in.formal man- ner. The Presi dent's SUl?l?estion that men or the caliber and exoerience or tho<:e 0n tbe investij!'atinl! commit.tee would not mat..e atlow::ince ror this is in itself an indirect insult to their in'e"rit''· If nublic mic:intPmretation is indeed hii;; rear. surely the committee woulrl 11eTP,e to heJ1r the taned converi;ia- tioni;; in exArufive c:ec:c:i('ln ~nd ('ould bP. tn1c:fed to use reason•ble iurt"mPnt in f'P.1•P-"Hn"' the cnnfPnfs. At thiii: noint i11 thP. t:in,.lPff "4'f::iir fhf'l dic:rovPrv that evidenre P"l:idc: whirh "''O"ht rl•-Mf,t ~nd nl~ce in n4'MOP.C- tive the lhnuc:~nrlc: nf wn .. ric: nf te.;Hrinnv alrP::idv nre- sented. ic: of vit11 I imno.-t::inre. CnncPaJmPnt. or ~11rh evi- dence. were thii;; a rnurt or law, would be tantamount to obstruction or justice. The "separation of powers" argument simp!y does not wash in this instance. What is at issue here Is not the JlOW•r ol the presidency but the integrity ol the preS1dency or at least of kei-presidential aides. No President, includin~ Mr. Ni.xon, has ever abided by the principle of separation or P.!>wen when sharing information or decision·riiaklng with the Congress was in his own best interests. 11 the tapes are as Presldent Nixon describes them, there should be no reason why he cannot work out with the Senate committee a satisfactory way to provide the information the tapes contain without jeopardizing presi- dential immunity, separation of powers or security. ln the interests or the presidency and in the inter- ests of the nation we strongly urge the President to re- consider his stand on the matter. Officia l Heartwarmer Orange County Supervisors recently displayed be- lated magnaminity in agreeing to take onJy one-third of a crippled youth's insurance money to help pay his medi- cal bills. The teenager, pennanently paralyzed in a 1971 auto accident, had run up bills of $17,262, which were paid by the county's Crippled Children's Services Fund. When his insurance claim at last was settled the disabled youth received $19,000. His attorney sugge'sted the county. accep~ $6,000 o~ the money to help settle the account with Cnppled Children's Servites leaving the balance for his legal fees and a trust fund to help pay his future medical and schooling expenses. After first refusing the offer, the supervisors re- fl~cte~ and voted 3·1 to accept. But Supervisor Ralph D1ednch held out for no compromise, pointing out that if the youth were forced to go on welfare "lbe state pays 90 percent of welfare costs." . It all leads one to wonder what happens to some nunds and hearts on the rocky road to officialdom. • Documents Vital Dea1· Gloo1ny Gi1s Increase Co11ld Be SI0,000 a Year· In Nixon's'·Case WASHINGTON -The Ervin com- mittee's insistence on access to White / House papers reveals the central weakness ot the case so rar against President Nixon. Without f u r t he r docwneotation, the case against the Premleot may be in- ccmclusive. At the same time, however. the President'• refumtl 0 D constituijona) gaomlds to grant ac- c:em to White House f11N Clb be cited as a vital link ]D, the dlala-Gf drcumstan-_ ces incriminating the President In a .,.,......., Gf the Watergate break·ln and ~. tt.e1efore, ts not only a con- stitutional question but ls central to the final resolution or tl)e Watergate affair . rr HAS BEEN clearly Indicated by in- vesllptor• tn the Watergate case that John ·W. Dean's versim of t h e President's involvement i:s in Itself in.. sullldent. especlally as It stands, challenged both as to ctrtain details and in its general meaning. This cba1leiige wilt centinue with the testlmolly of former White House officials, John Ehrlldman and R.R. Haldeman. Con- linning ctreumstances may be .Uered by other witnesses. But the goneral outlook Is 11\at unless the committee ~n access to White Houle files , and ps even if it does, a CU>dusive interbn report cannot be written by the "Entin committee as it ends before September t'his phase of its investigation of the 1972 presidential campaigri. U that is the case, presidential guilt will remain unproved and there will be less certainly on the part oC anyone in- volved that a solution can be found in an impeachment proceedings or t b e •President's resignation. A MEF:rlNG between President Nixon and committee Chatnlitil · Sam 4. Ervin can easily end In a stalemate v.1Uch can-only be resolved In the courts, and perhaps not even there. The separa- tion oC powers is not conf'ined to Congress and the presidency, but lncludt!S the judiciary. A President who refused the demand$ of Congress as an invasfon of his constitutional power might con- ceivably resist an invasion by the judiciary -and that wou1d create a three-way · constitutiooal crisis. In the 1952 steel seizure case, the Supreme Court invalidated .by a 6 to 3 vote the seizure of steel companies by President Truman. Justice Hugo Black held for the majority that the President's power "must stem either from an act or Congress or from the Constitution itself." Cllief Justice Vinson, for the minority, declared there was no statute prohibiting seizure in this instance and the President acted within his constitutional authority. The Supreme Court prevailed over Presi- dent Truman. NIXON IS quite clearly at this moment not anticipating a conflict with the judiciary, but is acting in complete con- ndence thal the Supreme Court as now cof?Stituted will uphold "as it fllways has" what he deems to be his con- stitutional authority to deny access to CBS reached a new high in p~ gramming last week when they fol- lowed the Watergate broadcast with a commercial for Ringling Broth- ers Circus . .Now there's real con- tinuity ! C.F.M. O'-0111 -h •r. ~lrtM r, ....-rs ... • .., lltCl'UM11V r.flttt ,.,. ·-ot ""' ---· 5elMI ,_ "' _.,. M Qlooflly Gn. O•ltf l"llot. White House files. A . compromise by President Nixon \vhicb would allow Senate investigators free access to \Vhite House files seems unlikely, and a compromise on Ervin's part to accept only what he is given would not meet bis requirements. Ervin Is as confident that he will be upheld by the committee in his demand for the files as Nixon is confident the courts will uphold his right to deny them. W ltE prevails, the President will haYe added to his credibility problem when be firially presents to the American public. his full response to the Watergate in- vestigatiOn. lt can, and, no doubt \Viii. be said that in pretending to cooperate with the commtitee be withheld from it in- formation essential to a fmal judgment on the pretext of an ill-defmed doctrine called separation of powers. This is a case v:here the President will be damned U he does and damned U he doesn't. It would be a constructi.ve result if President Nixon and Chairman Ervin could \\'Ork out a formula in which the President's version or the Watergate af- fair ftould be presented to the committee in a manner satisfactory to both This would require a great deal or give on both sides, but the question of presiden- tial involvement is not likely to be settled until something like that happens. Tips on · Touring England Dear PrHident Nixoo : This being your "'Year of Europe," I thought I'd do my part and advance The Grand Tour you and Mrs. Nixon are planning for the fall. I do hope Or. Kissinger won't get sore. (Maybe yOU'd best tell hbn f'm In Paki- stan with a stomach ache.) But I'm sure you'll enjoy England. Yoo can't help but !eel rtgbt at home hett. Of counoe, In ywr ....,.,..tlen• with Prime Minister Heath, don't. for heaven's Sllke. bring up the subject of tcandals In government. Mr. Heath onJy recently survived one by lmmed.lately .,.ting a dean breast Gf the whole thing. But you know how sens!Uve lhe British are about scandals. INFLA110N'S al!o a vuy touchy sub- ..---•11 Geol'!Je ---. • Dear G<Orge: M, boa Slll'• l lhould join loll of clubl. I beloag to many sln<e he told me Iha!-like Lions, Moose, and all. l tttp hearing about a club with a lot ot 'COntracts ror buJiness. Where dots BOmelhin8 called ''The M•lla " meet! SALESMAN Doar Salesnan: Alo a Ks e tt waota to. ( ART HOPPE ) ject. Food prices hove sky-rocketed here in recent months. Currency devaluation is defiOitely taboo. The pound sterling of "'hlch the British have long been :>O ptoud ("~und as a pound," wM their motto l has been in a nose dive. I'd also avoid hi~hcr crime rotes, welfare foul-ups. racial strife and i.n- terfertng in other people's ctvll wars . 'l'llere's no point In offending Mr. Heath by bringing up his problems. But I'm sure you and he wtll find something to talk about. And if lhe silenc:e lasts more than an hour. you can always go slgbt.8eelng. LONDON'S o wooderful dly, cool, grey, exciting. And the English are so Vtrf polite. When the waiter serves you . be says, ''1bank you." Then when you say, "thank yoo ," he s.<1ys, "Thank you." for your "thank yoo." (It 's adviuble to have a couittJn8 1pell at this point to -IYOid prolondnl ~ convusatloo. l The Eng!Gtuiuin Is poUte, that Is, tmleu hi-ls encased in a car spee1llng down the left hand aide of the street ond you are stepp!OIJ oil the niri>. But l"'ll!lvc lhe touri111 a spor1ing chance, Loodon has now painted warning signs at pedcstrlnn crossings aaylng, "Look Right." Whtie this may not have lnaeased the number el tourisb comlng to London, It ccrtanly has increased the number who have gone home again. Dining out is also a must in London. I'd' hi~hly recommend an historic restaurant like Simpson'~lhe-Strand for a truly English meal. For, though the service ls adequate, the food is terrible. BUT THE BIG tourist attraction ls a visit Lo several dozen o( the 32,67:1 palaces. castles and noble eslates that nre open to the public at a stnall charge. In this rield, lhe Eiiglish are years ahead of u.s. Bi.It there's no reason you couldn't appty the principle to San Clemente. \Vhat you do is-charge tourists 50 cent s to enter the grD;UndS. Then you've got them. Next )'OU nick them an extta quarter to see the very room In which John Dean 111 got lhc axe. And rm .Nrt they'd pay another dollar to see the swimming pool beater, cabanas 1tnd nagpole erected At public expense eo that we Americans would know our Prts\ctcnt "'8.S warm, palld and American. And with lht: rtvenue, you could pay bock Mr. Apbllln ... Apple •.. Alban •.• You tnow, Bob. SO 1~1 SURE >'OU'll !ind your vi'lt to Ellgland not only pleasant but educa- tion& 1. 11lffl you can go on to the Cootlnent to talt to the GtrmaD!. the french. the Swiss or whomever atwt economics without fear of orrendln·' them . They don't hive any problems. But I think you11 ltave your heart Jn England. \\1e arid our British couslns have so much tn common. Fo one lhlng. we Y.'fll W war. Dl!ln't we? ' Congress Speeds Pay Hike WASHINGTON -Congreis can act speedily and decisively when it's of a mind to do so -like voting itself a hefty pay raise. You aren't aware or it because it was done so quietly and smoothly that it escaped public notice, but exactly such a pay hike is already halfway through Congress. The slick job "-as put over in the Sen- ate. \Vithout a word of explanation, debate or even a gesture to require a record- ed vote, the "upper chamber" \\'hipped throogh a bill lhat speeds up the existing procedure to grab off juicy pay boosts for members of C.On- gress, the federal judiciary. cabinet mem- bers and other high government officials. Strikingly illustrative of the dispatch and deftness with which the legislation was adopted is that Sen. Gale McGee, D.- Wyo., chairman of the committee that originated it, wasn't even on the Senate noor at the lime. He was in China as member of the Senate and House delegation jllllketing · there as guests of the Peking govem- menL THE "PHAl\'l'OM" measure is now pending in the House Post Office and Civil Service C.Onunittee, where its ex- peditious approval is certain. The ways are all greased for that. Rep. Thaddeus Dulski, D . • N , V . , chairma.n, is strongly for, it as is Rep. Morris Udall. 0.-Ariz., ranking com- mitteeman and one of the originators of the bill. The militant liberal and vociferous advocate of "congressional reform" spearheaded the drive last October, in the closing days of the session, for the appropriation that fi- nanced the nine-member pay advisory commission -whose report recom- mended the various pay raises. This report, submitted to President Nixon last month, bas not yet been made pubUc. INSIDE WORD Is that the hikes pro- posed In the report are as follows: --Members of. Congress -$53,125, a boost of.$10,625 a year from the present $42,500; up 2$ per cent. -Democratic and Republican leaders of the two chambers -$60,000, from the present $49.500. They also "-ould retain their cheulfeured limousines and extra large staffs. --Orief Justice of the Supreme Court -$72,500, from $62,500. Associate justices -$70,000, from $60.000. -Other federal judges -$50,000, from the present $40,000. -Cabinet members -$70,00>, from '80,000. -Heads of federal bureaus, com- Wick s (ROBERT S.ALLE~ missions and various oLher agencies and top Civil Service officia ls -$45,000, from present $36,000. Equivalent increases for thousands of other civil servants of lesser rank. It's a safe bet the House will do exactly as the Senate did and enact the pay 'legislation overwhelmingly. That's cer- tain; it can't miss. But there will be one big difference>- It . won't be done surrepUtiously · or circuitously. Seeing to that emphatically is Rep. H. R. Gross, Iowa, lop Republican member of the Post Office and Civil Service Com- mittee, who ·has vigorously opposed these ·"back door " pay boosts from their start in 1967.' He is determined to force both floor debate and a record vote. TIIERE WllL BE no sleight-of-hand whizzing-through act if he can help it - and the doughty and resourceful economy advocate knows how to prevent it. He is a master parliamentarian. Uncomfortable as it may be rar them, Gross is bent on seeing to ll t}\at every member of the House is pu&licly on ret'Ord on this pay legislation. His colleagues may. not like it, but he couldn't care less. The feisty lo\van already has won one round. He forced committee chairman Dulski to hold hearings on the measure. Dulski was all set to quietly bypass com- mittee consideration and take the Senate- pas.;ed bill directly to the House for rush approval there. Gross torpedoed that neat scheme by threatening public outcry. WISELY, Dulski backed down, v.·ell knowing that Gross meant exactly what he said and could and would make good on his warning. So hearings were called, and Gross is making the most of them in his admittedly uphill battle against tlie pay boost. "lf the reported Increases are ap- proved for already well-paid government officials." says Gross, "the effect upon wage schedules in the private sector will be quickly demonstraled. The Presi.dent can toss in the sponge on price ceilings and any other efforts he may make lo StoP Lhe s~aling inflation." All Great Religions Cite the Golden Rule -- lt's odd and depressing how ethnocen- tric most people are; they actually believe that the "Golden Rule" was in- vented and promulgated by Jesus;-and that the "superiority" of Christianity over other religions res ts upon a creed or maxim or this sort. They would be sur- prised to learn - and perhaps disbe- lieving -that the oldest recorded re- ligioos incorporated the "Calden Rule.' or that Jesus himself borrowed it from his Hebrew heritage ahd added not a jot or tittle to it. It is expressed this way in the New Testament: "AU things, whatsoever ye would that men 11bould do to you, do ye even so to them; for this Is Lhe law and the prophets." AND mtS WAY In the Old Testament of the Jews: "What is ·hurtM to yourself, do not to your felJow man. That is the whole or the Torah, and the remainder is but commentary." Buddhism puts It more briefly: "Hurt not others with that wh.lch pains yourself." In Islam It readJ : "No one of you is • believer Wltil he loves for his brother what he lovtS ror himself:-'' Confucianism telb1 us this : "J5 thert any one maxim which ought lo be acted upon throughtout one's whole life? Surely the maxim of lo\'lng klndnfss is such. Do not unto others what you would not they should do unw you." IUNDIUSM: "This ls the sum ol duty -do naught to others wttith If doOfl to 1hee w"'1'd c111use· thee pain." T~;nism (wh!~b carried this doct rine lo ~ ·h "X'r ,...~ {h81 th" )111~ w.;-r .. v .. t1.tt " •ty.i f'tt"'!'I In l'ITTf""" II) .,'"'f\jA "I('- ,. I\, 1Wtl I.I 1 rl rt refrain ! · 'h r~ such lnj111 y • •t ' W(' 111'• shni•ld .11 lnflicling upon a~ would appe1.r ~YDNEY J.HARJU~ undesirable to us if mnicted upon ourselves." HERE IS the formula of Sikhism: "As thou deemest thyself, so deem others. Then shalt though become a partner in heaven." ln Taoism, Lhe maxim reads: "Regard· your neighbors' gain as your own gain ; and your neighbors' loss as your own loss." Ancient Zoroastrianism places this foremost : "That nature only is good when it shall not do W\to another what- ever is not good for its own self." So. as we can see, all the great religions of the world have at least two things in common -the "Golden Rule," and the failure to practice it. . . DAILY PILOT Rober< N. Weed, Pub!Ullfr ThomOJ Keevil, Editor BorbofO Krtl!nch Editorial Page EdiU>r • Tut tditoi1al . ..pagt" of tlw! Daily Pilot &eeks to lnfonn and lllmu&at~ ~lldtrs by ~ on tWs i-.p diverw ·C"Ommtntu>' on topics Of in- lttt'SI. by ll)'ndtcatfd columnists and c.rtoonists. by provklinc a fonun tor rcadm' ~·· and by Jlf"tltntlnc lhlt newspr1t.per'1 oplniont and ~ .. on C'UTT'tnt topfa. The 1dUorlaJ opfnlorw of lhetf>aily Pilot lpp!tl" anly tn ttte • tditorial ~umn at the 10p of die palt. Opinlona t'.'f~ by the CCll- •mn:lsts and e~ and ktttr VTlttn arr thtir own and no~ mmt of thtlr Yll!'WS by the-Dalty PlkK th:lukl be lntf'rf'9d. . Tuesday, July 2A, 1973 l 0 w, ,. m je: cil "' pr cl> bo J I M he .. co th A1 Oi b\ of Y• th " C( " A B ~ L t< c A b F ~ " a ii c s F n • c <. 1: 11 ' F L ~ • ~ •i • • • 0 ,, ' '· J I 'i T H • ' • • • • H • • ' ~ • • -, I I • 0.\1 1. V PILOT Sea Search .Goes On Warning Issu ed For P~noni Penh B11rlo11s Pick Out . For Crash Victims Rorne Vi lla APEE'PB;-Tahitl i A:P1 ._... Officials of Pan Ainerican World Airways said today th~ search would go on for those missing after ono or its jetliners crashed In the Pa· cific, but alt but one of the 79 persons on board w e r e J?resumed dead. The airline said the dead In· eluded 36 Americans. Twel ve bod ies have been recovered. The lone survivor °"·as Jam es Ca n1pb e ll of 1'.1adawaska. Ont. 'I'he Papeete hospital said he was in satisfactory condition with contusions. bcstt'r;'S:ln·Juse;·Jtruu;·\,'Dlt~r···-.. ~-Bt'fare-ft'-trnshc& ITIIO tti~ - Na\Yrulh. Los Angeles : Lucille Si.'U. I ~a\1 a :-I'd na1 ~· ,: 1d t'll'n Olson , Richmond : E.:··t:-1.1ra I I S.11 ... -;1 c.:&~k in1> il.o i.o1ll."•nc 1 • Berke1ey: Llnda Rlssa Steinberg. Tiburon: Jamt'S c. breaking a ply\\'ood bottrd " Zapp and Ann Louise, Zapp. Pan An1 denied suggestions ~1ountaln View. lhal a defective windshield in The survi vor. Campbell. to'd the cockpit might have con· newsmen he heard a cracking tributed to the crash. It said a noise jtl!I before the trans-side panel window had been Pacific plane b~gan to go inspected for a der~t in do°"'"· Then he r".)und hilT'.sctf Papeete but it \v&& appro"ed iu the y,•aler. for fll r,ht and "C{)u\d In no way . "ALL I CAN r<'n1en1btr is that I was picked up by a fishing boat.'' he said . Then he Jost consciousness. be in\'olved in the accidenl." PILOT OF 707 Capt. Robert Ev1rts fol!owing tlkf'Off. ·· Pan An1 S..'l'd. VPIT ......... PURSER ON PLANE Rit1 Van BHICum · PliNO~t P1'~NH t UPI I - The. Brilish .. .and Australian c1nbass~s in Phnom Penh to- day urged 1he.ir nationals to lea\'e the Cambodh1.n capiH1l as air and ground nctiv11y stepped up against insurtient troops thrtatening the city. The leUtrs of notlfi<'3tlon . referring to the "un<'t'rt11in" St"CUrity situation i n s i d e Phnoln Penh, °"·ere in ttw form of ,.,an1ings rather t ha n orders. 'llley \l'ert similar to those issued to national~ o( :11 least six forC'1cn t-n1b.1ssits 111 ;\pril \\ hl.•11 st•\ rre ~round fightin11; flared JUSI OlllSlde the capital. wcrf' killed in a cha!lh 011ly 10 1nlles rro1n the. capil11L 1\ n1on1h ngo !he J11~n1·.;c . f'n1has\v nd\·ised its rcs1dt•111 na1ionnls lo len\'e, no11ng th .. 1 i( i'hnon1 Penh'li only nirport were overrun. escapt frorn thr capita l "·ou ld be difricuh In other developments. -South \'ie.tna1ncse /.101 ~rn­ rnl'nl authorities S\1s1x•11dcd thf' exchangl' of prl<;00t.•r:. 10- da y, l'lahnlng Co n1 rn u 111:. t 1roops chsguiscd a:> 1·111l1,1n« har:1 'l~ prlsonf"r... " h n wu nled tn rr1na111 on Jh\· gO\'l'mm<'nt sidl• RO~IE lL'J>J 1 -Elizabeth Taylor an d her husb11nd Rich :ird Burlon. rew1ited after a 17-day separation. have derld NI lo ~ up hous1•k(•tping for thi.• sun1mer iu u rented vi lht on Rome 's App1n11 \V1ty The Burtons, i11 Home for filn1lne separalt n1m·i<!'!il, spent 11 quiN weekend at !he-\'Illa ol Sopt\lll Laren and htr husbond . ~odu1't'r C11rlo Pont i. in tht' root Alban 111\ls alter their rf'- 111•io11 here Friday endt.>d tht1r briPf :!it•pnArlion. On•· 1ritr..ess ro Su11d;iy The airline. s<i id that among night's crash said the plane the 69 passengers were 28 turnccl to the left as .r.oon P.s it Am ericans ·who boarded the look off and then startft! going flight in Tahiti :ind four 1Yho down. Q(ficials i:aid the plane cllmbe:i lo <ibout 300 feet be- fore plunfing into the sea 90 SL'Conds aher tulfinl! of( for Los 11nr:clt.•s. II had co1nc !ron1 Auc kla nd, New Zcalafid. "THEHE WAS NO radio commu nicatjon •fro n1 th e pilot A fire! of pri\·;11e yachts and fishini,: boats ioint>d n;n•y tug!I and police laun~hcs in the sea rch for bodil.'S ll n d survivors. The airline s:iid lhc crash \1'as ils fL rs1 "'ith passenger lat.11itics since Dec. 12. 1968. °"'hen another Boeing 707 cr<1'!hrd In the ocean "'hile rn nldng a landing approrcch at 11111 i q u e t i a · airport in Yenczuela . All 42 persons aboard died. ~tilitar\' authornil's todin reported · hea\·~· fi/.thllng nnd intense. U.S. bornh1niz north and south of Phnon1 Penh and said roo Co n1nu111ist goldi rr.s -TI1t' \'11·1 Con1: :'>lld ttw.l:i~ tht• Soulh \'i<'ltW1111e«e go\'('rn- llll'nl kept cJ3unin1J, thcre "·err secret lalks in l'or1s bt•l\\·een thl' l\\'11 sides, but th:it all such reports \\'l'r~ untrue. "P.\•r rvthine-i"I fin,. 00\f." \'1•11 Ynrk Jll.tblic rrlntlont m~n .lnhn Spri nr:rr said. He s<1id thl' Rurl on~ proh:ibl v 1roulrl 1nove in four or fi\'t' d11y~ inlo ont' of thf-eleg:int nnd fl't lud- f'd \'i!las tha! line th1~ rro1l lha1 (:J<'l!il r's legions look on the \I ll~· to the 11 :irs. boarded in Nell' Zca!ar.d. Four 1- o! the 10 crew n1e1nf>ers also were Americans. ONE OF THE dl•ad was 23-1 year~ld Geoff Perry, one of the world's top six motorcycle racers. He was en route to compete at Onlarlo, Calif. ~le recently took first place at an Atl anta, Ga .. mee t. Among !he 1nissing \l'as Beryl Hillman of N e 11· I Zealand, who w:is en route to I join her husband. Ste\'lard , in Los Angeles at a n in-' temaUonal conference of the Christian Booksell e r s' AssociatW.n. He manages a book center In Auckl and. I A FAM IL l' ot six from Hill!lborough, an exch1~i\'e Sa n I Francisco Penins ula suburb. were killed. John A. Nelson , 44, an I automobile dcalt·r. \'las return- ing with his 1\-'ite rind four 1 children fron1 a · IY.'O·l'll.'C k South Pacific vacation. Nelson had con1e to the San Francisco Bay area from his native Detroit seven years ago with his French·born 1vife Christhlnne. 41 . and thelr l children Philippe, IS. J>atrick , 13, Olrislopher, 12, and NIC{)le. IO. I OTHER CALIFORNIANS believed dead included r..1rs. Jenell Bower, V en tu r a : Richard Goe, Camarillo : Ilse Leman, Loo Gatos; r..1etedith Arnericans In Crasli Listed PAPEETE, T.tl'lllJ IA.Pl -P1n Amt"c"n \r~rla Alr,,.i.,.,, •Ill• lu!H!U '"~ fooowing Ii~! 01 Am•rfcdn1 wnt l>W•d· .a ;;r f-,tpeel~ 1~ p11nw tf\tll C<I••"" 5UnclJV 11111111 on 1hf. ...... I. Edn• Arm1u0tt11. ,..asl!lnolon, 0.1.,. J. Mrs. Jo~<I Bower, ,,.. H1nHn 1101 Sunnv<.r1sl Venlura, C1IU. J. Mn. Jeanie Brill, ,,.. llovl>lr, bor" Rlcllmona. YI., no P<IHnl Ill· ar ... DIYlfl. 4. MaNln Cote1. W11llll'IQton, o.c.. l. A1ron Gtrih~oll. Paw!IKktl, R.L. 6. MrL Mar·' Gt<$n~on, Mme i>Cl• dfttl. 1, Jlkf\tlrd GM, 12' LI CrtKlflll Or1v1, "'""'•rollo. lallt, 1. Paul H11~~ .. a u.~. n11lon11, llvln~ In P1r1 .. 9, llH 1...1m1n, 2ll31 DHrll1!d Ra., LM G1!os. Call! lD. Meredl.n les111, ll4f Trebol St .• Si n JOM., C..ii1. 11. J1r1e·1 ll•ton Ne"' Yo•• cu~. ll. Trtoma• McWOl!lf), U.S. PIUPDr1 HO. 1513-<olll n~ .i~ar1u given. lJ, Theme• R•Vmllnd McWttRIY. ,, Sue McW1en1v. hOUHWlll . I~. Edward MerDul1, m1n11111m1n1 CM!Ullanl Powell, Ohio. 16. N1nc1 MarQuls, s1m1 1aareu. !I. JOl'ln Me>'Qul•, c.rlmh: 1111t!neer. Tawton, Ma. II, Hans Waller N1wruth, 1J5 kulh H1rttora. LD1 Ar19e1e1. lt. Phlllai» Nel1<1n, 21, born Dtlrolt, Mich., 1!..0.nl, ~611 F1!rw1, Clrcl1 MUia. HUl!l>DfDU't~. •:~Ill. :io. Pa!dtk Ntlscn, n, 1tud1nl, wm1 ld21'j~n NtltM . ._, l>Drn betroll, 1uta Cle1llr, ,,.,,.,.. ·~~,., 21, Chrls1.111< t.l~lson . .i, umt 1d clreu. 21. ~lc~I• N•han lt •llTl'I 1dclr1,., '" ChrlllOl>lle• Neilan, 11, 11mc 1(1. clrtn. ~-L\'('lle ,,,,.,. 1•1r~•• U.U T1r1 Hiiis Orlv1. Rkhmond, Calif. 1'. Ktt111elh Olvn, 1jllttm1n, 11,,... 1ddre1!. 11. 81rblr1 Sir, •I POP11r SI., llerktlt r,, <.a11 •. 11. L ndl Rll'•' S~eln~"ll. ft1(hlr, SJ4 Comstock. r;1111r0fl, CtUI. 2'. J1rr•• · ltan. m11rk1l!no /l'lolnaqer, 1701 Dale A~f., Mount1!" VI~~· ... C,,~11i..wl~e 71~~. Pt" A,.,.rlcan 1,....,1,"'" · •M•t ~i! t crt w m 1m1>er. ,,,,... addre1o1;. Iti~n l'JJ~ m~T®!mm Wiii ElTIA MONEY IN YOUR SPAil TIME FOR YOURIW 01 AS WAYS AllD llWIS CHAlllWI FOi YOUR CUii OR ORWlll.lTION THIS COMllll HOLIAY SWOlt Miki pl1ns now to setl ,,,..inted CHRISTllAS CARIJS from alb\lms sent to you flllotdw11. Friends. rel1trm 1nd nolthf>orl all buy ClllllSlllAS CUil Tako ldvantal' of this enr, frlllllly llll' to'"" _ ... _,, .. l""fOlllllflJ!loft. WrHt O<,..,. now ID mMYt ,.., rm '""""· MAJESTIC lllPlllNTS I 113 l Ill All* St, "tlfl.D·ll lal ........ Ca.12 """' 121J> m.2214 I • ------ • The Bank of orma announces ... ' • FREE mercl1andise certificate ... good for $}0 toward the purchase of any merchandise in the•....t:A:£c£clJ/. recreational catalog! Just for opening an account (or adding to an existing savings account). ' 00 ,...r ake your Jl.ick fr(1n1 tJ\ 1·1 1.'.!t•i 11·1 r1 ·a1io nal and 1 a111 11i11~ it1·n1 ... 'rlu·re·.., so met hi n~ (or l'VC 1~·01 11, 11 hn 101 l ''> r I u· 1111tde1111 ..... t run 1 fi ,fi i n.~ ;.1111 I 1 ;11 11 p - i nK l"<JUip111cnl tO hi kin~· iLtHl hac kJHH k i 1 1~ "l lJl\ll it·"· C:l11lh iTl).! il tltl al tt'""Or it•" 1114>~ 1\11yd1ing; y<111 111•t•(t to 1;1\..(· 0111l 11· Ll 11ill vn1,:l· of !lit' 11111do11r ... (11 .. 1 cu 1111· i11 to till\' 11tfict• ol ·r h1• l~anl. ot c:.dit1)fll ia ;111tl !Jllt'Tl a t hl'( king' or ""\ 111).:" .it ttu1111. lu1· 0111\· S~tXI o r 111n1L·. ()r :uld rlia1 llluLh lt l ~t 1t 11 pl't'"t·11 1 "il\'i11g .. ;1('{'('1\l lll. \\'l''ll ~i\'t' \'OU lhl' cu lorl1il i·.dd il' l\a111·r r1 ·t·r1 •;1!io11al ca1alo)!. 1\11 cl a nit·;-<. ha ndl ~t' t l·r t i iiruh • ".( ,;., h SI (J 1 O\\ 111 d t lu• JU 1 r< h:'"' · ot a 11v n H ·rel! 11111 l i .:.,. in lh<" ru1ah1~ (or ut thl! E.<.ld i1· llau1·r -"lnl't'" i11 ..... (·,1 11 11· 111 :"">;111 l·1a1u i"l'(l ). (:l·r1tti1 alt'" l11nitetl 10 C)lll' J>t'r indi,·iduoil ar11111 111. '.°'1<1 lake ild\·J 11 !<1~l' 11f tHlr (;l't'a l ()u tt\t)(JI'" (;j\'t•-;11•1t\·. l\11 1 hurry. ·rhf' 11lt1·r i~ ~CM><l~1 nly until J\ug u .. 1 :II. 1'17'\. Free for the aski11g! ,\ ct•lf,rful CO J>Y of 1hc f:tl(lic Hal1er recreational ca1al,>g (,,·f1ilc .'lllf>JJ l~· las1 ~J. 14 ·1 pages Jlackcd '''i1h a huge sc lcc1i1>n of cxcicing 11tltlloor rccrca1io11al c<111i1>mc11t . ·~ The Bank of California ... @We make banking eaS)~ 1401 Dove Streeti Newport Place,·Newport Beach , California 92660 (714) 833-3511-· Warren P. Thompson, Vice President and Manager • . ' ----- -. It DAILV PILOT Tutsday, July 24, 1973 'QUEENIE -1-"t l-f 0 r;;,,s F_..,:-,.o.,._ koo., 1•1•. w,..w tqh., _...d. j~lb~l.~n·t like lo se~1n iek y-pi cky stingy. but !hat's n1y L. ltl. Boyd Wife Now Worth \ $235.40 a Weel\: Q ... \Vhal proportion of the divorces in this countrv arc· granted for adul\.ery?" • A. Just a fraci'lOnJof a single percent. f\·lost injuries on the foo!ball field occur right at the st;irt of the second half. Players' bodies lighten up dilrjng the halftime inHctivity, that's \vh y. Or so one traincfJ.con-) tends. " Q. '·\Vitt the IRS lei n1e deduct the cost of a surgical nose job?" A. So J'rn told . Client says name the one sporting C\'ent in v.•hich there's no betting. Must be bullfighting. no? \Vail. Sporting event? Q. "Why isn't beer put into square bottles to save space?" A. Such bottles are too weak al I he corners to hold the pressure. , HOUSEWIFE -Every year the Chase Manhattan Bank of New York reckons how much money a hou sewife woold earn if she "'ere paid a composite salary for all her chores at t'Urrent wage scales. Call her a nursemaid, di sh- washer., ~ietitian, cook, laundress, practical nurse, main- tenance man, gardener. food buyer. housekeeper hnd seam· stress. 1)\is year's ca lcu lations, says Chase, shou ld credit her for f.~.40 per week. Those' statisticians \\•ho dally in crime figures rea:ntly ca me up 1 with another simple finding. An uncommonly large peroentage of ju venile delinquents, they say, were bed\vetters until a later age than usual. Young lady, what do you do on thoS{' occasions when you find it difficult to get to sleep at nighi? The Empress of Russia. Catherine II ordered somebody to brush her hair until she dozed ,off. fo.1ighl try that. List wai~rs also among those professional folk who mostly appear to ht' immune to seasickness. I 1\i5XICO -You've read all about Europe's dark ages. Nobody knew oothing about nothing. So what was going on in Mexico then? Plenty. The Tolrecs came forth \vith a31ron- omy. They dreamed up a calendar somewhat more accu- rate than any the Clreeks or the Romans devised. Thev put together a \\'ritten language. And they discovered the. zero sys tem way before it was realized in India. Got that. Anglo? Good. · Autopsies are n1anrlatory after deaths in Soviet hos· pitals. Hereabouts. onJ.v ~e out of every five draths is followed by a postn1orten1 di ssection. No. 1\·on't d\\'Cll on 1his, please don't sco1\•I. Point is mrrclv that son1e doc- tors think Soviet mcdic::il research 11·iJI 'read to far n1ore sig nificant findings as a rC'sult of the foregoing . Possibly so. Address 1na1l ru /.. ,I/. IJoyfl. P.O. Bo.t: 1875, Nelu· port Beach. Calif. 92660 JCPenney Presents KONICA Fully Automatic SLR Cameras DEMO SPECIAL! AUTO REFLEX -A CAMERA I I I I e 52mm f/1.8 lens • Lens lnterchange- •bility • Fully Automatic E:icposure Control $17995 ,:, I .• FACTORY DEMO Thurs., In Camera Dept. Fri., Sal .. July 26, 27, 28 11 e.m. to 7 p.m. JCPenney We know whit you're looking for , FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY N•wport Be1ch • Telephone E1nploye Acq11itte(l S1\N· Rl\Fl\EJ, 1,\l'1 -f\ ronn<·r l'ac:ifit: T t' I t· p h o n c cn1ployf·. att·uSt'il or t:;.ill1ng 111 a bon1b rh rr·a1 rn 1hf· c:on1 pan~· has been fo1u1d u1nrx'1•n1 111 a tr i11 I in which \'oicrprint~ \~'err rult:d unat<:cptabl·' it.~ 1·\i· lh•fltC Str1>hrn r Chapu·r 2fl. gr1n- n1·d broudlv :ind P1 nbrat•t'<I his \l'lf(' :'\1orictav Mft1'r i\·\<Jn tl Counly Superior Courl .Judgt J~ \\';1rrl'n :'\lc(;u1rl' rl•ad his \'l'rdit:t. Tl!Ent.: \VAS no 1ur~' in the 1rint. llunng the tri'-11. Lt. Ernest N.'.lsh 91 th1· \Ochigan S!~tr l'olic1·. identi fied 01s :.i top vui<:t:prin1 or· sp1•c1rogr11ph (•JC - pcrt. selccied• C'h;tpter's voiC:l' fro1n four n.1cot•clings. Trstirnon v disclosed that Chapt l·1· l\'1;s lhc ouly t'n1ployt.· to refuse lo have a satnple ol his \•oice nu1de ;1ftcr lhe F'cb. 1. 1972 lhrcat. It disclosed . ho\re\•er, that a recording of his voice \Vas later 1nade ll'ilhout Chapter's knQwll'dgc. the judge refused to admit the \'Oiceprints as evidence 111 the trial. Danger of Cancer Cited In Sexual Intercourse • For \Veck cudc 1· Advc1·1jsiug Phone 6424:~21 SALZ!l!IH(;, Austri a ! UPI I -A Finnish scientist says sexual 1nti:rcoursc n1ay n1nke MilllC 11·vn1cn susceptible to ('Crvic:a l c:anct:r. t11a1 ('an infLhratc cer\•icat ce lls and take over lhe genetic 111;1cliinery uf the cells to nuike thc1n rn:i !i~nan\," he ~ai d. .s.Ludy .in \vhich.he. look "Pap.'.' ····-··:c· c:·cc-=~~·-~-~-~-·~-~='=========== smears or 1,000 "'omen at -- Dr. P!!nt11 Lcppaluo to uf lhc Lal.loratory of Cuncer Soc·ie ty :ll Tampere. Finland suid a post-intercourse niix of sperm and vagina l fluid can al ler lhc ua 1ute of the b a c t e r i a normally iii lhc vag111a. "1'111:: Nt:\V for n1 of b<.1<- lcr1al flora f'll<11· h a v t' HSSUCH.tlcd 11 i1h If ;111 or~al\l.!.JTI Lcppaluoto sa id he hoped sl'it>nt1sts can b1u!d into future t·ontrac:epuves 11 \\'ay to pre- \Cnt this bnt·1erial s11 i1S:hover. He n1ade hi s remarks at a F.uropc:in l"OJ1fer:.-nce on rylology Clnd cancer prc\•en- 111in <illended hy more than 300 ~c1i:nt1sts fron1 38 nations. LEl'PALUIJTO dt.•scriUcd a vorious times 1u rt c r in- tercourse. He reported finding altered bacteria lmo"'n a s haemophilus -present more . often in sn1ears IHken soon after interroursc than smears taken later. Frequently linked v.• i t h haemophilus . Leppaluoto said. <ire or g a n 1 s m s called mycopl asmas. ,.,.hich ran in- vade cervical cells and induce gcneuc chang~s that s1>ur rnalignant grO\\'\h. B1·01v1a THl'!/Ct LEPPl\LUOTO said 1 It cl ;·dter<itions in vaginf11 brC1i:ri<1 1vt."re not coused by infection from the male. Scl1111itz Has Eye 011 State Po st Bacteri~l changes. ht: ii;ud, did not <1!\1·nys take plnc:c [ after intercourse and the: ii\1•i1cho\'Cl' was on!y 1crn ·1 porary. "But during the nltercd stale women mav be 1nore vl.llni?tabfe, 1' he sa.id . Capitol News Ser\'ice IJcpPe.iuoto said this could faces possible opposition from 'explai\)· 11'/J~( virgins , appear S t a le Corporations · Corti-betler prot~ted a·gbiJ)S I mi ssioner &fian · Veo Camp cervical · cancer than othCr Wholleeds You1 A lot of people ueed ;<><<. Aud. 1hey ~>d you righr ''°""~ Thl"rt•• ill 1<iil"I .-d lnr t1t1dli5¥d IJENTA.l Tl:CHNICIAN~. Learn it righ1! . ~OlJLht'rn (..,lifon1i.t Cnnt-gf' of "'ediri'll & 0.-.11.tl CN~ '~'"'~ .. ~r"ll"n' , nur'"4!~ lot Ol:NTAI. TF.CHNICIANS. Ynw !Jl'I ... 1r,.•th 111ofe~~1011 .. 1 ""1r"~"1 ,in •M:•11>9 c:.1rf'n 1t11 1~ lk-ntal fit•lti! Le<lrn it fasl! 1 h 1~ ",, ·,..,.11(Jf"''"'r' ''~""''· L 1.1n11111•d wllh rl'll~ ;°""- '"''Hi•ll. y.,,,·,~ l•""Jlll <1t11• 1.11• l;,Jl\11"ntl-i,1• t\n.!l ~ 9'0 Wt U.!lfk -1 •• ~1· ' LcC1r11 it now! CALL 635·3450 lln ii 1i!tht ui>"'! Vvu'11 g4'f n!Ori' lnfon1i.11 ii!M -a1i<l ....,, ,-i:itii'I di~rv~er j11s1 how"'""'' petitil~ really do need you! J>LA CEM[NT AS~IST1\NCE FOH (,KADlJATES AT NO J:XT RA COST!.N1'1l0VED FOB vt"'Jl:RANS. SOlJfHERN CALIFORNIA COUEGE OF MEDICAL & DENTAL CAREERS 1717 SOUTH BROOKHLIRST,ANAHEl.'<I 635.3450 SACRA~1Ef\'TO -1'he lure of the pol ilical life has once again caught hold of John G. Sc hmitz, formr r California and ~1ike Montgon1ery. a women. I South Pasadena · cit y coun-ll~;,---;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;-;;;;;;;;;; ______ .;-;.,.'"-~••;...-m;;;;;;;;;o;;;•------, S tate Senator and llE SA ID ~ash ·s 1den· Congressman , and 19 72 cdn1an. Among the Dcinocrats "·ho have expressed intCrest ure Senator Alan Short ID- Stockton l and Assemblywoman ~1arch K: .. HAMS Fong tl),Qakland). ;.So Good ... It \Viii I/a unt You 'Til Its Gone." SPEtlAl TIO~ WEEK _ .. _ --- OUR DELICIOUS Malle from our HOl'OY llkt4 H•m : HAM SPREAD .. . 79~ tification of Chapter \vas "not presidential candidate \\•ho reliable in thi s particular received rnore votes than case" because of niistakes in an~·one except Richard Nixon p r c pa r a t i on s ~f tbe and George r.-tcGovern. voiceprints. ··-fa i l u r c to A John Birch Republican as detcrznine th e existence of a congress man. Schmitz took such errors. listening erro~ in the mant le nf !he> An1crica n court. and',' ~ pre v i 0 u 5 lndependc111 Parr.v r r o 111 voice printt 'm\sidcntification. The lrial lasfcd\ix daj''S. ( J As former natio nal office seeker. S::hmi!z must be ;1 \varf' t>f some bard politicial realities. Hi s total vote in the Presidential election wa s under one niilliop . and he go( • R;ady_t_o-Ser~ve with Honey 'n Spice Gliz~ about 2.7 ptrt1•1\I of the Califorrlia t;ill y. " .,:(-~ • Spiral Sliced From Top to Bottom ."if•irol Slice<l \V/1ole '"' ll<rlf _ch,pter. Mio losr hls .-)ob . 'NEWS ANALYSIS 11•1th the ~'1q~~y · ·~ft~r th~~ . _ \Vhcn Jerry 13rO\Vn r;in for • We Package· arid Sh ip from bomb threat ~rresfl will at- . 1.j;'mpt to g'iln fe\nstafeznent in George \Yallace. whose 11\is tnsfaijer-repai~n posi-'Political hopes fcrr 1972 had Lion, Cl\O.Ptcr rs att.Qrncy: said been crippled by an assassin's <itter the 1verdlc1 . • • bullet that left the Alabama :-;ccretary of state in 1970, he Coast to Coast galhercd 3.234.788 votes com-• _FuU Service Delicatessen pared lo runncr·up James • Imported Cheese5 ·and Wines F'lourooy"s 2.92/i.613. Perhaps e Catering· -·A Speciality prophe1ically. r\JP candidate I '.f";":' ~·· J700 E. co,••,• "•''•'"",'·,c, .. ,ona de,I M,"' -, 61].,000 Thomas ~·I. Gooc!IO\\' rccei\'cd 'I' ioc ~1 • rown' ., auran Situation Doesn't Sit Well FORTALEZA. Brazil ! UPI l -City councilmnn Demetrio carneiro asked the state labor ministry to Order big-city employers to permit depart· nlent store women sales clerks to sit at work -lo prevent thei_r beooi:ning sexually ex- cited. Ca rneiro said, women \\'ho stand all day a{ Wor} become sexually excited anct 'also tend to suffei-from spinal an'~ leg ailments. }le said he wants employers in cities of HI0.000 or n1ore population to provide chairs for women clerks. Labor minist ry officials said the y were mystified b y Carneiro's request. Covemor's body paral~rzcd as well. Schmitz fa·iJed to capture the imagination of The AlP. lack- ing lhe national stature and gut-level charisma of \\'allace. Al P convention people clain1 thnt unofficial envo.vs from the Nixon Admin istration tried to get \Vallacc to run anyway. 144.838 in tha1 r;;it:t'. beating ~'7-:::::::~~==~~1~2~':' :':· ~··:··~'~'~"~"~· ~·':':•~ll-~R~•=::-~·~··~"~';·~=~~·~35~·2~4~6~1 ~,I only Peace> and Freedom 1-,-------~-- standard-l>C'nrer JsraC'I FcuC'r. \lhO got 110.tll4. -----------.. Schmitz has now rejoined the Rep u b I i c a n Party "because of a desire to rejoin the political mainstream and because of internal dissension in the California American independent P a r t 'y . ' • ac- cording to.a news release . THOUGll IT llAS not Ileen officiall y announced. Schmitz, currently teaching at Santa Ana C-Ollege. has his eye on the Secretary of State's job. Present occupant of that post. Edmund G. Bro""n Jr .. is seeking s~ in t h e •Go\'ernor's office. .\ Schmitz spokesman in- dicated that Democrat BrO\\'n 1nay he Schmitz's be st target since. he is expected to gi 1'e up the post in quest of the stale house. \Vit hin the GOP. Schn1111 ~ll 1\11TZ'S SPOKE'.S;\IA:'\\ notes that the fvrn1er ('11ll· grt·~sm:in "h:is n"l l:i<;t loo many '' contrtlc:t~ \1i1hin the llepublican Party ;ind that an.v oppooihon to hi1n no \V "migh!'\'C been !here hrfore He's a rather o:inlroversinl l fe1!01v ." · f He did arise a few ha ckles in the party 11·hile in Congres~. I speaking out in oppo~ition to I the president on occasions. Schn1itz began the long road I back to political life recently in S11cra1nenlo. 1\'hcre he was I feted by the Superior Califor· nia Chapter of the friends of l John G. Schmitz. It docs nol require a cryslnl1 ball to see that Schn1itz "'ill ' run into trouble "'i th the ! California llepublican P11rt~"s treasury "'hich. his spokcsn1an l readily ;idmits, is just now gelli ng into the black. "The Comrni nec to He -Elect the Presi dent has all the n1onev." he quipped. · -------_____ , JULY 27-AUG.5, 1973 ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER ALL AIR CONDITIONED • SEE I. .. THE ONLY MAJOR FLOWER AND GARDEN SHOW IN SOUTHERN CALIFOR NIA FEATURING FOR THE FIRST TIME ANYWHERE "FLOWER MAGIC OF THE TROPICS " .•.. AN ANIMATED FLORAL SPECTACULAR SEE I ... THE VERY LATEST INNOVATIONS fOR THE HOME & GARDEN WITH OVER 135,000 SO. FT. OF GLITTERING EXHIBITS SHOW HOURS, 5·11 P. M. Weekdoys • Noon -11 P. M. Saturdays Noan·9 P. M. Sundays ADULTS s2.00 • JUNIORS sl.00 (children under l2 fr•• with parents) Try Jac~'s 'Phase #5'. RECIP ., for ·~RED . ING! 1. Stir in one Mini-Max program of exercise and nutritional guidance. 2. Add our Fig ure Fitness Spas for Men a nd Lu xurious Figure Control Salons for Women. 3. Mix one frosty, cool and delig htful Swimming Pool. 4. A splash of our Hydro Whirlpool. 5. up in our Steam It all . adds up to a pretty I sweet deal. Our Special Pre-Opening Offer lakes Ille cake! DON'T DELAY CALL OR COME IN TODAY 979-4800 . NOW SERVING COSTA MESA SANTA ANA COMMUNITY. » ic •• '· ·-·z lo !~ •• ia 1" •• -~ i~ lz ,. Enro11 now at our conslrucllon 11te 1raller and Slve durl~ Ph1se 15, Open 1111 10 P.M. for your convenltnot. r JACK lA ANNf 'S t((~nfi"a" HEALTH SPAS Ovar OUTH BRISTOL Construction site at corner Bristol and MacA11hur T AND FINEST CHAIN OF ttEALTH SPAS FOR MEN AND WOMEN. co11t to coa11. Owned end o f~ted by Hea1ttl lnduslrle1, Inc, • ' " p ' ,, II h Ii h ~ I' c h " ( II • ( ti d d n jl y b ( u 1• ' t • r s • y ,. v t • h ( t· f ~ ~ \ ' t I ' ' • , l ( ' i , ( t ( i TV Moves Into Court Testiinony Capitol News Service SACRAi\1 ENTO -You've seen the tactic used a hundred tin1es in lelC'\'ision or movie prtsentation!l; or c r i mi n a I court proceedings. "lsn'I it true lhen, Mrs. DaggeN 'Orth. that yr,u diSL'O\'f'rCd your husband's infidelity and. in a lit of jea.IOlLc;y plotted to kill him'!'' the prosecu tor need!~. !\lrs. Oagger\\'Orth begins to !1vitch. .. \'our honor. I obje<'.I!" cries he defense attorney, leapi g lo his feet. " stained ,'' the judge in- ion s. "The clerk 1vi1l st rike THE LAW the question fro in the rerord and the jury will disregard it.'' Or son1ething like that. ~1ean"•hile everyone know s that the jury can't ··-simply disregard the question or the defendant's reaction as if it never happened. You don't just edit people's brains like ~·ou edit video tap!':. BUT YOU CAN, indeed, edit \'ideo tape -iind it has become a gro'A'ing trend in California and other states to use taped depositions and testimony in cases where ~·itnesses cannot conveniently be present for trial. In one case in l..o.~ Angeles, a defense 'A'il ness in1a medical malpractice trial has taped h i~ S\\'Orn tcstin1on.v. a lhree-and- a-ha\f hour dePosition which \rill be inserted int.o the trial \\•hen ii reaches the point where he "'oukl have been tailed in person. Due to a prev iously scheclul - l!<l trip. the "'ilness would ha ve suffered a serious in- conYcnience had he been made lo appear in person. Assistant Presiding Judce Robert A. Wenke or the L.A. County Superior Court suggested that if all could agree to prepare a \1ideo taped deposition, sworn statements by the doctor with both plainlifr and defenst. lawyen partici pating, such evidence could be admitted in a U:ial. "'l'HJS CASE presented an opportunity to use this process advantageously,. and Judge Wenke, the parties to the ac- tion and the lawyer• have cooperated in anothe r test of what may become a valuable judicial tool ." Presiding Judge Alfred J. ~1cCourtney said. The J6l·judge court is recognized as a leader in judicial innovations to tht ex- tent that vidoo tape may well become an established part of its process. Juries may more often be seeing the 21-inch television set on the witnes11 chair· -as in the current malprac tice trial -a n d smaller 5elS for the judge's bench and the counsel table. 1bc whole scene \Vith the imaginary Mrs. Daggerv,.orth can be stricken from the tape, guaranteeing that the question and ii! aMwer are disregard- ed and saving the court's time as well. JUDGE McCOURTNEY says he welcomes the OJ>- , ,I portunity "to exan1ine lhe 1 ___________ _ utility of videotape testimony in trials" and in "using lhe scientific miracle., of the twentieth century" as long as justice for all parties can be assured. An Ohio court equiva lent to our California P..1unicipa\ Court recently l'Onducted an ex- perbnent "'~re all of the pro- ceedings in a trial were \'ideo taped ~·ithoul a jury being present. A ju ry was then im- pantled, heard li \'e opening argument!, saw and heard the video tape of the trial and closing arguments. They then deliberated _and returned a vetdict: Since that experiment. the: Ohio courl has put into opera· lion a 1rir1 I sys tem in which the only live parts are the opening and c lo s ing arguments. • JAl\1ES W. \VIUTE, presi- dent or a Southern California finn which has been making the taped deJX>sitloR! for the past ft>w years . says the use of video tape for introduction of evidence has been on lhe in-' crease, especially in the last year. His firm has mAde 28 depositions OYel" an ap- proximately 3-year period, 15 or them since March, 1973. The ''ideo lape camera operates in normal light, \Yhite sar~. 8nd one~ ma~ can harialc Ilic whOle systciil. Although the Jen. Is usually fcicUsed on the wllne.ss, just as he would appear on the st8nd to a jury, the can1era follows the normal cou1'3e or action throughou t the deposillon. going lo exhlb\l.11 or showing that the witness is ob!erving \\'hatever demonstration ht is being dirttted to. Girls Hired As Tijuan,a Policeme11 TIJUANA. Mexico (AP) In order to quell touri!lt com· plaint! about bribes, 'njuana fired one-third ol the city's 62'}.man police force and is replacing_ ,som.e of ' tlme with pretty po11cewomen. The sit: women already on lraffic duty at the ·U.S. hl>nJ.,. u.!lually v.•arn rootoriSt.!I about traffic vlolation's inttead of issuing tickets .. In . event Of problems, they ~ waltie- talkie.!I to summon.help . Chief of Police Emtito Vi!· caino Garrido said tM coin· plainl3: of Americans l\ave fallen off sharply 1ltrce tbe first young wnmen of!iCtrl \\'ere assirined in April. Among them is Olivt• Rodriguez, 19. who l\'ill &iv@ tickets 10 motori!t.s w h o become nasty after violathta the law. But MiS.!1 Rodrigue!.deliven only warnings in 1T101t cases. And slit direct. tralllc with !~thor!t!li•• bias'!_ -or her "'!llstle. . _ Another 1i1 policewomen. wearing maroon and blact slacks out.fits, are in tralnina. The flrls are proving "as good at l)lelr job& 11 the men,'' says Vizcaino. Since the la11t ma.u dismissals last 11?£.lng, he sakl, only five. m~ on police traffic duty have been !ired !or ooUclting bribe.I. Natural Menthol Blend (meallS' naturally fresh taste) . Salem's unique blend features natural menthol. not the kind made in labora- tciriH. like our · supe<b tobaccos. oor menthol is naturally grov-;n. You'll get a taste that's not harsh or hot. .. a taste as naturally cool and fresh as Springtime. • • • Cl ••ti •.J •r••0..01 !0••C(0(0. ' Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined Thlt lligarrne Smoking Is Dangerous 10 Your Health. • 19 mg."ta<". 1.3 mg. n~otin1 IV. per cigmne. FTC Repo~ FEB. 'IJ~ DA IL V PrLOT 9 • Big Task ,4 ivaiti11g Solons .. -~ - Capitol Nt'WS Sen lt't SA('RA~ll-~!\'TO -Jo'alt('ring no-fault 1nsuranee, the death p<-nalty and ~·omf'n's righls lcj!1.'l la11on t1re all await111~ r t>tu111 of !a v•nw1kers to tlw Statf' C'apl!ol on Aug. 6. Contrt'l\<'r.-1:11 lel-(1slat1on 1~ O'ihl'a\·s the 1ou~hest to pas.~ and '1eg1sl<1tors takC' thC' easy "'av (lut b\' 1i:nor1ng 11 until 1hc. la,1;1 1ri1nut(· ... hoping (NEWS ANALYSIS) • . . Atom Tests At an End 111 Alaska'! Al\'CJIORAl.E . Alaska IAP 1 -The Atomic Energy Com- mission , having said goodby 10 the sile of its most con- tro\•crsial nuclear test. doesn't need to find a replacemC'nl tn th e ne~r future . its director says. l)r. Dixey Lee H ay, ch airwotnan of the AEC, said, "There is no need <in\'more to test 'A'arhC'ads the siiC of Can- nikin," I he five-megaton underground explosion that eausOO a n environmental uproar in 1971 . Or. Ray and a group of Al-:C 5Cicnt1sts paid the Aleu tian island a fare\\·cll visil in preparation for the island's return to thr Interior Depart- ment jurisd1c11on. tha t lightning "'Lii strik.,. lhal :001ne i.ICCOIJUnodi.111011 Ctl ll l>f' madf' or Jll~t th;i.t the bill will i;t·t losl in lhl" shuHlc. l\1•forl' :-.djonrn1n1'nl l:isl \\"t•f'k ·1ht-y succc:-.sfuUy gainrd pass.1gc of ·· a rN.-ord hii;:h budget and :i1>prO\'(-d a sal<'~ 1ax d€.'lav hill. Gov. J{onald Rragan ~igned the budge! and \'('\Ot'd the sales tax del;1y b«·nu$t" hr didri"I like ,1;ome Of it.'i pro\'i~ions. 1tnposJt1on of the one cent ,s;iles tax h1 kt'. frotn five to :.1i: t·ents 16' ~ cents in Ala1ncd.1 . S1n Franc1sro and C.."on1ra Costa count ie:-). /\.'Is gi\·en rnt"rchan1s fit~ t>r<-11use th!': State Board nf r:qual1zalion \Ya.'i unable to ~et new lai: tables out to the more thM 4.l0.000 sale's tax per m i t holders 1n California befort the July I deadli ne. ~I F. RC H A N TS bl amf"-t Rcai::an an.i A~scn1bly Speaker Hob Mor rtti tl)-Viln Nuy'.'i l for Their failurr to conic 10 son1P accommmod ;i1ion on the salCf; t;i,; delay. Al! sitlt•o; agree th!': state doesn"t need Ow extr;1 money OCM'. l.awmakers >A'ill r1'vicw !hi' sa\M tax hikr "'hen !h('y rf'turn in August. Son1e favor repeal. but tlK'y"ll ha\/e to mef't the J::Oven1or·'.'i "la.'t of- fer" ~fore he 'll ~ign a hill. Reagan wants lo delay lht ~ale~ tax hike until Jan. l , 197~ and give income taxpay('r.ii " rebate in 1974 Oil an cscalatin~ ~cale downward from l5 to 20 perccn~ fo r thl' b1gcest lai:- paycrs, .'tl0RE'T1'1 IS adama nt . lit wants a l1m1t or $200 placed on the a1nounl rctumt'd lo any taxpayf'rs. lie visualizes som~ million;iirl"s ~ett1ng JOO tunr'.'i thal in 11 rl'b.-1te No-fault insurance is han~­ ing fire in !hr Sen ;it r Judiciarv Con101il1er wh<'rfl' hilll' hy. Assctnbl yma'n .Jaek .Fenton t 0-~-lOJl~cbclloJ a n~ John Franri.~ Foran ~ 0 - San Fr;incisol arr awaitinQ; action. The con1mittee h;i~ already kiJled 3 bill supported by the t.alifornia Tri a I La\v:••ers Association. After f"'O agonizing hearings. the Asscrnbl v Crinunal Just i~ Commit!~ has ycl to comP 10 a decision on capital punish- ment. Three co mm 1 l I c t '"'""'""rs arr kno'A'n lo hf' for The blll and lhrf'e against. i\ssen1blyma n J ulian Di xon t [).Los AngclesJ. a Negro. •~ riding the fcnl'('. lie hasn·1 made up his n11nd on the ls~ue. Sen. C:eorgc DcukmC'j1an I ll· Long Beach1. author or thr dealh prnalty bill. is hopeful the committee 'viii ]('t thr bill go lo the floor \\'herC the \\'hot. as~en1bly "'i!I have a chance. lo VOIC for JI. TIVO BILLS bv Sen. l\lcrvvn llymally J D-Lo.o;;. An~clei;\ a 0 rl! hanging fire in thf!: St 11te A~S<'lnbl~'. They 'A'Ould giv" ~·i\'C" equal status ~'llh their hu:;h:inds 1n controlling: ro11l- n1unity property and p\aCf' rn•·n ;:ind "·omen on an equal footing in 1hc mall~r of pro- h.11ing rsta!cs. Still .to be detern1ioed is legislation supported by UM t ca11ue of Caltfornia c.itie'I: "hich would appropriate $24.6 milliflfl for suntnlr youth pro- grams. ~lorrlli <i!ikcd R~agan In slgn the bill, 111ying, '·Thf>re are" thous.1nds or youngster:\ throughout the i;t;ite 'rho ha 1•e alre ady been scrccnNI by th!': ,·rir1(1us sunnncr job pro- J!rarns . .All \\'e nrcd to providr meaningful t"n1ployment for an e!'tlma!ed 100.000 .vouth thi1 slimmer 1s the money." Cc1uglit TIIE TOUR was int ended, as much as anything elsC', 10 ~ shO\\'C<l!ie At::C efforts to ret urn the island lo H.!I pre-test 'late and to show 1t has not bct-n harmed as a "'ildlife ha bi ta I. RF.STO:\, Eng I a•n d t L1PI ! -Police Md hnlc troublf' catchin1t accused burglar Peter ~1at1hcv.'!i, 25. affer he broke iillo 8 "'-oman·s apartment. 11le.y round him nsleep in bed . "If v.·e had any intention of making the use of that area.in lhe future, 'A'e wouldn't be pulllng out now ," Dr. Ray said as she returned to Anchorag('. "It v.·ould !><!a lrcm<.-ndous ex- pense lo go back no\v ." She said lhe only tcstini? ('X- JM'Cled 1n the near futurtt 1s in l\IA!the\\'S slept on "·hlte ll}e "'om<1n telephoned the poll(.'(', llP went· to prison for 18 n)()n1h~ for burglary and theft. NC\'llda. "'h1ch is unsuitable L---"-'--------' for <t~lca of ( 'immkiTr si:rr --- --~ OAILV PILOT Tutsdly, July 24, 1973 PVBUC NO'l'ICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBIJC NO'l1CE PUBIJC NO'l1CE f11etm:ur7:~.'"''' '~CZ:~0~l.:~~i:::• ~~. ~..;.:..,~·:::•ii ·~·;;· iOMib.t' ~· ·.-.; ··· MA.Me ITATllMllllT TM t.il'-11111 peno:in1 •t• dol"O elld ble1lln!I ot •II POwder Wlllll a•oio.lvtt of ............ Thi ... ....,.,.. ,..._ k dilltlll w.illttl lluilll'lell "! type, •10trdlott1 ot methclll llMd tor tlldl llSlillnt •: W RAYfl.1-THIRA"Y INSTITUTE, •lld pJacln(I •••••••.•.••••.•..••••••.••••••••••••••••••• RWTAll. MfRCl'lAllllT1 C II: ID ll 1•7 W.vdiff Ori,,., MtwllWl 9NCI\. lh111gy~bil1 MM ·····~··· ........ , ................... . ASSOCIATIOM -ORANCI! COUNTY C•. ""'° C-1 ~ ("" I r•t11 Ill' i.., ... tnlllw .... COl-1.ICTION Ol\11$10N. 1m 1!!111 Wllllani • ..., ,.,,,,,,r, "'· D .• Jj(lj 11Mdlln9 llulll (1-11 .............................. ... '*-'-lt'I lltMI, Stnfa A n t , Holly l llM, Newporf INCi\. C:1. "'-0 CHIPllOI OIMW W11111 lntreli.r ., , .. , .• .... , , ,, .,,,,., •• , C1tlfOl1!41, J-fd'w'"' 8-d, D.D., 2101 ChuQ."'"49r • ., •.. , ...•. .,,., .•. , •• , . .,, •• , ......... . f111eutl'f't C...-t MaM9dll«W. lflC., • Helt\! Le.,., N~ -..CPI, Ct tHtiO CltMlf'lll end HtNlllnO of PINI ,-.,,,... .................. ., C•Hlotftl• C~•"on. TPlh r.u.IMU It C'Ollducted by 1 lllM<ll CMCftlt Core C11llff, Or~ Of hftOlf ............. .. Tiii.ii MINU II c.enouc:ftcl by e W-pertfll••lllp. C:DllCftll Clll'ff-lmpentlolll 1Mmbf1111 -,-orm Dllff •• pw•llon. Wllll1m It • .,.,~.,. tonc•tle s.w Mlln, C11111n9, ko..1119 Old o• New °""'""''• DAVIO Oltl!ll!:Nf lllLY Tlllt 1ttl.....,.I ·-•• '41M wUPI IM C°"""'1t .. .Ju9.cli119 tor; R.....;11 $.lrlb Ott ~In.~ TPllt •i.1tm.tt1I w.u Hlfd ..... lh IM CClllll< IV Cltrk OI Or'lllOe CC11111ty on Ji.ly U, will! M•mor•fll:h.lm of U-•1!1!111"'9 wtll'I Ctml!ll ,., Clll'k o1 °''"" c-1, on J111y" 1tn. 1t7t. fl\150n1 11 .. .., 111•1•1 ... .. ... , .............. . ,,..., 1"·26719 concr111, Wiler C11rina . . • . . . • .... .... .. fNM!llMCI Ol'M\Ot CM.ll Dt<ly ffhot. J.,. P11Dt11hed 0•11111e Coiot! 01llv Piiot. Jll· Crlbt>tr, 5110r.,, LllK!l"ll, $het tlng, 1nd TrtllCl'I &r1cl1>9, tr 10, 11, 24. 31 , 1'7) 11H·fl IY lJ, 24, 31, 1flll Aug111! 1, 1'11 2\to·ll Hll\ll·GUl!Hd LMlglfl9 H~m"'-' .. ••. ... . .•. , , '-----------· ---C11lllng Torell Olltrttor t0.mollliof!) ...••........ PUBIJC NOTlcu UBL O.mollhon ~. 1111 tlt•nlfiv ot b•Kk tnd lllmbe• ~ P IC NOTICE Orlllol" AU ,._, Cir/Ila, 1xcflldlng Jtc.k~mmer. wn1111o1r core, •11fnOlld, WllOOfl, tr.UC, fl'lllitloi.t unit, • "* HOTlt• TO tltlDITOllS Ind lllY ... Ill olMr type1 of ml<Mllluol orui. MOTICI TO t•l!OITOftS _,.,.._.·7tMt ~ w("*'f r...,..i to 1111 ~ Of mon.e ,....._ Ind u · IVPl:t!Om: cou•r Ofi" TM• SUpttl« ~ ... 11~1 ~·""""" c.IWdl• 9"'Y ltlll _. ....,.... .... .....,,,... Ill ,,. IT•TW OP c•Lll"Of:Mt• l"O• ""the (-'f~ °" . . ~~ 91' u ...... ,IMN ...,...,. l.Moren .... '11• CDUWTY 04I' OtAlllOI! Etlfle ol JULIA l lONAaD, °""'11111 .__... 1111 ... Ill Mllfnl, "'°"*• t/US4 .. .... A·Hnl C>K:N-.6. Orll•. JtdOlllW'l'olr, 1'41 n. "111 •*I or llflllt ...... ~:.. fll MAV ALLAH 51Mf'SON. 1~oll!:o.!: 1 .. ~t'fliil:: °'l.J-:':' .~ .. ~ .. ~~ .. ~-~~.~ .. ~": .. NOTICE IS HEltEIY GIVEN lo !Pit""°_, IM nu _..r.w tl\I ~ '"" Graellf', HIS'IWIY ltftll llrllt l"•YIAf. A~ • ct9111llWI tot tl\I M:iow ftlll'll'd Hc.9Clln! dK'td9t1t • ..0 to ... thtm. ·'II ltWIWl\'1, .... alll'lli.r type hel"' C:Ol'lilt\lttllin ....... . tlltl •ll PlflOfll ~..Ing c111n1111111n1r the tr.. n1eet11 ~1\4..1~'• ollltt llltt W•IChlf. Urnlltn. lrl.llfl lMiftn, l"lltn anc:t Miid 1'Kftlflt '"' rtqlll....:I to fll!t """'· lhf' Cler\ Of ~...,.nn""-eCl'llWt, &r Pttltl• H•ftdltrs ............. ""''"'"''' ....... . wltti "" "8eeH••Y YOUCl>t'I, In lht otflc• t• 11re11t1t llllm """'" ,... llkit•••Y llllQmlin . . . . . . . . . . .•. '. ••.• . . . .. . Of tl!t c:I..-.: of 11'11!1 •bo"" 1ntltllcl t-1 • ., ¥Ouehl<• to 1111 unC11r1lgnld at 1111 off It• Ga1 & 011 Plpel!ne L•bof"•r . . . . . . . . • . . . . . .......... . to ~ 11!1m. Miii ltia ,_....,., o1 Wll5SON llNO OLSEN. 2J316 Cren1n1w G11s & Oii PIPtllnll W,..,,..,....._l"ol Tender •nf !"&rm MM .. YIMKhln. 10 ltMt u~tlollll<I "' tl\e otnc.1 1 111111 .. T0tr11>ef, C1 . tOYl5 wnlcll ,, Ille Ga1 & 011 Plpe11.,. wr....,_. loch ptpe •1'111-....... . ot 1111 lllOtMY• JOHN (. MC CALL, 3200 t>ie<t"' llutf.,..t o1 1111 uncNrtl!f'llO In 111 G11lne• C"°'1er ... .... .. . ................. .. Wll11tlro ~lrd, Suite ""' Los m•tl«• l>'r;ttlnlng 11> 1111 111111 or ulct M1ot1 llixk Sll11111• ..•.••....• ,,. ,,,,,,,,,,,, •••..•... """"''' Call!ornl• tOCll wtilcll 11 , ... CllCfdMI. wtr11ln IC!llf rnon•h1 •11•• 1111 lmt>f<I w'-""· Mulll01"ti11:. ............. 7 .......... . JllKti "' .., .. ,.... vf IPll _.....,... 111 111 11,.;1 llll(Jllc1tlon gt m11 notice. K1hl1men, Por""" anc:t """ 1pptvina 11p11111, .. ,......., n'lll't.r' por1•Lfll11t to 11'11 111at. ot u lll O.lfd Jiiiy ll. itn. cr90IO!e, lime 't1u1tk -1!mll1r ..,... ""torlllf dtc:oeltnt, WllMfl fllur ~ lhlf" ttll CMARLES E. LEONARD l"l pplying" means ... IYfnll, •I--b1'1'11'11111, Ir fl"t ,_.k•ll• "' ltlls M4kt.. E•1eU1or gf 1111 wm 111na11ng ot we~ m1:.r1ei. for -"" _,,,.... ·w 1)9tlcl Juty L 1'1> Oil 111111 Clte:oCltnt. w.i!llrproalingJ ......... .. ............. ""' " HUGH J. ltlTCHll!, WASSON AND DU•M t.1bortrs, ~rtt or C-lrt.ldlotl .............. :::::::: EUlaltor Oil 1P11 Wiii 2U14 (Af'l1Pllw ....... L•Dortr, ltmPOr1ry W•Nr & Air lillll ................. . ol' tt11 1"*"9 Nll'ltd OICOdlnl TIH'fllltt, Cl.... t.ebortr Pac.lln(;, RICI Slltl & I"-••....... , .......... . JOMM C. MC CALL AllttMYI for •.uc:inw 1. .. 11hc•P1 G•rcttnor & NurMry Man (his klllWltdto If nee ....... "' ., .... Sutt. llt ..... ,.¥1 Pl•nt mlllt•l•l1 Ind ...... lo Mitt '"'"'" LIV$ out UI "-ti-. CllN. Mflt PlJQllU1ed Or.,... (0011 0.lly l"Hol, J11· Pl•"' 1rra"91mtnll lo follllw IM llndsc:tpt flll•ro} .... .. Tlh C:nJ) .i•1 Ir 17, J(, 31 tnd A....,.I 1, lflJ '201·71 Ml1trl"I HosttlWro !Wl111i 51aD1, ,loor1 .... Ooc:kel .. .. A,..,..., flt l!.lte1i1lor Mixer· Truck Chutt M111 W1111. Sitra, Coel1, Fico", l"llnlhl1ed 0r.,... Cci.,JI 0•111 l"lklt. J11· PUBUC NonCE Founc1111on1 .tncl Foollngl-(u•b & gi.ller & ildewtllti) . ly , .. 11. 24, 31. 1'73 1n~n ~fall><' OI P ... i.m111c, G11, EllClrlc T1>11!1, Vlbrt!lng PIJBLIC NOTICE lfOTIC• 01" TltUSTa1.•1 IALI t.s ..... 1t7WI M1cl'llnes & 1lmll1r mec111nlc1I 10t11 no! 1~r11tly NOTICI! TO COWf•ACTOltl cl111/lled f>trr!n •.... , . .• . . . ......... .. CALLIN• l"oa llDS Plpellftr performing 111 un>lc11 In l~f llYl"ll & In. . Sc:lloal Dl11<ld: OCUN VI EW ll•U1tlon ol p ipe from Ille polnr ot r1eelvlng plpt1 In 8111 Detdllnt: 11:00 o'dock a.m. ot 11'11 11'11 ClilCll ur1IU toonpltllol! of 09erlllon, lricllldlng lnd d•~ ot A11111111 , 1'71. •ny -au lorm1 ol ll.lbul•r fnlltrlal whtllllr p1p0, On AllllUff •• Im, II It A.M.. PllCI gf Blct RKelpt: Allmlt1hlr1tklll mt111Uic or nonmelaltlc, ~1111, lf!CI 1nf ,111 .. $1• SOUTHEll:N CAl.IFO.Nll' !"Ill.ST NA· Olfkt 1'11 W11rMr A~ ..... H""'ll"81on llOl\llry type of tuOlil1r dNlct llHd lor "" onYeylng TIOHAI.. llAM I(. • Nlttonll ll"*lng BHcll, C1litornl1 of 1ny •ubt1ance or ellmrftl Wlltlller '"""· H'Wlllll AUICl1llofl IS. duly """°'"''" Tr11llH ProflC! IMnllllc1lloft NllNI; Two i.olld, ~I, 1lr, 1>r olllrr procl1K! wMIJOIVM" '"°' w1111'. un111ot" .,... flll•-nl to Otfd OI Tr,nl Retocat1bl1 Bu!ldlng• 1"1rt1 Yllw ktlool avt r191rC1 ro IM nat11re al m.1ttrlll from wttlcll mt ..... ~ t, 1'10 rec:orCIM PllCe Pl.Ins UI on flit: 10 I!. Vftlon tubular ma! I I I I bric Itel ~ n. 1'10. II 11151. Na. 111u. lrl '''"'· ····-··· ,,,,, --.. C•---P l er I • • I .. .... . . .... . ...... . ..... --.. .,..... H L.tyt<'s. &tcltup M•n, c.oeri.,g, grou!lng, m.1kln11 bid. ,.,, """ l-C&. al Offlc:lll lt1eenl1 In OrlYt. Suitt 111, H._I &llC~, of lolnti, seellrlQ, ceulltlng, diapering & lnch1dlr111 tt11 atlk:il Oil !Pio Cwntv Rtc.orcttr ot C11lltorn11 nuo ,._, D••k•I J1>lnl•, JJOlnt 1>111 ;iny •nd 1 11 othlr Orangt C-'V, Sl11t1 of C1lllorN1 WILL NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ""'' lltl MrY}ct1 Sl!LL AT l"U&LIC AUCTION TO •°'1"'• n1med S.Clloal Dlilrttl ot Ortr191 Ovtrs'e Coner~·,, "l/1tiraro~·o~,1to~:·;o ~;.cJ'"i,'M;·:: HIGHEST l l0DE1R FOR CASM lp•y1bl1 C1>11nlv, C•UfO!'ni1, 1ctlng by I nd mrougll P room 5wtepers. (Jml!tl •. . . ......... . I f """' 91' MN 11 Llwful "'°""1 of !he 111 Governing &ot•CI, ht•flfllftlo' •llffrlid Pr ated M1nl'IOle lntlllltr · · II UnlflM Sl1Nt) at VM NOtlti lnlnl enlrtnt1 IO 11 "DISTRICT", wilt rifd-\W lllJ IO. but c Ind SIOIWl11ng , ..•. , ··:::::::::::::·:i :~::;:: 'i; g'~""'~:u"'.J 1CClll·~~..:t no! l1t1r !nan th~ •--I.IN l!'l?li ,.... I P ''°llotPoDV«, pl1clng 1ton1 or w1! ~-...... :,, lll'I St•~l 1n"tt11'ci'1y o1 Sent• AA1 eo Diii• IOI' 1rw •w•rd gf • ?"fl1er·1or Sll~rr ...................... , ......... !ft""' ci•lfoml• IH r'9111, ""' ..... lnll•nt ~ lhl 1°'1"'1 prolec:I. ~·•Pt'• lnCI Tlllff ........... , ....... , .... ;,, ..... ! 'f'tYld )0 Miii -htlCI by II llf'ldH" ..ill 9 1111 •11111 IM flCflvfd In 1111 t(Ktl ~ 111" (Noul ..... "I ····~·' ..... ,;It:' .• , '" Ootd of Trwl I" Ille prf4lll'ty lltu1t..:t In !!!ltd ·-~ •1111 WI! De opln09 111111 Sondlllfpl't1" (P'of T.,....J f"'"• "••••M'f'l"'l .. ''~PI' Mfill (OUftfl Miii St1!1 Cl111Cr1 b9d •t: publltly •tld iloud •I 11'11 .......... 11199 kllft. ................ '.1tY:i~'&lWll~tU •tt Lii u 1111 Trac.I No. »IJ. lt1 the Ctt1 ol 11..,.. •nd piece. I Jartk OIDMr 'I~~ •••. ;.~ •• :1 N...,..-t 8todi. tounlf llll Or11191 Slllt T11trr ..... It De I S]J.00 Clel>Ol~· 3 c RI 'J.'~' •• '!"•••!!"''-• of C1Hb'lllt, u -mep rt<.Ol'dea Jn for •ICh lei of bid Clot • .... , .... ,.,. •llllk 111 P•oes 3& If> 41 ll'IC!U11Yt of ou•r•nllt 1111 relurn In 9ood I T MPtrt. •1 ........ ,. .... , I Mbclli.-Mape In"" olflc.e ol '"' wll~ln tG o.•Y• •fl"' .... bid-'"' ,., ,"* k• . 'I •• 1 ... ,.( )~ .............. . ' E!Kh l>ICI musr contorm 1nd bl 1rm.1n • · '" -.f.:'"!f,!r'=~ i"': =l~mon rtlJIOllllYt ID Ille e<>nl,t <I Ol>cllmlfllt. !•tt Cl t ')W.'iJl+:t• ~ .- ··-' !•ch Did •hlll be •tCOfnPI by !Pit ClllJ>cllf" or """' •I-., 1 "''' flf tt11 •HI ~If llCllrll r1ferrtd to In lrKI Trenclll"f M \11/""'"1" • clncrlbtid 1bo¥1 l1 purported lo bl, ~·-Y 1 nCI 0 ,~. Unill«lll'OIMf • ••M11.1J.11~•i ••1 ·•• • tlOI Totat1 L-, ,..,._.. '-11. """""''"I I Y '"" """"""' •• ,., C1llfornl1 '2660 l !>OC.Ofl!rlc!Otl. Wlk'ftmlrl I •• t(o..•4•1 I • ... ' Tiii lll'ICl9fll;ned Tru•let ll1Klilfl'l!I ...,. Tllr DISTRICT reserves ,.. Yffllllnt In ,, • ...,,.'fo.'.'.'.',~'," Uelilllly frw ..,, lncor•tc1Mll9 91' ltlo JlfH1 Itel •nf Ill 111 bldi to Ir-W,,..., i ., ...._ ....i ofl'lll'" ~ dtt.l1tn1llon, If retul1r1tl11 or lntorm•lh" -ftll•IFlll ....... l\llown ,.....n In !hi bidding. l.IH t.llo Mii t.. ""'*' bY'I wl"""'1 '"' DISTRICT h•s d . . c-...t or Mrranll'o 1xprn1 or fmpllfd, 91Mrll pttv1lllng rite 01 • ,........ title. JIOSllWI.._ ., lfl-In 1111 lix•l!lf 111 which cwntlrMC;:m. 10 ..., tllO rtmtlnklt pr1n· bl orrtonned for t ldl c.r t clpol wm of tt11 IWl4'o _.,. by 11i. -•m1ro Mtdld lo tlltcut. OOlld of Trwt, ,...,.II: 11t,ftlUI. wttll !ft. IO bl 11 follow• ... .., ttroroon. " provided lfl Mid flllo, Tiii w~ •1tn 1r1 on ~~ 1111 ..,,,_., II .,,,, urtNr "" t.,fM r1'I .. 111 B111lr111s 0Hlc1 of 1111 Oc:11n "Jrlll'if ~ 91' Trutl, 1-. (llerfft and flo1llrlS.J Dl1!rlc1 • olf tJll T"""° Miii Of t110 ,,.,,,.h Cl"Ni.d Tf>t l0t"10l"11 :tehldu1e ol' \'a b¥ Mid ()..:I of Tn11t. w ..... h t>IH•<! UPOfl I WOtkl 'TM bo!llllc:l1ry UN!er 11ld Dffd Of tight (II llouro The r11e for llo T""I ~t ellKU!td tnd doll_. o,,..rtlme WOl"k 1111111 bt al !1a1I I ' to "" """'""""" a -111111 Dl<.l1r1llorl -·ht!! , wt'llforl Nata ol Doff\111 Ind EIK'!lon to TRACTOll to WllOm tht conlr of Dlf•ull 1nCI Ottftand lor salt. 11111 1 n sn•ll bf m•llll•ll>f'Y llll(lfl th I :kll, The \Hld-19hld c~Uled UICI Nallct l'"'ll•Clltl. Ind llPOfl the sutic:on a,ot 0.111111 1nd El~llon 11> S•ll 10 bl 11>111tr lt•m, IO PIY not 1111 ll\ln 1111 """1lld In Ille COUl'lly """'11 1t1t ,.., op1Cltled r1l1t lo 111 workmen •m ,,....,., .. touilocl. lw ....... Jn '"' e~ICUtion ol' lhl CCl'llf Dell: Jlllfy t, 1m Mo bidder m1y wlll'IClraw Ills l>ld I SOUTHlliltN CALtFOltNlA perll>CI ol lorty 11Yt !ill <11y1 l tllf" FlltST NATIONAL &A.N I(, Cl•lt 1tl for 1111 -1"11 ol 1>1111. II Mfill T,_..t A PllJ"'*'I bonCI Ind I pttfcll'f;l a v Roy M. F..,llKll'I -.:! will bl rl(llllrld ptlor to lf>t t ' VO l"....idllfll ec:ullon ol' the c.ontrec.t. Tiii p.11ym1111 Aufllortl• llonlturo •Mii l>t ln '"' 10tm 111 lortl'I In !he • 1'"*'7 tracl e1ixumen11. ............. Nf1f10ort Htr1lof' .....,, 1"1"111 Governing Bo1rd aln'lbll'llcl "11ttr ltll Or..,.. (Olll O.Uy &r Dr. R•IC>PI M. lllUer, Clt rt; ~ l"llol, N~ &..ell. C11ltorn!1, July U, l"utlllll'ltcl Or1n1e COii! D•llf Pl!ol, JIJ-M. 11, Im tlil·13 ly 11, 24. 191J :nlS·ll ,- • I • . .... ..... "'" S.IOS "'" .... s.tu ..., I.tit •.tu S.ltS u~ .... .... . .. &11 S.7d . ... '. PUBUCNOTICE PVBUC NOflCE PVBIJC NOTICE .......... .. u ... .. • , to tJ .. u .. " " tJ ID IJ to t J H " (StrlilCturil a. 0rfllfl'ltl'lhrl) 114.tlntordnQI 71 • ... .. " " .. '" .. .. .. " n .. fl.I 1tO " "'"" ,. ~· "" ,, "'· • "" • "" I "' ' "' I " a' d ,, c a n v l c s n ·~ ·a 'F v a o: " ' I ' ,., M~ viva -· . '-'• ••• o .. •m• M~ ·~· ·~ "' "'c Mn G" .... '~ '~ !l••I '" "" . .. ,,.. ~ ( •• ~------------.... - ·-------- For the Record Births 111tld,1y July 24 1973 Knott Divorce Asked SA~TA ANA -Vir~1n1a dl,•1s1on of proprrtv Jolnth u"·nt'C.I by tht" rouple. Lish'<! by Hcufsn)·der s l:1"'Yt't'$ orP an r percent Ulll·rest U\ Kn~n·1 Berry Furn\. the hornc on Galaxy Drt\'t', thrl't' hornt·s 1n 1'u.stin and Orange, a Colorado Reafsnydtr. daughter o f Knott's Berry Fann fQ1.irw.IPr \\'alter Knoll, \lo'a.5 sut'<i !'!fr divorce ~londay in ;,ii\ <>ranRt> County Supe rior Court <iclion c i t i n ~ "irreconcilable dif- ferences " between her and p I a in 1 if f Kenneth E. ranch. ra('e hc.;sl'S in Ken Reafsnyder of Newport Beach. lucky and call!l' on two DAILY PILOT I J •....... COLLEGE PHARMACY .. ,.1, °"· •I H1rMr C:tit1 Ml'MI.....,.. • P•llll5CIUPTIOH' • )t•1tlOOM ll•NTALI • KOll UT•ll OlfOMY e +tUOSOfrol VITA~INS e JOIST SfO lllMOi • CAMI" SUl"M)ltfS t.L _JQSPEH HOSPITAL July J Mr. ind Mr1. WUll1m BerlOK.tl. 15730 8roolth11ril, We.rmlnti•r boY. Jvty I . 1 -__:: Court action i3 sought In titt.__:u•.:h.,. Pm... County. O.nv...., ~_l'f\'ke e Ml•llH' Cllol"" Mr. and Mrs. Dolllllitl M. Sh11rer, 21m Acr1dl1ln, Mlt•loo Yl•lo boy. July t Mr. anct Mrt. Bur~• W. P1rct. 4)11 Lockti.Ylfl Circle. l•vtM bov. Juty 10 Mr. and Mrs. An!honl M. Mumolo, :ttl1 81b1 51 •• lrvl...e, o rl. July 11. 1m Mr, and Mf1,. G~ald E. Pllklf\Olon, 1'611 s-11n, Irvine, glrl. Jlfi'f IS, ltJJ Mr. anet Mr1. ll:oberl W, McGft, Jr., -.1 R9<1 BhtU Clrcll. lrvtnt. bo'f. JUI'( 11, 1'11 Mr. Ind Mr1. WIUl~m Svencts.en. ~ LaguN C1nvon Road, LIOl.lllll B11c1. ' girl. Otlier Deaths Geronitno ! ! Daring young man starts descent in hang glider at Escape Country in Trabuco Canyon near O'Neill Park. More than 400 flights were recorded during championship events this past weekend. REDLANDS (AP) -Funer- al services were scheduled to- day for San Bernardino Coun- ty Superior Judge Russell Goodwin who died of a heart attack Friday at 64. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Fu- neral services will be h e I d Wednesday for John Newmark Levi, vice president or I h e Capitol Milline: Co. and a de- scendant of Los Ane:eles pio- neer Hanis Newmark. He died ·.Monday after a long illness at 67. Assemblyman Briggs Not Alarmed Over Plans for New Majo1· Jetport BUFFALO. N.V. IAPl - •Funeral services will he held Wednesday for Russell Hardi e, a character ar.tor whose car<>er on stRP"C Rnd screen soanned 4n veal"S. H-ardie. who was 69, . died Saturdav at th~ Sacred Heart J-fomf! in suhurbs:in Clar- ence after a long illness. Dentla l\'oti.,e• LAllllllE Norlh L1urle. Age 51. ltnldenl of Cos!• Mes.I dele of dNth, Jul'( 21, 1911. Sur_ vlvt<I ll'f hustMl!ld Wiiiiam J. L1url11 two oom. RotM'rt W1ynt1 Ind JI,_. Randolph • L•urle. SlfVk:n, W9dtlftd•'f• Jiiiy 25. 2 PM, CelY•IY Churcn, Sunn-•net Greenville, S.nla AN, with RIV. Chuck Smllh otttcl1llfl0. lntHm1nt, PKlflc View ~11 f'•rk. Wntcnlf CMPtl M«· tu.ry, '-M-4181, Olt'IK!ors. · SCHUMACKl!lt By O.C. HUSTINGS Of 11\t Dilly Pilot Slllf Assemblyman John V . Briggs (R-Fullerton) says he is not alarr:n_ed by the state Department of Aeronautics proposal that a major jetport be established in Chino Hills. "The' final power o f decision," said Briggs, "rests with the county Board of Supervisors, not the state. The Department of Aeronautics, if it should accept the con- s u I tant's recommendation, does not have authority to force the airport on the area." Briggs has lon_g opposed the Chino Hills Airport. T h e assemblyman also pointed out that the Southern California Association of Governments (SCAG) citizen advisory panel also found Jhe Chino Hills site unacceptable. . . open space wilderness preserve in the area. * * * ASS EM BL YMAN Ken Cory denies that he has plans to seek statewide office next year. There have been rumors the Garden Grove DemoCrat was thinking about running for state controller or lieutenant governor. Both jobs may be open next year as Controller Houston Flournoy and Lt. Gov. Ed Rienek e are talking about running for goverTl<lr on the GOP ticket. "I am honored that I am being considered for statewide office but I have made no definite plans other than to con tinu e being a n assemblyman," Cory said. He h as b een an assembl yman representing a north Orange County area since 1966. ed Testimonial Bean Dinner and Picnic" at the home or Clifton Seymour, I 2 9 5 2 Hickory Branch Road, Tustin. For reservations. or in· formation . c<intact John Graef, 557-5068. * * * GOP HOPEFULS also are bouncing in and out of Orange County to line up support. Hugh Flournoy talked to the Republican Associates o r Orange County last week. Ed Reinecke is ticketed for a Newport Harbor cruise with the associates Aug. 23•aboard the Pavilion Queen. And the associates plan to hear Bob Finch Oct. 4 in Fullerton. * * * A Bll.L that would require lending institutions to pay in- terest on impound accounts for home buyers has the sup- port of the Orange County Board of Supervisors. Jamrs Shiminorr of the county's Consun1cr Affairs Of- fice said the present impound syste1n prevents a hon1e buy('r from earning interest on his own n1oncy. /·le noted that bankers argue that they are providing a service £or customers and should not be requirt.-'CI to pay interest on the money. Supervisor Robert Battin . v;ho asked for endorsement of the Holmdahl bill , said that. statc\\•ide, impound accounts al\ov.• lending institutions to use about $350 million a year l in home buyers' money without paying interest on ii. Fast, Thorough, Guaranteed Real Estate Sales and or Broker License TRAINING .· .. Phone for Free Folder : Frwcll Schumac:hll'. CJ S. H1rtior Bl...!!., Saota An•. Dill of de•lll, July 22. 1f7J. Survived bv hulblnct, Carl; d1119h!ltf', Mn. 'C1lt\lf"IM Van Sk! ... r, Gardt'n G•ovt• two 11rorhlr.,, ltlcl\4lrd Jael<el, of M•"..wan. Mew JtrllY• C••I J1ek•I· of L.-.ltton. Pt!fll'LSVIY•nl•i &lslltf', Alm• Jonl'ari T,.nfon, N-J1rwy; lhrH cr1ndchlldren. Services, Tllurod•'f• July 26 1·JO PM. our Redeemer Lutllflran church, Garden GroYe. ln!ermen!, Paelllc view Me""°"!1I Park. P1c!llc View Mortuerv, Directors. Briggs has authored legisla- tion asking for a study of the possibility of t!Stablishing an STATE SENATOR George Senator John Holmdahl (0 -The bill. SB 671 by state a ANTHONY SCHOOLS Moscone, who is seeking the Oakland). calls for banks, sav-HARIOR CENTER. D 1l0Ct K~rlHlr ''"'" ARBUCKLE & SON 13 p ed em o cratic gubernatorial ings and loan associations and co111 Me••. c111tDrn11 ~WESTGLIFF-MORTUARY r@S6lll nomination, will-be in Orange other Jeri_ding -institutions to l"h. 17141 979-2l5l 4%7 E. 17th St., Costa l\lesa County Sunday. pay 5 percent interest on 1111 ~-8reow11wn: i1 64M888 • -The San F r a n c i s c o money held for payment of An•ll•im, c a1. tU0-1 • Set*VICC Pins lawmaker is scheduled to taxes. insurance and other Ph. 17141 '176-ssoo BALTZ-BERGERON .... speak at a ''Good Old Fashion-liabilities. FUNERAL H0!\1E I - Corona del l\1ar 673-9450 SANTA ANA-Service pins1 ~-.,,,,r.~·~~·-.·~.x1Le•..W,.-_.....--... •• ~,.~ Costa l\1esa 646-24%4 have been presented to ,131 · '·~~·~ ~· ~~~•--.,,..._.Alf"f'-;. • BELL B:OADWAY Orange Coast residents honor·~ ··uah hu111hug' •' MORTUARY ing 10 years of employment by . ~ e ~ 110 Broadway, C.osta l'r1esa Orange County. 1 -,._ DI~Y~:OrnERS m;~; ~r":::tio:. a:~:r'.1 ~ Christ1nas happens f.. MORTUARIES Bu1Jdmg Services, Newport r. 'J- 17911 Beach Blvd. Beach ; James N. Bertolino, 1• h 4-'' I. Huntington Beach 84!-7771 A~s~sso:'s Office, M is s ~on . u 1, 0 n ~e a year e !44 Redondo Ave. V1eJo; Tr ma Braum1ller,I j .. Long Beach 213-438-1145 District Attorney. El Toro~ · • • • • Virgi nia A. Crane. Haroor j Not So My Friends ~ 1\-fcCORMICK LAGUNA De t t N rt B h ' ' 1 ·~{~~~ ~~i'i~~:::·· ( 11 II~: IWfi G 1@1 ~-0'? ' Cemetery Mortuary LET'S BE FRIENDLY \ i, SHOPPING ARCADE e 425 30<h ·S+,,.f e THE CANNERY e Nowporl Boo<h l Chapel 11 you have ne\v neighbors ~ 3500 Pacific View Drive or know or anyone moving I ~· Celebrates X1nas in ]ttly: • Newport Beach, California to our area, please tt'll us 644-!700 e "that we may extend a s l s W d J l 25 1 PEEK FAMILY friendly •·eicome and help I 0 a t tarts e ., U y ( 11 0 COLONIAL FUNERAL them to become acquainted 1 J HOME In their new .urroundings. I -±1 am -5 pm through Sund ay, 7801 Bolsa Ave. S C t Visit 1 \Vestmlns~r Sn..1525 4~S79 oas 1494-~361 :t. With Savings Up ro-40% off SA11THS' MORTUARY f. • ~ Peel $l10 Off r raund-trip · by~ng P5A frOm (OngBeach. a..ng-----$18.l7 lncludlngtax. l*wt_..icetDSaa•--$11.J7 lndudlngtax. NOW! HIGHER RATES ON ALL NEW ACCOUNTS! flo/1111a!l/b~~@k1,11?f,?J is pleased to announce higher guaranteed income on all new Bicentennial Savings Certificate Accounts, and a higher yield on both new and existing Passbook Accounts. 7~3 73 6%3 SI 0,000 minimum SS.000 minimum $5 .000 minimum 4 years• 4 Lo 6 years• 2 Yi to 4 ycan• 6)23 5%3 5~3 Sl ,000 minimum Sl ,OOOmiriimun1 Pa\.~hook Account, day- 12 w 23 months" 6 months"' in to <lay-our interest, on :iny an1ount INTEREST ON ALL ACCOUNTS IS ('OM POUNDED DAILY, PAJDQUARl"ERLY. •OOday interest forfci l\Jre for early wi1hdrawal, and earned interest on withdrawn an1ount payable onl y ;H the current Pa!'Shook rate. NOW SERVING YOU INS FULLSERVICF. OFFICES ~1~11a!?Ji~d~1/ti'?4 AND LOAN ASSOCIATION HOME OFFICE: 260 Ocean Ave., Laguna Beach, Calif. 9205 1 Telephone : 494-7541 LAKE ELSINORE SAN C 1.1:1\.fE:-.O TE LAG UN A NIGUEL 6(X) Wesl Graham Avenu e 601 N•>rth El Ca1n1no Rea l 3 t.i onarch Bay Pia.ta LA GUNA HILLS 24038 Calle de la Plata 627 Main St. Harbor Yisitor c • ''now that's a bit of alright!'' HunUngton Beach lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll .............. lll;lll ............ ... '-====53""'53;:,,~9 ===~~ ........ ~646-0""""~1~7~4""""""""~'..')r..'::·~·~'JlllV,~~-·~~':!::::·*~ .~.·le.~·~-~-· .. ·~~~ -----~~--~---- FROM Fash ion Islan.d Newport Beach ST'EREO SOUNDS -OF THE H·ARBOR , • --~· _.., __ J" DAILY PILOT AMBLER TUMBLEWEEDS MUTT & JEFF T11esday, Joly ?~, 197J LOOK,A>EEl. "OJWERE ARATlO FIGHTER-'1tllJ MAO 5CWE 6000 PAYDAYS. I SAW TO IT 1 AAT YOU M4<W SQllE llOEY.' )IOU 60T A 60CX> l rm.E 8ARSEilWG BUSKSS,Afr( A NICE GIRL WHO ~5 TO MAf'RY YOU! by Doug Wildey by Tom K. Ryan 1HEN1 r!.L JUSf HAVE 10 GO ON 16NORI NG-'!OU! ·- by Al Smith - DOOLEY'S WORLD SALLY BANANAS --' ' GORDO aM got f/.lf>ned by Roger Bradfield I.Im' 1H'~ MIJFFU ~ TMIS" 1?1/Nt> .ABOUf SHARl ""6 HM TuFFa>r uj by Charles Barsotti by Gus Ar.ripla YOU SEE, s~. IT'S Nar1"!4E HEAT IT'S T HE HUMIClTY.f WHEN THE AIR IS FILL.ED WITH MOISTURE THAT MAKES IT UNCOMFORTABLE! YOUR THEORY IS ALL WET, MUTT! Wf/.E.ra'.!' :L COME FIGMEN TS · NANCY THIS WAS 6NE OF' THOSE DAYS WHEN EVERYTHING- WENT WRONG --ICANI EVEN GET TO SLEEP 'TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE - ACROSS 1 Spongelike !or ': "" Oe1t 1m'"e 46 A al"Olt llbe r 4 1 Whiten 50 Willlop. Sl•ng l O Pirt•il l•t Y 5 1 Feminine 14 God ot love "'me 15 ----52 ------Neve1s· S tan lord thlld 56 Trit world "•I f ''10 65 Judge 2 ! 01s1gr1e1 11'1 66 Nortn behe1 73 Does a lnll,.nt pohsning 6f Proceedad ••• 26 P I kn I In 68 Franc11 u 1 0 upoe• riouse '11 Small c1n ol 69 ExcluS1•e· 30 ··11 11•1Ch --Stang 3a Ba!li's 1iw1r 35 Ac IOI -- NOWIHO 37 Or not 38 Ra••nu•: 1nform1L 39 011•••, Hou11 ol ____ _ • 1 Two Comb !Orm •? Sooner '"•~ ~3 Ad1u11 h!Ung!w l l • . " 11 --2J .,, " " " - " ~ ~ ~--~· - -~ •" .. <q- " w t DOWN 1 Innocent person ? ve .. 1y 3 Superwl1or • Cr1!tsm111 S Tr1nqu1t 6 fll ume•u;al pre f,, 1 _ PIO•ltl •own I). Gr e<ile 9 c .. ml! ~11a1ns1 -.1111 ~· " " • I h " lS w .., " .. . ~ -. 7 " ' ., ~ " F k T"OT ( I E k N I >H'+-l'+-e-D t' _.,F F E R t N C E FENDE O E • T /'I 0 JI, N D ; D 10 Kind of meal " __ Roy1le 12 U.S.A. " Tools 18 An11a11cra!t arhl~•l' 22 Euroc11ns 2• Skin; Sutril: 25 ltnpnnted WitPI I llai 27 P11mowes tP!e out1r skin 211 Turn •••Y :19""1rie_ Soys J1 As•tn country J2 Oueoec 1 ----Ro yal 33 Weir away 36 S1ymg • • ... " " " ll " . t JO .. ~ ~ ,,. , .. .. .. • ' c 0 D • T • T J \l Watercourse <10 Remn11'l lS -4 4 Ou1burs! •6 M1n"s nam• -4 8 Put into -4 9 U/lusual lndl•ldual: Slang 52' Far"' lf!lp!11111nl 53 fUd!culed: Informal 54 Healing apoa111ut SS SmaM pond 51 Pr1po111ion 58 Makel w 11n 1Lrain 59 O run~ person: Sl•rtll 6 2 \l •ol1t1on 63 Brilit h CJrln~ " " .. • ,, . •r;·~ " " " " ~ .. . ~ • " " ~ ,.. .. f:'IUl~! • \._ . ·~,,~ fil ... ' . .,.~ by Dale Hale MOON MULLINS ® WE WE!.L -WE C~ j.IE,Rf WE GO FOR ANOTHER WATCH PROMISE OUI'? • l>EVMC!NG WOEK OF P.AST TOO PoL./Tlc,AL exc~SSIVE" :Zf.AC- MLJC~. ANIMAL CRACKERS '---------------l ~7·2• PEANUTS by Ferd Johnson ~ooD <lF"!SF •· I1MAL-READY HOOl<'!!D !.' by Roger Bollen I'LL~I'. EVER</ BOl.lE \~HIS BOD<J FORlH/fr/ . ' THE GIRLS by Charles M. Schulz ~~~~~~~-..:. JUDGE PARKER ... , •• 1•· •. ~~ -,M\65 Sf'ENCER ALREADY TOM, THERE'S. A MAR BY THE INFORH\fD ME A80UT NAME OF LAS.SITER WKO MAV HIM., MR. DRIVER! IS TRY TO COME THROUGH i'IERE! HE DANGEROUS? MISS PEACH I t ' ! • ·ANO Yo!! Hil>E9Y ANNO<ANCE 'O<AT WE "A2Ei GO ING ON A sa21e.s OF H<AN~O: STRIKES ! t 11 \It ll(l/l l \11 l l /t \./!;li t HOW Dl5AP/'t>NTIN6 .• HE HATES M~ GUT ' ~y Harold Le Doux WH,.,. 00 'IQ.( MEAN I ,.. ·~iR/~11 OF 1-fUNG>E.lt ST"-ll(fCSo ? by Mell we Me~N THll:U A DAY, FTWM 9AM W NOON 1 :ZPM iO 6 PM1 AND 8Pt\ TO "T..-M .. , \I ' ·'• ''' ., .... \,,' ... DICK TRACY YOU WOULDN'T BE ANY WE I IER MAO ¥OU BEEN Sl<IN~OIVINq. WElL! WMAT ~VEVOV GOT TO SA.V FOR ~LF? "What gets me with pantyhose is the minute yo u get them over both feet the phone rings nr there's somebody at the door." DENNIS THE MENACE 'MR. W1L.SD!J JUST BO 10 GET RID OF rr; M HE WA'fJW DENNIS 10 HAVE IT.' • .. ' ' ·-,_, Tutsda~ Julf 24 , 1973 DAILY PILOT 13 Chrysler Earnings Hit Peak DETROIT (AP) -Chrysler eofi>.' first ·or the auto firms to report first-half pro(it11, said it had record net earnings of $198.4 million, The report of record sales, profits and car and truck total deliveries came ?\tonday a.s Chrysler and the olher auto firms were engaged in con. tract talks with the United Auto Workers. IT APPEARED likely that Chrysler's healthy financial report -virtually certain to be duplicated by the other auto companies thls week - would attract considerable at- tention. from 'bargainers at all the tables. .. Chrysler's six-month profits came on total sales 0£ $6.l billion, 'tl.7 percent ahead of the $4.7 billion in the like period a year ago. First half 'earnings compared with last year's first-half figure of $104.2 million. IT SOLD 1.82.1,201 can and trucks in the fint half, 19 per· cent ahead of the 1,528,426 in the first half of 1972. Board Chairman L y n n Townsend referred to the con· Cuddly Ctib This lion cub, held by La Vonna ti.'lorris. is one of tract talks which got un· two from Lion Country Safari that •Ni ll appear at derwaf with the UAW last Southland llome and Garden Show in the Anahei1n w~k and repeated the com-Convention Center, July 27 through August 5. pany's hope for "an equitable _c.c_:_;__c__:__c.:..:.:.:....:c..c'.....::.....:......:..::::::cc..:....::._: ___ _ agreement without production interruption." Structure Standard-Pacific Purchased 'Reports Increases OVE R THE COUN TER NASO Listings for Monday, July 23, 1973 Jllo ••• ... 10'· H• llo t \o lO'. l'~ 1:• ,f-. ,i,. ' ,, . 101... 11 .. It .... II•• . . .... 2 .. )'. 1,1. 1''o 11'. 1\1<> Jlo i • , ... . "' n•. n" t '' 10 • 11 , n•, }•. . . . .. I• U I}, ll' "" t' . I 71, J"o •'• ' ,, 1t' ~ 17' I l!'• IS\o s•• • ,, •• 1•·· ,.,,, '°°'' II ... It ', 17' • II 11"" u•. lt• t It • ,,,, ,,.. 1' , IS', ''· S'. 10·. 1' u~·. "" .. t'• I ' " ~ Ill Uos l .1<'1i r .. "' '" "" "'" '" •• "·! "' "'. '" "' ,., 19., " . 11.• 11.] '" ". " . lS.• ·- Don Koll Co., Inc. of Newport Beach has purchased a 230,000 square foot industrial Standard-Paciric Corp., a facility in La Mirada from Costa !\fcsa residential con- American Electric Co. and struction company , reported leased nearly hair the struc-1'.londay a 38 percent increase ture to a Northern Galifomia The per-share figures are based on an average or 2.229,520 con1mon and coin· mon equivalcnl s h a r c s outs tanding during first ha!f of 1973 and an average of 2.271.810 common and <:om- mon equivalent sh a r cs outstanding during 1972. lS 4"'" firm. in revenues and a 100 percent Officials of Coldwell, Banker increase in net income for the Co., who negothited the sale, six months ended J une 30 said the $LS-million transac· compared to the same period lion included the building's of 1972. 11.37-acre site on Firestone Revenues in creased to Blvd. adjacent to the Santa $22,638,224 as compared to Ana Freeway. $16,412.790 for the prior year. Net income, was $718,777 MMM Carpets leased IOO.OOO against $358.70!J for 1972, ac· square feet or space for a wareho4re shov.TOOm retail cording to Arthur E. facility. 'The three-year agree-Svendsen. chairman of the ment had a consideration of board and chic! executive of· ~ t•·· .... 000 fi cer. ~------------'------------~-----·~--'--mo __ re_•~-·-~-~·-·----I• "OUTSTANDING perfor· mance in o u r Orautte County division toge1hcr y,•1th contributions from some of our nev1cr divisions enahlcd l he company to nch.ieve records in hoine sales. nel in· come and Pa rnings pc r share," Sv£"ndscn sai d. The co rnpany's new Illinois division. "''hich has offices in the C h i ca go mc tropolilan ftc"':1':41ii&saz~~~-~Mll!ilo·~~.t'il" area. has bro\en ground for Greenfwlds, thg ficm·s fies! MUTUAL FUNDS '" 14.l ". " ' "' " ' 13.0 11.S " ' Keystone changes some old ways EARNINGS PER share for the six months equaled 2S cents per share compared to 14 cents per share ror the like period in 1972 assumin g full diluti on. residential project o u I s 1 de Cali fornia, he said. ·----· ·...---:::z=J of doingt • 7 .OO"A. • 7 .25% 4 year Cert111ca1e ol Deposil- $1 ,000 minimum. 6.75%. 6.98% 30 month Cert1Ucate ol Deposit - $5,000 minimum Of 4 year Cert1hca!e of Deposit -$1.00 minimum 6.50%·6.72% 1 To 2 year Cen1hca te of DePQ!!f - $1,000 minimum or 2 ye<1r 10 30 rnonlh Certificate of Def!OSit -$5,000 minimum s. 5.75%·5.92% 90 day Certificate of Deposll - $1 .000 mlnknum 5.25%·5.39% Regular Passbook. accoute - $1.00 mini«tum Not only does Keyslone offer free services on all accounts and conipoun ds interest daily on all ac- counls, but also shows you how to make an extra nine days of lnt~resl by moving your money on the 10th ol the monlh end earning Interest from the flrst. The Money Machi ne is another Keystone Innovation. La. ca te d outsid e our offices. it puts twenty-five dollars oash in your hands. Within seconds. 0 KEYSTOlJE SAVINGS ••t I.NII .,..la'ne_ llONM..O W. CAPPS. CMAlllMAN 0, THI 90.lllD Wettmtncterofflc:e: 1~011 Beach BM:t.-Maheim office: 555 N. Euclid-Newport °'Uce -Alrpor1 Center. '301 MacAtthur Bhd. .a.s.sets a<1er $65 million. MSI Data Tells Revenue Climb ,.151 Data Corp. of Costa ~1esa J\.1onday reported net in· come of $2 12,4 15 for the first Record Set By Bertea Bertca Corp. of Irvine achieved rerord net income in the fi rsl half of 1973 on slightly lower sales, Richard Bcrtca. chairman or the board, has announced. fo,or the si x months ended June 30, net income was $611,853, equal to 41 cents per share. as against $555,493, or 37 cents a share, in the com- parable pe riod of 1972. The weighted average of co mmon shares outstanding was 1.506,814 in 1973 and 1,498,729 in 1972. Firm Asks Damages Damages totalling m ore than $797,tXK> are being sought by Collins Radio Company of Newport Beach in an Orange Countv Superior Coort action charging a Santa Clara com- pany with failure to fulf1ll a ca lculator usembly contract, Co llins' lawyers name Com· modore Business f.fach.ines of Santa Clara as .defendant with the allegatloo tha t t h e Newport companv's ope:retion was adversely affected by the defendant's fa ilure tn deliver electronic calcu\otor p:irts on time. qua rter of fiscal 1974. basrd on revenues of $4,173.880 fo r the pe riod ended June 30. In an unaudi ted statcn1cnt of earnings announced 111 the compa n y's nnnua l shareholders meeti ng, ~·lSl President \\'illian1 J. Bo\l'l'rs said income reflected carnin~s of 11 cents pe r com1non share wit h an average of 1.945.080 shares outstanding. TlllS CO~I PARES v.ith five cents per share for the hkc period last year with 1.628.642 average shares outstanding. Boy,·ers said income hrlore taxes y,·as $438 .415. a 1;:,4 per· ccnl increase abo\'C pre-tax 1n· co1ne of $172.516 for the period last year. First -qua rter r c v e n u e represents a 41 percent in· crease over rrvf'nues o f $2.964,436 last yrar, and this ~·car's nel earnings 11·e rc 140 percen t higher thDn the $88.516 ror last yea r's first quarlcr. he added. THE ~IS l executive told shareholders tne first quarter performance "·as based on continued aocrptancc of !he company·s electronic order ent ry and inventory data terminals in the supennarli el industry as "'ell as expanding penetration of the harct .... are drug and general relaihng markets. The finn 1s a principal sup- plier of electronic field data entry systems with more than 18,000 terminals in Opt"ral1on In S1ores throughout the nation including vai·1ous supermarket chains. Try Sattn·day's Nc,vs Qui z • - .J IJA1._1 PH.Or I THE PICK OF Punch J PUNCH '1 """" t~nd to specialittJ, •• 'Buy Govel'nment' Supersalesman Has Big Goal By OF.AN C. l\lll.1.ER UPI IUMntH tillltor NEW YORK Super- salesman John Y. Rro'>•ln Jr .. like Alexander the Great. is never happy unless he has oew v.·orlds to conquer. This time around the man who built Kentucky Fried Chicken into the world"s largest rommercial f o o d operation wants lo sell the American public on the need to "buy back its government ." (Brown resigned i\!onday as board chainnan.) BROWN, 39, WILL sponMlr a six-hour prime time national telethon Sept 15 over NBC-TV in an effort to get the Democratic party out cif hock. "Actually ," said the Ken- tuckian with the boyish smile and wide-eyed look, "the $9 million we hope to raise through .. udience contributions really is meant to save the two-party system and restore morality lo the political proc· ess." Brown argues that it'\ im· possible lo have a t'>'-o-parly system when one party has $50 million to spend and the other is $9 million in debt. He also doesn't think big contributions should be allowed. •. "NOTHING OVER. s a y • $5,000 : I jusl: ®n't belitve in Santa C1aus," said Brown. im· plying that big contribuUons lead to big favors being asked and given. leading to a general breakdown in political morali· ty. "From shady favor-giving we go intO ~he who\~ bit --;: spying, buggmg. espionage, be said. "If a lot of little peo- ple stepperi in wlth their small rontributions they c o u I d regain rontrol of t h e i r parties." Raising $9 million from the "little people·· might seem op- timistic, but Brown has pro\'- ed his salesmanship before. PRIVATE TRUST FUNDS AVAILABLE FOPI "£AL UTAT£ I.DANI 111 & 2l'ld TRUST DEEDS $1,500 "Ta 5250,000 \1' TO IO% LO.ulS OH TRUST DEED COLL.AfEAAL ltlWl"OllT f.OUITY fUMD5 N.wpon C•n!•r 620 N•wpOr1. C.n1t1 Otiw Ntwpor1 BtKh, C•lll. !714) ~2( that yours may not 1 COMPLfT! OJtANGI! COUNTY COVlRAGl lncl11dh11 : l1HJ11i.a leoch S.1t ci.,...nte, Mlttian Vl•!o. •D1111a Pohlt, n woll et la liMch and rna1t af L.A. 2 MONTH TO MONTH lllNTAL IASIS 3 NO DIPOSIT R1!9UIRED ON APPROV!D CREDIT , 4 ONLY 117.00 PIR MON1 TOTAL COST 1 ... 11 .... lted pct9nl 5 NIW COMPACT UHll ,, ... ,. 1111 .... I "'I 6 VOICI M!SSAC.E PAC.IRS "' ~o -.n1 AVAi ' ,t,llf 7 fUll Fill MAINTINANC ORANGECOUN7Y RADIOTELEPHONE SERVICE'" 714 • 115-JJOI .. , $0, tAltTA ,. SANT.I .I.MA Nfll \;""" ·~ Mffll9n "'*If " hint. Siii' "''•""'"te S·~ '" " .............. rt I c.il M'I l•t • 4t6~J2.2J As a part time door-to-door l salesman for Encyclopedia! Britannica du r i n g un- 1 dergraduate days at the University of Kentucky La'>''I School, he made more than I S25,000 a year. FOUR YEARS after gradua· lion from la'>'· school. Broy,•n bought the rights to Colonel ) Harland Sanders' recipe for fried chicken and franchising •history '>''aS made . Jn seven years.Kentucky Fried Chicken \ was '-'"Orth about S500 million. I Because of stock inCentive plans Brown at one time had l 25 millionaires working for l him at KFC, "That y,·ore me out; I was a basket case and had to get my 1 head on again," said Brown. "So I sold out, or rather merg- ed it. with Heublein. Inc. and stayed on as chairvian of the board." AL THOUGH HE brushed off 1 suggestions that he sold KFC 10 lry pc;litlcs . il's known he t has an eve on a U.S. Senate seat. a Spot for '-''hich his father campaigned un·1 successfullv seven times. When poiitics (ailed to jell. Brown bought Lums Restaurants for $-I million . It's a 350-outlet chain featuring beer and hotdogs and has about $70 million in sales. "The one thlng it needed was I quality food "'·ith a uniQue-1 ness." said Brown . He thinks he's found it in the] shape of an "Ollieburger'' creatl?(I by an Archie Bunkf•r· type from South f\:11ami '>''ho has been cooking hamburgers for 37 years. "I believe Ollie C.leichenhau~ could be another Colonel Sanders," savs ErO'>''l'l . •·Hp say~ his bu,.gers are the be~t in the '>''orld. I believe it. s" 'I J'l('"'"<=11aded him to come \\•ith me." OLLIE IS a put-on artist v:hol insults customers if lhey ask for mustard and ketchup, says ' he uses 32 spices and a special! sauce in cook ing his 'bur~ers in a wafne-iron tvpe grill . The "Ollieburger'' is being 1I featured at Lums restaurant and also is being geared for l franchising. Bro\Vn and his 1 creu' are busy selling "Ol!ie's 'I Tr()!\ey"· \vhich he predicts will be another Kentucky f ried Chicken. I It 's a counter hamburg shop sh<1ped like a trollev and able to fit in an area about the size! of three parking spaces. ASSOCIATE Collfor11la Carporotlett a f f • r 1 119"0 District Owtt0nhlp 111 Nan· Comp•tltl"• l111inH1. rnork•th''I 1rtol11tloP1ary MW mocllltto ta ltt· d111trlal ond cornM•telol oulleh. lltdl"Jd"' M'1tt how Hiid -n· a11-ettt bocktto1111d end capo• bllity fl4 tekl"'I c-plet• chort• of ope«ttloM. CoMpJefe pradvet & 1yst_, trahil1t9. Troclr rHord wlU pr.•• Sl,000 moPlthly 11•t. S11b1ro11tlal Hlory & •lfpPm ta oporori1t9 pClrTt*. Slt.910 will haPldl•. Prl11clpel1 a11Jy itl•~- Wilr. la•to• Co., 605 Hi11dry •••·• l111Jlewoocl, C•. 90101 , Att~ J. l•mMY• PJ'9ilde11t. 111· cl.de be<lrgra11P1d hbtary, ,...._, • "'<ft, ,..,.,..." 1101t1~ for r,. -"ew -,.pal~. '--~==~·· Tr y Satu,r'l"y's Ne1i;s Quiz We D~re You When a Family tJeeds a Friend ... Sylvia Port<r Do high food down on the costs cause you to cut quantity and qJ allfy of company dinners? Do you find yourself slighting your family's nutritional needs in order to meet financial needs? You can find help with these and many other problems of family finances in Sylvia Porter's column several times weekly in the financial pages of the DAILY· PILOT. Yes, Sylvia Porter can be a friend of YOUR family . Her nationally syndicated column, "Money's Worth," features im - portant ,ideas which can relieve your concern over monetary matter<. For ex- ample, she will tell you how to save a considerable percentage of yoqr gro- cery dollar despite spiraling food costs. Let a friend drop Sylvia Porter can . '" on tonight. the you from visit you pages of the DAILY PILOT delivered right to your home. You will get your money's worth from Sylvia Pnrter:s col- umn and all the oth er special features in the financial pages of the THE ONE THAT MEAN~ BUSINESS ' Complete New York Stock List ' a i s ••• NII( N•rc ""r "" N•!A Nll C NOC N•IC "'c NI (I NtDe WatO N0!5 NllF Nau N!IG N•N N.r l Ntll NII I NP re "" NII S NI SI N!Sll Nill NttU N••"' ~·" '" ··~ Nc:o,, Ntwn Nw .. o Nwm . " Niilll """" N••M Nl•S "'' "' ·~· Nor II ,.,,,,,, NAC ••• •• "'" "" NCHll '"" Nu111 NllG No•n N<1N1 Nu~• NoSP Nu,!' ·~' ·~· ·~· NW'' ••• NW>! NWSI Nwt! ·~· ,,, NOWJ ""' ·~· NrtSI ·~ "'' o" Oa~lt ""' "" "" ~ """ "'" "" "'" 8:'/11 Omo ooo Oot•I "'. 0111 '"" o~r1e o~, "" Owo Ow• Owo> O~tr ... ... " n .. " H " • '" " '" I~ E " " " " " ~\ ll " DAJLV PILOT July --------'- Monday's Closing Prices-Coinplete New York Stock Exchange List \\liarket Ignores Dollar Weakness .. ,.. ,... I s.i., "'" s. ,, ~. f ~· " N•t , 11;.,,i """ Low L•tt c,.. Do-to lone• ~• oo11,1 """ u. u.• chi! ,. r 1/'IO• "'111 Lo-l• c"" , E c""" tt .... 1..ow Lt~t "'°" 1t 1t aJ ., .. M4•,. .,..-. t.i--u ""' ,.,, 1.J~ 1t11 t1\t /tlarJcef. Trew:tl v~•• •rt 1" JO \ i,. 111 w•11a:a" ., u "'• 111~ ~" ) ft\111 ,,~ , 11 4 lh • ~ I I.it& (.otl) :ID lllO '• '• • • V~ Tt "" 1 JI \ o I •I "''"'~ sh 1 11 )\, 1 1-T :!I" 11-ffij r,~,,,. 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II n l , .. ~... .cl I) nit )l YlllCll .:a. IJ XI' 2:J~ lli.. 2i•r~kotn tS.7 , .. ,, '! Jll 2llS.TicGt11 1 .. I I"' U 11 Ulo ;is1, 0 U~LFt "I> n 1 'lo I -,,.., t~ Cl l t 1 ~ lJ • """, !! .: ,•, ," ... 11 ,...,_ ... I II.... ' ... '"'-" 1 ,, lit J1 '•GtT1! 1 l , i·. 1• ' t• ·-AG'v•nc:to ~·· fr!"1 u~ .... Cp '° I ~ .... I • ll\,.. I\ fllll n , 1• ,. 14 - W...£0 •• ''"' 11'tt h2 """ 140.-1 .. :1::1""10!• ,,.n ·~••fnd '. II tlo ·~ .... o..;... ~ u u~ .... ,,. I ~ I l'l l 11," olllrv•M •• N )I.I ~I ............. t'lll.Mfll IOtiDt )t '° +I~) pm u..i 1'4l1i 10115 inn,, .... s..o 26JIOl IOC ~lO. U•CP• td » l'tOu•~ln ... .., •I ..... .,i. ""' ol\IJll"ll ! ,, ,r lot )I "" .0 •• It 17'\ 11 +1 ... c:1o.. t l)..li I .... 101 ... ,.1111.11101 01 u , .... II 1'-.. ro:r>q IJ~ 1fttuu,~11P,=..t 1111,, I•, '') ll l'• •l'fthff')t ~" '' ...... 1 .... NE\VYORK<AP)-Thestockmarketcont1nued Sn'V(.•ff':n 11 i.111 i•\•11 •'11-·N•''"-+il:t:~:t.:i!+&a 1""'-' .M• l 11' 11'•l!. '•P•m"""~"'"'i • .... .i.u , , .. 5''" ......... 11 s ••\It , .. u-t d l::..':· ..... 1!' 1:11,,,':~1;;;=~ .. CI C'9 i::1"1u'1'':o'} ~tt''J8.,if~t" I ---'--'---UVlnllll• -Jv_!_n 1 r~'d;t,;--J'&~ ~ ~T-~ o g:un groun Monday a s investor sentiment re i.-ve11 ....... .,. ,.,. i1 • "" "1..1'1.... It• nouot , .. 1..., •'• , ~·1,.,~ A, .. i · '' ''• n 11 ..... ;;or 111 J ,,. , • 1 -1 1na1ned confident in the face ol some d1scourag1n" ~~Ln l •J,•, \ 'I "•'• "•" ""~" +" , .. , 1111 "' • .. 1 ... ~. 1 + • ~ • ,•, ,. .. , ., 11 . 1<> 10 w~ <.,,, '° , .i. ''. • • o ..,~Cftt ""...-$fi., ""J••lpf2111 ISJO JO JO 1 I ,_., '" llo.,h 1 -'-""t tJ IC) ~ 1)oll •'~ economic signs C•rEI 1 ... 1 11 • 21119 lGO.. ,. E INhl 1101'1 Uow L•• Cl'lll *"'°' 10 , lit IN n ;o j~T ... •,·.~ •• H"'. -,,,, , ... "~~ ~ • •1 " • ,... .. .... ~ ,. 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' ' " • 1 )1 '" I' I " ' • ' ' ' I • • " ' '" ' ' l " ' . • •• ' '. • . " » • • 1: :1 :. " ' . ~ . . ' I ? 1 o I 11. " • I 1! 0 SS S " ' • • • J IC O o 5 6 I I ' ' ' ' J • • • 1f I 1 I II • • • 122:0..:n-, ~ l\.o l l I 111 17 1 O I~ -l(Yl . -. IOV.+ ' -. " . "-. l ,. \o • t '~ . "' " 1'-• ' S"-+~o 10 .. -r 1 o-.. • ,_ . . " • ") + • " • ' . . " ' " ' + • ' ... ~ . ' 11.,... .... ,_ • '" ' ' lf',.,. , • ,.. l • 1& .,._I ' " I •-Si...... • & -I• • " t..-\• '. t " t • ' . ' ) ·-... " . . ' • ,,_ . '' ' , ' ' 1 • ! • . ' • ' " ' I~ -I • y~. 1 ·~ II l • • " ' • ' .. I ..., II J lr"''"" iO ,, " A 1r1erico1t I :~vo;;o:~ _",~.'::: ~ ;.r•~ 1 1otc1 n n1 l!rlo c1n i or.~ l ' ~· Un ''"~ 1• 100 f ~"' '" " """ '"" ll l!i rlrnn < n• • m' 21 0 T t" • . ~ ,. •• ' • - DAILY PILOT lutMl.11, July 24, 1973 l'a81lllf Clrc~" .. •---.. b.:11~ Bii Kea11e Ah~ Silence Post1nan Never Ri1ig·s From Wlre Services Tite postman never rings in Rancho Santa Fe. a wooded town in the hills bv the Pacific, w.hich is fine with ac- tor Robert Young. child, he is second in line to the throne after his father. ' ' Statement Says Rig Spill-free Student Rights Panel t() Probe WASlllNGTON (AP) -A dr~Jt of a federa l en- Campus Bugging ·vironmtntal hnpaet statement LOS ANGELES (AP) - on u proposed offshore oil Allegations of illegal wlretnp- drilling platform says there is ping and electronic spying on liUle chance or oil spills or students and profe!S<lrs in the pollution {ron1 the rig. Los Angeles Com mun it y 'rhe thrce-volun1e, 1~27S..page College Di.strict have been rrport y.•as preparOO by the unveiled by a legislative in· U.S. (:ro1ogical Survey and vcstigaling committee. 11'aS released ~1onday. "For more than a year no1v, EXXON OIL company has legislators and I aw en· propost.-d installing 8 94().foot forcement officials have been drilling platform in 850 feet of rece1vrng complaints from y.·atcr in the Santa Barbara students and other persoooel channel. Under the profloial. of the community college pipelines would carry oil and district," said Assemblyman gas from the p\atfonn to a Charles Warren ( D ·Los new treating and storage Angeles), chairman of the facility on shore. Assembly subcommittee. A spokesman for the su rvey ALLEGATIONS OF wiretap-- WARREN SAID studen!.s, admlnistrators, campus Poli~ aoctmembers .or dis~ of trustees are being caned to testify. Earlier, slate Ca pito I sources said witnesses were being called by subpoena. It was not immediately kMwn if college administrators would be testifying voluntarlly or ,un. der subpoena. \\'arren did not say in the fonnal statement whether the alleged wiretap activities were being conducted by the college adlninistration. but pointed out that the district is defendant in two suits involving the rights of students and pro- fessors. said the major accident which ping in the district _ with t'Ould happen would be a spill. private suits over it -surfac· Tll1'~ JtEPORT says a major ed last year and received wid e "TUE MEMBERS of this oil spill could be caused by an publicity. committee · are going to improper well casing pro-Warrep said J\.ionday the determine whether the rights gram, rupture of caprock, subcommittee would look into of anyone have been interfered earthquakes, the p I at r or m the situatioii in public hearings with -and if so, what bei~ hit by a ship hum an er· here July 30-31. legislative remedies may be ror, fire and storm damage. He said the alleged acts in· appropriate," Warren said. 11owever, the report says the volved "illegal wiretapping, Warren is chairman of the likelihood of any of those electronic surveillance and Assembly J u d i c i a r y Com· events occurring is "very other acts involving improper mittee. He is also chairman of low." or illegal interference with the the Judiciary Committee's "Subsurface safety valves rights of st udents, professors subcommittee on the right o( Good Jnv.estment News: BUY DIAMONDs-t=RP•ESTATE, SAVE A FORTUNE NonY111ablc for t'hc nublic: fine jewelry from several large cstatei" at Cost.a Mesa JewClry. . Save 50%. ESLatc jewelry priced for immediate sale. Invest now for unbelievable 50% savings. Wise invCstmcnt oPtKWtunity. Coll ection in cludes ·diamonds, rubicl' nnd emeralds. •Big invest- ment demand because of incrcwsin~ value and limited supply. .Beautiful i;election of ladies and men's. rings and watches. f!lcgant necklaces, bracelets and pins in gold o r platinum . Priced from $200 to $10,000 ... values to $20,000. Out-o(-1,awn je welry-a great investn1ent. llundreds of prcciO\iji and semi -precious itef11S now available. Pri1..-es low as $10. l\.1ake SollM!One l~appy with the pericct gift rro1n Co!lta Mesa Jewelry. Make a sound financial invcst1ncnL too. RACITl'S 1;xqui1ite platinun1 ner:klact uilth l i18 dion1t1nd1. l'rnr..,./«r/lf!(I 1fro11 (J.~.j l."rrr11/J<) 1"/u1i11.t1I fill l7 hn~/11tllr~. M liri/- li1J11/~. 1111d lft•/irote r/11J<fcrt1 nf -''' mnr ... 1111/lf(tt"Ht t!i'111111111tfA. 1Jil~<i~r /S kei:et .. $ /8,IH/11 1;1dut. JJrirf ·rediu:ed to $11./lll!l. COS.TA MESA JEWELRY 18:!8 Newport. Boulevard. Costa 1i1esa, California 9'2627 7141646-7741 "I have to go to the JX>!t of· fice, and 1 meet people there," Young said. The young prince is named arter his great-grandfather, King Haakon Vll. Norway has also had seven kings named ~iagnus. but none since the 14th century. * placed in producing wells and administrators." privacy. would prohibit upward move·'_:::_:::==:::=:::..__~ _ _'.:::_:::::_::.._ __________ ~----------------------------- "We stand around and chat about ~ stale of the Ylorld. I prefer it to Beverly Hills or tlollywood." Young, television's !\1arl'US \\'elby M.D., and his wife Bet- ty bought their home in Rancho Santa Fe about 20 years ago. * The Small Busin ess Administration has filed sui t agalost the ex-wire of former )Cleveland Browns fullback ( PEOPLE J J im Brow o and two associates. seeking to recover a $10,000 loan. The su.it, filed in U.S. District Court in Cleveland, names Sue Brown and her associates in a claim J.or $7,764, the amount or the loan the government said was un- paid. The trio u.ed the loan to start a suburban tetepbooe answering servi<t that still is in operation, the !Uit said. . . * . Prfucess Anne 's fiance is now Capt. Mark Phillips. 2-1, not Lt. Phillips, the Defense :h-Unistry announced. It said Phillips' promotion, which -took e H-e c t im· mediately. means a pay in· crease of $2.50 a day to $6,731 annually. * A car driven by President Julius Nyerere of Tani.ania collided with a truck in Dar/es Saleem, but Nyerere escaped injury. Nyerere was on his way to a beach house outside t h e capital, and had a police escort with flashing lights. but the truck driver apparently did not see it and pulled into the path of the president's car, y.•itnesscs said. * Nor\\1ay's new prince will be named llaako n ~1agnus, and if he reaches the throne. he will be King Haakon VIII. the royal palace announced in Oslo. The baby y.•as born lo Crown Princess Sonja and CToY.'n Prince I Iara ld. Their first Ramsey Clark, a former U.S. attorney general. says he is con,sidering running for the U.S. Senate from Ne\V York. Clark, 45. is in private law practice in New York City. His career in justice spanned eight years of the Kennedy and Johnson administrations. * \Vllliam Penn Patrick, the late cosmetics millionaire, left about half his estate tQ his estranged wire and the other half to a trust in his name, the controversial tycoon,'s w i 11 ShoY.'S. The will. filed in Marin County, did not de<:la re a l•alue for Patrick's holdings. Patrirk, 42. the forrTK'r head of the San Rafael-based Holi- day ~lagic cosmetics empire. "'as killed June 9 when the vintage plane he was piloting crashed at his Lake County ranch . * C~arged by a city coun- cilwoman of being a "Neander- thal male chauvinist," Phila- delphia Mayor Frank R!tzo re: plied that, in police work. \\'O- men should not be treated as the equal of men. Rizzo said in a te~ev ision ap- pearance that a woman can't cope physically. He said that. faced with a violent criminal. ''The only thing a policno.'Oman could do-in many instances would be to shbot." City Councilwoman Ethel Allen charged that the police leadership assigned the force's &I police\vomen to "runaways and stolen bicycles." * A man claiming to be a pro- ressional writer and the original "\Vizard of Odds." fil- ed a $2 ntillion la\YSUit in Lo, Angeles to halt the National Broadcasting Companv from c:illing a morning television ouiz sho\v, '·The \\rizard o( Odds." Leo Guild, who said for th e past quarter century he has created radio and television shows, books, ne"'spaper col· umns. and ~loons bearing the wi1.ard title, claimed the quiz show has deceived and misled viewers into believing they are watching something he created. ment of oil and gas in the event o( damage to the \li'ells or the platform," the report says. IT ADDS that the platform "can withstand without struc· tural damage the strongest ground shaking that has a significant likelihood of oc-- currence during the lifetime of the structure, and that the platform can withstand without failure the strongest potential ground shaking at the site." IT ADDS that the chance of a ship ramming into the plat· fom1 is remote because the structure would be seven to nine 1niles from shipping lanes. The report also says there is evidence that the structure ''\\o•ould have a positive impact in that it would provide an artificial ·reef' (or ... plapts and animals in an area where reefs are lacking. Park · Stock At Yosemite Sold to MCA LOS ANGELES (AP) - ~lCA, Inc. said i~ agreed to buy [13 percent· or Tile STocK or,_ __ _ Yosemite Park and Curry Co .. operator of all lodging. recrea- tional and transportation facilities at Yosemite National Park. The price \\'as announced '-1onday as about $7.2 million in cash. J\-1CA, AN entertainment rompany, said the seller is U.S. Natural llesources, lnc .. which is primarily engaged in the manufacture of forestry equipent. J\1CA said that in addition to acquiring 552.634 sha res from U.S. Natural Resources it v.·ill make a tender o(fer for the remaining 498,000 shares al a price not less than the SlJ a share to be paid U.S. Natural Resources. Yosemile Park and Curry's sales for the fiscal year ended Sept. 30, 1972 totaled $15 million. ARE YOU SE RIOUS ABOUT LOSING WEIGHT? ' l1ndoro's unique progrcm I~ o safe ond practical method for the entire fomily to lo~e weigh! and leorn how lo mointoin proper weighl ... under the slrict supervision of Medical Doctor ~. medical weight reduction Cati for information I LINDORA+ MEDICAL CLINICl Mond•y thru Friday 8 A.m. to 6 COSTA MESA Adams at M""' Vtfde 557-18'3 NEWPORT IEACH 404 WostmlMttf 645·3740 P.M. NEWPORT BEACH GARDIN GROVE LONG BEACH PASADENA • ORANGE 64S-H40 S34·20S1 426-6S49 796-2614 S38-239' 'et• , .• , ......... 1 "'"'' .. '''''" ...... C•t1lo•• 1 ........ c ........... . ,,, ,,., ... ,. ... 1 '''• '"• .... i.11"' ,,.1 •• -•tfDt WOODLAND HILLS SHERMAN OAKS WIST COVINA FULLERTON LA HABRA 694-1019 347-S647 789-7103 962-3438 870-9S01 "'n""' w.,,., .. v ,111•1 c ...... "'" Dyl Met1011 Mttl<C .. l ltit ,,,,, .. , .... 11111, l ltlt COSTA MESA SANTA MONICA POMONA S,7• 119) -128-•SU -v .. ,. l•t•~I•• ,. ........ .i11., ......... '"' SAii BERNARDINO . 886·4788 ............... Mtdocot 11•9 62a-16SS lo-.... Y .. lop "'"""'"''····· E. LONG BEACH S97-0378 lo• .1,1101 Mtd•ccrl Ctn•t~ , •••• c: .. ~· Mtd".! t Mutl..:.,I 11<19. ClRRITDS RIVERSIDE 924-5741 787-llSO , ... ~ .. Mtd'fti.I 1,.1 ........ ~., Sq..ia10 MISSIOll HILLS J6S-1!38 Ml\1ion M•d•c ot lld9 Free Personal Chee For e to celebrate the opening of our Newport Beach office < Save up lo $24 a year!' When you open a Checking Account fo r $100 or more al our New- porl Beach office on or before Au gusl 31, 1973, a nd mainlain a·$100 n1inimu1n ba lan ce,~~ yo u'll ge l free personal checking. You 'll be abl e lo wri!e as many checks as yo u wan! each mon!h and neve r have to pay a mon!h ly service charge. If yo ur minimum balance falls below $100, your accounl wil) "'Free Personal Checking., could save some of OU< customers up lo $24 a year and some cuslomers o( olhe r banks even more. Our two drive-up teller windows 1nea n fast se rvice witl1out .even leaving your car. Or when you come in!o the bank, there's a large parking area for our customers. Drive-up window banking hour,; 9 a. m. lo 5 p. m. Monday-Thursday. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Fridays. Regular banking hours .10 a.m. lo 3 p.m. Monday-Thursday. 10 a.m. 10 6 p.m. Fridays. The Bank of California @) Wem;j{eb .............. 140'1 Dove Street, Newport Place, Newport Beacn, Califomia 92660 (714) 833·3511 Warre n P. Thompson, Vice Presi de nt and Manager -· .. . -- " TRICIA'S NO 'EASY OUT' REA ANDERSON, £ditor Tuftd•y, Jul'r 24, 1t1l "'" 17 Star-craving Madness ;M/ orker Re -signed -. "' J DEAR ANN LANDERS: There's one ;fubject you never menli9n in your col· Umn . I suspect you are afraid of ir· iitating a few million idiots. I am talking i bout astrology. A cou ple or nuts in this office who consider themselves highly in· telligent wouldn't dream of making a move without consulting their "charts." One is an Aries who believes her destiny is to be a world leader. She •(:OUldn't lead a molh to a name. In fact, .!he's a troublemaker who has managed 10 make life so miserable for three good "employes here that they quit. I might be ,_exL ~The other is a Libra who insists that her sign has pl.aced he r on a higher ;..thlcal plane than anyone in the offij:e. i:'ve watched her opera te and she coWd engra\fe her code or ethics on the knee of a bee and still have room for the Get· .lfsburg Address. I hope you will put the knock on these Phony Balonies and express ydur views RJ1 ast"'108Y -SICK OF Tl!EM ~-DEAR S. O. T.: 1 know very little ~t astrolo&Y but I do knO'ff 1everal ~pie who are a rar cry from Phony f8~onles and an berosoope-hooked. MY r.nonal lacUu.Uoa as far as altrology concerned parallels lbat o f D aketpearfs Cau las, who said, ''The "fault . dtar Brut115, 11 not in our st.an. but bl ourstlves, Iha& we are undtrlinp." • ~·DEAR ANN LANDERS: My dear brother KcMy wa.s a factory represen· 'tallve. He knew all kinds of people. A few ;weeks ago KcMy dropped dead of a tieart attack. :--Alter lhe semces, a <n>Wd of people ~me to my aiste ... hMaw's house. She ~ KeMy's death vecy bard and was :ender heavy sedatkin. • A we.U-dressed man sought me out ,ihen he couldn't !ind !)er. He told 'TTK! --\•at K•r\l!Y owed htm "°° from two . llOker 111>ies, ~ !11.-i~ was cl•!'!;. -: he expects the rnmlly 10 pay the money. When I asked il .he had GJ\Ything In rltlng he said, "The guy's word was food as gold. II• always paid me l:tc.forc." The man left his card and said he'd be In toucll in two w..,k,, • . A few days later I told my sister·in-law about it. She sajd she never knew Kenny played poker for such high stakes but if he owes lhe .money she'll manage to pay it somehow. My husband told her, "It's a _ racket. Forget it." I said I would write to Ann Landers. Answer, please . .:_TULSA DEAfl T.: Since the man bad nothing in writing and your sl&ler-io-law never' saw him before, I'd say your husband gave ber the right advice. , DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have a good friend who has a habit that drives me nuts. Nell is a darling person and knows everything that goes on in town. We talk on the phone every day. My complaint is this: I can't recall a single conversation when she didn't say "Hold on a minute -" then she leaves the phone. Her ·"minute" can be anything from 20 seconds to 7.0 minutes. One day 1 timed it. When I called her back, haU an hour later, he r line was busy. The next morning she phoned lO apologire. She went to al\SWft" the doorbell and forgot 1 was waiting. This morning Nell gave me the "hold on a minute'' routine again and I waited seven minutes by the clock. (Her dog had to go out.) Any 1uggestk>m? -SLOW BURN DEAR SLOW: The next time Nell says, *'Hold t111 a mlnute," bang •P· Wbta •be cans back tell ber elac:U, wbat you told me. What kind of W<dding goos wltll tod3y's 11J!J!'._Jifr •.tYl~•? ~ an)'thlng iO? Ann Landers' completely oow "The lhilic's Guide '' tells what's right for todny's wed· dings. For• copy . ..00 a dollar bill. plu.• a long, self-addressed, s1amped envelope (IS cents postage ) to Ann Landers, Box 3346, Chicago, Ill. ~ . By LAUR.IE KASJ'Jo;R Of ... Dlolly ...... , .. ,. "Jiey !\tister. Wait around for the next game if you want some good pictures. 'nley'Ve got a girl on lhetr team and she's really greal," said I.he young boy baseball player. "She's greal, is she? ls s:I"' better than you?" asked the photographer who had C.'Ompletcd his assignment of shooting a boys· game. '"\\'ell ." replied the youngster. "she's nol better than me. But she's bcll<'r th an them." And vdth that he pointed to the olher players, all boys, on the fi('!d. What betler testimony can there ix''.' Duly impressed. the photographer stayed around and became evf'11 more impressed as these pic1urcs and hts report to us pro\'ed. Since then. Tricia EchternaCh. 10-yrar- old daughter of r..tr. and "'lrs. John Echternach of Newport Beach. \\'as one of four £rom her team at !\tariners Park selected for the All-Stars "''ho v>'ill be playing against better players from other riclds at TeWinklc Park Augusl 4 and 5. GIHLS PLAY There are at least three other ·girls playing in the ~!arbor /i\rea Baseball League v.'hich had ..3600 youngsters register this summer. But s~·s the only l gi rl Y:e know of v.·ho has mude it to the All·S!ars. This means that she'll automatically move from the double C lO the B league. v.•here the boys \~·ill be a little older and playing tougher with a hard ball, if she chooses to play again next year. Tricia Echtern ach IZii' • .,1 demonstrates .. , •• baseball talents ~~ wh ic h warranted her selection to Newport Harbor All -Stars. '· Leacue rule$ pro\'kle lhis for All-Star players. explained 1\od ~tac:?!UIUan. the program's direct.or, bccaiM "they're 00.. \•lously godd enough to play up in the nexl level next year." AltOOugh nnotllflr girl pJayed v.ith thent a nu1nber of years ago, he S3ld, this is the first year glrls""have really sho\\'ed iu1 inlercsl In tht league, which is spOO.'lON'tl by Costa l\·lt'Sa, Ne....-port Beach and the Soys' Club. Their rules have ne,·er. he said, specihL'<i that the league is only for boys. 6u1 girls might be more interested. he ttunks, no"' thnt CIF rules ha\•e been changed enabling them fo play "'hat ha\•e trnd1tlonally bc<'n considered compctiU\'e boys· sporis as rar up as high school. I-le anticipa tes a gfO\\'lh in the number of girls playing \\'ith them although he prefers that they sta rt m the fifth grade or lx>lon' so the boys v.·lil become used to playing v.·ith girts at a younger iigc. INOIVIOUA L G A~I E And if a gi rl is going to choose a gainc she can rontinue to play even in high school, he thinks baseball is better than , say, football because it Ls not as grueling and is "more of an individual game ." Actually, Bill George, her former coach at ~1armers School who persuaded Her to join the league, thinks the small-1ized girl whose long blonde hair hangs oot ol her baseball cap '"·ould be a good football player 100. l ie dest.Tlbed her a!!I "really ~n excep.. t.Jonal athlete" "'00 is b>tb ph.)'lictJly and menU1li;' wugh. 11iere was one boy in Tricia's fourth grade class "'ho is a "really, re.a.Uy Sood" athlete, he said. But if ahe "'ere a boy or bad 100 training a boy nonnally gets, he added,-"l'ni sure she v.'OUJd be baftimg· the other boy OOL'" lie encouruged htr beca use he beUevf's "everyone, if they 're fortunale enough to have the abl!Hy, shou/dn'I "'!.Sle it." Be. sides. ~ thin~ sht mrght enjoy It later on. fligh school sporu, he notes. provide the student "'ilh e.tercise. friends and· good limes. ' TRAINING NEED~D But if a girl just deeides y.·hen she'! 16 lh:it AAe "·ants to get into Sport!!!, he be!ie\'es her decision romes too latr-. She just can 't make up the experience and training she \1·ould h:i,·e missed in her ~·ounger )'fars to compete again.o;t boys v.·ho naturally get this preparation . \\'hen it comes to sports in school , George cornplaincrl, !ltudcnL.s a re SC'parated on the basis of sex. \\'hile boys play the fa miliar ltam sports, as football and baseball. girls play soccer '"'hich is often foreign to them (Ir ~ "just sort of stand around game" of baseb.111. "Tht'y never let the girls develop the good old American game," he said. So girls, he believes, miss ool on the challenge \1·hich makea sports so en· joyable and rev.•arding. But also. he said, okier women have diffil'Ully learning a sport, a.s tenni!!I, because they don't lT101¥ how to mo\·e and Jack the unde rstanding of things \\hich are fundamental in all games. As for Tricia, he said, ir she "·ere pla}ing ~·ill1 girls. there ~wld be no challenge for her to be the ''be:st.'' CHAU.ENGE But she has had the challenge ot playing v.·ith the boy.s and pro\1ng herself. No~·. be thinks she sOOOld go on into fast-pitch hardball but that will have to be he r chok:e. \\'hen we asked ritrs . Echlemach about her daughter she saKt, "She's just a \ot of fun. I don't know ho1\• good she is." But then she described her youngest daughter as the kind who like,_, to be.> good at whatever she i!!I' intere,_,ted in. When she S1arted ptaying !our-square in kindergarten, the roothe.r recaJled, Tricia would come home and pt"actice the game: until she was what she considered goed. Now that Tricia is interested i11 baseball, sbe'U get their neighbor, a col· Jege all-star player from UCI, or some· one from her family or other friends lo play catch with her. "She has a natural Jalent along 1\·ilh this." admitted the mother who is ob- viously proud of her daughter but still 11 bit concerned that her ability will gel played up too much. Jn her family, athletics, for the J1lMI part. Ls a female interest Elizabeth , 12, plays ba!eball and tennis and has tht same talent as her younger sister excepl that "Tricia work s at it,'' Mrs. Echternach said. Betina, 20, is manager of the pool al 1''ewport Harbor High for the sunvnc1 and also plays tennis and volleyball Although the mother is now more of • spectator of her d:illdren's activities, shl did play collegiate tennis. (See TRICIA, P11e U) Daily Pilot Photos by Lee Payne , ' ,._. _____ _ -'-------·------------------ 8 DA ILY PILOT Tur~ay, July 24, 1973 Musical Smorgasbord Anolher Evening of ~l usic ~ will the n1e the party planned for fol'tday, July Tl , at the Ne.,.,1>0rter hu1 by t h e Founder's Support c..;roup of Ibo JrviJle ~~>I« .Gil2'e~-.. !\ternber~ und guests will gather around the pool at 5:30 p.m. for co n t in u ou s en· tcrtninnlcnl, a bu f f et , 1..'0Ckl<1i\s and dancing. Entcr1a1nment will include cxcerplS from the 11ws1cal hit show "Gertrude Stein Fi rst !«'rider": d i re c ted by 1.a.,.,·re ncc Gordon : the Pilaster Chorale "in 111 i u i a tu r e ' ' dircct<'d by John Alcx<indcr; .... "'l "Soni:s f'rom Lhc Islands" by ·:::::: C~ri=:e and Bev Kaho1lua : the • ·": Norm Major Duo and music :: · ·· ~ by Up \\'ith People cast ; .. mc1nbers. I The g~rlng al s o is a n1eans c>r rf.'Cruiting nt"1v me m- bers for the support group. Giving a preview for !\lrs. Edw-J rd \V. Schuma<..i1cr, ehairman (at ' rightJ arc Up \Yith Proplc cast members Rosy Da rrell of Bennuda and Willie Carpen te r of Oklahoma. From Page 17 ... Tricia ··:o.1y son will have nothing to do with this. lfe's a busint'SS- man," t.ln>. Echternach said . Althou gh John, 17, does go la. Tricia's games, he is more in-"" terested in someday O"-Tiing- a chain of t.1c.Dona ld's rcstaur· ants where he is now a crev.· chief. .. • Set Tourists Having~ .•. A Great Dime . By ERMA BO~IBECK Las Vegas ... When 1 was fi ve years old, my older sister and her girl friend lured me Wider the back porch one afternoon and engaged me in a game of strip poker. I lean>ed an important lesson that day. Never engage in a game of strip pok er w\1h two hustlers (who knOw their numbers) while wearing only a sunsuit and a pair of briefs. I have been overdressed ever since. Las Vegas is not as subtle about gam bl ing as my ex- perience wxler the b a c k porch. I know somewhere in th is ci- ty are men who carry Donald Duck thennoses to the office and fall asleep in their chairs in the evening. - I know that somewhere are mothen who livt'! in houses without room servi~ and save green stamps and have childrro who play in the sprinkler, but my time was spent in the part. of town that tourists see. Ceremony Planned ' ' Pamela Marie Hoffman and 'Thomas P.t Berce are plan- ning to marry Aug. 18 in St. Joachim's Catholic Church, Costa 1.1esa. • AT ,, ,• WIT'S .: 'END . ~ '----' There was something atxru'f' it lhat made me feel like Dori!' Day had come lO town wUq. the egg money . Maybe it wliis' the S1range v.·ay th& eash!er looked at me when I asked rur a quarter's worth ol nick~ All I know is, som ethlJlg happened to me the iirst tid'.f I put in a nickel, pulled tl\t arm on the slot machine af¥i got 1\VO nickels back. :: Doris Day went banaJ\tl. Feverishly, I pu in t'fo nickels e l a t ime that ;1 could raise my od Theo.:J began Ioadi~ the · e ~ my left, pulling ann 8!tf inserting a coi in the ~ machine without even waitifm to see if I hit'anYthing or JJOf.. My palms began to' sweat· I refused food or drink, per~ myself on a stool and went)t the job of looing money with all the dedicat ion of a WY balanc ing 18 twirling plates l't1 bamboo . poles. , :. Numb v.•ith excitement,· I didn't notice my husband :e.1 my ellxnv. "•low are yiu doing?" he asked quietly. : ''Doris Day is down to ~ last freckle," 1 said sadly. : . "I've got the luggage," fle said. "Don't you think y e ought to get out of lhe airpQrt. and into town~" "I'll call the kids and tell ·them we got here ," I said. · But the mother credits her I d ~h~~~t~~sh~~v~u~~~d~~~~cou P es We a science teacher and head of , the meditt center ot Ni'"•port · in-,Summer Ceremonies News or the forthcoming event was announced by 1.tr. and ?-.1rs. William P. Hoffman of Newport. Beach, parents of the bride-elect who is a graduate of Los Altos High School and a student at San Diego State University. Her finance, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Berce of Mission Viejo, also is a stu· dent at SDSU. Inserting two nickels in the phone I gave the operator tpe number. Then I heard it : ... that magic tinkle-tinkle o( two coins being returned. : "{.won ?" I shouted, jum~g to my feet. I stood up too soon . A man took my place and began inserting nickels i!'- to the telephone. Harbor v.•ho played rugby in coUe11e. · Tricia . "''ho also has a part in the P.1ariners School sum- mer porduction or ''Oliver." V.'3S doifw Sixth mde \\"Ork and Lo; artistically inclined ap- parently has no definite plans GI BBS-NOLLER ·' St. Andrcv:'s Presbyterian Church. Nev•port Beach was the setting for the double ril'lg nuptia ls linkin g J\:.1rt'n Lauree Noller and John Ed\\'ard Gibbs to coolinue playillJ!: baseball . III of Parker, Ariz. and Fox "She's not one that tal_ks da Lake. 111. lot." he.r mother explaine · The Hev. Cecil Ea n es ·'She just kind of qu iel1y goes aOOu t her v.'3y of doing things." And the family is "jll<;t en- joying it and seeing v.<hat hap- pens next." "1 think if she has .the abil- ity to do this. it's a good thing,~· the mother said. But Tricia "'BS surprised at her selection to the AU -Stars. ''She really didn't think they'd pick her because she 's a girl." Mrs. Echternach explained. Boys from opposing teams often ask. "Is that a girl on vour team?" or simply say. "Get that girl out oC here " But her teammates support her and usU'81l y after lhcse crit'ics see Tricia play. they shut up. "There's no big thing !hat she's a girl.'' her mother said. "I hope that some other girls. will try out and want to play too." And she bets the y will, next year. performed the ceremony for the daughter of ti.Ir. and Mrs. Walter C. Noller of Newport Be<1cil and the son of r-.tr. and ti.·lrs. John E. Gibbs Jr. of Parker. t-.faid of honor \\'as Kathy Everett : bri des maids were Judy New and i\1a ri l ou Beav er. and no11'c.r girl was Dyan No rth. Altending as best man U'as Sig •lal\, and ushers were Dennis Noller, ChriS Lewis, Da vid Hoover and Dav id New. FollO\\'ing a honc~·moon In norUX'rn Californ ia a nd \Vashington. the ne\vlyvoeds v.•ill reside in Costa ~1 esa. The bride is a graduate of Ne"-'PQrl Harbor High School and a business collrge in San- ta An a, \\'hile her husband is an alumnus of Parker High School and Arizona \Ves tern College. CHRl~TIANSEN-. JORGENSEN In a military ce remony in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church. Ne""•port B e a ch Kathleen Jorgensen became the bride of Lt. (j. g.) Russell Joseph Ou-istianscn. The Rev. Donald i\1addox performed the double ring nuptials for the daughter of i\1r. and Mrs. Alfred vmnt Jorgensen of Newport Beach and the son of 1trs. Alfred Bent Christiansen ~f Denv er and the la te Mr. Christiansen. Alt.ending the bride were the Mmes. J . P.1. \Vallace, R. D. Crosby and Gilbert Hooker: and Miss Susan Vandewalker. Alfred Chr istiansen served as best man, and ushers were David Geoffroy and the Lis. Robert Sears, llookcr and Mike Wallace. The bride, a 1965 Children's lfome Society debutante and former member of the San Diego Cou nty Spinsters. is a graduate of Newport Jiarbor High School and ~alifornia \Yestern University. Presently she is a teacher in Chula Vista. Her husband is a graduate of Denver Eas t lligh School MRS. GIBBS and the University of Colorado. An air intell igence officer. he is stationed ;it :P.Iiramar Na\·a! Air Station. San Diego. Alter honeymooning i n Canada, the ne"''Y"·eds "'ill reside in San Diego. LEVIN-LANGLOIS Luanne Langlois and Gary Levin \vcre 1narricd in Los Horoscope: Leo, Accept Praise : WEDNESDA y cne 11 ho is !emporanly han+ cides v.·1th travel, higher interest Some persons no1v do 1 d1c;1ppt.'d. Visit and b c education, acllvat1on of learn-not know north fro1n south JULY 25 ch1.•erful.. Spotl.ight is on v.·ryat i n g pr 0 c e s s . \' 0 u r CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. By S''DNEY 0~1Altll you do in quiet. unobtrusive plu"losoph•'cal concepts a 'e 19 H I h d k ARI ES (~l arch 21-April 19): Accent is on relatives, sh()rt trips. idc·as that can be transformed int o proril s. Older individua l may represent in- hi bit ing factor. Key nOI\' is 10 be confident , \'t.'rsat1lc and to rnal ntain humor in face of ap- parenl ad 1·ers1t~·- T AUHUS (April 20.!\l ay 201: ~loney, personal possessions. budget and ba rgains arc highl ighted. Arie.!, I. i hr a IX'r.;ons could play significant roles. r.ct rid of outn1odcd concepts. Streamline O!X'ra- tion~ 'i"ou have solid op- portunity to enm tn o r e mon('.\'. GE~1 1 /\1 (May 21-Jun(' 20 1: !\Jove <1hcad. ~lake new ~tart~ in nc\1' direction~. Be in· A I Id I .1 : ea t an v.·or ·. are l n1anncr. quor an cou P ay sharpened. You can in· k Y -le Coopccate t"n o-"p featu red along \l'ith prn-(' •v · ,,.v vestigate s uccess full y. ur club pro ject. i\ns""·ers arc found _ you ductiv ity. Nothing o ccu r sl LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 J: i\c-discover and decide. Opposite halh-\·ay. If you start -it \\'11\ crnt no1v is on pro(e ssiona l ac-sex is involved. be nccessarv to finish. 1 clain1. the winning of friends · j I SCORPIO (Oct °'N'O\' 211· AQUARI US fJan. 20-Feb. and the influ cncin" of pcop c.. · ~ · · • c~-ck ·1h fam •"ly Take 18': Crea!ive cndca,·ors are Social activity increases. You -•rt: v.·1 • niav he \vined. dined and fl at-spceia l person into your con-likely to suc~d . Accent is onl terC.d. Fine 10 celebrate but fidellC('. Build for security. Be ho1\' you deal \\·ith one \vho af- 'wa'e 01 b"dgel ccq"•·ccmcnls fl'<'ts i·ou in cnlotional scnst' don·1 forget rocent promises. • .. .. · Aceenl l's oo money thal Ref""" to make doorn1at ofl VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 1: "" bclon "S to mate pactnec Yo" vourse\f. One "'·ho sings !he Spothu_ht is on earel'r. civ ic r. • • " "•II hav 10 make oon-ss•"o•• b. l"es is pco .. abl,v usin 11 i·ou. pro1cc1s, prE'Stigc. 'i'ou "'iii ... • e ..... · "' b h:H·e \l"O rk cut out for you_ But you ulti nlalely gain as a PISCES IF'eb. 19-i\lareh 201: I but indications art' that you result. r.:e"'' approach to property. arc rewarded fot efforts. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-~ro.1rity 1s 1nd1ca tl'd l.eo.1 Srorpio, Leo persons figure Dec. 211: Cautious :ipproaeh is Aquarius pc'rsons probahly :i.re I pron1i ncntly. ThC'rc is room necessary -take nothing for involved. State need s. Sci for vou ;it highrr clc\i<llio n. Jtran tcd. Be "'·ary in -con-. your 0\111 pace. Check drtails.1 LiBfli\ (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 ); nection \1·ith contracts . re.la· I flood !un.11r aspect now coin· tionships dependent on niutual __ . dependent in thou ght. action. l;==:i~iiii:~~~~~~===::~~==~~ Gi\'c creative resou rces full play. Imprint your O"-'n st:,.·le. Lead rather Lhan follO \V. illem- ber of opposite sci is dcfinite- h· auraclcd. I . CAl\\.:EH tJun<' 21-July 22 1· Huneh po\s dividf'nd~. B(' 1\1lh , I ij J Full Service Locations in Huntington Beach ·' PRESCRIPTIONS e c11a.,. -"'tavnt• • O.tl'l•f•lt ·' SEW·KNITS ., ,.,.. OUT OF BUSINESS POLYESTERS , WOOLS, ACRYLICS SKI FABRICS, ETC. l/2 PRICE OR LESS Jia STRETCH ~ COTTON PATTERNS KNITS · U, TO U' TO 80°/o •ff 75°/o off HUGH MYNA.TI NEED A CAPRI? L1l 11• rtfll' r.::' ''ttt•r fltlO<'t P•lc1 .... 1111 lft nt .. ... KNITS .11.,mtn,.I , •• ,", •• n""° "·· OrtM"lll I s:~w ··-I~ .......... c;it, ffllttfnV 111..,.1 ,.,, lnltrr'ltllt!I -•~ljl ""tM"al 1tn lt.t -"Ati< Ip• 'I ...... RU Ff ELL'S UPHOLSTERY It's that kind of a town. q;., FRANCIS- '\,,ORR el FINE STATI01'.ERY IA.Ck GAMMON .,1c1 CHESS SETS J111t Atti••d Wheti Yoa 'Waltt Tho Inf 1 t 22 Harbor 11,-d. Costa Mn• -541·025t t ill l.CIASI l151Wlf IU+llll tl•llA Ill llAI -CO•V!ll!l l 'Alllll ' MRS. CHRISTIANSEN Coyotes Country Club. Buen.:i P.:irk_ The bride. daughtC'r of !\Ir. nnd illrs. Bob J.anglois of Foun1;1in Valle.\'. asked l\1iss l\athv J)el.uc;1 lo Ix-lier maid of h'onor. Bridesn1<1 ids \\·ere ~lrs. Tt'rry Ccnl\'il v, :\tiss Lc~liC' Lan glois and hllss Lon- nie Langlois. \\'31 nc. Lev in ser\·ed as best nian. · and ushers ,,·ere .John • "G11mboll " lomp s59. MRS. LEVIN ' AylS\\10rth, Phil Scully and Terry Conw ay . The bride is a graduate. of r·oun tain Valley High School and Southern Ca lifo r nia College of ~lc.dical nnd Dental Ass istnnts. Mer husband, son of il lr. and P.1rs. Harold Lc\'in o f Fullerton , is a grndualc of Californi a State University. Fullerton. ~ Golden Needle's itm illtm~S~µ~'Ua~t~o/~de~'IUi~'ed.4 m.'ll x ·" ' I Swinging, Springy, Slinky Printed Jerseys RPg. 2.98 • 3.93 yd, 2.27 • 2.97 yd. Golden 'l1eedle ••••1cs IOUTM CO.I.If Pl.AZ.Ii • C.1.11.0Ul l!,, LIVI!,, 0'11t l VllllllCI I IUh\O~YS mt\GG I COP.>B rURNITUR( •• \\ Tli.( ONL y WA'( \O BUY II 0 • • • • • • .. c:---., ~! ' ONLV ONt llLOCK ft,OOI Cl'fV Mtl1..,1w OW(~~ Vlll.C( INVENTORY CLEARANCE SALE SALE -OF GREAT DECORATOR ITEMS LIKE: Bedroom Sets, Dinette Sets, Lamps, Pic tures, Chairs, Occasional Tables, Sleep· ers, Mirrors, Nautical Furnishings, bars 'n Servres and many more goodies, tool ·: . . :· ~1,, 1111 sirttt JM-'tol ,·~I 2975 FAIRVIEW at BAKER JOH~;~~J: SON r1 :·"'1 "'' ... M••llOtl• ........ ,. I COSTA MESA 1.INCOLH • Mlfll:CUll:Y 81rilt1mt rlcard 11).5 Wed. thru S•t .. Thurs. Nit• 'tit 9. Closed Sun. Master Ch1rgo rertl~ M•mn: f6).(111 ~JI~====================~ c_._ .. _._._·-__ ._ ... _._' _'"-'-·-·-~--''l!-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; _________________ _.!l _ Com~ In ancU Save •• 20o/o, 30%, 40°/o, 50°/o Off \ • [ ft l I ' I r j ----- DAILY PILOT I!) National League Tabbed: Hunter vs Wise KANSAS CITY (AP) -An undaunted Dick \Vilhams and a determined Sparky Anderson renect the lntens1\·l' mood of tonight's 44th All-Siar bascb.:lll gan1c at Royals Stadium. ,Williams le!l a hos.pit.at bed arter a re- cent appendectomy to lead the American League team \l'hile National League manager Anderson voy,·s: ''I'm here for just one thing -to win." 11arrah's Tahoe Hacebook rated the National Leaguers 6-5 favorites r..·londay . 'A sellou1 crovtd of more than 40,000 Recalling 1919 When Money ~as No Object ~ ATTLEBORO. ~lass. I AP I -taseball's All-star Game has revived emories of an earlier version here here the greats of the ty,·o ma jor ~gues played in the post-World \Var I ars. For ty,·o glorious years. 1919 and 1920, . C Attleboros -the adjacent con1· mllnities of Attleboro and North At· tleboro near the Rhode Island Hne - staged a mini world series and brought in the best available talent. Money \lo'as no object because both At- ll eboros then and nov.• arc centers of jewelry manufacturing. ~-ten like Babe Ruth, Rogers Hornsby. Grover Cleveland Alexander. \\/alter Johnson, George Sisler. Rabbit Maran- ville, Eddie Collins. Zack \\/heal. Bob Shawkey and Sam Rice played in eight games over the t'"'O years. This v.'as nearly !j yea rs before lhe major leagues inaugurated the All-star Game in 1933. For the last game of the series in 1920. Attleboro spent $3.500 in sala rie s to field its' team, led by Alexander and backed up ~Hornsby, Maranville and Sisler. They %'00 the game and the series. t~. ~lomsby and Sisler each got $455 for at ga me. Part of it went for travel ex· nses since they came in from the SL J,ouis Browns. : There is no report on what Alexander )Jot in 1920, but he was paid $750 for llitching one game in. t_hc 1919 series .. •,The two eommun1t1es played a f1ve-~ame series in 1919. North Attlebora v.·on. :.AJ1 abbreviated three-game series \\'aS iield in 1920. ( The series between the tv.·o com· ~unities ended in 1920 primarily because ~tll.e cost of fielding a. team had gotten so jllioh. L Letters in the possession or the v.:a1vtucket (R.I.) Times from Don j?'Connell. coach of the Attleboro team. ~ay North Attleboro dropped out of the 1Jeries during arrangements for ii in 1921. • 1 Attleboro played Providence that year ;but interest was not as high for that :.series and that ended the play, although ~an unsuccessful effort \va s made to f:evive it in 1!123. 1 '. The gan1es were played in the fall at j\he same time the major league \\'orld :,senes was being played. so the players ~r the Alllcbor<rNort h Attlebo~o ~ri~s ere chosen from teams that d1dn t win .league pennants. ~ Althpugh it lasted only tv.·o ~·ears. the l(&eries became a major allraction in Ne1v England . Special charter tra ins rolled ;ao,.,·n from Boston y,·ith patrons \\'ho •tame from as far a"·ay as ~lanchester. !NH :· will be on hand at baseball's nl'\\'tSt park "'hile millions more watch the starstud- ded affair on national tele1•i.sion. Along with the n1anagers, the ploycrs On TV To11i9hl Cllniil1el :1 ·a1 5:15 by have shown an wtl.'Onunon con1- pelitive desire. Both third baS("man Ron aSnto nnd shortstop 01.ris Speier were injurt"<I last v.•eek, but will be in the Nalional League·s starting lineu p. And Allanta star ll:ink Aaron e:-:presscd professi0nal pr1d<.' <,\ht•n he said: "l \lo·ould like to play a:\ Ion~ as Sparkv will let rne I 'ti play 11nd will do <tll)'th1ng that \\"ill h1:lp us 'AJn " Oak.la.ruts Coufi~ .. llunter., .. a . U,izanlc winner . \lolll fa ce fttck \Vlst' of !ht' St. Louis C;1rd1nals in an att~n1pt to l'U! 11110 the National League's 2..i-18 Jc:id 1n the series v"'1ich started bark in l9a3 , There has been one Ill' Ul All·Sl:.ir t'Om- pe1it1on. \Vise. an ll-gan1e Y.1nnt•r , \\·:is c-hnscn over more 1J!ustr1ous n.an1c.s tx>t:iu:ll' hr Aft~r Costl~_ ~ujur_y Concepcion Embittered, Won't Steal Any More CINCINNATI rAPl Cincinnati shortstop D:ive Concepcion blan1es the injury which forced him to miss his rirst All-star game en ac::gressivc base ruri- ning.. No;v he is having second thoughis about hustling on the base paths. "I'm not going '1.o steal bases any more." Concepcion said . "I \Viii be a lit- tle afraid . "l just think all I'm going to do is be a .300 hiller but not run." he sajd. Concepcion, manager Sparky Anderson's choice to back up San Fran- cisco's Chris SQeirr as the National League's All-star shortstop. \\'as injured in the Reds' victory Sunday over the i\·fontreal Expos. Although the Reds 11·erc already leading S.O, he tried to go fro1n first to third on an infield oul . He made it easily, but in his slid~ he caught his spikes in th e dirt and crashed into the base, dislocating his ankle and breaking his leg. Concepcion v.•as hitt ing .287 1.,.ith 46 runs batted in before Sunday 's injury. He also had nine game-1\·inning hits and 22 stolen bases in 26 tries. \\'hy did he try to take the extra base 1vith the Reds ahead by six runs? •·1 just tried to win the gam!!," Crin· cepcion said. "I kne,.,. I had a chance and made it, yes." Concepcion also admitted he \.,.anterl lo sho1v up ~tontrca\"s rookie shortstop Lar- ry Lintz. kno1vn for his speed. '"I can run belier than anybody 1n 1hc league from first to third and from sec· ond to home," Concepcion said. ''I am convinced of this." The injury .robs Conceprion of the chance to play in tonight's All·star gawe in Kansas Cit\·. Instead. he \1·ill vic111 t!ie game from hiS Cincinnati hospi!al bc(I. "'The All-star game 11as \"rry itn· portant to me because it v•as my f!r .. t one. and all the people from my couutr~· y,·ould be able to see rnc on tele\"isio11.'" Concepcion said. Concepcion ;\ill have a cast on tu s lco Rams Make Cuts The population of Ille l..os Angeles Rams FuJlerton su mn1er camp is do\1·n to 29 rookies and <15 veterans Y.ith three players being put on ,.,.aivers. The Ram.$ cut rookie free a~ents Larry Battle, a v.·ide receive..c from Fresno State, and running back llC'rman Christ "phe of Grambling. Also cut li-londay was defenso bark Larry Shears, a tv.•o-year veteran who saY.' service l\ith the ,\1l anta Falcons. until the f1r!:t \1·eck i·1 Scote!nher. Th1•11 he y,·il l go through a rcha!1ilitat1on pe1 iriJ. He s.:iid the injur~· rn· 1· rcrise his \1'1nter has" ball plans. ·r1 ior to the injury he plannrd only to pl;:~· s:-r:it dlt!y in his "native Venezuel.:i. unlike pnst ~-e1rs \1'hcn he .,.,.en! directly lron1 rc::!1:1;.11· ~easn'1 nr- t\on to \\"inter ball. ~01v he 1v1ll proi.io•ilJ' again play all winter. In Conccpcion's absence the Reds 11111 rounl on Darrel Cha11ev. a .250 hit ter on last year's National LeagJe champion team. to fill in. "\\·c·11 be all ri ght ir Chaney hit s and Bobby Tolan gets hot ,'" Concepcion said r-.tean1\·hilc Concepcion \Viii t\..11·r th!! next t11·0 months to th ink about hi ~ :J::!- gressi\·e base rlmnin6 . The Reds hope he does not change the style !hat hrou[J~l! him \\"here he \vas before the 1nJUIJ'. People, Deer 111 tl1e N e\vs OVERLAND PARK. Kan. -To check a cancerous tumor. 11-yCilr· old ~·!cl Dinkac:e"s right lrg \\as :imputatcd be!Ol'-i the k.r1cc la~t ,J;:inunn' \l'it h an art1ilcial limb. hr has lerirned to ride a bicycle an:I hopes to pla~· tackle in the fall on hi.~ sixth grade foolllal! team HO\\·evcr. r-.lel nerds a ne\~ leg e\"Cr\· SC\"Cll mon! hs, because of his gro\\.th r:tl('. To help defray 1he ex- pen se. ;:i benclit Y~ICA footb;11! game over the 1~c('kcnd raistd ~2.000. • The girl \1·ho sold the mosl $1 lickcls to the game 11ns cro\1ncd <1uecn for tht occasion. She 11as ~lei's 14~ycar·old sister. Cheri. \\"ho sold Jn. SACRA~IE;'\°TO -An g I c r ~ aboard lhe Xt>lt' Vera 11 on .Julv 111 n1ade a unique catch 11·h11f· fbf1ing out on the Pacifir Ocrnn. accordH1i to the s:<1te Dcpartn1ent of Fi~h n.nct (iame. Thrv ~a1v ;i Goe s11 imm1ng about n hnl(m1le off ~luir Bl':lch 1n ~larin County. The deer. dt!scribcd in ~ood shape. 11·as haule<l aboti rd and tum· ed over to lhr ot·par1n1e111 \1•tucll relrasrd the animal 111 lhc nearu~ tulls. had !he most n.>st. \\'1Se ~aid IM.''d pitrh the American Lea!\U<' hltteril "\vith an old philO&Jphy - high and llghl and low and away ." ""1 try to hit spots no matll'r y,·hether Ille .bllll~ b l(fll:vlndt>d or .. rjghth~nd.t.'<11" !')ilid the Cardinal right)" \\"lse ""ill have tus hnnds full, though "·ith rm forn1idable b:itting order of Anlt>ritun Le:igucrs that 1nrludes four Jchhanded hitters. t1akland shortstop Berl Can1pancns \\'ill lead off for the American Leagut>, foJlo\\"t•d by left-handed hnter Hod Care11 of the ~hnncsota 'f'Ain:s, th<' team's "'t'('.· ood bas~ .. man F1rs1 b;.1.s<'mi'.ln John fllayb<'rry of the Kansa.'i City lloyals and r1gh1Uelder lli!'ggi£> J1tckso11 of th1· Oakbind A's, ttw J-4 h1t1crs. are both lc·h· handed" - After ct•nlcrfil'l<ler Amos 011s of the RO)•als. the AL.':i No. 5 hiller. conies ldty Bobby ~!url·rr of the r\l'Y.' \'ur k \';ink('(·~ He'll pla) left f!l'ld C'atchrr Carlton F1.sk nf the Bu!ito11 lt1•d Sox "1H be :\o 7 111 tht· banini,: orclt•r, full011l'Ci b~ third b:u.l'1na11 llrook"> Hobin!'fln of the Bal111nort' Or10ll'~ ;ind llunter L(·ft fte1dcr Prtl' ltzyjr :oind serund basernnn Jot• .\lorg;1n uf !he Cincinn:i1i Reds Y.'1!1 b<it 1·2 in thl' :"\ntionnl Lt:ugue orrlf'r. C1'ntt r ftflctl'I' C"l"S·:ir C\'l'l(l"MO of·tlTC"' llw~lun ,\,tros. fir~! ba.~1·rn 1i11 Aarvn and .r:tghL_.lie.ldcr. .liilly \\'1lh:;uns of lht! Clurago Cubs \\ 1!1 hit 3·'4 5 for lhl' N<'I· t1011al.., The r\"'$1 11f th~· 11rdl'r includt-!> \in- t 1n111111 r:1!rl11·r J11hn11\' H1·nt.:h. S.1nto, ~Jlt.'ll'r and \\'1,1· Fastest Human Shot Down By American in Relay Duel Soviets Pile . Up 65-31 Advantage In Track Meet ~11:-.:SK. U.S S.R. iAPj -Dislance runner Oa\'~ \\"ott le, 11·ho \lo·on the 800 meters in the ~lw1ich Olympics, is en- tered in the 1500 meters today "'hen an American team attempts to erase a Soviet le-ad in a dual track and field met>!. \\"ottle is t•ntcred only in the 1.500 and did not compete on opening day ~londay. Tht• Hu.~sian n1en. despite a bn!!iant performance by Arnerican sprinter Steve \\"1!11am s. took a 65-51 lead ove r the U.S. te:un 11"h1h.• the Soviets over1\hclmed thl' American 1~·on1en 53-20 . . V.'il\ian1s, from New York City. \lo'as 1mhampered by tht' soft ~linsk track and captured the 100-metcr dash in 10.1 Herb \\"ashington v.·as second in 10.3. 'Villiams . expectin!'.l strong competition '· Ill V:ilerv Borzov. the "\\"or!d's Fastest llum'an ,'" v.·ho \1·on both the 100 :inti 200·mctcrs in the ~1unich Olympics, had little difficulty outrunning the Ru<;sian Running the anchor leg on the 400- mf'ter really team. \\l i!liams grabbed !he baton about three meters behind Borzov · n•I c:isily beat the Russian to the .__.ire. The American men 's relay team. y,·hich ~rsn included \\'ashington , ~tark Lutz and Erlward Hammpnds, \\'Oil the event in 39.2. Pole vaulter ~1ike Cotton of Ocala, Fla .. v.•ho had expected to earn the l'n1ted Stales five points in his event under the 5-4·3·2-l scoring system. 1.,.ithc!rew after pulling a hamstring mus- cle in his initial effort. The Russians then won first and second. Th« slrong Soviet men·s team, 11·hich raptured such events as the 'triple jump, picked' up va luable points in the 110- liurCllcs and 400. '~''""arlt~ IJ.ornl"Y In Int S1ar~i track u1<1 lotld mttl ~··~"' r•~•~ I '>1tve Wllll~"''· IJnil•·J S• 1 s. 10 1 1. H!r!l W11ol'l•n~ron. IJniled St•le,. 10.J 1. 60•1i 'm ~·.~· ~·.•." llmOH, lOI. o, Vl•a•mi• O">avN"." ~a"~' un•on. 10 1 l'lomr.-1 100 • /la!l<'lh!ll 6!!>11m1lnava. '>o~''' U "en. 11 • 1. c; .... n~ t.."••·o~h•na, S<>vof! Un•n. 11 6 J. . •«•I 0 hom111°". 1Jn1!od SM1M. 11 I 1\0 h1,,d't1 -lolT'mV L~ Ylh1!1. Unl!P<I S"'"· 115 '· Vo~t~r Mva~r!•ov. Soviet Union. 11 7 J. rh~·I~• Fciltr, Un•Tf<I Sia'~'· 1l a. •, Ecua•a P1 ·~~triev. Scv•fl Un•on, 119 '.'/omen•• •OO -N~<ltthda IColesnokova. Sov•~I U"l~n. Sl 9. l. Natalia Kullcrikov•. SoYoeT Union, 11 ! J. DebQr• CerPtr\T•·. Un•ttd S•••e•, 5--1 0. •. l{•lnv He...,monu. unlrf<! s1~1e,, " l. \Vomf'n'• ~lqn IU"'P -G~•lna Fll•T<)V•. '\.oVIOI Unonn. ~0' ; f.n lon•n" Ltl"'ev.,, Sov<f! Union. ).11 J, Di an-• ·,.,.II •on. un.!!"d St~I~•. S·1'. •, ota"''' l.'o er. Unlll'd S•ete•. l·T'; (lriira and tourm P'"'" bd•ra on rewe• mi\sei!. l"omen's 1 lOO '· Lv,odmlla 6r'111ln!, sovoe! Unoen. • 1l I 1. Tdm•r• Pon~etova. Soviet Union. • H • J. Fran<!~ La,.leu, un:te<'.l Sle!e\. 1;;; l •, Kd•,.,· f,lb~r•. Uni led Sia!•,, ~ •o I ... v1orr10n"1 laYt hn -l. Elvl1e O•ollno, !>Qo.olet un•on. ;09 l<l ·,.,In '"'~rdl ;. '.el'""" Korolyo.a, ~o .. I 1·~•( 1?• l 1 e,..riA'·' P•<•el, Uni!!"<! SM!es, 161· l •, Dr.ib'e L ,,, oe>"a•n. Un1r..i S1a1~. UO·S. "."l<•r-r ., r110,,1 !, Foino Melnl~. So..le• un1nn. ;·9.IJ ). N >n•:n~o ~•ry•Ye~•· Sovl.i un,~r\. 1~9 :1 1 "r.nl"'I· D·l\ool'. Uni!f<I ~laT05, !J.I •'•· •. y,,1on • rrt•. Un•l"'1 S••'''• \09-' !OIJXI 1 A•.ato•J f!.sll•an~,,..,, SovlU Unro-i. '' ct : 1 Ra•~lll sn .. r .. •e1aonov. Sovoel Union. 11 .i ? J, ·t'I <>• '<:l""" onn~11 ~11le1. 2$ 'l 6. " Ttll (. •. 1r•n"~~-lJ••tf<I S'•"'· 79 n1. It~ I i Y• ,~env .0.•1twnnv. Sovit! Unoon. l.•9.2. 1. RI Wo~'"u!•·. Ur·!~ '.>!ale"\. \ '1 • 1, Geor<:iV •••nvs~~v ~o"''' '!••OI"'. I SO?. •. To......,le Fullon. U•··'l'<I ''•"••· I 51' .00 -1. JI""' Rod1. Un•lf<I S!alr•. 4ol I ?. ~'1\· von l'"oc~tr. SoV•H Un.en. C6 ' J, 11<.••lt P••~-" !~<. .t, <1."; " I''"' "l••ino•ov. "'°""' Un•on. " ' • ,..,,~, •M. O• v - ' ~cvl•! U•oon (I.la""' S•a17ova. Lyuo:tmlll M11l1~ov1, ~ • d fl I h II• Fi 1.r1"1 •'"~"· ufl 1 I flit ·•••~I '11 2. U'1•lt(1 >P"l '"'a"h• w.s1>·n. I.• '"'"" R""<k'. J.sc~·~ lnomDwn. X.1tf1v Lew•onl ., 1. •00 R•lt·• -l. un;'l'<I Sla'e1 I Herb W11ni119f0'1. Ed t1•"".''"""· "'"''' L•JI,. ,,,.,,~ Willlem'J :9? 1. ,,..,. I Union IA•P•lnd~r ZNd•l~h, Boris 11'1\tt'yfv. Y 1 .l'ov. v., ery e iricv) l9 S. ""' V.sult 1, J~nl~ L.,,rr .. Sovltl tJn•on, P·•" • '• , '\MG;. '·'•WICI ll•Ol,n, 17.Cl , l. VICf~r 0•11, U··'"'1<11 1. lt~ ' ! I. '• ~ '"r'b"f~ IJ flt<! SIMM. ~J 10 ! ), ~·~• 1r~•· l\.1r I"""'• .ncl~ U~•on. ~·I• ~ o n ~., p , .,~,. so, .. ,, U•·•o•. e• 1 " i;ton s~"'""' ' ••• 1. 6.' ~'. • 7Q-1t 1IO'l"'"!er W•lli. -1. Yev9env lv•~r>llo. Scvlt! l/n•c"· 1 -·· lS !).l 'T'lllUIO$ 2, '"''""'"'" !;tflfVfV, • u~ "· I lS 11 C J. 11' Raw ·,llt'V ~·, lt1o, I ·~ lll •. JPrf• B•o ... n, Unilf<I ~!•T•~. 1.)1 41 D 1•1!'1 c Ju<T'!'I 1. V••lo• ~a~~yt<'. Sov•t• U"lon, 51-< • '· "'''~•· &•'•!Id". ~0,.,1 u"'""· 5•-4>.. l. '""n ••It t.nH"OI ~1~·n. ~-•' 1 " Mlten Tift, ,Un••td · '''""· ~11C\, 4a••""'' -1. v.1,n1ln 0..,11.~"~o. \oV••' u" o-i. ?JI~ 2. r.i.-~,, Sp<r!-v. ~o .. o· un·c" n~·' J. '"'0""' HI u~ht'O ~laltt, 1Cl·l•~ •. ft'O 6tt<;rfr. u~11-a S11•n. 1n l , f STEVE WILLIAMS PASSES RUSSIA'S VALERY BORZOV. Sports i11 Brief Tl1omas Re1lo1·ts to Ca1111l; Cl1a1·ge1·s Release Har{ly-_ r .o\RLISLF.. Pa r 0:1•1111·•·ri· t rui- ning bark Ouanr Th m;1 <; ;:rri11•d ;1• lh \\'ashingtri n Rcd"kin., tr:11:iiric ,. 1•nn tri d.1y JUSI pri or 10 1hr-tf'nni"-1norn1•1.,. \1·orkou1. Thoma;;. \\"ho had h<'rn l''Cfl"''teri \lr1n· day came lo the prat ttC"C' field \1·1th his .1i.:ent. former Am('rican FoJtball League star Abner llaynl'S Thomas and lla1TK's met bri~nv ""ith coach George Alll'll Thnmas le.ft the meeting and ll<1yn('ls anrl Allen rl'm.11ned Neither Thomas, llayn~ nor A!lc.n had any comment 1n1n1ed1ately. e llard11 '1111 Kevin llardy. y,·hn rnterPd proff'««innal football Five years agl) a ~ !h{" nalinn ".;; mQSt renowned t·ol!l'ge linrm~n. m .1 v hav~ ended a care er that never r•'allv got sta r!eri Hard\". 27 . \lo"aS CUI bv the San Dl<'i:?O rhargJ·r" .\londay a victim of 1•1rak knees supporting a 2ifl-pound Frame Despite lhrt'f' npcrauons hr np1·rr rc1?a1-· er! !he mobility he sho.__·cd during a brilliant collegr football career at :\r1tn.· name. e 298 Gome Anahe1m"s Bob Jtam1re1. rollM ll nr•;1r- prrfl"Ct 298 ~londay night to vault into :i ~hare of first place in the lcn~th:;· \\"1·~1 Coast \latch Ellm1nat1ons ill C<»-1;1 :0.Tcsa·s Kona Lanes. lie tied Fred Bernal of Tustin fur 1he le<id as 1hc firld \1as cul to !6. e 1tf11lln11e11 ,,,.,,.,., l.Ol 'ISVILLE -Fonnrr l~1ker1> rn:irh .Irie ~·l ullancy. coach of lhe l\(·n111c~\· Colonels. ha s accepted a similar pn~1111tn 11ith the Lilah Stars. e C11clis1 Dies r ! ~ r, r, 2 fnr lh('I Sl2.f)t)O fir"! pri1r in 1ht· 1·1111 d1•L1\<'d 111n<l11p of lh•· 1 urna- 1: , 111 bef11:·e a capacity cro,.,·d r r 5,000. O Grid Clas/1 ·;F:\\"T():'\, ~lass. -The football tean1s c,f 1\11~ton ! "n!lr"e and J\ntr<' IJame ::ire ~«hr-tlulPd to n1c'\'t fflr 1he first time Stpt l:l. lf!i5 The game, to l)e playrd in Scharrer ~·a•!ium in F"nx!)")ro. \.\"tll be Notre r;;:mr's second appt'arrint·e 111 l'\!!w Lilgl:tnd . e Cager l11ke1I l>E,\\"EB -The l.len\ler H.ockels of the American !3a skctball Assoclatioo h.1\C signed L::i1nt1n1 King. 8 &-foot-2 guard from Cal State ! Long lleachl. Aaro11 U1tloads -Kuhn 's Sorr)' • KA:\SAS CITY l,\P1 -The flnt1l counl- dO\loli has bo.·gun for Henry Aaron , clos- ing 1n on B;1hc Huifi ·s al1 11mc homr nin rerord of 71~ and \\h<'n hl' gl"ts thcr(' !he 1\tlanl.1 slt1g,crr 111/pt•<; h«"ll finrl ;1 mnrf' ctYdial 11·elron1r fr•)tJ) Aascb:.J\I Con1rni~.;1orn.·r BO\\ 1f' Kuhn th11n he rr ce1\'C'd 1\•hi>n he hit ~o 700. "r ~ot 100 l l~l1•i.:r:ims rongra1uJa11n,:: lllf' ... s1nd .A11ron. 11ho"ll tY. ;1t first b:i~c for !hr :'\.:ition<1! l.c.:ii.iur in toni ght"i. 4llh annual All·~tar game. "Rut r rl1dn't rC"C<'11·p a h'lt·gram from lhc N"ltnm1\"'°"~r I 11!)1ifd think lhal 11M. ('Ornm1s<1:1nrier \1ould Sf'nd i•nf'. 100."11 It 111" rf('ar !h.1{ Aaron co11,1dertd thr ar1100 n 'lnuh bv f\uhn :ilthou~h the rom. m1.~i.1onrr 1nsi..,tf'd thot he mr:int no sh~hl to !hf' slu~J:er !Baseball Players Find Ne'v Grieva11~e I~ j KANSAS CITY (AP ) -The Major meeting of player representall\·es y,·ho Al:CKLA:'\0. ~.~1-1· 7.t>::iland -(;roff Perry of Xe.__, 7.ea!and. onr of the v.·nrld "s lop moloreyclr racers, Y.as hsted locla\" among the 78 Jl('r<;()fls v. hi) died \\hen ~ Pan-Am B'lCtng 707 ;ur\1ncr crashed at Papet>te Sunday The plane ptun~ed 1nto the Pacific Ocrnn 90 seconds ahC'r takeoff. The 2.lyrar-olcl Perry \\"AS on hl!i \lo·ay to compete 1n ttw $50.000 race at Lai,'\.lna ' i"m cert:i1nly sorry Hrnn• 1\Jron \13~ d1sripro1n1,~t1. a~ l rnn .~urc he knov.~ I em °"" o( his b1t;,l!C~l root{'r.;." ~1rl thr {'Omm1ss1on('r "I \.\Rill 10 lt't4d the 00~l"­ b311 rtlebrauon \\litn he hit~ iii nod 715" League Baseb:ill Players Association Sd~d are here m conjunction \1'ith Tuesday's ~1onday that 10 teams are operating OC-AU·Star Game low ihc 25-man roster agreed lo carller "We've leaned over OOck\\•ards." ~111ler itm year between players Hnd owners. sa.Jd, "to.:-kip those s1111alions \\"here the IJ'he assoc.la lion. in a fot11 ·hour closed violation is not clean-cut But so1ne (•lub~ hiceting. agreed 10 file grievanCf!s agairut have operated for ,.,.eeks at a lime 1\·Hh 1he unnamed elubs. 23 men and one club 'A;'ilh 22 " ; \llord of the action \V35 relayt'd ~Ion· ~!Iller said the romplalnt has h<'en filed I day from ~1arvin ~iiller, execulive di· wilh John Caherln. 1he owne:rs ' rcprr-sent· ,lector of th~ 3ssoc.lation. fol!O\l•ing the ~lllve in negotiations wllh the players A.S- soc1at1on. Failure to resolve the gncvance .__,111 lead 10 the question being su bm111cd for binding airbitrallon. !l!Jller said. The subJC'Ct of proct'Clures for sa lary arbitration was discussed t\t h .. 'TlRlh ~111ler s~11d the associat100 had agreed to 14 un· namcd arbitrators -five out of Nc11· YOrk . rivl' out of Chicago nnd rour out nf Los Angeles. Pla~cr conlracts WI.II be mailrd Of>c. 20 this ~'tar. rather than Jan. 15 a!i 1n lhe pa!it -to allow more tJme for negolia- tiom. Bet\\'ten Feb. I and Feb. 10 either tht plnycr or the club can submit the contract ror binding arbitration. This is a "first" In the basic owner-player ton· tract negotiated last February. The player9 also discussed lnter-lea11.ue play and \\ilethcr to take a Slt'lnd on the Federal COmmwiicnlion Commission's investigation into sporu broadcasting. 'Seca, Cahf. • e 01111ors Tops Ashe BROOK LINE. ~lass. -Yoong .Jimmv Connors emploved a mi ~h!\' !Cll'<'ba!Vl and a devast~tinR two-handed backs1r11k11: lo derea! veteran Arthur As:he ror !ht' $60.000 1J S Pro t('nn1!'i championship ~londa y n1i;ht al l.on1t"'OOCI. The 20-yeo r-old Connors needed just over lhree hours to defeat A1>he &-3 . .f-!i That's no! quilt 1tood cnouJ:h for Aaron . "·ho 11as itkf'ri by Kt1hn f'nrlier this ""11- ~on 1\·hl'n n,.. ,..,.,mmi<1~iMer v.·<irned Na- 11on:-il I A'~Hlu" "• h"r •lv'y \rould faCt> -·disr·inl1n··r\' a,..t•n11 if lh<''t" lhrew Anron a .~ofl n•1~h "" hn wi'nt fol th.-mll~lonr. "T<'ll the <.'<lmml~!iiOl'l<'r h1• didn 't lay it 1n for me." 'iald Aaron, after tagging No. 100 against Phil<idclph!,1's Ken Brt1t last S<lturda\' • • .. .. . . . \ ,- ~ 2U DAILY PILOT lutsd1ty, July 24, iq73 Principal May Double as .Football Coach ' Vikings, i I Tars To11 I · l Polo Foes::· 6\' HANK WESCH Ol 1 ... O.tllY .. llol ~1•1t Wht>n football practice c.'On· vcnes this fall at S Iii n Clemente Jl lgh there1s liHble to be 1t large numbC'r of pJ11yPrs sent to see U1e school's principal every night. ll won 't ('ntnil a long and anguis hed walk to ar\ office like such a 1nunda tl' usually implies. howi'ver. A sln1ple jog <icross the football held will do. San Clt•n1ent c princi p:il Oar· rel 'faylor v.·\11 in all pro!> ability be doubling as !Inc ~ch for Allle Schaff when f<>QU>all season be.gins. that's a situation v.·hlch might have ·been co1nmco- phtce u det1ldt.l or so s~o. and nt I) sn1;11lt'r !!Choo\. but will be unique. for an OranRe County school \Y ith an 4•nroll rnen1 tn the nt•lghllorhood of 1.800. But 1t 's a si tuation that has !wen dictated b\ a seve re t'Oachini.: sho!'tai;1· ttl San Ctcnll'llh: and no h•aching op1:n!n~s to fill 1hc gaps. "Allie is shy son ic ('Oaches. a1Kl I '\'c indicall'<I tt> hun I ~ uutd be ~·illing 10 assist h1n1 ," Toylor c:ir:plains. "Jl's not offlci31 yet . I hnve 10 discuss the idt:a with truman Bcnt'<lict, our Superintend ent or Schools. to get hi.is approval. hut there's a good chance of i1.·· Taylor was San Cle n'lcnte High's first football t.-oach. guid111g the Tritons lo u 6-2-1 r1•<.-ord ln 1964 and a 2·1 1nark in 1965 before becoming the school's prin1:ipal and yielding the CO.."'lching reins lo George Jl11rtn1an. Prior to tht• San· (;lcml'!lle job, Taylor had been an assist- ant coac h at San Bernardino tot lbree years, head coach at Fontana High for four years, ruld also coached at Burbank !or, two sell$0ns. Out or coaching since that li1ne, Taylor !eels he'll have so1ne catching up to do to fan1iliarize hlmself w 11 h today's techniques, but doesn 't feel it'll pose too big a prob- lem. "I'm not too familiar with !he Texas and UC L A ! wishbone ) offenses, bul the b~1sic line lC1.!hniques haven't cha nged much," Taylor says. Jlarbor League Mustangs Win Basebal~ Crown I Costa f\.1esa High clinched the Harbor Area bascbal\ title with th ree games still re- maining with a 6--0 victory over host Edison ~looday, whHe Newport H"arbor and Fountain Valley also notched wins. Mark Garfield doubled home Ron Shimaji with the winning run as Fountain Valley edged Corona del Mar, 3-2, and Morgan Abbott pitched a one-- hiUer 1o lead Newport llarbor to a 4--0 victory over Hun- tington Beach in games al Costa Mesa Park. Cost.a Mesa standout Brian Costelloe struck out si:ir: and allowed only a fourtb.inning single to Joe Morado and a fl!tb.lnning single to Byran Mendenhall in b I a n k l n g Edison. Steve Teregls' bunt single scored John Brown with .Costa P.fesa 's fi rst run in the second inning and the Mustangs went on to score two more on a fielder's choice and an error. Steve DeWildc tripled home Don Tryon with another run in the fifth inning and then scored on a sivgle by Daryl Crandall. The Mustangs pick· ed. up another run in the sixth on a triple by Stan ~1cCoy and a single by Costelloe. The victory was Costa ~tesa's 13th against one defeat for the summer. Second place Newport Harbor is four games back (S.5) with three games to play. Corona del !-.far jumped to a 2-0 lead over Fountain Valley as Doug Johnson singled home Brian Wilkinson and JerTy ·Kohler in the .thi.rd inning. Wilkinson had walked and Kohler singled him to third and moved to second on the throw to set things up for Johnson. FOW1tain Valley came back to tie things in the foorlh as Dick Tessi er singled. took sec- ond on an ou t and came home on a hit by Dean Fox. Fox moved 10 third on an overthrow and was singled home by Bill Ogden. Shimaji singled in front of Garfield's double fo r the win· ning run. obug Zeissner went the distance and struck out five for Fountain Valley. Doug ~1oll fanned out seven in six innings and Wilkinson struck out two in the final inning for Corona de! 1'1ar. (flll Mfll (0 •• r """' J l , 0 , 0 0 0 J 0 1 1 2 1 1 0 J l 0 0 I 0 D D l 0 I 1 l 2 ' 0 , 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 2 1 I l 1 0 0 0 1 O O D 0 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 1' • 1 ~ i~11:. rf ~~::,a .. ~111, u Sh•rP, lb S. Bt>mh.lrdt, ~ T...-11!1111, d ~~=~j,.~ D s. 1!1.en,..rc11, lo OeWlld•. d (•ld,..•11. Ill'! Brandl, It Hllmt~. rt Phelp,, ph To1.ii lid!1411 (0) S (OWlll, 2D Mltt'hlll, 11 - •• r II rlll J 0 0 0 J 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 J 0 l 0 7 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 , 0 l 0 l 0 0 0 MICY. C Mor•dO, II Schl..-be11, 1> Cull9rUI, cf Anctenon, )I) Scka•ftr, 10 Mencknn111, rl s1o1r...-. 11o11 To!1t1 21 0 2 0 I~ ly 111111,.1 t II 1 Coi!1 Mn1 ~021 O-• 1 2 Edhon ...., 000 0--0 2 o Fou11l1l11 VllllY !JJ •rllrlll Trtuler, 10 l o \ o r=rr.'~1-211 ! ? y & G•rtlt ld, cl • o I 1 Teu i .... c l 1 1 o Ja<dan. ID 1 o O O P.t!l ... son, 1D t 0 I 0 Fo•.l D 2111 OQcHn. 11 3 0 1 1 H1rct,...n, u 1 O O O Zebs~r. o J O o o Tollll 21 l t l c-• fltl Mir ttl Jalvi5<1ft, .. Noq•w•. 'lb J1M1. d lo.\otl. p.IO Por10. lD Murphy, 11 w;1~l~son. 11>-P GrtlltY, c ~011't~:1 c 8tflK"•mo .. r! •• r ~ tlll J 0 l 2 l 0 I 0 J 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 d" l 0 0 0 , 1 0 0 , 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 I 1 o 0 0 0 0 24 2 l 2 Tol1>!' ~..., '""'"'' , r II • FOUllfftln Valley o:io 210 G--3 • I Corona Itel M1>r OM 000 0-2 3 l H11nt1nttM 1 .. clt (01 .. ' ' 0 0 0 0 0 ' 0 ' 0 ' ' ' 0 ' 0 ' 0 ' 0 ' 0 " 0 N-wt H•r'DM (41 Pie<-. U Ye.Irr, 1tl C~1rct. u "'DI><>!, 0 Sore•. 1~ lliuonene. t Ouff~. t i '"""If"!', rf 011~f!. rl P•ul!C h, 1b AoOl<'lfOl'I, :» Ooslol. Oii .. ' ' 0 ' . . ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' 0 ' 0 0 0 ' . ' 0 ' . To1•1• " Scttt toy lnflil'ltl " ... ' ' 0 0 0 ' ' ' ' 0 ' ' ' 0 ' ' • 0 ' 0 ~ g • •• 0 0 • • ' 0 ' ' ' . ' 0 ' 0 ' ' v i • 0 " ' ' " . Hun!. lle1cll 000 000 0-0 l l NtWl>O"I Hlrbor 101 (11)2 ........ 10 2 AIM FOR TOP OF FLAGSTICK If you're Ji.kc 1nost golrcrs, you probably fall short of the green n1ore often than you go over. Even when you make the green, you're likely to be short of the flags tick_ Since most greens have more sand and water in front than in back, this kind or approach can lead to trouble. To. counteract the tendency to fall short, I suggest you aim for the top of the flagstick (A) instead of the hole (8). This will aut.omatically cause your approach shots to carry deeper into the green and closer to lhc hole. Scoft in 1pilt of 1rap1, hunktn, fOUlh and downhill /~1-witlt tht ht/p Arnold Palmtf offer1 yuu in hU book~t "7>vWW Shot1." A t opy ii yo11r1 [Uf 20( and 111tamfHd, -'t""'*• I tn-.tlopt 1rnt to Afnold Palmtr, t /o lhi1 nrwipapn. - W est1ninster Rallies For 9-7 Tourney Win Westmins ter rallied three runs in each of the last two innings to dump Placen- tia, 9-7, In the opening game of the Fullerton Am erican Legion baseball tournament Monday night at Fullerton. ' Bob !{ale, the win n in~ pitcher, delivered the key hit for Westminster. a two-out bases loaded triple in the last . . inning. Trailing S-3 going into the sixth inning. \\lestminster tied the score with its first three· run rally. CUmal R u n g o started things with a walk and successive singl es by Dave 1\l;iss. Rich Rosen and Larry Kublecki produced the scores. Placentia pushed o\•er a run in the sixth to regain the lead, but \\1estminster scrambled to set things up for Hale's • ' decid ing hitin the seventh. Tim Richards started the outburst with a single, but was forced at second by Curnal Rungo. After !o.fark Houle came in to run for Rungo, Twiss vlas hit by a pitch and Rooen w a t k e d preceding Hale's hit to left center. Hale was three-for-four on the evening with Gary Rungo the only other \\'estminster batter wilh more than one hit. Wnlmh!Jflf' (t) er..ilev. t i G. RunQO rl·11 Wl\ittley. S• Richard•. l b True. pr 1• r h rltl l 1 0 0 1 0 , 0 l 0 1 2 I 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 l l 0 0 O I O 0 l 1 I 0 2 3 1 1 l 0 ' J • 1 J l O o 0 G ,7 ,101 C. 11.UnQO. 10 Houle, pr Twlu , u Roi.en. 11·(1 Kut>IKll.f, c H1I•, D ~wlncle. rl TD41I• Stor. ..., lllftllltll t II , W!1fn\lns1er 100 02J )-f 10 ' Pl•cenTI• 100 051 0-1 1 3 DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO Baseball Standings , GAS SAVERS '66 Nov• SS V t , •utc t•~nt . ll1H, "°"''' i lt11 pCOOM91 $977 '69 Coron• Coupe Au!o tr1n1., r"ll~. 1lr t.,,41., lltll· ,, 1Yc::11nn $1477 '70 Coron• 4 Door A~lt. t••n• .• ••4fle, ht•l•r CN04001 $1277 70 M11rk 11 4 Door .a.w11. t••n1..o rHI•, .,..,., cm•OCI $15_77 '70 M•rk II Cou,. .1w11, 1r1111 .. willy\ Miii, "'4'f. wttottl•, r9"'111 II,..•· •If' <lft'il., rH le i nfllLI $1977 'If C•dlll•c 11 DotMlo TtllOw Wllfl -.it• wlnyl \tf. M>c""' lllr t'fll4flt11111111, t111I !vii ,....,_ (YDUUI $3277 . - AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division Ne\Y York Baltimore Boston Detroil ~lil"·aukec Cle\"l'land w 57 51 52 49 47 35 L 44 41 41 18 49 t;.1 Wtst Division Oakland Kan sas City l\tinnesol a i\ngels Chicago TCX:lS 56 55 49 48 4' 34 42 46 47 48 49 61 Sut'Hl1,•t 0•""' fl •lll~·· •• il.lt11tll ' (hl,190 4-0, N-York ,., Monft~SO•• 10, 0.0.ton I K1 n••1 C 1!~ 1, M1lw•u~et !I (),}"~"" 1. (l~tltNI , lr••• •. Oe1fci•n l ro IMlno1 TM•l"1 Gll"tl NO DIO'l'ltl KIH'duled, f ll'"ll•r'• 0•- Pct .564 .554 .542 .505 .490 .351 .571 .545 .510 :500 .500 .358 GS 2'1 6 1 1 201 ~ N1\TIONAL LEAGUE East Division St. Lou is Chicago Pillsburgh ' l·~hiladelphia i\lontreal l\"c~· York w 51 51 46 46 44 42 L 45 46 48 51 51 ;1 \Vtst Division Dodgtrs Cincinnati San Francisco Houston Atlanta San Diego t;.1 51 56 52 45 33 31 42 43 50 57 65 SI, Loul1 !, Doll-I 4 P!ltlDu,,,11 ).I). S.11 0 1"'° 1·1 Phllldtllohf• 6•J, Alll~ll i--1 Pct .531 .526 .489 .474 .463 .452 .6.10 .511l .566 .510 .441 .331 San Fr1Ml&ce '· C~ICff0 1, ll !nnl"tl Clr.ch1n1!1 6, MonlrH I 0 New Yortt J, Hou1ron 1 TN•l"• 01-. Ho•-~· T"""n"I Olll'W •ti·•'•• 11nw 11 ICtn\.lt Cltw. GB •; 5\1 61h 12 19 29 "While I haven't been coaching 1've bctn following th e game pretty closely and have been to some practice, so I don't see any PfOblem.'' Taylor snys he·s·al5o•looklng forward to meeting with students "in a different man- ner," as a coach . and feels the only probl em \\'ill be finding the time to spend on both jobs. "Coaching ls very time con· suming , and being a principal keeps you busy too, that's the only real drawback I see," Taylor says. "But we may be able to work it out." Ex-Pirates In 83-80 Hoop Win 0rang1! Coast Col!eg1! Alum- ni upped its Costa Mesa basketba.11 league record to the .500 mark Monday night wi1h an 83-80 victory over Sad· dleback at Estancia High. The defeat kept Saddleback ' l ,. •• ,. •• in the winless category after 10 starts. The other scheduled game ended in a forfeit victory ror Red Carpet Realty over Nads, snapping a tie for sixth place between the tv.'O foes. The OCX:: AJumni conquest was triggered by t he hot shooting of Bart Carrldo, Steve Jacobsen and Craig Falconer. all former Costa h-fesa High players. Carrido led the way with 28 points v.•hile Jacobsen and Falconer chipped in with lG and 14 counters. Sa.ddleback's Rick Bauer also scored 23'21 in the second half. MD Rolls; Lions Fall ~ " " ' ll Mater Dei High's P.1onarchs rolled to their seventh victory in 10 starts Monday night al the Santa Ana College sum- mer basketball league v.ith a 53-39 win OYer Saddleback High. \Vestminster's Lions weren't as fortunate in the Long Beach \Yilson loop, however, falling in double overtime to the host quintet, 74-72. ~1ater Dei's triumph was hlghli glited by B r e n d o n J\1cCaughey's 14 points aod eight rebounds, Jim Dean 's 10 points and" Steve Martinel.ale's elght points and dozen re- bowlds. . Westminster lost a chance to win in th e first overtime when the Lions g a i n e d possession with 10 seconds left and had a th~n-ooe fast break going. M•rllndt!• 111111r Del IUJ 'l •, " ' " ' MCCl>UOl'll~ J ' Otan S 0 OUOfk l 0 8rell!u1 J • l Prlllt l 0 1 Dll111tY 2 0 Tot•!t 2l 11 ' • ' ' ' ' " H1lnlm1: M.t!tr Dll, 71.11. w"1nt11111~ tnh ,.i Pl•kfr 6 ' ] Wllitlll 11 0 2 LO•d 002 w11111 nsJ A(com1ndo I 1 l To1111 >0 11 n Htlfllmt: Wn!l'lllllll ..... i,., ... lt~ut1ll011: ~·Ill. Fi"' OWrtlrM: 11·•11, W eshn inst er Bowlers Lead " " • • ' ' " " " n , ~ ' n HA\'WARD We s tminster 's \llillis Zle11:enhaa:e.l and his: Braasch Ho"•llng Supolv (\\1estminste.r) tTTates MOve into the 12th week of comptliUon ht're at the 28th f!nnual California Stale meri's boW!ing toumnmtnt with solid shols 11.t ttam and indl\1dual 1 ll I('~. .. And will Ihm be any prob- lem In making the switch from the boSS during the day to an assistant lo ScbaU once practice starts? "I don't see it as a conflict ," Taylor says. "I have the highest reg ard for Allie, I think he's a fine football man , and though he'll be asking for inputs from all of us his posl· lion as head coach and pi ine as an assistant won't be any different than if someone else bad the job." DARREL TAYLOR MOlilJo ullll Newport lb~ maintained their flnlt placie; ranking aa both 'prep water Polo teams pooted victories In separate leagues M o n d a y nigh!. Marina's Vikings ran thelf record _to 4-0 in ttM; ~ Mesa lllgh loop with a 9"1 ~ tory over wlnles.s Rancllo Alamitos. , , MV Triumphs And Newport's Sailors (4'H remained in, a rlrst place flt with Garden Grove in the Orange Coast College league with a hard.earned 74 verdlei over Westminster. ' ' Mesans Capture Cage Loop Title · In other games at Costa Mesa, Edison fell 10 Los Alamib)s, &.5 Mission V1t:jo suffered a 4-1 setback to Tro)I: and Servile won a forfeit decision from Bolsa Grande. At OCC, Costa Mesa feH to Lakewood, 7-2; ?o.fira Costa whipped Downey, 10-3; "'¥f Garden Grove trim m ~ d Costa Mesa Hlgh's Mustangs closed out the regula r summer league basketball season at Laguna Beach High with a :;s.. 42 biualph over the host Artists to clinch the circuit champiomhip Monday night: A tournament b e g i n s Wednesday, however, and the Jeague champions are faced. with immediate elimination •• ' , ' • • from the toui'ney If they can't get past Mission Viejo Gold's team. The MV Gold unit stopped San Clemente Monday, 58-53, to band Mission Viejo Red sole possession or second place after the Reds turned back University, ~52. ~fesa meell PY1ission Viejo Gold in the opener \Vednesday and the winner gains a bye for the next round while the other four teams clash again ?\fon· day. The loser of the opener, however, drops out of the tourney . Mesa's victory over Laguna Beach was led by the trio of 'Phil Salazar,. Andy Sager and '.l'im Carrico. With 6-5 center John Cum- mins absent, Salaiar, Sagir aod Carrico took over and dominated bolh ends of the court. Salazar scored 12 and Sager and Carrico each tallied 10 as Mesa imumecl the lead at lhe ' outset and was not threatened at iany point Anaheim. 4--1. ," Marina's John Famll and Doug Fabian each rammed Jp three goals to pace the Vilt~s to their rather easy victory. I'n l'tlur games thus far Mtirtria :~ has scored 54 goals. ·'' :: John Himmelberger tallied ~ all of Edison's goals in the Rkn , to Los A1amitos. The lostirg ; Charger! trailed at the hall, S-J 3. and added a goal each in the Joe Gailis led the Mission Viejo Gold uprising, scoring 19 points. San Clemente's 6-7 Ted Kalota led the losers v.·ith 13 counters. Cnt1 Mtu U•l ' ~ ' ' . ' • • ' 0 ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' M ' " ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' 0 " third and fourth periods but couldn't get the tying marker in. U!!Ufll ·-II IHI Rllhbtm '1 ~ ·~ I~ ICltH .. 0.th 4 2 l, '° Wrl11n1 b 6 6 ICQtnlg I O 1 2 Wllltll 2 23 6 Allen 50210 McM.lnui o o 1 o l'lk• 0010 Tot1l1 16 10 lJ .c:J ~ llY Qu•rfll'll Coile ,1,1.,.. 15 7 11 11 -.sa LtOl.Hl• Eltlcll ·· ! lJ 10 1, -'2 Mlultn Vltll RH IN) fl!tl•f·~ """ ~2,10 O'Brl1n 8 3 O lt "'r"' s a 1 ia P1 ltrlOn ' 3 2 11 H1rrh ' 2 S 10 M1111r l S 2 lS G1lll1 001 0 Ree,..1 1 1 O l Zcioa 0030 Total• JI 1c lt 114 UnlYWll'T. IU< fl pl ., !leek 101 • Gunkef O I) 4 D W~lte 1 I> 3 10 F8tc-r 1 O l ' ::.:ri1~ 1 & ~ ! C•llt-11 o 0 S O 0•rc•¥ 0 0 0 0 Wilson ' 3 I 11 !o...,...11 l I 4 1 Glne 1 021 Tot1!1 11 10 25 !1 MY Red 117tJ023 -M Un!vt rl ltv 11 1' 1 1' -51 S•11 Cltmtftll Ill) 1n Mission Viejo's setbacJ.;, Skip Neville scored th e Diablos'. only goal. Meanwhile, at OCC. Newport jumped to a 4-t halftime advanta. and mat?- tained control the rest of the way. Gregg Horman Jed uie Tars with three goals while George Newland tossed in · a pair. ·. J\fike 1.-fullady, Dave Jued~. Mark Hurwitz and Dave Kent scored for \Vestminster. Costa P.1esa's only tv.•o god ls were tallied by Tom Gruelley. In frosh·S<>Ph league play 1tt. Estancia Hlgh. F.d.ison ri-- mained in a first place tfti. dO\\"l'ling Troy, 3-2 W h j 1 ~ Westminster dropped a 9-4 . •, ~. FD'tm1n l Sltvro 3 0 ! 1(1klt• ~ s ' Oen1mor• 1 o ' ~:::11s 1 2 ~ •: decision to Lowell. In other 1~ games, Santa Ana Valley ' thumped Los Am'igos. 8-2, and ,; Bolsa Grande rooted Western, St v1" 201 ~l~I 0 0 1 IClllPP 0 0 0 Brow~ 2 0 O Tot1t1 2~ S 16 MINIOll Vllit Gold !Ml "' ft pf . ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' 1 s l . . ' 0 0 ' ' ' 0 ' ' . ,, 10 10 • g . 15-3. • " 'l Ask Andy''' • " ! Kids Like To • " If you need a few thousand dollars or more, consider the people who make Individual loans worth mllllons. At Commercial Credit we lend millions of dollars to some of America's largest corporations. For things like huge office bulldlngs. Power stations. Freighters. Anrt !he BraaSC'h Bowling Sunoh' five from \Ve$1minster 1~ tli"" team leader to date with a 2,951 ~atch and 3.221 hand· icap totaJ -tops of any team tn tlAte. But for all 1he millions we lend busin ess, we lend just as much 10 people like you. Because we feel the reasons you need money are as Important as the reason s a big company needs-money. For cash 10 pay off bills-or whatever the reason -e tho people who understand all kinds of money problems. Commercial Credit. 'j ' I NEWPORT LEASES 2~00 WW CHtt H.,.._., Le1Jlnq all Vehicles 645-2202 ~ Cootmerelal Credit J'lle-""I' lo botrow I t/iouulld If hom ... ,,..p/t !<'Ito /ond m/1- • • ! • _, • t aai iet inc thi ~·l ". "" •• r.I I .. , , lo ~ lh ·lti ·.· !'I ·11 ·-. ~ al S\ l< "' k I( ll . it -~ " .,, •c '1 :1 'I p • ·1 I r I t For Tonight Start Your Engines! Alamiws Entries WITH DEKE HOULGATE Auto racing has hit Its pe!!.k in popularity and is suiferinJ; from an adverse reaction to the horrors of Indianapolis, says Mickey Tbomp.on, 1i~ar --be IL-for-~1ickey to knOck the-aport.. Ob the other hand , he is bent on Sa'o'lng it. ' "I am going to start a new fa1nily concept," the speed king said, "~here the spectator can participate in sometttlng and cnn letl,he 1s part of the sport." Thotnpson is describing his newest venture, formation of ¥X>RE International, a new sa nctioning agency and promotion ({OOP to organize off-road races so that spectators can conven· 1ent1y watch -and , as he points out, even race a little them· sclves if they want to. · It's an enonnous undertaking, one that only a single-minded individualist like Thomp!IOll would dare undertake. and the way lhlogs are going in off-road racing SCORE International m<iy wind up doing a \()( of other thi ngs its creator never intended. On the heels of Thompson's announce ment that he will stage hi~ first "RV (for recreational vehicle) Spectacular" at Ri\!fr· fide Internat ional Race\vay Oct. 5-7, other oe~'s rock ed lhe off. road racing world. ln two separate actions. olflcia\s of Baja California withdrew permission for the National Off-Road Racing Assn. (NORRA ) to hold any more Baja races, and businessmen in Parker, Ariz., told NORRA not to bother coming back again. NORRA created the Baja 1000, Baja 500 and Parker Dam 400. .. Tl10111pso11 T11r11ed Dor"" Offers . Thompson wa s approached by both J\lcxican officials and bis (Mends in Parker lo take over all three ra ces, but he lurned them down, citing bis Jong associaUon with NORRA as a com- ~tilor, unpaid ad\•lser and rrlend of NORRA priDclpals. · The people In Parker kept after hlln, however, and got ~ltkey to agree fin ally that he would stage their next Dam 400 the spring of 1974. Whal thl• means ls tbat SCORE lnter11a· onal could become the one do1niaant sanctioning body tbt spo rt las needed, the NASCAR of off-roading. ., . However, what bas the dune buggy set buuing i1 Tbomp- IOll1S original concept, holding off.road races on sbort courses so 1pectators can stt the action and la\lolvlng the paying customers le a \larlety of recreation ve hicle-related activities. •' A Cl1011ge of Pace for Campers "The people with campers, trailers and motor homes are l90king for something different to do besides camping in the Woods.'' Thompson said. "\Vith our format they can go to a race Weekend, camp and do all the other things they like to do and at the same time be entertained. It wi ll be a change of pace for them." "' SCORE's first race at Riverside wi ll be on about a six-mile t'Oute that includes some of the paved road course and a lot or Ifie rugged terrain behind the track. :~.: Tbe raceway's infield will accommodate camper and motor )lome parking, manufacture rs' displays,-a slalom-like perform· ance course that lets RV drivers sam ple their racing aptitude. :if:minars for RV driving, maintenance and camping and areas Jor cookouts and square dancing at night. The idea of making a family activity oot of racing is based .4fl-three Thompson concepts: ti) off-road is the most exciling kind of racing to watch. and until now it is largely unavailable t9 spectators. (2) RV owners, currently buying 20 percent of Detroit's product. are looking for different activities, and this is different. (3) People want to get involved in racing, talk to :tbe dri vers and even try to develop racing skills themselves. • · After proving his point at Riverside. Thompson plans to ~ ·mote events in other metropolitan areas. starting with San Fran· •cisco and going across the country with a regular series. > NASCAR Lore 1•reser1'ed In Book When race drivers walk up to a car rental desk, the girls ia lhose colorful uniforms ought to take off at a dead run to\.\'ard the exit. In the parlance of the sport, rental cars are called "rent-a-racers." Some of the thin gs that hav e happened to Hertz a nd Avis p9ing business with the racing clan they sbouldn't do fo eatb bther. The stories are legendary, like the one about the lime "Angle Pabst drO\'e bis rental car Into the motel ·pool lo 'o\'in a bet, but rarely are they aet down In something as permanent as a book. , ONt & '"'-Pini ,_. 11U '·""-FlltfT lllAi(li -»0 l'l"lh, 1 ~••r .n Cltln'llfll. "'""' •ll'Ot. Cltl"*" ~ .. -$w-••• COl.,........I Wow'1 Broatr tl(l'llllfll) Ml11,,,. IGtr•1) Tri~ V.,. (Wrlfl\l~ Ov••"-• Bftldtt !P. G1n1) It.cl 1111 .... r 1t111tv <•m11111 "o~i. VlllCIM (TrH1urtl WLMLt. LlilU IM.wlell Ml~• AV!ltr Utlcrwirvtl Jodie Ltl t Htrll Ahl 1 11,1111ot !fl!'lllG'I Dtll'I (MllM.1111) JIOCkln' :S..1 Ul!Cklll Dtfll119 Ettl !M••-tl Miry OOtl Bir !D•t ¥1fl SECOND lltACE -110 v•rlh. Oldl .. uo (l1tml119. ,l>l'M (l1,ml119 Prlct 11.00, 11.11<161 IBk•10 Ct!Cll OM• (C1rocoi1) TM $yfldoci1t (ltlcl'lllrll~J !><-~por1 (ll:nlghll .._,mfl! C111l (H1rf) 81rrl110 (Adolr) C1111 2•-n IMOrrh ) Sl>tttlle Night CE. G1r11) AIM &"91Mt Top Frtlllfll IBlu •• o THlllO ltACE -.tOO y1rd'I. eJ.O,. AllOW•llCt. l'wr1e 1l10CI. l.111t11 Thoe Dood Cll:ni11n1J CO!"y WMch c.-.111••1 8 111111 ltin,e IM ltl) W11Ch Ml••r Go (l••••11•e l Toolln A'-lel (Or1v1•) "' "' '" "' 11tt °" "' "' "' "' '" "' "' '" '" ) ¥N• 'll•JO. "' '" "' '" "' '" '" "' '" l y11r "' '" "' "' '" "' Cw•ln Edrlt !lhnksl M00oi T09ptr (H1rll lit • off FOUltTH ltACE -600 ¥trd1. 2 .,.,., old1. PU•H M.000. Tl" Mo on Dect;/Flrsl Olvhlcllll' Mo!1~e 2 (ftlctuord1) L!gll!lng It Bo• CK11!t"flll Mr. Cvlt 8rl!cn•1 lMyltl) Go F••lllltllllll' C••dW•) \Vlnd1 "' Sr>•l119 (!m!tll) Sky ot 0!•"1'01'111 tAd1lr J Miu Bar Lolli ('llttdl O•lldY'I E•prtu !Ht nl '" '" "' '" '" '" '" "' F IFTH lt:llCE -llO y1rd1. 3 Vti• 0101 L ~p. AUcrwtllCt. Pun'" •l~. T~t El Mor11t auifntu 11\d ,.,o1,,,r~n•I "'1;1111en';, club. Uncle Rulu• U:l:kh1ros) O•(~ey f'llve aov 1a1nllf) I Kl\OW !I'll! Girl (Mottltl Vl11t wln !KnlgMt Sl'l•rnrocket fAd•lrl S1v1nn1h't llov (Wtrdl "' ,,, "' "' '" "' SIXTH ltACE -"'' Yot•d•. 3 ye1r olcls & up. A1IOWUl(t. PU'rM Ual. Tl\t Cosll ""''' Mln'1 Golf ClllO. HV Str11111er ISrnlln) l11m.,.•1 Leo Two !T•Hwrt l Undo w" 1w1rdl Go hi• Go (81nk1l Spur CJly (Htrll Cn1!ned Rocktl (C1•do11) MIQntmlnous !Adair) Mo:t.t lt:oytl 1Knf9hll "' '" "' m "' "' "' '" SEVENTH ll:ACE -~00 yarot. '~··· olds. PU<H 5.al)Q, Tht Moon ~Ck/ tKOfld dlvl1I011/ Liddle F&ct (Knh;tnt> Min PIQ Pig (MVltt l Trlol• S•al IB~nktl (.old 11 lleaulllul (Ward) PIC<' fl'l«tr (Rlclllrdtl Roy.+I Moon 2 IHlfll Ot!l'I Sl'lodow (Tre11ur1> Lincoln'' Su•• aet tA1111rl Gauchos Bag 7-5 Triumph "' "' '" '" '" "' 1Il . Saddleback College ban ged out 13 hits in rolling to a 7-S upsel decision over the La Fonda Dons in Metropolitan League baseball play a t f..1emorial Park ?o.fonday night. The victory was only the Gauchos' second in 14 Afetro games. La Fonda dropped into a !hrce·way !le for the league lead with the loss. Senik and Anahein1-Fullerton have 9-4 marks while La Fonda is now 8-3--2. Trailing, 4-3, Saddleback scored four times in the sixth Now comes Stock Car Racing U.S.A. (Dodd , Al ead & Co., 1 · · Thr New York , $5.95 ), one o( lbose slick fa.n books designed to sell 0 \\'ill it. ee walks, a triple ........f by John Springman a n d to the grits and gravy set that populates tbe r;uper st"'<"'""'ays. singles by Brian Hester and There is the usual amoU11t of colorness hero v.·orship between Rich to.·fartin did the damage. the covers, but some of the belttr NASCAR Jore ls preserved as "·ell. Uke tbe time Joe Weatherly checked in his rental car. The Gauchos scored two in "Did you leave your car ou.t front?" the clerk asked. "Ob, the third on a pair of walks no," Weatherly replied , "I rode out with some friends. Left the and singles by Ernie Avalos car at the motel , Pops.'' and Steve Williams. And they After signing tbe bill and taking bis copy Weatherly turned added another tally in the fifth as an afterthought and ad vised, "By tbe way, Pops, wben your ,on Springman's triple and guy goes to pick up the car, better tell him to take along some l\1ike Jones' orle-base blow. acuba diving gear. 1 missed the parking lot last nJgbt." Heste r and A valM had three L. D. Auslln signed Jn at NASCAR registration one time. ~ hil s each for · the Gauchos llstlng the owner of bis race car as Avis. He was asked wbat \\"hile Springman banged out a make it was . pair of triples. "I'm driving a U-Crasb-Jt," A115tln 1ald. La Fonda threatened in the • , ninth inning, but Saddleback llutater Reef1lls Bet·t•fJ St.opped pitcher Rick J)eregud struck Hunter him self recalls being stopped in the Carolinas by a traffic cop with super .spcedY:ay hero Onvid Pearson sitting in 'n:.t passenger scat, his feet propped up on the dashboard. 'I'he ctiarge was 90 miles an hour In a 55 zone as recorded by radar. and Hunter was somev.•hat concerned about what was going 10 happen next. out the final batter. • First place will be at stake Thursday night at l\lcmorial \1hcn Scnik 's Rustlers (Golden \\'est College) face La Fonda in a i:JO game. l)earson spoke fir.st: EIGHTH U CI!: -:HO .,..,,._ ol<ll t. u11. Cl1lml"I, ,..,, ... t1t l'"ltl0 "rk• '3000. St•"MI Bid 1---.1 COM"lk: IKnlfllll lt ocktt Mkt lMt hWal S'""" C ...... IR1<1'1t•d1) ltu11 "'-" ltvn tWr!on11 iltl1fcl UO !Myled 0.1w "l•r !H1t1) It avl!IOl'ld BV Sot' fC~!lfl I or~""'' l•r ~sm11111 ''"'""'"'~ IW1rdl .... lflltl•I• Wtl('l Mr Trivet (frHsu••• Alamitos Racing Results THll:O l:ACf -110 ¥ltd•, 3 old• & u11. C:l1!rnlno. Purse t1Xll>. Lltilt Ml11 a u• Cll:lch1rd1l Malilhe (l-llrt} Cll""-1'' ROii !Orey .. ) Time -4'.50. ~ . .:! ).00 ,. .. A!1o0 r111 -ldtllo Go. 0"9 tlld Only, PrlncfmHr. Ml ,..,. No Krt lcl'ln. "Boy. am J glad you stopped us. officer! r~·c been trying: to get him to slow dov.'n ever since v.•e left Spartanburg." Hunter claims the legend about nloooshiners starting the sport of stock .car racing is somewhat exaggerated, but there \\·ere lots of bootleggers in those early races. GWC's Sanders Hits 37 At Lakc\.\·ood Speedway near Allanta police used lo inspect the entry lists for v.·anted men. ~lunter v.1ri1es. Consequently. there "'·ere n1any aliases used by the drivers. Quoting the specd"•ay promoter: "One night the police w:inted us to stop lhc race. They said the leader was \vanted for questioning. and they hnd a v.·arrant for his arrest. \Ve slopped the race so they could go get him and that was the funni est thing I ever Sil\\', He sensed something was wrong when v.·e stopped the race and there \Yasn't a crash or anylhing. He neve r slowed down. Deep Sea Fish Repo11 DAMA WHoUtJI -'" l 'IOl•ri· 4n c.iico ti.P, ~' bltrl(ud•. l -1~. ? ..,11)19 ,,.., bttl, I llollbut, I 1'1'11~#1111, Ill O-OC:l (Od. ll!AL •l!ACH -l'CI' o..alt•I' no bofo!IG.. '' .. fld n..n, )) r~\ C&! 1 ) ml(~t•rl ll1ftte -l)' O"OI'"· t ei.r· fK\141. lSO -.Ito. 71 ,....., Mil. J l'll~·~ltT IDl•tY'I l1d11rl -Xl4 '""''": 4 toorrocwa1. 111 "°"'Ito, ,7) ~i\41 bit•• 1 wll!lt NI bit,, lt4 r«I t od. 76 1'\Kto ....... tArt"t U ftflottl -tO •"9lftt: l1 DOtllto. St •lfld !Noll, l Ml•· r 1c...,., 4 .-ock cOd. HUHJIN•TON l l ACN U t noltrto ..s· ..-1'111 bRn. l lliltl!Wf, l9 ~'lJ1u ,.,,. -JJ ,,.....,! JS DON'T DISCARD THOSE OLD TENNIS SHOES!! Tund•y J11tr 24 }q?) DAILY PILOT '...::__..:.;.;.:.:__ ____ _ I PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PURUC NOTICE • • ' l ' ' . • ; I • • • • • • ~...::: ..... _ '·-11• fl.lt'Sdi:y, July 14. 1~1.> .TV IDGHIJGHTS KCOP CD 8:00 -Circus Coverage. Bill Burrud interviews the perfonn~rs and takes viewers back· stage for a look at the Ringling Brothers Barnum and Bailey Circus. ABC fJ 8:30 -"Rolling ltan." Dennis \Veaver stars as a~ e~-convict crossing the country in :search of hi.s m1ss1ng boy s. Don Stroud, Donna Mills Agnes Moorehead , Jimmy Dean , Sheree North. ' NBC 0 9:30 -Welcome Home. A documentary on the returning re gu lar Vietnam veterans (who were~'t held pri~oner) and the problems they face In trying to re-adjust lo ou~ society. i TV DAILY LOG Tuesday Evening JULY 2' '""II o ai m m • ... rn • ... 0 Ol (?) 1'7J AH-st.Ir lntball lb•• C:Ont'd lrom 5PM. e lollant• Ci) Courbhlp ., Eddll'i fltlllr 0 W11IM Dlall ., Atlwi at 1111 fliltbtoftH 0> ?t-r Trtk fl)LHToml ED Hoc1flSIOll11 LMp m fMH Siltttl l :lO 00 Htt:••'• MtrM• fJ .... : (2111) ~bitl· (dft) '59 -Orson Wttlu, E.G. M111hill, Dt1n Stockwttl. CJ) CIS Min Willer Ctv~kitt 0 HM Cv11 Will TrrM m Mir lritlltll EID Sit Yv111 Yl~t TH m-m .DtMrt 1\tttrl m Uttlf ••tut. 7:00 II rn News e Mlln1 ,,, Donlrt <II Mtwlt: (2tlr) "tfJ ftr c...r {dft) '43-.llmes Ca11111. (I) Safari tt All....tllrt 0 wtllt'i M, UM? m I lM lftJ ti) I DntM of )t111nh fl) Sl•pltlMlltt Md frj TlMI fnndl Clltf fmMllNIU a:lY• De• Yl'fir )ouftlty throu1h Aust11h1 lrom the bottom ot th• 'shnd lhrouth 1\1 primitrtt eente1 to 1111 Northern llp. 0 (}) (l) UC Tu1Mlay Mtrit: (C) (90) "tlot6nt Min" (R) (dfl) '72 -Otnnis We!':"'· Don Stroud, O!nl- n1 Mills, Agnn MOOfthad, J!mmr Dean, Sl!eree Horth. 01lven by th• death of his wi!• 1nd 1111 dls•P· pe1r1ntt of his )'Oung sons. 1 slm. pl• man who has spent lour years In prison tries to rebuild his lilt whHt eri»·trossing the count11 setkln1 his minin1 boys. m MtlY 5riflin Show (?)Stand Up and Cfleer rJ'i.) Drama 9:00 00 lt1111 fer Teur lHt @) Mwir: (CJ tnr) .. lldltllf hi P1r1CllM" {com) '61 -lob Hopt. mnn1nrt m 5p10 t..iiru11 ,.,. ...... fil lkdlt T1pttias m M1¥1• 9:30 1J (JJ CIS Tvts4ay Mwlt: (C) (90) "Cfi1111 Club" {R) {dra) '72- lloyd Brid1es. Y'w:tor BuoflO, Paul Bu1kt, 811bar1 Rush. Martin Sheen, Cloris ltachman, Dnld Ked ison. Privlte detecti~t Paul [()rd, mtmbet ol Ille Los Angeles-based Crime Ch1b, a lr1tern1t 01ganlJ1tion ol public ind private lnvesll1atOfS, sets out to prove mu1der or suicide in the f1t1I (If aash of his lon1- llm1 ltlend's $On. 0 A KNBC SPECIAL * "WELCOME HOME" THE STORY OF THE "FORGOTIEN" MAH - THE VIET NAM VETERAN. .. .• 'The "/tlatcla111aker' Lackluster Revival .. For San Clemente Eve~y kn o '", S that "Jlello Dolly" \.•:as one of the biggest of all Bro a dw ay musicals. ri gh t? So it v•ould be a g1·eat idea for 1:1; <."Ommunit y theater to put on the non· n1usical version of the shOY.', right? \VronR. "Hello Dolly" pro- bably was the 1nost overrated musical ever made, owing its initial success to the gUtter of Carol Channing, the staging of Gower Champion and a score that makes you almost forget how bad the raw material really is. Take away the music from "Hello Dolly" and you're left with "The ~1atctimaker," a porous little comedy b y Thornton \Vilder. who was the last of a number of rewrite men on a plot that was halch· l'd back in the 19th century. This is what the San Clernenl e Con1munity Theater is left with as its sunnner production and, as comedies go. it isn't very much. WHAT TJIE Cabril lo Playhouse production docs ha ve going (or it is director· designer Richard Andersen's .imaginative sense of stagecraft. The scene transl· lions in the four-set show. us· ENTERTAINMENT Intermission Tom Titus 'Hercules' Put Out To Pasture plause than the play itself. Th.is is hardly surprising since, apart from some im· pressive ind i vi dual ac· complishments in supporting roles, • 'Th e Matchmaker" doesn't quite make it in San Clemente . Ensembl e pertorn1ance, so slriking in CASE •UtT the theater's last multi-set summer show, "Tom Jones." seel'J'ls forsaken this time arol\"d. further emphasizing the blpodless, plodding plot which~fails to generate a good la ugh during the entire first scene. Not that the cast docsri't try. Stanley \Veissberg plays the authoritarian Hor ac e Van· dergelder as broadly a s humanly possible. utilizing a fine gravely voice to un - del"'SCQre his character. \V<'iss· berg's moves and ges tures. however. are so artificial that they negate much of his cf· feet. She is completely natural in the pa.rt and )ler sense of stage trans ition is finely tun· ed. ~1iss Gordon is an ac· complished actress in a com· pany of less polished talents. The two major supporting roles are adeptly handled by Peter Case and Joan Burt. Case, as the. harried store clerk s.,eaking a night on the town. scores highest in his tnadcap second scene in the hat shop, while Miss Burt combines 1980s gentility with inborn feminine cunning to rise alx>ve the limitations of her part. The best performance of the night, however, is given in a much less conspicuous role. Ann Keenan as the young and innocent shop girl Minnie Fay is a sheer delight, injecting a delicious style and sparkle into her assignment. She is a total joy to watch . VALLEY CENTER, Cali£. (AP) -HercUles roams the airy, sweet'smelling orchards of fruit. eating all he wants, plus lox and bagels, without a worry about railing Rome or a falling chest. In fact , actor Steve Reeves seldom even goes bare-chested any more. He dresses casually in the same-size clothes he wore in 1947 when he was f\1r . America. The tanned, 6-!o o t·l , massive-.looking bod y is virtually unchanged except for some gray hai r and waist which may not be quite .the 29- inch example se t in 1950 when he was f\1r. Uni verse. But the rest looks the same: The calves, neck and bictps all 18 inches. The chest 50 in· ches. DOWN THE line, the depth of talent becomes less evident. Only Kip Conner as the brash new clerk and Ray Judson as "I love to. eat," admits the headwaiter come up with Reeves, who has stopped being solid characterization, though measured sire. ''He eats three some sporadically g 0 0 d huge meals a day," said his perform ances are given by wile Aline. an attractive Mark Razo&. Carol Gustofson blonde whom he met in Rome. and Curt Wellman. Bonnie A Rabbi from Dallas came .J udson and !\tardi Bren t by the other day with bagels overplay their cameo rol es ~nd lox, and Reeves recall!! y.•ith gusto fortunately, we love bagels so "The i1atchmakcr" con-we had a good -time eating." linues for three more m s..-1tactt . 1'.lO 11...., ~ SW LJ'n• A.\. defSOCI 1uut1. O ! ltl<•M I Wtlai mt Ko1111 A ing reversible scenery and a wee kend s. playing Thursdays JGcJS through Saturdays. at the Like To Ask Andv doc.um,n llry on th1 r1tumin1 AIU· well-dtillled stage crew , JA.i'J GORDON fa res better lar Vietnam wterans incl th• ultimalel)' elicit heavier a ~ · h · I ro """''• ""'" g...,,., ... _ Cl) Tllb Is Ywr Utt probltms thry fate in tl}'lni '''l ---;;~;~;;;;~;· •• ·;0;';';';'';';;';•l;•;•=l~Do::::'.:l~ly'....::Le~•~·i~.1 re.adjust to 0111 socirtJ. I O Ntws 0 MWlloo I _, (Cl (?><) • .,_ lllJlilld" _ (Wt$) 'SJ -Clltr1!0fl HHton, Jatk P1l1nc:t, KltJ JllftCMI. Gtllltt Cirl @)Cit Sllart ai) MaAldLtl Italia•• E:) futiwal M11kaM 10 .. omm•-m Dl'aptt m-· Port ' "Av11on1c.t1nn1" 00 Twili(tlt Z1111 0 (J) m M1n:11 Wtlby M.O. e;i """' m ™ Mii••• r111111y Oetlfkn 0 MGM: (C) (2hr) "fnt..rt 5vltll Alm" (mus) '67-Roy Orbison. 10:30 O Ptlb Surpoe 1:001J ()) MtucM M1ud1 fetls that II • 0 T1l• II(• rtlltct,J b1dly on htl IS I mothH @ Ont $1tp Btytnll wlltn she !tar ns that C1rol ls HtiRI m True Adwnblre 1 psychi1t1lst, and 1h1 make{ 1 EE Y-11111 111 Confllctt surprise risit to the doctor's office ai) l.oi Dias ftllttS to put 1n end to the analysls. rJ'i.) Ntn/Sfo!b o ~m•... u .. eoommai•m 0 Movie: (2hr) ~SM• Tllil'l'ts.. . (jJ CII fi9l m News (mys) '60 -[dWtrd G. Robinion. g Dftt Step Btyonll fJ (}) Q) Te111p1rahl1n 11 sl • t 00 Peny .. .1111n "Interrupted Melady" {R) Moland m Trutll or CClnseqiielltfs cets adm itted ts an ultt1 palit nt lo @Merit: "A lllllet tor }er(' (mys) win b1ek Ille $200 Lefkowitz lost '!:is-Georie Ritt to a c1rd·pliyln1 patient. m i\lltld HHdltect P'mlrrb O)!IB<IAl1tl11ll11 I 111 larnu111 I lailey Circa ,... lllitR tom111 Host Bill Bumid lnteniftrs the perto1m1rs 1nd bkn Ylewers b1ctst111 for a IOot at tht ntilinc wot1d of tht circus. f.P} lt Se!IOl'I JM~ ft) Wattriatt H11rl1p (4 to 6 hn) e:I D EdifU de £ntrtntl ca!) V1rlttJ I lntttTieWS lflM"" 11:30 0 (() CIS lite Morie: (C) "$11111· 11trtret" (df1) '71-Mlchael Oou1· las, Jack W11den, Brandi Y1cc110. 0 ®) fD hhn11 Can111 Hrry . Lmi is gueit ltost 0 Mo'lit; "I'll 5et TOM" (mys) 'SJ ---Geor1e ,Raft. S.ally Gray, 0 t]) Jatk h 1r lonitt m festival ., tlusla: "Annlt Oakley" (wes) '35 -Bafb1r1 St1n• wyi;k, Preston Foster. ti:oo (6) Marsh•I Ollion 1:30 IJ CJ) HIWID flvt..0 (R) The slay· D Mnit: "Tiie l1111t Amtrltl• Ing ol 1 publle ht1Uh ottiti1I wtiUe P1Jtimt" (Cflm) '56-Tom Ew1!1. lie ls 1XH1dlldln1 1n investlg1!lon Into wn1re1I dlse1s1 leads Mc-1:00 ffi 0 0 (j) Nen G1rreti Into 1 world of potllics 1nd 0 Hipway P1trll intn1u1. 0 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC * SPECIAL "AUSTRALIA: THE TIMELESS LAND" Brought to you by GENERAL FOODS 1:45 0 MDYie: "lt0111h1had" (wn) '49 -Robert Sterlin1. Gloria G11h1m1. l :IXI m All·Nipt Show: (C) "Ct Gt M• 111la" "Rt me111btr hut Harbol"' 0 Nltloul 5to1f1ptlic Sptcill l :ID f) Mevlt: "liq liwi•(' (d'ra) ··9 "Alntr11i1: Tht Timtltss Und'' A -lucille 8111, V'ICtOf ~latu11. Wednesday OAYTIME MOVIES 1:30 0 (C) "011111" (d1~) '5S -l1n1 Turner, Pedri> Armend1rlz, Roger Moore, M11lu Pavan. 10:00 {])"Solle• I C1111omh" P1rt I (drt) '63 -Sttwrt llran1e1, Pier An1tll. 8 "lalflts" (rorn) '40 -David Nivtn, Oll'ii1 tit HWiUand. U:OO 0 "MYl .. IJ Sh bldtl" (mys) ' -C.rol Undis, Htnry WilcOJon. "Wlltrt Tlltn'• Ult" (com) '17-1 8Gb Hope. 1:00 m "I A111 at tht Stars" (dra) '60. -tori JY.!gens, Victoria Shaw. ] l:JOO (C) "Smn Hiiis II ltomt" (mus) 'SS -M11io Unz1, Pea11t C1stle. .1:00 00 "Tiit flfhlnt Cootilt" er.i~c1. (com) '6&--Jl(k l1mmon, @J '1111 ff•u•tln(' (suJP) ·~ Julie H•rtls. Cl1!re Bloom. 3:30 0 "Th Mtt1" (dra) '50 -Jt!i Wrbll, Merion Br1ndo. 4:00 IJ (C) "Tlritf " '•fdtd" (ldY) '40 -Conrad Yeidl, Stbu, John Justlfl. 4:30 (]) S.111t " lOAM llrtln1 KOCE, CJIANNEL 50 Orange County's UllF television station, KOCE-TV. has 11chejuled the followi~g.. .special programs today. De1ailed llshngs of Channel 50 s programs are carried in the Daily P1lol's TV Week e8ch Sunday. I JULY 27·AUG.5, 1973 ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER All AIR CONDITIONED SEEi. .. THE ONlY Iii.I.JOI fLOWll AND GARDEN SHOW IN SOUTHEIN CALIFORNIA fE.t.TUl lNG FOi THE JIRST TIME .t.NYWHElf ~flOWEI MA GIC Of THE TROPICS" •••• AN ANIMATED FLORAL SPECJ.t.CUL.t.I SEE !. .. THE VERY LATEST INNO\l.t.TIONS FOi THE HOME I. GAIOEN WITH OVEI IJS,000 50. fl. Of GLITTEllNG EXHlllTS SHOW HOUR S, S· 11 P. ~.Weekday• Naan·ll P. M. Saturday1 Noon·9 I'. M, Sundayi ADULTS 12.00 • JUNIORS sl.00 {children under f.I Ir•• with pa1ent1) DEL WEDNESDAY NIGHT* Make Wednesday nlg o night to eat out. At ~·I Taco, Wednesday night is Taco Night. You get s1~ tasty Del Tacos for just $1 .7SI This Wednesday dr1v1 thru for • family sire meal you won't for: get. At prices you'll find hard to beat. NEWPORT BEACH lrhtol I Polk.e4otl crt C•111pn SANTA ANA 4th~ and Nftrrt ,.,,,.. HUNTINGTON BEACH SIS6 W•'* at Sprh11d•lo TUSTIN R•d HUI llfff S.1'1• .... ~wy. COSTA MESA 11 5l lalH .. F.ln'f•w Cabrillo Playhouse. 2 O 2 Avenida Cabrillo in San Clemente. ... "DOLLARS" IRI "TOM SAWYER" IGI ... "BIG JAKE" IPGI "FRIENDS OF EDDIE COYLE" "' 'LADY SINGS THE BLUES" (R) "'L(l THE GOOD TIMES IOLL" .. , "EVIL lNIEYIL.. IPGl Del Opens Tomorrow! Opening day at Del Mar ••• a sunny holiday scene of lush greenery, sky blue lakes and ocean breezes. A gl.impse of the Hollywood crowd. A blaze of sati n colors and pageantry. Nervous stallions and fri sky fillies. The Gall To The Post. A hush. Tension builds. Silence. "'The Flag is up ••• and they're off!" Seconds of incredible strain. Poundin..i' hearts and pounding hoofs. A prayer. A nose thrust over the line! Cheers! A program tossed high Jn the air. A girl hugging a friend. It's a lucky day ~t the Del Mar track: maybe yours. And it all begins again .•• tomorrow! Where the turf meets the surf ••• Del Mar. • Now Sunday§ too! ;.•!,•, • :'!Ip-----., I ""1,_1,..... NI,..,..., dally, HC•llf TIM.· I I 0.n't edm., 11.13. Sr.Cttlnns (M}. 11. wt~ .A•••rtH •••fs, $1.26 ($1.60 Sat,. Sun: 1 holldql). I htont (1141 29"91340 '°' , ••• ,...,,,0,,. I Spitel1t Greyhound But ro Tr~: PhM. Gttyhound, t -"'/UN.... I .. ___________ # 'Stan' Returns Russia Revivi 1ig Metliod EDITOR'S NOTE -Tile tlaetpfc theories of Ca11· .!tantine Sia11i1lavsky, which produced t11e Marlon Broll·· do uenerocion of perform· ers !n thf.t coun try, have f luctua ted in pre s t i g e among his fellow Russians fo r the past 70 years, But in re cent times, tile Culture i'1i11istrt1 decided it ·was time for 11ew blood in So- viet theater ond Stan is the man all over again. B1 \\rllJ .• l.Al\I GLOVER MOSCOW (AP) -The big man around Russia's drama schools, all over again. is Constantine Stanislavsky . That's a surprise, for Stan the Man first procliiimed his theories about how actors should act over 70 years ago. sending vibrations across ·the theater world from Moscow to Madagascar. ln New York, his method, still taugh t at the Actors Studio, influenced such a generation or performers as !\-1arlon Brando and Geraldine Page. You can still get plenty of argument over his key no- tion that deep self-anaylsis is the only way a performer can properly interpret Hamlet or even a cowOOy. HIS PRESTIGE ha s flu e· tuated v:ith time, but now is definitely on the upbeat. The rival style once espoused by Vsevolod Meyerhold went out of style when he was liqui- dated in 1939. It continues in establishment disrepute. ''Ou r schools and. the Cult ure Ministry realized the Arts Leader HOLLYWOOD iUPll Peter Ustinov has been narned chairman of a special rlelci:!a· lion on the Arts and Soci~t~· for Congress of Europe . · -MANN THEATRES .tll THUTllS COOi.ID BY lllfllGIUTION NOW PLAYING RESERVID SEATS On Sale UD 'Iii UO Fri., ~I ., Sun. Noon MARLON BRANDO .itL rpans 1X "'.l=.,",';(u" 1!n11td ~~l •SI~ ~·oN. THRU IHURl. 8 P.M. FRIOJY 1 I g.JI SAIURDAY 1-1 & gAS SU NDAY 1-5 & 8 All SI.I.TS $4.00 ,0 "SILVER fOX " Sou1f1 Coast Plaza II Ull frll'C.O NT '' 1111f0t • S-•·liJ1 time has come for new blood tn our theater," s11ys V. L. Rhaodmysli<nll<y o/ lbe cur· rcnl trend. "After passing through many phast:s we have come to realize tlut the new blood is Stanisla\•sky;• Rhadomysliensky is t h e solemn-visaged director or the Moscow Art Theater School. one of 13 upper institutions of thespic training in the country. He worked for three years with Stanislavsky, who died in 1939. . TIIE MOSCOW Art Thealer. itself the ultimate shrine or Russian drama, was establish-- ed by the famous !cacher and a colleague. His method y.·as carried on by various pupils until 1943 when lhe school was established. "Each yea r.'' 'the director d~lares, "there arc 2,500 ap- pijcants, and ~·e take only 25 for the acting faculty aAd 25 for training .in such techni'cal malters as directing design and lighting." ' The great majority of hopefuls are girls, but most or those ac~pted are men. Ylhich he hastens to explain is "becau!le of all playwrights. onl y Gorky preferred ac- tresses. About 70 percent of stage roles 3re tor actors." THE SA"IE ratio prevails among technicians -"T1lcre are the physical rigors ot much of that work. and we have a delicate attitu de , toward our women, we cherish them." Toward the end of the four· year acting term, the 1nost talented are offered an ad· ditional four-year course, aim· ed at preparing the lea ders tor professional theaters, which arc constantly increasing, At the moment Chere are 553 playhouses in 262 cities. ll•v••~'" ', ..... r •I L•mon 51. ~1S·3~16 Ui IUl't'IN 1 llHUI - Loncoln Av• . ..... . , "'"°'' 111-4070 (IMT DIM IN SltOWIHG! DAY OF THl JACKAL l"l WllRI AIATYMlU t CUOl ll.llHm Pfll 'N' Tlllll !Nl S•n0••11lwy, • • 1 c.,ist••M ou .• , .... • fAMlll' IH'IUT.l.IHMOO MUSIC.l.l YllMON TOM SAWYIR !GI "' CHARLIE BIOWN !GI OHll DlllW IN S•nOi•1or...,. •I ll•-""'" lS•.J 961.·2411 IYAN & I.I.TUM O'NlAl PAPEI MOON ff'GI CHINESE CONNECTION!I) ~)4 .6112 MIWUT IOHD .007 lllT ..... ..... LIYl AND Ln 011 (N ! THI MECHANIC ~ l .... o1 ...... -•I ml l{noll '''·121) NOW .I. MOVm nu tOC• MUSICAl ~ ....... ~. r •• ~ ... ~ ,..., c ... , ......... . ~~··1012 • • '" ...... ' •' '. •.:, .. :.•, ... .. ' ~:. .. ... :• . ·" . " • .. - • ,, • . ' • • Creator ... Grinds ,.,.'Em Out . ' ...... ' By JERRY BUCK ·, ·: LOS ANGELES (AP) ·;"!"'Comedy creator Bern 11 rd :. ··Siad< bu been at the plate II "14~~--~~ '' Umts ln nine years and ls bat· r • ting .500. '• Seven of his creations " became aeries -including "The Patridge F a m i I y , • ' "Bridget Loves Bernie," "The ,:'Flying Nun," "love on a ~ Rooftop" and, upcoming on ··:.NBC, "The Girl wit h '', ·• Something Extra." : , There also wu "fo.'lr. Deed3 6 ,·· .. Goes to Town " and the Bobby Sherman Show. -. · Slade, 43, is under contract • ' ---- •" to -Gems to tum out Cruising Dot. VJI ihe River ~: three pilot scripts ~ year. He .·: abo writes movies and plays. Members of the oirabanda Company (i ncluding Orleans. The troupe is putting on plays in 30 town s "· · Most creaton stay with the Gnham Paul of Laguna Bea.ch) a theatrical group along the way and shou1d arrive in New Orleans in .. ; ·show as producer or con-from Ohio, sail down the ~1ississippi River to New September. sultant, but Slade is one of the-----'----------'-'---------'-'------------------- , " few who constantly ls on to ,,. · aomething new. ... _. , uA CREATOR knows his ,· , lhow better than anyone else. ·· and its to his advantage to :.. stay,'! he said. "But I get tired of writing about the same characters. -.: "If you leave, you miss the Joel Grey Enjoying Life at the Top RENO, Nev. (AP) -After have had it any other way. more than 20 years as a show "l think it's good that. it's business trouper, Joel Grey is happening the v•ay it is," the ready for his status as a 5 -foot-5 singer-dancer-actor Gre)' says be is too busy 10 think in such terms. and lhey don't mean an)1hing to him anyway. -----... • T11rj(jc1y July l4 1q13 DAILY PILOT I_~ Bo11ntiful "Hutley' Bates Perfor rns T1vo Years ilJ. Drama SAN F'HAr\ClSCO (UPI I -boys· nann_j' abollrd 3 trrun for done a klOg time aao." be Alan Bates doeln 't pllln any an t'it.!hl-<41}' ~}' acro.<>s said. "But I g\lUI people more nude •Tt'Sthng on thl' <..:anada and da-·n the Pacific di<ll'I see me UR thal •• xreen. roost . "I've done some Io o d "l"'C dmc lhat nov.·: that's scripts and rtleued llOme "IT \\'AS TOO Jong in too ,_ .:.. •"'-: ......... At Over," said the llritlsh ~\,'>.r VU')' .... eres .... g u ... 111 .. ukl small n space," &t.es recalled __ ..... doing ~., ••· who ronsidcrs "\\'01""" m· 1 ~-.i •ere WUllU • uu w"' ~· "'Uh 11 sn\J (', "~IY ~Ou .... t thi I'd 1 ~\'e" his n1ost satii>f.\·lng fLlnl PB•"" were no cvtr)' nc ...,.. couldn't open tht> windoY.·s," ·~~ .. -but "'ho doesn't v.·ant to '"wn"-"· The actor said he dC'cidl'<i 10 lie pt~~ ""'omen in Love '• Wplicalc Hor any of his other ,'" t•· "1".,1 1 •· wa·•~ •• do roles. comC' \\'est "because I've "" .,,, nc ·~ .., nt'\'er br('fl hcrt' -cxe~t for nl051 -"for every reason." "If !ICl'ipts come in that are tv.·o days I sptnl 1n 1 Los "Keo Russell ls a very t'X- tht same, 1 tum I.hem down ,'' Angele!! hote l with U1c rtu on a citing diroctor. He caught the he .said. promotion tour for ·'Jbt' fix-spir1t of OJI. Lawrmce. lie All Of \\'hich ,...made the er'." O\'erdid it, but that's his pop1tbu.-":'8.~1rar-old actor's .. 1 \Yantcd 10 s.:·(' thi:· coun. ,,·on!.'' Bates Wd. "Kt'n's a i:l'('Sence <1:1 a \Yest C:O.. lour try," he Si!ld. ''And I don'111ke bit or a genius in a wt1J.'' of 1hc sl.agt" play "Rutley'' to Oy. I hitven 't donr II .for even harc!er to undersland. fi\'c years. We'll go back 10 lfTS FAVORrfE dirt'Ctors. BATES _ DESI' known for our nc11· home ln LMdon by thougtl, v•err Pinter. wbo stag· bo I -' t ~-t • l'<i "Bulley" in London. and his scrctn portray::i\s i n at. .,..._.er o sec ......... e in nd A • h "Georgy Girt ," "7..orbo the going." Li say nUl.'rson. 1v o • B'>e• .. who'• n~ -ady .... directed him in David Storey's Greet," "The C~Betwt.'eD,' ~ "' " v .... ,, ... r fl d finish \\ilh "Butlty," \\'ill cap "In Celtbn.tio n" for the Lon· "King o <'<iris" a n don theater. II' · • -" ha his career as the \\'ill.1'. self-.. omen 111 u.1 ve -s "Th-'s 8 r•, pport that '•ou r the t destruct.Ive Loodon Un11·tt:o:ity """" " ' devoted most o past wo h3vc ~with certain people."' -·• to Sin100 Gray's play' --"es90r in a movie \'crsion J ~-· yo;v• Hates said, nolln" that Pinlt'r ·•-1 · I ty pleas'"! dlreded bf play .. rlght llarold " ..-a SlD(U ar un .... refused to rehearse unlt>Ss II f Pinter. co ege P"> essor. fl•llO\\' p\.iywright Gray "'as tie playf'd the tiring, ne\',~r BATES SAID the part \tas a prt'S(nt to n1ake sure his con· offstngc role of Butley for brcaka\\<IY for hizn -:i l'l'pllon \l':lsn 'I lost. seven months in London and sti1nulatmg change from the "Fd1n dlrcc1ors often can't then look him to Broadway -popular characters he has IX'ar !he fact th<it they arc not after time out to Hirn the still created in movies. :is brilliant as w r It e r s," unreleased 'Br"lmpossiblc ffOb-"It's something J 1A'ish I'd be noted. ject." The oadwa)• e ort,~-~=~=======-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-W \\'Oil him the Nt"W York ll weekly grind, but it's like a ·,-roulette wheel; The sbow may take a direction you didn't in- • · tend. That's the gamble you ... take." He ad.mil!! he is not happy ' 'with what has happened to ·. · · some of his ideas. He did not b10550:ming superstar -even explained. ... though he shuns the \\'Ord. "I have 8 sense of perspcc- ·• 1 can enjoy it nov..,·' he live about it all. lf this had says, "because I k n o w h d be 20 """etb!ng of what it's about. appene may years ago, I don't know that I would have The whole experience -work· enjoyed it as much or that I ing foi-something for 8 long would have had as complete a time and then getting it." life and this concept of v.·ho. "I have my eres set on ~'bat I'm going to do ne"Xt and what I'm doing at the mom.en!." he · said ... And tha!'s enough to fill my bra in." Theater C.'ritics "Ton)'" a\\'ard as best aclOr of this ~uon. · FoUowlI!4!: the Nev.• '\'ork closing, B11tes packed his wifr. I Vict:oria.. lbcir lwtn "lwo-and- <1 -<juarter" year-old s o n s Tristan and Benedick, and the • Al'ORT$,,,,,1~ . . . . ' ''·"'' Coron• cl•I M•r 67J-tl60 · · like the way "Bridget Loves · · Bernie" went ·and said he ::·:· was not upset \\'hen CBS canceled the show in its first '·' _year. Born in C8nada and r~ G r e y ' s 0 s c ar-winning and where r am.,. perfonnance in the movie ln England, Slade wrote his ;~-fmt ·professional script in ·1957~ ·~when he was an actor. The ~--play sold, and he became a ! .. full-time writer. "Cabaret" has catapulted him Grey, who recently turned to the top of his profession and 41. describes himself as a he says it brought a degree or ''together" person, a feeling security, satisfaction and he said, "has been coming on welcome independence. for a couplt! of years now and it's "ood." "It's a nice place to. be." he e said in one of his first in-TlflS "INTEGRATED fec!- tcrviews since winning the ing.'' as he put it. is a result or Academy Award as best sup-]earning to trust in himself - porting actor for his role as "It's a very gradual process "SALT WATER I WINE" 'Ja~·s' Set 7:JO & ':45 £aclt hnhtcj .•. · BE WROTE dramatic plays . in the dying days or live ,~ television and switched to :~ comedy when his first assign- ;..: ment on arriving in Hollywood •. in 1964 was for "Bewitched." the Cabaret's sleazy master of that came over a number of HOLLY\VOOD (UPI\ ceremonies. y e a rs a n d i n c 1 u d e d Richard Zanuck and David ITAITS WIDNUOAY "LIQUID SPACE" RELAXING in blue je:ins psychoanalysis, quite a bit of Brown have purchased screen and sweatshirt at Harrah's pain and an enormous amount rights to Peter Benehly's new hotel~asino where he i..s .::•:..£ .!'.P:lc::•s::u::.r:::•·_" ______ 1...'.no'.'.v:'.c:'.l.:..'..:'J'..'.a'..'.•~·s:_.'_' -----'~~~~~~~~~~~ He wrote 19 shows for that ,..:.· series, was story coru;ultant on ~ "1.ty Living Doll" for a year •, and then was on his way to :; creating series with "Love on ~ a Rooftop." .. His newest show, "The Girl head I i n in g '"'ice-nightly 1·· Sho\VS, Grey Said that despite .-----,-~--~-z--~-~-­the long, sometimes bumpy 1 !PGI road to the top, he \vouldn'l £XCLUSIY£ l EXCLUSIVE • with Something Extra," stars ,. •• 'Sally Field as a wife who can ~ read the miod of her husban~ ~ played by John Davidson .. ··-'..'. '.; .. . , .. ., ~ ~ ~ t t 4·: " t ~ • . " H ••• Nobody did it like 1\ll\l&f .. • •• he wos the gangster's gangster. C .. rl$ Lt1ch1,,.n 211d Fratur-Walter M111ttha11 "A NIW LEAF" MESA THEATRE 1 tth & N•wport Co11t, Sor., Su11. 2 P·"'· Phis: "HITLER: LAST 10 DAYS" Co11ti11110111 S1111d.,, 2 p,,.., I ' -: •.. ~1 . i . •• ~ ~ )' <:, ~: !l · .. ~ .... 'lo ~;· • ,.: ~ ... NOW IT BOTH CINEMAS ~~:.~°"SAW WMIN THE LONG-RUN ._ACM TWS A • COMEDY HIT YOU HllOVll c~ tomes to the '""' ara '-s screen -liv lJllmann Gene Kelry IPGI Edward Albert Binnie BarnM 2MetCW l 1 GOl.DIE HAWN IN ,U'mlfLllS All ,.,, .. HOW IN THIATll THlfl ' • tN CtNIMA TWO U.A. Coty •1111 S...111 C011! Clntm.1 -T.,.\Cllf S0c I Lilllitl •1111 O.lckn19trs) -Open 'Ill 2:M l"..M. 1111 ~1*111. w .... Oeor11 ~I Gl..,4-Jtdlwn • "A TOUCH • OF CLASS" ..... _ ''\.OCUSTS" 9etll lft c .. or fl"GI Cli.rlll>tl H11t011 Edw. G. ·--""" "SOYLENT Y O• .. IN" ll"OJ Jll!Oel C...• Silty' KMMt"'-ln "SLITHElll:" J • "'"' c.Dlf'1I "PAT GAii· •In AMO alLL'I" TllE • KID" ·~ ..... a.tltlft(ollwl ,., "THE HARRAO EXPl!RIMEHT" W...Cr Alle<1'1 "'-M..icM \'itn.lell! • ''TOM SAWYlll." !GI ''890THl!R 01' THI WINO" !GI I "l!VERYTHIHG YOU WANT' TO ICHOW A90UT __ '!="-' ~"~'-­ Clt•r1111n HtUO!I "SOYLENT QRl!EN" J1tr1H C1., "51,.lfHER" ktlt ... '""'' ("O) lolh Jn ( ... r t U!lhruolt ., T1rtor! • "SSSSSI" Y'OU ltl-. ffl "90Y Wit() CIUEO Wl!•IWOLI'" ••" "' c..klrt ll"GI ·····················••·· • • •l•C .. BLVD IH t lllS • •n co••~ .,,... .. ,. .. ,. .. ,.,.., • .... •&7 ·,••0• • 141,1 N'PINGf0H •r •L.• • 7 I DWAIOS THE WESTBROOK IN CINtMA HOOKHU1$T OH WISTMtHSTIR AV!, 2 ILKI. SO, 01 GARDIN GROVI FWY, 530 .. 401 -HILD OYll --..... -llumdl ,,....,,.1Dt ... ·-·---·--- ""' 2nd {OP ITTRAC I l .smNEr ' -t><J!!W•~ """"~ . ~l!t:~ . ....u' =l'O• \ ANO THE WHOLE DAMN THING I-JACK LllllMON "SAVE THE TrGER" IOTH COLOl-UTID I "PAT GARRm AND BIUY THE KID" I.ti~·~ @-0- Plus • Lee Marvin St Gelie Hackman "PllMI CUT" u1o 01r:o '""" '' l• P1 / ni•,.ou llJO 6490 PLUS· JAMES COBURN KRIS KRISTOFFERSON IN "PAT ou1m AND ltll Y THE KIO" And 11011· Iii<' 111nrie ... .. perhaps lhe 111os1 r1·1n;11 h .1bl1: 11ln1 ll1 cn1Cf,lo!I' sinl·e Cecil)\. [)('~·lillc f, 1onderl I I• •lly"·nnd ... -'1£RNON scor1, Uflf ' ! ~"""',,... •• Ro~• \o,._.,1 -"""'-I.I\' Jf \to l'<I'."' him "JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR- •• -\J.1"~ •I <!'•,... '-""<t~J..-·,_-., .... _ .,._,.._, . .....,_, '"~"'••··~,,--·I 1111,,c --,\rUrolo.,J ~-.. , ,,_.,,,.,,lh,< .,_,_ • ..,.,.\,~•l l'·"'•n -·--· '' ·•• '""'" .. _ .. '<llllol,...:Jl ... l'<N -.VlJ!\l\'ll""'!"'N-19 1H1 ~1 '/~,.,..,,,,, __ ._.__..,...,,. 3'i!'P.,...-~------~-... -.,_ a: ":.~:=' .. J PREMllR ENGAGEMENT NOW PLAYING CONTINUOUS AT 'l P.M. lo'l 0'fl(( OHNS 7::10 .... • ••• l!DWAftDS •' ------• • • • • • . • • • ' : •'" THll:ATlll! •••, .: ••••• 5 46-3102 •••• .. Al't90 f0 •T AO •MS C05t& ... ls-. .,.···---'"'" ... "" ... """'° ••. ?.1,1'.111 • ,.,.. ">f', ~ •• ~Smtih limolhy Bottoms .. -'!JI .. J ...... JV .... ..,.,......,., ..-LINCOLN I _. DRI VEIN l1nco4n Aftn!M W. of Knotl B'*1• ,,.rte:• 527-ntJ ,RfMlll INGAGIMINT --P:t!m~~ ,... PLU S · GEORGE SEGAL IN "LOVING" '•jaf •.>?.'" ••• ~.-,.. !, . • • • • • • • • • • • -• • • ,1 • • •• < l\f\1\1 f'lfR t<Af LCIR Al AtlA\A \ .Q',lA \A(\A • ?l9 4 14 1 2nd At Cintma Wtst Only "THI N[f'TUNI FACTOI" i• lit . r.: . . . °i"7'-. "'·1 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • f l\I 1111 f\ll R 11/l ~~l)R AT AlJ A\A~ lQ\TA \Af ~A • ?1? ~l oll . ' .. .. ' •• .. • \ • DAILY PILOT lutsday, J"'uty 24, 1973 Judlclal ' .. . .. . I ONE . TWO .... • ' ' .., .. For the Re~ord • Dissolutio11 Of Marriage Hon~. M••v (.oUten tn<I cn.,1t·1 c "l•v. i\t rl'fl •M ~••••n<;t l•h• I LCl>Cl<l•. I\• •Shn Let ""° J.rrots ti tn• y Moore. Oi•nn J, end Erno•v O. o..•••n, Nluo•m Jt tnt s 1nd J1nnh1r c;;i;:,,~•,....,,H •n<1 Oennl• K. Yavnu. AOnt~ i\lul &un ind Goroon Leo Pinn l!l~~hlll(I, Ocnn• Lav/st •nd Willer "· Grlllllll, Ron•!d c. UMI .,,,,1y.r11 • .-. SMwn, Joyce ~nd s11nle1 Irv.on $1ndlft, Joyct Adtllnt ""° W1yn1 Jtflr1y Robin,..,,,, Ke.,...111 II. 1n<1 Molly Ann J<:>'ln•.on, POlh' ,.nn and Jan•c> I... run. Gtr•ld Wescon '"" Oonn• l!ltlll 1!11vm1n1 Albert G. ,\l'ld M•rlon J. Ross, M1tlltfl E. 11'1(1 Melv1llt E. 11no1r;:,,., Estrl1 M, 1nd L•rrv G~le 1Vood, l!loronlt M1rlt tnd Gene Irvin Woo.Ii. t ell J. VJOO<I' 11nd GeO.•llt R. M<1trlntl. Ccncti>Clon and Edu~rdo S1•1i., Jcvce M•tlt 1nd Fr1n~lln Jtl w~i:"'M'!:'v1 Lade• 1n11 Jamf• Dn•kl V1Mken, E1d Jr, 1'\d Cl•ud!1 M11tln, l!l•l~n 1n<:t Vtrna.n LtlCY 511\ld1r, Joyce M1rlt 1nd J1mt1 A. Rubio, Corlnn1 1nd Ju1n llu1nHQn c1m1>11ell, 01yle c11rl111ne 1na L&0n11d 11~,", D••nn1 I... Ind Rober! L. K·-·· l"YtrlY J. Incl RIYm(l.nd Vern C1r-cllkl, Lindi AM tnd J01t~ Jolln • Pl'fltM, M<>l..,1 '"" J...:I< l. Aq\1111-Sti!rlty 11111 M<i•lu!I A:tmos w11•11, &1r1>111 lff 1nd Jt<MI Ltollt rtll"lllno, Sutannt E. '"" J1me1 It, Jr. 'ltOlllon. D1r!ftl" tncl •ll~lrn E. S_,,...~•·· Rt~ L. '"" S~lvl1 -''· t•r•~. Pe.,ic1t IC~" '"" V•n<mt ltl>IM•I MtDoM.•11. C1•rlu" L 1rd 1-l<oo" I $(1\rotdfr. J..,.,;,.,. '"'"" •nG ·M••CUI .,~·:in. L!'h '""' • ..,, """"'' ':'"'" lh"'dY, C•rCIY'1 Je1n i nd 'l"ttmtl Fr•-.cl! Dt Ptz. Lui11 Alv1r~t 1na ltol)O!•T V r!1 .. , •• L· ·, ~h ••· •n• l'le~" v Gr11m1n, lud~ ind Fred Htf!1nd, Dlfnld Allen 1'1<1 P1ttlt • Ann atrton, AtM1l1 M. llld Wlllltm !.. M.111, Edwl111 J. 1n OGf'f'1ld C. Sttw1rt, 01rc'1' A. Ind It,,... W. W.f#, t l'll'f. J. •!'Id Miry E. m. .,., .. µ,,. ind Georee 1 . Crult· DtCW• \.'(l'ln 1nd Wlltt1m ltcblr'I P1r•1r, 00rttn A. Ind It, lttld Garrt'lt, Olndt O. and Gtrv J. Osw1td, Jtrry L. 1nd ShitllY Jean &lo.-itluno:t. ,\!~n It, 1nd lil0".tm1ry llet•,, lor~l!e M, lfld G1•y L. Wt-I""'· O•n•~ •"ti P~ul MOfht N•n<Y E. 11'\d (!IUe<d ( Lou~. r1 ••I '" onnl~ ..,... Nlcllcl1 Shirl ti ncl Geer9e L~ll' D• Sl•n Jon" •~d ll•rllvn J. K r, h1rles R. 1nd Oi1nt M. (iltiav . 21nclr1 Let ~ •nd ltklllrd J1mts Ntt>!L ROl'l"1 R. Incl J•r!vn /\, SleYO<'ll, F•fflericn EJrl 1...., Svs1n ·~· llenntttl. Oeoortll Su11n i nd L1rty Leroy l1ldwt1', M1rjcrle EltiM '"" Get.id ·-. 8rummtft, S8"1dr1 L. •NI 80111• J. 8rvmmtll, S•M•• l . 1nll l ltlle J, Sl~n. Mfclltllt M. 1nd Steven De1 n Gibson. LOWtlh G•le '"" l •un1 Ftlll• '" Cott , ll1tl>4or1 J. ln<:t J11ne1 R1n<:tot1111 Mclrtyl!'I'. 2eu1 M1e 1na All>tft Lu~• L1y!on, Mlc~lle LO\llle lftd C11rl11l1n Edw1rd Kenn~y. Chrl1llne 111<1 Gtr1lll 11toyc1 lltkll1rd,. M1r9le O. 11\d M1rvln 0. Summervni.e, GKVllll G1r1ldln1 Ind L""'ll Ar1a.n Afl!ltrton, V-11e l't. Ind 1:1zl1 l. AllMJ'NOl'th, DllM Ollvl• .,.., Tnom•, Merle 1u1tiv. S<ini1 R. 11111 J010epl\ 0 . t1eu. (;'1)fQt Mlrvln .;.., Lt1trlct Joy M1rin1ll, Edltll Luz 1nG Lt Vf;/#1 ' J'llHI J11ne 7S • Dunn, Ellvlf>e G. Ind G1ry W. w.111ms. GeorQt M. '"" sna•on M, (~!ltndcr. Mly1~0 Ind (lllrltS M . SmnUey, l-4o'"&fd C. •"" Helen />.. Cotll1ter. J1cquel!ne L . •nd J1mu o. Claremo1 it Cites 12 /u Area Twelve area resident~ were a,mong the 441 Claremont l\ten·s College students circcl at the end of the recent semester for 1tcaden1ic e:-.:· cellence. Richard Cramer, son of l\.frs. l\tarjorie W. Cran1er o r 337 ~farche Lane. Costa l\fcs~. and Kenneth Ore\\'. son or l\lr, Clrld i\l rs. l\farvin \V. DrC'\\', or 32251 Stonin gton Road. South J..aguna, were both honored as di11tingulshed sc h o I a rs re· quiring a 3.5 grnde point avtrage or better on a 4.0 scale. Tt>0 other students made the school's 0c:in·s List "'ilh a 3.0 GPA o r better. They "·err: HVHTIM.TQM alACM -l,tlclllfl llW)M, JOI! f;tf Mr "\lfV V, LI''""'· 11'4 Sl1tor AYt ,. Ind '~•"11111 Tno.>•n. YJft cf "'" •nd MrJ Htrold J TCIK'fn. llJI It~ l lflt llVINI -JI~! 01v/•, •C" of ~'r ·~ "'''• Jt(k O~v,., \Im Anlie<ll 0.1 ... \.ACiVllA alAC::lt -JOl\1'! CP\1,..• JM•lln, 10l'I llf '-<r• Ylrfl11t1 (11•,.. Derlln, .I (tM~f Sl•flltl, Incl ,,,u,11 l•W, Mt!'°" M ... M1•111r,i l ollr. )S,_ MO!'lltal Orlvt. LAGUNA NIO\JIL -Mtrk L1u•lt, '°" of ""'" Jo Ann L111rl1. 3U:.2 W, NfM. llrNI. MIWl"OIT alAC::H tc;..,ntlll l rown. "' 01 Mr. •!'IO' M•1 0••1 8fl1Wn, U!I Lincoln l.•11•, •I'll ~1!rlcl W•lllamt. tOn Ill M•I NllKY K!1'\0it, UT S"VO MlfllOf' llotod. SAN (LIMIMTI -MtflO ""•'flf'O. 11111 of M• 1nd M"• Mtrlo W M1lnoro. 110 (rl1tocMl WISTMINSTlilt -Srlll' T1lbCl! t()fl Of "r •fld M•• C1vld l ll'!Ot, 1)11 PtfflttlOll AW. ~ Pll!llld. 8t•1tflY H, 1nd Ovtellt J. 1•111<, Ct•OI S. '"" HMckl E. Oldl\1m, Glitn R. 1nd N"tl!nt Rlcl'WlrdloClll. P1 .... 11 J. Ind c111rlH E. l OYI . Stt«ll 1(1y 1no-Llnntll toy HoU..,.n, l"l!rltk J. Ind SNrCM'I K. ti t•lllC:ott, Oo1"n1 I(, 111<1 G1rv 1,.. fv lt. C.OllMn l .L. Otnitlt 1no 1.cltnd . ., P1g1n, C1r01 A"" 1na Jim~ Slllpltly. Pllrlcl1 \..Ind frfd f . Gerr1t11n. l lnot 1.M ltlley '"" Jann All>lrl P•oveoxlo, L_,1rd lhom1s •r!G Kristin L1urel Mc/1rrc. AflOtl!n• L.A. Ind Guillermo Junt'1•• McG1n1e, L1nny P. 1nd Metlnd& L. Aoie. levttly Anni i nd Ktnnetll Nnrm•n l~rt>osll, Fr111lc Jo1pell tnd C.r>rl,Une F1y1 11.ilawon, Terry '"" Jo~I 81t~tlev. Pl!rldt Ann tnd .llcl>e•t Jotln E•tll l !untlon, M•rv JNnn1 •ncl Cllntl01' 01 V/111 Corllnt. Glorl1 1nd Avtlir>eo "••eo11!1. FrNtrl~~ S. ;,nG f~lldrW G. Slltrrlll, G1vl• E. ind Steven G. \.l rlH. Le lloy l......, Egle M. Ellwood, "-DI A. J~. UICI M1ro1r11 •M Ourt ntt, L1urtne:1 MICfllll 1nd Sul AM Dom.ncl'llClt, A11rellu1 I nd Sll~k• ~r•ncoll. lonfl!ot L" 1nd lnlnony Peter Keer1n, Mltll•itl P11rlck 1r!G M••CI 0-1. Jo-,.nn Wllm1 tnd J1mes P1..r ,, ~ye •• ~i110•1 (., l<ICI Alon k. llt1m51y, Jollll H. Ind C1rcl 0<1nt•1•, Mitthlll I\. 1nG Cllrl"int M. lnltrl1C1lwy P1creu Enttr" JWM U M<I••· l<.dy Lui,./! d!IU 1."ll ! f ..,,;·,w. o,.,. Lt>. ""M ,~.,• lta.,~•J ~·,:~;····· v,,,c,, ... l~• •'"' •l•ll•on1 R"lev, NltllOI•' l . •nd L•ur• LtiQh Thornrori. E1/1111er11 M. 1na Cl•OJC1• w. • ltlC~rQ. Jwcly Y. lflCI J t.,y lllc:ll, 01n W, 1fld .. lty L ' &e1ro, Aobtrt1 l. Ind Fr1n• C. St~~:~"· Con111nc,t lOUIM I nd l111ren Kim, ~IHI J1 I nd KYCM'IQ S11 £:rro, l'll• AM •no tnom1~ .fll!I..,• Percy, Veran!c1 E. i nd Grcgbrv {., 1,1111,.,,, kuS'-C ll l.t1wln 1na M••Y ~•lnor;ne \~,.""~·, IJ•ll I . •"" Antiut G. 1..e""" W1n~• l:'.llttn 1na Jolln ""'"'~"· ••••It ~1nc1r1 Ind Mtrl< Semufl P•eh, 'Nl1!!1m l't . ind N1ncy G. l1J111,, Jenn •ncl Miry Jo Ann • L1<1vlh. 11-r! Tnom11 I nd Kllhleen AM Aur11aon1. t•t M Ntlll• lrid J011iin luldem•. Otl>rl Je.,n 1nd :lolvl C.1rrv 8•· ;,,,, l\ll(Jrey M. 111d Htrstlltl t. Suoll11, JoHPfl, Jr. Ind Htlg1 M, .C•>O!t, H1rl)la W. •no Loul11 C. Mock, Pllrk!• .llo•1nn -1nd Ht•old Jou1>11 Clotre, Lllf!l•lnt M. dncl Ro;tr W. ~lt•<IY, J..Ch v. """ ~-rl L, 111u, S1undr1 •nu l-or• ~.n..irv, LOVtrt1 "''° &llflven.,. J°'~ 1..COh, Htymon(! L •• ,.., Pllrkll A, •••-hV, f\-fl k•Clll•d f ncl Rull\ ll•fl.tle<, HUI/I Pl\ylll1 Ind Jor.n Htnry 1..5.CU<nt, Swt•llflf """ lfllrlts WllOOll Pllt•nGilcr. f01'1 ltt '"" T11Cm11 A. M1rlln11. AmorotJc Jt''' Jr. 111<1 Jtlflllll l ovlM Crtt~utum. o..11a1vn end l lll le, Jr, Hyett, Jwclv l.ynn 100 Wllhtm H. Pucnitrj lltlll JO 1no 1 om SltPl\fn H1v. E 1lt L. IM Jonn Al•~•nd•• Sc nlfl, A"" l. 11111 LOU•! D. V•wPln, l1r1>1r~ N. Ind Cl\111n II. 8•,,cn. Otllor• 11111 1'111 Artnur E1 rr Jorit1. Cllttord ltt '"" Elli Mat Cu•ltn, M1rp0rl• I(. '"" Rotlef'I Henrv rt&ctl, Dtl• ... M. Ind LlrfY G. H•n•nllt•n. 01nlll 0. 1nd llonn le S. Trlct. $1\lron and Bedford lllcnard llG.1. KtlhY Lvnn •!Id Oon•I~ JCHtlh lleneutt, Mt re<lltll lftl!S ~nd M1uri:1 lle•d· Klrfn .ond GtorQt A .. !Ul•on. Co!leen Donni 1na Ste•e Holt Mtver, WUli1m W. •nd K1t11trint Now1lnP,I, Ol•nn1 Mt• 1n<:t M1rtin Peter McL1ll1n. Larry W. 1nd ll1r1>1r1 L v.o<rano. w11nelm!n1 J. 4ncl J11> A. Hvl>l<'I. $1U'ndr1 J. tftd Dtvld E. 111c001'n111. Vfncen! T. •"" E•he1 L Mtllall, Sl>tlrM P1trlcl1 1nd Freaerlck 1>.ut11ur Ctltstlnt. M1rv Lou Ind RtYmond ROdrl1u1z . .ll!l<TI1n Ind Connie sncmo. Liro llobtrl '"" Dl1n1 M1r11 ~1114 Jiiiy '' 0011\tn, WUll•m Josepn end {!tire M!!lef, Loul1e M1•v 1nd J1coo Pt1t• l1rnt1t . C1rol1 let Ind SllVtlolt Sh~~~~~. How11'(1 No•ton •"" Ell111:1t1n ,:,~~. G1rY .. u"" "'" 01 ..... Ml"t Lei n•~'''' Ellr!lde tnd Herora G1rc!1, Ed..,·1rd 1nd M1rv llMlllt J<:>'ln1on. Lindt 1nc1 Mlc11111 llr1ct . Donni J. 1nd RlcM•d F. Corfmtn. N1n<Y Lvnn G1 rdn tr 1nd J1m11 Stevtn h1IHl1C1ltrY Dtcreel l!i"!t~ JVM JI A.r1nj<1. J11trlc l• Ann 1no Edwtrd M, IC un\ml~. l1r1Mr1 l" Ind It-ti Va~~·i~\klrk, M~r111rtl "llV ind Oo111ld R•r ~rcw<1. Dent d l'ttY 1nd Donn• ltultY t al>tfn. H110!11 G. 1nd Ruu en I'. freemnn. Eowi" G. 1nd C1rcl l. (.umo11lfl0, l~or1 MtcNtlll, Ind SMrlty C1t1>11rlnt C1r11no, Mkll1el J01111h ind Jennv llu~ri1~~~ \V!Hl1m l'ticllard '"" Glldys r.1•1~·ie11. wl1k1r. A1>n 1n11 How1•'1 IO,,.,tlY Vtl\ll11, Sn•'"" R11 11'1!1 °"rth"' N. G1n11lt1. 11r1>1r1 Al'n i ncl 011n~o Bonlltclo Htf'Ck•-· suu11 M••Q.,OI •nd Thomli \...,nit Sovr lac~. 1(1rvol E. Ind PIU1 H. S11>0. Jonn 11ld Ori II, Chrl1i.!11..,, (trl F Jr, Ind Al!Otlt C. ~·ccov. P•"!c~ O. I(. Ind Mlcllolll A. r ron-Otvld C 1n" ll1r1>1•1 J Wl'M,...;.y, ll;OMrl S Ind J0tnfl M. .llel\11 Ore!llnt L. tncl .. 11111.tf H coo1<' l't-rl 11:11111 Ind P1trlcl1 IMI AVH;, J1mn lrYl'I '"" Mtllt• A.\t l'll Flo•rnc:e. "-" W. 1nd Loullt ,l.\fllnlfl, Ame111 """'' A,.cttrlOfl 1nd J1 11r1c~ ltov felh l(.1ut • C~. M1•lt K. 1fld l'tk l'lt•d l, S•hrl, Yy~ M1rtl1"n' tnl llO<:CO J••'V JI!"•'•· 11.~•I I 1"'1 Slla•on t l'l•nomv, G••c• Y, e~a w 111r""' J &••1••11. 01~1d PllU11o 1r,d Mt•Ol•t! r: L.~"\ ·•• 10111 ~"" l •uct .l l•" \•t• A111t•'. Ptto~ Mt•IM 1NI 0on•'1 Ht°'~f/:~~:::.. L, 1fld lt~etrt P ,.,~I-. Sf'er•nM ""° JOl"11 ~d"" J11!!1 "'Ur• '"' W1nlem ,,,:::;i:;,,, ltoN M G. 1110 Ellr1Nl>I c.~;~. c11a•+ .. ow ... 1'"' 11:111!!••11 c.:1",';.:;,1, B1rt1tt• .Jt1" tlld (~1•1.., 1'r11n•ll11 (•'"111"911•""'• J•'""'"' A 1nd Nc,,!1 ,..,,:;.", (•lt•lll• Sw tnil ReM:M Gtn• M't;ll'<''tn. Mtr,t LDlll.-, ind JOl!fl '"'""'" 1'_1-1.!llio•loll Jo•~ M. •"" )(l~(t '-CoU!tr. Joe S 11111 t otlb!• N. P•••• $t'•111 11111 J""" C•non bfll11. Sh1r011 lfld MtNV T...-1&" JllC~ [d •I ll 111• (l'IM~i ,,!)~;,;.:" 1!111•0"'~ " i nd Oennh L •ti•' '"' JIU•" •...i lrl•<ll•nl •t L•"''' ~f•" ! l~~I P1•"I""• 1"11 01~1 1 ,, ...... ...... .. . . .. . . . ... .., .. "•I' I' • ·•· I••""' tl•o•~ t- r1 ' • 111 the Service I ~ Alrman Georgr A, Fierro, son of !\lrs. Felipe !\I. E~pl· n02:a of 2510 llunllngton St ., Huntingtoo Beoch, has been 01.:-s:!ant.-<1 to Chanute Aft'B, Ill .. after CQ•nnleting Air Force basic training. During· hill six \\'eekll at tht Air Traiuing Com ma n d' 11 1.ackland AFB. Te:t.. he studied the Air Force mission. organization and customs and "l'!::'eh·ed soecial instruetion In hu1nan re lations. 1'he airman hw been assign· ~1e5a. Calif., has enlisted In the Navy for four years in Cleveland. Ohio. She 11 a 19n graduate of Clarkston High Schoo 1 Clarkston, Ga . l\'larine Sgt. James E • Snyder Jr., son of t.trs. Charlotte G. Snyder or 611 Cress St., Laguna Beach, has reported for duty at the J\larlne Security Guard Bat· talion at Jlong Kong. PUBLIC N001CE f'"' to the Technical Trainingl---c,clCc,c,,c00=.,~,c,c1c1•c•c1c1---J ........ ,~r :1 • Chanute f 0 r NAMI ITATl:M•NT :!l"~Cializ('': 1~ainin" in aircrart l h• to1lowlng Pt•oon 11 doing ~lnn1 e ••: nl'.lint(!ntir>•·e. THE f'ATCHWORK f'ILLOY.', l1S '°'II SI .. NewHrt IHCl<o, Cell!. fl'MI \[ ' p n .. , S Sonnie I . Eno11rom, 1101 lrltwl>Ol"1 . anne vt. '"'"~ · Mini or .• w., NtwilC't 1tt1d'I, c111f. :\la1bleson .Jr .. son of Pifr. and ,,"° S h. f Tlllr 1>v.1ln111 11 tcnducl~ 17V t n In· '.\lrs. R ay •· ~fat 1eson o 8.S9 d1 v1ou11. Oak St , ~la !\f es a lorinl• 1. E"''''°"'· "• • ' Tftl• 1111eme~! W•• Ill*<! will\ lllt Coun· graduated from basic training 1y Cla•k ct Dr1,....e County on July u, al the Pifarinf': Corps Recruit itn. • '''I" Dept Rt Sln Diego. l"ubli111td Oru•ot C.1111t 0~11~ 1>1to1. u· · ty 17. 1~. !1. 1nd Avou111. 1'13 1109.13 Nav1· Construction Recruit ----PUBLiC N OTICE Tboma~ R. Platfoot, .son of r..tr. and ~trs. Robert F'. Plat· 1"1CTIT!ous •t111M 1ss foot of 297 Rose Lane. Costa ' NAMI STATIMINT .\lesa. graduated from recruit i s:M 10111w!n11 oe••on 11 dOlflll buslne1s training at the Naval Training r. v. fAClS, 21:io1 Mooln1, Lag~n• . Ml111, C1lll. tl6S3 Center at San Diego. H•nrv J. 0·11r1en, 12:io1 Moe11~1. . L11un1 Hlll1. C1W._126S3 Navv Airman Recruit Vin· Tiiis builntl$ I• c-ucted lty ·~ !n· . • dlYldUll. ctnt E. Po~·trs. son o f ;\fr. Henry J. 0·11r1e~ d "" D ' J E f' f T~ll 1tll•m1n1 w1• !!ltd wltll 1'ht Coun· an J>u S. an1e · OWfTS 0 ry Cltrk ol Or1ng1 COllllly on July t. ltr.I, 15811 P'lumbwood St "iu1i • . • f'ublllhtd Or111C1I Co.UT t>alty Pila!, Ju· \\ estmmsler. graduated from rv 10, 11. 7•. JI. i.n 2111.n recruit training at the Naval ----- Training Center at San Diego. PUBLIC l'\OTICE ---~1arine Pvt. Ste\•en C. ,.1cT1T1ous •uStNl!'Ss NAME STATEM£NT Pestb. son of l\1r. a nd ~1rs. 1111 tvllowlno flHIOll Is dclng l>uslntu Robert T . Hastings of 18441 '"SPECTATOR 111EsEA1t.cH1THE f'l!:lE Basswood St., F o u n t R i n PllTMAN co.,.,,ANY, 11• )jt11 s1rM1 , V 11 , d led f ba • H""'flCN'I 1l11cll, C1Ulornl1 '7'60. 3 e). gra ua rom SIC Ptlfr Josenll Plllman, llt 3$111 Stretl, training at the l\farine Corps Newpor1 1111ch, c~. '76611. Do '\ lJe t t Sa o· T~!t tM,nlnHS Is condvtlftd l!'v 1n In• nxCUI po R n 1cgo. dlvldu1t. Pt!cr J, PlUm1n Jeffrey p Rhin(.'Smltb son This 5!1tement WI S lllld wl!ll Ille Caun· ' M h' \" !y Cltrk ol Or1ng1 Cavn!y on July t, 1''1.1 of Mr. and rs. .Jo n '" ,..u,u Rh,n"smilh 331l5 S Baker St Pu~llolltd or~nQt c~st 011ly Pilot, Ju· I " 1 • ·• ly 10, 17, 71. JI, 1'1J 2\2•·1~ Santa Ana, has been com--· ----1 m issioned a second lieutenant l'UBLIC NOTICE in the U.S. Air F orce upon PICTITIOUS IVS1~£SS n'racluation from the School o( NAMli STAT!'MENT t>' Tl'<P. lotlowlno ""son~ '"( d~ing J\filitarv Sciences for Officers :ius!net• 11: I d AFB T l E,.N tS (LUii VILLA! , 110 E•1! at Lack an . ex. 11111 s1reoet. c~t• Mesi . '7617 Lieutenant Rhinesmith. IOH, uo E1111 11111 sir(et, !':0••1 ed hr h t't' 1\1111. '2621 select t oug compe 1 l\'f! 11111 1>utlntu is 1>1lng coneucltd 1>r • • lion. f tt nda-e at l lml tfd P1r1ner1llip e.xlmtna . or. a e • ,.... 10H bv Gto•a• 1.1. Hot11t;n, 111, !he school lS being 35Stined al H1 1u1norlrld 1gtnt ' ·"'Jd 'AFB W h T11;1 Sllltmenl tllf'd wltn ll'le Cavntv F a 1ru1l • as .• as a c1.,.k ct orinq1 touniv "" Juty tJ, ten civil engineering officer wilh WIL LIAM E. Sl JOHN. COUNiY CLERK. the 92nd Civil Enginnering 111 B•ltv J. 8''8"'111• Dtl>"'Y· l"·HttJ o:;:,..uadron P111111ol>ed Or•ng• cOf,~t o.,;1., PU01.1 oJl.j t • July ?,. 31 •nd AutU\I ,, U: 1973 r.tlt·n I U.S. Air force Captain PUBLIC NOTICE Slephrn P. Dorris. soo of ~tr. __ _ S Do · a-,,_., ,.ICTfTtOUS auSIHESS and ~trs. am rrLS. o/J<J ~ NA.ME ITAT l!MINf Wes t m in s t er BI v d • TIW 1or1cw1~11 PP.fson1 1r• ao'in11 l h · ed th IHlslnft' 15: Westminster. as recetv e THI!: SHOE HVT, 2300 H1rbor 11 ... 11., Bronze Star Medal for c osu -''Ha. c1111. 916)6 S•Y·On sr-. Inc .• 1 C1Utornl1 ccr· meritorious service at Koral pcr111cn, 2:JOO H1rbor 11·1d .• cost• I.\~•, Royal Thai AFB. Thailand. ~~:~'· tiu'!~~~, 11 conducted 11v • co• .. Captain Dorris. an aircraft ~t>r1t1GnS.v.on SM•• '"'· ·1 maintenance staff officer. was \•1t1"ar.1 Spurg1on. v.P. "t'ted for ht's outstandina duty T"i• •llttme~t ""'" 111"1 """" t~e coun·l '-Hoe ty Clerk of Or1ngt Coun!y on July ll, J•J,l ..... rformance during military P·'"''!' r-Pul>ll•he<I 0•1"91 CCtllH 01nv PllQ", operations. July l~. J1 1fld August 1. 1', 1913 2ltS-7JI He was honored at Hickam PUBLIC NOTICE where he now serves with a ----------- unit of the Pacific Air Forces ,.';~~1::,.~;il!o~H~;~HP~~~';~HLG I (PAC.4.Fl which provides air uN01:1. P+cT1T1ous I power supporting the U.S. and T~e lnllow~ .. ~,:~~ ~!M!ltf\dr•wn ~l its allies in. Southeasl Asia and • Qtner1I partner ''°'" !he p1rlner5,.tpl the Far East. r11tr1tlno \Wider the Uclitlw\ busiM"03 n1me crt lHE HOUSE OF WAX !>.HO !'.OLOR. Paul C. Graham. son of ~trs. 111t Pomon1. tc•t• Me-.a, c1. '2611 J3 .. , R. Graham of 26"~7 Via T~~ llt !lllou• bu,1~•5! ~•-ne ''"'•m!nt '"' '-" tor 1111 p1r11>er1lllo w1s Ille<! en Fel>. 21, Roble. ~fission Viejo, has been 1•n In '~ couniv a1 0•1nge. he Full Nunt1 i nd Addres! ol ltit Per~&" promoted to sergeant in l w11r1•1w1no: s. Ai F Edwtrd Frtderick Oulfl•ler. 11'12 U. r orce. S1n11 Lucl1. Founl1ln Yellev. Cl -mot Sergiant Graham. an ad· s1ontc1. Edw1rd F. Outh111rF.UWT m inistrative specialist at Pope Publl1lled or1nge CN~I Dailv 1'1101, AFB, N.C., serves \vith a unit Julv 1,, 31 1nd Avoust r. u , 1m r.t14-Tl of the Air force Com· PUBLIC NOTICE munications Service. -" sergeanc. a 19 6 9 ~ PICTITIOVS IUSINE>S 11~ NAMf STATl!MINT graduate of Pilission Viejo l ne 101tow1ne 1>er1on! •r• d'oing nded Sad bu1lntu 1s: l.figh School, atte • BUENA f'ARK MAZOA. 101S l(~nl! dleba"k CommunilV, College. ""•nue, t1 uen1 P1rk, C1Hfornl1 f06?D " JIM MARINO, tNC.. 7015 ttnnll His father, Cecil R A~enue. 1t111n1 Ptrk. C1t1rorn:1 '°610 Graham, r esides at 516 Dia· Thi• bu1lnt'' ls ccmooee by • cor· oor1t!on. mond Monrovia, Ca Ii f J1M MARINO, l'IC. ' h ' ' f !IV: S. J1m11 M1r;nc. Prt~idt~I Ser geant Gra ams wt e • Tni' ,,1,...,•n• w11 111M1 .... 1111 me t:o•·~· Beverly, is the daughter of t11 Clfork of Or1n9t C011nty on July 13. ~lr. and ~1rs. Charles A 197 3. "'"u Parkhurst of 25352 Campina et,.1111 AHD ll!A11tv 11116 WHdl"'lll'll llr"' Drive, ~fission Viejo. .. •. M.rt.._...,, r1. tHei Tiit U1J) 76t·SfM1 llT·Hlf Resen·E" Lt l;;ol. Jobo A. Pubtl,hed 0<'1~:°t:·~, 0111v Pllo' Jul~ Guan 2740 ~lendoza Drive. ,., 31 1nd .lvou11 1. 1o1. 1•n ml·1ll Costa'l\tesa. has been assigned PUBLIC N011CE I 10 the ~fa rine Corps Command ----------- and SI.ff ·-hoot. undergoing flCTtTtOVS aUSINISS "'-NAMI STAT•MlfHT Phase I at ~farine Corps Thi lollownf perlon b clolng but•~~~ei Schools, Quantico. Va. IJ: VICTORIA Tl'tAOHl$ CCM P ... "1Y. Gunn. ne\\'S editor for the :.111.i c1~r1 L•"'' cos11 1.1 ..... c.1111. t7il6 Orange Coast Daily Pilot. Vldorf• Mt1101r, "°'o c1~r1 L•ne. I ' J ed to Cast1 Mn•. , .. ,,. 12616 nor mal y is ass gn T111~ l>Yiln•i. 1, be!nv coneu(•fld bv ·~ Volunteer Trainin g Unit 16, an inc11Y1du11. VICTORIA 1,\EiljA'R all·3Viat\on Unil, Which trains Thl1 tl•l•,.,ent ll!•d wilh !hi! Cou~ty monthly nt El Toro ~1arlne Cltrk at Or1~e Caun1v on J ~I/, ii. nn. 8y ltt!Y J. ll1rt1 tl9fl, Otpu y County Cor""' Air Station under lhe c1 •• ~. •" A. l'•Hn1 direction of the Marine 1r J1obfl1n~cr O·•Mi~ c~11 n1nv Pho1 Jutv ttcscrve Training Com1nnnd. "· 31 •P'ld """"'' 1, u, 1tn m,.n ~larlne Pvt. Jo!tph \Y . MJBLIC N011CE (;oopt.r. S00 Of ~1rS. \ffldll I '7111 1 f 21661 fl kh 't IN THI IUf'lfltlO«I COUltT OP \\'l cs 0 roo ur. • Tll• ITATI D, t'.ALIPOl:llllA llunlington Beach. ca I If . IN AND PQlt THI COUWTY 0" Ol:ANGI graduated from ba~ic training M1. Aruu Al the l\1arinc Corps Rtcrult 0~~1:.J-0,sHOW UIUll ,Olt (MAWOI Oeool in San Diego. 1n"" M•"., ~the A.1>P1lc1n~n 01 JIM· He l' a former student of Ed· M~~. LE~P~:<•1~1:!' ~ °J~~1~ Nt~~ • JI' h '"hool fluntington G!IEAU tor (l'Wlnct• 111,.a~.11"'1"' ~n 1son 1g oc . '"""' I~ Cwrl. tncl II ·-••1nsi •• ....., ••IO Beach. ·~l!etl!Ofl lll•f JIMMIE lEE OllliAV 1111 lllt!I .., 1110ll~1!i<oll..Dr.,;:l1111 lflAI 111, l'\':l\'V f'lrcman Apprtntic e LUr~s.blt cf\lt'IOtd .. IM.MIE LEE l\enot~ n. Coa1tway. son of Now. IM•t/Otl , rt It lltrtltY ordtrtd INt dl1t<tfd, flltl 1n ~rlMI lhlcrt it.cr 1~ '.\tr. nnd ;\lrs. Jimmie C. '''" '"'"'' ao ·-•r t1t•or• 1ni,. c~rt 111 Con n\' Of J78'l' SO 0 O•p1rtm•n1 l en tne 11111 dtV ol ""4u1! 8\\' , " • ' HTJ, 11 2:ot o'e!Ock '·"''·· oi t•ld a1v to Clemente~ Fo\mtain Volley! lhoW c1~1• """ 1111 •DOllCl !ltofl lor ed f It ~1141 cf Mfl'lt VIOUllf no! .,. onin1'0. CaliC.. gradual ronl recru 11 1, ""'~ .,.,.,.., 1r111 •copy QI 1t111 training at the Naval Training ~....:.:,ri::.':.~" c~~f!:/!!.. "~;~;.: Ccnttr In San Diego. 111 .. i. "'''"ry, ,, 1"'' anc.• 11c11 .,,,.,k A formtr student of Foun· 1w •our •uc(ntlw """-' ••for 10 '"' d•v of .. Id Mlrh'll, tain Valley lllgh School, he Is o.,., 1111, 1'1111111 or JIH'I•. 1m. hed led I (lAUOl M. OWE~ sc u to report o Jwtt ot •• 1cr s~ ... '°" cw11 F' Ir t m. h A.pprenUctlhip SOMOt ft. LIAVILL, lltOltl.11: & JOlltGINllM Training. San Diego. Anw1111,. ,, L•w ,,,,. ti.rt ·- • Jorja S. Ra1. doughtfr of r.~:r:~·11,.,,.1• .. ,.. ~fr. a~ !\frs. 11oward Chiry of Attw11•n ,.,. ,.,,;,...,., -J '" d r -PUl>lf~ Or•• Co.t'it OtdV ,.110". 2......., a rvit:\I>' Ro.i . ~la Jiii~ ,, 11. 11, i"' 1rn ~,~ • WANT TO CLEAN UP ON YOUR CLEAN OUT? ·FOR FAST! FAST! ACTION! CALL Di\11 .. Y p ·11"0T WANT ADS • ;; I F P di p dAIBJI, ,,_,__.., ;;;;;-:-::::::;::::::::: ( G e neral DELUX TRl-l'LEX Pride of ou.·1\Crship on lo1·ely stre-et. All 11nlt11 2 bl.'droon1, 1 bath, a rtlll buy at ~.000. TI1ls onr 1ron't las! long. Call nctJ Carpel. Realtors 5"'16-i.6 IO I flJX'll P\'l'nlng• I . B e autiful -$33,500 Central air cond. 3 bdnns., <lcn. Uullt·in~. Plush inter. lor. BBQ. AllSUtneble 7•;; loan. bric f>i().1710. TARBEL L NEWPORT HEIGHTS WITH A VIEW (lrnfl<l nc11• ho1ne \ocllt\'l.l in 1uost dcs-h'P(! nt>lghborhaod. 3 huge Uedroonui 1\·iU1 1111lk· In cioscis. dining 1'0t.llll, rnn1· lly room ancl 1·1'CTt•allo11 1"00tn. This ('Uli'!On1 huill ho1n{' i~ 11u11lhy hudt l throu;;;1ou. You 1•ill •'nivr the n1un~ · .ti·;,~. C 11J n.-111 ~ It 11·on't 1110: l•J '". $s;.:,oo, [ l 646-7171 =~glNDEX I on-~ TIL 9 . IT'S FUN TO 6£ NICE• . •1 THE REAL ESTATERS Reil £111t•for Sal• [ fl!I ) =~~!~::'•::"'':=~=~~':::' H•IHK ,,, s11o1 ),....... 100 Don't Call M. e MHlll1r/l"r•lltlll tmn .. 120 Acr1111 for ' UI• Ut M111111 H•m1• l'•r s.11 us A Duplex.". A111rtmtn11 ttr .. 1e · · · • · • • 151 J 'n1 a 1'00n1)' :; lkdroon1 2 l utlfltll l"fl,..,,'I' 1S4 c .... t,•rv Lth/Cryph .... 154 Ua lh hon1l' on an open <.'1.rl .. CtmrMr(ll l Prt,erly UI n 1·1• )(')! 11 i!Ji tlHU1i~UIYtJ (1unl C1n•1mlnl11m1 l1r 1111 1'0 iw,1,xin/Unl11 t•lo. . UJ yarJ 11nc! ~hClt;'rcd pal iO. H1u1e1 te II• ..,.~tt 1t4 PLUS tncomit """"Y 1U l...,,,,>lrl•l PNptnf ..•. IH L1l1 ltr S1iol . . . . 110 Mot1H1 HtmtlTr•!lar l"•MI• 1n Mount•!,., D""1. lltt••rl 114 Or11111 Ct. f'N,trl1 •. JU 0-.t Ill Stilt Prep1tty Ill R•nchH, f1rm1, Grevn Ito An c:.1 ~1· t•i 1·l11t illl"lt\11' 11111\ 1Yi·1va•1· .-.n1ran1:r, 1iiVtlu1,•i11~ <:~ 1110. '-&t .. )•j'} CALL 644-7211 Ulll l 1 n•111' • Gener•I STEAL THE SHOW and l.'1\joy this lovely hotnt.; 11e"' c11r1M'l,<1; <1nd drapes, fE1111ily roo111 or fonna l din- ln~ roon1, hut 1rhat a value lhiil: 3 lx-<lto01n, 2\~ b11U1, fi rf'plnt'f' hO•l1(' L~! Lurgr patio for your rntc rtaining /))eas111"C'S. All yours for only $31,450. 644-7270 BLUFFS CONDOMINIUM ltt1/ E1lllt E•cll•n11 UJ DAILY "iNI ... ::.::~.. I ~ ~~- PILOT ::::~::: ~:n;:~.' ~.M,',o MEsAVERDE Con1pletely upgratled 11\0 Slflry, [~JflfACULATF.; ''\V" pl.in. •I gwroornll, 3 baths, hrick rirt'plaee, large conn· \ry kitchen. Close Io f\·t>rything . flOOI , tcnni..- cluh, shopping & schools. $.J-1,950. 644-7270 CLASS· IFIED DEPT. D lnvHlmenl Opportunity lnv11lment Wtnltd ....•.•. l>O COUNTRY CLUB MllllY II l t •fl TIO M•"'' W•"•·• ... . ........ 1•'•'• I AREA Mtr'llll"• Trutl DHdl Renti!IA ]~ I Lat':;<' 4 txdroo111. :{ ba1h & l\on1c 1.'IOS1' 10 ~olf, ;;1\·irn· [ '9 1~1 ini a11<l lt'lltti~. TtJp :in·t1 ~--------111 be~1 ni·icc! Sj9,\:.JQ. Call ' llou•" ru1111,nect JO~ 1· MtUIH u~lu1n. JOS to ps"E"·TE BARRETT I HIMltft tum. tr umurn. JIO Conclomlnlum1 lurJI. • 115 C-omlnlumii uoh,1rn, no TQ R C1n•o. l11ro. or 11nlu r11. JU -REAL -Ttwnho1111 l11rn. .. no Ttwnllllls• 1111111rn. . . . . . . . . JU 642·5200 Jownl!W••· 111r11. tr U11f11r,., HO ~~~~~ u~~~n. ........ .. i,'~,', ! ~W_A_N--TE-D-:;-" I OvpluH, l•rfl. t r unlwrn, :::~·..:,~~~ ... :: ................ ~~.FOUR CHILDREN 1 A.,tr., hi1r11. er U11lur11. . ... 111 , :::::•I. i'u rd ' ·. :: .. ·: ·: ::: I IN I """' MOl<I• •• ' '' "'I GARDEN GROVE Gvnt M•m• . . •u Sum...., R1n1111 no • J V1c1tllfl l.tnUl1 •a I :i\'n :\•• d•),\'n r,1: .:,.11,.·· '" "llC!l ~·ou 1is111ith US, YOCR MOJ'l?I·". is ad· 1·er1 i-wd in Home tor Livin1 n1agazlne in 11101 ,, than 900 11.~as . and CUSIOlllf'l'S are ~<'nt 10 you as refer· r;1/s fro111 our -lii aJ. fili;tl('S Of i\J'i!I ~~. ~tnt•l1 to Shirt •10 1•· , ·•'I rost~ ., lri r··I' BR •) I c;•ra9eJ 111 Rtnl o ;, • · " • ,, ~. • Ollict 111111111 uo Uui11,;, 11lu~ , "'"Y t.l't.'l'l.1"1. [.c tnc111str111 llttnl•I ., . .... •!O I\ !lxl.f den Ho111e on a ~t=:~.~: w~~, ....... ::::.::::.:: !!! ::ll~.t?.; fl. '101 11<'lll' Los • • • Richard Tom berlin 17230 Si n Mateo Fountain Valle y Yen ~rf' Ii"• •"ir11r1· or TWO FREE TICKETS Ml1c1fl1n11vs lttnt1I$ ... .u1 Amlgos Hi School'. CALL A I NO\\. ·-][~!'l'CO" ' 0 WA LKER & LH '" SOUTHLAND Home & Garden Show ./1·1~· 2iU1 !hn1 Aui;. 5th at' th<' ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER L ~:~;u~:·~~~"t:,11'11 Me;M~iu,,;· ~~ 1'eALBoA PENINSULA 1 lttll Mttkoi ... , .. 110 C11s to.-.1. !O!J quality ho11l(' ,, Person,!1 11&~) ~:,~~Y'l o1h~t~,:7i~~;~:P'r~,:/~:hor~~: I'·---------'· ~ :-( r1s tt o ... •:on :i1u s P· Awtl tr1n1perlu~" P~rtlfllll soci.1 Clubs , • J?S 1 pin~. i '.n )O;tn. C.~l.L 11011· D l .... ~~-11~~i 'S21 ~JO \r. h'..atel!a. Allaheim P lf'RSI' i;a[J 642·5678, £!.':'. ::tt to l.'ln in1 your tickels. INorll County toll free nun1bc-1· iJ 540-l 220. l • • * RURAL AREA Fan1astic view or ocean atl(J J-lunting!on Beacb Lighei;.! ! Overlooking pro~ ~fa­ rina & regional park. 6 Br, 3 ~· 4 car ~rage, bl~ ra1111ly m1. Spanish decor, ~ilr. and lots or shag: carpet. in;.:, too 1nany ('.\Ir.is ta mtn· tion. ,6.i,500. Hors'Cs pail· 1 R E c T ~1111111 tlrtt Ids) Ltsl IMtruction ... . SJ~ I J""" \\' "[ . JU '""' <'st.:::lu Dr., ~ Jl 11 ~1 11 Mi~L~!~E,:?~~' L------~ bcclroon1 on the eas1side Cff Stlllols & •1n1l•1Klkin1 Thlltrl<U . ... sn Costa tilf:-sa If you'\'e n1is$- wo cd rxccplional buy before, call this minute· I ServicnsndRepairs ]~ OPENTIL9.~T~~~·TOBfN/Cfl c~:rs 5itrv!ct Dtr.,;lory .•.. '°° I It I WALLACE ' sible here. Job Wiflltlll, M•I• . . 100 0 Jell W1n1tc1, ftm1I• 10l 1 1 I REALT RS Joll1 Wlnltd, M&P 11H I ' 5"4141 "-'' Wtnltcl. M&, , 111"' ,=-=~~L:;:;;;::;::::::~= ----(Optn Evenings) 11~14 BR & F.11n1ily room 11·ithl~.,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,...,~ ~------· 4 Bedroom Prestig• A"liquts 100 lar~e yard. IF'airview & $-OOO Applilfl<n 1111 \\'arncr> -newly painled .i:; ""• Auoi... ............ •~• cflrpcts -15 minutes 1(1 k){'atccl. in nice n€'1ghborl)()Od, l irlldlnt' M1l1•ill1 .,.. tH sho f'. [ ,,..,.~•• • ,.,r,,,_1 , ......... •• Nf'lllltJrt Beach. O n I y . pp1ng a: ra.'\1•ay . 01\'11('t' l'irrnltur• .... •... , 110 $26,500 _ early occupancy! is pl'ofcssional plun1her. A11 O•r•1• S•ll ................. •n fixtures upgraded. J!as gar. 1teuuhll4 GtM!i ..... ·· 114 grous 1:ia1jo 11;\h 11..iter rouu· Jewi/ry ........... llS Mtcllincry .... ....... ...... 11• tains, 01·c·n;l1.l'tl doublr ~ar· - -MIKella11eo111 ···•·• •· 111 "'"' n=<> RIC<' & \\'e u.;tt takn I\ •l>>ai' Ml1,ell1n"u1 W1nltlll no ............... · .. ,. M1r11c11 1nttr1rm'"'' ....... ~. u1 l 'I' hon1(l lracle! Offl<• ,.ur1111vr1tl•111lp •........ 111 * 4"PLEX * Walker & Lff l"lfllftfO...-"' ................ 116 .. _ Mk••n· ............. , •• • !<EAL ESTAn: SP9f'liM ~ ................ IH 'itit\2 l::dingcr, ph. 84:2·41jj St1r1, ftnt1ur1Jlf, 111 •...•... ll1 Op •til 8 'JO sw1" ...... . ,, ........ 11• E''CELLENT C rn :. p.111. S ,,, ost::i ,\11''-3 6 '[,v, 1111~11' " 1 ·" 1 • 11r" •11 ~ .. 'j CORONA DE L MAR-. . lo.c!illion. S1111cio11s 111111 ~. :ind prin1r in· HOME & INCOME l'et1 and StlppliH vcsln1ent. Annual inron1c Cl".lsc 10 sho1i11it1~. 11m1.,c> $7:'.M. No Jo;1n [\~ . S62.500. 1:11u1clng & "" exl'tll(·nt rem. 4 Pell, 0111tr11 ......... ..... lff Call 5 ~ 5 · S I 2 4 Sou1hCo tit rocorrl. E11t•h uni! h!Y ~· .... :: ·:::.::.::.:.'.... · ~! .R.-nltor"!I. 11\1"(' bt•clroon1!I, 1~~ OO!l1t, ~I~".. ::: se-E USI bu ill·in kll~·hMl5 plus M'D-llVHttc~ ............ tH For the tight honie for you. ara!r ln11nrtry roon1 nnd pri--flt Complc1e stlectlon of hon1cs \•a te p.it!Qs. ~l0\\1l bv op. I-!1.1_ .. _ ..... _ ... _~_ .. _ ... __ "'Jl\{ I ~·~·cr·c~1EW· HOMES c:111F~C01~~w!:i~ - 5 6 7 ~ o-.i .. .. .. .. ttt IMll, Mtlnt./$tnkt . ••• .. • H2 lt1U/M1r1M l:l!wip ........... ftl ...... ,....,. ... ' ........ '"' ... ,., 111..ifl(ll•rtff ........ ' .... IMff, Stll .. . . . . '" Ill+.. M!Wo.ctt .. .. ....... flt IMtt. SJltM a Ski .. .. •••• f11 ... "' '"''" . .. .... "' I '---''-_"'"'__,]~ Aifl:rafl .. • •••.•.••••••••• tlS c.,..,.,.., s..1111-m Cy,:M, a llln, SAllttrl •.•. fH lt.ct~lc C•n . . , , ••. , , t• Mtaltl H-US Mtttr Nt-. ,. . .,, " ..... flt Tr1lltrJ. Tr•vtl ................ tU Trlll•n, UtllilT •••••••••••• ~J A .... S~a~1n, , .• M 1~-""-"-""-""~11.-.1 a.... ........................ tM Anflrt'lt1/CUulct •. . . . .• .• t s.I Dllllfl l.,..W. , • .. • . • • . • • • • • • t M iJ'llfl .. l:te• ""' '" Ttwln .,. m Vt111 .••. .... • Kl A..i.LuW., •.. . f+C A..-,. r1mt:• a ••nt . "" A.in W11,_. -••••. ... tM ltl!M. ,,...,,.. ,,. A~ ............ ... A ..... u ................ "' REALTY Ru 1tors ~002~ l""4710 WALR TO BEAC Three bR.throoms plus J bNtrooml! fl\nilly mom, Beam l'f'lling, 3 Bcd&OUnJ$0 Tnlt.'!lt'r OO'irnon1 haJll !lunkcn 111'Ke patio Y-rd. A~Lnw: Roman bath. h'.llC'l~·n t'q•~in-Sll.300. Jo'or npptflntmcnt: r>Cd fllr a Qurt.'n. .\ rc:\1 nl\·cast". \VALKER k l..F.E Ht-:.\l. f:STAT1': i6S2 f.fliturrr, Ph. '42-11;;.) OIX'O 't\I S:30 p.m . - fiAiUio n 1rt1-rOfi1'ilF1~0 , ;tr Nowport Ho lthh * + l)r, honus nn, 3'' bo,, ~~1n1<J\ l Hit 2 ha. Nf"'411 outstanding d r r o r • .(; ,.. n1c."t f.xtra ta. lot. Bt.i hl$1liCP\l.. oTfi.:r. S.l-J.¢i1Jl or Hl"ll(ht,c ll'l"fl1i,m, $~~. 961>-11ffi. BALBOA BAY Pr<OP:" 'F.ASTBL.UJo'F 1•ondn, * 64'.l-7491 * beautifully d~rcra t~I . ---.YRE S HOM E Bi'llCO!'l1 O\"M'looklng &cJt El. CAJON JIO~lf;, 11.B. &y .• '' ~R, 3 BA, $73,.500. >WX> Yds to he11~•h, Not n$ Bkr. ~~ lshcd )~l. 3\·1n Jn Aug. Takrtt BU\0 oite or both ~~ OVt'r n1y ('ill'rtlll' $·'500'1\ill {Mtdroom hnuges scparnlP !\1 Plll'\'hUt-p r I e ft $52.~ x ai5 lots. Priced at S2l.500 Da,,\ii : lC3-9018 I £War each. Sht:ll Realty 612·1()86. 5 11nc1. s _d~~-~qi:.~ bucl\li. is.';r;.1 1="11= •• "1d'"•""•u""1'"111uy="1"1te- ad, CIJI 64'Z-:i6'7S! lilUU. •· ' T11rsd.i1 Jul, 24_ 1~73 DAILY PILOT ,?,; ~cment' . , • , , ,.500. S24 The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast Mobil. Hom.1 '°' Solt . 125 -~ DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS /i.IAOlllObiaes ••••••• -950. 990 loob & Morine (~ 900 -9'4 l n..,.,fllel'lt . , . , • , , 700 • 1" ,.."°"°"' . S2S • .549 '-" or.d ~It'\ . • aso -"' R~ Ei101t CeMiol. . I~ • 199 finoncim • • • • • • 2<X> • m HoutH tor Sole , , 100 -12• Lott & Found • • • SSO · S7'4 Me«.t->dii.t-, ' ' •. 800 . 1'49 Houses for Sale General i General HARBOR VIEW HILLS You Can Sell It, Find It , -Trade It With a Want Ad Den like the captain's cabin, vie'v like Sky- lab's and appointments like yo u've never seen , But it's tin1e to see then1! This is a four bedroon1 Lu sk built that is the finest ~ At $98.500. 'J'ruly Unique! [642-5678] One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval ltllfltOI • 300 • 499 School~ and lrlll1.,..;hon S7S • 599 ~tY.CC\ and 1-.>0lfl • 0()0 • '9f Tron,poo 10101. QIS • 949 - I ONE HALF ACRE LTnusually large lot 111 rin excellent Ne,\lpOrt Beac h area . I.o ng pr1vlle drivc•\\<ly. n1a Rnif1· <'C!lt large tree.-; :ind shrubs. and an addrcs." close to all popular r\e\\'porl school s. r\ fou r (lt' five hedrou1n ra nl'h stvl e hon1 c 1\'ilh l'harin and polcn ti al. heavy sh ake roof and all in cxtrcn1e 1~· good t·ond ition. r\ delight · ful place for a lar:.:c fa tnil v. Call 6 75. 7225 NEAR SOU"TH COAST PLAZA MUST HAVE QUICK SALE -.\dull ort.:11· p1ect :1 bcdroo111, 2 l1a1h. "ilh a l:lr).!C k1tchc11 . llu,cc rul·dc-~:tt' lo! \t·ith man ~· fr uit lrees anfl lJrL('k f1rc•Ol3Cl' and l)('<!U liful t'O\'CrCd patio rnon1 fnr ~our 01\'n garden. Q\111er lea\•111~ Sta\c>. CA LL 546·5880. UHl9Ul HOMES OF CORONA DIL MAl, 675-6000 A lhli119 ,f lyltt11 Ew\119 If~ plcµtning a I Newport Beacl])nove I 1l,urry fo("your clJ9ice~ : General G~neral 3 Guest $25,950 I 5'6-5880 ~HERITAGE •1 Open Eves. ll'n\:11,. , u-..·ul.11· ~1..IN"r .:ir U~l()Uf fi()Mf§ Half gone in half a year and the rest will not -'--S-W_E_A_Tl_N_G _OU_J_TH_E -SU_M_M_E_R-?. last long. Hurry to see this distinctive Newport Beach development of condominium homes. built-in clusters around handsome courtyards. I l1n1• h"lll\'' l'i11nt ;ind .\..I\.,. __ ..., ____________ ..,. ___ r h " 11 ~11 n •I '. s ,\r<'pini:: EALT REALTORS Eight superb models. each a ma sterpiece of luxur~ comfort. convenience and quality construction. Sundecks. fireplace. wet-bar. e legant Mast~r Suite. Sun·Lite kitchen. \Vhy don't you look into this cozy 3·bedroon1 air-conditi oned ho1ne in r:l Toro. It's only 11 nio11ths old . General General i::1''l!nd~ 11 11 1· not1111 r .. r ll(');J1. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.1 :: l11~h\Jo'ltll' i n c J u di n i: • lud1"a·11·11y rna:otl'I' ~ulll', General General ** ** **' *TAYLOR CO.* EXCLUSIVE LINDA ISLE-$195,000 Beautiful near-ne\V bayfront home. Jligh ceilings, open spacious feeling for taking advantage of 'vater view. Prof. decorated in 'va rm smart colors. 4 Bdrms, library, play rm. & 51h baths. Pier & dock. Security Gate. "Our 28th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors I 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road "Overlooking Big Canyon Cuuntry Club" NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 Gen9 ral G@neral I LA CUESTA LA PALMA OCEAN BLVD. I Corona del Mar Vl~W private enclosed double gara ge. Recreational fa ci lities in clude heated swimming-pool. lighted tenni s c_ourts. sauna. theraJJY pool. All exterior building and' grounds mai ntenance provided. Scitisfy your curiosity-see Newport Crest today! Side,va!ks ;ire in l'tun1 the garage to the rear or the house \vhere 11 Joins a 12 x 10 patio. c·arpeting is upgraded and beautiful draper· il:!i are iu c/ucted in the sale. !)rive IJ.v :.tJ:l!ll Cav anaugh Boad and LI .you like \vhat you .see. call the O\\'ner at 586-7307. llett~r ::.til l. the O\vner lives just around the corner at 2~532 Dunbury Urive. \Ve·u be ha p- py to sho'v you the ho1ne . Two, Three, and Four Bedroom Condominium Homes 1 Gen8r.J1---Genm1 ------ ' ~t ,:•m $ 620995 ~~:.;. •. 1 BAYCREST BEAUTY ~CMilJ New Listing I Located in a lu sh. Jandsca1Jcd. established 0 r neighborhood . Ouls tandin g 4 bdrm .. ~ ha .. ·~ CONDOMINIUMS I fnmiliCQRB'llN ~MARJlN From PacifleCoast Highway and Superior Avenue {Bulbo..i REALTORS Call Anytime ;44-7662 OUR 24TH YEAR Offeri ng Service Only Experience Can Provide LOVELY DOLORES CONDO In lhe cxrlu::.ive Blu ffs. Xlnt vie\\' of wide, \\'C\I landscaped grel:nbelt -also. handy to heated & filt'd . po.11: !his attr.., 3 bdrn1. & fatnil y rn1. hon1e has been btfautifully up- )!radecl in everv re,1-.etl. Please ca ll for app'I. S6i .500 OPEN DAILY 1-5 715 CAMEO HIGHLANDS, CORONA DEL MAR 1\n 011t-.;t:i11d1ng 1Jl•1c in a pre~t ige locat ion . 3 ll<lrtn.':!. 1'<:. f;,111il y ri n. hon1e, price only S69.5UO Et:Uf and B.eaclv 'Rcaffit. 9n,c,. 1401 E COAST HWY· CORONA OEl ~AR ·67~ 3000 ,,.l>Rl'lll•· :::Ul'!!.I fal'1l1ty, d• 11 11 llh ,J1d1n~ J:la~ rluir 1 .. :,1:,• t 111••1111111•·1.,. f)l!llO, 1;H.,•il1:aJ.111i.: \'It•\\ ol •'<Ul· .1"n and loluo• l'<J<'llll', Hl•:T. T l·:H ll UH RY : C all lil~'.0.1. I Olli \I L 01 \0\ N £A1 f LJ4', NEW 4-PLEX Br;ulll ""''' J HI~ .\.· :! ba. •I• 111'°" 111111 11 /fr pl l' , ,'-: :l , :!·Bl: unit~. ,.,. 11 /1)ut\o or 'Hud., :t l-:a \1-.uk Co<ttlt ''•·Sa IU' x ... , port llt!l. l:U,I• I i.;o I\ 1 ~1 u.•• 1· I&.\ 1l•·1•r•, 11111•111 lil 10.•f) ~ l'r\L.l 0 •.&•·l''' 91~.~,,llL Nr•r Nrwport Pe11 Olllr• • I Bf::DROO:\I, ? bath.•, .1 .. uw .. ~ILl'Uge. J::(IJO). D~I i of tcnns. • CO:\li\1EttCl/\L ZONJ:: -:!I Feel 'th!' <wl ocean brccic !ronl this 4 bc<.hoon1. 2 ha!h home on a qu ii>f r ul·dt•-:;;11r str(!(''t, Clo!'e 10 scliov-!s :ind shopping. You l'l:lll huy lhis 3 year llC'o\' h01111:• ;11 b<'!Oll' rf'!lla{'C'ntent l'OSl:<: -S4l900 including all lhC' l'X\l'as. Don't ~·ail · cull 1oday - ~4'~-25.1.i Old Spanish five brrlroon\. Blvd.). drive up Superior to den. [011111.J dininc 1·110111. T1ceindcr•1<Jil. ond d1rectk I•.• l;o1nlly 100J11 . ••11 ~,,·,'1'..i1.,.,1 . N,•wp<.)rt (,,.~1 lnlnr•n,,!IQn General Gentra-1 -BR t~·o Klory oider home. 1 G"!neritl ;;::;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::::;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;, R~~le·~~'c!~~:I~· R'•ltor ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;A;;;;;;;,;V;;;;;IE;;;W;;;;;;;;;;?;;;;.;?;;;;;;;;?;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. ~fJnc/a JJ/e '"' '"~'1¥i9'1 c.>i. GenP.ral inl jui;t .~lcp~ fru1n 1111• Q•n!l'r ·r..,i_.phonc: l.il4) 1>4~, b l,11 hca(·h 11·ith a fr•h•tlon«. 1• ·Par ! Seil\!! Offito' op.!n dailv view. The only ~rn c·iou• I 10 a.m. to su11~1 A view is a view when the view is forever!! See this 4 bdrn1 .. 2 bath hon1e \\'ilh pool. n~lh!>ntic· Spa111.~h h1-, n1 ~1 CSLI N•. 2666l f 11·1th nil of 1111• 1•h11rnl <of rilo 1 Corona dC'I i\lar. Sl !li.~IUO. ""''"'.,....C1tt1to o .. oioct <llPodllc:N.C.,lnc. ,.1 673-8550 g ..,._, Mobotn H. o,..,, Co.-por•tlan. G....,.1c-ac1 ...... -= "'!JJ : jacuzzi and \'IE\\''. ~9J.OOO . OPEN SAT & SUN . I ·S OPE/111/L g • IT'S fUN ro /Jf HICE• THE REAL ESTATERS ~ OPEN 1/l JI • IT'S FUii ro Eli NlC!' THE REAL ESTATERS General ...... _,,, ........ , ~-,. .. , ..... , ... ,... ...•..... -··· ''-" .-..1 .... ~· ~· ••• ~... • • • ..... ~ . '·• , .. " .... -·-·· .......... ·~ ... -·-·· ! ... .-~ ..... _. ... ' •• 888 SANDCASTLE , CORONA DEL MAR General Orange Coast 2600 E. Coast Hwy .. Corona del Mar \Vant ad results •..•. &12--;"J67S Ifs a bree7.e .... sell your items 1\•ith ease, use Daily Pilor Clas-.ificd. 6·1'.!·56i8. \Vant ad results ..... til2-5673 1Ll 1L OLE RED HOUSE General ·General ON BIG 71 'x140' LOT, R-2. T\'ro bedrooms REAL ESTATE 644·4848 General -- 1 General IRREPLACEABLE TRIPLEX Bayfront -pier & float - sandy beach. T'vo 3 BR .. 2 ba. units & 2 BR .. 2 ba unit. First owner depreciation. Close to Balboa shops & fun. $270,000. Bents. NEW OFFERING Sharply decorated & clean. Lovely 3 bdrm. in Lusk H.V.11. Hard to believe price - $75,500. Will go fast. Jim Muller. ONE BLOCK TO BIG CORONA Just listed - custom home. Dramatic use of 'voort. brick & gla ss. Fireplace in large living rm. 3 BR., den. $94,500. By app't. Dean Kring. DD YOU LIKE ROSES? Then you 'vill like this love ly 3 BR. J,usk home. Large cozy family roo1n overlookin~ rose garden. 3 car garage. Harriett Davies $77,500. A NEW BAYFRONT HOME A super value -excellent financing. 50 ' Lot -4.200 sq. IL 3 car garage. 5'h Baths. Room ror 4 lo 5 boats. Nea r ocean. Now $245,000. Geo Grupe. THIS IS A MUST For the '''eekcnd athlete! Beautifully up- graded "X" plan. Karastan carpels. No maintenance yard. 3 BR .. 2112 ba. Bluffs con~o. $69 ,500 Incl. land. T. Escobar. BALBOA ISLAND BAYFRONT Lgc. borne on 2 lots. Pier & noat. 5 Bn .. den. plus bonu s playrm. 5 baths. Sandy beach.. Move in fo r summer fun. Xlnt finance. 'SI 7,000. P.aul Quick. . 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B. plus guest room. F:astside Cos ta l\lesa.-Better Jlurry·Askin g onl y $23.950. CALL 540·1151 . ~HERITAGE REALTORS 546-5880 Open Eves. I ;;;;;;;;;;;;D;;;:U;;;:P;;;L E;;;X;;;;;;;;;;;;; LI v E I N I RV I NE CORONA DEL MAR (FOR THE KIDS) ()('~fin Sid!' of H 1\\'0IY 1-lXh'(lJ. plus l'Oll\'l'l'L clr n II\ l'Ht'h U]lit Firt•pla•·l.'s, sha,i.: 1·arp('1l', l>il f'lh'll 11ppl 1;,111·1·:. Cre~11 loc<Jlion! $82,00} HARBOR Or. ln:1nl's "l~;1neh." ~ 1,r. I y1·ar "itl. 1\n ,.ff<'1'•n1: r~· "n" «.1 11 f!Et-·lj~J·:~ s:;!l(IO d,,1111, I \\'IF11',; you r of!t'1·: {'.di 110\\. C WA LKE R & LEE I -ADULT - I OCCUPIED General General I REAJ.TOT:.S . :inrl ah~lutf'l y 1111111;" 11 iiiiiii;jjjiiiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ______ .., .... _ ... _ !'l:\Cf': 1911 11111·'. f'\111 earPt'!l'~I. .oll I -I rwo .. sTORY I 6 73 4400 bu1t11n:-, r luc.h ionrl 111 .. .i .. 111. $29 500 " \\'r1lk lo rhetH n·~. 111 lJ"I' ' NEAR BEACH -----... 11111i11.I\'.;! n nd 1·,.. .. 1;1uran1 .. 4 BNlrn1, :? B>.1Th, sh;11 p •·ul- 1 tle-~tl' honl('. Lo1rgc 1'(!\ t'f('fl 4 BEDROOMS I Any day·~ It\(' Bl-:ST D.\Y 10 J{t.·aunful l b\.'fhY•Jnl, 'j t.Jt1 h, run a n ad! Don! dl'lav ... I ror 11nl~ S.~j.~(.0. ('.\I.I. I pel1u. IM'lk no lll'it°f• l11••:aui;c U1\i1 one·l'i l'l~-;1n, hVl! 1;4 .ACRE LOT ]-~AIL D1\ILY P!l.()'f [ :11·1 .... 121. S.1utlol'•• 1:1·,,11 .. , ... \\1irri· l'l:<1> CQUlrl you fincl ·General General this tYJn1L>1nation7 A IK-au1 1-1 Newport fu! hon1f', Jl('.'\! sharp 111ro11~hou!, in 1110\'l'·in con-1 d1 t1on. f1>atur ini::-fQl'l111il din· ini:, c·h;in11 1n~r !a1111ly 1'0t'lnl I 1• il h hre1)ln1·1• und :: hnrli.. ~11u;1trcl On q11h•1 1·111.cl f"l>ill', I 111 ~rr:'ll 1li·t~hlKll'l1',....I . nn ., Fairview 6-46-Hll (1nylime) 1n1.:1• ~.1 11ilh ~1'11"<' l<ir l:K,.,J. ~~~~=====:l llf'.al, c·nm1»'1', 1•1,·. Ct<J .. ,. r .. ii ~ ·h<~>l'I l11k•• T 1~t11 ho •t1o·h ~ IST TIME LISTED I 1r1d :-1,'p111n-.:. l '.1 1•:•;.'~1 .. :)()11, I Pl""""' pho•1" .!4!»'.!.',I.: f,1r 4 Bdrn1s., f'(•n1n~ul1t Pt 2· u\Jf';. story hornt•, un l'le11t slJ"('('I, r'Jl¥•1r1t.11 · 'I SfUlll TOBE H/Cf 1 ,·Jose Iv 11•ntli1' .~ bc1H·hc~. In • THE REAL ESTATERS '1"(A)N~~~~Row i l1 ~ Onr of a l;t11d, L ltll'flll\t'<i .. ~ fn'lm thl:-\'Rluahlc l0t:aUon. :_:":========'.I Olli fnr tlct:ul~. I Call: 673-3fi63 b'13-.t'.l8C E~ associated BROKERS-AC Ill TORS 701\ W lolbe-e 61l l6f.J OLDIE BUT A GOODIEi Cu11· 2 bdr. 1 bu Lnunc 11dU1 \ooclc. nf 1><11ll'llni;: 11rod rM t)1•l1'k flrcphtri'. l.&rge R-2 lol In 1'lllliC't' E11~t ('1'111.111 ;\ll"l'a 111u.. allC'y RC~ I'll. ClrW<' to 1111 shopplna yoo \\Tl11't ll('M n r11r rn•rP, LEASE WITH OPTION Tr> 1\1:1.1, or :\:I) Dc111 o \' \, •ir (11\ "''r ITI1'1 ' o·;UT\' :/"°! !),~, 1J 01 Tn1-.1 • ~ i,;;,h'Ofl111~. t 1:i11h .. lu-1 l'111ntl'd. $1:; •. ~•J. ('1111 l4Q-O·).·.:-.. PtrfC'rtl> ,,,.,,..-'(f at $30.cr.o. TRIPL EX th\11 (IT)!" '111111 II" fl'l~I Ct1ll Rrd Cerptt, It ea 11 or ~ C'OHUNA IJEI . :\I\!: I S.16-8610 1:J1 2 nn. l"ntJ' !Ji tfJ\e ~ .. •:cllow P:u:r-7-'"0t 1 1)1111.-r·~ 1·,111. $:-('l.~111 clal'~ftf>d ... &i-8. f111-rw"r .\1?' nl, i;j;",. I• I"! \ MACNAB IRVINE ________ ... __ ---- IRV INE TERRACE CHARMER Be::iutiful 4 131-{ hon1e -brk . ·patio s &. \val kS--ne111 cpt s ~parquet floor s. Lg. Jo i. f'ee prict $33,j()O. U;,irbu ra r\une 642·6235 IA231 LINDA ISLE llandsome ne,\· 5BR . 41 2 h~1th -I.rt . DR, r·n O\'erlook bav. Stciincd brk . ~allery Cll• try -oak panclini,: -rich cpt s. S19!l.OOO. ~laxine \V1Jlia111s 642-32:15. 1.\2:!1 • NEWPORT HEIGHTS ARE A ('harmln~ 3B lt -nc\11.v decorated shake roor. Corner lol. O" ntlr.li bought an- other. S52.000. 1-lcvcrt~ :'llorphy ti42-82.lj. iA2S 1 (Irvine I IOI Dov1r0rlv. 1'4 2·12JI 114' Wac.Artl\Ur 14'·1200 Hnporl l11ch.Clllt0f'nl112111 • PRESTIGE WATE RFRONT HO MES Linda Isle Wa terfront J ,u\'e!y 4 bdr1n .. 41,2 ba. hon1 c \~ith .s\\'im- tning pool, pier ~V.... .':!l ip. panOr~!111C VIC\\' Of n1ain channel. l.ge. ta1n11 y rrn_. 1v /space for lul li<irds & l<1111ily dining. \\'atcrlronl forn1al dining & \i\·ing rn1 . S2i5.000. For Complete lnform•tion On All Homes & Lot•, Plea•• Call: * * -* J BR FIXER UPPER $23,950 JBR, RUMPUS RM. $25,950. B1lb0a Island----- ISLAND CHARM :-\1f'1t.( 1 .. ha~. .l hr, 1 hn, llo1111ill 11111) 1'00111 • rental 11 11 i1 !.;11. ~illl ,,,,.,.k, 1.-.,: ~·un11lv 11'•1111• 11 1th u!<I \\'OrVI charni. ~·1ri;1 1L111r urfcred. l.l!L~ uf "11U1.l. \aul1e1l opr.n• hl'<Ull 11\. I nl. \\/he.IL'Ony. ~hi\·r in .\t1.,. l~t l~'l'ently l't'n10.trh·d .I.· in x1nt l'Ond. \116.000. 0\\ller. 6T,,..76GI. <l lboa Pen1ns\iil .. - DAILY PlLOT "WANTED" SIX CHILDREN IN SOUTH ·coSTA MESA ,. .... _~ nlot ""' ~I-ti. '.'Republic llo111e," ii br. """"' ""'"' with "-"""" A "-'dy yml. 1000 .i...~ • posse&&lon August ISlh. • l uUday, July 24, 1 ... 7.l ~ .lliJ ~I _~_ .. "_t~---~ i ~I -... -lie AIN• l11•d1Mo ~;;un;l;•;ln,;;Do~-; ... ;;rt~~;~-~ .. -.lii•ii•iiniiii~. ;2;40;1;_;;;;;;U;n~lu;r;n.;;~30l;1 - .;.F.::;or:...;:So::lo:_ __ ..!l~D R-rt 174 c ,_1 M -oron• -ar T~1,r;,;Ex, ... Juan * m AC.* 2ND Tnnt Dffds SMALL""""' So ot H ~ 1~· b' ~:, r:: Nr. Rencho.Calif, PJUVATE FUNDS AVAD... gar., carport.' patio, i..wn'?i dltlooal wtlts, .., itcnae A \\.'arner Hot Siftta:s. in Alty Ameunt en. encl perch. $115 1eue ~~~~:=-!1J..!h 5111!., -' Amo Bou OAO State Parl<. * Coll 67~.llKR. tnc gan!ene,, I~ 2 adul11, PrNel\11 f'inem t.oc.t'aon lutlnen P,...,.,,., IM S:~~M1:ke "&i:r~~:w NO poln" no -·•"-~ Crds~-vai!M -M.-~i287 ~ -.J...BR...OOmc. oceu A~ TM. --tm 20-rt . trade. 548-9710 a rai~n1· .-.-.---.. ~ o1ta .., SUMME R FUN GREENBROOK ht1ge lot, bNK+. t'rontttgt, -sALE or lease, ioned otttce, evil &-v.·knds or v.'eel:dll.)'ll PP -.wu. low rate11, fast. ;,..--"-'-----·I CA."l BE YOURS llOday ln GRANADA mMl ~ t.iM homes avail. Realtors Prol. lite wtq l *'>' ~ Investors 'lbrlf't 6J9.6ru. NEWLY Decorated • 2 Bl', 2 rhls tnnla~ll"' \•11.cant pool .. o--lri. 1 ., t OC EAN VU LOT 2863 E est 1~-CdM cmtom home 4 Br. S BL _ Mo..._•_ Ba, dlx app!, all all elcc . home. 3 Br!nns, 2 bath!\ "Wn'il;-~ T:7i""~.~~~ No. mt. Ptam nvaH $44,150. 6.75~7080 168' trooiaae oo E. asap. Out of St•te Prop. 171 ;.;:;r~. 260 lt\&a ~. d11J1. llhatten. room rlJr a boll.t and nlut·b l:J'tts shade ttib nisUc Summer/Winter R•nt•li nw.n, Orange. Xlnt term., SAVE hlJdren, 1 ha Wlh/dry, elec. 2 car aar., ntol'c, and v.·ouJ(i you beli(-Vf' ..... A'-t A I f ti ho Let lJ!I Sell Your Pro""-" plant for ottlee Oonvienrion Yout c ve adult.a. no 1)1."lt. $2tO. 181 S4&0022 only 129.900. c.u quick! ~;i,i"',~'C: ~·~ BEACH DUPLEX "'"""' torbome & Prof. u,.ro~~t~1_: PUT YOUR MONEY Magnoita,cM,64>-'136'l COUNT RY OwnCT ltnx'lo\lf. CALL garage. 11X' ooly 0 n e 494--1001 494-7513 2 & 3 Bdrm units, one ",_,. uee. o.,y or eve&. 541:51854. w/a bM.utilul mw the em. TO WORK FOR YOUI HONEYMOON CO'ITACE -V'' 'lf' • ''E ~, Ill" ·, l • • : CLUB LIVING J 11 i:;.r.i-9'.:ITI. avn.ilablo. from beach. Needs pai;rt"& Commercial ?"* tinental Divide. A wonderful Eam 10~ lnternt lA'I well-Eastslde. Spot.less .2 bt, CJ'pl, Ran1bllng 3 BR. 2BA ,)11 TRADE YOUR $56,500 * 3 UNITS * lix up, Betit bu,y on lhe Property 151 pla~ for you and )'Gttt' lllC!Und 2Dd Trust ne.cts on gr. stove & pr. Married mrui!MJ~I cornt'r l<'lt ! EQUI TY --Oceanfront. '6mack on the beach.169,500. fannly to spend sumnicn Oraate r.ounty real ectate. 1-onty~No~~c...~ C11.rpeh1, drapes. b I tn s, FOB. 1·111s b'Of.-geous. iPiraJ HUNT INGTON CREST 19.Dd! In tile' heart of La. 1797 Ot>anie, C.M. 6'2-lTTl or year aroW\d living, while SIGNAL MORTGAGE r.o "'8. er "" ........... .....,..,,_, co\'ered pnliu-mt>111t><>M1l1ip st11.irc1L~ Francbcan F0tm· M011t popuW-mode-I 4 guna Beach. 3 Older unka. C-2 LOTw/INCOME ~-huntina,ffinunlng, (714) 556.0106 . • iow='=ner=o0/"ag"'"=1=·-~--- to tlubhoUM" & l!"'-immlnG ta.in Honie. Loods of up. bl'droom, forn1a1 dining and completely tumi!lhed. No ~· 21 19,800 SQ. ft. on Newport ~~· filhlC or jurt platn 4500 Ca.mpua Dr., N.B. GREAT Pool F.utllde 3 pool includ~? An xi 0 u ~ J..'n.di~. C;\.LL 842·9371. separate family room. Ne\v· rrntal problf!ma h~! O\\•n+ Blvd Fal o Cott · Wlth the IJ'O'Alin8 BR. 3 BA, + aep. \Ullt.l.ln: ownt'r a:<1.king $11.500 _ 1o.,.., 3 BEDROOM 1 BATH ly t~corated Ui and out, er '"ill finant'l•. Askfna: Meu.'. J.25/aq~ rt...r'Owncrj . Salmon. Idaho, only 4 O % D I SC $ 6 4, o o O ofc or ~en. Frplc. New crpb down OK~! 66-HJI) l!UG1'~ LOT. UM :your (~l. 1,IL~L~llS g~~-hon1e $200,(W, Bkr. 6UdS90. ~ ... a~. A ·~~ weil1ecured ht A ppl y & pamt6.'"' ~ + pool 70fflq$Sfl!Y!HO'(Q!l/!'.!fN 11l.9 sl'llers will ht'lfl fi.n11nct. n u... most ..,""'"'5"""" area D · ........... -· )'Our ....... .,. Valley pl.Ya 1640. mo. 10%; 5efVICe. ,.....,.,u, I I CAU. 8.f.2.9311. wooey ca:.r.bv.y1.·. ;n . ~ ~ !1.~ ~'.!.._,Undl. Bx 3 Apple Valley;. {714 ) 2 BR Modem. c & D, bltns. V. !:; J:::!! Co. ..;1.000 """ -•.. * OCEANFRONT * Duplon1/Untt1 -. c,o -De-242-3144 W..Skle nr. Blu!ts. Baby ok. . . PARADISE sate 162 livery, salmon. Idaho. FOR i;:ale Trust Deed $54,500 no ~-$150~ Avail 8~ SHARP Mesa Verde borne. "'._167e "''·'llOO 7.000 Sq. h . or wood & charrn R•nchft, l'•rm1, Yield 13.25C'A.. only $24,0001..:.54&-=::='-------near nu carpel nu duplex. SJX!,COJ. ~Verde area. 2 BR & 3 Orevet 1M required. 673-6T::i6. * 2 BR. l BA. Townhouse. ,._,, nu ·~", EXCmNG • • • • • 33 LIDO REAL i:v BR C.U alter 6,JOPM ltr i ~~~~~~~~~I $225. Pool, patio, gar ... , heattr, covettd pspo, dog Chrill Abel desi.gn in wood & 77 Via Lido, N'pt Beach appt. 5t9-<l504 LOOKING FOR a local.Jr ;;'"'~hwa:.='=""~'.:.·.:==='=·--I ~ ~u~ ~~apt. to glass. 3 BR. custom home, * 673-7300 * Income Pro-rty 166 =~~.~el~~ I -ffr-If JI! J AV1AU... Aug. 1, Bach.I house · · · · 'll::=::=::=::=::=::=::=::== I fully l&ndscaped & fenced BLUFFS CONDO'S ...--arrlmal.s 0 .K.! U t~ ml. of1:mmmmiiiiiiiiii~~~:1~w~yt'd~~i'~"'~!ds~refrigJ]~·~·~st~o~""~· 1ESA Vertie with a vi~ "' yard. Atrium e n t r yway * Great view + location. 3 ONLY l LEFT' tmpaved toad doesn't utU· pd. $9.Jl"llO. 548-2182 Spac 4 BR's on a quiet THE BIG WHOPPER leads tll C'xciting living. Just BR. 2 BA end unit on Vista • bother you, call 83W223. H F I heel lOO LRG old 2 BR, $145 plus fhcd .cniet. le oil. compl w/boat IdN.I tor the family with I,...,.,....,...,...,...,...,...,. rOOuccd. $6~.ooo. Caudel. Leasehold $300 yr. Deluxe fon-tex SS.950 And up, fUll price. ouses u.m 1 3 BR, gar, $180. Bring kids. p~. . sprinklen, I u l l Y t~! Your own swin1-BEACH ESTATE ~-"""',I * F'irst time offered J BR ·+ loen --~-t"nt R I E W ted A.gt. Fee. 9'19-8430. lndk'pd, 1re at 1859 Illinob, ~ pool B-S-Q outside .,,,,,,,,.Or,a~ den, 21,t BA end uni1. Prime ..-.u ... u .. ., H ,,.., •n 114 B1lboa Island Dina Point -· under the 1.,.c covered VACANT RE '#6; greenl>elt on Vista Dondo. n.c,. =.~;_ have -1 WILL-CHARMING • ~-furn BEAtmFUL Bar Harlm. patio. Thi.< home ""h ocp-AL ESTATE Loiehold only $410 ·-GUARANT • --NEW %300 14 n 4 Br fm rm ante formal dinlng is a El~ home tor the perfect Owner .,...., ~., . .,, lo• _yr. frpk:'a, cen1r'81 heat, dish· EE TO SELL 2BR, trplc, Little Baitxia cuzt 4 BR. 3 BA home, same Mn,· 2 o:Wrci Patio~ la~e. Jo\·el:y, si rtglC' sto1y '1 ~ Over $10,000 in 1190 Glenneyre SL NR. FASH!-uir-.w ' · wdlers, a1r conditioning, • YOUR HOME -Ialand. Winter rental. SePt. ~-nn. fpic:, a;Ptd. Me I: "'-· $43K. Owne-wants fast bl'dl'ooni. Come sec it, landscap1ng Jt Interior dC'· 494-9473 549-{)316 ON ISLAND -Lg blt·lns, tile baths, enclc:Rd IN 30 DAYS. 15-June 15. Call wkends. ~,.,,,,... tJJ Marina.I S385. ••r 96.1-5671. sip. Master suite bas &tudy BEAtrrlFUL location 4 :m-. fa.m rm/pool tbl, garages. Ideally located CNh advanced. ''":11-~219~5:0·~------1;~~=:'":::'-:'.::::---- ...ie. 'Brkr. ~77l9. CRAMPED KITCHEN room, dressirc room, Pri· SOUTII LAGUNA. l hl""k b,Jttns, d in, ~S ba, nu cpts; near ahopplng, 8 c h 0 o l l!I • Aaent •·• •••••••• ••• 847~ D1lboo Pon1'n1ulo Fountain V1Heu NE.V.'PORT Hts. · Lots of vate Sll'.I deck + EXCITING to beach. Newly re--~--led AH, SJ>kl.s, B~Q, 2 t.p., ex· fTwys. Only $64,:IOO w/10% 9 ' trees. 3 BR. 2 BA house. · · · got you ®'°''11! If so, be VmANDA. 4 ,..,...__ 3 2 8 1 famil "-1 lras, 3 patios, lg. -~1 Oor.vn. needs TLC. Lr&: yard. Nr all sul'c 10 i11spect this rooiny baths 1 ld~ts, c rm, y rn1, arge $63.400. + Fee/land. ~ Opf!n H Da.Uy 10 6 BALBOA PENJN Bayfront 3 BIG bedrms, ·2 ba, 2 car tchls It shops $25 000 by homt". You'll have a roomy '1 very! .olyrma ming, deck w/ocean view, Guest Basswood NB alt 4 p 110' ~""""AY GARDENSro I~ S BR, 4 BA. Pier, float. pr, all bltns, S\\oiJn pool, owner. 642$6: ' · kitchen and livi'l!!' room with ~ e ami rooni with apt. $62,500 firm. By owner. 644--0483 Sy ~r m. .....,..., fhlrdll • Avail July 14 & Sept 1. kids OK, $2i5 mo. No fee. nrrphi.<=e', 3 b«hoous and 2 beamed ceiling a: roaring Call 499--1204. Would con-· · 12132 S. Huter, ::::::iiiiiiiiiiiiiii.;-~.:1 !!:~~W~ee~kly~.~611-~~20~39'.:==l .Alt 84>-4421 R E. Side C.M. 3 BR, attrnctivc baths, all on 11. fireplace. Ri&bt out ot Rider summer rentals a.ho. WALK TO BEACH Garden Grove H • Bo h 3 BR, 11,2 BA. fncd ·-', 2 BA, F. Rm, Ex. lge. kit. ch.>t•p lot. Pi.iced at S2fi 000 "House and Gardens" & * OCEAN VIEW TENNIS, POO Sparll1"19 Investment unt1ngton •c encl pa& _, ..... Cu 1-d e--.sac, 1~)0de1ed. llui·•·", CALI.. S46-J37?. · · only 6 bloclal to bcaeh. ExN: * · V · 1 LS, CLUB Corp. 631-5662 BuslnHI ' c:rpta. drps. pr. Appl.~ $37,950 rfaucH / POOL transfer is your gain! Take tlugc, QCean v1ew liv. r m. Feamllry' c een 3 B!:_,1% babths. Opportunity 200 2 BR, walk lo \Vater: Also $250 per mo. Ask for Wa,yne, """'" ~. imped today, w/frpl: din artt. 2 BR, den .......... y.._:in., "'$46"'500'' ltns, 4 UNrrs -'"'-'"'-'-==--..=.:::: N.B. BAeti;·$100. 2 BR h9e,1.:;962=-=:.:·c_ _____ 1 £1 Toto I Your '"ftY oivn " bedroom submit your offer & niove + guest rm, w/w carp --.-·, .., ... pes. ' · Dlatrlbutorship $1.85. C.M. S!O-2 BR, $150 Huntinnton Beach r:anch ilyle hon1e with a in fast' Broker 962-5r5U thruoul. Central k it'. CAYWOOD REAL TY I Great 4 Uf!it for the investor Singles Families. Agt. Fec.i---:•------·I LAGUNA REAL large S1\1mming pool This i oioiiiO..iiiiiii.Oii;;iiiii'ii;;o \l'frange oVf!n. dishwshr. * 548-1290 th.11.t nqwres a tax shelter, Your Very Own 53rr2575. $200 UP. 3 & 4Br. No leaae hard to find, but 11ooh look. BUILDER'S REP I See this one! $5.1,500. l "-'Ith cash flo\v. De I u x e Bu1ines1 required. Othen avail. in Mow: )'O'll' la.mUJ into thil ing at home. is lot:a!ed 0 l\Ussion Realty 494--0731 SO-IT'S SMALL Wl:lls Ideal to Uve in. Mr. "'e need a J?istribu1or to Lquna Bueti Orng Ct)'. Ca.II Dept or beutiflll 4-BR borw with North Huntington Bc>a<'h in NEAR NEW I Secluded Elegance! But ifs only 1 short b\k to ~~c, No. 221. Phone handle e9t.ablished dealers Tr a n a p ort at i o n Fmmal ~ Ra:m and a a popular are&. Try $J.,l,!l60. BUL LOCK'S Behind guardro i:&tcs! 4 ocean, markets & libops Dnd · \\'ho lvill be retailing our nm · Ulil Pd. l Br. Ocean-213/620-3'31D froin 9 _ j Fam1b' Room. 'nlis home is 847-3584. SOUTH COAST PL A .... A hdrrns, fam.ily rm. formal 8*ing only . . . ~~....._ product!;. 1bese products are front Apt \'lc-.v. Deck. wkdays. dNfCned for usy Hvtna """"" ti $39500 manufactured by a 50 :year $250 • UtiJ Pd, 1 Br. Victol1a l-"""''="'"'==~=~ with all the conveniences Large 4 BR 2 BA block ( ning rn"L Private bead1, BALBOA e'AY PR ,.;:~~ o!d leader and one of the Bee.ch. a.rmtng &: Nice! 400 YARDS TO BEACH and located near the im· walls, al1 eiec. MaimtiC<'flt tennis crts. Children's play OP• best-known manufacturers $350 • 3 BR, frplc, garage, Large, new 3 BR, 2 BA, exec portant lhopping centers. buy at mly $33,950. ll..l'l"8. $79,500. hrk 491-8003. * 673-7420 * ln 0 r i e in a 1 Equipnient yard vie\J.', \Vinm-rel'ltal. home, all utll &: gud. paid. N"" -at only 141,900. I' TARBELL NEED SPACE? Manufacturlng of auto-NU·VIEW RENTALS Leuo_S450. C.U Owner/Bri< Call today, we're ready lo SPECTACULAR ocean view carefree lMng! Try ttiis motiw partol, This busines3 6'T3-«J30 or $3248 547-Mi9 or eves: 838-29'11 tbow! 58&-0222 ,62,. .... 71 ( _ \V/wh!tc water. 2% yr old elegant 3 Br <.'Ondo \\'/pools, can be operated out of your LAGUNA furn Me 1 lied 3BR, 2 BA. w{!am./dln nn NEW umNG! -•••LJ546 .. 10J SJ)nC'iouS 4 br, 3 ba, clen. putting greens & privacy. home oo aparttimeorfull ............. ..,-,bl ·i..h' ~-~-combo, rrplc, covr'd patio, Exciting 3-BR home in love· ly Lake FO!"e1lt Village. This * SPLASH * is a 11.•ell-buil_t ho me In ex-1R' x 36' J-l/f pool, 3 h:g bed· <.-eUeot coodll.JOn. Call us fol' 1 rms 2 be.th honil' Take information about the many over' FHA k>ari and $225 extras. Pritt? -o n l y 1no. pays all · · $C,SOO. ·5ll6--02'22 "'·'" '"'"! ·o· •1-.,~ ~WJ • • ... •·OJ.>• Elegant decor. By owner. CW.>ner trans. $45,(NXI Denison OOCTO S & INVEST time brui:! •~D,...,.ii:ro e 'ac ..... .., .. .,,:n ua· bttns, nr. Edinger &: Spring. JEWEL OF A HOME SS!l,500. fiG!t Bol u.na, Aasoc., 673-7311. TRTENTI ON ORS Extr9'mely High nent. ·No pets. m&1D. dale. UiO. kdc. fix'· Dille. Rare fim m.J967 A Returns on This 2 BR. No~. l\-alk to .:001--44=-.:_.::cn:,... ______ I ~ ~. ~·~~cil~ \\'ELL designed 3 Br, 2 Ba 8prAfSH~~'Cozy• 2B~ot1.ag1'a'A2 3' new units, Costa Mesa.~~ Excitin Growth Bc>ach. Sl7a. wk di Sept.15. CHARMTNG 4 BR. 2 BA, has • i,..:: • nUlCI to heach. Acrelerntcd t! 494..Qi2. everythl""· Avail. tmmcd ing lri<.ic fireplace \vith ';ri:,cy ~mp~at ~~~I =tioio ~·xv!.':~ S~i5 ,+, de predation opportunity. Business . . Lido Isle Lcs.se. $!10. Sngls/chlldreti. =ti~~-Qy~ ~~~ ''ieiv. $69,500. Owner 2996 Crestv.ie\v Dr. Open daily l· Schcd. income $54.<m. Price We have made provisions lo ok. 962-885! or 968-QlS. Oen courtyard, k>b ol (ri Zurich Court, Laiuna Beach -•··=~~------$385,(XX). For details Call ~tee tl1.e success of our FOR rent furn, 224 Via Lido ALONE on k>t 1 Br hae YkY· Huny for this! The 494-9528 :""' CJS REAL ESTATE di.stributorshl l_PS. Consequent. Nord, $2(XXl mo. Call ~ {213) Al!O walk to water 2 ':· Reel Estate Fair, 536-&it * BRAND New 3 BR. 2'h 548.J.168 eves, 5511244 y \\--e n.•q1.nrc a man or 270-4547 or ~ $185. V • PLUSH duplex w Io c ean BA. Condo. v.•/Boat Slip. 2 * BAUOA * \\"OmM ,vith hig11 cth'irol No · lew of Ocean 3 Br. REPOSSESSIONS view penthouse apt, try ear gar. All appliances. standards, good credit and wport S..Ch $235. Agt. Fee. 536--:575. $150K. Wllb Realty 546-7739 O,,t!i & drps. Sale or Lease. Two R-3 \o!'!i wttta 3 bdrm. a minimum of $1. 700 cash WALK to W ~-n •• ,., ~oo 3 BR, 2 BA. bltna, crpta, :;'or inlonnation and location BEAUTIFUL ocean view lot 213: 287-0023 or 2 l 3 : home + 3 additional unib. secured by invmtory and a~ &.-....: #.J.. ; drps, children OK. Good b!. ONLY $26,500 of these Fl1A le VA homes, Only $13.900 287-8723. Ckttn side, in the heart' of llef'Vicrs fw this prestlgiou.!I Also 2 Br hse, $185; plus $70 $2.15 mo. Mk for Dale 3 BR, 2 BA. 1 mile to bea.C'h contact • Oceanv\ew Rlty. • 673-8500 IMMAC. home_ superb patio Balboa. position. It you meet the ~Va~'to$l.\~~erB~. ~ii: 962-44TI . Fountain v.11.., 9ni sq. ft. cul-de-sac Jot'. Real KE~!!BIAN La gun• Nivu•1 . o:~v~: :aC:1.-J~;;m~~ ~OAs~tp~p. 61'i4:4~ !~ lik~!a ~ Agt. Fee. 979-MJO. . 2,~ ;..:,r ~ io~:· 1,:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;; I Cal.l: .... 111 • 962-6644 ::::,,;::;::.:.O:!l.:0:::.---Ramsgate ~-with timitcd out-\\'INTER rental -4 br, 2 be.. fncd 2 Bx'a. ldd.s/peta. Axt (1 r.... LaQUESTA -Santa Cruz, COND0-2 hr. 2 ba, on goU 6T':>-0144 644-8490 Agt. Industrial p,._rty 161 1 ·side~ and no penon. dock, ~ewport Ialand. Avail Fee. SJS..2575. ELEGANT STARTER WALKE•· Model. 2'raJ Square Ft, crs & tennis club. View. UFFS ;,;;:.:;:.:;.;;;..;_:.:·-::i::•-~!...!::: nt selling write today bdore Sept l:>~ to ~une 16lh. Phone ---~~---- Lu.xm1ous appoirlbnents or •IM UTA.II ?.tod~I Home. Landscaping, 1or,;, d\\'11, $37,500. 831--0638. ~L-· 3' XBR,plan3 ;,!"'n·000u t b~ atOJCE M·l CORNER your area is closed. Ecom 714: 635-1350 NBaE\~ 1.,.~,. Twnh[ cu"N· .. 2 .!!!.· · 2 1 ml to bch $8 000 I '· ......., a,,, Sy-· I P 0 Bo I BR I '-'--"• ...... a • '. """'· 'lh!S Bednn, 2 SA Tibun>n lTITI Beach Blvd., lLB. · • n up * BY Q\VNER * Sept. carpc!ts, draPt'S, patft> South East O>mer Euclid & 0·~-nc., · · x .. """"k.to ocean. $280. $285 tse 961-9644 e:VN A "Malit.J" 1nctude raised for. CUL SC141B gra968~ $57,500. ( 714) 5 BR.. 5 ba.; walerfront .$5,00) under market. Avail Talbert St. F .V. Com'l. ok 3Cilil6, ot17829 Valley Blvd., Nu C'arpet. Yearly 673-7613., wknds ' ma.I dang roon1 with ch&n· -......., Pier/s?ip $206,000 67'5-4242 A &40-1000 % mile from San Diego ty Industry, California or 613-3522. .~=-------~. buf~ns. air cond~· $26,950 Lido Isl• ou':~EX. 3 ~R. 2 BA 4 Fl-wy. \Vill sell at .tax 91744· (Include pti.:x>e num·1iH~ou~10!!!•~Unfu~~m!!:._ _ _:30~51;1;,.;1;"";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 .::::C· !!"1-21?'~m:-:· BRING YOUR PCX>LTABLE Huntington Ha rbour BR, 2 BA upJ)l'r. 4 Houses ::i~apprals. McCormick, ber.) • 1· ' maker. ~;·~ M>cated I for this beaut. 2 BR condo. BEST -..BJJY on Water-2400 A REAL CUTIE! By owner. -from beBch, great Joe. Only ~ · * * * 6-Mr1I 2 BR, 2 ba, den. A/C. •• $215 1n qmet adult area. Private , Bonus rm 20· x ,20". 2 car IQ. ft. 4 BR w/YJ boat sUp. 2 BR, 11,I BA, enclosed 9 yrs.young!! 673-5569 r. ·Sale 170 Ron Chesney i;;.=="-------1 3 BR. 2 ba, ail'-<lOnd. •• $275 patio. Assurne 1~'7r Joan ... 1 ~nc!. gar .. bl.tins, xtra cab-By Owner. TI4 : 846-3TI1. f!li~~-A-1 tond. $68,900 Newport H•llhts 2771 Lorenzo 3 BR. 2 ba., den •••••• $475 Owrrr wilt con;ide!" 2nd. tncls, shag CtlJf:!f. Adlt occ. , o:irr.u"" Co1ta Mesa 4 BR 2¥.z b8, ll/c · · ·· ·· $425 larwln rNlty inc. Front5 (l"'N!nbelt &: steps 10 Irvine Mission Vielo PRICE REDUCED R·2 Costa Mesa You tiT'P the \vinner of RENTALS 4 BR., 2 be. •••••···•• 'S500 pool RED c ARP ET I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;:;; I BY ~wNER TWO FREE TICKETS We Hat~ Summer !\enl>ls 96M405 (24 hts) Roaiton536"'836, I• LOVE YOU u Aport"*1la v· . WHY NOT?? MUST SELL ZONED foc 8 UNITS. to t!te ~ 1s1on- H R h ~=Y 3 BR,RAT02 BAR SbomepeclalF. !!~~ You can affo<d ""tiny price CAN AFFORD $35,900. 2 br, l ba, .xpan•ive 66 x 300. s:n.soo. H SOUTGHLdAND - ~AC orse anc · .......,. ot ~.IXKI for ttris t~ cutie. lat. Apricot trees, tN crpts Sparling Investment ome & ar en Show Rm, blllC, new drps, w/w 2 ~, •. , 1 ~·• ~--ed You can a!lord this lovely & dra, Fan~-·,·c 1st home. July :no. ~l'U A ~h crptg. Walk to school 1 uw" " ......,.. .._..,, 4-BR Deane Garden Home Mak otl ....... Corp. 6J8..S662 "' ug. "' 433 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa ired hill Beaut. Custom Home Tadt nn, 4 pad(bck stalls. loe.ded "'/fruit ~s 11J1d t'O!te garden. fonnl din, bldlt rm, ranch·st)'le kit, huge front nn w/flr. to ce:iL stone tittPI. $45.0CO. I' 1llage Real Estate 531·5HI <:;:: J 531· 5100 REPO $750 DOWN 2 or 3 BR Townhouse, hge rumpw room dble gar, swim pool. few left. Hurry! 557-9144 or 842-t421 First Pioneer Re•lty SPACIOUS 4 BR. 2 s.tory, 2~ ~lose ro 11chools . Huntington llH<h LOVELY, NE\V EL CAJON'. Prol"8ional land!tcaping, #Plinklt'l'S, 4 ))e(Jromna. 3 ba.thl pl111t bonUlll room. Jo'or• mat 41nlnsr. sit)' kitchen. aepuate faml!y room. Per. feet tOC' ~ hlmily. CAl.J.. -· rnrs JS rr1 3 Bedroom. din· 1111 room, UviJ1K room. ~>d pat\o, l11undry. L.oeds of room, loMla: of 1J811· ~ Md loads at l11.M11"'p. i!1f. All al t1 go.xi prier. CAU.-. P R..ANCJSCAN FountaJnt. ~ltaJ sTalrcase, 5 BR. 3 BA. panl'd tam rm w/frplc- pl111h O"J)ti. r rn .,,, n err "-bie GI loen p;,900, lff-OIC mile to ocean. Be8.ut. C!'iling and 1cit.r5 of storage \\'here the fun really begin1 Calle~ this week only. I !!~'!""~'!""~'!""'!""!!!!!!!' I AN~.¥'E 1M l8iJ4 S. Coast Hwy., LagUna neighborhood. Fenced ya.rd. Sp&(.'!. in your O\Yn bllckyud. Cro-42· · 68xll0 LOT. 1607 Cornwall, ~lly landscpd'd. Bltnir;. V1"s1"on-quet, Mdmlnton and Barbe· S.n Ctemente Newport Beach. Nr. shop-CONVENTION COSI'A MESA OFFICE Pr1nclpals only $36,500. Call que. Private Swltn &: Rae· ping. Owner. 673-6293 CENTER $85 • Includes UtU. Fum. ~m·1. quet <lub. adJoola, library, BY OWNER, 3 BR, 2 BA, Mountiin. Desert 800 w. Ka~la. Anaheim Badielor \vMtctien. Ideal REALTY A O::impany With Vlmon Univ. Parle Center. lrv1De Call Anytime, 552-7500 Office hours 8 AM to 8 PM: -. SPIRAL 5TAJRCASE ... (i. red h·111 thew.tre and lli.owtlig all lpa~~ld, on golfndcoul ""1 ' 2 Resort 174 Please call &12·5678, ext. 314 ... ~ rn!denAll utllt. Pd l B impre!Sive mr 4 br, 3 ba, \\"ilhln \\'alklng dlstancf'. goo l'le\'V c 0 t on · 1--'C::.:c.;. ___ ~.....:.:...: I lo claim your tickets. {North ofu.,I . • r. F\Jrn. l"~ds of u-d•••, lg. Now priced nt $41,500. Call _$44"-"'='c' 0-49&-::...;lmO=c.' ___ S!NGI "' County toll tree nun1ber Is N~, perk&: town. Vacant. -••·· -~ 5 ..,... \VOrldng \\.'Oman 11~ ~ 2 BR ho Incl maste. •'"· w/clen, ~m 5$--0222 ante Ano 540-1220.) ~ · ..... ..,. use. · 1,1.1"" u• \\·ants partner, same stolus, i&r Yard fu kids/ t nn, flrplc, dining, util nn, RF.ALTY for new Condo Palm Desert. * * * ' r . pe · YES WE HAVE RENTALS lg cov. patio. $56.900, by A Comru.nv 'Vith Vision OWNER. Nr. So. (bast Sips 4, [ully furn ne\v, for Sl\tALL machine sho far $16.5 . Cute Cot~ l BR + May we be Of service owner 6 percent loon. Univ. M"eentM", Irvine Plaza. Nev.• 2 Br, l~~ Ba seasonRI rental, personal sale by owner. Costa p~lea den. +CPool. ?:iv. )Td. Gar. in IOI~ 8474152. Call Anytinie, flQl.7500 $995 dn. A55Ume GI loan _: use & tax relict Refs n"<(d. area. Complett>ly eqt.Upped ALL 645--0W Your housing needs LA QUESTA-Santa c ru l Office hours 8 AA1 to 8 Pi\l ~ $2S2 mo. m-U03, $4{XX). 644--5570 days 'Iii 5 .. ready to opera.le. Low LAGUNA BEACtI OFFICE model 27a:l aq fl. Prnf. PM. rent. All put accounts $150 • Util Pd Furn Stu<I "I 1 I ''I ' 111 I I' 11 ii Landscapif1;: S Br. 3·&. 1.5 BY Owner· Univm-sity Park. BY owner, spacious 2 BR Income Property 166 avail. 1lo new O\vncr. c.D wlkttchMlette. N Laguna o. ml to heh, on cul-de·sac; Hard to find Julliard model, =· grndsw·,, pooiadits', c586-lub~ ";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;:~ tor appt. 537-42'17. $l'75 • Nice i B~ fourpl~x. ' ----I L1•11l 1i r walk to 3 5Chls. $8.000 in up 3 BR. 2 BA, bonus room. ,_., P bl!ns ts/-child/ grar.--000 ( 7 1 4 1 ~, 152 TRI PW( • Beer Bar 'Great Spot k ' crp .... tr.>• • ~ -pet ue:i;. _., • grt'enuo:: t, .:->00. Prin· Newport B••O. o 96&-J563 c•·ra•• '"'Y «• 0 114 ft 6 • • Audk).Vlsual Systems -~ ,...._ __ , ltfODEL .Home LAnl'ISCllp~. or week'e~ . .._..., 8 . Duplexes netir the oc@'l.n ...... ..._ Ir=} Coroftjl del Mar • Book &. Hobby Store _,.. • ..... -.·uUne 2 Br. Frplc. "SINCE 1946" 1500 square Ft. 1 n1i. to bC'h. TURTLE Rock, Spac. 3 BR, M..ilff Lanon, Rultor 1 ,:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;' ~~;';:-Corona dcl Mar tri-pk!JC •"Children's Shop, Ell l.oc ~-· Frrd yrd. So. La· &,:. IOllJl, $10,000 do,111. form. din. family &: liv rn1. * 673--85& * neat beach. $675 per Holland Bus. S1l1s $350 • 8Plc'loln -4 BR, ~ Ba. "p;~,OOO;='(;n;4l=;;96&-l56::::;;:'~~~:B~y:o:w~n~cc:.;S;·";·500=.;;833-8:~;·:oo;;:";"a:;n~t ;;•:d ~re~•~u~tt~• :,· .;· ::· ="='=·56~18'.: n\OTl'th income. Call oow 645-4.l?O ot 540-000S Blt.ns, fl-pie. Fncd for kids/ 1st West.em Bank Bldf. Untvenity Park, Irvine Doys 552·7000 Nlghll • Mobile Homn for additional details. pet. •l BR, 2 BA. crpts, drps For s.1. 125 BEAUTY SHO~. Clot. Owner CAIL ~ bltns. air 0011(1. Children & d~-0 j\,. ( _ l)'fJ. ~C.e 14 PLEX oper, good ,.,.....,., Xlnt. * LANDLORDS* •mall pots ok. 1285. mo. ~~ }.'Q!J ~). ~ J.J({"v 1073. 24 x ti4 CU ST OM • ~182Sfl>WO. Eves -FREE RENTAL SERVICE 837-91150,~\429 Th -'/ f W _ _, u""""'ed on goU coune: .Costa Mesa ; LANDLORDS• 3 BR. "°""'· 2 Ba. tn Turtle ar It riguing Oro Game wifh a Chuckle lull awn I n g'. Caiitornla """"" red"""f"ted 4. llu11not1 Woiitod 210 . • Rock. l400/mo. Shown by .... "1 a.AY a. tow.N ------room. Adult park, Pet OK. prex near Shoppl:ng. Two. \Ve Specla!lr:e in Ne\\•port appt: only. Avail. Aug l O .,~ ,_ of thti Paint Springs. 714-J28..8469 2 bedroom, Two, 1 bed· WANT3 ~~.buy, ~r sbop :Z Beach •Corona. dcl ltlu • 11tiv. party 833-27nS • • .....,,.,nge ,.ner1 LOVELY Cottage TY pe room, $Sl,SOO. Call now or.. Cutur. Vic N pt. Bch to A Lagun&. OUr ~la.I Seto-L Bo four ecrornbi.d words. b.-hotne. Beaut. garden 1'I to get addftiontl.1 detail• CdM'. CASH <713> 4~1469. v:loe Is FREE to You! T..., _!9""• •ch law to kwm four il"""l• word&. • ' °' ., ..... C'al"lJOrt. patio, &. very Money to Loan 240 NU·Vlm.i! $165 . Udt l">d. 1 UR.. ~ ~~· Space rent S&J.20, SHARP NU.Vl l!W RI NTALS .,.,,_, .t.ck, "'" Hlflh IOhl'. I r 1T1?IE1 I I ROGAC 1 ,~ 1 I I I I .' ~1-irH_Ar.-D...,.O_R.,_-il ? 'lnere lsn1 a 1h;ng Into~ I I' I I loc!ual about long ha~ when your wife picks II off your -r_F_U_M_A_S_O -1 "''' •. _._I ... 1 ....... 1'_...I _._I ... o f;1i::: .~tho~!:."':/ you ~lap from thp No • .1 below. e ,.INT NUMBE•ED lETl!U IN 1 1 r 1 • 1 • 1 THESE SQUARES . _ . • • 6 UNSCIAMBlf AIOV! lfnEIS I I I l I -IO G!T ANSwU. . . . _ • NEWPORT BAY . TRl·PLEX 1st TD loans ::"""""'::'k'"":::1~·~2.'""' ..... ·2 BR New 2 BR, I BA llvtng rm. W&nt spadom units • aU UP TO 95% lo !Chools. 4 Br, 2 b6, lrg ~-:.... ~ 2 Br. S>. Adult pnrk \\·/private beach hW be<hootus · one Md cov'd patio &: fnc:d yard ~...... dbl. gar yard 116.500 541J.,'1672 on<>h"" bat!" • "'~ 2nd TD loans Crpt/drps. 968-ll<Xl. ' NU.VIEW RENTALS pe.11o's each unit. Excel-673-«)30 MY --TRAILER ~ N I c t' 1 y h•nt loclltlon. Just otf lllbOI Island · or ~ furnlihed rea90011.ble tor tt llorbor In 0>8ta ~tesa. low•s+ r•+•s Or.11i• Co.. 2 BR, 2 bu., min, S decb. quick sate, new carpetlrig Price S.'i5,SOO. Owner will S.ttltr Mtt c.. BRAND ne-.v euMom S Br. oct.\n view, c:pt'd, blt-tn&, all through. &~9226 com:ldcr r.xcharce for 6ft..!JJl 'J45.0lll 3\.t Ba t.>me. H~ fanUty ne11.•ly dee .. no petL At'll.ll 21~!~Pl~k o~,":~~ =_1 Corona del Mar StfVlnl HUtMr area li 1ft. ~ \V=~ ~r, ~ ~-$325. mo.64+-1680 Bayside VIiiage, N . B ' DON'T aoRROW f°''P :Crior, Walk·ln pantry. FANTASTIC ocean & ~ily lil,!m. Ph' 6.1!>-2126. 546-1600 'TIL YOU CALL USI .q !rm A master vtew, 3 BR. 2 bu. i.. 26' AL.JOA, patio, awning, lNVESJ'MENT DIVISION Borrow on :your home cqu!ty :T,.;~t· See f.t US c..met. ~ 1, $400. mo. wkda,ys DOOi. lodry, teens, •ml pct, 1lfE REAL ~"T.6TC:RS tor an:y ~-Sav-Sff.3990 wkenda. •1*8. ' Lkto Village, NB. $1'150. tng I.Gii AJWt4et CountY tor LOVELY ~ 3 lbr, 3 be • At1una N....., 61;,-2319 or 61:>-8496. <WHnt.t•trlNf70 •~' over 10 yan and NOW In •/den home. Yr)y ~!al. · ~ 7!e~~.yr,.:~y~~·~ ~ 1llll1l!fu1 =L~.?°ioACECO~ =~r ~~~SEBad[.•_a~j· p1y. c...r1 e l-5919. 1 ilifi\ii:~ fT14) 556-0tos Leaie. $32$. ~: ~-UDO BA.yft-ont '1t11a;t lOX.40 -· tiOO Ounpus °""'· N.8. =-= ~~b~ ba':;,IL_l_d_o_l_1_l•------I IUnt. 2 B~?.>~~cr. 'vou don't i1lid • lJUn 1o "'UICK CASH ~,;:;{ loco.tlon. Bk r • CHAR."'l'IG -U.. l "Draw F11.1t" when )'OU T 6'1S.: Frpi. N.tio, dbl pr. place on ad in tho Diiiy THROUGH A, 3 BR, 2 SA. Crpll, d'1"-a to bch. ~rty, 1J;o udl Inc SCRAM.LETS AN SW~AS IN CLA SSIFICATIO~ 700 .,, * f.IOWL.£ Home In adult PM'k for sale or U'llde tor pldrvp.-1. l>iiol· W1n1 Ads! C.U oow WANT AD bllnl. N..,. "''""' No po1>.l"l4l-G:IO&.:;;:-;;:::,,,.----=~ -&G-!r8TI. J'tl: ~Tm Sell kl1e tttms ...... • " l •• ' •• I le by l. ------- ,[.._ __ 1w ... __,]~' 1 _,__ ]~, _ ... _ 1~11 ~~~ Housts Unfurn. 305 ,ual••••· A_~pt_._u_n_f_u_rn_. __ ~365-ht, Unfum. N a. Fum. or·Unfurn. 155 ·i ewport ·~---• .....;...c;;...:;._c:.;;;.;;.:::....::::: Corona ct.I Mir Laguna Niguel lL\CHt:LOR tt \\'1tn1s, 11hl\I'\' $160 _ 2 BR, 1 blk bt·arti, Newport S.ach 3 Br. ho nu• v. 1utr.t<.'t1vl' Ba.Ibo&. NI"\\' rrpi11 &: R«IH· SUMM . NEED 1 CONDO. N(!v.•, 2 BR. 2 l:iA. you11i;:: lady. Co.11! aft 12 p111. _ ... _ l~ I Tl::AOIER. 1-1 ~T tild .:irl _._ 11nl pct v.·ant :! Br llM' '•r apt. Cd~I ~a. i 2 :l l 64-~3.'\. - ltRO\\'N & 11h1H• S/)01h'fl Nt"I\', l"\'ttlOd<'I, frl\nl•' t.. PA'l"IO t'lllf'nl, 51MU.'til 1111. &...set fr111al~. ~h·~ \'o·r~t·· 11111:.lt, !ilfn·~;;:. llfht•i•s. ,.., 111~· Unlqtu• \\ell plantlf'rl fln'll l'"nd,j) JUI) ~'\Ith ht11111·~ 1•11• (\Ji;lotn 11url. .\tiu.onry, Cont'., ttl' Quaht~ 1 9l'!J.-l2W. Llt:·r1UoNl :Mi2-l~l Olli;),, ~I . Lit• No. 180600. Rt1 $350 -3 BR \Va~rlt"Ofrt u~ I I ER, \Yllll('r", yearly, 3 SOR. APT. on golf C(JUJ'M. Tonnh dub !i:'.6-3862 Jgle F'rpl<.; blms . ' "-·1.BR.2BA,lplc,bPamed IN CdM ,t-lM.·ai:h.$295n'IO.ftil.{)6lg, ~IAl'VREnU1il<'"..1.nlL'llMlr '4 YC tvupl~ l~1ng 101· -111 •"NI> lll<!li' B•~\t'r 1•1rJACK T.1ulan,•. r-1·p.11r . fi.12-11m, Ken. .,., 'la'.ol er, PatCTJ , Repair $400 ·• N~ 'irit 4 °B~ar.trplc ~ :111~5baj°P'!S. drps, 1 ~lck I l'f'3pon. adult ma1 .. lll'<'rls Mesa l/erde BR Mc, U.8 . $90 ll('r 11-..1. + house le> N'nt $130-SU.O. I Anahrnn '.\h~111nr11tl H.;n;1)1f11J. rt'rnorl, 111hl Lit· H~l ai~i2 gar dt-ck I blk tieurti• '1 '.1~c · • cnny, 0ttan vie.·~·. a rnt>d·lrg 1 bd. unturn apt uni. Call bt·fo1·1· 6 pm, llB1D I an-a.:.:~. !!311-21..166. l\ly \\ay c·o_ .>17..00:t;i l NU-VIEW RENTA. LS I $.1:l;) up. ~S-e18. tn Co1unn de! l\tar. Prefer DL.X 1 & 3 Br .. 2 Ba. Encl ~-L -D f -1 • 1'.ATCll J'J....\STERJNG • $1= " 1 Of ---=-----~-~~~~~~~~~~~i ost 555 rat ng All ,,.,,..s. 1-·r<'f' t-s1ht1att'& ~or-49-1:3148l -·garage wtlt.!irt.'plac"-. 1170. 11:ur. "" up. enta c .. STRAJGllT & sc1ul\re nutlf', --1 "=~ I 1 rt] 185 m·• 1 1 ,.1 :!093 l\tatX-AV('. ~103.f. ,3 •. . , BR •• G .. G • t .. 1 C'a I 5J.,._..,"-'· BLUFFS 4 1 1 h • , .. / pre f>r eall•'. -" nt · . , ntt~ 11u:e -rwUst' t•n I ]~ e £H[RQUS • r1f,.,f N l•lr.i. t-1U141\ll. llun1e , •. __ _ · ir wn Sl'. end Apanm.msfor i..nt ?'f'ffl.. Nt'ell hy &•pt. L l'h. N1twport Beach E. l!Jtll 111 sh;.u·t·. La1ly 01.:. .........,.,., ~ f.t 1-.;"ninJ .... ,1tht11.111~. ~.u· Plumbing l,lJ\il, 2~* ba, 2 blks from I· _ J\hke, 6T:i-lill aftt'r 6. -· -------&1~l4ji. '---------' •. 11;.:,.,..1'1-f1·"WOO. 1----''------ stores, \~ hlk fron1 S(:hools. '-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;::I THE NEW -REWARD LI~. <lTI:' l'LlJ~tHING Uved \J1 l>y o1vnt•r. \Vhit e I 2 BR Lu."<ury. Splil Ll·vrl HA\'\\'CX)D AP1\ftTi\tE::\'TS Ga rages for Rent 435 • e El.ctr1 u1 RrttW'llft-4" & lt,.1ot11n;. \\'.att".r crpt, brick pa!lo, nmny t:\· Apts. Furn. 360 Gardf.'n Apt. Priv. lt'miet'd , B A 1 SOO h<'Ah'No. <h l>'~l1', f\U'Mt+tl, tr ...... •111 seUin". ovcrk.:ikln" "1U'""'" 111 ll'l'\11xi11 IC'tuti <1ri· nnouncemen s . 1·1.F.·c-rt'l"Ai. , •• ,,, •. ,,.,,,,. .............. ~ " ' "'~" F"OI' I " ' I • f ' ~ • ~ 11 ... 1111 ll.,IU'' b-Ll>ti:li:-1 111 C I.: .l: bli), 2 bJk.,. to bra1.:h. l't'Rdy. Thl• sa!t'!I off1r1? l!I • 1no or l1n£>8, 1;u l'r. r •ll' 1~·nu11 1.1r an) 111 "flll·t· B"~' Coniui. ln,\ui.L Lii·. 2 STY Exe<.'\.llive Fre1K'h Bean\ cell., lropical ati•iuru. opi•n di!ily front IO ,\.\! 1,, l;n.11, Cf1". 161~ Nc"·Porl • • • hun !1•111fini;: r,1 ro·turn of ,1 No '..'661l l t>l~-o;:.ii', '-ll.!-tJi:a H/,\ Con1pl1•tr l'!un1blni; Provincial. 5 Hit 3 BA, 11v Stove. n•frtg, dsh1ir, & 6:Jl) P.\1. ?ilal!/\rthur Biid Ull.-tl. l'..\1. J.IS-!li66, 1•1·1"S Eugene R ocho l-"1ld {pur l1·11f 1·lv1•r p•n. ----~f\IN" rm, d in rm. lam rm. All $35 WEEK & UP lautlrll'y. 673-7829, 67:.i:-oc;w .t, !ian Joaquin lliJL; R~d. 6~-1-1\Xil. 8762 Humming bi rd l•P/11"'· '! uit·tK>s ur di;11111•1t·1·, G~rdening 1'!.l".\IA[l\(i Hl::PAJR bit-ins. Q\·~rlooklng golf • S!l!t'ping Roon1s or~ 1>44.55.)5 Sl!\CLE Car G:u·a~('. ni•ar Fountain Va lley 1111h J1·111•!1'fl hvi...1''111.11• in • ;...o Juh 100 :<1111111 cour&e. $395/n\O. U.•aSt~. • llousek-pi•g Roo•n• 1~h ' ' "· I'·-·· HI d · "' .,. " , "I I r ' • • 'I' ·n·" * * " " Costa Mesa *OCEAN VIEW* "' st.··'"'"'"' 1· · 111 1· 1 '' '; •ll", J.:"1 """''' • • • ".-..., Ol.11 545-542'"1. e Oeefln-V' A ts bu ·1r1• I H• 1• ·llllf"I' .-.1 I -------. iew P Nl'11por1. s2;;1rno. li7~•-kl00 TWO FREE TICKETS i11.1 ... .--.11 i·1a111•. ;1pr1ro-' ih, M e rk Ka pla n '"'wing/Altereti?ns ~IARBOR Vu hom(I-SonJM'· BALBOA INN Brand new upper du pli·:-. s111· 1)f a ni1·k .. 1. 111 ...... ril~··I S('f:. 5 Br, 3 B.a, 2 s!ory. Ad· JOS !\lain Slrt'Cl DELUXE 4 Bdnns. $375 hlo., y1•111"s Office Rental 440 ! to 1h1· I 10 ~,.1 .. 111, Ft •. •\, Th,·~" nr•' 10322 Shangrila Or . ' .act.mt to Giwnbt.-·H. i:iark & 6..,,. "740 APARTMENTS lra.s{'. ~ O\\'nt>r at SOUTHLAND ,1,-..·pl) 1n·a.su1~,11 ,1111111, Huntington Beach '~ Ai C f'-207 Coho N t SI N1>AI. 111·C'urale. 20 )'l"l\r!! exp. schls. Occup. 9' l. $575 roo. 1· 011d • -•Pie's • 3 S11,im-·--n, l'll'µrl!_~ Home & Garden Show nt1•1tt ••11r"l'l .<. thl' I•":" I:< u·. Yiou ar .. 11,• 11111111·1· "! 644·2542 for appt. Costa Mesa ming Pool~ • lleolth Spa • OIARi\tlNG 2 BR., 2 ba .. 2 PRESTIGE Julr 2iih 1tir.i Au~. :;,h 1 1't·pl111·,-ulili· 1• LE AS~ •• TWO FREE TICKET S Tile 4 BR 2 BA. Tennis Cow-ts · Gym and car gar .; some apt.'1. w/fpl OFFICES al""' l'LE.\:-:E ht•ljl II ~·111 h.11t• 1., hi 1-..:..--------red~rated. ,\1 a 7~':,11~ Casa de Oro Billiard Roorn. & beam <'l'i\'s. Avail 011 rounlatn Valley, Beauth ANA HE IM ar1y 1nfon1111.11on . ti l'.!·1·,,q SOUTHLAND l'EH,\:'-11(" Tll.t~ l'\~:'.\1 & r Mariners Sehl, libl'ary & ALL trrIT.ITTES PAID 1 HR. 1-'toni $130 ll'ase. 1285 To $300. 61 •. -::..1.".<l ful new build111g, grountJ CONVENTION ~.i·"s~ "c~·k•11tlll. Home & Garde n Show n·nirw!i•I. ~-,:~·~: *'.~1. s_ii1. ,lobl;j \V rn ho . c 1 BK & l)(>n Froin $190 6-H-7~"l • "" noor, J,IXKI square feet, r.ti"r 1 111•lru1n(" ;~~~2 1!6j s;,~ A~g~c"~'" ~:,, pping, Avail. ·c onipare \:M>fore ,)'OU rent 2 BR fl.'om $210 BAYFRONT 11·/priv. bt'ach 11·ilJ ltivide into small~r CENTER ~11-0.1;\"'.:~nian,..!,~,,,',,'1,•,,1~· ',",', Jui~ '!"11 .. 1·1.,' •• ',.·'ui.:. ·' !i Tre e Service .., I ...__.._,. ustom desi~ed. feat uring: 2 BR. Tvonhs-Froni S'"'-o" :-!(() \\'. f\.1feUa . An:d11.·u11 "· -,.-.. .. • S-,.,·0 k·1 h ·11 · "-" ~ & pier. Nev.• 3 BR. 2 li1\. olli1·e··. ~. _, -. ,,..... ll••110." ...• ,,, ·,,,,,.,,. fl <<•••··I. ANAHEIM CARJl.t EL i\lodel, llArhor ,~..: us 1 c en "'l t 111· MEDITERRANEAN .,u.. '> ~ """"' 0~ .~, '" Ph·a..-" 1·;111 &12-~'67". '""'· Jl l '" "' Tl't'1'" lurl View Homes, 3 BR, 2 BJ\, direct Jighling .MN/n10. \'rly. ALSO. BR, ruor. includes carpels, 10 ,.Jaini \Our 11,.1; .. ,_~. i;\'orth ph·;1..-c 111:111 h:o {'un,ul,1:,• CONVENT ION • · • 1r1111ni1 n~ lfl(' 111>= • FA""'""''" d•'n'g "'~'" VILL GE 2 BA, S495/nm \' 1· I y. dra""s. all utilities. Jitni-· 1;1·1u•ral of 1 rail r p1ll111 In···~ 111wl I r" I' lam rni, nr .. ,,rk, avail Aug .,..,,....., • .,_ .... ".. A r-{'111.lnl.v toll h'\'(• ll"JUI"·•· "·· CENTER I 1· I •-•ii 1·k 979--0631, 644-4510 10' 0 0 -·0·1·•. Call ,>rarii\'TI " " ~:rnharo·rrl"o·o c,.,,,,., .. ·.··,,, 1•·n i.1v11 .1•11. r1•:111 l1p, 1. $450 mo. 614-TI24 ome-1 e storage ,,,_,. ,_ 5 10-1:!~.! '' ,-·' JO . . ~ 'Ni fl l7 1791 z BR. hotlS(', drps, L'l-p\s. Dbl e Private pa!ios 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.llf, NE\\'PORT CREST .... Condo. Stovall (714) 832·5440. • • * -,:~~-,",",·~,D,'.' C111if. 1 '-l'l~a."~\ :.1~~:·~·~J:~-i~~11t1,t~/,111q.\ .... 1"i<s." 111"~ · --· f ~ d e ClosC'rl garage VJ/storage t114) 557-8020 3 br, 2'2 ba, frplc, tennis .r. , ,1 . nia ,. '"1 i: 1 k · " crar: g e • SZ15 enc Y · e M11rb!e pulhnan OPEN EVEHYDA Y crts, pool, spa, suun:1, nr NEW OFFICES : Sht•p/:'r B\Tl1anl 111 1 " ' 1'.' (" 111111 ~oiu· tii· •'11".. '· •11111 [Ill ner. a. mo. Phone • King·!ll Bdt>1n~ llow·s; Fri-Tues 10-6 11•aler, 547-1250 ,\IJ{PORT I 111-.11111 ,!(,, 11hlh'. fl1•1t •"<1llu1: ~·11u1~· h•ll ft1'\' nu1111,.•r " [ Ii I ! noon to 6 pm 5.iS1:l41. • Poot . Barbeques . SUI" \Vcd. & Thur!!. 10..7 \\'ATF:Rl-~RONT Apr .... 2 BR, No il'aSf' rl1f d, full Sl'ITlrl', ! II~ I & •·l11•h•· <'h,11n: Co.~111 ~l1•qi :>kl·!.!O ' ' l JT111oyl'l'llftt f POOL lovely g··cden 3 b' l ,_ .. ,,,, .. " . .,,u pl h 1 d M R L M d · 1 P•n--·'• t '· 'y •-.n·· * • • • " • • • ..,.. '-"U .. 1 us an · ore oom-•ss oney newly rNl~"Oral{'d . $28.">. rps, 1·pts. n1u s1r, rur t\lrto: . ...--..-'"'__... .• ,.. -----1 ba, i.175. + Sec. ~Posit. scaping, Wl\IE see a real gardl'n Shp avail. 613-2182 or all ulll. Single oflie<'S fron1 1 UEAl;Lr:. nialc, !I 111,1_,, MOW & EDGE I 25(lj Universiry. 642-364;;. Adults. No Pct!I. apt! Like living ;n a honw 641)...8496 S125. n1°.: . . 1 1111ssin1: !ill\C'<' ~un 7/l:i. EXPERT & Job Wanted, Fem1le 702, FA?.ULIES welcome. Ne\\' 3 LARGE l BR, SlliS for $162.5011\10. 2 BR, 11;, NF:\V duplex 3 Br. 21" B:-., P,\L.:~_s.A.DE? C~~TLH Personals 530 ~\ns r.v \\1w.;lt·s ltE\\'AHU' DEPENDABLE ! BR, Br, lush t'IU'J>. $5.)(l 365 \\I. \\'ilson &iZ.1971 BA. 2 prk'g plares, priv S375. per mo. l hlk 10 otf'an . 201:.! ::.. 1'~. B1~~tol :>l&--01.{7 alt .i:30 S•ullii An.1 C a ll Fo p 0 t • • * montti, lease. 644-7662 13kr. LOW WEE KL y RATES patios & rec areas. \Vilson or bay. 822 \\'. B.1lbooi. 121:~1 l('!\C\1-1X11',' B<'ac-hl aa7·7010 l Palm & Card Re ader 1' iu·l':i F ree isti;,.;:;: ' D . E. Gilcrest THE Blufis. N1;>1v 3 BR, lush Executive Suites Ga rdens, on \Vilson St., \V. 4i6-67&3. -~lpus-rvttll' "1l'l'Nl'I.~ Spll'ttual. ps~·i·hh', 11,.1 11 111 I.OST: Hl ~t;s ~ )••II;;: • 1358 Su5sex Lane carpl'g. Lease. $550 l\To. 2080 Newport Blvd. of Harbor. No <-'hild./Jl(!t. NE,\R HOAG J-IOSPIT,\L. *WATERFRONT* lu''"· n1u1·r111i.:1·. hus1n<'1-s,1 Diafl''I' b;1~. \'1(•. (ilo •11r11·)n ' ____ SJ4..7l87 __ Newport Beach Avail. immed. 644-7662 Bkr. Costa Me•a ~ Fountain \Vay East L~e z Br z Ba. l\i·nh~. Pt·in1e locatiou, N <' 11,• p o r ! 4'!t'. :-:1 ..... ~·i:d n·nrhni.:s $1.tJO. & c\1111;1 S1 . La i: u n 11 . * Creative G a rdening You nt"i' 111e 111nnl'r or * 2 BR. 1 BA, nr heh, s:r.JO 646--2S46 d1~h11·shr, bit-ins, it a r . Hea(·h. i.Al1)tl· i>UI!<'. i..;111Jtl ti111·11 d111\y 9 u.n1. !v 10 p.m. 1 lt~:\\"AltD, :.i.~-691!J. ··1'111 llfl' 111 \nur ~al'd"n & lt TWO FREE TICKETS mo/yearly. No pe1s. !las STUDl~~-2:1~ BR'S HARBOR GREENS Arlul!s. 5210 1110. 6-12-<1387 1><1~king:. s:.;50 monrh. '::~~ l\'.t·~1.1111~1sr~·!· ,\\'c., t;EH.\1AN ~ll('p, h!a"k & r.in. ~nni.: 111 y,~u;· h1";1r1.' tn the refrlg., 8.Jl--.8974 Furn. & Unfw-n. }'r $130. 3 BR, 2 BA, bltns, t:rpts, ~111 Gr~ndy,, Realtor \\tsln'.ins1~1 .~.\-!l:\.t-1. .S r11ns, hnJ1\TI <'Qi!iH', I'\{' ~.)(~lf'r'. lr1~hmn1.1 ,. Cll'lll\Uj), SOUTHLAND 3 Br. Sch Cottage, slcps to • r-REE 1.Anens Bach, I, 2 & 3 BR's. i\Jodels drps betwn OCf'an & ehan-... .JI Bayside, N pl. &·ach ~Ul.L' L.!Cf:~'.'l·'.r 1 l!Jth/l'nn1u11:1. Jut. J :>: ·~"1111r. L n 11 rl i.' & Pt n ~, Home & Garden Show Ocean front, S 1 8 5 / 111 0 . e ~'REE Utilities Open 10 'lll 7 pn1 . 2700 nc l, $350 mo ~21:il ·[\9-.'J62'!. --* 675-6161 * ~ . • ~Pll'.l1":J1\LI ST • _61."..-2!~26 ttlt :;, ~~~·111~k1~~rs 1ns1t1lll'f l/n •1>:111· Jul.• lith thru i\Uf<. S!h 675-4911 BKR e l-'ull Kilchc-n Pc1erson \\lay, Cl\!. nr. liar· 1 PRLSTIGE Offlt"l'S . l\i·w :'!ip1ruu.1I_ rt•11d1n;;'> IU a1n·lO !'\!,\LI. blk ~ \\'ht !nil Joni.: ~,.,.,.. 1• ;if thf' • llcatl'd Pool bor Blvd . & Adanl&. ' San Clemente pl'Clfcssional bldg., Fou111ain !:01· :'0~11~ On all niatt,•,rs-. hllu't'tl dog "/clt•fon111••t Exp. •ANAHEIM S•n Clement• • Laundry Facilities 546-0370 -VaJl{'y, Jnclds rC'Ct'pl1011i.~r ",12 ;>.;. l:.J Ciunu10 H<'ttl. :S.in j1l 11. 1\ns 10 Shav. H<'l\':lri! American Gardener CONVENTION ------e ·rv & maid sct'V avail. FOUH. SEASOJl;S APTS. 1700 WESTCLI FF DR. room: r ec t' pt ion 1 s 1 6.· C !1 :· 111 c 11 t e · 4!!'!·!1136. 916 S.•nalc f't ., c..\1. :.1-i--0~1~1 .\luinrl'nant·1;. Clt·iuiui•. CENTER LARGE vie1v home, 4 BR. • Phone Service Spac. 2 sty 2 BR. JI, BA, 2 BR., 2 BA .. Bltn ap1•1i11111·t•s. answering services: dr;-.JIC'S, l'.1 • .,((\.1, \l ll L ' , L..:uwl~·aiun" & ~11, tnk1,.,. 2'.2 BA, to be leased for l or 1--.=.,=='""°''""°'=c--ll 0 • , ,.-. .'\111n1('~' IYJJo' c·at, "' ~I \\' Kah·l\u. i\na.!J1•1111 $30 WEEK & UP bltns. c1·pts, drps. priv Pool. 642--627-t. (' r p I . g. j lln i I I) r 111 l. ~ ~ BLE.\l Pn·g11a11t',\'. c.-.n. tlun, 11. n1arkini;:, kink Ill ~ S1•r.'lf"!'. Call 615-1!1:'.u Plt'.lM' ··all fr•2.;..:7l( l':it:I , 31-t 1~ yrs. Partly furnished. e s 1· & 1 BR patio pool ronv !()(· No Sceretarial s!.'rvice av11il. f1dC'nl s y ni pat h ,, 1 1 t' 1 \" c -,., "' · Balboa Peninsul• Alteratlon•-642.SS45 •1t:A. ""r mo. Call 492-8272.· tuc 10 Apl!S. ' • · · Apts., 96.2_,,..o.•J. · 1 "11 · Ji". .nldt•n \\',.sr & J_,\ I\",\' & Garden 1 ·a 1~'. 111011· rn 1·ltt1n1 your lil'kl'IS. 1 :\"01ih .,......., r--e TV & Jl.1aid Service Avail. pets. $165. 735 Joann S1, F "'" · 11n•gi1aney counse 1ng. Abor· i\l ·in~lon "'>.f;..1:\;,? 1 f •,' 2 BR, lop oond, z Ba. Only • Phonl' Servi<·e I-ltd Pool C.l\-1. 646-1.lj(J, urn. or Unfurn. 370 , OCEAN VIEW tion .t· adoptions l"C'r. '; · .~ · ~-•·11;;•'·\'<1t·u1un1h·flov.1'1'r ll\·tl~1:1 ~·,10•.,11~, 1011 rt.'C. nu111bl'r u1 Mature Adults. Bart."elona, e Chi!dl"e~ & Pet-Section APCAHE 6-tZ....ll?AJ T1J R.TOJSF:, \' i 1• /l '.'111 .• All< ~ 111 > ~;'I.?." '1 . ;,.. . ~ .. v.J $250 ,~ ,.,4 2., NEIVLY DECOR,\Tl::D Balbo• Island SpRcious, exec. office in P"Ef' , .. ., . 1-!alt·t·rest/llull of f :iuil' . ..i!lt-:tl:i7 nr d<I Jol.17-.l:lil * * • '' . "~'"· .>76Ne\\·portBlvd.,Cl\1 2 Br \\'/gar, fn<·d vnt --· "~NAN f . Thi nk1n~ l'"\l'l RO'Cll"li"61"" CO\lfL'~· f ~8-9Ta5or645--3967 w/palio -\I/tr Pd. Call Unlon Bank Bldg-, Nl'11·po11 abo11ion?Kno\1·atJ1hefarrs 1 •r.' . a -" .. ·•' ·.' r.-11'. 1111lf .,,e1t 11c SCRAM LETS (Ad good for S5 on rent I hhl'n 1 & 5; 636-1120 BRA .• '-:D ne\I' 2 BR apt, hlln Cl'n1er. \Vlii.'cpt , l:-iping-, first~ C'all L!~'L Ll :'ll ~:-2·1 RE\VARD! mion!. ~'!'." ('11111111 I. iurt, • Houses Furn. or Unfurn. Lido Isle 310 LIOO Isle Bayfront Pier, -I Br. falxdous hse &· location, Aug )'t'ar\y, ~'lfi.{1770. Condominiums Unfurn. General * * • D. Lavin 320 7811 Talbe't Huntington Beach You 11.J'f' ·he winner of TWO FREE TICKETS .o ihe SOUTH LANO Home & Garden Show July 27rh t.nru Aug, 5th at the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER 81)) \V. Katel la, Anal1eim Pll'ase call &12·5678, e.-..:t. TI4 to claim your tickels. I North County toll free nun1hcr is 540· 12'l0.) * • •• Irvine 2228-C PJact'nlia Ai·c. $145 kill'hcn w/trash compactor. X('l'O)(, l'll', l\lr. i\lcl'arland. hrs. :;.11.;,;;zz. CoH1;•, rnal.•. ':''~Lt!. Sprutklrs. cleanup. Li\RG. l br, twin Dcds, ideal 114:; ll.'~1 ~ Garnet. 673-6:}1/I'. 6~1-94'10 --:-. 1 :i..11-12 16 I ti·J;;.m~l ANSWERS for bachelors. s I p 00 I . 2176-1': Placentia AVl' ~ C M --'.\IA;>.; .{() !'('•·k1; a1trart11·1• 1(<11 . Adults. $165. 54S-9633', 1993 UPPER z BR, par1ty osta esa PRESTI GI:: 2 J't00~1 ro 2..: 11 h1:i ;~ nu1 ru·il doil"n I :\l'f-;t of TalN>r1 .~· Ed11ar~I.: C11nipJl'll' l.a11.:n S.. (,a1-.lt•111ni:: Church St. elec. bltns, ~~l', f~~l THE EXO 11NG E)(l'C. officl', adj. A1rpor1 r'1' by f\ joh. lt<'1•I~· 11 ith pi1·1ure RE\\',\l{JJ: l.o~t \I hi pou<!I<' ~rVll'' -Hauling & Cl~·anup~: T1p1nr -C:argo -lloard - i\'1CE l .(:_ 2 BR Trai!l'rs. SSO !oration. $Li0 to responsibll' PALM MESA APTS. llotl'I. f'ull glass v1e11·, ~Bo . ..: ! 124 Tu.:hn CH ~t'ti\() I ~~ on 7 Hl, .'\16-R1(1'1 ~-11~1' . , .. , , ,,.l:t-Of0.1 l-'1•m•11141 -COAT & up. l\lalul"t' adults. 133 E. ~~~ul!;...,AN.'o pets. 1-ll' f 's. l\llNUTES TO NPT. BC//. p<:tnt•IM \\'alls. all Util., an· 1" PRICJ-: spi•c1nl .\lnf-C11111· L(>:-.1 \\11! 11111 li-1\t'I' 11 1 l.~I ~.T.l~.i\C~.~ JaparJt'!i('j 111• 1" l~n·1 a th1111: intel· I.6th SL, 6~2-1263. 1 .,...,....~..,. Bach, J & z BR. from $150 ~r;,i~,~~~ 1r~;:kin;.' 1;1~il;<.~ ro1·1 cust11111 111tt'rl hr;•~. hr11·n <'Yl· r<ih·h. \"I<' ~".\' .. {,;u·dl'r11•1·-_ ~la1n1enance & l1'1.·1u.ll n!.1u1 ) .. ni.: h:ur 11•hcn Hunt·n 1 n Be•ch Sl,10 up. 2 BP.; ::; Br., :l Ba. Adults,, No Pets. ~33-:)223. ~~u~?19ho111'.' o~· 111. 1 u !' . i ~~'l,l-H('f.)7 _____ _:lf·an-1tp . ..>l.>-ISftl yourT111h· 1>1<.:k~ 11 j1H your 1 9 O Pool, bl!ins. play yal'rl. 1561 r,..fl'sa Dr. --·.·~~. -OL 96:\-2·100 1-llr BL. h: l•.1.1· n.)!)(ih". l'I<' HHsll, G ,.1 , C'OA · _ "' F'ULL SERVIC~~ p 1 ,.. ene Services -------1 Sl 45-$165 Lt.Jti i\fapk• i\ve ..... 64l·~l3 (5 blks iront Ne1vport Blvd.) Westcliff Building d P ~ July r<i~'.\r\~';~1"~j~· 1~1 _9\1ght. _ l.'Oi\ll 'i\:\10:\' und l'n1ctic11 1 BACIIELOR & l BR., ?112 Colll'gc No. l .• fi.'6-60.12 546-9860 Corner \\'e!ilc!i/f Drii·c J_ LA D! • !'>1:to_•rial 1 ~T ~. , '.i. • -~• 1_._ l/(J.\IE Ht•p;iir. ,\!! Typt.'•. ill· 11u1·~'" t1ave car, x ln 1 patios, trplc's priv. garagei;; 1 BR. Dupll')(. $150/J\.10. * C,\SA VICTORL-\ * Irvine Blvd .. N l' 11. po r 1 n14•n1bership S.'i. C" 1 I , r l11•J1ni.: o·lt'<'., plun11 1111i.:. n:·f•'l"t'llC~~. l\J!I \\·ork uny -Divided bath & lots of Idealt-Jor older couple. No 1 & 2 BR. Furn & Unfurn. HNlt'h. i\lr. l!(l~iu'd 'PartnPr' ~~G -12;1 or pa1nt111~. cahinC'ts, slieh.-f's. l~•uu>:. Ca!\ &42-()117 9 ani closets. Rec. hall, pool & pets. 219 Magnolia, Ott Carpt'ts, dl'llpes, D/\\1, TV &l:J...6lOl S.18-1479 • ~ __ I .1~ !\l11)nr aUl'ranon~. li"'tun· 111 ·I 111n pool lables, sauna baths. 615-0040 or .fi..12--0212. ant. Pool, etc. 52.l Virtor1a . . .' . . 1 SWINGING COUPLES hlstruttion I'm: l'l'p~ir & insta ll. 1·h·. T1111e & l'J.:F.r> ho·l p at honie? \\'e Sec for yourself. 17301 ' BR. 1•, '··· .. ,,,,, d•1-. St. al·lfarbor, C:\I w 89i0 Io~~ ICE sur1r. -3 pnvllli' Ca!! "L ah" 2 ~ ....... n1atf'nli..I. }' & B !tornc hll\"+' 11!des. ll u I' se Ji. ~ " • 0 ~~~~~~~~~~~I off ices, lrg. sc<'rl'lat 1a] re· " • (' · P ni. [ ",., i•n·• Ke1;>l!!On Ln. (1 blk \V. of bllins, \i·ash1;>r 'dryer, palio, t:epl!onoffiC1'; tx-aurirul sh:ii;: fi3.\-1al1. !r11..11r.u-u-..W. ho u fi ekp1'l'I, C't11np.onion:'I. Beach,lblkN.o!Slater). gar, $170 mo. 695 Dnrt'l"IJ I I~ lTpt'g. Nc11'110rt Finant:ial ALCOllOLICS \no Js c I & TOTAL Sf::RV ICF:s "i1r-!lon1«n1aker!j V 11j o hn, 842.7848 St Costa 1\-lesa 962 r.:l67 & C l'I "•?'7.1~' nyinuus c"oo s f•n1n1·,,. PJuni h'i:. R<·p;11r!i :>17-6fi>:l · ., · · ·a. Rentals ,-. ent er J0<:a1ion 11· vi<'~I'. 1 i"f5 l<>nc :i~ .... -!. ' or v.n h· · t t' 575 ., · ---------1 $pl40 1 -ULTRGA.JllCE: ~~t, 6 2 i'iew 3 Br., 2 sry gard('n sq. fr., S·l50 ~IQ. 61-1·56..'l... po. Box 12Zl, C'osla llh'Si1 l ins rue ions ,",~~-.,~11ms .t ,\pt.s, 100....1717, 1-.:XJl Jo .. H. boul!Csiucr a \•ail_. to oo s. 4 a1uens .. -...una. B..a & F 1 -~ -_ _ . · ..-v~I . \\'Ulch u1·1·r your hon1c \\'hile Tl'nnls. Private pat i 0 . apts. th ~~. ~rp c. gar, STOR~ OR O~'F!Ct.: ~WING! NG SINGLES_ 1 YOU It !'hild \\ill enJOy l1•nrn· SPH!Nh:LI::R ~ ·:;t('nis 111_ yuu flrr. abroad. Xlnt ref !! Adults. Ph: 846--0259. 64nrn .~8505~h90J~,us66hplngJ · S.lID rno. Rooms 400 Nl'wport & Bay Ccn!C'r Ct11l for info. 2-S 11n1 530-1?.'JO. 1 11~ 10 Pl:1y a 11utl' fro n1 ltn •st·iller! elt•t:I )' ;iu lomal rd 67~11'.Jcl.=cc-~---- l/" • .,..... 2052 Nc11-po1'1 Blvcl., C~I. SWINGIN -<')(JIC'rl . ;>.;onh 11-..•u11·. ' . · _.. . .. 2 BR. Ad,,ll", no -i·.··. BAY .i2.i' Avail Aug. 1. Pkg. Ulll. G SINGLES X::.<\..4--t!J.l 111:111u;1l J.n.·1· t·1>1ln1ar1·s. C'O.\ll~,\;\I0:-1. l>r1~1·r . i.;OOl'J Lido Isle I BR. Furn. Ufil & garage incl. I adult only. $200 n10. Yearly. 673-0&11. .. " ,.~ ·' ROOi\IS S20 v.·k up 1~·/kit $30 C ii • • • h" ' fi.lf)..-O(fil I I k ok l\lt:ADO"'S APTS. 387 \V. &l&--12.12 0 1· 61 1-W!i a ·...._.a ~ ~ 'lnl ~13!l.12."IO. 11 an ti10 · no n !!m f'T' Ba <1 C\1 "'--1 i1·k up apt!'. Childn>n S.· Jl"I --F ·1 C ,.--1Hauling itr111k1·r, Uoocl n.•f"I. 6#-19>1 ·1 '£'d led at SJ n10. Ans\\·ering srrvk~ s.nm .m Rep.-il's 1-'1 () v Ix G, II ·• u l I n i.:. S1\l .fo'.~LAI)\' O\'rr 30 "iU1 Y .., ·· · Vl'.>"1.lll i. section. 2376 Newporr !:U\·d., DESK spa("{' :iva1Jablc s.·i0 _ am1 Y ounse 1ng [51 aft 7 l\k<lv,; all day sun. 2 BR, $155, sgl sty, beam Ci\!. 518-9755, 6~5-3967. 1110. \\'ill prol'ide furnilurc 636-:'flEifl or ;i.1~.:1.6-13 [ I ----· · cr1, I l't'Ora , erpL'i, BEAL'T. Roon1. p r i 1·. .1 hi 1 .... ., •• ,,_ h Bl I 1 1•l1·11~1-uri.~. i'. l! 11 s u rla h It' "'P ,·,, ""•<y 111 """~c. looll ,BR 2BA b · k I I lbl d~,, 646--92.13 or 646-8882 I I I ·r· ava1 a e. 1r.1.:1 oo.:ac \"f . . -,-••" "~n , , ric rp c, { ·r 1 a eo n Y v.· magn1 IC1:'111 . 2-2 '[ ,-------~)[9J ".:1t.·~. ~ r•·<' 1• st 1 ni "-' r ~. linic or pan. CD.\!. 6n-29')0 gar, v.•inter r<'nlaJ, $315 plus LARGE 2 Br, encl garage oeean vie1v. 1 ~ b!k bch. 2:>00 llun!ington 8l'ac-h. 61 13 1 Lost .Ind FOi.Rf Q Colh>t:r Slullencs. i ' I I i J b W d M & F 704 util. 213-793-0427 avail. l child. &-nvi<'1v, Cd!\I 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB _ , •'.'.;.itt ing R:::.!-7:>Sl o s ante , Newport Be•ch Call 6--12-9138. llOO.\IS $20 1vk up w1k11 s:;o BIM, 912. 7;iG & 510 Sq. FL (i~:r l{fD Of U:-.'SU;llTl.Y GOIN(: nii·av for a. v.•hilr? I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;13 BR, 2 BA, avail. Aug. \5. 2 11•k up apls. Chlldrn & pct An1plc parking. Util. Bauin-II • BABYSIT • TRA.~11 & D~HRIS S\2 f[on1>st, rcli8hle. roupl•• 11.111 I• children, no pl'ls. 186 21st s~t1on. ~76 Netvport Blvd., _¥ardnl·t-, 5-11-50.12. Found (free ads) 550 .\IY llO~lE C . .\I. LOAD. COLLEGE STLl· housesit or hoatsit for you . 2 BR, dishivasher, bllins, * .r,iACHELOR, FURN. U9a. St. No. D, Cl\1 $180. 646--1362 Cl\'!: 548-97:55, 64;..-3967. OFFICE Space for rent, &16-.i!"IG I U.1:.:~T. S.lH11:o! ~1g,...7!MJ1 11 ft 6 pm. swimming pool , shag, drn, Beach & heated pool f"URN!Sl'ED r -~-· Ne rt FOUND: f'O.\\'. con1cr San sauna & extras. 53&-2774 2 BR. 112 Ba. Studio .• Encl ' ~ roon1, en1 · .__.. .. ase, .,,4a nio. nr \\"J)O B • S • CLE"A1\'l!PS, 1.'l'n101·e {hr1, Help Wanted, M & F 710 Adults.only, yt·ly lease. gar. $l:J7.50/mo. Cpl, 1 in· ployed lady day ii·orkl't', Rh·rl. 00 Broad1,•ay. C.l\I. !\falro & Slater in front 011 us1ne1s erv1ce trl'C'S, ivy. dnve\\·ay~ ~rud- Newpo't e. __ •_ch Security <."Ontrolled new f ok a•,.,4::.~9 ref' $20 k rjj;,_19-9 6Ta-8761 Post Office, Fount:\ in 82 -building. 642.2566 ant •no pets. O'U .,,.., · &1.:;..87l;s. \\' · 'f 'u-' ' • Valley, l\lan's blat:k 11 alh·t. BOOKh'EEPl:\G any '> r ing. s..17-21166. L!C'. 2-KJI · AAAAAAAAAA . *BRAND New 3 BR. 2\2 Las Brisas Apft. 2 BR., Apt. Ne~·ly carpl'l<'d. F'OR rl'nt. single ofrit'C, '.t103 Soc. Sec-. Carll. 1tni·f'r's 1,;111 -1hru ftnafk'l~1l ~1<1.1r-. GEN ll;iulini;. Trl'1•/Shn1h '0ur iww tl',mporary off1ce_ls BA. C.ondo. v.·/Boal Slip. 2 5:Jl5 Ril'er Ave., NB $1,j(}.l\fO. $50 dep. No J){'IS. F'URN. roont 11i1 n bath & Harbor Blvd, C.osta l\1esa, JiCf'nSl', hbrary rarrl, In :;ul· llll'lll.~. p;tyrnll, A·R. J .J>. lnm. r.11r ,t . Yd elr<111up. 111. 412,1 \\£'$1l'rly Pl. ~li e 1 , car gar. All a.ppllances. 7a7 Shalimar No. 2, Ci\). ki1ch. priv. Non-smokc1·. Src-1'1.'tarial services avail. lt•r, papers s 111 eii l' ••d . l'ri•f••f sn1a1J 1111 .... ul('S.s_ E~t. !)3J-S377, 5.":ti--G!:Ol. 11.i. Nrw1Mn'I li<'r1t·h. (llll' , Q-pls & drps. Sale or Lease. ] BR. l block to OCf'an, 1 blk 3 BR in 4-plex. /\Or schls .~· Nr. OC'C. 5:>7-SSJ9 979-6373 :>-ll-~. I 6~1--1 8 12 ~Kll--'l_,()ADk:B.-\ dun111 rn1t•k I.lo.on ""11 Ct<nlf•r•. !As you I ' 213: 287--0023 or 213 : G t H 415 \\"ITll Sailboat vic1v: 20x40' · ' kr~ ... \. \\·,. hu1TM.·d <kl\\-n.i 287_8723_ 10 bay, S17J. n10. driys shop'g. $175 + Depai;it.1021 ues ome 011 Coast llwy., N'pt. Bch. c,\T v.·ht \\'/IX'1~e & g1·,,v 1 Ca rpet Service 11 n1k Con1'n ·lj·, asphalt riurrr••s.•ntpholK!L~&."h'\.:.lt90 &J..1-.4~&. eves 675-0172; 112-1 Vall'neia, Ci\l. S.lO·Of:.i7. PRIVATE ROOM Sli.i nio. Cal!: 8.1.1_11160_ 1narkn1~<> tCal1l'u1, 111 1·u· i;11~n.t:, b1"t'11king ._IYM~illO. (ir it{~~'ilff'.l. hQll'(•..-i·r, if }'U\I Townhouse UnfU'tn. 335 W. Balboa Blvd. VEH.Y NICE l Bil .. Sl41J. .$an Ju:in Ca110 S1•\'1'1'P JOHN'S C;jl'fl"( .~ Uphrils\l•ry '.\!". VUl'tl'l"ITURf: \'•n for ran't reaeh 11~ on ooe of $.15 & Up. 1 Blt .. 2 BR & No children or pets. for eldcl.'ly, a 111 bu I a to r y Business Rental 445 st(nna<'h 11ound . 493 ~~:'! 01· l)r1 Sl1111npri..) ,,.,.,. ·"'.,,I< h. lneal turn houls .~. i.:t·n J ihosi• 11111,ll . our ;wsv.·erini; Corona del Mar * * * * * .. Deluxe 3 BR, 3 BA, Huge Ownl'r's unit, in ne11• du· plex, beam clng, vil'\\'. Near Bachelors. Color TV. n1aid 837-9jl7. pc-rson . Nk-.:!, quiet l'llt"-49?.-5377 aftPr 6. f:Ullrd 1So1l He t11rtJ11n1~1. hnllhni::. fl.1~1:-16:.!. Sl 'l''\"H'<', 5-i&:2Il>l, \ILH be I Th M 4•~ N roundings. Good, nutritious NEW SHOPS s O.•g1·ca.scrs t '11 1 serv, poo . e esa. w · 2 BR. 1 BA, cpls, no chikh·l'n meals. ·mall 1\'ln!e Pt't'k·a·JXIO~ \\' / . · " " ro or LOCAL n101·Jng /,, hn uhnit hy ftlll'111•ri ni{ all caHi; & \lo"i:! Newport Bl., N.B. 6-16-9681. or pets. $175 mo. 1st & last. Call ~s.4r;>.l A fc1v ,choice :§hops still lit<' bro~·n ni&ridnits. 2 i'OJ-~rie:h~l'n.;: t.·h_tlO 111111~1"' i;tudl'nt. Llu·~e 11·111·k. l l•'a~. \\ill i•all in 1>vcry 1:5 San Clemente $50 fr.c . E. Wth. 6-12-126-1. available at Villai;e F111r, lar. \'i1:. \V 1Ho11·s tra<·k Jr. .,_eac r \\" 1 eb carpe ~-5.?.-l-1X·16 or fii3.f'l&l7. m1nutl's. \\"e're ready !or VACANCY tor Plderly J11dy 1100 South Coasl lhiy. 1in1;> 5;'11-4:112 ' .-...il'l' your m<inl'y Y i.a1·1n5' yr11.1. lla1·r all k"in..b: llf f11n-Back Bay View 2 Br $200. 2453 h'l·ine S.1~1729 • in lie. Guest home. Good Laguna. n1e extra trips. \\'ill el*'an Housecleaning in~lic npc'ni~s? 1::mpha.5i.~ J beach, patios, fireplace, no 11,, pets, $425. mo. Available 8-1. 61:i-6900 San Cll'mente Resident Hotel $79.SO per Month QUIET • SE'.CURE Fut'JJ . u!il . linen se1'l>lc-e. Dana Point food served. &16-3.191 494-8888 f;l:D lg Yfl$ n1 all' •~11111· h\·1ng r1n., d1n1~ r1n , & on &•r·f('tar1cs al I h c Summer Rental~s~""°""°' shf'phC'l"d n1Lx. Flea & 11•d h11!I Slj. Any rrn. $7 '..ll, Carpet Cleaning s:.::.0.$6.".0 level & t.r i;:" 1 420 T\\'O shops, main st. fron1. ('Ollars. Vtt: \\"l's! C.:.\J I t'OU<"h _$10. Chair s:i lj ~r.~ Floor Ca re & Windows S1•l"J"f'll!rJ('S ss.·i0-$300 .. \\'(• <lgc, 600 plus sq f1, :-:ln1 !O-lil5-16.'\io< t.'Xp IS ll'h/'tl l~l11111S, nor lllll("h .\ln111!. :-0.•I'\ :..17-l:JllX :i!...-1 fl<"<"! ti S:IOO flo.'l' 111m1U1 't * * • * * • I.. !~-~-~~-~-~-~-~-~~-~-~~-~~-~-~· Huntington Be1ch \\'alking distanee PANORA..~llC Ocean View. 10 C\'CIJ'tlling. Lrg 3 Br Dplx., bltn kit, 2 Sleeps 4 -r·ron1 S70/1vk. in --'~"~D~'-'-'-''-'-· _s_.c_·~= 1 Ba. Bldg less than I yr. o!d . July SUMMER RENTALS eallon r'-\·1110\1·n San Cle· DOOTtS'"EP "·ho·., .. ,,,0,,,.,. ml'thod. I iln 11()rk ni~sc ll -, ----< .,h. lh "'' '' lJd ' ' G~I Ol•f. •.".",1--0101 . !..\]J' \\'1i!l!)'l l\rl\llil.• & ltp4 ,,U\M 'I'\ 1.-..0r 11'1 111 I.' nc• 111crtte. ld<'al fur any type .1 kittC"ns. 25.37 Gret•nhnr·r ,......, ·• ··h·anin).{ ii r•rk, ~:'.l.pt't'. thin 1~111111in>; held Only tho.<;r or shop. $200-$275. p1·r mo. Ln. C.~r. J.16-6678 or Cement, Concre te ~rii ns . whn h1t\'I' li1JfX'JV1J«>tl n{'('(f " ' I I I" I j. • ' .,. Sleeps 6 -Fron1 $95/wk. Apt. Unfurn. 365 Close to beach ,'<:-MrOOr. Slt.'l'ps 8 _ F'rom Sll$/\\'k. I !4 Del i\1ar At'<'., S.C. 5-11}--3,gJO. , • • . . • "'-l7.:\ii:',i • a111ily plr1l."''· ~·ur 1hl.' san1t> 3 Bedrm, 2 baths, built· Balboa Island ins, refrig., washer, dryer, brand new crpl. YEARLY z Br. apt lrg, Children OK. $225 mo. nc11·ly derorated, furn. Ask for Dale, 962-4471, n10d~1: rent for adul•s only, 673-2472. Duplexes Furn. 345 , _Y_E_A_R_L_\_' -,,,,,.-.,-.,~,-b-,.-.-.,-,-,-,, Newport Beach n1· shops/heh. 8.1.1-3437; C\"t'S & \\·knds, 646-111.'J. OCEAr.il"RONT. \\'inter re n· C:oron1t d l'!I M ::r tal. Lo\\·er 2 Br. Nicely furn. Avail Sept, l :>, 646-2830. Duplexes Unturn. Coron1 del Mir 2 BR., l~~ ba .• carp, refrig, slove. LcaitC, Adu!~. 67a.6145 Eves. 350 '"'" $27fi. 2 STY duplex. Brand l"lf'\I' i BR & Den, 2 Ba. $.'t'i0/h10. Mature adults. 673-IXIS Huntington Beach NEW 3 BEDROOM 2 balh, encloRed private gnr· fl.ge ln duplex building. $260. per mo. Manager at JU OswtlO Hun1ington lleach. ·~ N•wfl'!rt llffch 2 BDR.l\f. 1 Ba upslail'!I. 110 p.ragc, $1R.i. yr\y. Sl'nlor clll2ell only, Nt·ur beach & 11hop$. 6T;)-{]1 \5. The r.utesfdnw in !he \Vtllt. ... a· 0311.Y Pilot ClusltWd Ad. gc..56'f& ON TEN ACRES Apts. turn./unfurn. U!a5e Fireplace / pr!~. patio!!. Pools TeMIS Contnt'l Bkfsl. 900 &?a Lan, Cdi\I W -2611 !MncArlhttr nr Coa.,, Hwy~ * 2 BORMS. Ga rs ge , CLOSE 10 BEACH . $250/mo. 6T;r6900. SPACIOUS 2 BR. 2 BA, upstairs apt. Open beam&. lri priv. Jrl'lrttat'-Clote to ~ach. No pets. 6T;,-4S7l. 2 BR. PENTHOUSE. New cal'p('tll, drape1, 1 Ba. Pool . $265/mo. Ph: 6?'J....3A50 2 BR apl. 1 ~ bib to bch &: Mlllpplna. $250. Adulll, 3201! Larkapur. ltavt aomttblnu )'OU want to .ell? ausif\ed ea. do It 'M!l1 • call ...-ow 642-5671. Very dlx. S300. 49!1·?'195. 1U.SO AUG .. SEPT. & OCEAN l'lews, \\'lk to heh, 2 \\'INTER RENTALS BR, furn or u n furn Bkr. 61.:i-5800 sroRAGE/Sbop, 3 6 x 3 8 · , LOST: Stn. Chihuahua or Ct:\II:.NT . ,f:.: Rl0<·k \\r11 k -.-. ---f'h<•nt ~r n*'C"d :! Jub Cos1ing 0 .H. door. 2'.ll V. Nr. fl."pt Toy Fo" Crcanl rt ind; \ 8 \'a t 1 1. pa!1os. s1rlf'\\':1lk.~. rlc. f{Tl.IA~Lf-.h""f~r. lri61~~·B"l'lllJ (1rrk~-o 0 rll.' r1f )Y1U 1TIU!il Post Ofc & J\fariner~ P.11\c, quarters Injure.! •i'flnt·il'I Y 1r OrJOb.61f:;..#.II.-.. ec•an. •) t <' 11iy, 1""" I)[)<'• v.pn1. llt·y, v.·e 'N' $220-$250. mo. Bl..T. 496-5771171 ~B~U~f~L~D~f~N~G~fro~m=ocr-.,-,-­SJ7J.fn10. Ag!. &JG.2414. Anin1al.Control . C.:0.1. • PATIOS. walks, dr11-·<'.s. Sil\\, llfll•r ,i l''.\l' ha"k 111 luL~Ull'SI. 1...ct's .1itCt1 ·==~~~-----· M jitOlnJ;!''' ' Huntington Beach VILLA YORBA 1, 2 & 3 BR. Unfum. Refrig.-UTIL. INCL'D loOOJ Villa Yorba CX Sis .. Beach Blvd & Stark, Avail 11'18 -814. Al90 911 - 9/8. 3 Br, 2 Ba. $l7~ v.·k. 6i5-8531 NE\VPORT Be.1ch, .1 Roorn B:i ch, \\'/balL'()ny, ~1ps 2, '~ hlc-k lr~m bt'ech $12~ 1'.k. 6iH925 "TI-IE FACJ'OR\"' has shops ll\'ail. fron1 S90 1110. Jn Can· ncry Village, 42a 30th SL. N.H. 61.i-9606 or 642·R"i20. 1600 sq. ft. l~DUST. shnp, S2'l5. Al!iO 600 S<J. ft. o!fi('<' l\'/li\'01.( qtrs, $1 55. · C.\l. 6'6-2130 FOU?\D Afghan "'Olfhoun•:I. brt:'nk . N'.n)!)1·c & rt"plact• asonry Hl"O\\'JJ, \lie. \\'ilsotl & I roncrelf'. ;,IRJl66S frir e~t ---.~-------1 fl rho ~~-J l " :-.; C L"ld c fll!lf'K. \'l'IK'<'l'S, ~If' p :'<' a r . •·'' ,,,_ n11 "' , . o. n1 are \\ 11 I k 11· 1 v 5 ~lump~tntlt' 6 Cossa .\ll'sa. '· · ' · · ' . TF. \C11FRS J hh11·k and ll!'OU!.:fll ""'II BLACK mixf'fl fprnnll' rlni.:. h·'lld'"" ' " ... .'1 111 Y11• . 5 1"1 · frni·"~-tiJc_. l'n l r y \\ it \ .~. ~hort hatr. Call 5~17-~16)!. t' .~nor •Jd 'Y· us .~a rlfi"-Jll'" · -· -h'Jnte not a nu~t'V ~"111101. · ·• !;)-~-----41:11 \\'e~tl•rh· Pl11f'1• ~'OIJND Plgcon. Call & id{•n· only 2 chlld n•ri ir1Tl'pt ccl. Painting & ~ui1r 11.;. j\;"''pt . Bt'I'..:.__ T $'f1 ' I "<i t1fy. :'i.w.--010.1. ~pr1m?dal~ ,f:.: .Ii J :i 1 r· 1·, P aperhanging ,\ A A A A A A 1,n;;d;";;';;';;';ia;l;;;R;•:;n;;t•;';;;;;;;4;;S;;O ,, t•rl a ''Parl'" Pl;i«e an Ad' R.Mj..:.J7S -~--~--~---lr)nr ll{'t~· l<'n1por&r)' orr11•r " • No \\'a!riru: al 1121 \\"f':<tl·rly Pl :oiuih•, * WALLPAP'ER * 11'"1. /\f"\\·por1 Broi·h 1Th~ nr. S.D. Fnvy offranlpJ KIDS. pets 11·eolcomf'. 2 BR, 714/842-9622 Corona del 1\lar; 112 blks. to --~~ heac·h. $175 IA-'c~k. *DOG-RUNS* 1-lal Pinchin Rltr. 6Th-4392 NOW LEASING SPQc 2 &: 3 BR, $149 ,~ $199. NE\\'PQRT beachfront, tdf)5 Kida otc. Pool. Keelson Ln. 9, v.·ash/dryer, 40· l\'lndov.·, Huntington Beach t l blk W. of ~Reh Blvd, off July 28-Aug. 11 833-83..iO. NEW M· 1 Slater) 842-35-lG. 5 BR. 3 BA house w/viCIY~f 940 Sq. F't. & UP WALK TO BEACH I bay, Balboa Pf'nin. $2j(J v.·k lh1m1llQn & r>;cwliuvl 1 & 2 BR. Crpt/drps., bit -ins, & up. i'lG-1068 646-0697 or 833-0519 RfLI'. 30S 16th. 5J6.50S6. I BAL. ISL. VACAtlr"I' NO\r• I.,,.. ... ~~~ ... ~'""!! I J1lock>t11 3 Br, 2 &. i:io 4001 BIRCH, NB L.aguna Beach Pearl, 67>-0158. :.1000, 2©J .. 1600 st?· rt . or ron,. I 00. lhl'l't'Of. ,\va1l. 10 1 'i:l. LA.G UN;\ ~lat"' UVini.: on Ll'f'T'LE Balboe. I~lani.-1 · 3 Br ~rr. l~unii:ardncr. :J.11·;ill32. acres o{ maJntained rurn. duplex avn1l 81tl thrn gardens. Pool &. spa.. Oc:c11n 9/3 $200 .... 'le. 61;>-5612. l\1~1 CORNER. 127' M 19th viev..•11, CIOIC 10 beach & 25' •TOUSE Trailer, I hlk St hy 90' 991 \\I, 191.h St., Cl\! n;o. 642-J.a90 shopping. Lgc. 2 BR., 2 bn. fron1 Doheny Beach. Adults, apt. w/IUT'le.nlti~. $3SO Mo., S25. \lt't!t>k. m.6888. Re ntal• W1nttd~ 460 p1111.ially furn ., Incl. utn. V1cation Rentals 425 ~lature adults. 49-J...."'653 or ----------)'OW' broker . COND. for leaSl': 2 BO l l\fl , pool, l1('W carp. m J)f'lll, mature aduJl!J, So. LAi\lnll $260, "9\.-0076 CONDO !or lt>n!il', 2 RR. l Ba . pool, rww c:ir-pct, m pell, mature adults. SO. lAgUJUa, $'2ll0. 4''-0079. e BALBOA S.-..eh Ai>t .. Sips R, $80/Wk & up Qr Yt-11rly $1T.ilmo. 67:1""'5R10; ,16--0R2;. Renta ls to Shire 430 \\'ANT!'.:O, Rtrl 10 11Mre Beh. apl., ti:m1 Q~· s1oa1rno cttl1 Jorly. 53IHlJt>5 olr's. • NEED 1 BOR. APT. IN CdM I re!rpon . adult mfllt> ~1$ 11. n1f(l-lr11; 1 bd. 11nfurn 11p1 in Con:1n:i 1Jr>I )fii.r, f>1.,·f1>r llllr<l~{' unit nrrplaf'('. $170· J)lj 1no. pt'f'f••r l+'!IM' Xlnt r1•f<1 NN"d ~· St-pl. 1. PJ'I. \l1kt', ~~lt177 lifl 6. • Trader's Paradise lines \l'hl.'n you 1·aJJ "l\lac" i)()n f\()JI (1•n1,·r 1. Our pN'~- , 54.~-l .W•l l'vr~. ""t l)OOnl' ~ki-2l lS 1\1U I~ -.--PAI NTING_*_ :in.~1~enns.; t·aH:o;. \\t· i'ftn ~ . . ;1pphcanrs at 11:30 .\t•lfXIMY 11 _ p.i~ ti) rail P";f~~i;1unal• niornin". \\'1>'rf.' 1'1'11.dv for I ~·•r h'1'r •·~t 646-J!i,~. Y(7t1: Ila\'{' all kinds o't fllll· f'l\liF p:un!1•r, hf>n•'\l 11urk, ta~tlc ()pcnirljt ... : ro·n~ 1111 t>>.f, f1,'t• 1·~r.1t11 l.itul'l'l·ft11fh K:U"t'n & Lori ti mes I n •. ,, '"·2T>!!. 642-3'11. T .,. I) .~ J Po lnllng ~-fr .. •, Th<' _ i;;r J PC'nmnality P:rlnli'rs 11 /th1.• dollars Pmon" To"'h 64'1-,.;.-;; £• 9>, 11~\VE $17,000 T.O. plus other Cholte cqul11r11. \\Mt t.-ond u~ mobile hoinc lo n1nvr m n.nrh. Davi& Rf!al1or ll\J.lll60 \\'"-''1T '69, '70 1Jr 'il \'\\' Van or ramper, i·ll'an. \\'1U tr'l '6') Hulrk Sl\)lark. ~ny \pl'?('f)rrl .. tioy'11.....br1nn tum,, ' 11n. Bokha.ra ii.11:1, " ~tt;.~ J t.:X'r INT. Pluntu11i. R .. a~ "'-1 , (J1111!11y 11ork. P. r t '.,. °'121 \\'1"SltTly Plai."e. _ m-0160 or 61;,.;;r,o Su111· 115. N11l'1 , Bch 15 f t. S&Ih~ \'Ull1•r, 1dc•nl BU\' \\',P. & jitet hAnit lng A A A A A A A ~1J & 111" aboortl. JWaut. 11"1ntraC1 In l hom" call. Thto HELEN HAYES 1Na, S'.R,l)'X) \'11! l'"•ir TD, llt1nRrnrn 547-5846 h~:ir. t)JW'l'reci "-ntv.· office! 1 ! molnt' harr'!r, """1T1tlt0n, or PAINTING. !;;iJExl 3,j .)T'!I. Tl'tnr,,:.ntry & ~111 " 6 J\,\I &1.il-411..'ll C"</I. IK'out "·'Orie:, Rf'f1st>n° t'ill't"l"'N , , .f.7ngtneert~. I l..ikc to trarlr~ f)u r Trflll~r·!I ablr "42-87'Ji 11.'lk·for N01·111 ~IC'd\ral ... l..tk'!l. Contro l'1111ul15<' ('(lh.11~111 IA lur yotJ" You don't fl('f'(! a 11;un In rs..l'l:"f'r Employru.-nl AW'n- 5 lint-< "Draw 1-"Mt" ,,.•hen )'OU l"J'. 3-~ ln1111' Rlvd., Suitf' 5 d1Q·~ pli.l'e an ad In UU.' D.11ly lmR. Nl'°"'J)llrt Bch. for 5 burks. 1'1lot W&nt Am! Call now A ttlOd ""ant ad "' it good l"i ------------------&12'-MTS. \-ntment. • I ' I . . ' • 77 2a OAICY PILOT Tuesday, Jul~ 14, 1973 lrlll l;. .. l'.o· ..... ·-~lrlll~Jl, ~I ~~-iii. ·~· ~fill;;• f~~[o .... ~,·-~l[i]];J/. ;;;-I ;;;;"-"";;;;''"-";;.;.' .;..'ITT1..;.• ~I;;;;;;_"'"";;'-;;' --_;;lllll I ~'"'"" ... · l[i]] Help W•nlod, M & F 710 Help Wentod, M&F 710Halp Wonted, M&F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 71~ Help Wonted, M&F 110 Help Wenltd, M & F 710 I Help Wonted, Ml.r"710Help Wonted, MI F 711 Help Wonted, MI F 710 [ Ifill !~-· ····-1~mJ I faflci11M111t ACCOUNTIN1,.; NCR OPERATOR The lt'\•lrlf' Cn1np.1nv r1<·l'dS f'Xpt'r. f\('Jt.::r+j 11p1 t'fl!t>t for A'1l &· :\ I• 'A'hu 1•;m tyfl(' SOv,·p1u. !'.u!IU! ful'nlal Clillt'!I· tion ln ,.,,,.,..,u11t111i,: \1·1\uld IM• d t" ~ 1 r ;'l /J ! t' t.:xf'\'!krit benef1t:t. <.;nn ~I"'°' f~~lt•"' bctll't'!'/\ 9 ,r,, 12 644-3389 f''.:quaJ 011~"-·11. E1npln)'('r ACCOlJi\ TIN!; C11 1·k. Jo:;::-t gTO'A'i rlg N11!'I. -~ n 11 b•1H l n1anuf. hinns,: a1'eti;:, C'lrrk for hcnd otliC<' ln Cost;. l\1e~a. Al'i 'I§. 1·cr. rll'rk niu.~I he1·1• 2 yr~ 11k1)r. & 10 f,;:('y ,(. I) f1£' ~~/ 11•11111. For ln fu rnll 612--0.j·12 .Equal Opply En1plo.v•·r ~CCOUNTING CLERtC :: yeiu'll nun. cat.I a{'MuntlnK - t"XJI. r.-q . 111 srruid;µ·d & )ob cost. Tyr>ini,: rNJ. Co111ar1 Joon ~l:ltUly lil 11 616-2191. ATTENTION Huntington Beach Fountain Vatlty Costa Mela Irvine t:'alJOhaBT.-Ch'-- Newport Beac:h MEN Don't miss this opportunity! 50 TRAINEES \Ve hope that 50 ~ood trainees \\1ill an· s\ver this nd to fit good position. ll doesn't 0·1att~r \\hat your past \vork ha~ been if you c.:an qualify. 1\1/ 11 c ask 1."i that you \\'ill be \Yilling to !<.ludy and e<1rn as you \\'ill be taught our "·ork. \'ou '''ill be selected throu ~h a 8 ,\BVSITit:R for $;iris 1~ 1' 8. Car nc:-1..-cssary. ~ llf· ternnons per \dt nrr~. rff!'d. Garden Gr o v r . 1!9-Hll92. HABYSlTTER .,...ith ca r , ~'VPn yr old boy, bf'flch 111't·11. C11ll 673-212'.l, 675--6570 -V\t(~'k.nds.--- BABYSITTER. ·"'On1an, 1ny holne, J day~ "'eckly. INine. Call ;,:11-33:~ P.ABYSl'rfER in n1y hoinr f0r 1 )'r old 1:1rl, 6 hrl'. n <l<ty f<>r 1eacl11ng n101hl'r. :,.·,;-;-iG.18 :\IAS'l-;-l':R-B~.~,k-f'-,-.-.,,-,-,-,-. -,.,-.q. fo1· \.\'Cll r~lab. Lag. Bch. Bnkc•ry. Perrn. po~. <'XC<'ll. sill. PhonP 494-9210. Balboa Boy Club I\\ ,\JT~:T{S -Only 11·1'11 r:-,. P•'rt1•nc1•rl llf'Cd a 11 11 1 y . ;u111urt 2.).40 yrs. "ld. Srl' fll.'rSQnlW'l ~1~·. l?'ll \\', CIRCULATION TRAINEE MALE OR FEMALE The Daily l'ilot has Jn opening in the circu· lation de1>artment for a begin ner to manage a sn1 all dislrict of boys and girls, delivering, collecting and sell ing ne\vspa pers. Full time, permanent positions with regular raises and full fringes including personal use of com· pany auto .. s\pply in person to Milan Leavitt. Daily t1ilot, 330 \Vest Bay Street, Cos ta lttesa. EXECUTIVE SECRETARY EXPERIENCED Type, Steno, Dictation Call Helen Shinmac:hi (7141 556-8110 Ricoh Electronics, Inc. 17482 Pullman StrMt Irvine, Calif. 92705 Halp Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710 MANAGER TRAINEES ASSNT MANAGERS Apply alter I Pl\1 Kentucky frl•d Chicken G93 S. Coft~ Hwy , Laguna 29'29 l'.:. Cs!. llv:y, Cd:-01 MANAGER TRAINEE Outsfnndlng opportunity to advancr to nUU1agertal posl· tion in 30-60 days. Our cur· t'f'nt 11111 11 age r!I ean1 SIOOG-$1500 n10. ~lust have dirttt sule~ experience. C11d1Ht1•' Cu1it1'0ls ,\ un11 of ~:."i-1..'t"ll·O ('01·p .. 18(,ti \\l11tl1t•1·. C:\1. Equnl • opportu1111y rrnp[(lyrr. ! A CCURATE ty111st/hkkpg thru quarter1.v l'f'por!~/rhi:'I. mach. Exp. Nfl1 Ctr. Scie ntific Unbiased Aptitude Test \\'h1ch \.rill tell yn u \\'hether you possess Ct'iii ~t !f,1.)', Ne11·por1 Hc11rh. [1!!'~~~11!11 Balboa Bay Club Hu,l,uys _ Suinc C>.j)\'rlt'llCT' Help Wanted, M & F 710 -General Office $550 Help W•nted, M & F 710 Fct• Pai<I Also rec Job~ \\'es1elilf c,11 !\tr. Newn1an 979--5222 l\1AN,\GER Trainee, matu~. over 21. \Vould I I k e restaurant exper , but w!U 1 rain. \\'ill have to undergo a ~hor1 training period. Prefrr so~ college, Apply }lamburgcr Han1let, l~ Adan1s, C.l\I. Ask ror ~1r. ilagan. beh\'een 2: 30-4: 30 1f p.ni. MARKET BASKET \\'rit(', (1a~sifit"r! Ari !120, 0 11.\\y Pilol, P.O. Box l ~i60 Cost11 f.ff'~ii. Calif, 92626 ADMINISTRATIVE I ASSISTANT t.i:the funda1ncotal ability necessary fol' success in our hotne n1aintcna nce elcC· trical industry. 'i ou \\'Jll enjoy tak ing the test; it's frcl'. given on inlervie\v. Our \vork is n ot harrl . \Ve a re not the type of company to stand over a man or \VOlnan and drive them. We do. hO\V· ever expect an hones t day's work for an ho nest day's ea rnings . S150 Per Week 11!•1<1rah!r. SC'<' l)l•rson- 111•1 :\lgr, Jt:.n \v. Coa~T !lwy, NB UANK!Nt; UNION BANK 1f1t.S an upening for a TELLER E:.;prr1rnl'(' dt'sirahle, and CREDIT CLERK Clerk Typist '.\laintain hld & dra11•u1~ fill'S, <'U.~10111<'1' l1s1s, ()Jh1·1· a s· i,;igned clrri<•fll duties. Ar .. c-u1·acy & ncao11..-ss illl)Xll'• 1ant. Eiri::tronics WE'RE ON THE GO! P£•rsonnPl Aii::enry 16,')l ~:. Edini::-cr, S.i\. (;\lark II CPnter' fi.12-883fi l"'""''E trnC'f"\>o..ft\.it:L Has in1m{'(ll1~tc o~nings due '""' r ~~ ~Y tu remoclclpig ni Orange . S£RYK:ES•~~ County are..1: AJtt>r 5 PM By ApJXlintment SERVJO-:: Df.:LJ CLERK Control Engr BSEf'.: to S11K \Ve arc seeking un individual GENER./\L office t~i>ist for \\lestcin Union l\Ja 1 u re Acctng Supervisor to $11K who Is familiar with \\·on1an prefetTC<l. 642.6149. Sec to rontroller to $'r.'i0 prepat'Cd foods, etc. Payroll-Constr to $150 + 2101 L>ove Slrcct Glfo'T \\'cttr Mfi:::'r. Jc11dcd E.'xec S<ocrrtary to $700 F1lESlr. F!Slf ~ERIDN :\1·\vpor1 BPll("h \'ARIAN DAT~ !ltACll~NES g 1 ass - c a nd I es -\.\' ood l..o.'gal trnl' $650+ An expcn E"nccd t1sh pr.r!On EDLER INDUSTRIES ~~--I hrt . ..; SC\"£'rAI 1 mm e<! 1a I e 1)h1n1Prs. Nl't'ds he Ip . Ser/ltE. Legal Jo $650 to (·ut, fill~t, and rlh'iplay COMMERCIAL 011C'n1ngs due IO rapid ex· 979-4638 &>eretariei-;: to $6S(l fish. ~1os1 in1porta.ntly, "-e TELLER 1)11nsion. \Ve are looking !or ·• . . kl I II ,, I ho individuals that \l.'IUlt 10 GIRL fr1d11y, par! fime f':le,.1ro-n1ech. tech. StiOO att sre n.'C nc v111ua s "' A new & «hallenltin~ pos1t1un has bf'cn l't'CatNI 1\·irh a small ~l'in~ R & 0 or· ganit.ntion, to handlC' :lll ad. mini!;lra11vr arMvi!1(')l: of the compnny, rrporong: 10 the p~dent. 15 per written guarantH plus bonu s and cash advances. If you are sincere. clean cut and an1bitious call : }>ll'llSC fl.pp1y ill prrson, 610 \, ,\'1•11 por·1 C1•nlr1· Dr., ,\/('\\'Pl lk·h., Tt't'('!ia \\'a.Uri.~. Experienced Part Time CONSUMER LOAN CLERK Experienced Full Time bt'('Ollll' n p.·1.1·t or tht' ex-a!lcrnoons, ~t thn.t F. Needs Girl Friday to S600 cal' deal directly .,..•ith peo- ru111g con1putcr industry. 50n'e hkkpg .f'xp. Mu.«t hav<' Pur('h/St.'1:/no ST~ to S600 pie. ~\ C> nrc in nC'l'd in th!'.! p~casant voice on phonr. l\1C'(•h. Drartsn1an S¥S Quali{ied applican•~ apply lollo"·ing a1tas: 963-3876. AC'<.'lg Clcrk_s 10 ~ \l/f!d~a'" July :Oth, 9 am The person seh.'\"l('(I will hf' responsible for Pcrsonnt't Administration, Proi.,'1"11111 Planning, ~ng I rost ('()fltrols, input to r(Unpu!cr· ized payroll sya;tctn & ;:.-en· eral aN'OUntini;:. 979-5222 or 979-5469 Call 2-6 pm Tuesday Or 9am ~ 1 pm W.dne5day Applicant sht'!ulct have 3.5 yn;. o! solid exix-1ien..·e 111 .1d· 111\nistraHon v.·ith 11 stroni:: a1·1-ou111in1t b.'tckgmund. 1\ RA or l\1!it\ dCb'TI'l' is des11" ablr. Halp Wanted, M & F 71~ Help Wantad, M & F 710 A~'"''"H~~hes I ASSEMBLY Pll'as1• 51C"nd a h1·1cl ,,.~un1f' 11ith salary 1't't'111i1'l'mCnTs iii roinplC'I(' 1,;in(idt'nr": Newport Beac:h I INSPECTOR Microelectronics DUPLICON CORPORATION A Subsidiary of AB DICK CO. 4321 Bl<ch St. Newport, Beach, CA 92660 Division has immediate requirements for experienced Assemblers :\n EquaJ Oppo11 . En1r1loy"r l.m•;.•;;;•--i;;;;;;,.; 1 e Electromechanical Adm1n1.~tratrve A!';S'! SiOO Assemblers P1T Med. Ins. Sec'y Sl.50 hr. e Microelectronic Draltsrnan !n"K"Ch ) S5.SJ Component Bkkpr Con~tr. to $650 Pr·rl<'l' orrrrs 11 r r n1 n 11 r 11 t i'tnployn1<"111, p;11d v;ll'a\1ons r1Hrr 6 nlon!hs, plus our ll('l'k pnirl tinic off at C'hril1!n111s. con1p;iny pa id lif<'. hospi1a!, ,c;'u r i;:-i c 1\ I 111t"'dir11! 11nd rlf'ntnl hencfits. ~::.:i·i'II\•nl 11· or k i n r.: <'On- rli1i1111s and i;1-owrh fl"l!<'n· 11;11 I /h'11u11·(>~ Ii n1on!h!' ''' ! ~·rar PCll i n~f1Cct1on f'>:Jl'l.'rlf'll<'<'. .\lu~t kMll' ron1pnn1'11f cnlor 1·ode ,'\: hr f/1111\litll' 11 i1 h p1·•nl•'rl 1·11·1·111! bol:11·d 111· 'l""''l(ln ~rl'l11rl/\r•I~. \\'ill u1. ~I'"' I pi· r !l fl p 1i('11 h I(' u~.,.·n1hl~ 1h•1111·111l:!> ,ind Ln· :0/)"1'1 111,;t1·111•11nn!'. Apply 111 : PERTEC Gal Friday SiOO Assemblers Showroom sales sson·. Wltrnason nic Wire I Rect>ptionist. S:,00 BorlaN.s Pa,,rro\1 Ork S!iOO e Photomask I Order [)('sic S.'":ilO Legal ~·y R.F.. to $700 P rocessors I Rl'~l:'\E:"S SY~l-:\1~ l\1arketing Sec'y Sf,()() • Micrc>-Welders I 171 1'2 ,\rn1 ... troni;: A1·r1111<' Acc"g Ork SQj() • Die Mounters s:-u11n .\1111, Cal if. Gen. Ledg(>I' Bkkpr S550 e T.C. Ball Bonders I Jrvu1t" lnrlu~!ri:i! Cun111lt'.\ C.R.T. Operritor. !:q114I Oppr-,1t 1u1ity En1ploycr y,•i ll train $4i:l 01ll'n1nr:" 111·1' "n !hr 1st :111d 111 /r Lab T('('h .. l\IC'Ch. Sf.00 2111! ~hill !<. Thccr pos1!ion~ Keypunch to S:i6j nf!1't• ron 1'>:•·1•1!<"11! f\1\ure Lf'gaJ ~ $650 II ilh R !;!"fl\\'lllh !'\llllnl<'l'('i11] f''inaJ\('P ~1gr Trnr $j2() 1llvisio11 ()[ th r 1!11i::hr~ Sec'y R.E. 1() $600 A1rl"rArt C:o111pany. 11'h('l'<' New acrounts l'lrk S::,00+ top 1\1'~•'"' an!I fl11t.~1a nd1ni;: Tl"llcr trne !O S:,00 fr1t1~(' hr 11 r f 1 ! ~ ;ire Sa!l'!I Se<''y $600 :'l1'fll!;1l)!•'. F'ilr SupPl"\'lsor $500 I Sccrrtaries lo $6j(l P\('n~f' call 1Jl' :,ppl) in I ho Coo I <>~· pt'l'~I\ 10· n use n.~f' , ........ y I . f'!I ! Z \II:\' R 'E or Cons1r. bkgi'd. SWO+ -1.11 :>'li,00~]1 ~~ 1 2.r ASSNT, MANAGER r.1a1un:· /"OIJ[lle IO l\Hllll\I:(' adult ant. oon1pl<'-.; 1 n N<'ll'prirl H<•il('h. i'\o JK'tS or c·hilth'cn. :O,l;1inll'll.1nr" •'\IX'I' r('Quirl"<L /\pl. + ~alar:-•. \\'rile Cla~s1!l"cl All :-:o. r,;7, Dail y Pilot, NJ B.•"I 1.·ni. co ... ia :"Iles;\, Otl 9:lti~'ti. A~:-i~'T hk.kpr .~· f\\1111 tlrsk. I P11.yiull rxp. nee. Conslr. hk:.;111rl 111·1 I. Df11ty job l'J1'1· l:A"1uul OpJX.>l'tunny Emp[Qy('r RAR NIA.ID. Quern Bee, 1562 l\e"-porr Blvd., Costa ~1esa 6·'6-9!1'.5. BEAUTICIAN ""'4111ed for salon located in So. Coast J 'la1.11, ron1mi~ion & Jsal11.ry l,'uarantced. Paid l'acation. Call j.16-7186 BEAl:TY O{ICl"JIO\'. Take Ol'f'r clien1l'lt-in bu)o/ salon. l\1ghf'SI f'11!1ling.~. ~. llun!inglon Bc'ach BOAT MECHANIC ru1d RIGGER Lxpcrlcocr nee. (},1·n tools. Phone • &15-3880 BOOKKEEPER Lue or hf'a\'Y fur bookkerp- 1ng offict•. Exp('r. in puh!ic ac1oonting prefem.•ci_ Salary upcn. Call: \\ C'5te111 Business Ser\'io..-e.~ loc, ~.t \\'. 19th Sr.. Cost:\ ~lrsa. 612.{)21~ Bookkeeper FN· paid. l\iust hil\'f' flt'n\'y A/P & p11yro!I rxperien1..x-. t:e11C'r;il le1!c:C"r thru trial l~<l11rn:·f'. GN'at bcllt'fi!s. ~Ill !'! $G.'"-0. Also !Ct' jQIY.;:. C:ill Sally Ila.rt, J.ID-60.-•.\ ('r,;is! PC'rsonn('l !\~ency, 27!10 HnrllOr' Bll'd .. c;..1, J';t.;:-Bo'I· over 21, expc-r. pl'C'f'd but 1\ill train, \\'ould l\kr lo hal"e so1ne food krl01vlerlge .... llrs to b (' scheduled. Sa la r y com. 111rnsurott> 1\·/cxpe1·. \\'ill lake Spa.ni~h ot• AmC'r. spe11.king. Apply in pc~n. llan1hurger llamlc1. l:l-\j Ada.in,.; ,\1·, • ., C.~1. ,\sk for ;\Jr. ll~a:;~o="~'~~~~-- CL ER I CAL ASSISTANT n:;~"~;~>;;1~ r,1::: I 'ltlJGHES I 1n14, b1llillJ;. P1{', SjOO ino. ,rnr1 . ; .. 1~-~ .. '111 Per~!~~~!ncy 1 833 Dov•r Or., N.B. I 642-3170 Pcrt<'c off<'rs pennruW'ni em· 1----------1 ployn1cnt. paid vocations AIRCRAFT 1ATTENTION MEN '"" 6 ""'"th•, ''"' .,,., l tu11ii11i;:1011 lka1·h \\'~k paid tirnc orr at 01rist· COMPANY ~·oun«aln Vall•y n1as, ron1pruiy pa"id life, hos. I "''!""''""""!~ .... -!"'-"' SOO Surworior Avenue C:osl:1 ~l.:>~a pi!al, sur~1ca2 nll'<fl1cal r'i n<I APT. i\IANAGER 111 Gan:!Pll .--li..,·inr 1lrntal bl'.·nC'ul~. .:xce rnt c;ro\'c. No. e,-:p. tX'q 'd. Cati Newport Beach, Calif. I r.io::in'la Ue:iC'h 11v1rkini; rond1t10ns a11d aft 3 pn1., 5'13-28.'i~. ~~{jllld (1ppo11Ulllt) ~1 r :'\f'll"JlOl'I llt'ac·h !'.;IU\\llh potential. l'n1ph,1yr1· 1~ 1 r ARCilTTF.CTL"R.\I. ~ i r t11 ,. ... .., ...... "" ... iiiiiiiiiiii• ,.,rJ"! rnl~!li r 1 i. opporrunny: """'I~ ti•' fl 1'1ld1\ h 1 f' nr:-, , I SO TRAINEES n1in!str>1!ive a~~1sran1. X'lni 1 ,\~~"111111Y 1 \\" 1iuP,. rh111 .-"1 p,o'lflrl 1yp~~1. j;,'00'] 111<1nRgrtj1•'l11 l BECOME A 1 1r;1in1•r~ 1ri!1 an~11<'r this arl 1n1nl \11cs. 11'f'\I gi'••.1n11·'fl: 1'1 lit ;.:•.id Jl'l~ilfon~. !1 11·arni personality. :--111.'lr) I 1lo,.,~1\"! n1.~11r>r what vour ~1.",';,,·,_,'',',',.','.1£:. :>·11~2910.Af!t'r 1 VARIAN 1u1~1 11 rr1·k h:1~ 1~'•'!1 ii' ~011 " I ('1111 flll1ll1fy. 1\H I\"(' :'l~k I.~ PA,R~"o'111"0'' UCTION I ASSEMBLER ~\1:11:1yy:~::r11'1.~1.~,.:7n~\'~~\'i'~1.11~ ht' 1.111,i::hr (1111· 1101k. Yn11 11 rl! ho,• .~o>ll'ctl'rl thl'(JUbh a TESTER I VARIAN :".::;~::::;; \\ii! prrfntm a vai1e1y ol 1'lrriral dulif'S inelucting typ- ing \'arious rt'po!1S r111d n1nin1ainin~ drpa.rtn1rn1 fill'S and rc1·01'd.~. 1\ n1ajor por. nun of 1hr li1ne 1~iH b,, ""fl\'nt nn data p1'0l'CSSU'lb inpul and ou1put. f{N]uirr~ excellent l"l<'l'l(':t! "XPf'l'i1~11ct'. Apply "l' conrnct: T. l\n1gh1 (il·fl ~/\.'HQ PERT EC A1111t111lf' T"1 Perle(· offrrs p" r 111 ii n r n 1 I DA TA \ \\ h\rh 11111 !C'll )-flll 11·hrther BUSl~"'ESS SYSTE!\I:\ t'mployml'nt. p.:1111 1•a1·~11on~ I MACHINES I ~·ou 1xisi;i•s!t the fundan~cntnl 17112 Anrrstrong Ai·cnuc after 6 monlh~. plu~ on(' .1h1hty ll('!'CS.~llT)' for i;ur· Santa 1\n;"\. C'\1\1. 11·erk flll ld lunf' of! at Jo; h11·1r1~ P!t'<'l1'C)-nl•'~·h:unr.1I ,·c• ... s in 11ur l101n1c n1ain-an ('(fu:ll oppoiiunily Ch1·1~tmas, ('fln1pany pi\UI I :1~•f'n1bl<'n; f{'lr \,1 .!;,; 2nd trnnt1C"" rl••t•lriral in1!uslry. ('1ll!iloypr ni f life. ho~p1l:l!, ~ 11 r ~I l· t1 I .,tuJJs. Rcq11u·1•t 1~ a You 11•111 rruoy li1k i111? lh•' CLJ:::Rf~S mrd1c-11l 11nrl rll'n!11l lll'l'lt•rn~. n1111i11u1n1 11f 1; n1011th~ !rst: !l's fr'C'f', ,::l\•f'n on 111· Exrellcnt 1v o r kin & 1·on· l<'ltt1f'rl <'\l'l<'l"if'no·r in onr or fl'r\'1c11'. Our 11·ork 1~ nnr MARKET BASKET rl1tio11< nnrl J:l'<l\\'lh potrn· 1 th" l11lh111ull{ ar•';1~. Coln· I hf1rd. \\r .ire not !h<' t.l'Jl(' ol . . . !liil. 1•~11.•111 fll""I) ,oldrrul~ .~· 1 •'flllll'an\· ro ~t 1tnll 1\1('r ,, H;\1·" u11111Nhn.te opr111n<,:~ tnin11·difll<' or'f'n1ni;: for "'· a~'<·11ll1h nf Pc~ f{r'l;ird• 1111~11 (Ir' 11·1u111u1 an1t 1!ri1·1• ' dur to rcn1orJelini:: in fht" rltv1d11;il ro lrq ~1n1t 111<.p1•1 t I 1\l~t1 hlr1n1.: In ';1bh11~ ,c;,, I th-•111 \\ r t~'· ll(l11·r1·r r, "r-.;. (lril_r1~" County <rrf'a for rx· rle{·l111nl1~ ron1ron<"n1.~. Ill• 1'1rr 11r,op I pr,·~ :in hnrn''11 ll:iy·~ 11'0l'k fll.·r1rn.-rrl: 'l'">.>l•>"I •, nl,'< 1€'•1 \I 111 111' f11t' ;111 h1>l1f'•( rlU) ';, l'hl'tl• • ,,. e J · • • (;l'(lt·.-:~· Clrl'k$ fl".'lirlf!d tO ()j)l'l'ltlf' l'Ot!'IHI°' 01n (I grow1n9 11\~1'· /"]1'('1mn1c 1l•,1 r11u1nn1•·n1 ] $1 SO Per Week e P1'0!'tUrl' C!rr~~ H(•quirrs l~fll,11 1 d1':0.h'ri1~ .... company I a .. p.·r 111'\ltt•n i::1.1:1ren1c.· Rhllily to ler1.r11 i1uu:kly. A!)· plu~ ho1111 ~ :ind • .i~h nil· • 1.l111ior ClC'l'ks ply al' I • Excellent em· I \.int·p~ H \'Ill /Ir(' ~lll('l'l"I", • P1u1 thtlt' C111?ekrrt PERT EC 1 ]i>.111 °\Ut 'a1vl an1li1l1ous ploye benefits ,·all· ln!rn·irw!< 1\ill hr \\l('cl· 838·5267 nrscl.1~, July 2.'ith. 9 n111 1Jin1 BUSJNES." . ..:r::;Tl·.:.r.- 1711 2 Arn1.~11~v1~ 1\vrn11" Irv1nt' lntllL~lr111I ((lmpl"' I •Immediate MON 9 AM·1:30 PM 4 pn1. 1\11 i'f(tinl t1ppn!'lun1ty l'mpln)•'r -' openings AUTO PARTS C<H ''\ 11-:H .\1 1\\ ASSEMBLERS I URGENTLY NEEDE D Rc~~l<:r to.11t~, v.~rk 1.111111r.1 ro11 1 1 •·,.,,," ,\flp!\• lu Pl"1·'1(11\ -1r Cflf11·11 1 R 1,r.1n; 1 VD-M 1 l',•l I~ 1h·1•I ('\pt"Tif'~'I" rr I 111111. 1! ~·('rrt f'\fldn.~11rt' f'rt""f1'11'<~/ IMll 001 lli"'f'C..~r)' 1 '"•II 1;.,1. ..:1r·\\ll1i tor inrer· 1"" 1o11.1w11n "'r II THEODORE ROBINS NO r1·:E f:\'F.n TOPS IN TJo:~ll'Olt,\ltlr .. ..: : 1n2 Michelson Or. FORD Irvine, California .~•~1 H11.rl-·r Bl\'d., I 833-2400, ext. 336 I --_(··"''-''"~:'! -I 1 AVON SAYS I •~1u:it Op1"1• F:n1pl••)'f't l "S. Your Own Boss" ...... ---... ---~-~,· i f;arn ~n inrnmf' or )"'QUI' 01vn. QUICK CASH rii;:ht in \h\\ll' """' m"li:hllflr. ho'"''· Hr ;111 A \'n.'<J rt.,,,,... THROUGH A "''11rnt11'1". C11!1 now· !'"rk).7041. Hum11n Hr-ourt'l"!'i J)t~1·••l11p111rnt Of11t·f'- ZSJ,j Sn nn~1{11 :'fln1a 1\Jl l 21.J: r,,;;,,;..;·(l() ~:q1111l Opr1ort11n1t\ ~~1Y1J1loy•'~ Clf'tir:1l TYPISTS & CLERKS \\'i> ne4-d I y fl 1 It I s 45 .,..·11m +. ('lerk.t \\11h gtln(j F.ngl/~1 ,(: f.tarh. Apply In Th" Pt-r~nncl Drpt. ~fon lhru Fri 9 3n1~17 nOOn UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK 309 Main Street Huntington Beach 536-8811 Equal Opport11n\1 y ~:u1ploy1 ·r C0i\1PANION for s1·ini in· valid lacly. Room, boal'fl & son1c .~alary. No. LHb'Un.:& &~1 arc.1. ·1!17-10:'.0. COOK • f.1u st h<' ovrr 21. \\'ai;:rs nrcording io f'.'(P£'1'. Apply in Jl('rson. Hamburger 1!11n1le1. l~I~ Adan1s A\·e .. Costa ~ll'sa. Ask for l\lr. l!ainin. • Secretaries lfELP waoted mature adult. Rt>cepl/Typist S5SO thni I pnl JanitoriaJ serviet:!, Naugles Kl'ypunch/CRT S475 · D · h 2 Girl Fh. AIA to $800 11uman ReSOUJ"tt>.t Typing 60, S/H Ill. At le.a.st nvc 1 rn ,l40l Brookhursl CALL TRISH HOPKINS Devetoprnent Office 3-5 yrs. prt>vious e:x· HB. Apply 111 Pl'I"!IOn. JI::RRJ \VlUTTEl\10RE ,,,,..~So ·~ pericnCT'. llousckef'per ·cook, tlfature, .iss E. 17th St. (at I.n>inei C~1 ~ ~~;"" cxptt., li\'c-in. 4 children. Suite 224 642·1470 714: 5-\9-3282 • Clerk· Typist 1'11 si::noot age. 4:". priv. nn. ,. •• ,. -.;-,.,·at Oppan.unity Empl-• Typing fiO v.·ith a knov.•ledl'.:e TV in n£'1\' honie. Dov<'r II\« '1f..... ,....,_ "11 ~~="::,,;=,=="'-==~··=·1 ,,( fihng systc-ms & an 111. Sho!''1!_ $-~ per n10. Ref Medical Recept. l<'r('st u1 !c1un1nl'.: a pubhca-f>.1'2.56()4 I JAN!TRESS.~1oor 1\'a x c r , Busr 111cdical group needs !Jons <lt·11L oper11.1ion llOUSEJ.:I::EPER & ('f)(•k. preS<.•nrl.v part lime, going in<lh·idual \1'it.h j?l)Od. pho_ne S70. per 11·k. 12 111),Jn to !I full tin1<'. Clll a r ra. pC"r . .;u11ah1y. t-;o n1ed1caJ in· •Jr. Tech Illustrator pn1. f.lon-f'ri. Newport Bch TI4:52:\.-.J'..1136. su1·a1x·~ cxp('ri£'11Cf' tll?eded. a.l'l'a. Day• 2131'"" ooa, -Grra1 hcnefits. ineludi.ng .>.N-<>OUU JOE'S \Vindow Cleaning . ,._, ask for M r!\. Payne. Aft 6 Residential & Business. p1·otil shar1nl!. ,')(Uary to Pa!:tr·up or n1anuals. ~implc pin, l:il2-7292. ~ $500. Cati SaJ!y Hart, k I. d · & 1 54!)...6()55, Co..'1.stal Pcr!!Onnnel 1n · 1ne raw1ngs 1ave HOUSEKEEPER-non live-in JUNIOR SALESMAN: Agency, 2790 llilrbor Blvd., operated "STAT" can1era. approx 3 1o 4 hl's per day'. Earn S20-S40 per ,veek. 1 C,\I • Sh• , & Corona <lei Mar area. ~lust ,. 11 "-' d ---------' 1 1pp1ng n11.1ke lunch. fl.Ir. Osmond, \.\"OI' ing a er scnuv1 an f.10111ER 'S h~Jptr in new R • • Cl rk 1714) :>21-2703 on Saturdays gelling ne1v Jr\ine ho1ne 3 to 4 dayg ~ eCelVIR9 e . lfOUSEKEEPE, R lo"'-<o•· custon1er:s for the Daily "'k: 9 to 4. :>51-15U. '' 1 1 c 1 f ..... ._ Pilot. This ls not a pnper , . , u~t i_ave .a CUIT'('ll ~I. hon1e and 2 sn1all children. ruute and docs not includC' NE\\ . n1!~ business need!'i COlil\'TER 11t11n::u1. Fosrl'r <lr!ver s l1crnsl'. Prf'v1ous J8 inos. & 4 yrs. 5 Da\'s 11 d liveri s or rollccting. \.\·ork1n~ foreman to !'let up · Freeze. ,\pply 899 \\lest 19th .~htp/rC'c. <' x PP r i r n c e ii·k. Oli·n !rans. 1'ul1lc Rock ~ _e . . . -~ O/lt'rate -tr a c i n ii SL. Co~ta ~le"1!. hrlpful. 1IN'1'. 8.l1-35li \\c hai·<' openings 111 ,cosHi n'nchines for nf'1v product CPLE lo 1nan 12 un. at ii3 I ''lesa :uicJ Soul.It lfunungioi,1 p1't>ih11·tio11 lint'. Salary open. WE OFFER: HOUSEWIFE PT TIME J{(',ach only. Apply 1101v. + pro"I ,1,.~"g, c·•1 \\'. \\'i[son. C~t. lovrly 2 BP.. !lr6ll !l&Jl u .... '" "" unfurn. C"xchnL:" SC'l'\'irc:<.. • Competitive s:io. re:. i1·C<"k n1 ln._ counsel. . .. . 540-52n) for app1. \\"rite SloalA'\J~I ll!Yl Eiisr 111'= hiules tn he. i-lO P~l. NO\V going through planned C11apman, Orange. pay tl1on lhn1 Thurs. + Sat KEYPUNCH OPTS expansion. N(i..-d iz..15 yrs. · e M d f .1. . days;. l\lu!'il . bl· o\'f'I' 21 . s, 1. , h b. 1 DF:LTVE'RY or D" r I.'' I 0 ern ac1 1t1es ~n1h1llous. No ('-.;p ll<'l'; _For ~~~;N. ;,i;;;.:"zsr,o_ ea __ 1 n e PILOT. SUNDA'r" ONLY TO e Exe:' ellent !"1.ri:\\"· c1tll l\lrs. t rink. URGENTLY NEEDED NE\VSPAPER CAHRJF::ns ,,.1&-a74.1 129 expe.rient-e. 1----------•I IN SAN CI. F~ i\I t: :-J TC benefits II Y 0 !{AUL I C n111chtnc i\LL SH!}!S NURSES R('g'istC'r Jl){!ay, AHEA. l\1UST LIV}'; J;.J 3!'SCmbl('r 11.hlr lo rc11d iiurk IOlnOrroll'. AREA, REQUTRL'\ USF. Pleas<' Apply hydraulic sf·heniatics, b<>n<I· TOPS JN TEhlPORARIJ:::S RNs, LVNs I AIDEt or STATION \\./\GON or.. In Person I flat'(' hyorolic lubini;:. l\il1st KO F~:E I<,:\'E:R llosp1tal Staff Rell~r \' i\ N AND VAL TO Or Contact: J. Fu!ll'r have o"·n tools. Ask for l~:"."----'----.1 \l.ork Th(' lJ<1y.~ & Shif!..t J)JllVERS LICE.NSF.. CON· \i('rh l)ubl'. lil•U 5::.6-...'<{130 t You l'reh·r. Good Pay. T.\CT l-IARH.Y SEL1 ,E'i', y D M 1 .f:..~..J '\o l'"C"es OL' Rebates.. :'..10 \\'. BAY ST., COST,\ vm 11Ghr..t Dr. f.tESA OR PHONI:: 4~'2..r.HZQ INSURANCE SALES .-f-:. "*• W.1191 1~0~~.n~~~·~~~~~~S~A. ., 642--1321 .... 1 .. ~Man-:.... ___ _, I 547-6611 DLLIVF.R\' man for e~rly 2722 Michelson Dr. Nu exp 11('<'., t""':t111 11·hilD :,.'Ou n1orning L,A. Timf's hori1c> lerirn, pa1t tirne. r\'('S & """""""""""""""""""" r\u1'8Cs dr!ivery route. O\•cr 21 Irvin•, California ,1·knd.<t, full rii11e 1rhcn quali·\ I RN.LVN-AIDE years old. n1usi ha v r 831-2400, ext. 336 fierl. \ KEYPUNCH 11·7 & other !"hifts. Top pvt et."Omi~.d car. 110 sulicif\11~. r·an11ers Insurance Group rluty pay. Jnimed. pay for no rollC'CILng. \\'eslln1ns1er "':E~q~"~'li"';!O~p~po~'\'·~E~.,~m~p~[o~)'~";:;;"i~~E~r~l ~L~o"~' ~·~5""~1~53~4~~ SWING SHIFT rloor duty. County wid e & Garrlen Grove a r·ea. Ciill t: rnnv.\·s. ?l!on-Fri 9.5, 638-2924 E r.1 PL 0 Y i\t ENT op-tNSUHAl\'CF. SF.C'l".Fire & 6 f.lo's aC'tual \.\'Ork exper. Ll'scoohc :-.JursC"S Rqistry, DELIVERY. 5 days, niorn-por~uni!ic~ fol' men \1'ith rx-c11~11aHy. Sniall congl'nlnl on keypunch, keytape or key ~1 'll0i<;pl\al Rd., l\'B ([.ob. in~ paJ)f'r rou1 ('. l\'C\\'POrl pt•rience in: off1('('. Ph: 6Ta--0562. disc device. by Park Lt<lo BI d g) ilt'a<'h. ~i:'.»-7:30 A~l. Sl·l6 e fiberg-lasso\·erlays 1,1, F' T Apply In The 6~?9'.}a:> SJG.9!r4 e Ch<li•I"" gun ""T .OTA E opening for PersonnC'l Depart111ent --· · · .> • JX'I' 1110. Pre!. nlru1il'd n1.m 1·1~· d 1 · 1 -· •"•m•·-,,,·.g 1 · .,.~ar fl pnva e coon .. " l\Ionday·F"ri. 9 am-12 Noo"' NURSJ-:R\• School 'reacher y,·/eron. ear. 979-Dl6 '-" " " I J ;..1 •·-17 I " e ;\hirinC' painting & fini~hing tu>. ' ust ...... or oder. PA'CIFIC MUTUAL for F:lll. H.B. area.. tltature, 0 F~ NT AL 1· e c eplionis1. e Ri~nc: .~. hrd,iT instaU. C6•111111~A01o1 r app't f.1on-Fri, 700 Ncii'port Center OJ'. responsibl_<'~ exper. M~at Orthodonlic P ra ct i c" . Apply \\'illiard Boat,1·orks. · .,.....,., Nev.·poii Beach ha''': <'er11f1e11.t~. Call for l1J. outs1n11dini;:-Of)pt'lrtunity lor 1300 Logan Ave .. Cl\[. 1•••••••••-======:! 1erv1ew, 548-25:;1). qufllihl'fi person. To S700. I ~=~=--~~--c-,. Send resume 10 Cias.~H1l-<t Employment Counselor I NURSES /\idl'.'s. experienced Ad No. 001. Daily Pilot \\'ill l•·~un sal<'~ Ol'ienter! nspectors. KEYPUNCH prele~l'rl. 7-3 &: 11-7 shift.. lntcr .'IC\1-'S OCt. 10-12. Hun· P.O. Box l!"J60. Cos!a :\lc~il. per,.....,n . :\l,1th';\t\on lo lf'al'n Top SS$ llnglon Bf'Jteh ConvaJesceJ'JI Ca. 92626, Reph<'S s-tricll.v 11'/high earnin~6. Cnll ~~lly i\11 shiftg available II ·,.,, ff B 18811 Fl ~d confldenli11\ II ' ·~" "0"· c 1 Varian Data Machines I · • " •1~ ospiuu, · · · 0•• a }': 1~. ;:,,,.,...,'I,...,;), ••ntrn rv1ne _ 2 k:>'lir-t'50 s 1., 8·17-3515 DENTAL Assi!lt. 1 yr. ex· Cn1'C'Pr £·'.11111!oy. Agen1·y. II . I I lrSO Sky Par 1 -.,~,U-R~S-'>_"_S_A~.~,--IV---.- perient:", rull 1huc, rou11. :MOO Irvin(', Alvd. N.B. as 1111niec open ngs on NEVER 1\ FEE AT TE!\'IPO 1~ • .-1 es • t a.re m- lain Valll'y. --EXECUT-IVES Isl & 2nd Shifts Ternpo Tcn1porary Help cr{'as!ng our st11H & need c " I '"""""""""""""""""'"""I cxpen<'nC'ed pC!opl~. A 11 011 :!l-!ll;60 $12,000 to $75,000 1, . . & . KITCl-IEN lll'lpcr. f.lilture shifts. Good l:M•ncfit,; &: Dental Office ~nd 1·('.~11111<' or c:ill TOD.\ Y .'11' 1,'l"ceiving ·. 111 rirocc~s peri<0n, 1 .~1 slllft. i\-ff'.~ri 1v11.ges, Apply at 1 4.4 5 Or1horlon1r-E:xpcricncrd on· IOI' 1·onfltlenl i:il '.'\() CO . ..;T in~pcct?r.~. A nllll. of 2 ;-.i-s S11perlor Ave NB 1_1., Chllirsidc & Jal\. rxi·ruti\r in!t'J'i:icii. C-.;J><'I' IS nrelc1Ted. In rro· Ve.nle Con\'nle!lcenl' O " · · ('CSS CXJX'r. ~llOuld inC'ltUI<' Jlo~pilal. 681 Ccntt'r 'SI., 2 FFICE GIRLS .~12-77?~1-E;>;ECUTl\'E SF:RVlCf:i;. l'abl<'s. circuit board Collin ~lesn, JIS·5J85. Bl\\·n. NEEDED o~~NTAL r.ecf'p!ionist. El I s. ~ ~ \I .1:-:~... A 11ssen1blies, chassi~ & ()01\"('r 9.:: pm. Radio 1elcphone dispatch 1 o1'0 ar('a. 11\l ,.. ha :o:; <' ~ , s.~ • .. a1n, .,.1n1a 1111 <••PPI•"• R' 'e ,, "·," • '>" d 'I "-~ bl dri ,. (il•l1 :)47-962;-i. "·· ~ '' ... ,,. LABOl{ER \.\·ant<'. steady 1¥ ust ""£.J, a e to 11e n1asrrred, ~la1y Opl'n, f'rcs --c=~, I -~lll'<"fion riqier. should in-job. Boal buildC'r, cabinet Apply In PcNiOn 0'~'~11~,1~'~'""°'-'-'------EXEC. MANAGERS elude sheet metal parts, maker, 011-n tools. \Voocl YELLOW CAB CO. D ENT 1\ !j As<istant. Ex· Car!'<'r orportunity for 1hc cirruil bo.Brds,. comporX'nts finisher tor motor ho1nes. 186 E. 1611;. Costa tlfrs.a pcrien('('(t, ch .. '1.ir ~1<tr. X· ril!"hl "prop!,~ . orirn1C1'1'' etc. 1v/kno1\·ledge in the use Girl to an.~\.\·cr phoJl{'s & , R n y s. Spani.•h hrlp!ul, •'l'IUJ>lr. 212 unit Jnxury adult of dra"·in~s. vendor some filing & t y p 1 n g . OFf'-SF.T _press operator. fnni::r IX'tl('f1ts. 835-Z"J.113. opts. E>.p, no1 l'('(IU irrd. 5 catalogs, 1nicromt>ll'rs & 5j6.-1280 or 1281 $622. to S1 56. per mo. Send <ki: iit"t'k. Start $1000 JK'I' calipers. n>~unie to Snddlehaek nr::NTAL reccprionist rx· /jEGAL Sec. .)Oung, pal1 Valley Unified sch 0 0 1 (>l"riencrd 3 doy!'I per \\'eek. ~n~.'" Call lllr. l\lcAllistrr. If you n1eet these-qualifies· tin1C", Corp .. l"Xperencnced. Olslliet, 2:1172 La Paz H.d, Call 714: 817-Sj(ll. .t-1.i-ml. lions &. arr looking for R Nev.-po11 Center. 64()-()800, J ... iguna Hills, Calif 92653. DESK CLERK position 'Ai1h a 11:ro"·ing LVN for l\ll'd!cat Reducing Oe:1dline dntl": July 27th. Ni~ht N'l irt. ~-11111r .. 1 ti,1y.~. EXPERIENCED Orange CouHIY co. that of· Clinic, lite 11·ork a nct OHDER d•'Sk clerk. Smell 2 nth'~. ;\los1 hr ~rnhlr, ell'· ASSEMBLERS f1'rs xltJ't PllY & benefits -pl,ensnnt ~uties. ~tust .hf' gas appliance fi1m need !"tt'nriahlr .v nr111 .'lJlP(':trinh· l""lrttse ,\prly ln Pf'rson sh111 & cn3oy 11·ork1ng 11·1th !!h.,rp aggrci;.o;lvc person to ~run.~ horrl. niotf'l C\f"I'. rl"-Needed immediately! Or Contact 1)('011!r. Call .!oyc<' 11. r proccs..~ orrle~ from phone ~ii·NI. ~·:1 1111li111· 11 xcr. VOLT f117-ti3:f.l ____ & nl:i il. $.1i:;. JlC'r mo., ·l:nJ, ~c 11f'r."'J1111e! nv::r. Instant Personnel 8. KRAFKA I --MACHINIST st:i.rtinc:. Please send work Balboa Bay Club T•'111rw11•;ir.v SCL"\'h'(' Xl111 oppo1,u11i1y tor 111111111·ith !~sun1r 10 P.ll Box 957, IZ1l \\·. C'on"I II"')', NE. :{s4~ C1111)Jius Dr .. S11itr 1()3 2722 Michelson Dr all·llt"()Wkl n1achlnt shop .38nla Ana, 92702 DOtl!E:STIC Help Grori::e :-.c11·porr Bt·:ot'h ~1Ht-li·ll Irvine h;+l'k(?round to hand.le 1\·idc PART Un1e office help Allen Bylnnd Ag('ncy, l())...B l·:qu<ll Op1)(>r. En1p!oycr \'nril'ty of 11·ork in 111naH 11•antOO. Gt"nerar o t ti c e r.. 16th St., S.t\. :ll7....0:l~.l 83J..2400, ext 336 shop. La.Ille, mill, surl11ce k11011·!edgt' required. Houn DO-NIIT •,hop _ N,.,1,1-,1,-,.11, EXPER. full tin1c blood f' 1 0 E 1 • l!Z'indcr & .orome progressivf' fle-.;1hle._ CostR ?o.fCM ~a. ."'I •· dra11·f'r. To "·otk in medl<::il .. qua ppor. ~n1r oyer die cxpcri<'l'ICC rtqUirt:-d. Call Phone :,,U}-3280 or 642-0952 10Ptl1-6Atl!. 1ti;:e 2 5-4 ;, • L.ib. :'<111.~1 lie f!rxibl r ,t,. l'lblC' Iii.JI 6~2·SOSO.fo ·~'""'~PP~I~, ~~-~~~-I frn1ale, apply in ~r8'0n, :'<Ir. = I' l''l l' I" h • ~1 lo handle responsibility, IRVINE Unilierl 5c'hool Dis. l\IAIDS \\',\NTED _ J-:xp. nut PART lin~ help tteed~. Ap-.. intrt, " ~· 11 ,..,_, \ ·' """"'I>" I tip! I Pl 11 · 'I 'N Ed •,YI''~ .. ' u · ea!'(' r11 11'111 t101\· nr('ep1ini: npp/l('a· nl'Ci'ssary. ,\pply ;\JOTF,l, 6, rl,v 1n pcrS?r.: _" e 's Dr's Assistant Younc lady fIB 281 to .1Ssist 111 healll1 .~P/I. \\ 111 1r111n, no c>-.;p, n11c. ,\pply in prrson All)' aft or C\'C\ 2'l30 \\'. Co.1.<ct II"'>'·· J'\.H. DRIVER. SCrvlct·tow. f:x.p. not nrec>!M?')'. L\l('; tnf'('h f'Xf). ptcfd, Ptrm, Exec.I AAlary. lJve in Lagunn . l~i rr,y Tfunf J\uto Cf'ritrr, l82J l..agunl\ Ctinyon Rrl. ., h'Jl)OO b11.·1 !).,. 1>111 G-io--01 W, l\lr~ 11nnt for 1'l11ssillcrl positions: 6266 \\'e~tn1instf'r ,\ 11 r , P1l7.n. 410 Jo .. 11th SI.._ C.1'1. Arnisu-.:ino;: \Vl"~tmin!rler. _ -PAYROLL CLER~' Exi"D-Cns1nctic girl for P .E ./School Grounds· 1\-!ALE Donut n1a k er , ;\h\\(.•r Nr11·1l('rt &ach firm h:IHXX"t °'11.i;: Slf'lfi'. 1\I~ man -p/time, 2A1't-6Al'ol. 6 nite,. a srf'k" ,·;,111hd11tr 11·ho ill f/t1n1r rlrrk +;n-~ .. 1i(I. 12 n1nn111,. STI Z.il5 week. Apply in person. ~ rnnili1tr 11·\lh 1111 phAAl'J!, of ~GARDENER * P .E. Equipment M,..-Arl:i.n1!t A1·t .. H.B.. 111e payroll runctionll. F:):· S. your own Boss 1: ninnth~ S.19S-i'27 J\IAN io \\'Ork 1ul1 1\n1r in pcrient,. l\'tlh N)m~tl"T'tzffl Full 11r p !\ul(' in )'\lUl' Utility M•n/ Air Candi· rcntul yard. Ne11.t in ttppr:\r. !)#\)TOI\ ll)~en1 11M;1raWe. Ill I I 11'-lnn -'"'/"''' ho-•·,~ll"g. 11·,·11 '.'\1111 hcnc:-fifl', CRU ?-lrl.. 01111 rtrrti. Rl nc.'•lt1<', .. ,, • .. ,, nuw.-1 .. Guaranteed Customers 12 mootht S644-TI13 1n1.h1. Apply rOOl'Tl•, 1!130 t'lel(tl'r. No C•sh Down Plant Foreman • High Ne .... ·poM Sh.'d .. U\f. 6~~3389 1-~am Now, Pl\)' UtltT School -i\IANAGER. ll'llrm. ftitnc;ll\' • !)('t\1.-ec:n g ~ 12 96'-0812 12 n1onth.<t $ifi&.932 & mature, must bl' exp'd Equrol Oppor1. F.n1plo)·er -=--.,---==--I Utility Man, Gener•I -selling drem>s. liPlli"1·, 10 P~l\'SICAt Th~rw.plst to"r ac· Gardentr-F /time 12 innnth~ S6+1-1S3 run 1 "-oman 01, hall 11.c til•e h1du,.id11t clinic. Salary \Vnntt'fl 5 days prr wttk: De· !lhop. 87()-4i22. &. fr\~" benefits. Send ··~tAkr ni'Yil "'"' Dnddy" , . , clean Otll !ht' t:a.rn,gt> l11r11 lhal junk loto cash wllh a Dally POri; Chtll•lll~ DAILY PILOT "Whl•e ':1'~"""" ""'' n1nn1nl!' your lll)(tf('~ Turr1 WANT AD f/lfln1 fnlo "Ca~h" •.• ql'JI 'l'ou don'I l1('('d a gun to "Or11w r11~1'' Wht'n .)'1'1\l PACIFIC MUTUAL plar P .in :td 111 th,. Or11lv iOO Nto\1·port C'o'rllt•r Dr. Pi.lot \\'.~nl Acll! C,·\ll 00\'' f'('nrl:tblr. i'.'l![)M'. l{IU"d(•twr t\l'flli<'flli(ln Mnns A.mf nr. Var1tneh'!I 1'1111 mnney! R~nl rt!Ulllf' -r .o. 10893, Sant• fr1r \flnd~a.prd ron11nerrt11.I tl\11{.'(1Jobcl('!IC'rlpttons11.va1l -1 \'Our hou~f'. Ant., 11tr.rt> An11, 921!,l fll~\f""'rtio'11 1n X.D. Rf'f.~ 11.blr, Oftirf' of PrrNm11rl hlrlg .. t-l r. thn111. DAily ll\to1 1.lke 10 tl'H"'-~'""'o~,-,~,..~,d~er'-,·I 642-5678 t11rn1 lhru a D.i1ly PllOI <>l11~-1f\M ,.rjt NewP'r! Bf8'rl1 r ................................. _._,_12_-~_~_. ____ _ r«J'd. Cati Mr. Oanit'l11, 9.10 1 SC'r..·i1,,'t~. .is61 ~ll1-hrl50n Ct'dJ$iltrO>Arl Sell idle ltrm111 PRrsdl~ column l<t for )'Olli 11ni fnr tt'llrl'\•icy,·. 6-12·1626. l"!ood, Irvin!" ~. now! Call 642·$78.Now! .• j ltnl!s. S day;, ror 5 bucks. I • ' ' •• ,. • TL1tst1a1 July (4 l'i11 * [ J[ffi Lnplsp• l[Il] I ~,n•• I~!.__ _ ... ...,_ ..... _J[Il]il l[Il]! '--·_-_![§]~I ~-~!~~~ 11 H I W &F 1 0 Help Wanted, M & F 710 ••••••••-,,F_u:cr_n_11_u_r_• _____ a_1_ol,Mi scellaneous • p anted, M 1 Appli4nces 8021· 818 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wtnted, M & F 710 824 ~---------~-----TH.\INEb f11r llr,1111 r\ Sh"ll • ' • SE:\\'ii'\G machine u~r.1tor ... I! 1~el ~ LlrApo 'r' ~l'\11-., Kr::\~hlRt-: au1" 111'h•·r ~·, Vance Severance l-.utK's Spol'l$\\enr ... 1 ... ,r~ I Hil!l Uhn1s \\11 1. Cu1ot.1 \t,,11,,,_ ;01h) 11.i"t~ I' ~11 1 214 Grand Canal ... MACHINISTS *SALESMEN* li'Hltdl f h•~'t•r S l~:, , ,,..,1 ... ,.1 11r.1\\c'" sr. s_,), S':' hl!o·/11 II I ,1, •' ,.., J 1 h.ur"' 11urk k lnp psy. Appl) ·"''°I ~lt>i!o3 . ' \\,r,.,. io>·I" d1-..,·r. ~.•I t1\•1· 11· l "' C"I · Balboa Island \_'.11 :'\•"' 1 ......... 11 ~-•J ~·,,, Top pay & liberal wage proi:ram. Paid health & dental insura~ce. 11 paid holidays a year. Long term security. Roya l Industries, a n1ajor manuracturer or nu- clear !?O.mpo~ent~. is now hiring experienced m~ch1n1sts 1n the follo\ving categories. All shifts. Do .)'ntl takt" ''Snlesnlt'n .,.,·nntrd" ad1 with a 1tnun ol filth': Can't say I bhnnl" you. I iollov.·cd up a few rny~lf In the past. The job srldo1n ll\'ed up to the clalnl in thl' · ~ ..... ·-' · " f"""Y\G n11·n 11 ftnick, , ••fh ol• II\•·!) ~'11,1r '!7-,11·, l•f T1'~C~l~ICL\."I I II\ n Pl 111 ..: llo' \\ ~ IJ , ll, ·1 •\f,....,-,7~ Y«u 11ro• it .. \•lrll.ll. !' t•! Pl-:RT~:C of!C'~ pt'm1ar.;>111 t!.-h\'t'r)', )tore~ & r;i rk'( Hl'll.l -111 r1!!1i.:•· \•If! ~n~ •n111I TWO FREE TICKETS c-n1ployr11cnt, pni·l v;,1i::1!(on !"'57~:.'710 ,•; l•uill 111 P\•·1 1 unit. };u•l •·~ !h•· f,.• ol. .' •'l"I I 1111, • Sl:•. \',inl· 11· ,\'''"I $1~ Tr.aol!t• "" 111-1 n1..1.J~1.. s::i. :'111-..·. t ·-;~ 11 l'..; \Bl.t.'. :•.iJ ~· I• \•W~l\l1d, l \J 'J1J• ·' !l\l"U -..11 Free Organ lessons JiCJ Bore Machinist Profile Machinist ""· W yourS<'lf a fin-or & ,.,.. 11lore !lus Ol1l'. If you'rl l1kl' to n1ak<' $?:.O a \\'Nk i1n· 1nt•1h1tt«ly. \\'Ith nn <'Yt' ro nuit·h 1"Aorl.-' in II~ 1u1un ·. I'd Ilk(' ro talk ro )ou, It :-011r qunhricnrion~ 111111ch 1111r T"('l\U1retnl'nts, thi ... rould he •hr cal't.'Cr you'\'<' bi..'t'.'n looking tor. ln!l'r\•ie1\' appo1ntn1en1 11).4 P~l. 11.'l•ekrl")S, 5,'\tj.JJ.-."!. Si\Lr;s ATTENTION: CANDY FUND RAISERS ah"t' r, rnonths phi~ 1 \\c'•;.. 1 ,;:;,;.;,;;.;,.iiiiiiiiiiii•--,•111olrr1.111. •1111po.•r 1••··n \\ 1111 SOUTHLAN D TXlul nint· o!f 1H Chn5t1fl!'I'(, I URGENTlY 1 ~rll nr lndt• 1nr ~i.-.vi•~ 1•r1 Home & Garden Show cnmpany p.i1d ltf1'. h11!11'1tnJ, ••"11:.:1r11"1' »ltJ.J\:i,,o .1 111• ::111 11ir 1 \uh -*-A-UCTION * A s Lo119 A' You Lik e! ~~r..i1«al, 1nl'd1t.:;J ;ind '1l·il-1: ~-t 4 1 ~ j). '<\l'l 'I I"'' ·c~., 1&t l)ll' tu.I ben~Jits. Excellrnl \\'Ork NEEDED " ~-1-·,11,. t'iirlui<·,,,. '-••i l 11! 1\'I" ,\· 1>11oyPnc v.·rl· l'l.·ll\•t•.t -t:1.1.1r l'lun!111·_, ANAH EIM '"''"' t" .• 11,nd Tu1· ... 111\ mg corxllt1ons and gt\l1\·tJ1 1 1,1:, ,, 111~,rt t'\I ~.1,.77,0 CONVENTION .t \1 •1111:.11"''' 11 ,.1, 1 ; .•I !'\! \\i• \~aiii J)QIM\l!tlL 1 \u«l i' n' Fr Lo i . j :11 jl rrl. Secretan·es Re11 1 WashersfO ryers CENTER W' d '1• 1.1••ll·· 1,, 1 .. 01n I(• Jtlfl>' SR TEST ', 11 , , 11 •n y's A uction Bt'lrn r• , .. 1r1· .\ll rnit<'rl.U!o . ,;,, r U 1·1.1 1~1 •io1 \\ h,,r,·11,1 \llo11h'\1l1 • . Typists, • " I ,_~o~ • i·i ....... "·'H .. 1: .,:, .. ,r i 1 z.,7,1 :-.,,."To"ri. C\1 6~i•-~,~ '1ri11.11·•t. TECHNICIAN f l:l-~'.l·trku11 1~·1n,.: t~~· I'.'""' 111 \ .. ur I ·i.,.,, \, •1 "ij B1 ·h111rl T•'ll' ~ Bid.;__:~ 10·111 ~~h~'~"1'42'.2a$11\Il:"· !TH IS IS A CHALLENGING & INTERESTING JOBI Clerk Typist & n1· 11" ,\ .1pph.11 ''· •. I 1p I '•UO'\ ,,,11 IP'' IH ll!d"'r FOR SALE ReproTYPl•sts .·1d l'all<i7,_,~'·' I .>1•1!:.•1• 1• 1 , 1 CO AST MUSIC ,q.·r , " ·••<1 ... ;.~~•I. VOLT Building Mo1er1als-806 __ • __ • ~ ___ 11 .. .-1~. r .. -1 : .. 1,,, 1 ,1• \,"I' l't 1~"'1 "1 lliirl...,r ( ·,.,f.1 \1, ..... FURNITURE r"""1"r · : 1"" 1···•11 "\ e Surplu s Building 11•"1; ,, 1n .. , :,r,,. 1" s: · .. r .. l -----------~ Instant Personnel NC Drill Machinist EnCJine Lathe Machinist Grinder Machinist MillinCJ Machinist Are you tin>d of v.·orkin~ lor peanuts'.' Join an orxanila- tion thnr can niake you bu: doltnrs in ronunission & bonuse!I U§ing c 11 n dy . C'andl«s. stationery, gins & no\'clties, jt'11·elry. l'!c., etc. No in\'estn1cnL \\'rite, ~iv· fng phone nt11nber To: P.O. Box 85, Canoga Park, Calif. 91304. 1·.·nipor .• i ... ·"''1'1"l' \'\ll:!~l.\I~ 1nr.~rsuf:'\t:\\ CLEARANCE! 111•· k1r J;,-n Ill! 11•11•. \\ILL1est.<"al1hra!t',fl~H1l>lo .. •h'C.tn•l•U,[)L ,..;11,1 ,·Jt~i ITE~l"l1' IU\1'<' l .!.o,/\<S •1r~t ·•ll• ~ nl shoot and ri_.p;,ir •"OOlPU!t·r ~1·11 "'•rl H ... uh ~.ir.1·,11 ·,:. ..-ir-. 11 t', P~ \0 -\1111~11 H1·1 ot1 •l•·\•·l•>t•r .-'·'' ORGAN SALE \I u1·j 111 r t ,,,.1 .. r> ,\11lhnn1.r..I s,,,.. "" n•.1u\ rn.~h'l-;. O!ht'r h1 ollld,\ ,i;-.1 ',,II Jil!.lo•, j)fll'Cd IP ·'ll ,..:'.1'1. Personnel Department \Vill be open for in- tervie\vs 8 AA1·6 P~l A1on-1'"'ri. & B·noon Sat. Other interviewing tin1es can be arranged, ROY AL INDUSTRIES 2040 E. Dyer Rd., (Redhill & Dyer) S•nta Ana, Ca. SALESLADY ] f'osn1t'tics Or Vltan1in~ 540-3210 An Eq ual Opportun ity Employer Help Wonted, M&F_710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 PERSONNEL SECRETARY :'llal\H~ & exrx•t'. salc-slnd~· \\'anted to sell rosn1C't1l'S & \'itan\illl!. Plt·asant 11·orking ron(Js. l\tedical & hosp benl'· fits. l 'nilorn1 furn. l\lin. of $2.25 J)('r hr to start; more if pl"l'ViotL'I expcr. jus1ifiPs. No Sun. 11·ork. Apply Lind- ll. E. SALES beii; Nutrition in r'f':tr or tht• INVESTIGATE Tov \\'orhl sh11·r rin ]()\\C'r Progressive computer p<'r· pherial produc-ts manurac· turer has an in1media1c opt'ning for a Personnel As· sistant to 1\Wk for the Per- .!J>nnel Manager. \Viti per· form various sccretarlal and admlnistralive dutit'.!s. Requires excellent typing and commun!estion skilLc; and at least 2 yt'.!ars re!nted Per- tannel background. Some applicant inteiviewing and statistical survey prt'para- tion desirable. , .. the opponunity to assoc· lf'\:l'! So. Coast Plll7.a Shop. iate v.•ith \ar.1in realty .... tierc., ,1;"-"•;-cc'c''c'c'"·-Cc"""="C--''""'-"'=·-I your eUoru are r ecognized Sale5-Mens Boutique and re\\·ard('(!. \\'e ll{'('d 2 aggn>ssivc girls • \\'e offer :an extra· looking for a f/time pem1. ordinary bonus pro-position in sales & mg1nt gram t raining "''a \'('Jjl rontcn1- • Continuous monthly po1:·ary mens boutiqlll'. ;\Just sales and listing oon-have Mies exper. No !"itU· tests dents please. Call for ,\pr•t. • Listing rercrrals and Thr Look 6J.l.fu00 Pertee offers permanmt em· ployment, paid vacations after six n1ontlts, plus one "'eek paid time off at Oirist- mu, company paid Life, tmpila.l, surgiclll, medic-al, and dcntal benefit.-;, and ex- ceilent salary and 11•orking c.-onditions. A[!ply or contact T. Knight cn'11 541).83-IO PERT EC BUSINESS SYSTE'.\TS l i112 Armst.rong Aveune Santa Ana, Cali!. Jn.1ne Industrial Compl~ An equal o pportunity em p-lo)'('r PLASTICS MACHINE OPERATORS Tra.ioee & ex p e r ienced nutchine operators nl!eded on-Rll shifts in clean, new hu I Id in g. 7 A ~1-JP?o.f, 3-llP?o.f, 11PM-7Al\1. Shilt bonus premium for sv.;!ng & graveyard. Opportuni1y for advancen1ent "'hile learning on job. Top bconefi ls and vacation plan. Please vlsi t, do not call. 1 blk. off Baker St. & Nc\\·port Freeway. CIJ\I CO. 200 Briggs, Cosla l\1t'sa POSITIONS OPEN FOR: •BRANCH SEC'Y •PROOF OPERATOR \\'ill consider Inexperienced Contact i'llr. Wilke5, 4954501 SECURITY PACIFIC NAT'L BANK buyer clients front 18 larivin new home sub- divisions • Con1pany paid major medical insurance Openings: for two Juli time salesmen. FOR A P P T • C1\IL WU S..\NGEM-1ANO. 008-4400 mornlngs. REAL EST A'f J:. SALES SUCCESS CAREER New or experienced. Join the \\'ol'ld's largest and fastest gro\\ing resale organization \\·Ith a net\l'Ork of O\'er 300 offices and become a member of our ~tilliona\re Oub. ~tulti-million dollar advertising program. Free guaranteed licensing school. Excellent sales training. \\'hat is )'OW' license \\·orth lo you? O!eck our month))' bonus program \\"hich means SSS to yuu! Please call Virginia Jones '835-481 1. RED CARPET Realtors REAL ESTATE SALES MANAGER Resale Office needs managl!r with 2 years of Real Estate rxperfence. Ne....-port Beach area. Expanding company. Excellent opportunity for professional growth. A pply tn confidence. Send resume to Classified ad no. 638, c/o Daily P ilot, P. 0. Box 1560, Costa ?i1esa, Calir. 92626. R.E. SALESMAN ln\'estlgate the new approach & innova~ve marketing techniques of TI-IE GAL- LERY OF 1-IO~tES. 'fou 1vill be glad )'OU did; Call 963-5611 for' appointment. Lict'?lSed or unlicensed 1ve \\ill train. R.£. SALESl\1EN \Vhy not \\'Ork in the hottest are a l tunt i ngt o n Ikac-h/Founrain Valley. Let us train you! Call Phil McNamee. V I LLAGE RE,\L ESTATE, 963-4567 RECEPTIONIST 30m Croo.1•n Valley Pk\\'Y L<l~na Nii;,•uel Day or night, no exp. nee .. Eqool Opportunl1y employer oosy, fun joh. \Vill Ira.in, no lyping or shorthand. e!c. S.'lles1nan - DO YOU REALLY BELIEVE IN ECOLOGY? \Ve have n i.rround noor op. ponunity for )'OU in The Consumer Products Indu:q1y J.J n1inult' call is all it takes. 8.13-ltrf.J. SALES~l EN \\'anted f o r Cable 1V Dir't'CI Sales 1\·ork. Salary + C'(ln1mission. AJ~ ply in Person. Tele-Pron1p!er Cable TV, 262 1 \V. Coast ll11'Y Newport Reach. SALLS ... ?o.lale, female, nc\1' con slruction. Audio-Inter con1-Alan11 Sys t e n1 s. Establi~hed liarhor :irea firm. Salary + commission. 642-3-1!.(I. * * • .seamstresses Marine Upholstery Mfg . \1·an!s ~E,\~lSTRESSES E."<p'd prel'd. Salary Open. Xh1t Con1pany BPnclits. APPLY IN PERSON 7:00 A.M. to 4:30 P.M. 1763 Placentia Ave. Costa Mesa S E;1\l\l STRESS for upholstel')'. full or purl tin1e. !>18-0259 R u f f e 11 · s Upholstt'ry. SECRETARIES/ TYPISTS URGENTLY NEEDED Register tod<1y, \\'Ork to- n101T011'~ NO FEE EVEn. TOPS IN TEi'llPOH.ARIF.S. f (jirl "" ....... .. 1Mm ....... '"""" SECRETARIES PRODUCTION CONTROL Apply in IX'rson any nft or P ERTEC oilers pt>rnuuienl l'\•e, at 2930 \Vest Cst Jil\-y., employment, paid l'ncntions ,.N •. B •. ~'='~:'::="~~.,..,., j after 6 months, plu~ one RECEPT-SEC Th!' Irvine Cornpany has 1111· n1ecliatt' oJ>('tiings r or serr1)tari(•s 1\·ith .sulls1.1uti;1\ rxperlcnce in the S['>!'l·1!1c field of public rl'la!1uns, architecture or f1nnnt"c. Shorthand 80+. typi11~ iO 11•pm. ~lu~t he i;:ood on pl,loncs & de11lini.: 11·1\h publi\'. Xlnt 1~·ork1n~ rl)n- d1t1on~ & bl!ncfil~. CAii '.\!rs. fo~iC'ldt'r. week f>'lid time off 11.I Oiristmas, company paid Nf'"I\• office in !J'\·i nc • Archi- life, hospit11.l. s u r g I ca I t('('t needs you? Type 60. medical a nd dental henerits. xlt benefit.~. Up to $550. CaJI Excellent w o rk Ing con-Ann Christie, a:-6-8505, Con. ditions and growth poten-t1\ll Car~r Employn1cn! tlal. Agcocy, 3400 lr.-ine Blvd .. 644-3389 llcl\\"C('TI 9 & 12. f~qual Opport. En1pln~('r -or \\Doll<!, t1h1n1 .-..ho·rltn:; r1101ld·1 ll<lt.-t ,, II ,.,,,,,,. '''''''''''' -"1•'• \ 'llhll \ "'' 1lt,_1 ,· output 11uc-1i:o iilm ..:~~1e111 .. 1 r:i1u.d t11•1 •'L l-111111 .. \i.:r 11 · \1 Bac-kgroOJrni in rht;11:i l ('ll" l!l;J:, 111111"°1''· rt·'. "' u1o•+1I h••Tl1•' h1r111 .. 111ni:~ 1111 "''._; _ 1·u11ry fprrfrrrahly TI!. n1 Wiitresses BUILDERS SURPLUS .;;.,t ,, '"\•• .. ,.,1 .. ,·11<!, t1•\"'· -.1!IUo1 '-l I\ 1.1 , .1 ' '"-t"d ,., ..... ,, .,,,,,. ~·11i.; "'' :\l,\111 ... 1 .. -:.\ I i.uu1 ... 111nn" M'I" 1.~ln •"''I !ll<•I•·, 11 ,1 ...... ,,1 ol .,. ~ ....... '.. ,.''",".·. ," . ·. ~l.1IUl'l' :!:>-ID .\'r• nhl. Onh. ' '"i<Plic.Cfr(IO tl>n I< I :\[,.11 111r11:-a1 jl)j j"''' 1111•11•'"~ .1: 1 .. , 1 1,11:.'.ol•i • .~0 111,,t111•r •• , Wollichs Music City "-; • .: •t t · 111•1! r,.r,,..r1rn1'•·d 11r1•d .01< ""''' Cl'T , ..... ,,,,,,, ,.,, .. ,,,.. 7' l Z>lli·lr"l~~ ~··1 111i.:~ kn1, k h.11.H I.'(.\· 1 .. 1 ... o 1 •t>-t~ r-"ti ~.·~ •f • 1, -.:;,.urh (',,,,,1 PL11n .. . • " 1. p!,1 . ~ r P<'l"'IOl\llt'l :'ll;::r . ,.. ?'ld M'l'\-O e11~·u11.~ ht Jpful l\;,)hu.i Bi\· t'luh 1111 .. n' lll ~"Tl "1" 1•1 :1 \\,~l-' "'f" .1k··o" • .i •ri..• L•' f.,t .).1•1 2 years forn1:.J n·:11n111~ ph" 12~,1 11 . c,,:1 ~1 ·1"11 :--n Furniture 810 ~ r1 . "-01 11 .uu '" ;1 11111 ·'" '''1" •· • \•·:-..~t11r:.: J,. r Tl/!l\1,\S-1''.!"~·1 1,Jn1~-C'ir;;-;;:, '.15 y•ars ex1'.l<•r1ene ' · Slll:l.Tl-.J: l\,l 1L·:·,.r!:I~..; Jn, t\\ · 1 .. 1"1,-. ,., ,.O·•I I rn<~t••I l:.!.'1 $''.00 f11in. Call ,. ' . . t. WAITR-E"SSE X PE R~ n1.1J J.1sl\lon 111·1n ti.--d~. 2 11, I· l ~h ·"1 ('\J 1oi71r.\YJ111 :.ll•inn 1~1,,,--.~4 111'...fOfl<\ En gi neeri n g 1-"llll .v. p llll!f'. :'1!11-.1 l1t· ••\ 1·1· fr irn;·" 1 11 )11\ t•';lll ,\· 1 . ..-.1 ~;-H I< ~ {. 11 I' 0 '' 1:-1 !1 ~I \\hi . 111· ·l··I \), I !·~ 1n1· I L\.\l.\[Qc,-.,-,-.,-.. -,-N-,-,-,.-,-,h-,-"-" :!I. Xln't ho11r-.; Surf ,\' "1·1r• .~•l_ 0 _ 111111 .~pnni.::s l~·dt'"'l ll "''' Y,u\•11. ~i.-.,Jl l'.11'1 ' 11 /lw.1<tlil •''• 1.ulloh·s, 1..-,"!1o• l1k1• 1M•11: ~;rn f1e10. TECHNICIAN ':-;_1 1 1,101 n. :i!l:\O I\' (.',,,,s1 1111.1 ,l ,\ 111 "1 11 ''·'· il"l 1·1"111·•11 nnd 11 .. u1.\,. 1 011,,p1 t•·d ,11111 1~·1 11, ~111 n ) l"J' ,\ l1l1 u1 1'1\~>r•~ ll\1'.\tEDt'\TE op<'nin;.: lnr technician 11·ith digital iu- tcrgr:itNI t'ircuit ho a r rl harkg ro u nd. p,~rf<>rn1 brear.1-boardini.: anti co111- fll1!le1Jt-lt'\·rl lroublr~hMlin~ anrl chl'ck out 1"1tnputer 1)f'riphcral r CJ u i p 111" n r • Duties 1ncludr lab t('SIUll-! or (•n~incering prototypes ;1 n<l 1na1nll•nan1'I' of rl<X·u1nc-n- 1a1ion. Should ha\'e \\"Orkin~ kno11·lcl!ge of T T L -I) T L logiC' t'it·cuit in a<ldition to gcn1'ral electron1rs. Rr- riuires at lrast 2 Y•'ars of applieable C':<.pl'ril'n,·c an rl ll\'O yrars cducati111111: rlr(·· !r'(lnirs background IJ<.•yond l1i:;h srhool. Apply Or Contact T. l'nigllt (714) ~{).8,'}10 PERTEC •j Jlr. 1 11111111.-'.1·111 !~1·11 •·h. h 1, .. 111·1r1i.:-.; .111·1 111:1tln'"" 4•l1.1n;Pr i ;1ll 1'•·1·1i1l.1\~,1-'---'-'--------I --:-• ,111.•r ,, 1.· \1' 1• ,. k -t' 1111 ~ . -· , s ·• ~ · r ·• ~1 \\!(, ~a1r~::1r!" ,\: 111,i.: ~1)11 ... 1 sq7 _~171 $ .. • 1, 1 di \\.11ou1 1 •• 11.;0•11:-•· " "'' .... ,_ ~----TV, Ridio, HiFi, l.JU1!•' 111i..: ("11 u .. ,.1"!~ h.1'v I -• 011111\••I" 111111, 1 us1 .. 1nuf'•I FBF!11:.Hll "1' \\ i\h.. JI{• 0 1 Stereo 836 JH'11pl•· Cal !Aili-11.·1 ,.\~k f,lr 1; c;nld/.11 1tt·ad" t"111!i, k"''"I fn1· •'111o1L111111ur1t 11•1111•1 ra11l•· ,.11111.,.,,_ i.11, ~I!• ----------- L\)n111c • u,.,111o1r.~ i.:,·~! •"n-.:1n11·11•:_1. s.~-, !'.11r ,,f .. 111 •q11 .. u111: !J.11-.1 i·••\• r 1 •• ,i. •. '11 1-.. ,. SACRIFICE \\.110 \\','"I." .1.0 \\'O"I,'". ::. 111""'. o!.J, .1~;.;;1n1: Sr.•1 do·1~1r.1T••f t_lj•' 1·t1;i11•s 51 1 1..,x, \\' uit.-.d pr.i.-hi-..• pi.i t\O I \ I' , f '" ·• " !-1oru111·;1 '"rf,·t• 1at>l1• and o':i,·h :~·h-'.)d:i ~!"-JJ'"r, •• n .. -.)11a· ~•'I''' r.~J~ r ,... DRf\1~ 1\ CAB' :o.1{'r c-11d L1hlt'. l1t •i.l J.,'T:11n1 ' .... _--;-----,,,1\l•·r 11Hh 1tOJI01lll\1l<' r'f"· CllOOSE y .. ur hour". 11Ylrk fun~h Sl:.!l,.rt•'!h.•~·::-;!l 'i G S 1 812 1.>l .\l l!!·ll. L:l~"n h·•!•I •1•r ... ~. l',i-.. Anlf""X 7•i for )Ourl'('!r, be ;.uur "11 11 , , .-.--.----•rage i e •'nr po.·t ::.".") ~'T ,\.!s Sl 2 !•'I 1'"'1~ 1111d ll1f'o"s. 1111-ltulNo 3 hoss.. ~1<'n or 11·01nt'n. <'111 l.~ .. \\i.'-(, ~\,ilf' '.\r:irly nu. )•I Ill"' $1 11o:r 1rl t\o.11 'l)l.",1~. 1 strr,., 11111.•llkl'r..:. I I l'f':n1t. PN·,1n :.! Hr rin s1·r~. 1)1'.'\ nn ~·1, 11\· JY".nn1 ,.,,,, ,.,.,·,,,,,,. .. .. , '<l'>'l ' ~I l)f' s ~hi y hn nd11·ap11t•d. h kl 1 1 furn Llun ~ 1, N' ·in'> \"t 1. . .--. .... -. -10, h1·.id1•h<1n1 ~. I:> prr l"'f'('Jrth"(I .\;eat-Clean Appcaran•"' rl'a d:ol ~ .. 1, lllln fli'lf 11 · C I l ·, 11 1 • • s.i t;ll-617~-1.q .. -.. .•ntl t.1.1nk r.,-.1s. all \'t•, -r••-I. •,.., '>'" •• 1,, ·,<I. ult: ... 1.1, t•1ff 1hl, 2 rnrl tbl<;. :uh ;o. ~•"IJ•ir1 B <'a,. h . -, 1 1 ~ " , .. , ,.,.. .. " i--•f.1, :! J'•'<'. t•hr<. inust ~··(' f.11-t:,."l) Dl.0')l •. \Tl.'1t ha~ 1n.1i.:n1!' t•jll1f11\l••111 " >r11nr 11M\'. Supp\('mcnt your 1nc-11Ll•'. t I I .\•k1111: $:;:, 'II' lll:\kt· ottrr. ' •·•Pi•<·. •1·.>.·.>1·,-.. ~,, , I'' ., ''" 1 ('\'II •U~' nn ~lll"'r 1r;11) n) j Dri\'eat·ah6hrsorrnnr\1 :"1 -." -.--.-~ _ l.,;:, :S!t.1\"'. ~1: • tii1n "'""'~ l(on ,h:"li; JllLL).h •'I Pl 1;.,1.1,11 •01 11 '\l:j l'11. d_a>. .Apply 1~ i~r~nn, :-;J-:\\ :-; 1 in 111 •1n" FJf' si·), 1111"'' runi. i:;i; E. 1l('l1<'h ~:11 1rl.; ti\:! 2'::,:i 11r 1 * Sum_m_e_r"°"S_pe_c-ial * "\('111"' Cab Co., 1SG L lt11h 1""''"'':11 h1dt~a·hr1L n.-au!~·· \\11...,)n. 1·\1 t,,[,.'.!•12 .\ll _-,,'{_.1,..1 . ~t .. Cosla "°'e"i" _ 1., -.1 1u:f'l-1r"~" Yl'll011· ,\] ola.1• --------Re built-P icture Tub. X-R.t\' Tt'\!h for nrth"J" ·!o·· I hrn11 Tl 11 · .1'"\ll"n ~ il1~·1o· '\I~ Sil B.\BY I :qu1prn•·nr s~.... fnr $87 .SG-21" or 25" Color offlt·1· '.\pt Bt h 1~111 PL flltl 1 \t1" ._Hli [~11011'. t>ll·,i()!. J ewelry .i\I. l!i:_:h 'h;.1t', '11'11!rr, * ·~YEAH. \\"Artll ASTY I''. 11,t!k.--.r. h.1tk p:il'k, 111f,,,,, I ii · \ I 11 l>;H'I i.n1l'. ~.111 ... ji::~ :• ' "'1" !'''''" I \'nl II, ... • GENEROUS • ~":1t. t,1f;..l -Ji1 P.1t··"~ Tf'lr\'!s\nn !--·-.... i ..... !ll Y!:..:-:i. or O\'Cr, f,,11t itle. 11,. L>(Jt"HLE l 111Hour e h a i 1·. • ---.,,,. ,. I g-1'('('11 \'P\\'Pl, Sr'(l\l'h:._:anl. '.·: Fiil' Hr1!<1Jlllll'll, '~1n1pl r1•1'1n!'rly :\11•!>;1 North Ct'nl~·r '''rwr. nl'l'('Ss. A\·:u. ,-:01·11·d /"I' k r ,. ·· I I 111,·k ·.··, ,., Ui<kc• '." •-2 l'k • s•· C' II 11 "'-"' · o r Ui) 1i-, • r1!t'. .-. " , ~m-1Jl.N llr~. & d:lV!i. Tak!' ,I',· L'.I\\' i ·r· ii.11. ·"'' J t'\'C'rtlnt.:~ REWARD 0-\\0l'k nsstqnml'nts by Jlh"n" ,._1;...cr·~1:~ e e Sll)(). ('all 11f1.-.r ·I p 111. __ o_p.-_::~fi 1lny~I i\l in. \1':tt:1•. No snles. ~.a ~ \TII,\ !rini;:: 111·111 IM•ds, s:~l * S\7-6.·~-~-, * l'ACK1\HD B•.'ll. 21" l'Olor BUSINF.SS SYSTf.!'llS 1 ·h»~t 111 1lra11f'rs S 'l ;, f·1rm11 l11Jn lrarl1ni:-10 1-rturn Wanted 820 1\r.;, l1"rf \\'Ork'i.: t'(lnd $200. Cull nnytimc-. f,._12-99:1.). I (',1. t.11\·1·~1·Jt s;,'.i. Blond nak. Fo1· 1'<'!111·11 ni· ;\1 1\ in· Mi scell•neous T\'. rt·n"I01f' rnrl, folrl1ng 17112 Armstrong Avcnur ;,:;7 .. 7111~ ,.f a i.:nld four !"·" 1•lio\·r1· Ii.,"-'"",...'-"~·,--~-~~~ Sant.a.\na,CaHf. 11~;1 B~'..\L'TIFCI. n!di•r rahini·t pin. 1111pro,. :! 1urh··~ 111\\'1\'.\Tl·:n :'llan'!< ,f,. "~lakl' R1v,,11 f.,r fJadrly" Irvine lnclustria\ Comrlr'> Mtrchandi1e V .~.-ii·in~ lllfl•·hinr J"PJ'iOnab!P. d1,1nu•t.•1-., 1111J1 J •· 11 " I •• d \\'on1an'~ 111:1rchin:,: 1hamnnr! I . , . r]l'nn out !hr ~gt' an cqual opportun11} i \l'f\.c~..-..I ,..1n;lt1in!l f>o<·-~ horSt'\h0" 111 <'l'UI«:. al~i. 11C'<irl1n.: ruu.: ·"''tl1ni::' .. turn tht1IJunk intoci\Sh emplo}t~r I ,.: .. 11,,, .. ~1-,1 .~_• ... w,.~· i::nlil [fl('k•t "'r'~ 1111 t•h.iuio. 11111'.ou! .<1r1nC'•, preh•rahly 11'1!ha D1uly P1lotClusified 1'EL"PHON c·. I ' •I\ 0 .... ~. u•'·--'· ,, I k I "'" Lo ,. Sa L'"· O --.-:-~ . , , . . appl'"'· 1r ~11.l' I'! n 1111: "'. rin11qu« Gl.J-~l :..t. :id. Cnll u-u-:i67R. l loni<'\\'Orkrrs in SA :11 Antiques 80 • l <1Llll ,t· lD\~.:i!-.,\r 1n-1·nt""t in .vr'Ljll. tl..\.j ___ iii_iiiiiiliiiiiiiliiiiiifllllii iilii~iijj CLE~Ir~:'llTE & L\GU'.'\A I brand Ill"\. t,.,Th r11r S!.':111 The....-• :1rr 1lrrply 1l't'!t~U r(•d[1 an.-as. J::xp'd. prt'fl'rred. hu! Pn\·nll' Par1 y -.\ll'ST t·~u11tly \111111r, !¥~~7910 f.1nuly n1•·n11•ntns ,.., !hf' In .. ~ 11·{' 1\·ill lrain. Call collec1 St.LL' Bcaul "I•! n-ik. •~PC ,-, -510 0 ,--;;-,. 1s 1rt'f'pl:1<¥·;1hl<'. l'LEA."iE. 1 ' 1 i '·' . s 1·. • l'1:u .... ,1 4Jf892-5137 I 111a .10 an·y , \\ii 11 11 pr.Cor 1:ohl1'$IU 111 11\l<it' l'J.~:ASE /i(•lp If :0()0/ hU\!' fu1·n1Tt1n'. nl..;c1 l'lOC'k~. 1'1H!~. J ,S'.)o "\C\..l./11:, f '1·'1) nnv 1nforn1a11nn -li\2·:~9 TIRES salcs & !"Cl'l't~. l\lurP.hv l>M. <Ir corn!<!!' -....:.'.. · . ~·1 ll'r ,,_, ' E\«•s ,r, ii('f'kl•nd~. Brake & Ali~nK'nt sc1-..·ic.•. ltrn1~ & J,,ls rnon:"' l:>(l.) !'i. I i\11:.:T Cnfl·~· t:ll•l1· ,\· :! r"n1 F'ult'-or part 1iml'. Salary Bi rrh. s .A. K1~1-l7:'!J I n1otit·~" ;; 11111ns rild 111·1·4'r Mi scellineous plus c· n n1 mission Call S;\I \LL 1. •\" {\· l t) j 11~1'fl /rn111 J~B $1~ l!!l':.2fll~ l~l-1-802'2. Coas1 Auto .SCr1·iL'l' 1\1,'.1111 • a~ri11 ~~~'>!I ·~11111 1;1~'. I CJL\Ji{ '\!:,, BkC''is.• S:lll:-cof: MOVING-MUST SELL Crnter . . l 111111\.:. S.1.i. :110-~Jl I•"' 11.1 S"<-Rr<I ,•:-~1ui1~'i $:!.'1. T \'. Si >:i. T.rl•l1· 1o·n111~ 3~"1. 30 YR. adhesi\'I' 1nft;. Jl('(•ds i \'>TIQIJF 1 ... 1~1 ,;-. -,-.. "W \11~1· li ... rh<rl.! 1t(•in~ "<~~i.-1'Yl:\ 1>:r>"n1·:111t111n·~ r·ha11·, S~'fl. sec'y \\·/n1aturc out!O'lk.l 'i dt"l\/:r '.1i~ 1 11 r1.'.1.'."1,1 1-:!\i;~i~ln":"~ ;ind IK>."< 1nrSH)l':H·ho. Book1.1,e SJll, l'.::-.p. A/P. AIR. payroll & . '' r &w ~-jr, '1 " '' 1 Stnnrt SHI ~ h11n hr<t~ ~. For an id in Worrurn·s World Call Miry Beth 642-5678, ext. 330 1!1\f'S. );Int \\Ufkln" t'OIHl. ~-~ ~-,...''1 1--'il!'ln!!S S'l:, n1al l!'t'"'~1·.;_ i,:11'1] L''ll•I. $10 , ,.. S'l1?-~·r.:~ Whole Wa d be 1 Pleas{' send a r•'Slllll•' tn I Llk(' to Trarlc ".' Our 'I! .,q,·r·... 1.1k.• Iii"\\' II h•·r'\ bru'ro\\' S!.1. r ro . Jiffy Crochet Permalite Plasuc~. 1;,;17 ParndiSC" t·o\un1n i.~ fnr ~nu ' 11".' ;1 bree~c . .~!l ~·oqr l!o.-k111::: 1·hntr $Er. An!1rp11' l\lourovia Avl'. r\1'\11}f)rl :J l1!lt'S, 5 rlti~~ for s:i. l'ull i1t·n1s 11'\!11 ra~e. use Daily 1n1n1aturf' iron ~101'1' St-If! ReaCh, 92660 ' tod.ty . 6-l:!-.'1Cilt; Pi!ril ("];,.~sified. 612~567i!, ,\ntlqU« 1·11fr r j11i::s 1:.!1 S2.i. FIND YOUR NAME WIN FREE SHOW PASSES Each DAILY PILOT Winner Gets Two $2 Value Tickets \ ~l.)-IOi:,_ ---- ,\:'\ r1Qt.:E~ -o.1k !1'J1l'frq111 c11.-•,1. ;.tlvrr 1';1.st•·r ~··r. r, pt·: r1~·-~··I din 1111. 7:, ~,. nlrl. 1nntrh1 n~ huti·h. :l h:111d l>T ,,J'1,.,t rui; ap11r1 1•. 'o' L! ,\ l:!\~~!. f,<1n•' \\'1th Tiu· \\"111<1 1.1111p, :lnll!jlll' pr•''"·d '..'I•-~ all ~h.ipt•s, hand 11.1L1l1+•d plall'". h<..-1k., ~.il••n , .~'nll1 J:!J ~ r~. 0111. .\I.i n~ .. th< r llotn::s. :ll~!t~lifl :-rr:HEf> ~~:\\-1'1;.: 1:11·· rant 111ndt·I. full ~ 1 '" j tun11at>lc. .\~1 I-\I ~ll'.".: l'•'"\·1\'( r. 'l su.~Pf'tl~t"n •f"···k· 'r~. "a.-nfu·e S'f1 ,\I 1:...1 1111" Qu:i.i ... ~,.,,,111 frl s~1 n1nt t' I T{'~L~:~:~;ICE--· ,\ r:ln:'l.<Jo!ll(' ~1,•nO-ta1~· l"•I I ··•1rdo•J' I' . .th .11JI• l•l·('O' ro·· f \1 I"" -SJN•:Jl(PI'•, Ii• .,rj JilV•IH'~ r·,,1, .. r '"f"' f\•I 11fl,.r,. • 71 ! , ~ 11;.:,11!1 EXPEDITER' NB. Secty., girl for 1.agu,. R£CEPTIONIS~1 Thhi job wlll cnlnil pro-sn1nrt front orficc duction shortage fol lo1o.•up hu~y contrnctor, and parts expediting. Should Nii;u('\. g:n-l400 be famlllar with electronics RECEPTIONI:.."T for law Of· p r 0 d u c t i o 11 c o n trol. net" Llte typi1111: & niisc. ~llnimun1 I year C!Xper ience dutic>s. I 1nmediate opening. in production expedltinr;:· ~6~1~2-~2:1~. '°"-------=~ d!spatchlng required. Apply RENTAL manager-C's!ablish- or submit re11ume to: ed rttrrotionnJ \' e h l r I e PERTEC ('(!11ler' is opening OC'\I' kx:n- SEC.-RECEPT. £stablishcd ell'ctmni(' NJlliP· men! mfi::r. cnn1pany ~•'t'k~ sharp ronscit'n!luu.<; 1:;d f••r rl"'CPp!ion rlutie!<. lll\'111\'in.: rl'~p:insibilitics & g1•ru'r':'ll orfice \1·ork. Accurate t.11;1ni.; 1 skllls &-rront oftk·e 1iJ•P•'at·- nnce. ,\pply ln (X'l'Sllll GTJ Co11J., Dix Eni:rirlet'l'ini:: Di. ,-i~io11, 139'3 lngan ,\\ t'., C.\f. JULY 27·AUG.5, 1973 ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER All AIR CONDITIONED • SH I. .. THE ONLY MAJOR HOWER AND GARDEN SHOW IN SOUTHER N CALIFOR NI A l FEATURING FOR THE FIRST TIME ANYWHERE I "FLOWER MAGIC OF THE TROPICS ''.,., AN ANIMATED FLORAL SPECT ACUlAR SEE i. .. THE VERY LATEST INNOVATIO NS FOii: THE HOME & GARDEN WITH OVER 135 ,000 SO . FT . OF GLITTERING EXHIBITS t.ion in l·Iuntington Bench, Au~ust lSL Req. s e I f BUSINESS SYSTEi'ltS i:=iarting, manager, i\-1 a i I 1n2 Anns1rong Avenue resuml' P.O. Box 1267 Santa Ana. CAlit P.lonrovia; Ca. 91016 An cqu1d o pp or tun l l y I •'"'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim \ employer m-f UTE SALESMEN PROOF OPERATOR RO Experienced on bink proof/encoder. Apply: UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK 222 Oct•n Ave. l•guna S.1ch Equal 0ppor1 1-:mployrr REAL ESTATE SALES FREE LICENSE TRAINING ~ Placemf'nt l'f>rvlc.~. Frtf' Tralnln1t Pro~rnm. (;Arn while you lt>1ui1. ,\! Sloan 1714 ) S.U-!>110 Oon'I ji:l\'C UI) lht ship! "Lbt" ll In clnssltitd, Ship tl'.I Shon' ReMJll.!!! 1).12--5678. l.'U"g(' National Co. i!I lookini:t f•)r pl'nnanc>nt !lt&.ble nien. . r:'to·o•!i('flt starting salary. II 1ntere5lt"CI Call: 714 : n4-GJ30 SALl!:S Manag<'r Tmi!'lef', young oompeny kloking for tht! r\¢ man 'Ailo wants a fu!urt'. Can make Mif'~ mllnagtT in 90 da\-,. t •or ln- trvw by 11.ppl. Call llointe ~tety Vlr\\", 963-~. SALES Clrrk. \\'on11u1. j rl:iy 1o.·r1'k, :-;o l'\·r,.. or ~un. Ar- pl\ i 1 pcor~n bl\\ 11 9· 1 l :m. \•J 1)1111nr. :no E. 17th St .. C:\1 Cot<1;\ :\IPM Stanon('f'll SALf:S'CU;R.K, part tjmc, Drug store ~xp. ~f'd. 1.Aguna 494--0145 SECR.ETAH.Y-ADl\llN. In personnel !'lr1-..·ice8. $720-$871) f)('r n10. Send resume tri Saddlcback Valley Uniflf'ff School District :?'1 11'2 ~P11:t Rd.. Li\guna 11111..:. 926.'l.l Alln: l\tr. Shinkle. Dcarllirtt! Date July 27th. SECRETARY -parf 11mc Top skill~. l't'qutn::d. :-:.i. Siin111-lr-..ine aN'a. Ca 11 5."i7-9:;.ID ~ECH.1-.."TAP.Y / R<'o:rp1K>n1~1 on ~tannen t.hlt>. N.A. Fllime. Pref Zl -30. t"'or 1n- 1ervlc11.·, ~22a.l ~ERYICE Statin'n : '2 talC'!inu:n & I gra\'eyatd m.ii.n. Tori PRY· 1-~rinl{e b~ncUts, exp rrrf. r·ua ()r p.iM tln1'". Apply at Shvll Station, 17th&: Jr\'int", N.B l SERVICT. Station Attendant F\111-& pnrt limr. Apply 111 p('Nllln. !l'!Wl l-:. l'G.'ISI 11"), N'r" Jl'lr1 f:k'ach. ~ Don'I ·give up the ship! "Lll•t" it in clnulfled. Ship to Short! ReMill111I &42·;£78. .. SHOW HOURS· 5·11 PM. Weekdayt Noon·ll P. M. SohHdays Noori ·9 P M S11ridoy1 ADULTS 12.00 • JUN IORS sl.00 (children 1.1ride r 1'2 Ir•• with porentt) The DAILY PILOT makes it easy . Ju st chec k throu9ho"t thl' classified section for .. ad,." llstlnq wi nn ers' "om•s. If yo u f ind your name just call 642·5678, E1t. 11 4, betwiteft f o .m. a nd 1 • p .m. to mokt atTonqement' To pick up YO"' t ickets ot a ny conwe nien t DA ILY l'ILOT offlc•. • • l I ., " •• • • DAILY PILOT 2 L-, 2 Times, $2.00 GOOD adult bome only, SP9.Y'd fmWe Chihuahua... No · children. p I ea s t . 64&-<1!29. ... -..... -.-..... --·--· T~Y. Jvl1 24, 1~73 Boet1/Mlrln1 e,ulp. 904 SMALL. 4 eyl. Gray ?\1artne lnbd . engine, Rfeal for bny boat Ctt aux. 1ail. 54S-l:i61 CyclH, Bil<°" 925 Antlq-/Cl1lllcl 9S3 Autos Wonted Scooters -~==--__;,;,::; COu.ECl'ORS E1ullilb Taxi W>: l<UY Speedway Bike mint ..oo. Al,. >ii Mod" IMPORTED AUTOS .. u.. b T. T°"""" Sod••· oerlcc:t BEST PRICES PAID! R""""-n only 'i stUln Y 2()t Via Udo Nord NB. 0.... L1wl1 Imports DMny Beck!r, BW'nll quick 5.56-0710 _,,, .. '53 lttC:. T.D. ucellent coo-FOR SALE ·ro FORD Torino 2 dr Sedan. dlOon. Rebuilt en&Jne and t9n BUICK Sk)iark, J)O\\'tr V8, p/a. d/brakea. a/t, air • • ,GENTLE lovi~ b la c k German Shepherd. 3 yni. Bolts, PoMr 906 l.1\ange bub, l!Jl.'tOrted sprock • .::::;;==------1966 !!arbor, C.M. ms ll.lxl -.-ear changes. Betit RecrNtion•I 646-9303 ol everything, Vehicles 956 IMPORTS W,\f\'TED $SALE$ DATSiJNS NEW DEMOS 1973 510'1 trtuw. $2500. 536-UM. stoorlng, power brakes, lilt oond. 3 nu tirtt. 69.IXKI ml, TOYOTA "1tecl, air =• .. vinyl top, Gooil 'on d, $14'0/ottu. , , • low ml. $2400. 557-4690. 548-3684 old. P"rff to JOC>d t'lotM. '7'2 CRE8TLINER. t.1Wlkic ~a&& 6003 J7, Tri-Hull, 165 HP RATIAN t'Out h t.lercruiser. Va.ni;on Trallr.r, ~·b.1te.Jd1l.gen~~~ many e ic t r a 5 in1:ldJ: 66-2.'i68 ~111itt&:inll':tet, \\'ltter 11 k ! equJpmet'lt, ladder, rom· $1200 '51 CHEVY C'ntTYA11~XJnt Oro.nge Co~s cond. $19S. 128 Santa Isabel, BIU. TOJJ:y TOYOTA eall Bud Rytk!r fll C.\1. &1.2--1990-1&381 Beach Blv :. Trucks 962 H. Beach Pb. tM?.8555 '-'-;;.;::..;.. _____ _;;co I YOUNG ma.tTied c o u p I e 19n FORD H.Bngcr >...'LT. needs transportation car. * ion truck and 11~1 f!. PllY up to $350. 839-2399 Pi~kU.P 610's All ~fpdels &. Colors to Ctxioll! f'rom. --- :.'i1·m+1111·1 D.1bm1 ~ •, ~ .. · ·',, ... ·:· ·~·,·, to goon Mme 2~ yr pa!ll'I, elec horn. f'IC. $.1200 or GU. spa,yecI DachShund. Call best otrer. Plt'ase cnll MS-TI~ ">eekdays af1cr 6 PM, FREE to good hOme 1m. 1 yr 639-8805. mixed terrier. t..oves kkl!, ..:::°'21""F°'T~G~R~A=N~D~Y~­ NEWPORT IMPORTS A1nt'rigo fllx'rglas!I Md Avt rted 9701-====.;..c==:.c.==1 3100 W. Coost II•~ .. N.B. alwn. oampor. JlOth loadod os, tmpo 1973 DATSUNS hu shot.I. Aft 5, 893-n2 FREE Soil. rob: or top il ffll, You haul. 4891 Hilo Cir- et:l, Hunt. Bch. 841)...3410 • DESP ERATELY needs home. Very friendly '°"1able orange cat. &17~7879. JUVIER.A aoto.bfd, also kit· ma. mother Siam ese. mEE. 8'7-2671 --------, .... __ I~ Sports rhlbt>nnan. 2 Chrys. crigs. f"ully equip, for fl~h· lng.. T.S. Fly Bridge. $11,00J. Phme 831·2889 or 4~0136. 642-9405 •ith "'""'" Mly oeu-ron-PAYMENTS 1 1970 llAllLF.Y Dav 1 d 50 n tained. Like new condition ALL MODELS Sportstcr 16., l"l'llr wheel. 6.. and must be seen to be ap. $65 DOWN $65 MO. JN STO:CK C'xtendcd front end, aissy predated, 23,000 miles. Will l\lodt>I till, No. 418a, 4S mo1. 12' WIZARD fiberglass. 45 hp bar, xlnt cond. $l500. or bcllt Hel l separate. $5,800 or best Incl. tlf.X, lie, & all canylng BARWICK IMPORTS Mercury outboard. elec. oner. Call alter 7:30 eves •. offer. charges on , app. credit. 33375 Camino Capistrano •tart. NI controls. or,, 492-8289 1 .. ;;;;;:•ioi"""iiii~i.i>l9-4>18iiiiiiii.ii•;;;;o; I Dererred pmt . price;' 31'5.1.80 San Juan Capistrano ~m, tire extlnguUhers. BIC.YCLE SALE 11 lncl. tax & lit'. ANNUAL 493-3375 or 83l·L"t15 Trsllor. &rl-29l9 71 SPORTS CUSTOM PERCENTAGE RATE ''70 13' BOSTON Whaler. 40 NE\V 10 SPEED _ITALIAN super sharp, 4 spd, · rad &. 12.67~ '73 DATSUN 240Z, like new, hp JohnlOl'I, elec:. 11tart, B~CYCLES $69.95. Beach heater. New 12 x 16.5 tires. 9500 ntiles, warranty, 4 spd, trailer, Good contl. $ll."3'. 81cyc-le11: ~ E. Bal_boa $2'100. or best offer. am/fm radio, beater, air, 5.J6..6'9$2 or 962-3125 81\·rt., 675-7282. Authon.1.e<l * 892•1832 * radials, ski raclt, chains. , · NISMlKfdC'alcr. 1,...,..,..,..,..,,...,...,..... J.1ust sell $4900 . TO SEABIRD 24' traller r 846-1644/846--0651, {Paula) · ' ' 197;1 7j() YA!\L\llA Ex· * T. chev P.U. -1955 -t'hev new 350 hi-pc:rf. eng, hlg . ..... 2 .~ • n~J A' l"'"' "'d & ·n DATSUN 240Z air !\ferc o/D, tut. $63JO cash. pa.nsion ctmmucr, 1 F /\V • u.. ire ~ eng. 7600 \Vestm!nster Blvd. pd ' · ' Pitts, Generil 850 S4?jl560 nvi.ny, nu1ny extras good parts. , Both for S 2 0 0 . \Vc!ltmlnster 4-E; • mags, orange, 1m· .;;;"'-.=c=.;..:.e---'-'·1,,--. Cll-ARACTER 8 dirt bike. Ask for Don, d'"'I 97~1680 aft 6pm maculate! S3650, 842'-8836, ..., t -893-7551 or 638.-7880 e 54&-2806 TAUCING Anwon Parrot. "Balboa". Seliously ~~ r 642--6800, eve. 548--0708 DODGE truck, 196.1. 4 spd, ALF O ves. Young. tame, beoutiful. OK sale. Great party boat for 40 '71 ~4 DK\V. 125. New rtrm, no spin diUerential, 6 cyl, A ROME JAGUAR with dog. $175. Ca 11 people! 6T;,-59l7 llres, bars, ahUI work, p/p runs "·ell. $.)50. 495-52afl &IH032. ."..:=""':,:o..::;::"--~--1 lenders, T & M cng, lo pipe. · 'vkdays. 1961 ALf'A Romeo ·Sprint Li" OUTBOARD w/40 hp Super clean. $150. 714: '&I FORD 112 ton, f.'s ne'v Velocc R.t"blt engine, x.lnt '70 Jag XJ6 Sedan. 30,000 mi. TALKING Amamn Parrot. Young, 18.n\f", beautiful. OK Evenrude $300. or best of. 962-~" cond. ""'162 Sa.mn mechanic for over yr. J -':'.:::.::;'~~=,,-=o-,--paint, eng. overhau eel, dla· .,_.., ... fer. "A" ftK>,f * HONDA 450 * mond plate 8 x 12 flatbed. BMW I \Viii certify cond. $6000. Ph. -.... $19'. Call --"".......,...,.. &l.>-1691 675-3735 evei;, wkends. Und<'r 3000 mfles. like nt'\v. 1----------.::'.'.-"'..'.:'.:'...!.:.:OC..:::0::::::0 __ Cits 152 16' Gl..ASPAR \\'Ith 75 hp. $900. 847.fl37. '68 CHEV, custom cab, \'ii ton MAZDA 1::::.:.:.------"""I Evinrude dean. Engine !-"==="'-----LEASE A 1973 DESPERATE! Leaving town needs v.'Or'k. $900. 1973 YAMAHA 250 cc Enduro 6 cylnder, 3-spel'd, xtra BAVARIA &: must ftnd O'llo'nf!r or ne\V 646-fi078 k1w mileage xlnl cond . $150. ~lean, call aft 5. 556-0567 home. 2 tiny kittem found ~,,~.-eo=A~r=":i;~"'h"p_-,J~o""'°,--n_ .,~1 •• ~~e over payments .. Vans 963 We Buy Used oear Canyon School. Co«ta Blt-in bah tank -till' ......,,,,,. c.==-------" ·~ Bein&: bottle fed . trailer. $-151). 54&-8174 ITALIAN Racing Bicycle 6 TRUCK & TRAILER BMW 1s PERStAN kittens. CFA reg., from champion. gr, ch. I qd. gr. ch. and 'cat of year' anceston, $100 & up. Also stud RJViee &\'ailable. • 892-2970 * * * * HIMALA YIAN Kit· tens, show stock. $75 Up. AlllO stud service. 544-2$6. HIMALAYAN KmENS REAIDNABLE! Call 84Hl55 AKC Registered Dalmation, one year old, male, bad all shots. Call 8.10-8408. 23' CABIN. on trailer. alps 3. mo. old. New cost $189. 1970 CHEV. 1 ton 350 V8, 4 Top Doll11r P1id Dinette. clean, runs \\"ell. ltlust sell $99. STa--0122 after si>ero. 12 ft stake, gd tires, CREVIER BMW $1795. 893--263'1 t xint running cond., coupled YAMAflA 200, xlnt cond, 7001 "ith 16 fl. low boy heavy SaJes ·Service · Lea!iing BEAUT. 18' Trojan. 185-hp, inboard v.s, fa!lt, sm5. 54&--0223 or &r-3'"4325 Bo1ts. Rtnt/Chart'r 908 CHARTER 57' KETCH '1TlOGA"· Coastal &: Offshore 111:\and C..'nlisine. XJnt rates. Daily or Weekly. Ch?t Salisbury II. 6Ta-8344 or Tioga, Box 316. Balboa. Island. mi, $350. duty . triple axle, straight 208 W. 1st St., Sanla. Ana * 646-1352 • hitch . clectric brakes, -1 ft. 83S..3171 'iO l-IONDA Clr-450 plyv.'OOd sides · 1'\"!movable. ORANGE COUNTY'S Just rebuilt, $550. Both sides covett'd \vll h OLDEST 962-3827 vinyl tarps. $3000. 8-16-5-19-1. & 1..ADJES SCHWINN J·f.B. a.ft 5 p.m. VARSITY 10 ~'PEED 'Tl FORD Eeonoline, 350 cug, Xlnt condition. 34~21. air/oond, cust. 11 eats. 1970 HONDA Cl 350 J.A ?t11. 17,000 n1i. Must sell-Must Good Cond. $425 -or best see! Pri pty. 833-1004, SALES.SERVICE-LEASING offer. 499-1791 After 5. 963-1168 eves/\i1knds. OVERSEAS DELIVERY MOVING must .. u. '68 '66 ECONOLINE. '69 '"•· ROY CARVER, Inc. Sii 'I Trlwnpb soo. excel cond. radial Ures, elect. ignition, Tlh S Dot• 154 Bolts, I 909 .i;oo,,·:::o,· ::.o,_r ::.""=t ::.Ol:::le,,r;.· :.&l::>..:256'1= Franz oil filter. dual batt, 234 E. 1 t. --sofa-bed & extras. 5-16-5-172 Costa l\fesa ~S-4444 e PUPPY WORLD e HOBIE 16, 1 yr old. Tana-. & 'JUNE '73 Triumph Trident, '69 FORD long 1 ton. auto, ...... ihuahUAS, Amerlca.n Es· Gold hulls. \Vhite, yellow 5 spd. disc bks, under 2,000 . 1 1 3 v• _, --11·• --'Is HD m•· $!550 '"",,...,.... air, mags, ms. pan 'd, L;\l kimo (Spit'l), Pit Bulls, T· n :u ..... ~ ...... ,,.... • • ' ~· •v. mi. 673-a507 C\ip Poodlt1, Gree.t Dane, Sharline trlr. Dual trapeze '77 KAWASAKI 500, xln t .'-'::...o=='-----Gennan ,.,_rd, Bull Ter-&: Taylor seats. Sa.ii CO\-er. cond. lt1ust sell. $000 or besl '64 F,CONOLINE Yan xlnt ~--t -100 ne1v aslcing -nd. ......,. or ~st off"r, rier. C.OCkapoo. 100 i\llXED v.-of .. , ' offer, 66-4574 Bob "v ~ ""' '" PUPS'·'· ~.• •-•o• 'lost $1,700 or offE'r. Xlnt shape. ._,m:::"::'o.'""'"U"-'='536-4064""':::::::,..,,.--.,, ..... ~, .. , •• i::.te. '""" aft 6 or "A" "·'""' '70 BULTACO M""'dor MK " LEASE A '73 BAVARIA [)(>mo • Serial •3132900 for $Hi6.41 per month DEL or buy for $8.299. Bob Mclaren, BMW, Inc. (714) 879-5624 LIOI• A Rotary Engine MAZDA RX3 Station \\o'agon. our n10St popular model! Only $80.1 1 Monthly MIRACLE MAZDA 21.50 Harbor Bl\'d. Costa Mesa 64&-5i00 * Mazdo '73 Rotory * $66 MONTH 36 MONTIIS O?EN LEASE Will accept trade-in& CALL !rfR. FRY 842-6666 Hunt. Beach MAZDA 17331 Beach Bl. 842.s666 BOB LONGPRE MAZDA TOYOTAS FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY MX tit LUX CELI CA CORONA L.A."'ID CRUISER nmtwiU -TOYOTA ·~ BUICK Convertible, looks '72 COURIER • Gem lop good, run• aood. auto, mmper mirrors • rear bum- p11/pb, l.Jlt $395. gets It! per • R/ll. Low mlleagf: • 5.1U796 one. owner. $2JOO. Ex. con- CADILLAC dlUon · 5-18-4987 'TI FORD ltlaverlck, 4 door 8edan air OOl'ld, auto, r /h. EL DORADOS fu.~120ml .. ,.,. cleao, Sl•ro 14 TO CHOOSE ·n Ford Galaxle. Fully COUPES-CONVERTIBLES equlpped + opera window&. • ~.(XX) mi. $2500. ~. DE VILLES 3038 Club H"""' Rd .. CM 31 TO CHOOSE 'Tl COUNl'RY Squire, ndlo, CDUPES atr, lua:g rack, immacl SEDANS $2750. TI4: 642-9988 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 CONVERTIBLES 063 FORD Econoline Mus '12 COROLJ..A under Factory lal~ ex~Uen.t colors sell. sm or beat offer. "' 8 000 L M 000 Oloice of mter10t11 557-2019 waJTan..,, , ni .... , i~·th , 1 th at 240 Avocado St Apt A, o..w "' ea er) '59 FORD 2 Dr. Economieal ·c.M. After 6 pm .. , Factory air conditioning 6 cyl, stick shift, runs great. , FUJI power . OKiice of: $100 67'S--il!S.1 69 TOYOTA Corolla Sta Stereo AM/ft.I radlo . Wgn. 4 spd, Good condition. cnnse control · '61 FALCON 4 door auto Cnll 963-1445 Trunk opener & more trans, xlnt traruipo. car, $300 '69 CORONA. Auto, 2 dr, All in Immaculate condition Aft 1 pm, 84&-0975 nm/fm, xlnt condition. $800. Lal'ge11t selection in '64 roRD Custom f dr Xlnt Call 536-Cn'i Orange County cond. Asking $400. Nabers Cadillac 1--_::::.S3&-'98'7:.::::c:.._ __ , TRIUMPH AUTIIORIZED DEALER 2600 HARBOR BL., JEEP '67 TRIUJ.f PH SpUnre. \Vire COSTA MESA wheels, reblt engine. Xlnt 510·9100 Open Sunda,)' '63 INTERNATIONAL Scout. running t-oncl. Must sell lm· ·n ELDORADO De Chevy 327, 2 whl drive, med. $650/orter 552-0384 to sell Have 00.:.ght ~~ locked 4-11 g<!Ql'S, new ti~· · very good cond thru-obt. VOLKSWAGEN oar. Coro w/tan ~u top, 1650/-o/(er or trade. all pwr, am/fm radio, nu ~2399 · * * * steel belted ·ti.res, 30,000 · • Bill Willl·ams miles. Best oiler. 56--9419 '&I SCOUT, Chevy 327, 4-11 after 6 pm ·644--0637 ' gelll'S, 2 whl dr, very good 16701 otiv1 Circle *CAD. ,73 ELDORADO ..oo. $600/best aJJer or Fountain Valley Everything incl sunroof. trade. 839-2399 You are lh• wtnner ol n ... "'"3'~ ~ -MERCURY TWO FREE TICKETS ~ ~ ~· ev"' "'~'""· to ttie '72 CADILLAC "'Sedan de SOUTHLAND ..-. Ville, krn· 1ni., clean, has 70 F01lD Mel"CUry ~tontego everything!!! call 6'16-72'l7 2 dr. Xlnt cond. RacliQ, a/c. Home & Garden Show .68 El Dorado, beaut. coiKI. 44.000 mi. Good tires. $1800. July 27th ttu'\I Aug. ~Ill a ll extras. Need cash. Scill ,"644-'7'1580='='===~~o-~I at the for wholesale. 496-1408 '68 ltfERCIJR'Y\Colony Park; COANNVAEHNETIMION '64 SEDAN DeVille. FuH P\\T sta. \\'ag.~ al~ P\\T, fully + many extras. Xlnt cond. eqwpped, see to apprec. CENTER $795. 548-8703 673-5569 800 \V. Katella, Anaheim '70 ELDORADO 30 OOO mi 'T2 l\rERCURY ?.tontego, Please call 642--_5678, ext. 314 young, sho~m' fresh; 40,000 miles .. 673--7755 be. to claim your tickets. (North owner leaving c 0 un try l'.veen 5 & 8 pm only. ~nty toll free number i& 673-5569 ' '70 MONTEAGO. 44,001 ml, 54G-l220*) • * '68'CAD. Lo mileage, $1.T;iO. xlnt condition. Make offer. ~=~=------1 or best otter. Call 644-1580 DAUGHTER gono "'~"""'· Call _, 1-=~M""'u"'s'=T~A~N-=G-=-- CAMARO rn"'" .. u '69 V.W. Bus, xlot cond, nu. radial t l r e s , 61'3-4516 'li6 AlITO, ps, vinyl top, r/h, mags & new tires, xlnt l~. V\V Camper, xµit con; '69 cam. auto, radio, p/s, cond. !\lust SC!ll S 5 5 0 . d1tion -niu.st sell tlus \\'~k. p/b, air. Stecl rad, $1699. s.>7--0757 Call for 1 n for ma t 1 o n 431_7403 / 5.16-6021 ~~~-------1 979-1838 or &W-8338 'f,6 MUSTANG 289GT Fstbck '63 V\V T M 1961 CAf,IARO P/S. Auto. trans. Disc ransporter ust see 3'l7 v.s, ST;iO. brakes. $895. 586-5'29 to appreciate, $ffi0. 6~ ·-... -1"°=~~:::,;==::...-494-032'2 1.>-000>1, or ... 1cnc1.s, ~• 10 lfn MUSTANG very. clean . !'!"""-.-. OPEN E V ~ S : ~~ ~"" 3, Jo mi's. $450 or make of· '65 DODGE VAN ...u .,,.,., fer. 893-4496 aft Spnt. VS, camper inter, $1200. Call SABOT no. 55.Jl. Xlnt cond. 644-4012 NFGHAN • Platinum • °'b!a.clc muk: fetnale, AKC. Muat ~p.. bk>od line. $100. 6?.'>-130l Full ?titlhg rig. 2 sails. boat Electric C11r1 930 '65 FORD Van, 6 cylinder Stick. Runs good. $670. • .....,,., 1973 Ba.varlan1Bt<fW, fiOOO mi Stick. Fully Equip. Under \\'B.ITanty. Pri. ply. 642-3572. '10 VW Sq. Baok. 'MlchoHo CHEVROLET Gas savor. 6 cyl. C»lt -SERVICE FIRST-mha!s. good ..oo. $1350. pamt. $800. 644-&23. 1st Street at the Call 586-1167 1964 CHEVY Impala. 4 dr, '70 MUSTANG. Extra dean, DACHSHUNDS. mlntiture, AKC, shots, red; black &: tan. 538--6771 4 SD..XY Ten-, fem, AKC, champ Uni!. 6 wb. $200 ea.. 832-9422: M4-6178 ltt 7 pm OOlLIE pupa AKC, shots, •ble fem.-8 wkl. Qwnpk>p pedlg<tt 115, -* * AKC York.shire Tenier Puppies. Stud ~ avail. 54S-3541 or 5.1'"-0016 POSTAGE meter machine ,,,,,..!, duJ>li<ation madllne. .,..._, IRISH Setter. ltWe, 3 moe, ........ $100. Call.....,.., &: mast rovers. $ 4 2 5 , 64&-1'170 Sail boat, 12' Koralle, Fast. A·l condition. !400. 540-6338 KITE 651 w/doj.ly. $<00. Call~· COLUMBIA 34, P e rki n 11 diesel pedestal steering, 9 winches, Loaded ¥o'/xtras. $25,000. -CORONADO M' sloop. lnclds radar il extru. 3 mos old, orifa. $45,000. Now $40,000. ""'2582 23' "Star". 2 sets dacron 1911 TA YLOR-DulUl 6 pau. 4 "'hi, model l\t, Electric Cans w/hcadlltes, ta.illites, horn, sUITf!y top & bH-in charger. Cull "~kdays 8:30- 5, M.>283). Mobile Homes 935 UX60 PACE~tAl\ER '"/ex· tras. Seacliff 11obU Pk, 800 \V. 15. N.B. lnq ap. 63. &12-2816 Motor Homes Sale/Rent GMC 940 sails, 4 life jackets, trailer. Motorhomes Alake Oller. 546-7317. zr & 26• 14' LIDO salitioat, excellenl L\11\lEDIATE DELIVERY condition, ~7730. Hun· Orange Co.'s tington Beaeh Exclusive Dealer CAL 20, Half ownership for Bill Barry Pontiac sale. Newport Beaeb Slip. G!\1C REC. CJ::NTER 5.52-8488 >JOO E. l<t St., Sanla Ana ,,.... __ ,_ o::o 1000 .;J1.;UMllD!!' pup, n~ SABOT, no 4755, like l1e\\', 1 --~....;~:;,:=~~-- 3 montha oM. $30. ready for racing, Ulman e SALl:S e * 962-1Z75 * """ 13"'· ""11136· • SERVICE • OOBERMAN Pups, AKC . I-24. Trunk cabin. Equipped Champkm blood line, 2 raoe or crulse. 13,500. • RENTALS • ahow,.2.pets. 9.32-6834. Private Party. 6H-0209 1;Ho=·~-.;.;.. _____ 8_S_6 , KITE, .xlnt eond, prlv. party, EXPLORER HORSE SHOEING $400. * 61l-3749 * OF &Aftt:S~ming. Call &12-S29l Bollts, Slips/l>oc:ks 910 ~~Je'~i?~i?: B ~~ !~~~~~~~~~~I SLIP, a.t 407 E a st FtUNTJNGTON BEACH: 1: Edgewater, Balboa. Up to MOTOR HOMES I -.,. I~ 32' loog, 10' wM!e. $100 por ..._ [qUpment lC.. mo. (714) 525-1153 days, Apollo, Pacesetter, B aro n , · 12131 697-lr«i eves. J amboree. Robinhood Bol S--' Sk" 9 \Ve've got 'en1 at Bolh, Generol 900 11' ,..... & 1 11 KENDON i.:::::=c...:::=~--= '72 CRESTL!NER. """';' MOTOR HOMES * + * 17, Tri-Hull , 16.J HP Polly Boyce l.tercrulser, Van.'Wlfl Trailer, 2209 Bayside Dr. many extra s incklg 707 N. llarbor, S.A. 554-00.tl Corona del Mar speedometer, \Valer ski equipment. ladder, com- ~. <'lee hrn, etc. $3200 or best of fer. Please ('1111 "ttkdays alter 6 Pi\1, .-. 1913 Disco\·erer and Stmdial r.1otor Hon1es for rent, n1ake reservations for Summer 00\V, Phone l\Iiss Bennet at Bob Longpre Pontiac , 8!12·6651 or 636·2500. -. You are the winner or TWO FREE TICKETS to the SOUTHLAND Home & G11rde n Show July 27th U1ru Aug. 5th !ti the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER 800 V.'. Ka.fella. A11ahf"in1 Ptcesc call 64l-5678, ex!. 314 IO cla.!m your ti ckct11. i North County roll free nu1nb(·r is !141).InJ-) * * • WANTED Ui' -20' Sea rJi;itf or dory. Call 673-J.l:'i.1 Boeh/Morine Equl!'= 904 15' HYDRO S\\·1ft ski boat, FBR. GI. S:>hp, OB, elect start. traill'r. S&JO. 494-1:.>81 dy11, 84G-Si64 arr 6 14' SJ..:IBOAT. "fcrc iS. Best offer. ~11-21&1 or 5-18-8995. Transporlatfon I~ * RENTALS * Lltetime, Superior, Open Rood, Landau, Overland & \\'lntlt'bago ~1otorhomcs ltECREATION RENT1\L AND SERVICE Z16 N. (:liu-n, &\ 714-8.'lG-Sb,5 e Nf!w Lu:'!:ury LlFE:l"UfES 23-25', Jrnn\l\c. Slp11 6 "Com· fortably", i\lr, gen, stereo. pvt O'A'llr, 8JS.-OOOO. Tustin 25' EXEX:'UTJVE n1 o I o r hon1C' for n'nt. Fully self containt"d. 6'12-21.'"iO C11mp1r1, S11I•/ Rent t20 ·n COURIER -f'Jt'nl top elU'l'lpt"r. mirrori • ~fU' bumper . !V II, k>\\• milcai;:-c T c.;.r;.•i,..le;.r..;•:..• _T_•.;;•.;.•.;.•l __ .;;9,;c4S • l'll'IC O\\'flet' $2100. Xln1 con· dit.ion • 54.\-4987 15' CAAIPING 'l'ra.ilrr. C<1 * -VW l'OP'l'OP ,.... cond. SJ:i(l. S.15-00IJ or n1 ...... nl,Pl'r, ~ lmmac! Nu brakes & IU't's, .;:."-"~-,.--.,o-,.-= radkt. Citting Thi\ r r 1 td, Auto Service, Parts 949 lttUST S&J..!I S 2. 000 , 673-5193 TIRF.S ~ 100 Aslorfed dztll I: branda. •n TROPtCANI\, 8' JlietJM 6, New &: J"CC3PI + alJtnment l'!'lect \\'8.let, ovtn/f'1Ullrt, & brake t'Q\lip. -Tire 11hop ust'd tw\CC', <'O'l tl300 ~u. went oul of bu&lneu. 1-take tell for Stm, 5.!S-1747 oUer. 673-5569 ~ CAB-Over: ovtn, tllove, RANOtERO flberglas& trock ict box. Sl~. 2 arll!A. 2 11m. bed cover. luggage rack. children. $325. M7·1807 Adult three w~I bike, CX· CAMPER Shtll 11111 8' bed, lra•, like nl~. 64&-1261 CAPRI 2001 E. 1st Street steering & brakes, new bat· 6Ta-10TI Santa Ana 1'TY"Y· WANTED VW1c 327, automatic trans., power air, p/s, p/b. After 6 pm Santa Ana 5511.7871 ~NNING OR OT tery & tires. Good trampor·'~~~~------1 Do lLOLPAR ~ ~ERCEDES BENZ viRvea1·ss,.:'1. ;.,. ;;Pr!: ••tion ~Z>i!J93.~J; * ~!:~~LE .• IC] 50 USED Pty. 64:i='m ~. ~-· -· '69 CHEVELLE I Sllpor OLDSMOBILE PAID NO 0 N T •n VW Xl ..ii·'~-sport, xlnt cond., one owner, GMO TRUCKS Autos W1nted 968 W W HE MERCEDES ""'· nt """"~" bl"' w/white slr;pos d;sc IMMEDIATELY FABULOUS 1973 new engtoe, Extr.,! Private brakes ' HONDA CARS FOR ALL CAPRI ON DISPLAY ' party, 551..,., . 541).3894 ·• UNIVERSITY OLDS Sport coup.! d~. body sltle Sharp New Car EX~ ~~DITION '64 CHEV. CHEVELLE STA. ' 2850 Harbor Blvd. FOREIGN niouldlngs, rf"Clining front Trade-ins G4i-2.iJT, Ask fO!' Chris WMAKEAG. 0AFFER.UTO. $250 OR Costa Mesa 540-9640 i;eals, contour rear seats. 4 CARS speed transmission, PD\\'er Coming In Every D1y •70 BUG yellow Jo mL 1 646-8163 ·n DELTA 8&-2Dr, P/S, WE ARE IN hoot disc brakes, 1tyle 11teel Ask About Our Unique owner, 'xlnt c0nd.. muat '&6 CHEVY convert t apd P/B, V/R. ~.001 mi. $2595. DESPERATE NEED "·heels, bueket seats, radial Used Mercedes Lease sell! SllfiO/otter 557~7 $500 ·best ff. Ca.ii ai fi73..6502 aft 6 PAI ply tires. tGAECN89974'2l. PlllnS * •70 V\V Bug * 6pm ~7-0140 o er. '67 OLDS 911, Lux. Sedan xlri OF GOOD, CLEAN OVERSTOCKED I House of Imports Clean. good roo<litlon. $950. '61 IMPALA STA WGN """" $950. •10 Dodge Custom FOREIGN CARS IMMEDIATE Call 644-1757 A-l cond. Make ofi:er. Qu1 Dart, air, Sllm. 545-3516 TOP DOLLAR-PAID DELIVERY 61162 Maneh.,ter. ""'"a Park '69 vw Bug. R<!blt eog, ..,.._ PINTO FOR OR NOT! 1Jn the Santa Ana F'rw7 radial tires, chrome \\'his, '72 GOLD CAPRICE. Jowl ---------~1 Call or come in to see us. GUSTAFSON 523-7251) $UXX>. 835--0202/m-8781 mileage, like new. $3395, '72 PINTO Squire staUori NEWPORT L' I M JIM SLEMONS '59 vw "'"' good new ba<· 54&-1805 wogon. 14,000 ml. aotd lnCO R• ercury IMPORTS tery, 'body ~. $150. ,59 OIEVY. Xlnt A·l oon-A ltJ IF M s t e r e ~ IMPORTS 16&Xl Beach al Wuncr 6T'""741 ditloo. 1 .1~2350-"4.H!l37==='-----·• J1oow.i42.l..1!~.,Ne. 842.~';'(21¥!5ft5544 MERCEDES BENZ '68 SQ. bk, air. tapo deck. Call 54<>-8095 PLYMOUTH ~~...c~==~-· I "Home of the Vlkin11'1 SAI.EAtrrns &o="VJCE $1l.95. PH 4 '72 L.m>ALA, air oond., 4 dr -TOP CASH • * sr,.3311 * HT, lull pwr, gieat buy' * 1972 Plymouth s.i.mttj * * '71 CAPRI -GAS Jim Slemons ·rz BUG. fact. air, C1ean! 551-46n -Hlr. p/s, p/b, alt, auto, for clcan late model can SAVER -DELUXE -CON· 22,00) mi. $1900. l{)2 NOVA auto P /S P/B &r.;....1691 . 1 and b'ucks! sou:: RADIO -4 c1I. -Imports 645-0316 radkt $195 or offer. s4s-s985' 'fl6 PLY Sport Fury hd top ~I~:!:u~ a:liJ~!r!!t ~~~r~. ~s\~ $ l 6 9 5 • Nf!\1:~:!ch low i~=-l3T;;. CHRY!tLER =~ :!d. ~:~res) Newport Beaoh '72 CAPRl. VS, 4 spd, fully · 833-9300 Call 64+(,629 PONTIAC 833-0055 equipped. under 10,000 mi. ENTER FROM MacARTHUR ,70 VW BUS ·n CHRYSLER NC\vport, 4 . .C::.:•:::llc.:541l--001~~::2==.,---J '11 MERCEDES-O-'"'" dr lIT, air cone!., psfdlsc \\'E PAY TOP DOLLAR -uo::nz £.JV 7 pass. air, 548--3905 brks, radio w/rear spkr, FOR TOP USED CAns DATSUN Sedan, p/s, p/b, a.ir, clec• . I . . $2900 LEASE OR BUY ·n thru ·73 PonUaca DAVE RCSS PONTIAC windows. auto. trans on VOLVO ~!!YA702int., pnv party, · lf your ear is extra clean, °"""""' see us first. '71 240Z. 1 owner, nu radials, floor, radials, 29COl mi, J ----------1-"'""':=::,=====o----I BAUER BtnCK mag" om/Im '''""' tapo, orig. owner 963--5966 -ECONOMY CONTINENTAL 2925 Harbor Wvd. auto, air Jo mi. $3650. MB. '73 280 Sedan, auto, 7 . 2480 Harbor Blvd. at Fa.Jr Costa Mesa 979.2500 642-3392!6T~3008. months, 14,CMXI miles, lite & 197? !\lark N, Xlnt cond, lo Drive, Costa l'lfe&il 5t6-8017 WANTED U S E D '72 DATSUN UOZ, lime blue, p/w, $799'5. 5.52-9178. 1n1leage. Loaded. $6995 . ' -I lttAVERICK auto, air, AM/0!/8 trac "69 Mercedes 280 SE. Cream. SAFETY ~1360 betwn 8:30 AM-5:30 65 P 0 NT I AC Sedan PRIVATE PARTY mull. f11.ct. bltn. Stripping, & All P\\T, extras, clean. 4 dr Pi\t Tempest. Needs \\'heel bear- 644-1601 mng11. St300. 3.57--01~ Gd cond. 1 owner. 494-04.51 PLUS 1966 =INJr'AL ~~ku~illl~:. o~~:r =~ JUNK cars v.•anterl. Free '73 DATSUN iwz, 11\lver, '61 MB 280 SL Rdstr, 4 spd, Savintas & Comfort Ph 842-310i a.ft ·6pm ::,54::!Hl530,=::,.,-~----1 towing, title clearance, 2-1 auto, mftg'!!:, 11poill't', 500'.l mi, ps, air. low miles. $5475. In Our Rem11lnlng '67 CATAUNA 2 dr, nu tirH hn. 494-1003 ext 6(ll sacrifice. 644-5854 ~. eves. 673-0728. 35 DODGE & battery, lo mile!, $475. or ---~ NEW VOLVOS 1----------1 otter. 64&-52n Immediate Delivery ·~uck~~a~ powS::. .1:°'::, ___ RA __ M_B_LER ____ , • 1\ l $14$. 646-6708 - (Oil fJUiA' '64 DODGE Dart, Model 110, 66 RAMBLER , YOLvo auto, 2 Dr. Good runOing, 2 dr. 11a<1 blewn head gasket. ,, $175. 494-TI47. You repair. $150 finn. (In. FORD °'""" ,....1r parts). 1966 Hllrbor, C.M. 646-9303 CLASSIC '63 Volvo. $500. Xlnt cond. Great nlJllllng. Priv. pty. Aft 6 pm. 1971 FORD GALAXIE 500 • 543-36!11 • T-llRD MUST SELL I 67J..i©5. Autos, UHCf 990 2 Door Hardtop --'--------1'400 V8 "engine BUICK ~:~~trans, '67 T·Bird. All ~·er. xlht cond. low mileage. 67l-2383 or ST:.-8139. ---------!Power disc bral.'t'S VEGA BUICK SPECl.AL Tinted windshield Color blue, Excellent col)(!. Air condiOonlng a * • Radio, air, VS. Old 111.dy AM radio it· KorMk rrom Philadelphia previous Vinyl roof 15366 Severne Circle O\\•ncr. 1967, 29,()XI miles. Wheel Covers Irvine , SUOO. New Vt'hit~·all tires You nre the "1mlf1' of * Mll-O'l!ll. .. V..-y good ..oo;uon. TWO FREE TICKETS 114 E. nh St ., Apt. 14 O>l!ta 49,000 mite&. M..._ $199S to lh• '72 BUICK El"""' LTD, 2 See at SOUTHLAND dr, "'" -A .., .... DAILY PJLOT EMPJ.OYE Home.& G1rden SMw f11ct air cond, ~ control. PARKING LOT July 21th thru At11. 5th' Ult stt~ wheel, Altf/FM 330 West 8'ty, Costa Mesa at dtie l'ltereo, ~It bench Elli. or ANAHEIM Low book. 49J..i848. CaU Mat11attt G,...nm.., CONVENTION '68 BUICK • Sl<Ylark, Ca. 6IH121 • CENTER Spec. :?:::1::r & air ·n ltlAVER.JCK. J1,000 mi. 800 W. Katl!'li. AMheint $1~ ~ • pl•. gaa •~r. Xlnt cond. Pleue call &ti.5s78 txt p.t Fat Profll t. allahted when ~lake oftet. 53&-7014 to el11,lrn yoor tlcket'a. ~ )'QU all li\rouah rt11Wl...,el· '67 FORD Cntry Sqrt, 9 pass, Countt toll tree numbe(; b" tlor DellY Pilot OUsllJid 111ra cl<an..1..1u11 P"T, r/h, 541J.Jm) • TIME FOR ·9ufCK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WAtn AD 642-567B like ~'. j175. Uke to Trade! Our Tradtr't ""''""""'Col:::;:..;;""';:::::2:13:::;.I ~,---: Para41:11e column tJ tor )'QUI Da.Uy P'lot Want 1'dt hav• I 5 llnea, 5 ct&ys tor $5. C.11 b9..r'111na:p)oc.. ~t~oda:;.¥~·~-~·~'~''""";.:::;:.:.._~ ~---~------~----------~---~ Ml. ~ I.ft • pm, t:OI,; !Q..1523. • • * ( • I I. ·] I l I l I I I • VO I ,i.1 SI pre< itlfli lioy sl .. Tl lmn anl1' o1 loca F " di>< diet tell thei lam ~ D W. dbc ~ wal s.. ..0 1 rai1 196 In F lod dei s 55 "C( itiE dit mi: 1 oc< bot SM 81 in F> lni the I 1!i SW "p J bei ed • nq wl Fr l a fn lbl .. de du Ml Ti 1 • 1 Ir, ~ .. .. • f • . ... • --~ ---' ' Today's F inal San Cle1oen1e Capistrano EDITION N.Y. Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 205, 2 SECTIO NS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, .CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JULY 24. 1973 TEN CENTS Boy Severely Bitten \ by Coyote • Ill Clemente By JOHN VALTERZA CH Ille D.111'1' 'II"' Sl•tf ~ San Clemente State Park's un- predictable coyote struck again today - inflicting dangerOU! bites to a S.year~ld boy from 1w1ission Viejo who had been sJeeping on the gri>und. The youngster, Wayne Allan Preheim, immediately began the painful series of ~ntirables injections. or grave concern lo authorities is the location of the bites -on the small boy's • forehead. Authorities stressed !Nit it could not be determined If the coyote wai rabid, but that as a precaution the in- jections would have to start immediately. The latest in a series of incidtnts - a grim repetition of attacks on campers by foxes last summer -occurred as the youngster slept at space 74 thi8 morning at about 6:30. 1 The boy's mother, Mrs . Mary Alice Preheim of 22'm La Quinta Drive, called rangers immediately after the attack. Local police were summoned ns "'ell . .. Little Wayne suffered t'.\.o minor puncture wounds and a fe\V scratches in the attack and was given emergency trealment at San Clemente General 1'k>spital. The attack marked the Second time in little over a week that:.a youngster at the park has been bitten by a coyote.· On Monday of last . week Denise Plmper. 8, of Norwalk. was bitten on lhe leg -apparently by the same wild canine. Park rangers and other authoritie~ in1- medlately set traps :ind extra patrols 1n <ln effort to catch the royotc. O\·er the wee kend officers shol llntl "'ounded one coyote 1n the area and un- confirmed reports stated late ~londay that the aninlal 's carcass had been found. But that coy()tc obviously \\'as not the one that atll1cked thi s morning. As in the case· of the foxes l<ist yea r • inone of "'hich \\'as found to be r;1b1dl. lhl· atl acks glnl'r:llly Ol."t:u r in the p rcd~n\·n hour~ Hani;:('rs s.i1d they can on!~· th1'0r i7.e that the foxrs nnd t'Cy()tl'S v.h1ch h\·e in lhC' rugged areas of l~ park haYe lo.st thei r fea r of man ufter h\'Lng for months off scrnps of food at the park. hence arc capa ble of w1provok1..'d a1u1cks on slerp- 111...: carnp<'rs. The prt'caution nry orders ·for ;in. t1rabies shots co1nc fron1 1hc Oran ge C-0un1y \lelerinary J>ublic lleallh ofUc:e and 111,·oh·c 14 injections. one a day, of II duck scrum \\'l11ch im1nunizcs a patient against the dread disease. Health officials become most c.'00· ccrned \\'hen bites occur in the areas of the head and face because the disease af· frt·ts the brain. They ha\'e described tht injee1ions as di!!cornforting. bul nol ;1s painful as !he original type of scrurn \vhich caused \'1olrnt side clfccts . • • I ase n S Ill UICI e False Reports Laos, Cambodia Deaths Revealed WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Pentagon disclosed today that 81 U.S. servicemen dit'd in Laos and Cambodia oo secret in· telligence m.lssions since 1965 and said tbtlr deaths were fa lsely reported to families and to Congress as having oc- curred in Sooth Vietnam. Defeme Department spokesman Jerry W. Fr1edheim said the false reports were dl!cove?ed Monday in a re'view of Vietnam war 1latlstiq provided to ~in Ille wde o( last week's disclosure that the Senate had been misled on a 14-month 3CC1'el bombing campaign in Cambodia. '1'1le report listed 3,630 B5Z bombing raids actually conducted in Cambodia in 1969 and 1970 as h<lving been c<lrried out tn South Vietnam. Fried.heim said Congress "'as informed today about the false account of the deaths. Since the fall of 1965, Friedheim said, 55 U.S. sefvicemen have died conducting "covert military reconnaissance activ· ities" in Laos. He said since 1967, an ad· ditional 26 have been killed on secret missions ·m Cambodia. Their families were told "the deaths occurred on classified missions along the border of South Vietnam." Friedheim said, and tbe report to Congress listed fill 81 deaths among U.S. battle casualties in South Vietnam. Friedheim s'aid the agents were operat- ing on missions so classified that even their places of death bad to be kept secret. He said the cover story, showing they died in South Vietnam, was fed into Pen· t_agon computers and the circumstanc~s surrounding each death v.·ere kept m "paper files." . Friedheim said infonnation was still being checked when the spy missions end· ed and when the last deaths occurred . The families of the 81 men are being notified of the true .circumstances un.der which their sons and husban~s died. Friedheim said, and no names will be an· India n J ewels Stolen SEDONA Ariz. (AP) -Burglars took a $200,000 °collcction of Indian jewe.lry from a local trading post after remoyi.ng the lock ()0 a \valk-in ·vault. authort.11~ said. The Coconino County she nf( s department said the jewelry ·'!\'as discovered missing Monday by ritr. and Mrs. John Woodward, owners of the Bear Track Trading post. nounced until notification was completed . Most of the agents were Army Green Berets, he said, but some nlight have been Marine or Air .Force personnel. J-,:riedheim said their sp::. missions in· volved primarily observlQ.g activity along the Ho Chi Minh trail , gathering infor· mation in North Vietnamese base areas bi.side Cambodia, and ~ssing the re· suits of the secret U.S. bombing raids in these base area.!. CUSD Give11 Land Gra11t By Developer Bv f\1ARCI DODSON Of Ille D•HY l"llel 'llff Trustees of the Capistrano UnifiOO School District P.tonday night formally acti!pted a land grant from Avco Com· munily Developers and comm i t t e d $125,000 for land improvements to the 17- acre junior high school site in Laguna Niguel. Terms of the agreement require the district to pay $125,000 for improvements in access and utilities for the site, located in the northeast section of Laguna Niguel near Crown Valley Parkway. The board also passed a resolution of intent to condemn , which will give a tax break to Avco, said Superineendent Truman Benedict. Benedict met with architects for the school last week and reviewed three dif· ferent plans for placing the school on the . site. he said. "According to the architect, .there are no significant problems. In fact, the pro- cess of changing the school from one site to another has been much Jess difficult than previously anticipatt'd by the architect. which should result in less cost to the district," Benedict said. The acreage which trustees acti!pled ~tonday is the second site considered since Avco announced its intention to make a land gift to the district last year. Problems with grading on the first site caused the officiab to find t h e alternative which lhe district formally accepted ~tonday. School officials have tried to rush the (See LAND, Page !) New Clues Di.sclosed Jn Sla ying of Girl, 11 By JOHN ZALLER Of .. o.ltt' l"IW ,,..., Newport Beadl 1>01lce today rtleaotd an artist's composite drawing of the man they btlieve may have abducted •nd klll· """ 11-year-old Corona deI Mar school gtrl Linda Ann O'Kttfe two weeU ago. 'Police said Information for the draw. Ir.gs came rrom two witnesses-who observed Miss O'Keefe getting into a late model van driven by a curly haired man eatimated to be 24 to 30 years old. Witnesses aald the Incident took place about 3 p.m. on Marguerite Avenue, the Slr•<t the )Otlltg girl normally walked cm tf~r way home from summer classes she ... was attending at Upcoln lntermedlatc School. . She disappeared on Friday. July I. and was found dead Satunlay In a dlldl along Back Bay Drivt by Upper Newport Bay. , Call8t of death was strangulation. Police said they have had information abou~ the suspect .and hls turquo~e<ol· ()red van since "early In the In· vestigation," but were reluctant to make it public. "We didn't want . the suspect to know , we. had any Information about him," ex· plained C.pt Donald Oyaas ol the dctec- tS.. CLUES, Pore II CHASE ALONG PACIF IC COAST HIGHWAY ENO EO IN LAGUNA NIGU EL ; DR IVER SHOT HI MS ELF Newport Beach Patrolman Charles Morin Investigates Scene After Speeds of 90 MP H Through Traffic Council Forced to Retreat San Juan Busi nesses OJJp ose Zo ning Pro posals A slrong show or opposltlon by San Juan Capislrano's business communily Monday night caused cit y council1nen to back off on proposals to clearly define which types of businesses \vould be allowed in the city's con1mercial zones. Instead of passing final judgnH•nt on the revision to the city zonln!J ordinance. councihnen sent the iss ue back to the pl anning commission for a long period of new study. The San Juan Capistrano Chamber of Commerce as well as other business· en- tities formally opposed the re\'isions at J\I onday's session. asserting that the specifying of ell:act business uses v•ould create a hardship and da1nage business in gene ral in the city. Chamber of Commerce President For· rest Dunivin said that the chan1ber board had issued a strong recommendation to the council that the a1nend1ncnt be quashed. The changes could cause vacancies in con1n1ercial bu ildings that could not be filled , and could deter n!!w businesses from developing in the city. Dunivin said. Among the strong('sl critics of the pl;.in on 1he council \Vas James \'leathers, v.:ho said !he revision was \'ague and could cause problems 1,·11h proprietors whose • businesses could be declared non- conforming in the city. Specifically. the revisions set up separate categories ()f c.'()mmercial zon- ing start ing with the most tourist-related types in lhe mission-control district and fann ing out to the heavy commercial land uses in service-oriented complexes. The city's lega l office r told councilmen !hat even if the businesses were non- conforming under the new code . they could still change hands and the use be retained. A one-year fallow period fo r such a use. however. would result in 1he business being 3bandoncd in the district. One aspect \\•hlch irked Yefthers. however. was the inability r ~9n· COMPOSITES SHOW SUSPECT IN LI NDA ANN O'KEEFE SLAYING C1uicni1n., 2A to 3Q, Brown Curly H1ir, Droopy Eyes. Tinned . " ' c:onforrn ing businessrnan lo expand l11s business. After length y thsc11~sion nn the drawbacks or the rrvisiuns. counciln1en and critics ul the pl.in turned tu the issue of con1n1unication. Councilman J an1es Thorpe criticized the critics for appea ring so late w11h !heir arguments. "I \\'tsh that the planning commission could have had lhe beneht of presen- tations on the plan and that its acl ions could have Jx:<>n taken seriously." he said . ~len1bcrs of !he aud ience. however, 111- ISee ZO~ING , Page :!J Nixon Disavo,val Co ntradicted By Erlichma11 \VASlllNGTON (AJ>) -.John D. Ehrlichman roday quoted Presiden t J\'ixon as saying in Pi1arch that !he 1971 Ellsbcrg brea k -v.-as ··a vital nati<>nat SC<'urity inqui ry" "ell within his con· sli!utional powers and obligations. r\ixon said ~1ay 22 that he didn"t authorize Ille break-In, didn 't know about it until recently. and would have disa p- pro\·ed It if brought to hi!! anent ion. Ehrlichman denied trying to hide the incKlent from .FBI agents investigating last year's Watergate bttPi:lMY and wiretapping. saying he had been told that the J ustlce Department already had thtl ioformatioo . • He said !he breitk-fn at the offlct oC Daniel Ellsbcrg~ p~ychlatrl.st was a prop- f!r "'ay 10 track do\VD t~ who be trayed governm ent secr~ts. said any 11:ovemm.:!nl offlc\a l "·ould underst:tnd that und k<'ep tht break-In confidentia l. and w ld 1?\·en !he public would agree if only nuw!ll 1ned1a "'Ould properly inConn !Ste DREAK·IN, Pag< II ••• 4 t .. --.J..-- Si1spect l(ills Self 111 Niguel By JACK CllAPPELL DI 1111 0-51'1' ~llel St1tl i\ high-speed police pursuit from l"\C\\'port Beach to Laguna Niguel ended in death t.londay as the man police from three agencies chased placed a gun to his hrod and fired . Jerry ll Grenoble. 28, of Alameda , died at South C.oast C.ommunity Jlosphal at 5:45 p.m. slightly more than two hours after the c.hase began in Corona del f\far. An autopsy was scheduled today to determine the exact caU&C of death. The ·~ 1Man in Conloa del Mar after police were alerted by residents of Cameo Shores. A woman told o£Ucers the bearded mail had been m3king in-- coherent statements to her 8-year-old grandson and had told the lad he \\'a!'l God. As the woman went into her house, Grenoble reportedly called out that he would come in and get her if she didn't come oui: Police stopped the car minutes later but the gaunt driver sped away as they "·a1ked toward him . Police units lrom r\e wport Beach, Laguna Beach and the California ll ighway Patrol raced in pursuit of a late model Volksv.·agen dri ven by the bea rded suspect at speeds of 80 to 90 miles per hour through heavy su mmer afternoon traffic in dov.·nto.,..·n Laguna Beach. The chase ended at lhe entrance to The Shores development at Niguel Ro.ad on Paci fic Coast Highway in Laguna Niguel as the foreign car skidded out of control off the road and the Newport Beach police unil careened into a block .,..·all beside it. c;rcnoble apparently shot himself at tha t time by placing Jhe muzzle of a .22· ccilibcr 1-1 arid R revolver in his moulh and pull ing the trigger. \'ot hea ring the shot JX>lice officer~ frorn Laguna Beach and Newport Beach closed in. guns dra~·n, and ordered lhe 1nan to exit the vehicle . \\"hen he did not Laguna Beach patrolman Terry Temple app roached the SUSpl'Cl .,...ho wa s holding the gun in his left hand and took the v•eapon . wtl Bleeding from the mouth and ears f.reneble \\'as lifted fron1 the car. handcuffed and laid face down on the grass v.·hcre ambulance attendants pick- 1 See CHASE, Page :! ) Orange Coast Weather Coastal skies Wednesd<ly will again be cloudy during night and morning hours. but lhc sun ls ex· pectl'<I to break through about 11 a.nl. Te1npcratures \\'ill range in the high s1xt1t's "·Hh a sunny after- noon forecast. 1·ne low "'ill be 60 dtgrccs . \\11Hcr temperature "'Ill be 64. l~SIDE T ODAY ll1jocke r1 blew up a Ja po ncse jerl iner at cht Benghazi Airport $/in rtly aftPr tliey and their 137 /1ns tage1 slid dowt' Oll etner· gency cllu tc. See 1lory, Page 4. L.M •• ..,. I (111..,.,!.1 I Claw II" 1•·• cemk' n Cr.llWOt• It °"'" Hltlctt 11 l•tr•rlel '"• • fllltrl•lll•f .. ftl Jl-JJ l'illlll(• \)oil , ... "" llltc9•• , •• 14 ....... ,_ .. IR it"!(• 14 .... l.IHMltn 11 M41l'lu n °1J M91'1111 ...... " Nltllft•I ""'' 4, 1 on .. t Ctllfllf 11 ,, •• 1. p., .. , It ~ ''"" '*• M•l'lth 11-U T ...... lllM 1t TllMttn n ,1J W-111•1 Ntwt IP.11 WWII Htwl 4. 1 I DAILY PILOT SC Nixon to Abide _By Court Ruling WASHINGTON (AP) -The \Vhil c House today promised that J>resident Nixon will abide by an eventu<il rourt ruling his pn.""'Ct!dcnt-sctting battle to withhold Watergate e\·idenct. The President abides by the law," Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. War- ren said. He would g1\'e no hint \\'h3t legal ta<.. .. tics Nixon will lake in response to sub- poenas from the Senate Ylatergate t'Om· Hookups Slow Substation In Clemente Problem" with utility hookups have caused a delay of two more v.·eeks in the Installation of Sao Clemente's new north area fire substation, but City ·~1anagier Kenneth Carr said that the facility should be open by mid-August The earlier target date of Aug. I had mittec and 11pecial prosecutor Archibald Cox, excl'PI to say a decision would be announced by Thursday. f\lcan .... ·hUe , Atty. Gen. Elliot L. Richardson saitl he believes Nixon has •·substantial ll'g<J.I and constitutional foundation" tor refusing to give up the sought-after documents and ta p e recordings, Y.'hiFh Nixon concedes can't prove his innocence. Bu l Richardson called for Nixon, his boss, and Cox. his technical but in· dependent subordinate, to ''try to work out some praclical means of reconciling the competing interests at stake." Richardson tbm svmed to be sug· gesting an out-of-court compromise. The White I louse. by agreeing to abide by eventual court l'Ulings, seemed to clarify the ground rules in the unfolding ronstitutional confrontation. The U.S. Supreme Court no\v appears to be c<ist by all sides as the ullirnatc rc(crec in the hislOric dispute. From Page 1 BREAK-IN ••• been 8JlllOUDctd recently for the small them of all the fact s. substation, but the ulilily problems addro Testifying before lhc Senate Watergate ty,-o weeks to the schedule. commiUee, Ehrlichman also accused Other aspects or the project, including ousted White House Counsel John W. the hiring of five new firemen and order· Dean III ln general temu of lying lo the ing of portable structur~ and equipment. committee. are on schedule. Ehrlich.man said he believes he is 1be five new firemen "'ere signed on several days agG and at present arc personally innocent of any wrongdoing. He said he v;ants to answer a number of undergoing Intensive lralning. Hundreds of men had applied for the five positions, accusations agalnst him. Carr said. Saying that national security con- Portable buildings, including a mobile sic.ieraUons still prevent him from answering .some questions. Ehrlichman home and a metal storage structure are said the Ellsberg break-in was perfonned oo schedule. As for the nilling stock for the by the White House S p ecial substalioo, final touches are being added In vestigations Unit, popularly known as to the new squad pumper _ a rast· the "plumbers," that included G. Gordon response attack truck _ and it should be Liddy and E. Howard Hunt. Both were ready in time for the mld-August opening later convicted in the Watergate wlretap- dale, Carr said. ping. The station, being irutalled for less Ehrlichman said he didn't find out than $50.000, will occupy a leased site at about the break-in until after it happened the northeast end of the San Diego Gas Sept. 3, 1971. But he said he didn't con- and Electric Company storage yards sider it a potential embarrassment for almg Camino de los Mares. the While House because it was a proper The substaUon will be manned around way to investigate leaks of national the clock by a two-man crew capeble of security information. operating the small pumper and the sec· By contrast, fonner Attr.~ Gen . John N. end city ambulance also to be kept at the Mitchell said he coruiderea the Ellsberg station. break-in one of the "White House hor-· Carr said that as soon as the new city rors" that he coosciously hid from the ambulaDce be\ng l)UJ'chaaed w \ t b President for fear Nixon would "lower revenu~sharing fund!. ia delivered, the the boom," discl0&0ieverythirlg .and lose. el'iJU. na;ue mdt will be .kfPt at the -tf1e election to Sen. George McGovern. LoS M-s!le. ' Eh !'chm 'd N" d'dn'l .d The tati ould insta t r 1 an sa1 txon 1 cons1 er s on .w serve as an n · it embarrassing, either. response facility whereby the small crew "On the first <XX."asion when r did would respond to all calls and then ~uld discuss UUs with the President, which be bolstered by volunteers and full ·t1me was in March, he e:ipressed essentially crews as needed from the fire headquar-the same view that J have just stated," ten, Carr explained. Ehrlichman said. "That this was an im- From Pagel LAND ... entire acquisition issue because o! the .crush of intermediate-grade enrollment facing the CUSD. The district's sole junior-high campus -the most crowded of any school In the system -will go on double sessions this !all. The crisis will only be staved off. Benedict has said, when the new Niguel school opens itJ doors. From Pagel ZONING ... sisted that they had been infonned belatedly about the proposed changes. "Thorpe placed the onus on the cham- ber of commerce st ressing that it should perform as a watchdog for the business community and alert merchants when Jssues arise affecting them. OaAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT "TM Or1no-CHI! DAILY PILOT, •ll!'I Wl\!(I> II ~ 1~ N1•1·l'tt11, 11 """'4llhtll ~y 11\1 0r.,,.. Co11r l'llbllllllln9 c-""· s- r1i. Mllllofts ''' p,M1""911, -.,,., "'"""" Friil-oy, for Cm•• M"", ,.,_,, le•(ll. Hll!>llf!OIOll IM<l'l.llf...,l11t1 Volley, L~ a.di, llYIMISlcldltf>Kk ..... S." C ......... ltf S.n J~n C1P11tr1roo. 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'" If """"'""' --. ..._, Clfft "91Afl ,.._ .. c.t1 M .... \ portant, a vital national securi~y inquiry and that he considered it to be well within the constitutional, both obligation and function of the presidency.'' At another point, Ehrlichman said, "I considered the special unit's activities to be well within the president's inherent constitution::il powers. And this particular episode. the break-in in Cali!ornia. likewise. to have been within the President's i n h e r e n t constitutional pov.·ers." Single Parents Set Discussion Of Life ''Changing Lircstyles in the Single Parent Home" is the topic o( discussion at a meeting of Parents \Vithout Partners starting at 7:30 p.m. Saturday at the Shorecliffs' Golf Club in San Clemente. The speaker will be John Turner, director of The Family Services Associa· lion. Discussion will begin at 8: 15 p.rn . following coffee . Dancing to "llappiness Is" '"''ill follow the meeting. - l ' OlllY l"llol Sltff 1"111119 Ltieky Trtreker S.-Coost Food Sales 'Normal' By MARCI DODSON 01 ·~· O.lly 1"1111 '''" Some Southern Orange Coast markel managers have reported '"business iis usual" today sinoe the lifting ol the freeze· on food prices, despite threats of possible shortages and additional major price hikes. Others, however. are noticing a boom in canned goods and meats. "There's really been no nm on the market," said an assistant manger rrom Albertson's Market in San Clemente. "People have just been ~Yi83 things they nonnally need, even though prices have gone up." Roger Markum, a spokesman for Capistrano Market, said t¥t although the price of pork, poultry and eggs have gone up, customers are still buying. "There's been no stocking up· on the items but it sure hasn't slowed up,'' he reported. Howe\•er, Dcrrill Rogers, manager of Market Basket in San Clemente, said busines.s has been "pretty heavy" since the announcement of Phase 4, Doting a 15 to 20 percent increase in the number or shoppers in his store. San Diego trucker Earnest George Roekel, 31, of San Diego -a very lucky man -looks for personal effects in wrecked cab of his auto parts truck after a rear-end crash with a lumber rig en route to Mex- ico. l\fi shap -which could have proved fatal to the trucker, occurred late Monday afternoon on freeway near Sal\ Clemente's Camino de Estrella. Despite high-speei:l collision Roekel suffered only minor cuts. Damage to expensive German-made rig was in thou- sands of dollars. highway patrolmen said. "The people have really been buying carmed goods and canned milk. And our meat sales are up about 15 percent." Albertson's assistant manager has predicted a !ood shortage "on every ite1n in the store," and future price increases in practically all items, especially grain products and canned goods. From P119e 1 CLUES ••• live division. Oyaas said that if the suspect became worried, he might flee the area. But after following up literally hundreds of leads In the two weeks since the crime, Capt. Oyaas said a decision was made to release information in the hope that the public would provide additional clues. "What we want now is for someone to recognize the man in the picture and tell us about it," he said. "He has a very distinctive face." Oyaas said the man was estimated to be 24 to 30 years old, with mediwn lengtQ curly brown hair and an unusually "long face." A distinctive feature, he said, was the suspect's droopy eyelids. "If anyone knows a man like this, they should recogni1e him from our composite draw-· in gs." Oyaas aai~ the witDCSlel observed the O'Keefe girl g'etting into the suspect's van while driving pal!lt in a vehicle of their own. He said they did not stop, but were certain they recognized the girl get· f(ng into bright turquoise van. He added, however, that the two witnesses had never before seen the O'Keefe girl. Oyaas said the girl apparently got into the van under ber own power and did not seem to be under duress at the time the witnesses observed the event. Oyaas urged anyone with information about a person resembling the suspect to call the Newport Beach detective division at 673-2211. CHASE ... Other managers, however. are more concerned about their meat stock. Capo Beach Association To Discuss Zo11e Appeals "We're sc:heduled to get more beef this week and more the next week. although there's talk about a meat shortage next y,•eek. But as far as our supplier has told us, he's got plenty," .&aid Capistrano Market's spokesman. "It will be interesting to sec what hap- pen.5" with meats," agreed Markl!t Basket's manager. "There's a shortage predicted, and ii will be interesting to see how long it waits before it happenS. I just hope it doesn 't." Members of the capiSl.rano Beach Community Association Wednesday will discuss the progress of their appeal or the •approvals granted recently by the South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Commission to a major Palisades area condominium development. President Frank Rainey said the ap- peal to the State Coastal Commission was made on 13 points, all based primarily on density and the possible strain on local services by the 213 units. The Grant Land Company of Anaheim Is proposing to build the townhouse com- plex on land between t h,e san .Diego Freeway and a line a few-hundred feet inland of Camino caplstrano. 'Ibe South Coast Commission enforcing provisioos of the Coastal Initiative over- ruled staff objections to the project recently and granted a pcrml}_. Rainey appealed to all Palisades residents to attend Wednesday's 7:30 p .m. session at the board or realtors of- fices. Mutilated Body Found Near Yuba YUBA CITY (Al)) -Sutter County authorities are seeking the ·idenlity of a brown-haired young woman y.·hose body was found with 29 stab wounds on a rural road south of Yuba City. "- Investigators said the \\'Oman was ,vearing a brov.·n and white polka dot miniskirt over a bikini sy,'imsuit. Her '1We'te urging people to attend because of the urgent problems which will affect cveryonP with the advent of higlHfensi- ly into our community," he said. The Grant project is to be called Mira C:Osta Villas and y,·ould be the largest of several high-density projects proposed for the acreage which recently was an· nexed into San Clemente. City approvals already have been granted to the developer with no ob- jections other than a strong demand for recomideration by the United South Coast Communities group representing a coalition of homeowner associations. Critics of the master -p J an n e d development.s.proposed for the Palisades have asserted that the high-density pr~ jects WOJJld burden roads, schools sanita- tion facilities and municipal services. J ndges Learn Ropes From ·County Jurist Newly appointed judges f r o m throughout California are learning how to handle the job at classes conducted by Judge Richard Hamilton of South County Municipal Court. Judge Hamilton ·is an instructor at the 1973 Trial Judges College Session under '!Vay at UC Berkeley. Hamilton.will serve as an instructor at the session through Aug. 3. He is the presiding judge at tfie south COWlty court. -ueroine~ Dies Her Story 'Saved Father's Life' ESCONDIDO (AP) -As he looked at the kidnaper holding a ' pistol to his head that day, industrialist James Hawthorne talked aloud about his daughter Linda Carol -"sort of plump and happy, with a truly beautiful life." "I told him about Linda and how she was operated on for brain cancer," Hawthorne says or that moment of terror Oct. 6. "Suddenly, there was a rapport. His attitude towards me changed completely. I know that Linda saved my life." cd him up later and rushed him to the body v.·as found Sunday along Pleasanl ho ., I Valley road by a fisherman. Although a ransom of $186,500 was delivered, Hawthorne . escaped and a man suspected in the kidnaping was arrested before the money could be picked up and was later convicted. The story of Linda Carol Hawthorne ended less happily. After suffering 14 months with a malignant brain tumor, the 9-year-old girl died Sunday in Palomar Memorial Hospital. The Cuneral·was today. ~· be h She was described as lng in er late "\Ve really don't know why he ran. \Ve teens or early 20s and wore 3 st. \vent to investigate a report and when we Christopher's medal and a "Chri st in got there he ran," Newport Be;ich de tee-_:P_:•:•:::<•:_'_' m::::cd:•::l::lion::_•:r.::•.:w:::•d:_::hc::r_:n:::•.:,<k;::· ___ '...._===========================::! any connection." Oyaas said. , · Oyaas said he doesn't "know what the suspect wa s doing in Newport Beach and declined lo speculate on a connection between the dead man and the death of 11-year-old Linda Ann O'Kee!e found strangled In the back bay early this rri0nth. WALi{ SOFTLY! Mony times we toll to people who fael tho! corpeting at $5.00 to $8.00 jcorpet olone) per square yord is expensive. A housewife who buys dress materi41s knows th4t she is unlikely to buy good moterio~ for less !hon $3.00 lo $~.00. Also, a men might p•y $1.00 for • fool-squore hondlerchief, which worls out to $9.00 a square yard. Can you imagine how' these materials would perform if you pieced heovy furniture and welled on t hem 1 Consequently, when you spend $3.00 to $~.00 for corpeting, regardless of where you buy it, i:lon't expect too much, walk very, 1oftly ! • r "' .. ALDEN'S CARPETS o D:tAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 C.11~, ~-h' c.""" UIS -'M¥'°'"W fMff U.tJ ~ """""" .......... st ... ,,,.,. .... . ... -~HllU..,_... VOLKSWAGEN WITH SHATTERED WINDOW DRIVEN BY SUSPECT Patrol Unit Also Crashed Ag1in1t W•ll of Niguel Shores HOUIS: MOI. Tin T1'wn. t h> S:JO FRI. t h> t -SAT, t :!O ,.,-5 • '· j 1 i l '70' Shows lnflatio n's Bite Peaches • Complete New York Stork Li st Nl!'W YOltlC !U"ll -Foll""'I ... .,., S.ln Nt Siii., ..... Se!.. JMf Jt,s Effect Up, Too 'Magic Formula' De fin es Oto<" Dfl "'" ,,...., "°'"" St:x~ t•VI•-l'•E i-l Hj.gft L,,_ U~t (n.; "E l-1 "lllft i..• U)I L"'-l"·C! IMtl H19Jo. LN L.att th9,. "91... Nf!.::•tttlr ll~ IS ·~ 11\-'t w. •1'+•1'-F•.,Ch , ..... JI IHI•"-u I ... ,., •ntr~ l'o.t \'. JU,,_ 1tt. ~''• l"·f.l"lbl i-4i~LowL1.it"ll~••Com(p j >'1 3,, l~~·.~·,,I~ 'f,'l 2t ....... ~ .. ,,~,lo .... ~ •• WI~ .. CCI Co•1> j1, ~ 11.i~•·'""'11" ti '" I •· 1ni1~T 11• •I » lit.. 5'",,'' ",•, -A ...._ '<KO ( P J1 1 • \.... 16\o ltt.,_ '. ,., .. "•fl r ) ,>"-.: ,',', ". •0 >'. ;•.! ;'Ii, t.I t i t By SYLV IA l'ORTER If }OU are a mathematical dunce -IA'hich mtlhons or Americans ar~ -~ ou can still find an easy formula to help Wlderstand how your life would be. distorted a n d depressed if, now that we are into Phase 4, the cost of living were to contmue saaring al the Phase 3 pace The formula is called "The ?\1ag1c Number of 70," and 1t could not be simpler In brief, to find out how many years 1t ~'Ould take fo1 the cos t of liv· ing lo double at a given annual rate of price rise, all you need do IS divide the number 70 by the annual rate of price in- crease. To Illustrate, the annual rate or rise m consumer prices 1n the pre • freeze months v.•a.> about 9 per· cent. Divid<> 70 by 9 and it is clear that at this 1"01tTEt1t annufll rate of n se, our overall price level would double in less than eight years! That would be runaway in· flation. That would spur tn· d1v1duals and businessmen the nation ove1 to try to protect themse\ve!> against the erosion -in the d1llar's buying power by accelerating buy 1 n g , speeding bu1ld1ng projeets, deserting paper money for seemingly safer investments, There really 1s "no place to hide" -but m1lhons would try to hide anyv;ay Fear of price increases 1n the future would help to create the price in- creases today. The prophecy of galloping 1nflat1on would become self-fulf1lhng The psychology of 1nflat1on would become a menace tn 1tseU (1t already 1s). Btrr SAY the annual rate of price increase fell back to the 1 percent to l 1h percent range of the early 1960s Divide 70 by 1 or l Y.i and you see that it would take almost three- quarters of a century for the over-all price level to double That rate of rise v.·ould "not significantly alter basic in- vestment decisions. nor v.-ould it change our favorite forms of savings " says r.-1 a r t 1 n Ca1nsb~gh, formerly chief economist for the Conference Board, who gave me this formula years ago In fact, a rise of 1 to 1 'h percent a year in the general price level V.1lUid not be tn- f\at1on -a potnt you must get firmly in mind For this is merely the sort of normal price fluctuation you should expect in a dynamic economy such as ours It would imply almost as many pr 1 c e decreases as price mcreases. \ rr SURELY wolild not send you rushing to buy or build to beat the erosion 1n the dollar's PRIVATE TRUST FUNDS AVAILABLE FOA AUL £STAT£.LOANI 111l • 2nd TRUST OEEOS $1,600 Ta $2SO 000 Uf" TO eD'f. LOANS Of\I TRtJSl OEEO COu.ATERAL lill!Wl'ORT t:QUITY f\.INOS _ Ntwpon Cenltr 820 Hewpgrt C.nler Drh• NeWJXl'l BtKh, Ctl~ (~l'l ~ that yours may not ! 1 COMP\m o•ANGI COUNn COYllAGI IM:l.dhlt: Lotu11ct leoch S.. C.._..te, Mlula• ~o o-Po)st, .. weff ot La IMclt olltd Mo1f of L.A. • MONTH TO MONTH llNTAL IA.SIS 3 MO DEPOSIT IEQUlliD ON A,,IOVID CIEDIT 4 ONLY S17.00 Pit MONT TOTAL COST f •• 11 ... ttH ,.... , 5 MIW COMPACT Utilft SID 11 \'4•41 1/1) 6 YOICI MIS\,\01 PAGllS A'~,, ~"F. AV°'I' AILI '7 'ULL flll MAINTINANC 714 • llf.JJOS buying power. ment decisions affected. Your invest- v.'Ould not be Or. say. price increases slowed to the 1 to 3 percent annual rate that President Ni x on -set' ·in -tite- Adm1nlstr~hon'1 goal for 1973 tan impossible ob1ec1ive now, so just forget It L Divide 70 by these rates and you see tha t It would take a full generation for the over·all price level to double. That. too would not be anv cause for hysterical buymi- builcling • investing decisions. M1lhons of vou rould not onlv keep up with it but also could eastly. beat ll. BUT SAY the annual rates hove r in the 4 to S percent range -which we'll be luckv to achieve 1n )his dreadful first year of Nixon 's second term That would double the price level 1n 14 to 18 years, which would be dangerous in- flation. Now, against the above backgrowid, look at that 9 per· cent rate of the pre-freeze period in the first half of 1973. What is the outlook for us? There 1s no hope for a return to the non-1nnat1onary rates of rise of wider 2 per- cent 1n the foreseeable future. TH ERE JS no hope for ach1ev1ng the 3 percent target rate in the near-term. either We are fa cing the price bulge of Phase 4, a nd this, too is unavoidable Nothing the govemn1ent can do c a n change the built-in price in- creases 1n food and basic necessities. 'But there are so m e favorable factors The federal budget is mov- ing away from dehc1t and toward balance. and that puts a fundamental force which ha s been fuel1ny, 1nflahon on the side of fighting inflation. TUE FEDERAL Reserve System ts ma1nta1n1ng a tough credit-tightenin g pohcy, and this puts another fundamental force on lhe side of fighting m- flat1 on 'Colonel's' Successor Steps Down LOUISVILLE, Ky. IAP) - .John Y. Brown Jr, has resign- ed as board chairman of Ken- tucky Fried Ch icken Corp .. a firm he built into the world's largest commercial food service operation Brown said t\.1onday he wants to pursue other business and personal interests and feels he completed the transl· l1onal period resulting from the merger two years ago with Heublein, Inc. BRO\VN OWNS Lums, a 350- unit food service chain, and recently started another food enterprise, Ollie's Tr o 11 e y , Inc , with more than 400 franchi ses sold Jn 1004. Brown and Jack l\.1assey of Nashville, Tenn purchased Kentucky Fried Chicken from Col Harland Sanders. Sanders was retained as a consultant. Yearly sales total more than $700 million, with operallons 1n 25 coun- tries Brown's wife rece ntl y became the first woman owner in professional sports when she acqwred ma1or1ty interest in the Kentucky Colonels of the American Basketball Assoc1ahon ASSOCIATE I SACRAMENTO IAP l -• Reports of bumper crops m Peach prlctt art heading • encouraging. and so is some for a jump In California. " 'tvidence that the insane run T It e C 1llforn11 " on the d'lllar is ending Freti1tone Peach AMOCla-. lion, reprtsenting firowers, • It's criminal for any " sakt Monday u or ered its • autbor.ity =.in. or oulol. public... pooi -ol-F:a.y • ..E I .b....,. t a life -even to pretend that we peaches to the stat.e's • can eveo approach price processors at SlOO per ton . • • 1t.ab1llty soon. But we can That wouJd be a $30 per • ltope that we are • passing ton jump over lasl year's • through the worst. $70 price. A " (o0Yf'9hl 1m Flfid En+ll<'p.IM-t, •r.c. • • • " • . " • UP " • OOOllL I " n ,_. ll • ,, n '· ......... , ' 1?1 )Ht J1 , l<i ~-'• .mll4 1-' .. j" ',". ~ fl't Jil (.Fina ).IQ II ll .... ,.,, .i.•~ ''""'Din .JO, lU \JI,"'• U'•• ~~ .. ,.,._ .. ,")lo. II ··-··,', ..... .,.. •• il\t "'• M•,r •• ...;",."'" ooll '~ J lJ • " I• •• , CP!Jt• WO it .,. IJll It \. 11' _ 1 ~''-" ''"':& II 1t .. it,_. • '' f .o:t ..o<.. 1' • .;>'•1 ~7:11""~~ N :W ~-: \~; ~': ~ '~~f 1~~ l = l~ ,t ~!~ ?~ ~! '= :; ~=~~ l~)O ~ ; ~~ ~'l 11' : !n,;•oe~1~ f 6 111 r,,__ t'~ tt~; ., ~~~' ~ 1~ 1~~ ,•,..; .... ,J'.7 •,c..,J 11!' 11• 1 2.11 !''• U\< 2111 + '-'F-olio';;/.i 1~ U!I 1'~ t: 1:'1 • intoo.•'.~ ..... ~ J tl 'l "°•" 111'1 ... , Mln'lh•I I.II U o '•(!\MP.,,. 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PITT$11Uft0H ' mBa~ 10 • •• ~· ,.·. ,"(l!v!n• w11 111 1•, I'> 1i.;, Foo!t M·n•I las" 1•1 1 , ""'""<.II' t • "'11 .U'•111>-'• llr•n<1::llol I llol9.,~ :!'<• 'Cl1YlnvP11 ::ll'••l6••H•, f<>01tM.npl :ljlo~0 16•,1~" "~n"'" 1111 1111 ,\'•h A ,, rne,cue..111 2.1.;11 26 26,,.:;•c11~ Sror~I• 1 ~I' ForaMlJOt6•666U ~!•"•~'•""',.,..• ••••~ l•I•·~• 1•'•- CMICKEI ~In COLUMIH.18 t0 DDWI ~ ' • ' ' "'dl.xt <i II >.I h !••• b 'Clt<~EQ 10.-, IJ ,, •1 .. •2•, •l'--"-ForMcl( t• 1 "11~ !Jo IJ, '•""'" U!Clv•• lo 71 t J'-)'o mL1n 11'Q 9 61 JP, JO, 31 _ Cl•tkOfl 40 11 16' l9 •o 1&>_. 19'•1" I> FrMpl 180 l ll'o 2!'o 11·1 ""'' S.1 '"' ; I• 1¥ h • '• '-nM I Ibo 9 )) !9 lo•, 19 '(LC ot Am 6 ll I 6'1 I ..-1o ratl tlPf ll l• JO lil., 21 , ll •' , "Jv•l~t •I II 171 'N • ?1 ;t>\ot • (/\Aon I XI 9 10 2l'• i•'o 1> 1 , C:lev El 1:11 11 19 l•I. :U ll'•-'• Fot!ttW IC) 11 11? )8•1 )61 , ll'o l'o •.i.w•\.• •V 11 I oU ~ ... •U 1 " <n~v4n l'o 10 3oJ '/J'• ;; , 1•\oo ,1 CIO•oo(o H !9 :J'I? ll'-< l'Q" lT'l ~·· t=o~l»<O .0 JI 101 lS ll • JI _.I, """" r( °" ) .0 11'• \1 • n1,, -'o ~11'1 i'«W VOfl:I( ·HOUSTON I~ • Do"1Tet •) 1• 6--1 IO•o )t\, •O'-•.urnP 90 9 2'16 10'• ''• lO -•,Frin,IM XI U !oQ !J>, 1J'o !), •,""""" I~ 10 t '° J, ... ~, .. , '• nOvil U11 6 6 1 6,0 '' 1' (t..,.r\P llf I t U"° Ul., tl-1, Fr•n•I~! •0 11 s. 1'\o 111, 11\o "~""•'-D •O o 20 ) • • J ., It Oul OI l•a 1 11, ll'o 1;,;-'• CMI nv Co 11 Ill •I :111\o tl -t 10 l'rw!Mn ,IQ 20 10 71'• n •o 22'o-, ,.., '''••I -4 06 > "'-11 .. lo-\,. ~In U>S A.NOflts '" • DALLA& • • A •niol~c 100 10 2&0 11•, ;6'o ?6•7 , .,c,',',,.''",",, • \'6 U I)\, 11 '•+"•vonv11 10 I :ie "":II• 21•~· "~"""II :>o 1• h• 14'• 1• .. "' E•POrl Ill Ii 16 '• lJ 16 • Coc:1co1 1.10 .,. 19" Ill,, 11\o-,, l'~CIUOIM " 6 'IO lllo 11 .. 11.. "C"'·.t '"° • 2J 21 .. n .. ""'-' 'f,~::'i ~.· '' 1700 I )>1 t 1 0 Coc:iiloll ,. U Ill 1'3't 101, 1'11\t '• -G ~ '''' '''' :::~:.'~~:• l: I t 2.o '' 1• + •! ' llCON t"' .. t ~l~AUST!M • A A A A ' ~1 21 • 10 , ll , r Ho <•OwO> :C 11 IJ1 2l•o 1' l:>o ~ lo Glble lftd>I I 6 II•. • "~ ~/ ... 21'• 1t\o+ +. Flnpl I'> t20 la .. 11< llO.. ! •• 1 l.i 11'1 '-'• U'•'•GA(_ (.o.-o 11 J , Jo J'• "•~I! Ill t It 21 • ~ 1••-t ..... GnB I 11b •1 l6't lt ' 26 r '(ol«oln 06 \I 1t l2'o 11'o 11'• GAF Co .O l •ll't lJ" ll~t U .~ "~ell Mc °" h )'o) ~~ ti t'" ~ Gn8ond ,, 62J ).J1 J 32 l ll Cok1'1• .5-1 71 173 ll•o n~ JJ•. GAF 11! 110 ~11 111•1 lt 19 .. "'''M"'' ' ' J 121 111 12) ·+2'. GnC.•S 91 $(11•• lito 11 o-1, (oll&P.1k SI> 10 SS ll•, ll ll" c;.m s~ l XI '3 " ;n, 21..:.-\1 "' .11., .iw11 I , I) u '•'•••+ ,. Gn ln1 52 ll 16" 16 16 , ColllnJ FOOd 11 11 12 11'\t \llo-~ Gomblul 11, \ 2/'i 11'o lT'i "'"y~ 't> Oil 6 )I :ti) h •'I .. Gtt ~' 1.!0 16 16•• 2~ l''~· 'cc111n R1<1111 n 1011 19\o 20 o--11 G•mSol 100 1 n 11 'ii "'"'ml• I .-<i i. lit .0'• ,...,~ .a• • ., ·~ mkol•1 .0 I 16 13..., IJ•o 13._. '•Col P"'1! 20 IJ 99 lil-1 5":0.. 5-l'o-'"o G$'1,..!I 2~ )I) 11t J.;•o l/•1 i.• -t "'"ll>U) .Jll I •J 1 .......... _to -~ A In 9!.ATTLr: EB ' mHom oil 39 J/9 •S ''" •J , Colon~! I 0. I 1 lo» 1,,. 10 , G••dOtn 10 11 :i.. 19 1 1t•o n.: ~ .: "'""" ~ •J ~ Al h·, 11 .. 11•.-lo Hom .. of 2 '199', 19'. 19~ .• :,.: (Oii Ind 1P 1 19 IS'• u .. n• • .-'• • • .ifloc• " • • .. "" !1 .. L M ..... It •1•, '° 1 •I ... t '• A A • "'' Tl!'ltcl'l&rT A A mHo•o 2<I •i 96 ••'• •3'• "'••, Co111not •• • ""''• .. ., '"'• ... .,G••~hc 112 • lt 1••• !i'• I•' , "''''~"'"" •• 10 1•) •~ .. •J. 1.1 .. mtn••! JO I 23 9 Ii'• K'o-, C 8 S 1 ... 10 18• ll't JI>, l l,.._ 1,1c.~tt,..•• In 6 1 1 I / .. ' "'''""II Na o •I \41~ Ill• 1111 l\'leokt •2 9 s.i; IJ•o 11, lJ •1:c ssor•• 1 Jn 11, 211.-,GCJI. Coro i.1 11 ''° 1. 11 ... w .. ~~· •a 1 11 :is., h )I'•-" M~ocorp t 1t6 6'o ,i, 6q _ '• COi Git 1 90 t •llO JP.o 21', 21-~ .-.mini C•o 10 ll 11 0 11 ; • ~~:'~ P,' ,,: IA )t Joi _\.t -'' As Predicted ••• ' A A A MelCx I'' TO 91 131, 31'• ll>o CCII Pkluret 7M 6 \l, \ •-\1 Gen Jl.m IM• ·~ JS 1)•, 11,, ~ ., 10 I ! ) -'• M!::. pf S • n 1'0 119', 9~ , COl5 01> I 9? 9 SI 2S'o l!'o JS\o Gn AO! i.DQ 16 , '.14; :k , '.14 •o "'1'1•w l /1 11 191 ••"-« .Ul'I-to mo•MQtor 1 JlS 8't ''• ,,:, comoe ISi 2'11 1'1n"'r~ n.11 GenP.Trl61U 17J •t .. ,.9" n."'"""' )OJt Jl!fl>1Jl}J'l,r1 mNG~ 2.0 I , •• l•'# l•'· lt' •Corn5olv "° 19 II 16 1''• IS"o t•.GnATc• l • '/) 60 59. "° ;1 ~·~~•r loll I • ,, '19, 19' .; m Sea• n II JI 9•o 9 9,o-, Cm,uEa 2JO 10 !ol JI'• 1Dlo JI _ 'o ~81nc I~ 1 \ U'. ll'o ll' ' "'l>Qe• 1 JO Iii ll ll'o 11•0 II.._ o.. ' \Vhen supern1arkets reopened on Monday. the pnces ' ' ' of eggs, poultry and pork were up. Stores were free n1~n!p 61 9 • 21 •, 21'. 71'. .:cwEP' 1?• !9S 9S 9S ... 11Gn~•Of1 !O I .. ,, ' • ..; ·!"•-I .0. I •I lJ 1 ll'• IH, ... , .. Sm..i1120 ~ 11>8 21,,. 11, 1p •• ,,catnEdor 1 11 25'• lS1'o 2S•\ GnC11r 120 1 t 16 U'o 1, -'• -L L-m Srnd !oO 9 135 11 '•11'• 11 , CwEaal I 11 t 20:.,, 10'• 20'·-\'I <;n Oovoloo 1t 100 11, 10 , 11', •1 L•CI'""'• I • I I It" 1''~ 1\, mSTOul •'• t S1 54., Sii ,'Cw• P' I 'IQ 6 21'< 1• 21 -1 (;.e~ Dvnom I 1"1 tt\> 11 '• l2't• I .. -"'"""~" I I ' 13'• lJ>1 Iµ,-'• ' A to raise food pnces frozen until last week. And this ' A m~tfr,I io 11 I? ll't l2 , 1J 1_ ,~ ComwEd w! l 1~ 10 .. 10\o Gn Ele<: 1 .o JI IH 61'> .i>.o 62' _, '-•tll!llt .6!oll 11 I )Po Jl 1 ~ 11-_,-•o mT& T 2 80 11 811 Sl•o ~J' SJ•t-, (omwOll l\ 91 2't 9.. l'o 9•..,_ \• Gn Fooa ! tD !) !U '/O\> 1&'• 16>!. ,~ '-•'M1 I Av 9 I 2•'• JJ .. 2J .. _._ mT&Tol • 10 lf>t J,,; J9,, ,•cwo1101 1n 10 11\o 21·~ 21•1 C...nGro 6lb l) 11 11 ~.""' 19\o L•hoot ~I! l• 17 ,.,, 1•1 llolo-1• is how 1t went. A ' A • A A TT1>fA 16' IJ .SOl'J 501 .SOlo-,', Com••I .56 10 190 St'° I~ s.i•;•1 ;nHO>I (I! I 1 10•• 11) .. lOO.. ' l•••-·~ ll 9 9l 1\o l 'o 1 -mt&r .... 1 1(1(1 ••I'• 6 , ComourrStl Ml r . ''-J'o +V,Gen lnllrl~l• ll'Ol1',1oi..111l:1''-H•~i>I)', J17 ?I 21 mWft!r t4 8 10>, IOlt lOI,-t C:onA11• )lb 1 II I t'~ 16'o l•l,,__ '• ~lnil pf l J )I J6\lo ~ ,' '-••HCllC. o0 »J 11"-II'• ll .. Wlr~r I'• :340 16'• l'l., 15,, ,.cor.eMI Ille 7 11 19'• u •; lt-111-l•GtnM~ 11 20 i 11'\ Jl'~ J'/''l";,:Lefl(pl 160 •10 2'1\, 11•'-n11-\.o WaTrpt P, 120 16 1 16·, 16, __ 1 CnnMI I 12b U 21 '12'1 11', 21"o Gen Mllh I 10 107 !Io JI" SI..._ 11 ~t~M:l!I 1 10 I 11 ... :U'o 26'0-l\-o Schlitz Reveals A A ' ' A wr .. pf I Q 11'Q ''~ •9\, 1~·-t \J con,.a.;:c .60 10 ll 11\o II'. ll'lot-'· Gnl>\OI 1 OSEI • ™ 61'> "'6'1 61' ,. ' 1...c••...-Y WQ ll I ll~ l h • JIL.--"" m<''Con 6-1 6 1 U"' l••t u.. Con Ed I 80 11 10• 1?1'0 12 ... 'll'• GnMolflf llo 11 !l''J JJ Sl -\; L""°'•N )<J II '° ll'• 11 ll'• ..,~,f~ ia IO l• ,.,. '"' I•••~. (OtuEd pl 6 1 ,, .. ,,,, 76"o-... C...nM0111 s s 11 .. 11 11 l...ff~•· • .0 10 2• lJ•. 1''1 111-" MF In Ill& 9 191 11•, 16,, 2I -i!C.Oll•Edol S ~ 61'• &J•1 6?t• •,GenPor &O I It 12'• I~ 1}"'-' Ll'nP11,; 60 t U 11'1 I• .. 14-1• m!ac 64 I SJ l~'o I~ .,..._. ConsFd 1 lO U SI Ji'• ll'• 32'•+ •t c;. PubU 160 9 10 10'• )0 20 -•= L•ll Yil INJ i H, I\• Hi • MP lncoro ti 311 41 4''"6<1 _.,• (onl'llP! t , • 11•1 11, 81 '•+ '• ~n Rt!••C! 11 1 1 su, i • 1, Lrlimn 1•,g ~9 16 lS\o I• -t +, m11<0P l(I I J 9 f I' , Con F·111 11 0 •10 11 , 11>'o ll 'o+. '• GnSl11ntl 65 II 711 11 11 tl'~ 'I ti~!'tn l: S .UI 10'0. ,,,, IQ -\o • A A ' mll<!x Co so 91 5 1 !' • }';.:: • Cons NG 2 OJ I ll ?1 Ul< u>-.. Gn ~let! 111<1 l1 J~ l '' J•• '• ~ • d C. 1¥ 1f JJl~ 3'' • ll•o• 1 ~;r:r c,0)8 ; 6: 1::: 2~~ ~~·-~~ t:~"'or": I~ 9 z~~ ii:~ l~:; ~;,~ ._ I g TlE ~ ! lf', II nil 111 fl' 1 ~ >-,, ~~~ ltv; I~~ I I 1~~ Jr•! .~:~_,. 1' 5-year Expansion A A • ' ' A .tdro! 2 6> 1 11 1 ll'l Jl\~-' Con P pl ••' 11:!0 59''> !9 , )9' ,_ ', C.TiFta! I JO 1JOC !6\'0 16', 16'1-\, ~·',~1~1'1~,.~ 10 SJ ll 'n'< 2J -t '• msrrol 61 1 11, I'> 1, __ , COl111A1•LnU 6l'O f I'• t +•.GenTlte 111 91l'O'o 20'>1.._ L;t: •J l"<J •'1 •• ~~. m>ll'<I 160 I 21 ti , JI 11 , _, ,~ Cn Ctn I 60 9 110 16'• 'l'o 16'• .._,,~IC .l•n 9l o JI, S'o lO'"" I• S •\o •h '" mt•l tn 20 11 16 5 , '" s• •con COllC>t• u s•, S'1r s,.. .. '• <rtnulnP 46 ll 122 '31 .. •I'• •J ,_...,,1 ~·0t.;~o 21'Q 1 Sl JI , ll'• i.1,., n~con 2511 10 l'JI 11'1 :iv .. 2 11~1 rrnttCp140 90 o•, .o~. t1•, G•PK IOCI ll lJS ll'• ll'• ls1,.1 .. ~ Pl •• In .. n . n .. nchHc 1 ill 1 18 19. 19 191·-.: CntlCo pl1'> J •S •S •S -\1 c.~Pwp! 1.80 1110 rn1•, 10Q.\, IOOllo• '· l•Db1 MLNI " If >I• ~·~ ~-·· • AnaerCI 60 6 1" 19,0 9 H'o _ C Cn~tll 21, J •5'~ l\'~ A5'-G~Pwc! 1'1 1100 •& 99 91 -1 l•bllylp 10 • 1 111• lllo !Por '• MILWAUKEE (AP) -A five-year $300 million ex- pansion program that includes increasing its Los Angeles plant was announced Monday py Jos Schlitz Brewing Co. A new brewery with a S 8 m1lhon barrel annual capactty \1•ill be built 1n an eastern localion and plants v.·111 also be expanded in Longview, Te:<.; Tampa, Fla .. Memphis. Tenn • and Milwaukee, add ing an ad· dit1onal 5.9 mdhon ;;,arrels a year to production capacity Robert A Ukhle1n J r . , chamnan and president, an· nounced. ( rs~KI.IVc STOCK e 6etl!J Oil Co. J LOS ANGELES (AP ) Getty Oil Co 's income rose nearly $5 million In the ftrst year over comparable 1972 figures, the firm has an- nounced The compsny said Monday that its consolidated net 1n· come from worldwide opera· tions for the first six months of 1973 was $56,364.000. com- pared to $51,959,000 1n the first half of 1972 Earnings per, share m the first half of lh1s yea r were $2 98, contrasted With $2 72 in 1972 e Pman Central PHILADELPHIA (AP ) The Penn Central Railroad says it's go rng deeper m debt despite increased freight and passenger train revenues America's biggest railroad 1s nearly ftu l of cash and ts threalening to stop all trans by the end of the year unless 1t gets massive fin ancial help from Congress before October .On J\.1onday. Penn Central reported a net loss of $99 6 m1lhon in the fir st half of 1973 That compares with a $106 2 million loss for a s1m1lar period a year ago. r ' e Western A A A r>QrlJca !O lS :111 11 C!ll!lll; lJOll 11 1119'-, It'• 19 .. •"1Gert>tt llS 10 l& 1t 'l'o 11''>-"''-',,.'0' I, 2 IJ'o 1~i., 1J11 An.ut 1.0 " 1 ·,',' ,•,•,'· :r~ Jg'~-'• ,'~•'",,v•i,,>,1 1 HJ ,,A;--, ,,"• ,,•: • .-·~ g::;~01 Ill.! 11 iu, 1],f' 1u.i. l!j'-+J', :;,',"~',?; 11 •• !2,,~,•,~1 .. 0~1~= ,',• D.lcne l1Q 1 • 11~• 12\o-~ _, t ~lj ... ,, 20, -·, .,, Gil' Bu• 1&; .., 11 '6•, 'i'•l ...... LIH• Cll 11 •2 I;/ " 'ij14 w• l)<oOU ·~' 9 1•' ... h .._,.cont!Oll I"• 9 -,. ... •• "I PC " • ' ·-l •9 •J°• P<!CoCP,1621 'll ,., ,., ,.,~,Con!Ollo!2 1•1'4 •1'••1'•-"i"'tn1 1 11n-2}!11\o •l.oL•ntNll "'1 Ut l1lt)l o l,..,,,. .. LOS ANGELES (AP ) Aooll<'d M~ 14 n 6:i. 6,0 6,.,_ ,0 Contt1 O&te t JSl llh l6" 3l•o+1~ G•dd Lewis 9l 1 6"° 1 ~ -... '-•on•1 ""'fl 11 11 •"• • • ARJl.S•l'lll& •Oll1 l1811J1 .... ,1.onDtotl'• z•S05l~s2.s1·--.,.,GlrtHlll :160 -1 Jtl ll .... IJ~-'•L•llOll 1 .r, 111 9 t l,, ~ ...... \ .. •A PL (org 6 100 11 •. IO'o 11. +':lcon1 Tel u II 119 2l'o n . 2)~ • .._,.,G<br Flnl JI\ s IJ 11" u" M\0-\ltL!U(~,,,,., J I 11 )6 II Arthur F Kelly, presi'dent f Arc11aN it 1 1 1 1 1 _,, Conwa 190 • u VVt 11111 v •., · G111e11e ''° 11 lS9 ~ M'• &0 ..... i..111ncvo• 1 1 19 11-. 10 .,. 1.., 0 Arc1>erO .50 ll ~ 79"t 1' ""-11 ~-U11 11 6 19 ,.,, 71~ ,._ "• G,noi. tncw U 1'1 11'o 11h UV>-1-o -"'" c• pl l I M JS :U W t A I h Arc!lc E"1P 9 a• 6,~ 6,. 6 ,__ ,1 LllOP Ind to ti 21 lO , lO, ~"" Gletson .u 11 •1 11". 17 11'1 ~•Honln plA s ll llo 111, !\'•-•• es em ir 1nes. says c ex-Arl•ia.. n 1 s 10 ~ 10,, 10.,~ '•ICOOllfr L~n 11 s; 11•• 10 ,, 10">-1-Gioc.1 M•1 n us \J'• tl>t u-'• Lorna1F ~ 12 u 10 11•• i;•;L u1,_" t A•l1 PS 116 I ~Ml'• l'G'• _,,_,,1.oooT• 'I.I~ I I ll•o 111.lo!I'•-<• GIOl>IUn 60 t ll 20•, 19 ... 19*"-''L•L•ndE• I 21 125 361• )6 0 36\.t! 1, pees construclion of the Ark Se•! 4(1 • 1 ov CoooT11I l 1 11» 11 ... U•t Go!DWll F<I ' 1 IS'• I! lS -1'1 Lotti ""'0 IS I] J'O u. lh-"' Al I 11'1 11 11-•,1. • lJ ?l 't 11 21 .. ~.._Go<x!rlcn I. 6111 .. 11'· 11'o-•• .. or.gOg S.•I Alaskan 01! pipeline to in-... ~~~:11 ~~ !J 12' ~ • 6 6 • ~ '• ~-111 12 11 iao it• 19, " Goad•rT 92 9 2u 1"• 1p,, u-\o Lori srG 1 .. lo li ~::_ ~'.! ~!= 'i.: A,.mc~ 120 e 1~ ,t . ~·: 2~ -,",f=:.1o •f9i: .i l~ 26': JJ« 76 •~ •, c.cnionJ 1•' '111• 13 1l'• L.-M•o 6 1G 11•, 1J•• 120..-1.. Crease Sales and Arm pl l IO ,,... Coreura (p J 113 1 o• > 1 Gould Inc 1 ' t i 2J ""• l5 LIL 01 1 5, > '' '' '' -earnings, .. ie•, l!') 2S\• 11210,,,100..,104,,.2,.r:>••<P W 11• 9 111 ,,,. 21 . 12• .. -'1 ,-,A~• ~ -.. Armurp! •'• 1900 57 S4 .U -1'> ~QrnC.ls 1 \],. >> •• >>' ''' •, Grind U &O 9 lO 111> II, 11 >t '• -~ •w..., O S .I! 6'1 t'o to+-'• v.·h1chrea<:hedrecordpeaks1nA•m•t~toi6 ll!:!llll.21•,21 ._,c.ov,in 111o 11 ._,,,: ''G••n1,.1211~ 1222'•!'"71'• L""""'~'6 1 -.2••·1• i~i..+. Armstll 16") 6 11 26'• l6''1o U\:o-'o~o'""' Com 16 IO ~-. 1,, 6}' GrintW 1•, I .01 10•• •'• )O·~·••L°'•••lno 1 I ll 1.\. 1'"" II -, the three montl d d J A.-o co i0!1 1 9 1•'• 1114 1•••-cc~ Bra lS n n1 1l > 11 • 11 •• •l"-Gr•~Dr 110 11 26 11 •• !l, 11,._ '• l• P1t.1llc 9 ti!> 11, 111 u ~1•. lS en e une ""''"'"" .S2 io !.I 1•14 ,.,, I•'•+•: LP(1 .. 11 117 10 \ ... 30'• }'I ... 79,•. ~ GIAMI 11.-0 11 611 Joi•• llM ll•·-•• -<.UG•• I Ml 11 ll ll ll .. n ·-"" 30 ASA L!O .SO 19S iJ, ~·o SI _ ~, ~r~n..C 80Q 6 JS 19 • ll • 11 •-~· c,1 A&P le• U u~, \)~, 1)',..... '• .. u.,~o\I 10 6 16 15'• ll l !S'\:o-'• AJ.ftlOl!IJO ~ 122lS'•25'•251•-' "'e11il~l .:I 9 1' s, e,, 9 , .. ,1IG1L~0120a71 Ill 21 Jl Lf" Co'o t llf y,, 9, 9'.-'• Kelly said ~fonday that dur-::~GI 1: ·: 2f ~'· rs. ~r-.... ; ~;:.::'I( 1: ' ~ n!" n.: u~:= .~ &:~~~k 1 11~ :~ it !~:: !~~ ~'~: :: ~~~~1~1 1 ~~ 19 •l.t ~.: !~"' ~.~:1 .. • ""I Auoc Tro~• S J>o s•, ,.,_' Crouw.11 'I.I IS 'w,. • ul ",' GNN pl lllO ! 21 .. 11•1 11 .. -.. '•'""(~1 )1 !>i u 1.0 11'• IJ'• ll•-i• '• ing tu1: ast quarter \Vestern"'~ton1 .oo 1 9 111, l?'" 11 .. ,.,'trown Co•~ l• 6l ,.~. ,, 2•• G1w1r:1~ ,0 u1191~ 19•. 19•,._,,,lV<l•ow 10., J6 n. ,,l u"'-, A11cM1 I 03ti I 1J la'> 18' 1 ' '(,wn ZI \ 10 10 7~ ~'o n~· n~ [,!Wet! Un 11 t , ' l't • 1, •• ~0<>>ll '0 ~ 20 )•, ll'• l:I 1 '• A1rhneseamed$443milhon"•IC•r,E1o1 9 221110 11'2r:-·l •wno1•10 1 2916 11,•16 1 c.1 w,1u~o1 ~,, 16Ul6'•·'•LYOC0•01, ,, ,, •••.• ' At .II C~lld 2 11 !lS 81 t ll''l 8'/ _'•Cl~ Co .00 I '/) ]•, ll ,' ll'• -'G•n Gltnl t 10 10 ll'.Q 11 211>--'• _,,, ¥Q•I~ lt ~ l'l 7, 1\o-•, or 32 cents a share on ATffc Pf 2 '° 11 s1<;, 56', JI .... 1cu11 P•11 JO 11 •• • • •· ., GrnGP• 1 '• 1 JI 11 11 . 1 L.v~ 01 1 12c 01 11 1• , 2 ... • A!1Rcnpr,) llJH I.II lJ<I 1•1Cum•ns Na l1 l 0 1 1, ,. G•evft<I IGI I HO lt • ll'o 1• -'•-yucn>y tO II ; I'• l'o lhot"'• revenues of $99.39 million, up ,A~o"' ,~,co','• •B 1! 1 1•, Po-,; c.,",~,. 0~.~ ,: '" ,l'· l'O.' 1;.;, ,, G•er~"" "' S4 l '• J l ., ,, -MM-' ·~ 8 105 l.\o 71> I'•~' C~tlerH l1i 9 IS Jiit JC)l' Jl> \,Gro!\tr 90 & IJ 10'1. 10 .... 10'1-'•.V,1<AI' lib I 1&'12"1 11"' 11~•-'• from $506.000, or 4 cents a :~:~~,~~~ ll eo ~~·JI:• ,,,,,,.,,cvc1°"'cP l ! l n•' lJ•' 21_.::, Grumm1n 11 ~"' tl.. '" '•··• u .... 1u JJ. )• '' >'• ~ .. 10 S6 5, s . ~·•-'•Cvgrv~Ms llO llOJs••n,'ll•+!,;"Gu•rotl•n ln\il 10n>.n1011~.1t,,·~(•" lO 6 Ji lo 1 I·, Sh I "'"'no Avto Corp • U8 10<1 IO'o \li'o ,. '• O 0..--: ' ' GuMIQ J llo II 1J li°"' 31 ]81, 1.'ac/111 1~0 ! lu / . 1 , 1 • '. are, on revenues o .;>OJ '" a Avcri Cp wl$ 1s 1, • ; 1 1 • , • D•mon CP 11 .u '"' .,.,~ ,;, , Gu11 Liit '° 1 t.11 Jlo'" :ui, ls•o-1 •, , ... , " 11 , 1 )•I 2• ~ .)J , 11,,,,_ , • I. Avco pr J ;o IC 19 ' ll1' Ji'•-1, 0•"'''' • '' • •• • ••• • ...... Gull O•I ,.,, 9 1010 2•<. 21'o 2• • ''•0 IQ 'Ill ,, ·~ • • • '" "'vi• Inc _., '' '"" • • •1 ~1·1 _,'' O•n•Cp 1 J6 • JJ 32 JO•• 2l -+ 1 Glfllot• 10c 2 n Ii'• lJ • • ~~ -~· "~ ,.J 6'o 6 • o" • year ear 1er. Aver~Pr :is 11 M 1, 1 • Gu11 Rt&Cn 11 ns 91~ a•, t 1 • ''ti' "" 11'~ 2S'> 11•.-1•0 Oat! In Jl)q 11 •1 321, 32'1 11·~-'• Gl!Roro 6k 10 , ••• I)\\ 11• •• ! ........ l.ln JJ 6 201 I. ''• 1. Avntllnc lO 1 116 9 e•,' ~·.oar11ndof 2 '' :ia" :I&" l6l.o-'•GuilS!U 112 i1 so 191, 1, 19 ... ·""''~"' oil 11 11<1 !It'• IG. lQ~ ""°"Pr 1•0 51 m111 1151,11r1-1\.01vr!~1n 2• s 1'9 I'• I'• 1,• '1 ,ulf&W• ..,~ 111 6,, ,., 6 , '•"'"o'"'" )1 I& I '°'1 i\11 ....,, ll1!1cOll 6k •7 71 16>,. 16'• 16-l•--'•D&ylonH s.i I 191 u •,11 1''•-l'•GtlWig! 1 , 1105,,105,1105 ,_,,11dnn11>1l !Ill} 1I\.,,11•, 11, e Boise Casca<le ""•~tlnpl ! 111'>11111•.-1,oav<o IU I •17 1&1,,16!•-"IGult•Wi 6-ol & so 2y,11 ,1.,.,o-'•I""'""'' t6 w l&lloli1li1- Special to the Dally PUol Bab&Wll e.D 1' 19J 25'» 7•llr JJl-J-1.!'o DaPLril 110 z300 10l'1 lao 100 -11• GltWi of J>, 1 11,, 1\•o 711,. ,, Man"'" 1 !Ill 12 119 l6" JJ ,, l6 ' '• -··-D~~PLI 166 11 II 11:i. n .. ll ....... GllW~Dt l'o '51'• 511, 51'>~ ·1Manoc...-/)" lu 11•, 11•. 11.t • B•cl'le .151> II 1"11 6''o , ... s ... -.. OeanWll .:! I )(I 910 I\. 9 •+lo G !loo l'ICtll lS lo\ S' S y M..,P(O ~· 10 JI 29>, :/'I l"I;., • BOISE, Idaho Boise 114~<'rtn 16 '' s1 2•'• 1•lli ?•"'\-,,DH•• 108 10 ,... u•. •J •1•,+1•,1 w -H H-• ' ·~ • M&••ln<in M 1 tJ u •, 11 11 .. 8a~et011 JI 7S 19 11\. 2t\1 2n. Ol!IP&L I 16 I 6l 15"" !Sh IS--'olH•IHbln t 11 o 109 lll(I 1~._, 160 1-.,,JMar 011 I!><! t l!! ll ... hi.. ll ,__ Cascade Corp M o nday Baioo11 ll • 6 tl'• n-. n•o• ,1 0.1Mn1 110 9 115'o111• 11-..0 1111amP~n son 1o1 15.,, u" 11,,_,,M.orco• 'IO' 115 :;a..., 1~1101,• .. 8anGa1196 9 5' 16'• 16'; 161.1,., ,1 0ellaA+r SO 16 HJ 51 "''• 5l ·•'•><amd(o tO a 20 10 9>1 9'o •ij M•r<~•PI I JJ •!'1 •0 ti ,,1 reported th ( ( BUG• p! "' rlO 6l'• 6l &2 -> Dellec ln!n S .I l'o l'o l'o H~naltm 08 I " ;1, 9'o 9,,, ,0 Ma••m IOD 12 110 .cl J&•, t0 • a ne lllC1)me m 8anC11 !lt 10 11 1i,, ?J•,,.-11,,_.:0e11ona co• 1n 13•, 121, n .-,,..arni.·11 n 11 1 1~,. 1;1 1 .,~_1,jMd•M•d IN _I I•• 11 11•• l41;. th d Bana~g Inc IJ 41 J.t J]l, ll ~ 1 Cenno\n 10 I 122 ,S .. n"° 1t .. + ,_.Hant.CD 60 6 l ll'o U'1 11>-o M.irlOllL 11 .;5 U .(! • J• • &IJ , • e secon quarter of 1973 was ea11yor Pn s n , .. 9., 9,,_ :i. Deonvs 06 19 11 ll'• 11.,, 111.-.-'• ,..ann• 11s 12 S1 51 ~ '° _1 , m•n~n 1 11 11 101 •I'• •l •l 1 "" Bangrpf 1, 1 151, 15"' lll,,,1-, Drnhply 61 1' •1 11~ 11•1 17-'•H••tCll.ortB 1 I JI 1011 'IO'•"°"" ~l·"""•e• 1'0 1'0 11-' • "• •l'•1 '• ~7 ,590,0001 or 89 cents per Bn~ 01 NY 1 6 IH Jl" JJ.,, Jl"" ~ • 0eso101n «i 1 "° 10'• 10._ )O'• t • ,..a,d"'" ,16 11 1& 11" 11 , \l\0-1, v.e•Qtt c .. m 10 1 e • e • t • (lank V1 88 12 • 291, 19·~ 29• :-\. Oe•Edl\ \ •S 10 lJS """ 19'o 19',.-" ......... a I '° , 11 25'· l! 15 -•• 1M•"~fl l --" JaJ 19 > 1• • 1• ,_ • share, compared v.·ith a loss of Ban~Tr\lit J 10 uo 59'• 58,, 51"' .~ 0e1E 01 911 :110 112 111 111 -1 11a,,•h• .22 u 11 u" 11" 1•••· 1 , M••Mll' 11..o 11 11 11 2~·· 't6'•· • 8a'D'r011~ 116io..JO , r,.,0~1Eaf761 ll0'6"1Q6'>Q~''•''f"'a'"tln!ril1J 27ll '•J0 o ll\oo•lo"'~'"11"'1 "°111 /$ ••• •1• $198,490,000,or~t:38per sha re, BaraCR 1• 36 ls 2t 11,,. ?:" ... ~ De!Ept 1'16 1 91•., .,,, 91•,_1 111arl(Q IQ 1 11 ,, 11•· I\', •l"''"N' 1u 1 •• 1&.r le 16 1"' B1rntt 1 l'l'b 9 IO >>~ 'O<!I Eat 5' 1 1 75 15 II ,..trlSM• H ' )0 16" Ii'• 1e•, 1 , Me l.uo lO i le lo • II'• 1/'o--• Bdtlc 1., •O It ' 21'• n•,. ..... •~ o..~1rc11 15 l& 36 111, 16'> 11•,.&.1 11ar!tH 100 10 Jl 11, i;, 11. l"''~..ccc.11 10 1& hY Sl • \.0 J11, • ., during the same period a year e~oes Mt 10 19 ~ ,~~· 6' • 11· ,_ \, <Jr.1 Fin ~· 11 ~• 201, 10 '• 10'-• '• ,..•w•E1 i u 10 I• I&'• 16,1 26._ • ~"'""' •J 1> '' 11 , J '• n. ago ~::~s~pt~ l 16: 12.: 12•~ 8l:~~~:;, r : ;J ?J 1: ~'• l!.;: ::11~:i:1~,!!t> l 1f I: \:l: )~: I:•:. 01~:~~1'; !~ I ,~! 1r~ ~:•: ~r ~.1 " 6auicl\L 11 1 16 2l • 10•• 1• , ... l , o-.snm 1>f 1 l 111 2t ~ ,..CA Mart.~ is IS 2::1 lO 2'11 M1 '"'" l.ln Jl lJ 1:i... n -, Last year's second quarter g:;~t·c.~ U ~ ~~ ~f~ !~,: ~r:::1~g::~:,;o~n 1 ~ 11 ~.i~!': :~;; :~:;• .. ~~~)~~ ~; ll 1tt ~t~ ~~: ;t-;~1 :1z:;,~~a,;v1~i ·~ 1:: n~: 1!: l}~;~ l, results mcluded an ex-a 1 8 6 11 \01. 11 .. ~, r>·~1>111d o0<1 n s1 so o • ... so • H••remn •• 1 21 10., 10., ,0,,. , •··•"~' "1" 1s~ s , '. ~·, ffr n~> t0 1l I l'l'o :l'l'o ti~•-•~ O•GlorCIO "'6 1 39 9'• 9>, ~·,. •, 11~'"' !t I (!ii u 196 t}•. •"• •? • 'M4Y CIS 1 eo0 TO 101 ll 1 ];•, '.14 '• traordtnary cha r ge of aeatFd• 6l" 1C111·, 11•, n.-~,·-•~1 Eoo• ), 10191•. 19. ~1. •l1e•""&R ,6 111 LI'}"-• ..... 1,,· •• • ,.~ .. u. 41 •• 1 n 11. ?l', MOI) 000 000 •o 42 h gec~mn 50 11 U 21 • 11 ?l'o 1, OU!>nQI\ .Ill IJ lJ I• l'o 1'o \l<rlftM Cull • ,,, t • 11,. :·"'••>JN l(l t 119 I • I I -. <11<;, , ,Or<I"' perS are, 8KtonD lS ll J71l Je1 1111. J& ->,')''onel>ol 1 I 111,n . ??1, 11ellf•lnt u !I \ll l.I> l!o '6>• 1,N•,11a lJQ I• J.13\o Xi, J~•-'• and losses from t sco t ed eec~11. 1ov ' •1 1•1• Jt•, u• -,,0111onc &Ocl is 1 1'I N 7' ><<1• 01 •QI 11~ 116 11~ l M<l~•o 11or • 'IO 16'1 ••, 16 ,_ '• {I n tnU ~GkoPe! ?~ I IS ll <o 111 , 11•~· 'J•~~~vW ll U 251 90'o ?"• o('l • l , ,..e+mtPt 60 10 12 11•, l~l 11 , MCl<Q1• I 1fl S l/ ~ J l!Vo 1•, • •, operations of S7 .840,000, or 26 811arn 1 xi 1 t 20•1 20 .. "°""' ,_ ..., 01u1on 090 10 n u ... n 111 ·-'. ,..ft..,.&P 10 n "° '''• 2,,: 1,,, ~ , ; ,..,L<f• r»oi r 28 111 10 w 111 • 1 BelogH .lOg II 10 9 1\1, 1\,-~I '1!•lllS~1 to 10 6 (1 11 11 •,,, Hef'\l\O Clo 1) 2'• 2, 1,,1' 10 ¥CUonld Co ~ 61l 61 .. ~ ... 61 .,.,,, cents per share. Beu Hwt .a. 9 191 JO'~ :l"lloo ~··-"'O!ve<sl1<1 1n 1!111 11~ 1.-. 1 '1tm 111 l()Q 1 v, .,, 6., 1coon1> .OG 1 19) n . ll 1 Jl'o , ll~ml•Co 80 ' la 111. II\,, 11 -'• !'J•VM! 2 ISti 9 Sl }JI, 1)'• 711-o .. \'o 111!"CUltl! 68 !I 6J l:t. l1't 33 •• '•MC(,,• HI • 9 10 9 • ••• 9. -•• e Homestake SAN FRANCISCO (AP )" - Homestake ~11n1ng Co, the nation's largest gold producer. tnpled its earnings 1n the f1rst six months of 1973, largely because or higher gold prices, President Paul C. Henshaw reported r.Jonday Homestake. operating gold m1nmg operations at Lead, S D , reported 1973 flrst half net income of $10 4 million or $1 85 a share, up from $3 28 milhon, or 59 cents a sha re, in \972. BrMIA I ~ ~ 1l lS', 1•'1. llVo ~ ._ O•Peoo• 12 61 l6S :!8'4 ll•• 28 , ... •,,, He••nv 1 IO 12 11 16', 16 \6'•-t, MtC.•t<1r 0 0 I l , l', l>;, :~0L~ ~· 1l IJ; ~~ ~~ ~~t:; ti~~'::".~: 2' • ;g 'F ·~~. 9~~· •• ~:~~:r1~ ·;6 ~ ~1 :!\O :r~ :!'~1n: ~~K':::''~~ 13 11 ~ ii-: ~~ • ~r::. BenCoof ,,., zJlO l1 JI 3,,,.,. \ "l~llLu!J 12 •0 ' ' 610 1 "' ...... ~vau En .. • S'• !'• I'•-'•IMCLfffl tO 11 90 (I • .00 •1 .-1 8<'nCoo! S'> 11Jllo(,IJ11oill1\o 1 0Qnnell¥ .&Ir 16 160 23'1 l'l''O 21'>• •11!11loefll!r II I\ IS 21\o '1 ll -~lMCLWlft 511 I 2J l~o IY< 19>,r 8tn( at • JO ll n•, 11 11 ...... , "Jvlt (11 n 6 ll ll. 12'> ,,,,_ '• H•UOll H't I • li'tl 11 .. 20'• ;1 ·-... McNeil 1S I 16 ll 1 !l . IJ -· 8fn!l""I Inc 11 129 •'-•>t t'-1 Dorr OUvtr 9 1 9~t 9'> fl,..-'•l><MW l""on 11 t t • 4 (.-.1,.ae<LD llJ 9 !,J 1S, 11 "''1}. 8rr~1v Pl\o 10 11) IJ"° 12'• lllt-1._ "lorHvC 10 S 11 6 J>, 6 ,..oc.rt/A M 16 10 l91'o 11'~ lf'•-'• MeaOOI 1 (I() .J6 l )I;, l~, llethSt 1.00• I •91 n ... JI~ lit>-"°Oovtr(a ... II 1J tl'o:o tl''1 '1 'o' '• HO<!rner " 9 'l l1'• 11'> 711,~ '•'"~"~'8 1.0 11 ,Ml•, .If> lo. Bl11ll0d .Sl i! 111 :u·, )j•, ll'•i Oow(f>fm 1 n msµ.., S•. si.i..-..., '"lo/I EIKln I ?t ••• I 1·.~ ·~,,. ...... ~ .. I. , > 2•. 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OWl•DJ 1Q :n .ll)o 11''> 711'0 211,~ ,1 • ,,..,.,r I• I )!) ll'• 11, ll'•" 8rl$My lJl 2l 267 "'6\o M'> 66\o ?'\..,.,oLhtpf 2 010 16 '\'>)So,_ , .... .,... .... t 10 9 ol) 1 J•~ !,,. 11'l l"'•Cfo,..•ve )) t} 1•'• 2J ... 2t\o• Br l1My o12 'l o~ 11 (!,._..,-,,,,Ll>fl10 :10'6'~'''°'' "lllllt><'ll\b!l l!llt"'ll t..19 •J .. l!hl) )ll/"o l/111'• lrltPet .21b 21 111 l•"" u u°"' .. Ill Ovmo 1n 10 11 1t !9 11'1 11'• '' "1"18•• \ .o 11 11 11>., lO\o ll'o Moo~oU I 10 11 I! 2l'• JJ, 21;_ •• 8rod ,..al 10 IT 19 31 lO''r Jl +11, -EI!-"ug~t•H .O / 10 t't 6'• 6'4 ·~.A 1 JID I !! lS, ll' l\'. Bawy,..!pf 2 Is~~» Sl>j, .. vtE~gl<'PI 91 I ll 15 ,,..., 1•'•·' ""°~t\ Toe>l ll IM 5-1 ) JI'• °l<l l "' '" ~dRon 80 t I~ ll•• l ll'\· ii roe~ GI 11 J 31 1S' > lS IJ'' -'• e avo"" lib I 11 lJ ll' •I l>• t<o!!Ol1 E 4(1 ; 1) 9.. l\o 1 ... -•1 .\,,o>LD 1 71 1, Sl 16>-o 'l', ~ • 8rUnG11.n 10 52 2'!)\j, 1'Q"t 'l(l\f-11 E81•1rn •Ir 10:16 tli. l'o 9\41~ Hu.,<•(11 1• ll TO Jl'o 31, Jl-•,Millon8• 36 ll 1'I u, \l o u ,•l'o llrUnGtl rt l]J\ 1-l o 116 116 "sl'>~1F l• 11 126 ll'i ""-•I•• , !-< O•or"'I U 26 t•, 9•_. I'•-'• n.~M I )I .. 1 .. l. 6l'• 1' -Brow1> Com 1 IS ii •, ll't ll't-'o Eei'Uhl l•l \I 1 1911 lt'o 1n, -It-M•nnPL 111 I II 1t , 1n, 1 ..... CallfoNll• Corponrtlo11 • ff • r 1 49% Dl1h-ict Owiterthlp 11 N011: C•1ttpirtltl•ir l111l11n,, _ ... ,"! revolutloft•ry nw lftOCf!i..,. ta 11. duttriol 011d COMMWClol •vlMtt,' I. Pen11y a Pound I Public Can Pick Melons drGrouo 11, ,,1 ls 26'• 26\o ,t•o-•"tl"'D IOI~ .o l!)hJ'll.0 1•)' •I'> (NP~"'"' 20 ,,. n•., 10'• !2')•1"-l<toA! ,,_ ~ ll 1~1, 111, i~i,, BrnSnrp .70 9 10"" tO•.r 10•1 -i.,i:110nro 111 1 1u ,.., ll'' l•'• ,1ae/l'IP lit 11 ?14 ,.,,, )ti\ •·l.A•nnEa 1• 14 •l 21 '' ;.2 8rFerr111211 Ill n •• 21'o n •,•1 Etl,,..n! l't I ll'• :U 3 !'•'~folll~I 10' )I) ll'-!J'l 13.... '"'""'IO I~ l~ !~. 16. le , 8'U'l$w-1• 9 Ml 191.t 111, !9•-'•E•/lon ... ).I )6 lot ?'I'> '1 )? ,,,.~,T ~v 0 11 1't 61.o 6 6 -"-''">Pac AS 5 n I! 7.t rj •1'' Bru>~W 0010 11u•.21 u ·~et~aJ• 'nl.I .,)l 11 .;ll, \.t1~1 t1t1111u l'l''•J••l6o· •1•,. '°"a l?• 1• JI 6ucvl; l:/O!J 11932.._-11',)lll'•E•~<'~' '4ot M?O•X> ;io• l•t~lfll l2 I : lolC>,,,, •~'OPuDS 1•10 \llJ~l•o •\ lhaa LO • 6 111 l•'t I I••·· ''1"'"'"8' I Ill 10 s ,,,· :>!,_; -.. •• 'l •fl ol.l 6 l ,. 9• ,. ' •1 -O"'I' 11 "' ' ~ IJ 11 • "" htdf-Ad11al •Htst ..... tofkl "'°"" •lllflOllt bod9ro1!HI oN • .,,.. blllty of taklfHJ com,..._ cltcqe of OPftcrtlon&. Com,.... ,,-o411tt i "'""" tNl'1!111t. Trocli NCMd wl'I pro'" Sl,000 1Mllttily "'· " •bltal'tf.I MIJ.'y & CIJ:P*Mtt hi "':i1·"1t11!11 ,.,,_. $2',,10 wlll I uo>tJe. Prbiclpah C111y pa.es.. \"' ;1e loata111 Ct., &OS H!Mlry l\n., litqlewoed, Ca 90301 . A"• J. JOftTMY, Prmd•. Ill• cl11de bock9r•••d llhtafy, ,....... "'"· ,...,. ............... tot-111· ~-o,,.llrtftwftt. FRESNO IAP)-Rather than plow under canta· loupes that have gone unpicked becau se of a farm v labor dispute. John Harris lnvJted the publi c to his 9()().acre patch lo pick and haul off the melons for a penny a pound . Harri!> announced Monday he would have work· eN out today to direct persons to the melon·patch on his farm on the Fresno-Coa lin ga road 45 miles i:oulhwest of here His price of two or thrtt cenls a melon com· , r,are!i with gTocery store listings of three canta· I oupe~ for $1. · United Fann \Vorkcrs have picketed 11arrl5' fann since last week as the farm labor struggle spread to melon fjelds we.st of here. BlldOOl Ina \6 6'• .,., ·-. ~ • . .~ ['ti •nat • c 0 '• u u -• "•·•C..I ,~ 11 •Y 61 ti. 11 :~l:~:.,,?•!g 11t Jl )Q, l0'1 JO• ·,~~~Glu~ ~~ tr 1t 1;: 1;• :\/.,.";,. j~ 11 :?~ ?t U'° ~'·-,• '°"'C,: I~ f sl 11' <1• 11 llVl\ktR )QC) ' ,~ 11~1• 1;: 1:~ ,ros,r'M )5D l', 108 •I ~--11' '1lllPwP1 . ~~ 11fJ 11 \l Sl ·~·.::.. ll;o 1 s ri ,t:: II ,;~:: ' BunR OI l'> ~ !1'11 !1'' ,,,,,_ ') 'f< f""'O 1•1 '• jt, •'•• !lll lOOIW 3' 11 1 J1', l), 1'', • 'O ~,.,., 1 11•0 9 ll !~, u, •1 ~· Burl In \.,, ll ll lO. ~. lO\.o • '• "'' 11 DI SO<: l'l' ! ' I. ' • 1m~·1~· (c • 101 10'• ... 10 '1 MOl~nl I le I "". ,, • l9. • ~~~\NNi,1 ·J~ 9 1~1 lJ~: lj~ l,~}:1~1~11~ ~:.;,1 ~ \e ::: :: :.: ,,;~:in\'~°:~ ~ ~.! ~ •. ;g,;. ••l~--~Zmo )~ '~ 1~,! lj• lj~ .. 1~ Bv•ndY( .10 ,, °" 2•'• 24'• J•'1-'•£'Pa10NG I I ,, >1 .... lf.'1 11' -'•!fl(~ Cao II 1. '• 1'~ ~·'>•otA .. 1~ 161 is. 21' 7!'•' '• 8u•r11ru '° •> 199lJ9\, 2ll•• 1l9"' .. '"' F ••~Cn 111 I t 29 ,.,, JO. o-'• ln<C•nc 1«> I t'o ''• O-t • '•l''t'l1n1 J ~ 11 J!I SJ" ~· • \\loo • '• Bw"' Urn•• l.l 6 rt.. ''• ,,.._ '• r~•E' 1•, n tl'.t '°'' """ "?'•~ 1, ""H••l'I ~ 16 ~ "" u, 19 -'•" ~ P' 2 • 6s .. 1 t i • , -.C C-.-,,,El~! 90 1 6l o '''~ A"l' "'Ind(;.•• I.. 15 JS'o 7!~1 JJ\.-•1••..,•0• lU ,•, h lO'> lO'• Jt;I'+-, C1b!fl17bi l Ul•'1 1i '14"9-llf;mrv•lr 1'U 10•~•'1\/o6J '•'"'1MO!IM JJ09i I• 91 ~,,,,, O ?J31 '•Jl'o]!'. '• (ebOICO '1 1 fl :U'o 2S 2J6 +'or"lf"lln )1 1? S ..... •\, 51, l"dPWL 162 9 » 2Sl J!'4 ii'~ >,·~" Sil~ Jt f.l'o 22't n·,. C~, ln(t • !ii I 1 I'• '\.-!_. 1:;..,,,.,, 1 70 7 SO 'IO'• It • It'-I '"<111N•t! t6 0 II lG ,_.., Jlil ., ,M Jib 11 &Ir 12 11 , II 1 1; C••"rs wa s XI )loo l'• l~· '•IE..,r O. 111 It t 11'1 16'• 11,• , ne1co 0.1 20 !t,... ''• ,.. •.•oe<t Met 1 is 1•'•"• ,.,, ... Cttll ~lnenc: ' o ,.. ,,9 •'+-:It i;,,,0p11 JC 1100 _.., I , 6 , '"" ll:nd ! IS 11 ''I •1 '1 l<I -'' ._..,.gJP 1 q !t ilO "'" e1 6" •l , ~ (~llalMI" )k :10 171 lt'o 11•, 11 o t-'•[t"'ll Flo S• J lg I .. I , J, '""'JI Of 1'1\ !t JO"t ,....... •"°"""II( ..,., 6 It,,.,., I' !"" ... '• tom 8 2 111!> 10 11 71'o 2t 71 fm•1!re G .. 1 S !1 IO'o t\, t •t I'll CO!I• 1 6!l !0 S ll0 • JI'> M'~ 'l ""''~El P I 116 16~> ll'l t C.amRL ,$.> '6 62 6l'o 62'• ~ "',~,·~~• ~ n IJ l!ot 11\, 11'• !!<0 '"•"0 •11 1 1 1l 2f 111'1 ~ 1-'~'<r~!> II • ll I 1' 11 CtmpS llf 11 11 )1 ll ... n • .,r~~"·"' I' I ,., 5 , S I ~, ~· 11ti 6 lS 7''o '" ,... 'l• l\ I 11 11 1~' I~'\.. f~n«11s., l 110 ,u u ll ,. l•, ·< '' :1a :II\ to J"' co( 70 1 ti 11>'\ 10, 1~• ···••..:.,.. t, 1Q 11 ir, 11 tt.,. '• C•n ernwr" • ~'t I'-• .,. c-,,,,.,~ L,•, "111: ,, 11 ' '"• <""° 1. ll 1~. 1;.' v·, a•• v i't 1n s.o ,, l'•·I~ C•~PAc 1tn 11 du 1 'I ,,..._ ·~ -_,, '",..._:rt""....-... n1ofooa 110 !l 'l"l r0•4 ,,., '""' •1 .,... 11 ,, n I''•.,.._ '• C•ne1 I I 10 11 1 ll'• I] •• '•' • •• ' ,, ,, •o• !6~ ,,,, •• • ~ .. ' ,.~ I 11 l"'• '1" : ••• ,, I ) 1fl>, '6 lot or> (ft'" ,.. 'lit ll 4'1 171i. l!'t\ ._ t, -I\ 11.• t :J • '1 -..;01 "f>, ;1,, •M-)• l} !I IOU. 11'1 I..-., ..... l 1-• 'I ?!<. If•• :II .. • ~ cao1o1"'d '' n ,n 1H. l'l'lo 21\o -'' ... , , i , ,, n ·1 , , ~·· ·~ '~ 1' 11 ,.. .. J ~ •-1 • t • ••• ·-· ri'11ro 1 ao, ,1 ., ,1 .. ,,.,_._ '"' 1 ,, ,-. ~,,._•1IO ' Mn'litl'. .1 1 , 1 , 1 •• 1 Carll1lt -'J I '!f';) lt11 !I ~,_... "I '.\• 1J 16 1~. !ll'olCo ·~ JJ •ltJll\.'llO' ; • ""'• .~. ;"} ... :oil • '• Ca•ClJ.OI> 1 11~ 6l, .,.,, " -. ,. l' ••, 1'\."''•Yr \ii"" • ~ i! tl~ 11 • t '"" In.-t, '"'W~•v .:ij I \ii~--. -~ ;! t' ,-"'°' _,...._~"\ ~:;:~~•! 1 ri 1 111 ,t~ ,! .. 1!~ :~ F" ' : I i; ;;•1 n' ;; l :::!~"0fl11"1 II J:~ l)l:~ f~... •!' -, 0, ?' !~ .;: ~,, 11'"= ~lit':,'~ l;••o T-1 1 •1 n l" n I'• '>I• o0;a 1 · " ,,.~ •s •i.>. • 1n1 1'*' pf a no. ~ r. ··-· L 111 11 , 1 ..., 1 '• ·-1 .. (•rrloof c ,,., 1tl m l tl'' '\(t"•1Q '° 10 11 ,, lto It'• , ..... 111r~ 'ii,, l'Of 7''l ,, ... ,.. •• ,. , -· ·-c1 ... 11or ... lb l is"'o 11•• 11•, .. •.t .. .x..•, • 15 •'• 1. ,,_.,,.,,"'a.c 11t1 1 so )II ~ -'1"l•"l',eo1:io11 ~1~ d ui..-1, , •• ,WI '°" • let 1,"' ,, 11 ..... " [ ,.~n , -\I ~1 '""' "'6 '' •• '. '"" "11"1"" •! II .. !I 11•0 .. N•l·~ r.. 11 lPli. )II J6\o-J. .. ------·~;l)ICltOt .H. I -,•,,1t•,:,?..--..!?:!,·.:...__.,_ _,.,__ tM"'°"l•I 1'• IO 1 ""17fl'•,. '• ·o' &II 17 l~; ,,~ 1,11.•,~o to IVlt(J-RJ""'fl'f ,., • ,.,. ,, • .. .,. ...... .,..._ ~ • loo" Jolr<oM I J.e-..... Ji""> ,...._ \.-•• l"-l"-11,....,,1..; :l ".J,;--.JJ••'"-'·'·"·•~--L .. • • ----~--- Chrysler Earnings Hit Peak DETROIT (APJ -Chrysler Col"p .. ftrst of the auto finrut- to report fint·half profits, said it had record net earnings of $198.4 million. The report of record sales, profits and car and truck total deliveries ~me Monday as Chrysler and the other auto firms were engaged Jn con- tract talks with the United Auto Workers. IT APPEARED likely that Chrysler's healthy financial r eport -virtually certain to be duplicated by the other auto companies this week - would attract considerable at· tention from bargaine'rs at all the tables. Chrysler's six-month profits came on· total sales of $6.1 billion, "£1.7 percent ahead of the $4. 7 billion in the like period a year ago. First half earnings compared with las t year 's first-half fi gure of $104.2 million. IT SOLD 1,823,201 cars and trucks in the first half, 19 per- cent ahead of the 1,528,428 in the first h alf of 1972. Board Chairman Ly n n -·--- Cuddly C11b -~- Tunday, July C., 1973 DAILY PILOT J3 OVER THE COUN-TER NASO Listings for Mond1y, July 23, 1973 rt-. ciuo""°"* ~~o co ltti 131'1 R•ll uni¥ 1m lj•'j!H•nv 7llo ,_. i:olJid 1r1 IM N•· n A11tm !JV. 3'\li Rtl P'let JI.\ ... lmt DC ~ 10 .. '0 ..., """'::F:ll°" ol AuloP ¥i 24\lo Aevn A.It lm ~ Tlf.,. I"-1 urllltt •lt'n. CrvcM ~ ll"" Jll'Hil Mt :111\l Tow!• Ml t "'r:" 11• llldt • offllr• MM 2 \\ ll:Md Er, ~ T•M C11 Ii!: •l Ql.IO!ld by -·llw-rllm ,..,. l~ '!:? ltobn D 1 12 '\lilll'J Tr" Gf1'" ' ~-Mien. lo r•ofl k JloHIN 8 164 IN Tm 0cM I \i \NI § ~ fl of ••I' ACIY llOUM C• 4\lo I~ Trnofl ~ f f \1 (E ..... " Hacll (II 27,,., 2' It-F"I IN ll'h Uni ,. .. Ill. ) The t11110i. H•lln EW 17"" 11\'l lhockr l'l'I M '""' Un/an 11,~ 1~ --c11r"°' lfKludt H•tt~tt...--t-fl~rllh Jtw~,_. .--tt,,., tmAM fl _ -- •I rTMrluP, ""'k ~•mll •• :at1o1o lS1' s.a1 A<;11 1\-o 1 us lk NI m JI-\ dOwn Oii' comm1... •r1l'fl P 4"' 5\to S1f•m Cp 1~ 1 us Trk L 12* 17"• lllOllJ 11'111 do 11111 WPtr ll ~ 7V. S1m.,.11 1•14 16'-Univ Fell 15~ is• -·~ KIUI Hfili Fl 7~ m Schf••• )31,\ 341,\ Unv MOO! 5.:0 t'H lrr~~UsT'iilALS tl:fi 1111M~ ~ 114 knoll In JBr. 3114 VMIM Ho 7\fl I AND UTILITIES ~111 °" 25 U\11 Scon Inn 12 12<111 V•IK• S" t "'--r Ht•Cel c l•'lli U l/io Scolt1L G Mio ~\lo Ven o ... ~ 1114 IJV. Jiiiy 1J. tn Homwd tl'I 10\.'f ~~1:: 7 1f~ l\.lo ~fc~0t~S~ 1 T~ ,',0i.; (11<;1 A~ HGOYW 2414 2t\lo I " AClllMI m \ilolol tlU"' MfQ IO'h ll'A s.., Wrl<I ~Ill 2'14 v *° S}'I ~ •'. Alf.• !'!~ 20\lo i' Ii~'" c !l uin s!frJ":/" }:"" ~1\\ ~~llM>~~ 1~ ,:~ ~h: ~ 1~v. ~ 1;:J."'w1~ 1;~ r.--St.,.n ~P Jll4 l2 w .. 11 NG lltli 1"-~U~ ~~ ':~ '!~ 1::1:..~ucl 7i~ ~~ ~.:::', r~w II J;-! ~ :::~"Mt 1r-~ Am Mn! ll'h ll'A Intel CrP 'J"" Sol m-11 12 Wfbb Rt 3\6 t\'• A ArtCrtt '(~ ~ ntwc En v. ' Snip Tol1 SIV. 59\4 W-' 1''1 AmEt Lb 2\.lo .?" l'lmt G1 lt 1•'111 ~1ric11 P111 l •\t lSI.\ W•lf.1 WI ''" 11'h ~~ ~~ r~ f'~ ~ etJ1"l l\4 ~\Ii sf!~1~'v I l~ l~~ :::~ ~ I~ 1l"" Am F11rn l\11 1\.1 lntrst Cp 1 ~ 111-. !Id R111l1 1$\li 161\ Wtl PutM 16"11o I•~ Am Grte .U AW lrtl•rid ll '"° ''' lk N Ale 3:2 D W.llr Fd 20\io 10 .... A.Ml~ Sr 1~ 1714 J111'11Mt 10~ 11 S!kN lrw l'h 91,1, WUl•ml l 11" lt W Am T1l11t jto.i. 2S14 j" AlrFr 3\o'a •V. S111k N S 10 IOV. WU1t1 H J IN 11 Am Wricl 1" 111.\ ~'(fl M 1.S\!i 1'\'J S11'91 TIC 1714 IT¥. Wini PkT 13\6. ,.._. Anllluir o&S.\o ~\4 Kl Mr $1 13'~ IW SllPlr El t \, ~ Whc I'll lt'h !~Co Anken In 41\ 4\.\ IC1 v1r C 3\;o 4\lo 5v ..... CP 10\'o 16'1. Wood Lill lN IT'o ... Ill.CO Kt 10\llo Ke41rn Tk )\oo ' 511bo Fd '"" 7\4 World 5¥ 14\llo ""' A.PS lncp Ulll 'l\4 .C1llW«I lP,, 1"'9 TAllV Crp 3"' '"" ~·klhf w Pio v. Ard" Mvf na 31,\ Klffl Cohn 13\4 l•'I> TtmPI• ltom• Cp 101!. II Arrow Hr 16 I~ K•r 0111 6\!o 6"' 1l1V. 1nv. Yltll" F•t ..-ltilii oltll't A"'ldl 1"-9t;? IC1vwt Fb 13'-o l•'li T1ylor W $1\'o Sl'io Zleg1r Co ~ W. :rrGfct~ f~ fl"' ~:~,, c~: 1f'" 1m. T•1ecm 11 ,. 1v. zions u1h 26v. 21 ... UIP Trn 9!t 10\6 ICMS Ind 4'Ao ~ e11rd ,.,o ~ ~ Kn1111 v1 13 1s JO 'Jflost AAti-A fl1lr<;1 Wr 11l'I lt'lo Koci1r Pr 25 U ... ....~ l •ler F1 :M\!i li\o'i K•ut'll•• 9 '"''--cc:::::-:c:'O'Cccc=,,.---,,,--.,,--11<;1wn L 1 N ,C.intm El 1 n11 e.u ... Mn "'"' .-,14 Ladd Pl! I .... NEW YORK IUPO -TM 10 ,,_, Bnk Btoct 11\11 1"9 Llncl•I 12 !Polo 1cll"'9 1tock1 lrldMI on the OTC l!Mrli.t Bank Jltl 21\4 2N Lance ~ 26--MondlY 11 Supflllld by NASO. B••rlfl H """ 2''~ L•wttr c 31 llV:i v•-llf Alie .. ci.. Ba1;r.n F 25'• l'''~ Laly Boy ll\lo '111< R•flk O.gn 169,300 11V. 12'111+ <~ Bov .,. '"" 0 L-el Pl 13 ll'I> N•IP1l Dev 7t,.OO lOV. lffo +'"' Btellnt F 4'11 tl'lo LlberlY H 4 4V. Am E•o ... olOO st'"' 110 -~ B1kln CD 7Yo 7~ Lll Chmo I•' l'llo BlfflllY L• 25\lo '!"" Linc Bdsl 1v: 1--Pinn Lll• 60,000 ~ ·~+ "" ...... , ,00•,d JI 3 V. Llcm CISI 4'11o t;' Hoover Co Sll,900 U \!o 1'""-14, '-~'h 43'h Locllte 63',1, s.ol Plffl"hlll T••8 S6$0 ~ ~+l·16 Ilg'> Or~ ll't.;, 1~+i L-1 Co 5-t S5V. Pinn Ott11111 5-4,100 5,., ~ . Bird Soni 26 • 21 Maa Gii 14V, IS Anhl\ls 8\lleh 50,900 4~ ""'-2 .... Bab EYftl 7N f Mol Ally 5'.lo ~ Bink Amer .46,!0Q •5'!<. IJ\'r-1:., Booth No 10 Ml lckl .f2 43 ConnGn lnw lt,700 J5 SS'h+ ,. Brt11eo 1 21\.'! M1rll Fri 10V. 10~. 8rink1 I" 11 11\1 Merv Ky Jc29 JO lrown Ar 6\.'! 7 Mc Cmc:k to'h •2 N"'D v• 1~-, ..... 8uckbe IS U'h McOUIY 15 15'111 ,... um. -I' ·-· Buck•v 6\'o l'h M..Xm !Siio 16 ACIYilf\("H 137 llu•np SI 2.3\.'i 2t M9dltrn o'9 n 01Clln1i nt Buller M 39'h 40\.'! M1rld In 51,~ 6\~ Unch1nged 1810 Cam Tl<t 25"• 26 Meyer Fr 11'h 11\'I To!1I )05' Cai:il Sow S\~ S'IO MllllllO• 51 SJ 1--------------~~i,,l:IVI~~ J;)Z a v. ~f~~ ~:~ ~ ~ ~Nine:• A 11\11 111'<1 Mooul Co 14 2S Townsend referred to the con· This lion cub held by L a Vonna 1.1orris, is one of tract talks which got un-two from Lio'n Country Safari that will appear . at Gainers & Losers d erway with tbe UAW last Southland H ome and Garden Show in the Anaheim week and repeated the com· Convention Center, July 27 through August 5. Ch1"I Co 17.~ 7V. Mo(f( In :U•t. 3714 l--------------~l>e<n C11 J5'~ :Ult. Moore Se l!\'J 26\.4 New Yor11: !UPI) -Tiii fol'-11111 Ud hi Br Ir ll'h 14"'1 Morrlill • Jc21V:t n\11 il'lows 1111 stocb 11\ef hlY9 g.,ol,.-!hi '"II SIC Motor Cl 12\~ 13 most Incl kn! TM mmf bllld on percent pany's hope for "an equitable -="-"='-'--'----'--"-----''--"----- agreement without production Its 11S M51 D•la N '"" of Cllff\119 on Illa Ovw·llll-<01mter Clll1 u A m• )It>\ Nn CnvSI ti~ 10 m1rkll IS <tUOled by lilt NASD. Cl""'plc 11 llllz Nit LlblY 10 ll:Jitl NII Incl ~rce<1l1g1 cll1npes 1r• lhl Clow Cro 11'!, 12'·~ NI MdlCr 10 l1 OIU1ranc1 belWttn TM prtv1DCK 1111 bid Coc1C La 17'4 111/o NI Patent 10'/t 101,·, prlc 1fld !hi currlfflf 11$1 bid prlc•. , interruption~" Structure Purchased Don Koll Co., Inc. 0£ Newport Beach has purchased a 230,000 square foot industrial facility in La Mirada from American Electric Co. and leased nearly half the struc- ture to a Northern California firm. Officials of Coldwell, Banker Co,, who negotiated the sale, said the $LS-million traruiac- tion included the building's 11.37-acre site on Firestone Blvd. adjacent to the Santa Ana Freeway. MMM Carpets leased 100,000 square feet of space for a waTeOOuse showroom retail facility. 1be three-year agree· ment had a consideration of more than $350,000. • Keystone changes some old ways -of doingt · 7.00%-7.25% 4 year Ce1111icale of Depos1l - S 1,000 minimum, 6.75%-6.98% 30 month Cenillca!e of DePosit - $5,000 min.mum or A year Ce111llcate of OePoS•t -S \ .00 minimum 8.50%·6.72% 1 to 2 yoar Cert1hc;itc or Deposil - $1 .000 mon1mum Of 2 year 10 30 mori!h Cer11hca1e ot Depos1l -$5,000 minimum s. .5.75%·5.92% 90 day Cer1ilieate ol Depooft- $1,000 minimum 5.25%·5.39% Regular Passbook aooold- $1.00 minimum Not only does Keyslone offer free services on all accounls and compounds inlerest deity on all ac- counts, but also shows you how to make an extra nine days of interest by moving your money on the 10th of the monlh and earning Interest from the flrst. The Money Machine is another Keystone Innovation. LO"" cated outside our offices, lt puts twenty .. flve dollm cash In your hands. Within seconds. • 9 KEYSTON-E SAVINGS ......... _ .. " .. llOMAl.O 'fl', CAtltl'.lll. C".llll•A" OP TMI IOAllD Wettmin11or office: 1•011 Stach Blvd..-Anaho1m otllee: 655 N Euclld -Newport OfflOe ·Airport center. '301 MICWf'IUr SW. >.sse11 owr S66 mmlon. ' Coml Shr 26'.1, 11\!o Nft<lhm 10 11 CmwTI P :t2V, 23\.'! Newll Co 1011 '• G•IMEltl> Contllll P 15'• ltV. NEng GE 16\lt 16':'1 1 Clbl• Fu"dl~ 71'1+ ~ Uo "1 Cou1ln1 2017 2 V. NJ Nat G 16'11 11 .. ,. lrol' Co 111~ It•.-. Nlc:oltl In 1 •• 2 Bullw Nall Co l'-"+ 1 Up "'· C~~:chNot' 1f• 1:\.'I NftlSlffl A J0'4 31 '4 : :tt~~":mii"4° r~+ 1!: ~= ik. Standard-Pacific Da"I lnll 2711 2ll4 Nlelte" 8 ~ lOh S MICrodat1 Cp 314+ 1M Up .~,1.0 oa,.1¥ M a•' 1"" N0<C11lr 20'1> 71 6 Cr_,, Crells 61'1+ IV• UP Oa•I Oro 1:it 7V, Nws N!G 10\lt 10"4 7 G9!'oll!Mr lncp , + .. UP 23. Reports Increases 0111 Dis 3'1'1 .a 0Nuc:lr0 ',' ~'IJ> ~'I• I Loglcon lncrp SI~+ ~1 Up 20.t Oara G!(' toO ~ akw 9 CllS DlslgMs No+ 1'4 UP 19.4 DK!I DI 1''' 1t .... Oc11n Or 51'A lol\I 10 T1u1w1y lllC !'-lo+ '~ UP JI., DKor In SV• 5\'e Oct•~ E• I•/• I 11 Sol~w Alrllne t''°+ •• Up 17. Oi!~!t> All 52Vt s.11/io Ocn~r Mt JV. 3-" 12 T0o>c1ny tm1» J'l'ot: II.lo Up 17. Bfl~e~~ m! 1!~ ~11F'e~~ 1~a 1i: 1: ~;:" 1~1i~ l~+ i 1 4 ~g :t~ 8l~k" AH: ~ ~~~ ~~;'°1 11~ I~ !1 ~~r.!rk f~~ :t ~ ~= :t: Standard-Pacific Corp., a Costa ~1esa residential con- struction company, reported ~londay a 38 percent increase in revenues and a 100 percent increase in net income for the six monlhs ended June 30 compared to the same period of 1972. Revenues increased t o $22.638,224 as compared to $16,41,,790 for the prior year. Net income was $718,777 against $358, 709 for 1972, ac· cording to Arthur E , Svendsen, chairman of the board and chief executive of· ficcr. EARNINGS PER s ha re for the six months e qualed 28 cent.s per sbare compared to 14 cent.s per share for the like period in 1972 assuming full dilution. The per-share figures are Olvrs Sci 12\1 11~ Ovrmyr 5'11. 6'.lo 11 °"llc1llled Co 1v.+ I Up 15.4 Doculet 37 37"4 OV9ri NA l'• '"' 11 G.nerlcs Corp 3 + "lo Up '':J based On an average Of Oollr Gen 1 1\\ 01l1e Ctp 6"1 r:ft 19 Un Art Thr · 16 6 + ~ Up ll. d Oon1ld1 ~ U\.\o P11>11 8r Sl'o 59~ 20 Entrgy C1t 11lt 12V.+ 1'1> Up 13.6 2,229.520 common an COm-Daw Jons 29V. 311"• Paccer 3l l41''6 21 llowa" Indus! 2''1+ 14 Up 13.J mon eqw·vaJent S h a r e S O"•'•'>•OOB 1711. 11\.'! Pac Gem 20"lo 20~ 12 S1ntorm1!1 91 SVi+ "9 Up IJ.21 Ou 3"'1 33H PIC Lum JS'(, :w·~ n Volm S'-.16 14 + 1"9 Up ll. ts' d. d . f' t h If f Econ L•b ""' 40 P1So Brd av. 9\/t ,, S111>1rOllr s1.. 3'~+ ~ UP 13.t OU an 1ng ur1ng 1rs a 0 Ej PISO 11l't lJ'!. Pin OcOI 1•'4 U'-lo" Sunlit• Oji Lid $~+ ... Up 12.J 1973 and an average o f ~n••~::-:el ~ ~:z ~:~,.,ll•p 1f.;: 1~ LOSERS 2 271 610 common and COin· Eau S&L 13\'o ll .. PYIH C11 !IV. 19'1. 1 OCG TecllnolY 1 -'I> Ott ll.3 • ' . FThan A 27~ .. 1'1\.'! Pl~ N Sv 1311t 131/o 2 Atl1nUc Indus 2>J.-I Off 26.7 mon equivalent shares Execu 1n •V. s P1Gl& w ,, ,.,. 1 ALI corp 6~ 1v. 011 16.4 d, d · 1972 EZ Palnl ~\, 1'fo Pet H.SH 23'11 2,V. 4 Executlv• lnCI 41/>-V. Ott l•-l OUlStan !Og Urlllg . Fair Lnt 6111 6'• Petro LW 9\.1 9\.'! 5 Procllern<:O I" 3 -'I> Off 1'.J Farlon El 29 29>.:. PlcN !.IV ~'h 6\.'! 6 Glil1xy C1rpel 7 -1 Ott 11.S Firm Br 121+ llVt pJ,.krtn 11 21..., 7 Iron Mounlaln i-v., 2!', lB perlor-Fa¥1 0(1:1 .·.~,•,\I Pl-• w 9'4 10',1, I SMiier cf Am 21~-... V" 10.0 FIM!•hl ,. Pfoer Ind ll ... lJ"' ' G•t-•v r .60 9¥1-1 Off 9..l . Or Fsl S<>Sln 19\lt "°~ Pl1nd Mk 19 1~ 10 ..... 11y1mt Cp l't.-~ Off 9.1 mance lR 0 U r ange ht TKFln ti.~ 2.:1,•. PoDll Bro •!1 !\~ 11 Nitnl CSS Inc 2& -2\lt Off I.I County division together With ~~k:'111:, ,ii\," 11,,., Prot Gou J 3'111 12 Found• FdC11 1~ v. 2!', '' Fl T ! 17~ 17'1" PrOQ,..S 1'1.'r lS 13 GRI Com11utr 110-Vo v• l.J contributions from some O( Flrcko~ e9 12>/, 13 ' PSN Car 11'/> llllo 14 H1m1llnT ws l'lo-V. DI! 1.3 bl F 1 01 14l\ 14i'o Publshr 2 2>/, u Jltdlclron CP 9¥.-.,,_ 011 1.2 OUr newer divisiOflS e na ed F~;~~ Et 91~ 10 Puln CID ''~ •1\ 16 Tracor l11rorp 6 -Vt Ott 7.7 h hi F tla 21 11J :n Doner CP ]l, ,...., 17 ConlOI PIPl'l'll 2114-2111 Off 7.• ~ e . company to ac eve F~r;,0 re " 26'" Q111kr Ch n v, n;~ 11 ACMAT coro 12-1 011 1.1 records in home sales, net in-~'•i'K, " .. ~" i•v. 151"1 Qklffll C• n v. 1'' ,, MFY 1nc1 .06t> 1,""',.,_ ~ Ott 1.1 .. ......E ' n:. Ill!"' C11 I\• 9"" 10 C1ym1n Cor~ ... Off •. 1 come and earnings per Fu 1er H )C1J1~ Ja..., Ravcm 213 217 21 Ml1te• SI•• l"'>-~ ~ t~ Share " Svendsen sa1'd. gF~r~~ ... ~ 11 rn R~vmd 21't. nv. "12 vinW'Kk tntL i!t: "' off .i..s , ?lV. 21 '4 ltlrM Pac 17'4 1!'14 23 Delhl Intl OH J''4-Vo Off 'S The company's new Illinois :~"'1: J 1~~ 1:~ =~Ei~ ~ 2f.,t ~ ~~~~.;11~~: H'-,,. Off U division, whlch has office!$ in G•t• Lr "OUTSTANDING the C h i c a g o metropolitan J:.$1&19!& "'¥*¥®0iWWWi¥AAt#i&MtilililfiW'* i'!MJ!iW11Jl1 area, has broken ground for NDS Greenfields, the firm 's first MUTUAL FU residential project outs 1 de 0 I !11 California, he said. "'"'""'"""'""""""'""°"""rJ"""''""""""m""""~"'"~"l:l Y ' -••· E:\!a Gr 7.13 7.11 JHen !"' 791 861 ~•lee Eq 1.li 9.16 New or '' ' •• OH • JHln lg I "4 ¥ \J ~911111tr 0) (ll MSI Data Tells lawlno 11 • d ~ •CM•n.in 2•lul4.lw .;e,.~, Fd 161 90 tJ>d and ask~ur~.i HBOa'1n"~~· 9.6110 .so KEYSTONE: Xn11s So ,:02 9:U ~e:ndS :; QVOleCI t>v Gwth F 1' 11 H 0 ... ~ST Sl 1~.11 19.68 ~~. U00Ell FDS: 1111 NASO lne. lneme S.91 6.S2 l.U$1 B2 19.t921.:M 8ntr Inv l7.ij2 J1.02 SlllCll F 7.25 1.92 LUS1 B• •.26 V.\O l ll llC 16.(716-47 MotNllY Sick Fd 12.93 l•.ll Cust Kl 7.lt 7.12 t.om 10.7S 10 7S Julv 2.:1 1973 E11er1t<;1 10.4311 . ..a L11•I K2 6.02 6.611 5~•1 JO.oo.:io·aa 'flld Ask EOIE So r.z.56 22.~ CUii $\ 2l.3J :U.56 .... Lt¥ 4.56 ioo ADMIR•LTY: EFC MGMIGJlP; L11ir 51 11.~ 12.'6 ~~CUlllt'f FDS: . Grwth •.39 t.11 Eotv Gr 1.aJ 1.60 C11sl SJ 7.71 1.53 ~ly J,42 J 1S lncom J.16 •.12 Eotv Pr 3.01 3.36 l.ust S• •.2• 4.65 Jnv1sr 6.71 ,-JS ln•ur11 I 22 9 01 Fnd Am 1.59 1.30 APOiio •.59 6.02 Ulrra F 1 OJ i 10 A<;IYlstr i '.17 .:56 E11r1t GI 11.5' 13.4.3 Pola'I 3.6' J.fli IELl!CTl!D FDS· · Aelnl Fd I.JS t.13 EltUfl Trt l6.S9 · Knkkr 6.11 6.16 Arn Shr I 1-S i lS -•·~·~-nH--~~~N~~ At111ur11 9.72 t.72 Enersiv ,-01 0·11 lndmrk 6.44 7.0. S Pl Shra 127Ut2·70 Revenue Climb MS! Data Corp. of Costa Mesa Monday reported net in· come of $2121415 for the fi rst Record Set By Bertea Bertea Corp. of Irvine achieved record net income in the first half of 1973 on slightly lower sales, Richard Bertea, chairman of the board, h as announced. For the six months ended June 30, net income was $611,853, equal to 41 cents per share, as against $555,493, or 37 cents a share, in the com· parable period of 1972. 'T'he weighted average of common shares ootstanding was 1,506,814 in 1973 and 1,498,729 in 1972. Firm Asks Damages Damages totalling m o r e than $797 ,000 are being sought by Collins Radio Company of Newport Beach in an Orange County Super ior Court action charging a Santa Clara com- pany with fail~e to fulfi11 a calculator assembly contract. Collins' lawyers name Com- modore Busines.. Machines of Santa ctara as defendant wilh the allegation that t b e Newport companv's operation was adversely affecttd by the defendant's failure to deliver electronic calrulator parts on quarter of fiscal 1974. based on revenues of $4,173,880 for the period ended June 30. In an unaudited statement o f earnings announced at the company's annua l shareholders meeting, MST President William J. Bowers said income r e flected earnings of 11 cents per common share with an average of 1,945,080 shares outstanding. TIDS COJ\.fPARES with five cents per shar e for the like period last year with 1,628,642 average shares outstanding. Bowers said income before taxes was $438,415, a 154 per- cent increase above pre-tax in- come of $172.516 for the period last year. AGE Fd •.8' (,99 F1lrtld · · Lin• Fd S.2' S.2' enllrntl llf'• · Allst1!e U.96 11·1 Fm B11r1 9.6t 9.6' LEX GllOUP: Sentry F li'I \0.JO Alpha Fd lz) l Fed RRs 9~ · C11 Lfllr 15.6117.0I SH•Rl!HLD Gl.~·11 Amc1p F 4.11 FIOELITY Grwth 6.63 7.2S Com11 1. : Am Ovr1 9.961 .16 GllOUI': O..., t -RHrth ll.61 lt.87 E"lll>I' ! ~~ 3.62 Am E<1IY •.50 •.t3 incl ~b ,y, ·"" Llbly Fd S.50 6 01 Flt! Fd l. '·" AM EJIPRESS 111111 11.7217.81 Ute /nl1t 162 9t2 Hlrbr ill 4.lt FUNDS· 11111r1 9.06 L.lnc C i~ ,·,, ~I • .4J I 12 C111t11' 7.11 t.43 Cv SSe< 7.1( 1.'6 U IP • ' p '-a.07 ·~ lroc.om I SI 1.311 OHi 6. lt L~:r'r 3.21 · · · SM"/_%JtFC1 1,n 1 . .., ln"51m 1.07 1.11 E1 .. x 10.95 SAYLES! Allllr't" SOH PDS: SlllCI 7.'1 t.32 Evertt 11..2312.27 Cap 0 .,. 13121112 lllC'Orn 11.1110.•J S!ock 7 62 1.33 Fund 1J.a2 17.29 · In t 17.<44 It.Of Am Grtl! 1:c. 6:6' Purl!n 9.27 I0.15 ~~~·'.t,111!·6t 1'.6' $~ "t:. 9.37 10.2• Am ln1ln t 97 S Cl S1l1m F ,.11 4.51 • Sid 1" l2.$7 J2 S1 Am 1nvst ias 4:1s Trend 24.25 26.SO Aflllat 6.n 7.05 siJ Fd 1.00 ,-61 Am Mui 8~6 903 PINAMCIAL Am Bu• xl.99 3.:U MA FUfllos: AmNI Gr 2j7 2:st PllOORAMS: Bnd dlb 9.16 10.78 f•P Shr 7.19 i .. n ANCHOJI Fl" Ovn t.11 4.11 Lullllrn 10.,711.66 Tnv 10t7ll ... GllOUI'• Fin Ind t to •.«l L11lhn In 9.47 10.JS fll r"N • C111!al. .a.IS S.32 Fin Inc s:65 5.6J M.lGN.l FUNDS; s11'f'hJr 1'.99 i·: Fnd 1n... 7.69 1-43 vent •.02 t.ll2 Cap111 l.78 •.It s"" th e 10..10 10· Grwnt a.c. I IJ tstFd VI 11.ll 12.27 Fncom 1.7' 9.60 s! I.I.Gr 11 00 u·:ia., lncorn 1 II 1:11 FIRST PUonn l.ll t.JO GetiF ,,.., . Virnt11r 1.}2 9.3.1 INVESTORS : Mfnhln (.OI 4.46 ~w:st lny 1·211 11·" W1 N•l1 12.09 lJ.25 OIK F<;I J.51 6.12 M•SS CO: W lny G 1~ ,l':J AJ.lr0'1 l.7S t.10 Gr11'1 Fd 1.U 7.t.I Fr"m 1.n t.'5 So~'t'r tn 11<J 11M AIKla• F 7.99 1.73 Sloe~ F 1.M a.st lnclP F 1.06 1.13 Oldr1 ,,, ' " AJIE hi Mulll 8.s.1 l.$3 Miss F 11.412.5' p lnO I ) HOUGHTON: FOJIUM GltOUI': MA$5 l'NCL : STAT• fllflt·'o'.•.tf F11nd A 4.7!1 5.11 100 Fnd 10.97 10,'7 MIT 11.ll 12.Jl Com F<;i I': Fund B 7.0S 7.66 101 Fnd 1.19 I.If MIG 13.39 U.63 or.-..11 l·~ 5.:lrf Stoc• s.as 6.J9 Col um 1.73 1.n MID n .43 '"'" Progrs i 1 5.11 .lxt Sc:I t.13 •."9 '2S Fund 6.0J j·OJ MFO 13 :M It SI St Fr Gr · 1 .5.$1 8LC Glh ll.4312.•t F<;i" Gr 4."4 .01 MCO litt 16.IM St Fr Inc t~ 4.Jl B1~ 11.26 11.26 FOUNDERS Mai.1 Iv 2°21 :i21 Stare Str n I f.JI Bayroc x7.J6 7.13 GllOUI': Mllhfr 11·7,11 76 STEA!MV.N · 141.58 Bavrll 11r 1·· (.)6 Grwlh S.Xt j·7' Mid Am s"t2 6''2 Am Jf\d FDs : Beacn Ht 1) 1! tricom 11.111 .IO MOnv Fd 101s 11·1s A11o "" J.oo l .oo Bncan 1 .lt I .31 F Mlu•I Ill hl MSfl Fd 1iOJ lill3 ln.,.u 1.Jt 1.19 8wr•tt IC 11.31111.30 F Soecll TO.Ill 12.00 Mil enG fN 1o"n T•IN 1toe'·» l.ll B•rkihr •.211 , ... FOU™I. F 1.75 9.56 MtF Fd in ··:u B•I•~ itos, 6ondltk •.13 !·11 FllANKLI N MIF Gro is2 i" C111111 21.Ji:it.Jo llotl Fd" 9.17 1 .61 GROUP: M\IOfn Ill its 5·,7 Sloe:• 10.$0 I0.50 BULLOCK wth Sr 7.71 1.,$ m n • · G "' First· quarter represents a 41 Brown 3.30 l.,l ~NTC 7.as a . .io MuO 11 1·0, in Sis G1tou 1s.2r '5.2! FUNDS: r lncm 1.91 2.16 M11t Shrs IS.XI IS.20 rwth f 1' revenu e e1.111 Fd 13.otl•.34 usGv s t.1,111.a1M1111 Tr• 1.90 1.90 111C'Orn t 21 6·1l Cdn Fd 22.o.:Ll.1• .u1111111 5.24 s.7• N1t t""u •.90 9.90 }rnm11 1:12 :·oo percent in· DI¥ Shr l.69 4.0t llK C10 t.ff S.1 • NAt l llC FDS : $ ll:hnj •.lJ ,-: f Natwct t 9110 '' R1 E<!t't' 4,41 4.13 B1l1nc: '·" t .7' ~ro ,. 6.8! · crease over revenues o NY vin 11:0111:06 Fkl LIEo 11.n 12.n 1onc1 sr o&.76 s.xi !"' ·~ , " ',-~ ~ ~• 4'" J t and th " 8mfH'n t.1' 7t Fd Mt "! fA f,CI DIY!dn 3.6l l.t7 ~ 1· .l6 ""'·"'"· -as year, IS ~G F\lrld 10.2211:os PVNDS NCI" Prll 51k '-1' 6.77 tov.w .-:: '·" year's net earnings were 140 ~~' ~~ ll::lt~ 0c•:,u,:: 1.11 t ."3 ~~sr t;I' fi\1 r~:~cl: ,g:.es, •.11 t hi h th th $68 516 C".lNNINO I•~ 7.5' 1.24 G"Wll> tXI 1M TJldot-H I . 1 jl.lt percen g er an e ' PUNDS: I U$ ,, 10.to 11,tl M•w •HO LI"• 110tl't CG ~·" 1.11 for last year's first quarter he B1lnc:d 10.57 11 .ss ~P 101 ,•><, •,.ll2 Fo11rtv 1s.90 11.21t ~1,c, 3jg ~ • Bnd Fd 9.0I 9.t2 Ila; .6 .2l Grwll'I 10 ... 11.tS 11n Id fl& ... t6 added. Com Stk 1.30 I~ E p '6.66 . S'd• 16.tl 11.31 u" fllnd 1·,. I0.01 ·-j.30 5. "-u ii 6."4 4.64 NEA Ml t.7t 9.tt 0N.ION S•Jt'V•~o" .. lllCO"' .14 1 to C: N.-u <tnt 4.91 ..... ou,., "" , 5111et 1.7, 1.'2 Alltx F J.76 6.lO N1UW1'11 1.911 t llO lri:i S 1 I THE 1'1SI executive told Vftlh.H' 1.11 t .tt ''' F,"", ,•,.n,,,!"1,.ew1,.,, 1.1.101.:17 Nu'",.,~ t',',rs.01 h hold h fi '"'IE ... om ' .32 Nw P1r1 11621• n 11 C1pt · t.SJ s are erst e rst quarter 10s ON: S!~h'f~ 2f·A:2f:~ ..,_ Wld 12:" 13·111 1J'Nht1111 1ljJ 9.~ performance was based on fric1 8~ !:fl 'i:~ ~"' n '.ll n'.l.I ~~~'i!.i, lt~ lt;;' A~D ,.uJl>Pr continued acceptance of the ~ 81 {·:' !j ~LTOM .~~'"~ • nc"no '·" ',,_ 11nd Fd ~.lJ '•"' F \ "90 f Grwnt 6tj ist n"""'" 7.116 71' 1°"' h f .6' company's electronic order ~~NiiL 0· 1 ·' 1ncom 60 1·.,. n NII• "' 11 .A• n :u °"'ow-t"',. •10.u .. ..._, 11·11 1 ·11 ..,_ .. W111 1i ~~ ''" on1 inc 10· o.as entry and inventory data UNDs: ,.,,,,__,, 7·90 ,-o""'"'"H"' 11n1 · lni:orn .0110.91 ~anwr t . .tSlO~~art Lv -01 ·~ n., ~1,,. 1~11 11 ,_ ScllH!e 13.n isot terminals in the supermarket F~" ~i: 1~·' H::i !:s. •· no Fnd 1.11 8:M J..".."fd :·~ 1:., industry ns well as expanding f~ fl1 ,,~, ~::~~ 11:~~ ~:~.,'";(TS~ !·~ 1~·tt u,SG~ lf! 1f:~ · van111r 3.33 6o1 lmor1 Co 97310.63 "'""""'' 11:\ ''' ALU• llH'""IO.)t penetration of the hardware, 'f,=oG 11 _S6, :s. "'9 Gr 1'.1t 1:.. "'''' It~" ,,. 7"•1 ~", l111 6."''"0S, C NWLfM lllC ldAm IJ.J11•..50 ""••1~ " c 1• c ',.I: I Inc 5." drug and general retailing T UST: Ill( ew a.u ,.n ... ,...,, '~ '•• ~ ... G~t :·~ ....., k t ~ & 8 ljl l:E l~....':...Am ~:~ 1; ::~.: ~':. ~-~ ~·?~ v..,•",.~ l..u ~:~ mar es. _ ~· "I "~ 1~'-r.:'"vq_1 a .120.,, -·--•· 1,. ... 10 " SANo111ts • • omo o J, I I.At Pl...,.. G •.90 1.N -·-T-, 13 '~' 1 The f1nn Is a pr1nclpa1 SU~ -" ,,., 'H "w C9 e ll.01 ''·" ....... :••• ...... vs c-~.n '·• . om11 Fd .36 ,. "v G11d t.'4 1.t4 "'"-~ o: .. ·~• ... , ~"Itel .... ,fj 1,J4 pher of electronic field data onctd t.41 H '"" ino f.31 ...... .,.. " ., ,, ., """rt111 !·! '·°' DnJ Inv 11~ I t~v 80I I .2111," ., ..... 11 • ... '" •• "'°'lll'1f ,,,. f·~ entry systems with more than ns111 llW j· s ~N'f,l!ST, ......... • -••. v,"' '°" ,'·,',' ,,, onMt '" .. I OvNlll.. -·· .... .., .• ...,,,,. u."J-a 1 · . 18.000 terminals in operation :::~1 ,1 1~~ ,!:ff ~~"\... ~~1 f;j' -: · -.: "":·;-;; ,, ,, ~:r;r, GI-i ~ t!: In . 00 • 1.11 '·" ~;;Ji Sh ·i1 '· 1 •. .. ........... w.-"' ,:r 111 1 Q store.sthrougboutthenat1on. WI\ Dlw 5t I ll' INVEST OJt "' •. ._,_ ·-·-· -. .. ~ 1,1ot12:1t ~YldQ .It 9 It m SGth • n --..... , IJrl'ellllfO ft.to 16.91 including various supermarket 81'-"w:'it• ! NO '·" •.as -·-.•• , ... ""n11,., TON OUI'. "' '·" t.M -· -· -E•lll chains. i!e',. ::n11:n 1=1 ,;·~ij:f : .. ..:.:·.: .... t_:;: ~-,°' "1i:11~li -------------------------!S:li. T t.1l~;Q t'-cl j4 •!i _, . .,.,, .~ It>\' 4; o~~'tco ~:fr ·jtt l~,··~•v !.t :if ·-·· • ." 1' '11' •• WT%tl"' 11'.:i~i· T S d ' N Q . ~·E ll1Jlol1 (0..-!ft. 4.u 4.$6 ;::•It>< .:::,;:: w~r~ :.·~: · ry ahll' ay s . C~'S wz !Ei·••Tw ,t~n.7 ~?""~ ,.· •• ~~.:: ".·~"' 1!~~':!: w~'Pl~ rn ·• time. Ld s.,A• T~ti;i !.6.i .,.. , .. ,11 .... w•nctGr 1.u, " llC~ 1J·!2'1· 1~ F~ '~: 'l;10 ~~:.. F ;;;:j;; =' ~ lrdCant ttil PG-...tt! I.ti '11"4 ''"'""1" ,,.. 77'S••M-Ol"'-"d E&E M11 ; l" J 2t Jff'UI Frt 111117 •1~•·• 1' tt J ....... ~lllfbfi ' I ! r I ) \ I , TlltSday JUiy 24 197.J Tuesday's Oosing Prices-Co1nplete New York Stock Exchange List Mm·ket Goes Up For Seventh Day NE\Y-YORK' (;\P) -The stock market closed higher Tuesday for the seventh day 1n a row and analysts were saying that 1t might 1nd1cate a new more pos1t1ve investor pS) chology The Dow Jones Jndex gained 5 57 points SC DAILY PJLOT J 5 I 01· '' ee kcntler Achc1 t1 s111g Phouc· 6124321 Co1nplete Oosing Prices-An1erica11 Stocli Exchange Li st • .. • ' " ' ' ' ' ' ' I ' ' ' ' • ,, ~ ' .. .. ' • ' • \ • ' '" ' ' . i. 10 A 111er1ca11 !Jlo•t 1lrtive t<'.u 0 l N'-,, \ ' -II ""'~ ~ 1 r c~ l• • 11a ... o ,.; 11~~ t t a Or• l•I I ' , .... . ""' .... .. '" '"" "' "''' ~,., '""' ·~ "'" , .... .. " .. ~· " ... '~l. ' , .. •• ' lt . + • Amcri<'nn S oles \lohnnc "' • fl ~ 1,/11 ' II ~!I ~ Sy111l1ol• . 1-------- - 8 DAILY PILOT TutSday, July 24, 1973 ~-.t'tlllrilH Clr"~';::'•:.---.. ":;_!I:_ Bil Kea11e • t .... ,. .,., . I ~•I " tuw "Wny ore you going so ~lo.,,.i, Daddy? We'll NEVER get there." Ali~ Silenee Post rnan Neve r Rings From. \Vire Servicl's child. he is second in line to the throne after his father. Statement Says Rig Spill-free Stude11t Rights Panel to Probe \\1ASlllNGTON <API -A draft of n federal en· Campus Bugging vtronm('lltnl impact statement l-.OS-ANGEE£S (AP) - 011 a propost'i,.I offshor(' oil Allegations of illegal wiretup- drllllng plntforn1 says there is ping and electronic spying on -litfle chance or oil spills or st udents and professors in the po11uti9n fro1n the rig. Los Angeles Comm un i I y The threc·volume, 1.278-page College District have been report 1vas prepared by the unveiled by a legislative in· U.S. c:colo~ical Survey and vesligating committee. wus released ~tonday. "For more than a year now, f~XXON 01 L company has legislators and 1 a w en- proposcd instalHn~ a 940-foot forcement officials have been drilling platforni in 850 feet of receiving complaints from \\'ater in the Santa Barbara students and other personnel channel. Under !he proposal. of the communily college pipelines "·ould carry oil and district,., said Assemblyman gas from the platform to a Charles Warren ( D -Los new treating and storage Angeles), chairman Qf the facility on shore. Assembly subcommittee. A spokesman for the survey ALLEGATIONS OF wiretap- said the major accident \vhich ping iri the district _ with could happen would be a spill. private suits over it -surfac- WARREN SAID stlldentJ, adminlstratllts, capip~ police and members or district board of trustees are being called to testify. Earlier, slate Cap it o"I sources said witnesses were being called by subpoena. It was not immediately known if college administrators would be testifying voluntarily or un- der subpoena. Warren did. not say in the formal statement whether the alleged wiretap activities were being conducted by the college administration , but pointed out that the district is defendant in two suits involving the rights or students and pro- fessors. THE REPORT says a major cd last year and received wide "THE .l\tEMBERS of th is oil spill could be caused by an publicity. committee are going to in1propcr wc\I casing pro· \Varren said f\.1onday the determine whether the rights gratn, rupture of caprock, subcommittee would look into of anyone have been intedered e<1rthquakcs, the p I at form the situation in public hearings with -and if so, what being hit by a ship hun1an er-here July J0.31. legislati ve remedies may be ror, (ire and storm damage. lie said the alleged acts in-appropriate," \Varren said. llowever. the report says the vo\ved "illegal wiretapping, Warren is chairman of the likelihood of any of those electronic surveillance and Assembly J u d i c i a r Y Com· events occurring is "very other acts involving improper mittee. He is al.so chairman of lo\v." or illegal interference with the the Judiciary Committee's • • Good Investment News: BUY ·DIAMONDS FROM ESTATE, SAVE A FORTUNE Now available for the public: fine je\vclry fr<im ~vefal lar:ge estates. at Cost.a Mesa J ewelry. Save 50lfo. Estate jewelry priced (or immediate · sale. Invest now for unbelievable 50o/o mi.vings. Wise irive!rtshent opportunity. Collection includes ·diamonds. rubiei; u.nd emeralds. 1Hig invest- ment demftnd bcci"usc of increasing value and limited supply . Beautiful Helection of lat.lies and nuJn's. rings ·and watches. J:;legant necklaces. bracelets llnd pins in gold or platinum. }'riced from $200 lo $10.000 •.. values to $20,000. Out-of·Pawn jewelry-a great investment. }lundrcds of precious and semi-precious items now available. Prices low as $10. Make Someone Happy with the perfect gift rrom Costa h1csa J ewelry. Make a sound rinancial in vestment too. RACITI'S Eiqui1iltt plalinun1 ntcklaee with 156 dian1ond•. f'oo~hO/ICd rlro1r (J.3.) kan11.~1 rhnin!YI b11 J1 lio!111dte11, XX bril- /1a11"-. 0111£ 1tclirol1J rlotmc 11{ .u1 mar- t111 i.xt1:11t di4111muf.,_ 7bto./111t1t,. t.'i komt1. 11.~.tH/11 1•ti/r(e. f'ri•'t redM«d tu $;.t.!l!I:!. COSTA MESA JEWELRY 1838 Ne,vpo rL Boulevard, Costa Mesa, California 9'2627 714/646-7741 ) The postman ne ver rings in Rancho Santa Fe. a wooded town in the hills by the Pacific, which is fine with ac- tor Robert Young. "I have to go to the post of· fice, and I meet people the re, '1 Yoong said. The young prince is named after his great-grandfather, King Haakon VII. Norway has also had seven kings named f\.fagnus. but none since the 14th century. "Subsurface safety valves rights of stude nts, professors subcommittee on the right of placed in producing wells _:a::_n_:d_a_:d::_m_::in::i::sl::r_al_:o_rs::_.'_' ___ _:P_ri_v_acy,;_. _______________________________________ _ would prohibit upward move-1- "\\'e stand around and chat about the state of rhe ~'orld. I prefer it to Beverly Hills or Hollywood." YOWlg, television's A-1arcus Wel by M.D., and his wife Bet- ty ~ght their home in Rancho Santa Fe about 20 * Ramsey Clark. a (orn1er U.S. attorney general. says he is considering running for the U.S. Senate from New York . Clark. 45. is in private law practice in Ne\v York City. His career in justice spanned eight years of the Kennedy and Johnson administrations. years ago. * . * William Penn Patrick, the 'The . S~l Bu s. Ines _s late cosmetics millionaire, left Ad~ln1stration h_ns filed suit about half his estate t~ his against the ex-wife of former estranged wife and the other Cleveland Browns fullback half to a trust in his name, the ( controversial ty.coon's w i I I ) . shows. PEOPLE The will. filed in Marin '----------' County. did not declare a Jim Br own and two associates. seeking to reCQver a $10,000 loan. The suit, filed in U.S. District Court in Cleveland. names Sue Brown and her associates in a claim for $7,764. the amount of the loan the government said waS un- paid. The trio used the loan to start a suburban telephone answering service that still is in operation, the suit said. * Princess Anne's fiance is now Capt. Mark PhiUlps. 24, not U. Phillips. the Defense Ministry announced . It said Phillips' promotion, which too.k e f { e c t in1· mediately. means a pay in- crease or $2.50 a day to $6,731 aMually. * A car driven bv Presi dent Julius Nyerere Or Tanzania collided with a truck in Dar 1es Saleem, but Nyerere escaped injury. Nyerere was on hi s ""'ay lo a beach house outside t h e capital. and had a police escort with flashing lip:hls. but the truck driver apparently did not see it and pulled into the path of the president"s car, witnesses said. * NON'av's nev• prince will be named Haakon i\lagnus. and 1f he reaches the throne. he will be King llaakon \1111. lhc royal palace announced in Oslo. The baby "·a~ born to Crown Princess Sonja and Cro11n Prince ~larald. Thl.'ir first value for Patrick's holdings. Patrick. '12. the former head of the San Rafael-based Holi· day tifagic cosmetics em pire. ...,·as killed June 9 when the vintage plane he \vas piloting crashed at his Lake County 1"311Ch. * Charged by a city coun- cih\oman of being ll "Neander· that n1a\e chauvinist," Phila- delphia ~taror Frank Ri zzo r~­ p\ied that. in police v.'ork. \VO- men should not be treated <is lhe equal of men. Rizzo said in a television an- pearance that a 'voman can't cope physically. He said that, faced ·with a violent criminal. ''The only th i ng a police"·oman could do in many instances would be to shoot." Citv Councih1·oman Elhl'I Allen charged that the police lradcrship assigned the force 's 64 police"·omen to "runaYlavs and stolen bicycles.,. · * :\ man claiming to be a pro- fcc;sional \\'rite•· and the original .. \Vizard of Odds.'' fil· cd a $2 mltlion la\vsuit in Lo1 1\ngeles to halt the National Brna<lcasting Companv from calling a morning television nui7. "hO"'· '"The \V izard of Odds ." Leo Gu ild, \~:hCl said for the past quarter cl.'ntury he has created radio and t('levision sho11·s. books. newspaper col- urnns. and cartoons bearing thl.' "'izard title. claitncd the Qtlll. show has deceived and n1isled vie\\·ers into believing 1he>y are "'alching something h(' created. ARE YOU SERIOUS ABOUT LOSING WEIGHT? mcnt of oil and gas in the event of damage to the wells or the platform." the r('port says. IT ADDS that the platform '"can withstand without struc- tural damage the strongest ground shaking that has a significant likelihood of oc- currence during the lifetime of the structure, and that the platform can withstand without failure the strongest potential ground shaking at the site." IT ADDS that the chance of a ship ramming into the plat- form is remote because the structure would be seven tO nine miles from shipping lanes. The report also says there is evidence that the structure ··would have a positive impact in that it would provide an artificial 'reef' for ... plants and animals In an area where reefs are lacking. Park Stock At Yosemite ' I Sold to .ilf CA LOS ANGELES IAPI - l\1CA. 1nc. said it agreed to buy 53 percent of the stock of Yosemite Park and Curry Co .. operator of all lodging, recrea· tional a n d lransportation facilities at Yosemite National Park. The price \1•as announced ~londay as about $7.2 million in cash. MCA. AN entertainment company, said the seller is U.S. Natural Resources. Inc .. \Vhich is prima ril y engaged in the manufacture of forestry cquipent. ~!CA said that in addition to acquiring 552.634 share5 from U.S. Natural Resources it will make a tender offer for the remaining 498,000· shares at a price nol less than the $13 a share to be paid U.S. Natural Resources. Yosemi te Park and Curry's sales for the fiscal ycn r ended Sepl. 30, 1972 lolaled $15 million. medical l.odo co \ un;que p•og•om is o sofe end P'ocl;col e h n1e1hod for the entire family to lo~e weight and we1g t learn how to maintain proper weight ... under lhe slric l supervision of Medico I Doctor~. reduction Call for in formation LINDORA.+ MEDICAL CllNICl Monday thru Friday 8 A.m. to 6 COSTA MESA Adams at Mesa Verde 557 -1893 NEWPORT BEACH 404 Westminster 645.3740 P.M. NEWPORT BEACH GARDEN GROVE LONG BEACH 64S-3740 534-20S1 426-6S49 PASADENA 796-2614 ORANGE 138-2395 '••• '••l•n••"•I "•1• llt ,,,1.,.,.,,.r C•ot ••• 111111, ,,.1." ...... 1 a1., .... • • •"• ld9 WOODLAND HILLS SHERMAN OAKS WIST COVINA FULLERTON 347-5647 789-7103 962-3438 • 870.9501 w,,,..,.v.c••<y c,.,9,,. "''" Ovl 1'11oHe~ ~ .... c.11,,. 1'11•••.t 11o19 •••'••"Intl l l119 ••• ,,. ..... 111., COSTA MESA SANTA MONICA POMONA CERRITOS 557-199) 818-4513 623-1655 924-5748 """ ........ l•OAOIM ··-... ..,,,,., , ...... ~ ..... .r11-, M••<•lldiil Mo,;.,.,c .... , ,., ............ ,.., ''"''"'Chap"'•" ,,,1,,.,.nel l"t. LA HABRA 694-1029 !'I 11 ..... M. ••• .r lldf. RIVERSIDE 787-8250 Mtd•c~I \qua•• SAii BERNARDINO 886-4788 E. LONG BEA~H S97-0378 MISSION HILLS 365-1138 Arre.,.. head M1d1tal lldg lQ• A1!Q\ Mfd•(Dl C1 t1•t1 M,/,,,,. M•r1r111I ll!dQ Free Personal Chee For to celebrate the ~pening of o~ Newport Beach office Save up to $24 a year!' When yo u open a Checking Account for $100 o r more at our New· port Beach ofiice on or beiore August 31, 1973, and maintain If you r minimum balance falls . below $100, your account will a $1 0 0 m i n i m u ,,._ b a I a n c e, :t:..._:~~iiililiiilill • ,_ "'Free 'P ersonal Checking" could save some of our you'll get free pe rsonal checking. You 'll be ab le to \Vrite as niany cl1ecks as you want each nionth and never have to pay a monthly service charge. custo me rs up to $24 a year and some customers ol o the r banks e ve n 1nore. Our two drive-up teller windows " mean fasl se rvice without even leaving your car. Or whe n you come into the bank. there's a large parking area for our customers. Drive-up window banking hours 9 a.m. to 5 p. m. Monday· Thursday. 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. Fridays. Regular banking ho urs 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Mo nday-Thursday. 10 a. m. lo 6 p. m. Fridays. The Bank of California ® Wemukeb--easy. 1401 Dove Street, Newport Place, Newport Beach, California 92660 (7 14) 833-351 1 Warren P. Thompson, Vice President and Manager ...,, ...... nl~•.A. !.Ot ....... ' 0 IC. 1 , • vc ] I Slli Jin Ph pa I M1 an l m1 po lac ar "' .;: Li ir. ot m es al st ht w, S< w B, c. al 01 V> il w pl ti' SI It ol Cl rr u cl r p " b s! ( Laguna Beaeh EDITION - Today's Final N.Y. Stooks VOL. 66, NO. 205, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JULY H, 1973 TEN CENTS Buyers: in Laguna Stocking Up on Pork, Eggs By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of the Daill' l"lltl Stitt Laguna Beach food shoppers are snatching up eggs and pork as they con- tinue to deal with tlle uncertainties of Phase 4 price controls. (Related picture, page 14) .. ' One shopper-reported that the Safeway Market in Boat Canyon was out of eggs and some pork proo:ucts Sunday evening. fl.tanagers of various Art Colony markets say the shortage, of eggs and pork product.3 is due to overbuying and lack of deliveries by suppliers. • SOOppers apparently are hoarding eggs and pork, believing prices on the items will continue to skyrocket in the next few days, market officials says. "So far there's a shortage of eggs," reported Robert Bersch, manager of Albertson's Market. A dozen eggs sold to- day for 81 cents at the store, he added. · __ 'J'be large number of summer vaca- tiooers in Laguna may have added to the shortage, Bersch said. At the Alpha Beta market in South Laguna, George Dobbie, a s s i s I a n I manager, a.dmitted "chicken, eggs and pork are the tough ones right now ." "\Ve don 't anticipale any real shortage but it's always hard to gauge." Dobbie added. Whole chickens, he said, sold to- day for ,61 cents a pound, while large eggs cost 75 cents a dozen. Prices have been relatively stable during the past week. Dobbie noted. , Paul Campbell. a public relations spokesman for Safeway Markets, said only the prices of eggs .~ poultry have gone up since imposition~l Phase 4. "\Ve have had some difficulty in get- ting normal supplies," Campbell said. "A• I ase Slaying . Clu'es Bared Sketch of .~uspect in Newport Released By JOHN ZALLER 0 1 Ille DlllY Pllol Slofl Newport Beach police today released an artist's composite drawing of the man they believe may have alxlucted and kill· ~ 11-year-old Corona de! l\1ar school girl Linda Ann O'Keefe tu10 \Veeks ago. Police said information for the draw- ings came from two witnesses who observed Miss O'Kee£e getting into a late model van driven by a curly haired man estimated to be 24 to SO years old. Witnesses said the inciden t took place abOut 3 p.m. on ·P..1arguerite Avenue, the stieet the young girl normally walked on her way home from summer classes she was attending at Liincoln Intermediate School. She disappeared on Friday, July 6. and was found dead Saturday in a ditch along Back Bay Drive by Upper Newport Bay. Cause of death was strangulation. Police said they have had information about the suspect and his turquo ise.col· ored van since "early in the in· vCstigation," but were reluctant to make COMPOSITES SHOW SUSPECT IN LINDA ANN O'KEEFE SLAYING Caucasian, 24 to 30, Brown Curly Hair, Droopy Eyes, Tanned it public. ' "We didn't want the suspect to know we had any information about him," ex· plained Capt. Donald Oyaas of the detec- tive division. Oyaas said that if the suspect became worried, he might nee the· ar'C<f.' · · · But after following up literally hundreds or leads in the two weeks since the crime, Capt. Oyaas said a decision was made to release in(ormation in the hope that the public would provide additional clues. "What .we want now is for someone to recognize the man in the picture and tell us about it," he said. "He has a very distinCtive face." Oyaas said the man was estimated to be 24 to 30 years old, with medium length curly brown hair and an unusually "long face:" ·· ·- A distinctive feature, he said, was the suspect's droopy eyelids. "If anyone knows a man like this. they should recognize him from our compasite draw· ings." Oyaas said the witnesses ogservt'd the O'Keefe girl getting into the suspect's van while driving past in a vehicle of their own. 11e said they did not stop, but were certain they recognized the girl get- ting into bright turquoise van. He added. however, that the l\VO \vitnesses had never before seen the O'Keefc girl. Oyaa:S said the girl apparently got into the van under her O\vn power and did not seem to be under duress at the time the \vitnesses observed the event. Oyaas .urged anyone with information about a person resembling lhe suspect to call the Newport Beach detective division at 67J..221 l. Coyote Bites Youngster, 5 Sleeping Viejo Boy Attacked iri Clemerite Park By JOHN VAL TERZA Of fllt 0.11\' P'Uot Stitt San Clemente State Park's un- predictable coyote struck again today - inOicting dangerous bites to a 5-year-old boy from Mission \1iejo who had been sleeping on the ground. The youngster. \Vayne Allan Preheim. immediately began the painful series of antirabies injections. Of grave concern lo authorities is lhe location or the biles -on the small boy's forehead. Authorities stressed that it could not be determined ff the coyote was rabid, but that as a precaution the in· jections would have to start immediately. The latest in a series of incidents - a grim repetition of ~acks on campers by foxes last summer -occurred as the youngster slept at space 74 this morning at about 6:30. The boy's mother. r.-trs. l\1ary Alice Preheim of 22772 La Quinta Drive. called rangers immediately after the attack. •neroine~ Dies Her Story 'Saved Father's Life' ESCONDIDO (AP) -As he looked al the kidnapcr holding a pistol to hls head that day, industrialist 'James Hawthorne talked aloµd about ·hls daufbter Linda Carol -"sort of plump and happy, with a truly beautlfu life."· "! told him abOill' Linda and bow she ,,... operated on for brain cancer," Hawthorne says of that moment or terror Oct. 6. "Suddenly, there was a rapport. His attitude towards me changed completely. I know that Linda saved my life.'' Although a Tansom of $186,500 was delivered, Hal\tborne escaped and a man suspected in the kidnaping was arrested before the money could be picked u.p and was later convicted. The story of Linda Carol Hawthorne ended less happily. After surrcring 14 months with a malignant brain tumor. the 9-year-old girl died Sunday in Palomar Memoilal Hospital. The funeral was today. ' ' Local police were summoned as well. Little \Vayne suffered two minor puncture wounds and a few scratches if!. the attack and \Vas given emergency treatment at San Clemente General Hospital. The attack marked the second time in little over a \\'eek thal a youngster at the park has been bitten by a coyote . On ~1ondny of last \\'ee k Denise Pimpcr, 8, of Nor .... ·alk, .... ·as bitten on the leg -apparently by the same ""'ild canine. Park rangers and other aujhorities im· mediately set traps and ext'8 patrols in an effort to catch the coyote. Over the weekend officers shot and wounded one coyote in the area and un· confirmed reports stated 18te Monday IS.. COYOTE, Page %) Judges Learn Ropes Fro1n County Jurist Newly appointed judges r r o m throughout C.lifornia are learning how to handle the job at classes conduetcd by Judge Richard Hamiltoo of South County Monlctpol Court. Judge Hamllton is an instrudor at the 1973 Tt1al .Judges Collego Session under way at UC Berkeley. Hamilton will serve as an instructor at the sessk>n throuih Aug. 3. lfe Is the presiding JudS:e at tfic south county court. good parl of 1ne problem is that everyone is trying to find out what they can and can't do." · Safeway, he said. Ls charging between 63 and 71 cents for eggs; 49 to 58 cents a pound for whole chickem, and $1.68 lo $1.89 a pound for center cut pork chops. "Shopping was heavier than normal last weekend. We presume it was an ef- fort to slock up," Campbell said. Laguna's small markets have been ar- fectt'd, too. Earl Cunningham of Forest 1'1arket said his wholesale cost of bacon has gone • up 36 een1s since last Thursday. "I've put a price of $1.79 a pound oo baoo1. Someone may drop dead over that," Cun· ningham said. "Jumbo" size eggs at Forest r.tar,ket now sell for 93 cents a dozen, with smaller eggs rcta1lng for 8S cents. Cun- ningham said hi! cost for eggs had lr· creased eight cc-nls. Pork chop cc-nter cuts no\Y sell for St.98. the market owner said . "I should be selling them for $2.2Q. bot I'm going to hold the pri ce do.,..·n and see "'"hat hap- pens.'' he addl.'d. CUIU'1ingha1n noted that under Phase 4 rc~ulauo:is: lhc ctiling price on pork pro- ducts ""'as hflcd. Before the ceiling was \Jfted. v"holcsalers actually took a 10$! on lhe purchase of pork frocn hog raisen, be explained. Now lhat tosl is being placed on the consumer. "And the farnH•r's making more than he ever has for li\'e hop," said CUnningham . "\\'e're going to sit tight for 10 days. Then we'll St'<' \lhal'i; going lo happen. "I.kit I kno1v pritt'S arc .going to go up like you wouldn 't believe ." • • S Ill UICI e Suspect l(ills Self In Niguel By JACK CJIAPPEtL 01 ,,.. D1U, Piiot Sl1ff A high-speed police pursuit from J\'eV.'JXlrl Beach to Laguna Niguel ended in death 1'1ooday as the man police from three agencies chased placed a gun to his head and fired. Jerry 1-1. Grenoble, 28, or Alameda. died at South .Coast Community Hospital at 5:45 p.m. slightly more than two hours after the chase began in Corona de\ Mar. An autopsy was scheduled today to determine the exact cause of death. The chase began in Corona de! Ptiar after police were alerted by residents of Cameo Shores. A woman told office~ the beardt'd man had been making in- coherent statements to her 3-year--0ld grandson and had told the lad he was God. As the \\'Oman went into her house, Grenoble reportedly called out that he would come in and get her if she didn't come out. Police stop)X'd the car minutes 111.tcr but the gaunt driver sped away as they walked toward him. Police units from Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and lhe Califomia Highway Patrol raced in pursuit of a late model Volkswagen driven by the bearded suspect at speeds of 80 to 90 miles per hour through heavy summer afternoon traffic in downtown Laguna Beach . The chase ended at the entrance to The Shores development at Niguel Road on Pacifi c Coast Highway in Laguna l'\iguel as the foreign car skidded out of control off the road and the Newport Beach police unit careened into a block \\'all beside it. Grenoble apparently shot himself at that time by placing the muzzle of a .22- caliber H and R revolver in his moulh and pulling the trigger. Not hearing the shot police officers from Laguna Beach and Newport Beach closed in, guns drawn, and ordered the man to exit the vehicle. When he did not Laguna Beach patrolman Terry Temple approached !he suspect who was holding the gun in his left hand and took the weapon. Bleeding from the mouth and cars Grcneble was lifted from the car, handcuffed and laid face doWn on the grass where ambulance allendants pick- ed him up later and rushed him to the hospital. ' "\Ve really don't know why he ran. \Ve ISee CHASE, Page t.J Trio Bare All, '( Land iri Jai~-, A shapely redhead and her two male companion5 were cited during the weekend on indecent exposure charges by Orange County Sheriff's ;ifficers ordered to crack down on nounting reports of nudity on Laguna area btache.,. Deputies said they booked the '.rlo on charges that they romped nude on the sands in Soutb Laguna iear Point Place. Thi" suspects NCre identified as Anoe f\fargaret Hoop, 30. of ttiarina Del Rey, Ste.,,·en JBC.k Sch'>'·artz. 24, of Villa Park itnd ltarry Thomas Arnold , 30. of San FrancL'tCO. Witnesses who snid t~y obj«:ted lo the lrio's dJsrobing told otncers ~Y dellberatcly ensured th.at onlookers "'ere aJlo~·td to \•lew the full extent of !heir nudil)'. , Dao!, P'llel Sl11f ...... VOLKSWAGEN WITH SHATTERED WINDOW DRIVEN BY SUSPECT Patrol Unit Also Crashed Against Wall of Niguel Shores Pentagon T~lls False Death Reports of 81 \\'ASH!l\GTON /t;PI J -'Ille Pentagon disclosed toda y that 81 l '.S. servicemC''l died in Laos and Cambodia on secret in- telligence missions since 1965 ond said their deaths \~ere falsely reported to families and to Congress as having oc- curred in South Vietnam . Defense Department spokesman Jerry \\I. Friedheim said the false reports \Vere discovered l\.1ooday in a review of Vietnam .... ·a r statistics provided to Congress in the \Vake of last week's disclosure that the Senate had been misled on a 14-month secret bombing campaign in Cambodia. The report listed 3,630 852 bombing raids actually conducted in Cambodia in 1969 and 19i0 as ha••ing been carried ou t CUSD Tr11stees Accept Avco's Grant of Land Ry :\IARa DODSO\ 01 "'' r..11t P'11tt 11111 Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District Monday night forinall y accepted a land grant from Avco Com- munlty Developers and comm i 11 e d $125,000 for land improvements to the 17- acre junior high school site in Laguna Niguel . Terms of the agreement require the district to pay $125,000 for improvemt>:n ts in acxess and utlllties for the site. located in the northeast Stttlon o! Laguna Niguel near Ctown Vallt!y Parkway. The board also passed a resolution or lnttnt to condemn, which will give a tax brtak to Avco, said Superintendent Truman Benedict. Benedict met with. architttts for the school last week and reviewed three dlf· ferenl plam for placing the school on the silc, he said. "According to the AJ"Chiterct, there are no significant problems. In fact . the pro- ctlBS of changing the school from one site IS.. LAND; Poge %1 ·, in Soulh \lietn.1m. Fnedhc1m said Congress "·as informed 1oday about the false account of the dea ths. Since the fall of 1965. Fricdheim said , 55 U.S. servicemen have died conducting "covert m1l1tary reconnaissance activ- ities" in Laos. li e said since 1967, an ad· ditiOnal 26 have been killed on secret missions in Camlxxl ia. Their famihcs \vere told "the deaths occurred on classified missions along the border of South Vietnam." f'rit'dhcim said, and the report to Congress hsted oil 81 deaths amoo~ L".S. ballle casualties in South \'1ctnam. Fricd~inl said !h(' agents .,..·ere opera!· ing on missions so classified that even tOri r places of death had to be kept secret. l !Ir said the cover story. sho\l.•ing they fSee DEATllS, Page !I Orange Coast Weather Coasttil ~kies \~'ednesday will again be cloudy during night and morning hours. but the sun is ex- pected lo breRk through atn.11 1 l a.m. Temperatures .... ;:11 range in the high six!lei; .,..·ith a sunny after- noon forecast. The low Y.'ill be 60 degrees. \Valer lcmpcrature will be &4. INSIDE TODAY ll1 jacker1 ble10 up n Japane se jctlu1tr ot the Be1tgll<Jli Airport slior!/y aft.tr tlley and 1he ir J 37 hostngt,t slid down an ~mer· ocncy <:l111te, Ser 11ory, Page 4. \.M ...... 111 • ...... .._ ..... " " c.~ ....... ' ... -n.u (11\\llltlll ••• M\INll Plllld1 " '""" " "'''"'I Mtwl •• Cr•u-111 .. Orl"ff C•u11Y " 0..111 PMllCtl " ,,Ml l.nff .. Etliori.1 '"' • ·-· »n ·"'ffl•~-' f1•1J Sltdl Mol,.•1.1 1•11 Plt11K• lt-11 T• ... llloll n .... ,,.. ._. 11. )4 T~tlfrl 11:il .... __ .. w-..'t....,. ,, ·~ knit• " -·-.. l "'· . -----• :l DAIL V PILOT LB lLlt'~ly, Jul) 24, 1973 Ota Subpot>nas Nixon to Abide By Court Ruling WASl{JNGTO~ (APJ -A \\'hJ!~ llousc ~'JXlke-s mnn said today lhl'rl' IS no ques· tlon President Nixon would abide by court ruhngs, but refused to d1i;cu~s \Yhat Nixon v.·ould do if the U.S. Suprcnle Court orders him to re lease subpoendl>d tapes and documents. "Thc·re 's no question that he v«ould abide by court rulings." said Depu1y Press Secretary Gerald L. \\'arren. add· ing . "But I am not going to get into a hypothetical discu ssion on this particular case because we are at a particular stage in a very complex legal situation." -warren attempted to have it tv.·o v.·ays at another point. v.·hen he sa id, "The President 1bides by the law, but Y:e arc in a situation now v.·hcre the subpoenas have just arrived at the White House, and this is whal I am addressing !his morning." He would give no hint what legal tac- tics Nixon ~ill take in response to sub- poenas from the Senate Watergate com- mittee and special prosecutor Archibald Cox , except to say a decision would be announced by Thursday. · ~1eanwhile, Atty. Gen. Elliot L. Richardson said he believes Ni xon has "substantial legal and constitutional foundation" for refusin g to give up the sought-after documents and t a p I! * * * Ni-xon Disavowal Contradicted By Erlichrnan WASHINGTON (AP) -John D. Ehrllchman loday quOled President NllO!l as ~ying In March that the.1971 Ellaberg break -was "a vital national security inquiry" well within his con- stitutional powers and obligations. NllOn aald May 22 that be didn't authorize the break-in, didn't know about it until recently, and would have disap- proved it U brought to his attention. Ehrlich man , denied trying to hide the incident from FBI agents inVf:!ltlgaUng Jut year's Watergate burglary and Wiretapping, saying he had been !old !hat the Justice Department already had the informatkm. He said lbe break-In at the office of Daniel Elllberg's Pl)'lhlatr!st was a prop- er way to track down those who betrayed government secrets, said any government official would understand lhat and keep the break-ln confidenUal, and aald even the pub!lc foul4 -11 only news media woufd properly lnfOrm them of all the facts. Te1tlfylng before the Senate Watergate oommUtee, Ehrlichman also accused ousted White House Counsel John W. Dean Ill in general terms of lying to the committee. Ehrlichman said he believes he is personally lMOCent of any wrongdolng. He said he want s to answer a number of accusations against him. Saying that naUonal secvrity con- siderations still prevent him from answering some questions. Ehrl ichman said the Ellsberg br eak·in was performed by the White House S p e c i a I tnvestigatlons Unit, popularly known as the "plumbers," that Included G. Gordon Liddy and E. ~loward Hunt. Both were later convicted in the Watergate wire tap- ping. Ehrlichman said he didn't find out about the break-in until alter it happened Sept. 3. 1971. But he said he didn 't con- sider it a potential emba rrassment for the White House because It was a proper wa y to investigate leaks of national security information. By contrast. former Alty. Gen. John N. hUtchell said he considered !he Ellsberg break-in one of the "\Vhite House hor· rors" !hat he consciously hid frorn the President for fear Nixon would "lower the boom ." disclose everything and lose \he election to Sen. Goorge McGovern. EhrLichman said Nixon didn 't consider it embarrassing, eithe r. OUN•I COAST l l DAILY PILOT TM Orlr>Qc CN'' DAILY PILOT. wllh wflkft la cembl-Ir.. Ht....,..P•tn . 11 PuO!ill\fd IW tlM 0•• ..... COl!ll Pv!>llt~lllQ CO'fll!ol!>Y, i.p •. ~tie ..illlof1t l •I pUbllll>f<I, MOl!do• 111•~111111 F•IO•v. ,.,.. Coi!I M•u, N .... _, fl•atll. Hu"Tlntlon 8t.clll,IMlll11111 V•llt y. l.IOI"'• 8t•tll, lrvllM/Stddltb.uk 11111 ~'" CJemen111 ~•n Jw•n f1plot•1no. A al11911 "'ll'Ontl ..i111on 1. pUlllhhW S.lunl••• -s.,,....,,.,_ TM P•""'""'' 1>11bll$l'>l119 ol•nt 11 ti lJO w.,, •iv l!rHt, co.11 Mow, i:.111om11, nu• lllob1rt N. w,~ '°'" ..... ' •nd '""''-'" J1ck It Cwrloy Viet ''ftlll.-.1 Holl Otnotr1t M-..r n..,,_., ic .... u •1111111r "Th-•• A. Mwphlt1• M1 .... lrit l!lllllw Ch1rl•1 H. Looi llllch1rd '·Noll Aathllnl MINOlfot f.Gl""°I Leit-IMclri OHko 222 For11t AY•llw t Moilln' A44ro11i ,,0 , lo~ ••6. 92652 ...... Ollk .. CO.ti M .... : "9 _, llW Sit-.t H_,...n llildl: DU H.._i ...., .... ,.,,. HllOll'°"IOll a.di; ,,.,. l..ell '°"'""""' .. ,. Cl-t1: .. Hortll I I Cl<Mllt IMI T.i.,,.._. 17141 '41-4111 a.NW .t.ftilnW .. '41·1671 L..-. ..... Al Dop•t1 .... 11 T.a.,._. 4t4-t4" c..rrlfllt, ltN, CWll'lft Co&tl ,IAll11~111t (-~,. HI """ 1'9tlft, !lhlllrll_.,., tlffWllll .... """ ... ffvtr1l ........ t1 i..1n _, .,. ~ wl!Nul •-Joi ...,. fl'llll"" "' Nl"l'l'illll -· ~ <"-,.., • .-111 11 COf11 ....... <oH..,.... ~ll'tiln IW t•rrltr S' 41 "*"""'' w ,.,.11 u 11 mont11lrJ ""'t1r.1~ ..,..,.., .... tl.U l'IWl!llll~. recordings, which Ni:ton concedes cnn 't prove his inno«ncc. But llich::irdson called fo r Nixon, his boss, nnd Cox, his techni ca l but in· dependent subordina te , to "try to work out so me practical means of reconciling the competing )nterests at st<i.ke." Richardson th us secn1ed lo be sug· gcsting an out-of.-cou rt compromise. 1\skcd at a news briefing how the While House \\'ould respond to the subpoenas, \\'arren said the office of the presidential counsel was studying the "very complex legal situation involved" and that "after such study \\'ill take appropriate action ... , within the time specified in the sub- poenas." He reported that all three documents, call for a response by Thursday. In response to a question, Warren said that Nixon of course would make th e final decision on actions to be taken. Newsmen tried to glean from Warren sonic hint as to the course Nix.on will adopt. ··1 can't speculate for you what ap- propriate action might be," he replied. County Cons Will Submit Grievances A threatened sit down strike at the Orange County branch jail reached a stand up agreement early today when IS mutinous prisoners agreed to submit their complaints in writing to jail authorities. "We a11 had a £rlendly little discussion at the gate house and it ended with that decision and the agreement fJf the men involved to go to work," said Lt. Bu yr I Battelle of the Theo Lacy facility staff. U . BatteUe said the only complaint aired by the men this morning was "what we've heard before -g'rumbling about the fact thpt we don't relay music over our loudspeaker system. "That just~ isn't feasible," the office r satd. ''\\'e have I~ different systems running through our gate house, the kitchen area and lhe central building and it isn't possible to interrupt them for any kind of mwdc arrangement." Batlelle said only 15 of the 215 prisonen at the minimum security Jail in Orange were affected by thls IOOming's dlssemlm. "When we get their written complalnt.s ' '11 eumine them and see what we can do," he said. "Whatever else they have in mind they didn't state them verbally to me today." 'The Incident was the nrst such ln· rucauon that recent unrest at the central jail ha s spread to the branch facility. Allrgations of unfair treatment at the Santi Ana main jall have been ai red in an action recently filed in federal court by lawyers for the American Civil Liberties Union. From Page 1 COYOTE ... that the animal's carcass had been found. But that CfJyote obviously was not the one that attacked this morning. As in the case of the foxes last year (none of which y,·as found to be rabid), the attacks generally occur in the preda\\·n hours. Ran gers said ihey can only theor ize that the foxes and coyotes which live in the Ngged areas of the park have I01St their fear of man after living for months off scraps of food at the park. hence are capable of unprovoked attack! on slecir ing campers. The precautionary orders for an· tirabies shots come from the Orange County Veterinary Public Health office 3nd lnvolve 14 injections, one a day, of a duck serum which Immunizes a paUent against the dread disease. Health officials become most t1ln· cerned when biles occur in the areas of the head and face because the di.!lease af. fet:ts the brain. They have. described lhc injections a~ disron1forting, but not as painful as the original type of serum \\'hlch caused \"10\ent side t•ffcct~. From Page 1 LAND ... to ano thtr has been much ltss difficult then previously anticipated by the architect, which should re!ult in less cost to lhe district." Btntdic t said. Tut acreage which trustCC!'I accepted ~fonday is the sK'Ond site ronsidered since Avco ennounced Its intention to make A land gift to lhe di.strict list year. Problems with gra ding on !he firat 11lte cauSf'<I the officials to find t he alternative which the district formally accepted ~fonday. School officials have tried to nish the <'ntirc acquisition issue because of th!! crush of lntermed!llte•grade enroll mr:nt faci ng th e CUSD. The distrlct11 AO\e Junlor--hlgh c11 mpu!I -the most rrowdcd of any achoo! In the system -will go on double sessions this fail. . The cri!ll will only be 1l&\'ed off. Renedlet has said, wMll the new Niguel school opens Its doors. ' .. ? ' Diiiy .. , .. , Stoff '"°" Water Unit : Directors ·· . . ' • • • Eye Budget By FREDERI CK SCHOEMEHL Of tllt "04.1,., .. lllf 51•1f A balanced $1.8.'.U.500 budget for next year's operations v.'i!I be considered tonight by directors of the Laguna Beach County \Valer District. 1'K' budg et main tairui the water dist rict tax rate at 40 cents per .$100 assessed \1aluation. Rates paid for water also \\'ill remain sta ble pending com- pletion of a \\'ater rate study in Sep- tember. The spending program. under revieW by directors for the past six We('ks, allocates $71 9,200 for operating costs. $432,400 for new projects and $767,5(1(1 for re9erves. Of the $432,400 for new project.!. Sl79 ,900 will· be spent to upgrade the ex- isting water distribution system. Improvements include expansion of computer "watchdog" systems, new water lines along portions of Temple Hills Dri ve, Los Robl es, High Drive arul Acacia Streel and pre ss u re inJ· provements in Laguna Canyon. CHASE ALONG PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY ENDED IN LAGUNA NIGUEL-; DRIVER SHOT HIMSELF Newport Beach Patrolm•n Charles Morin Investigates Sctn• After Speeds of 90 MPH Through Traffic A number cf other changes are reconj. mended so the district may have two lir three ways of providing \vater ·10 a given area in the event of any water · line failures. Money will be put aside for new pump- ing equipment ($15.000 l. office equip- ment ($26.000) and buildings ($18,000). From Page I CHASE ... . y,·ent to investigate a report and when lll'e got the re he ran," Newport Beach de tee· any connection," Oyaas said. Oyaas said he doesn't know what the suspect was doing in Newport Beach and dcelined .to speculate on a connection between the dead man and the death of 11-year-old Linda Ann O'Kccfe found strangled in the back bay early this rr.onlh. "There is no indication that there ts any connect On," Oyaas said. Grenoble used a pistol slolen fro m Los Angeles along with a number of other weapons. sheriff's Sgt. Bob Reed said . No other weapons were found in t.he vehicle, officers said. Reed said a crime lab report on the gun and exact number of shots flred would be forthcoming. Reed said that other than an arrest in 1966 fo r peUy theft Grenoble had no record that officers knew: of at this time. , "His actions were unusual, he was act· ing strangely In the area," Reed said e1:· plaining what steps led to the Newport Beach department's attempted traffic stop of the car in Corona del Mar. Reed said .there is no indicaUon that the suspect fired at anyone other than him...ll. After Newport Beach police received the cell of a suspiciOUI-person who may have been drunk or acting strangely in the Cameo Shores community. two police unils were dispatched lo the scene. En route, they observed a vehicle matching the description of the sus picious person's car. The blue Volkswagen v.'aS stopped by Patrolmen Charles liiorin and \Valt Funnann. Reports indicated officers had been ad- \•ised the suspect was possibly armed. After the car wa! stopped in the vicini- IY ol hforning Canyon Road and Pacific Coast Highway, officers drew their service revolvers and ordered the man to exit. Grenoble put the car in gear again and headed south at high speed toward Laguna Beach. Fl'om Page 1 DEATHS •.. died in south Vietnam, was fed into Pen· tagon computers and the circWll.!ltances surrounding each death were kept in "paper file.!1." Frledheim said information y,·as still being checked when the spy missions end- ed and when the last deaths occurred. The families of the 81 men are being notified of the true circumstances under \11h.ich their son,, and husbands died, Friedheim said. and no names will be an· nounced until notificaU<n wu completed. ~106t of the agents were Army Green Berets, he said, but some might have been Marin~ or Air Force personnel. Friedheim 1said their spy mi~lons in · volvcd primarily observing activity along lhe ilo Ch i Minh trail, gathering lnfor· mation in North Vietnamese base Areas Inside Cambodia, and assessing the re- i;u lt s of the secret U.S. bombing raids in these base areas. Mesa Collision Injures Woman A 58-year-old Lagwia Hills WMWI "" injum! Monday as Sfle wu thrown from her car during a colllslon with another vehicle on the BrL~aol Street offramp of the San Diego Freeway In Cceta Mesa. 'Ille woman, ldentiOed as Matild1 J. Skebe, 3221 8 Via Carrizo, did not re- quire hospltaUiation. Mrs. Skebe was treated by her own physlci8n for woundl suffered in the 9:30 a.m, crash. Roger Allen DeYO'llng, SQ, of lm An.gcles, driver of the other car, wu cited on charges of failure to obey a stop sign. ~olicc said OeYoung'• vthicle !mashed in to Mn. Skebe'' eronomy sedan. throw· in~ her out onto the J)'Vement 11 tht! dr1vr.rless car continued for 100 feet and went O\'t r an embankment. UC Irvine Officially Ends The $767 ,500 reserve amounts essen· tially are carry ever accownts from pait years. according to Joseph S\\·eany, general manager of the district. Fraternity, S(\l'ority Ban The largest amount is $200.000 toward replacement of the deteriorating 12-inch c'ast iron \•:ater line running below Coast Highway. In the last year, the district spent $14,000 fixing failures in the line. Sweany estimated replacement wil l cost at least $1 million and that the district must start saving toward the figure. UC-Irvine officially has ended ils ban on fraternities and sororities by inviting six to fonn colonies on the campus this fall. None of the six is Phi Gamma Delta, the social fr aternity to which Dr. Daniel G. Aldrich Jr .. UCI chancellor. belonged v.·hcn he \\'as a studen t at the University of Rhode Island .. The sir Dr. Aldrich has lnvited" were said to have been chosen because of their open membership practices and reasonable costs. They are: Frate.mitles: Beta Theta Pi, Phi Delta Theta and Sigma Chi. Sororitle1: De1ta Gamma, Gamma Phi Beta and Pl Beta Phi. Since UC! opened In 1965 there ha s been a policy In force which In effect banned fraternal social groups on the grounds such gr:oups diM:riminated ln the selection of members. A 1912 U.S. Supreme Court ruling pav· ed the way for the change in UCI-pollcy. The court held that national affiliation alone Is not a permissible reason for de· nytng an organization access to a cam- P"-'· Sc:>me national fraternities require in their charters that local chapters exclude certain classes fJf students. Such charter provision! would violate U C I ad- ministrative and faculty policies. ln writing to the six national societies, Dr. Aldrich emphasized that campus organiza tions may have nothing in their constitutions, rituals or practices that could be interpreted as discriminating against any st1ent in the selection of their members, a campus spokesman said. Robert ..S. Lawrence, assistant vice chancellor for student affairs said na· tional social fraternities and sororities v.1U be glven the same support and privileges as all ether student organiza· tions on the Irvine campus. "We are happy to be able to provide this additional social opoprtlUllty for UCI student.s," he said. The chosen si x arc not 1he only na- tional Greek societies which m('{!t the UCI non~iscrlmination criteria. LaY.Te nce said, "The selection of those lo be invited was difficult because there are a number of qualified flrganizations. If the program is successful, adffitional organi7.ations v.111 be invited to join us." District Sells Not Only Water But Black Gold Every day, the Lagwia Beach Counly \Vat.er District sells three million gallons ol water. And a few hundred barrels of oil . This year, the district expects to receive $13,SOO in royalties from oil off 53 acres of district-owned land in Hun· tington Beach. Some 40 years ago, "farsighted" direc- tors of the water district bought the land because it held good well water, recalls Joseph Sweany, general manager of the LBCWD. In the late '30s the wells went brackish. Sweet water gave way to black gold. "It's been an ace in the hole " says Sweany. Revenue from the. Ja:xt has helped the district undertake major proj· ects without having to assume bond deb ls. The flil wells are becoming depleted but water district officials don 't appear to be too concerned. With land values continuing to rise, they figure oil or no on, the property is a good investment. Duvalier in Charge PORT AU PRINCE, HAITI (AP) President Jean-Claude Duvalier ass\Jred countrymen Monday that he remained in ''full command" follo wing a series of ex- plosions th at damaged the presidential palace. A "catastrophe fund " to cover return lo service costs in the event of a 1najor rusasler will carry $150,000, with $60,000 earmarked for lesser emergencies, such as water line failures. Reserve amounts or varying· amounts also have been established for potenliol improvements on the Laguna Canyon transmission main,-Loma de Agua reservoir, Summit Drive reservoir and Moorhead Reservoir. , One change in philosophy incorporated into the budge t, Sweany noted. is transfer of $43,000 in fire hydrant maintenance costs from the operations portion to the" capital project.!! portion of the budget. ' As an operaUons cost, fire hydrant maintenance was funded by water rate revenues, thus placing the burden only oli water u,,ers, Sweany explained. Slnce fire hydrants are a service to all property owners, the cost has been switched k> capital projects funded by property taJ..· es. .. El Toro Tract To Be Discussed : Orange County Airport Commissioners will ru_scuss a proposed tract of 3'7 single-family homes in El Toro at 7 o'clock tonight in Santa Ana . The commission, an advisory OOdy lo t~ Board of Supervisors, meets at the county administration building, 515 N. Sycamore St. ~ : The only item on tonilitt cnda is~a request by All-Cra h Home to build residences at El Toro an rabu~ Roads. Although the site is about Z.S miles from a runway at El Toro Marhie Corps Air Sr ation. It is outside the noiic impact zon e, a commission official sald today. WALi{ SOFTLY! Many times we talk to people who !.eel that carpeting •t $5.00 to $8.00 (carpet •lone} per square yard is expensive. A housewife who buys dress m•teriels knows thet she ·is unlikely to buy good materials for less th•n $3.00 to $4.00. Also, a man might pay $1.00 for e loot-squere handkerchief, which works out +o $9.00 a square yard. Can you ima9ine how these materials -would perform ii you placed heavy furniture ond walked on them? ( Con11quently , when you spend $3.00 to $4.00 for corp1tin9, regardless of where you buy it, don't Hpett too much, walk ••"(, ioftly ! .. ALDEN'S CARPC:TS o DttAPES 1663 Placentia Ave • COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOUIS: M .... T1ll'1I n..n.. t to S:lO -FRI ., t to t -~AT., t :lO tG 5 I I I I 7 I r 7 I I I • - \ Sadilteltaek Today's Final N.Y. St.oeks EDITI O N -VOL~-66, N0~105, -z--sECTIONS;-30-PAGl:S' TEN CENTS High Speed Police Chase Results • Ill Death By JACK CHAPPELL OI llte o.llY l'lloll Sl1ft A high-si)eed police pursuit fro m ~ewport Beach to Laguna Niguel ended 10 death Monday as the man police from three agencies chased placed a gun to his head and fired. Jerry 'H. Grenoble. 28, of Alameda, died at South Coas1 Community Hospital at 5:45 p.m. slig htly 1nore than two hou rs -after the chase began in Corona de\ J\.1ar. An autopsy was scheduled today to determine the exact. cause of death . The chase began in Corona del ~tar after police were alerted by residents <>f Cameo Shores. A woman told office rs the bearded man had been makin·g in· coherent statements to her S.year-0ld grand.59n and had told the lad he y,·as God. As the woman went into her house. Grenoble reportedly called out that he would come in and get her if she didn 'l come out. Pohce stopped the car 1n1nutes later but the gaunt driver sped a~'ay as they \\'alked toward him. Police units from Newport BeJch. Laguna Beach and the California Jligh\Yay Patrol raced in pursuit of a late model Volkswagen driven by the bearded suspect at speeds of 80 to 90 miles per hour through heavy summer afternoon traffic in downtown La g\i na Beach. The chase ended at the entrance to The Shores development at Niguel Road on Pacific Coast liighway in Laguna Niguel as th<' foreign car skKlded out of cootrol off the road and the Newport Beach pohce unit careened into a block wall beside it. Grenoble apparently shot himselr at 1 hat time by placing the muzzle of a .22· caliber ~I and R re\1otver in his mouth and pulling the trigge r. Not hearing the shot police officers from Laguna Beach and Ne"·port Beach 1See CHASE, Pagt ti Coyote Bites Viejo Boy Incident Second at Sa1i Clemente Park By .JOllN VALTERZA 01 llM Dill.-~1191 11111 San Clemente State Park's un- predictable coyote st ruck again today - inflicting dangerous biles to a 5-year-old boy from Mission Viejo who had been sleeping on the ground. The youngster, Wayne Allan Preheim . immediately began tile painful seri es of antirabies injections. Of grave coricem to authorities Is the location of the bites -on the small boy's forehead. Authorities stressed th at it could not be determined if the coyote v.•as rabid, but that as a precaution the in- jections v.·ould have to sta rt immediately. The latest in a series of incidents - a grim repetition of attacks on campers by ·chickens Flap Up 18 Percent In Irvine Store The cost of barbecuing chicken rose 18 percent in Irvine over the weekend as the \Valnut Villa ge Safev.•ay market boosted the price of whole fryers from 49 cents to 58 cents a ponnd. Ch icken price hlkes led the field in the supermarket Phase IV price derby from Thursday to Monday, according to in· creases announced by SaJeway's regional spokesman Paul Campbell Breakfast standard staples trailed with bacon rising 14 p&cent in price and eggs oosting 11 percent more on Monday than they did on Thursday-the-day.President Nixon··lifted· the · Phase · 111 controls on· everything but .beef, (Related picture, Page 14). •· The Sa feway Walnut Village store manager noted he has seen no evidence of hoarding by Irvine house wives and tbece has . been . ''.no problem" \Vith shortages of any. mea t, produce or dai~y items. Milk prices have yet lo rise,·.lhe spokes man said. Price hikes charted by the Irvine Safeway market over the \Vcekcnd in· elude : Bacon, sold for $1.M a pound Thursday up 14.4 percent or 15 cents to Sl.19 on Monday. . Center cut pork chops : $1.68 Thursday. up 12 percent or 21 ce nts 10 $1.89 a pow1d 011 Monday. La rge Grade AA eggs. \vere 71 cents a dozen Thursday, increased 11 percent or 79 cents a dozen on Monday. l Orange Coast Weather Coas tal skies \Vednesday will again be cloudy during night and morning hours, but the sun is ex- pected to break through about I I a,m. Temperat ures \\'ill range in the high sixties ~·ith a sunny after- noon forecast. The low will be 60 degrees. \Yater temperature '>''ill be 64. INSIDE TODAY llijocker,1 bltw up a Japa.M.ta j1tliner aiWl.e BenoMti Airpo1t' 1/w>rllv, a[tn thep Ofld their 137 OOl(o9tr,\Jlld §91.11< !#\' . emer.-, QC'fl~JI chute. See 1tory, Page 4. l ,M...,.. ' A1111 Yllffn " C11iftf"llll ' .... " ..... (lilltlliM ••• ~till l"\lllft " '-'" " Nf!jMll N-" ' <m•-• " Dr•• C...tt n DHll1 ... lie• " I Jl¥19 1"ert9r .. ........ , .... • ·-1•-u .................. tl-1) •tMl MM't'-14-11 ,,_ 1•11 r ..... .._ I " "'" fflt • ..,. 11, ,. ......... ..... --" Wtflllll'• ~ 11•11 Ill ...... • ~ ........ , foxes last sum1ncr -occurred as the youngster slept at space 74 1hi.s morning at about 6:30. The boy"s mothe r. Mrs. f\.lary Alice Preheim of 22772 La Qu inta Drive, called rangers immedia tely after the attack. U>cal police were summoned as '>''e11. Little Wayne suffered tv.·o minor puncture wounds and a few scratches in the attack and was given emergency treatment at San Clemen te General Hospital. The attack marked the second lime in little over a week that a youngs ter at the park has been bitten by a coyote. On Monday ·of last week Denise Pimper, 8. of Nor~·alk, was bitten on Lhe leg -apparently by the same wild Road Tall~ c3ninr. Park ran gers and other authori\1es in1- n1cdiately set traps and extra patrols in an effort to catch the coyote. Over the wee kend officers shot and wounded one coyote in the area and un· confirmed reports stated late Monday that the animal's carcass had been found. But that coyote obviously was not the one that attacked this morning. As in the case of the foxes last year !none of which was found to be rabid). the attacks generally occur In the predawn hours. Rangers said they can only theorize that the foxes and coyotes which live in the rugged areas of the park have lost Dlilr ~ilol 5!111 Pl>OM trtarty Russo, director of con1 munity relations for the !\fi ssion Viejo Company, tleft ) and Art Cook, manager of information programs, talked with t.1is~ion Viejo residents 1\londay who were protesti ng clos· ures of three streets at Jeronimo J~oad. Russo said he l1as urged 1'ounty roa d official s to re·e~amine their decision . Pentagon Admits False Death Reports of 81 \YASHJNGTON (U PIJ -The Pent<ison disclosed today that 81 U.S. servicemc11 died In Laas and Cambodia on secret in· lclli£?ence missions stncc 1965 and s<1irl their deaths were fa lsely rl!ported tu families and to Congress :is having oc- curred in South Vietnam Defense Department spokesman Jerry \V. Friedheim said the false reports ~'t'rc discovered ~tonday in a review of Vu~tnam war statistics provided to Congress in the wake of last week's disclosure lh3l the Senate bad been misled on a 14-month ~ bombliig campaign In CambodiR. • ~ Tlojo_ l<J!l!l , llsl<d lA.Jl B52 bombing rokli'llC!Wtny <!bndud«f in Camboclla In 1969 and 1970 as having been carrlld out i.n South Vietnam . Frll'dbeim si:iid Congress v.·as inrormfd today about the false account of the deaths. Slnct the fall of 1965, Frifdhclm said, S.~ U.S. servicemen have died conducting "'COYert mllltary reconnnlssance activ- ities" in l...aos..J-lc sald !Iner. 1967. an ad· ditional 26 have been kill ed on secret n1 lss1ons in Cambodia. Their families v.·erc told "lh(' deaths OL><.·urred on classified missions along the border of South Vietnam:· Fricdhein1 ~aid . and the report to Congr1css listed all 81 deaths among t.: S. bal!le casualtlc:s 1n South Vietnam. Fricdhcim said the agenls "·ere operat- ing on m~ions so classified !hat eVt•n their places of death had to be kept secrtt. He said the cover story. shov..ing they died in SOUlh Vietnam, was fed ln10 Pen- tagoo computel'1 and the circun1stanccs surrounding: each ·death v.ere kept 111 "paper fil~." . Priedbeim said information "·as still being checltM when tbe_apy n1jssions end· ed and when the last de11ths oct·urred. The families of 1he 81 men are being notH'led of the true circumstances under \Yhich their sons and husbands died. F'ricdheim said. and no names wtll be an· nounccd imtll notlflealion was compleled. !See DEAms. l'I&• tl their fear of man after living for months off scraps of food at the pa rk. hence are capable of unprovoked attacks on slceir ing campers. The precaution ary orders for an- tirabies shots come from the Orange County Vetetinary Public }ieal th office and involve 14 injections. one a day, of a duck serum which immunizes a patient against the dread disease. Health offi cials become most con- cerned v.·hen bites occur in the areas of the head and face because the disease of- fects the brain. 1'hey ha\'e descri bed the injections ~s discomforting, but not as painful as the original type of scrum, which caused violent side effects. UCI Invites Fraternities To Campus UC Ir vine officially ha s ended its 6an on f,·aterni ties and sororities by inviting six to form colonies on the campus this fall. None of the si x is Phi Gamma Delta. the social fraternity to v.•hich Dr. Daniel G. Ald rich Jr .• UC! chancellor. belonged when he was a student al the University of Rhode Island. 'I'hc si;t Or. Aldrich has invited \\·ere said to have been chosen because of their open membershi p practices and reas011able costs. They are: Frattmilits: Beta Theta Pi, Phi Delta Theta and Sigma, Chi. Sororities: Delta Gamma, Gamma Phi Beta and Pi Beta Phi. Since liCI opened In 1965 there has been a policy in force which in effect banned fraternal social groups on the grounds sueh group11 discriminated in the selection of members. A 1972 U.S. Supreme Court ruling pav· cd the \\'3Y for the change in UCI policy. The court held that national affiliation alone is not a permissible reason for de· nying an organization access to a ca m· p"5. Some nnlional fraternities require in I heir charters that local chapters exclude certain classes of students. Such charter provisions ~·ould violate U C I ad· ministrative and faculty policies. In writing to the six national societies, Dr. Aldrich emphasized that campus. organizat ions may have nothing in their constitu1ions. rituals or practices 1hat could be interpreted as discriminating against any student in the selection of the ir members. a campus spokesman said . Robert S. L<i"·rence. assistant vice chancellor fo r student affairs said na· lional social fraternities and sororities \\·ill be given the same support and privileges as all othe r student organiza- tions on the Irvine campus. "\Ve are happy to be able to prov ide this additional social opoprtunity for UCI students." he said. The chos<>n six are not the only na- ISte FRATERNITY, Pag' %) EJ Toro Tract To Be Disc us s.e <l Orange County Airport Commis~ioncrs v.•i!l discuss a proposed tract of 367 single-family homes In El Toro at 7 o'clock tonight In Santa An1 . The commission. an adviJory body to the Board o( S'upervisors, meets at the l:OOnty admlnislrstloo buildi ng, SIS N. Sye11mor~ St. The only Item on toaia;ht's agenda is a rtqU~t by All·Ctaft flomes 10 build residences at El Toro al'ld Trnbuco Ro.ids. Although the tile is about 1.5 miles from a runway at El Toro M11.rine Gorps Air Station. It Is outs!& the noise lmpact zone. a commls!lon official said todoy. D•llr ~li.t ll•ff ...... VOLKSWAGEN WITH SHATTERED WINDOW DRIVEN BY SUSPECT Patrol Unit Also Crashed Against Wall of Niguel Shores ------ Curly-haired Police Reveal Composite Sketch of IGller Suspect Bv JOllN ZALLER 0'1 llte Diii• Pllet Sti ff Newport Beach police today released an artist ·s composite drawing of the man they believe may have abducted and kill - ed I l·year-o!d Corona del ~Tar school girl Linda Ann O'Keefe two week.s ago. Police said information for the draw· ir.gs came from two witnesses wbo observed ~fiss O'Keefe getting into a lale model van driven by a curly haired man., estimated to be 24 to JO years old. \\'itncsscs said the incident took place about 3 p.m. on i\1arguerite Avenue . the street the young girl normally walked oo her way home rrom summer classes she \\·as attending at Lincoln Intermediate School. She disappeared on Friday, July 6, and v.•as found dead Saturday in a ditch along Back Bay Drive by Uppe r Ne~'port Bay . Cause of death was strangulation. Police said they have had information about the suspect and his turquoise-col· ored va n since "early in the in· \"estigation ," but we re reluctant to make it public. Accidents IGll 2: Heart Attack, Struck by Car A woman was killed when struck by a car in Santa Ana early today and an elderly Laguna Hills man died of an ap- parent heart attack al 5:30 a.m. after his car plunged off !he San Diego Freeway at C.olden West Street in Westminster. Roberta Whelchel, 37, of 10701 Ballast Ave., Garden Grove. "'as killed at 2:10 a.m. when the car driven by Lawrence R. Lundy, 18, of Long Beach, struck her "'hile she was walking acr055 Harbor Boulevard north or Bolsa Avenue. 'J'he v.-mnan's bod y was thro"1l 96 feet through the i\ir by the impacl, officers said. Investiga tors questioned Lud6 and released him. Axel H. Juel, 81 , of 863 C Ronda i\lcndoza, Laguna llills. wa s found by ;:i Ca lifornia Highway patrolman at about 5 a m. after his car had skidded intQ a drainage ditch in Wes tminster. The Orange County coroner's office sa id he apparently died ol a heart attack as tbcre were no serious mjur1('j evident Whitehead to ltesign NEW YORK (UPI) -Qay T. Whilche3d. Pre~ident ~ixon 's corn· municalions director wb:> gaine<j, notoric· ty last year ""ht>n he suggestOO tMt local s1alion.o; refuse 10 run network news th1:y considered unfair lo President Nixon, 11·i1l soon reslp;n. New York maKazlne rr.portOO '-1ondny. ~ magniinl"! said 50urres disc)~ th:it W h i t eh ea d 's r~i(tntltlon \VIII end lhe \Vhill!: llo!JS4!'s alttmpts ··to frighlen tht-television networks and l~nl .Stallons" into being frlendJ\er. • "We didn't want the suspect to know we had any information about hi m," ex- plained Ca pt. Donald Oyaas of the detec- tive division. Oyaas said that if the suspect became worried, he might flee the area. But aft er following up literally hundreds of tcad.s in the two we-cks since the crime. Capt. Oyaas said a decision v.·aa made to release information in the hope 1hat the public would provide addlHonal clues. ··\\'hat we '>''ant no~· is for someone to recognize the man in the picture and tell us about it." hr said. "He has a very distinctive face." Ovaas said the ma n '>''a.5 estimated to _be 24 to 30 years old. with niedium length curly brown hair and an'1nusually "long face." A distinctive feature, he said, was the 1Stt CLUES, Pagt 2) I rvi1ie to Get 01,vn Post Office? The \\'estcrn Rc~ional Office of the u.s·. Po~tal Department is surveying the lr\'lne area ro find out if an independent post officr '>''ill he set up in the new city. i\layor John Burton today said he had been advised by Rep. 1\ndrew llinshaw i R-Mission Vi.cJO) such a study v.·a.s under \\'<IY . llinshaw's letter did not indicate v.·he:n suC'h n survey of nl"ed5 ~·ould be com- pleted. r-.tayor BurtO!l noted ho'>'·cver. he is somewhat optimistic. ··1t is some com- fort to me lo know that at least they are surveying us," he said. Presefltly Irvine residenl" a n d businesses are ~cr\"ed by two "main'' post offices. Addresses norlh of the San Diego Fre-c"·ay wilh the zip code 92705 jlet mail which is processed through the Santa Ana main post ortice. Those south of the fretway in the 92664 zip area are strvt'<l by lhe Ney,•porl Beach off ice 1hrough the Irvine T0\\1l Center branch. Mesa Collision l11jurcs Won1an A .58·yrar-old Laguna lhlls ~'Oman was injured ~1onday a:i snc y,·as thrown rrom her car during a collis1on with another \"ehicle•on the Bristol Street offrJmp or the San l)iego Freeway in Costa l\fesa. The woman . 1denllf1cd as ~1atllda J. Skebc. 3221 B Via Carrizo, dld not re- quire hospitalization. l\trs. Skebc wa!i treated by her own physician for wounds suffered in the 9:30 a.m. cr~sh. R.oger Allen DvYouns. 50. of Lo:\ 1\ngelcs. driver or the olhCr car. was cited on chargt11 of failure to obey a stop sign. 1>0Jice said DeYoung's vehicle smashed into l\lrs. Skebe·s economy sedan. throw· ing her out onto the pavement as the dri\'Crless car continued fo r 100 fttt and went over an emblnkment • • ,2: DAILY PILOT JS f'rom rage I CHASE ... closed in, guns drawn. and ordered 11* tnan to exit the Yehicle. When he did not Lagunl Ret1ch patrolman Terry Temple opproui:hL>d the suspe:ct who was holding the gun in his left band and took the weapon. Bleeding from the mouth and ears Grcneble wt1~ \lfted froro !he c<1r, handcuffed and laid ruce down un lilt.> grass "''here ambulance attcndunts pit'k· ed him up Inter <.111d rushed him to !ht• hospital. "\\'~ really don't kno"' why he r.-i11. \Ve went to inv£'stlgate a report Hnd whl'n \\'C got there he ran,'' Newport Beach tlt'h:c· any connL~ion." Oya:ts said. • Oyaas said he doesn't k no\11 'A'hat the .!.Uspect "'as doing in Nc\\•port B~ach a.nd dcC'lined to spceula!e on a 1.'Q111K'tt1011 bet"•ecn the dead 1nun anO the death or ti-year-old Unda Ann O'Keefe fou~ strangled in the back. bay early this ni0nth. COMPOSITES SHOW SUSPECT IN LINDA ANN O'KEEFE SLAYING Cauc111ian, 24 to 30, Brown Curly Hair, Droopy Eye•, Tanned ''There Is no indication that there ts any connect On," Oyaas said. Grenoble used a pistol stolen from I.Als Angeles jiilOng "'ilh a number of .oth~r weapons. sheriff's Sgt. Bob Reed said. No other weapcins were found in the vehicle. officers said. Reed said a crime lab report on the gun and exact ,number of shot.s fired would be forthcoming. Screening Set For Irvine's Job Applicants Reed said thal other than an arrest In 1966 for petty theft Grenoble ~ad_ no record that officers knew of at thts Ume. "His actions were unusual, he was act· .Applicants for two top city of Irvine ing strangely in the area," Reed said ex· planning jobs will !!xperiencc a long plaining what steps led to the Newport day's in terview into night Beach department's attempted traffic Screening by Irvine planning com· stop of the car in Corona de! Mar. missioners was held this afternoon. Reed said there is no indication that Tonight, city director and assistant the suspect fired at anyone other than director of planning candidates are ex· bJmsetr. peeled to appear before the cily council Alter Newport Beach police rect:ived in private session, follo"·ing a brief coun· the call of a suspicious person who may cil meeting. have been drunk or acting strangely in Councilmen meet at 7:30 in city hall. the Cameo Shores community, 1wo police 4201 Campus Drive. units were dispatched to the scene. Two lract map approvals and ap. En rou te, they observ~ a vehicle provals of city bills totaling $9.000 are the matching the descrlptton . of the only agenda items. suspicious person's car. Hov.·ever, Mayor Joh n Burton said The blue Volkswagen was stopped by councilmen may set the city's 1973·74 Patrolmen Charles Morin and Walt "surprise" tax rate. It will be the same Funn 33 cents per $100 of assessed valuation Rei!r~ indicated officers had been ad· the new city levied last year. Under new vised the suspect was possibly arm~.. . state Jaw the rate cannot be any higher After the car was stopped in the v1c1n1-than the 33-cent level and the city 's $2.4 ty of Morning Canyon Road and Pacific million operating budget is based on the Coast Highway , officers drew their renewed rate. service revolvers and ordered the man !o Burton explained the tax rate must be "exit. St't by the end of August. Sinee lhc coun· Grenoble put the car in gear again an d cilmen plan no n1eelings in August, he headed south at high speed toward SJ id. "we'll do it tonight." Laguna Beach. Councilmen may, howe\ler, schedule an Both officers ran to their units a11d August meeting if agrcc111ent is nut gave chase and radioed for the aid of the reached by month's end on the planni11g Newport Beach police helicopter. depa rtment executives. Burton said . During the tl·mi le pursuit whi ch in· City policy requires council selection of volved the two Ne~')Xlrt Beach units. a depa rtment heads and agrcemcnl on pay Laguna Beach patrol car and t"·o CHP and fringe benefit packages fur the high units as well as the helicopter, the level employes. speeding Volkswagen swerved and d<Kig· Unlike the selection process employed ed through traffic attempting to evade to hire the city's first planning director, the police units. councilmen this time are involving thei r Newport patrolmen reported oncoming planning con1missioners in the selection. traffic on congested Coast Highway was process. . forced off the road several times in Co1nmissioners will recommend their avoiding headon collisions with the top choices [o r,each of the. two posts. The fleeing vehicle. . /.f'nal chol~e, however, wlll be made by Retarded Patient Disappears From UCLA Dormitory No trace has been found of a J7.year- old patient from Fairview State Hospital in Costa ~fesa Y.'ho vanished from a UCLA dormitory last Thursday y,•here he was staying y,·hile participating in a ''retarded olympics." 11\e man. identified as Paul Rios. is a male l..alin. about 5 feel 6 inches tall. weighs 210 pounds and was wearing a bro\\'Jl shirt , green pant s 11nd blnck !ih()('S at tbe time o[ his disappearance. He IS not considered dangerous. Fairview •lospital officials said Ri os speaks some English and some Spanish ;nd has relatives in Fullerton. lfe may be attempting to make his way there. Rios has been the subject of a search by UCLA. cam pus poli ce an d Los Angeles police. Althou gh no leads ha\'e developed. a hospital official cxpressc.-d confidcnCl' that Rios would be found. OIAHGI COAST " DAILY PILOT Tiit O••"llf c;o151 DAILY PILOT, •1111 ""'!Cfl '' (:lmb-Ill• Hlwt·•rtu . ;, ~0111"'-" bV -°'-' co11• Putlllll'l"'I (O"'N "Y '"~ ''" todlllo<I• ••• ll\IOll1lll'lt. l'lll)llO•v ,.,,_~ ,-rldty, !Or c;o,11 Ml)I, "'••06•1 l•H:.". 11..,..ono-11ae111F-111 .. v1111v. l •?UfloO ... do, 1rwlM IS-l1111C' I M S111 (lt..,.,.111 S..11 Jlllf'I C111l1tr1no, 4 •·~011 '"'°"'I todll!el\ It 11110ll1""' S1tu•d1v• 1"11 Sw""•v1 Jiit p<lnt!NI Polfl!l1M11t t l•M " .i lJll w-.1 l!ty '''"'· ("01!• Mrw, Ctl1!0•~••, t<'i16. llobt •I N. Wo 1d •rnoOl'ftl Incl •lfllh•~•• J ock It C11•lt v 11-Ct Prblo.,., •Nil G•11t••I M111~pr• Tittmll IC.tt"I E•lro' Tho"lt• A. Mw•11h1nt M1MOlft9 fO•IO" Ch1rf11 M. loo1 Doch114 P. Nill 1"••111111 Mf"'9•"' E:•Hll"I Offk• Co•'• M111 no W111 11v Strtt4 """"°" •11e1': HU Hl'Wlll'fl flOUl#otr• l .. ,,.. ltM~I m '"''' ... _ l111"llnqtor< ~-. 0111 llHC" lo.,,i.vl•d "'" (lllMfllf ! »' HO<"' 111 Ct"'lnl lltll , ........ IM41 MJ-4Jll Cl•ln.4 A"°"'ltl ... 642-1671 S.. Cle-.tw AH hp•tt1M11t1: , • ..,,_. 4tl-44JO Ctrr•l9fll, ,.,l. o....... C.O.lt l'llOl!tll"" (~11~, No "''"' 11Mln . 111111t•tlion1, ••lllwllt ""''"' Of """"''-''"''''"' ~trill~ ....... Ill' ttP.-00\ICtoil •UPIOol! lolll'Clll W • '"I"'"' lllf a • .. r'9hi -· ktofw:I <l•n POl!t .. ll<lkl II c;ot.lt ,,._, C1llfirfl'-. ..,l:ltO'll'"'" bv r•""' Ht! "*11111\'I k 111•1! U.U "'°"l!llr' f!l!llllry llMllllll\tlrlt • ..,_.. "*'"''"· the council. Since July 6, the city has been without the ser\'ices of a planning director. On that date, Bruce Warren who joined the city staff last October, lefl Irvine lo become the chief planner for the cbunty of San Diego. When he left, City l\.lanager \Villiam \Voollett Jr. recommended the city seek both a planning di rector to repla ce \Var· re1. and a key assistant to sa \•e time in the hiring process. List of Hopefuls For Irvine · Jobs N arro,ved to 3 ~la;·or .John Hurton sa'1d today the number of applil·;1nts to be in tcviC\\'l'd by city 1..'0uncilmen has been narro\\'Cd to three. Only one candidate for ptnnning dir£'C· tor remains follol'.:ing Jina ! screening by a bOnrd of pror£'ssion<ils and city staff, Uurton noted. T\\O <lre vying for the job of asslstnnl planning director. Rurion ~pl'l'Ulatcd th at since lh<!re 1s only one finalist for the top planning post the council 1nny 11ell discuss August tnectings for the lnlervie\\·ing of ad· ditional cand..idatrs. ·•Frankly, I'm a b1l surprised by lhe dearth of qualified apphcants. \Vhen \\c started out \\'e though t planners \vould beat a path to our doorst1!p \Vanting Jobs. "That hasn't been th e case. I really don 't think \\"E' are poht icall.v any more l\'Cird than any other city.'' Aurton said. "J'n1 d1sappo1ntcd our recruiting ha sn't attracted more qualifit'd candidates." J Llllf!CS Learn nopes Fro1n Co 1111t y J uri~t ~c11 ly appo1nll'd judg~. f r o n1 throughou t Califomiu arc learning how 10 handle the JOb at cl~sscs: conducted b} Judge Richard M11millon af South Count} ~h1niC'ip.1l Court .Judge Jtarn1!1011 11. :i11 lns1ruc1or :u the 1973 Trial Judges Cotlrge Session undf'r 1v11y at l:C Rerkelry llamllton will !tCr\e as an in~tructor at the session through Aug. 3. lie is lilt presiding judge at the south rounly courl Credi t Luw Appro\·ed \\1ASllI N1;ro.~ fUl'l l -Lc~lslalion to outlaw discrhnlnollon on the basis or sex or .marital status ln grunting or den)'ln~ credit w11s 1tpproved, 02 lo 0 l\1onday by OW> ScnRtc. A similar measure has bctn introduced in ihc llou:;r, From Page J CLUES ... suspect's droopy eyelids . "If anyone knows a man like this, they should rccognh;e him from our composite draw- ings. Oyaas said the witnesses observed the O'Keefe. girl getting into the swpecl's van while driving past in a vehicle of their own. He said they did not stop, but \\'ere certain they recognized the girl get- ting into bright turquoise van. lie added, however, that the "'ilnesses had never before seen O'Keefe girl. lwo lhe Oyaas said the girl apparently got into the van under her own pov.·er and did not seem to be under duress at the time the "'itnesses observed the event. Oyaas urged anyone with information about a person resembling the suspect to call the Newport Beach detective division at 67J..2211. Inmates Agree To Air Gripes On County Jail A threat ened sit do\\'ll strike at the Orange County branch jail reached a stand up agreement ea rly tOOay when 15 mutinous prisoners agreed to submit their complaints in writing to jail authorities. "\Ve all had a friendly little discussion at the gate house and it ended with that decision and the agreement of the men involved to go to \\'Ot'k," said Lt. Buyrl Hattelle of the Theo Lacy facility staff. Lt. Battelle said the only complaint ai red by the men thl.a ·morning wa s "\\'hat ·we've heard before -grumbling about the fact th at we don't relay mil.Sic over our loudspeaker system. "That just isn't feasible," !,he officer said. "\Ve have three different systems running through our gate house, the kitchen area and the central building and it isn't possible to intemlpl. them for any kind of music arrangement." Battelle said only 15 or the 215 pri soners at the minilnum security jail In Orange were affected by this morning's dissension. "\\rhen we get their written complaints \Ye'll examine them and set what we can do," he said. ''Whatever else they have in mind they didn't state them verbally to me todav." The incident was the first such in· dicatiO!l that recent unrest at the central jail has spread to the branch facility. Allegations of unfair treatment at the Santa Ana main jail have been aired in ~n ac tion recently filed in fede ral court by lawyers for the American Civil Liberties Union. Frenclt Plan1iing Enlarged Blast PARIS (UPI) -French military "!X· perts plan to set off soon a ne\v and po\\·erfu\ nuclear explosion in their Pacific testing grounds possibly using a hydrogen \varhead, it was reported Ur day. T\l'O ne\\·spapers -the mass circula- tion F'rance·Soir and lhe conservative Le Fi~aro -said France planned to follcn\' up Saturda y's test of a IO'lo'·yleld nuclear triggering device \'lith the exploslon of a hydrogen \Varhead. "A new nuclear test might be carried out tonight." France-Solr said. "It Is reported to be a megaton charge, prob· ubly an 'H' bomb." Plane Crash Kills Countian A man reportedly from Buena Park was among the 38 perwons killed ~londay night wh<!n an Ozark Air Unes turboprop airplane "·as apparently struck by lightning and crashed near St. Louis. Thirty·six of the 44 person• aboa rd the flight which originated in Nashville, Tenn .. were killed , The Orange County resident waas reported by As90Ciated PreM es Gerald Tucker. No Orange County address was available. The only other Calllomla residentJ listed were Mrs. Robert Moore and Jeff Moore of~rmichael. Fo r more additional detaUs , see story and pboto on Page •· President Will Obey 'Court Orde1· --"-·--'-- WASHINGTON (AP) -A While House spokesman said today there 1.s no ques- tion President Nixon would abide by coon rulings, but refused to discuss what NLl.on would do ll the U .s. Supreme Court orders him to release subpoenaed tapes and documents, "There's no question that he \\'Ould abide by court rollngs," said Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren , add· lng. "But I am not going to get into a hypothetical discussioo on this particular case becauae we are at a panicu1ar stage 1n a very complea legal situation." , W1rren attempted to have it two .ways at another point, when he said, "The President abides by the law, but we are In a situation ~w where the subpoenas have just arrived at the White House, and thJs is what I am addressing this morning." He would give no hint what legal tac- tics Nlxon wil l take in response to sub-, poenaa from the Senate Watergate com- mittee and special prosecutor Archibald Coa, except to say a decision wouJd be announced by 11lursday. Meanwhile, Atty. Gen. Elliot L. Richardson said he believes Nixon has "substantial legal and constitutional foundation" for refusing to give up the soughl·after docwnents and t a p e recordings, which Nixon concedes can 't prove his innocence. But Richardson called for Nixon, bis boss, and Cox, his technical but In· dependent subordinate, to "try to work out some practical means of reconciling the competing interest! at stake." Richardson thus seemed to be sug- gesting an out-of-<.'Ollrt compromise. Asked at a news briefing bow the White House would respond to the subpoenas, Warren said the office of the presidential counsel was studying the "very complex legal situation involved" and that "after such study will take appropriate action ... within the time specified in the sub- poenas." He reported that all three documents call for a response by Thursday. In response to a question, Warren said that Nixon of course wou1d make the final decision on actions to be taken. Newsmen tried to glean from Warren some hint as to the course Nixon will adopt. "I can't speculate for you what a~ propriate action might be," be replied. He promised newsmen would. be fumlshed detailed informatloa once ac- tion is taken. Asked H Nixon might simply ignore the subpoenu. Warren said he did not want to get into a legal discussion about available options. , To other qu~tlons Warren said the tapes covering two years of presidential conferences and telephone calls ''are being adequately protected" and are se<:ure. "They have not been edited,'' Warren said in a response to another query. He declined to say where the tapes are now located. f'rotn Page J DEATHS ... h1ost of the agents were Army Green Berets, he said, but some might have been Marine or Air Force pirsonnel. Friedheim said theiT spy missloos in· volYed primarily observing activity along ill< Ho Chi ~finh trail, gathering ~­ mation in North Vietnamese base areas ln.\lde Cambodia, and assessing the re- sults ol ill< secret U.S. bombing raids in these base areas. J • 'Heroine~ Dies Her Story 'Saved Fatlier's Life' ESCONDIDO (AP) -Aa be looked at Lhe kldqaJ!il" boldll\i a pls\of to bla bead th~t dJoy~-1ftduslrlalist Jam .. Hawthorne tallied aloud about his dauehtet Llnda Carol ~ "sort of plump and happy, with a truly beautllul life!' -''J told h.lm.a.bout..J.J.nda .and.how.she .was operated.on for brain cancer," itawthorne says of that moment of terror Oct. 6. "Suddenly, there was a rapport . !lis attitude towards me cha nged completely. I kn ow that Linda saved my life .'' Although a ransom of $186,500 was delivered, llawlhorne escaped and a man suspected in the kidnaping was arrested before the money could be picked up and was later convicted. · The story of Linda Carol Hawthorne ended Jess happily. After suffering 14 months with a malignant brain tumor, tbe 9-year-old girl died Sunday in Palomar fl1emonal Hospital. 1'hc funeral was today. Ellsherg Foray · OK'd? Ehrlichman Disputes President on Break-in I WASHINGTON (AP) -John D. Ehrlichman today quoted President Nixon as saying ln March that the 1971 Ellsberg break -was "a vital national security inquiry" well within his con- stitutional powers and obligations. Ni xon said ~1ay 22 that he didn't authorize the break·in, didn 't know about it until recently, and would have disa~ proved It if brought to his attention. Ehrlichman denied lrying to hide the incident from FBI agents investigating last year's Watergate burglary and wiretapping, saying he had been told that the Justice Depar.tment already had the information. He said the break-in at the office of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist was a prop- er way to track down those who betrayed government secrets, said any government offic ial would understand that and keep the break-in confidential, and said even the public would agree if only news media would properly infonn them of all the facts. Testifying before the Senate Watergate commlUee, Ehrlichman also accused ousted White House Counsel John \V. Dean III ln general terms of lying to the committee. Ehrlichman said he believes he is personally innocent of any wrongdoing . He said he wants to answer a number of accusations against him. Irvine Trustees , Consider Salary Rate Wednesday Adoption or an administrative salary schedule for 197J.74 will be -considered at 7: 30 p.m. Wednesday by Irvine Unified School District trustees. The meeting is in the lecture hall at University High School, 4nl Campus Drive. . Saying that national security c:on· siderations still pre\'enl hin1 from answering some questions, Ehrlichman said the Ellsberg brcak·in was performed by the While IIouse Spec i a I Investigations Unit, popularly known as the "plumbers," that included G. Gordon Liddy and E. Howard llunl. Both wer e later convicted in the \Vatergate wiretap. ping. Ehrlichman said he didn't find out about the break·in until after it happened Sept. 3, 1971. But he said he didn't con· sider it a potential embarrassment for the White House because it was a proper way to investigate leaks of national security information. By contrast, former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell said he considered the EUsberg. break-In one of the "\Vhite J~ouse ho r· rors" !hat he consciously hid from the President for fear Nixon would "lower the boom," disclose everything and lose the election to Sen. George McGovern. Ehrlichman said Nixon didn 't consider it embarrassing, either. "On the first occasion when I did discuss this with the President. which was in March, he expressed essentially the same view that I have just stated," Ehrlichman said. "That this was an im· portant. a vital national security inquiry and that he considered it to be well within the constitutional, both obligation and function of the presidency.'' At another point, Ehrlichman said, "l considered the special unit's activities to be well within the president's inhere nt constitutional powers. And this particular episode, the ltreak·in in California, likewise, to have been within the President's i nherent constitutional pclYlefS," f'ro1n Page l FRATERNITY • • The board met last week to discuss tional Greek societies which meet the wage agreements for principals and UCI non-discrimination criteria. district administrators, but didn't make Lawrence said. "The selection of those any decisions. to be invited 'A'as difficult because there A . cont.racl for pupil lransportati~n , . are a number of qualified organ1 zationi. contmuatlon high school and a resolu tion • If the program is successful, additional about AB 2530, the bill that established a, Organizations "·ill be inVited to join Us.'' taa rate for the new di.strict, are also on Wedilesday's agenda. The resolution i\lcludes a thank.you' to community members who sent Jetters and tel~ams to Gov .. Ronald Reagan urging him to sign the bill authored by Assemblyman Robert Badham ( R · Newport Beach). Irvine Superintendent Stan Corey has credited those letters with helping cause the final success of the blll . Duvalier in Charge PORT AU PRINCE, HAITI r AP) President Jean.Claude Duvalier ass~red countrymen l\.Ionday that he remained ill "full command" following a se ries of £'X· plosions that damaged the presidential palace. WALi( SOFfLY! - M1ny times we toTic to people who !oel th1t c1rpeting 1t $5.00 lo $8.00 (cerpot elonej ,ar squuo yud is expens ive. A housewife who buys dress meterial1 •nows that she is unlikely to buy good metoriek for less then $3 .00 to $4.00. Also, o men might pey $1.00 for • foot-squere hondkorchief, which works out to $9.00 e squero yord. Con you imegine how these moleriels would perform if you ploced heovy furniture end wolked on them 7 Consequently, when you spend $3.00 to $4.00 for cerpeting, regerdloss of whore you buy it, don't expect too much, welk very aoftly I ALDEN'S CARPC:TS o C'lAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646·4CZB l •~ ............... H.o.u~u~:~M~-.---Tin .... ,,.,..--~·-'." ... '-~.0.-... Fll •• _1" ... '." ... '--~-sA.T~-·-'.'J.o.n~s~~~~~ .. I • '1 de Uc pe r., at bj UI to le 'I'! "' bl pl no di fo g: " !( 01 ,., 0 n • ,. ii " c n • v ' t ' l I ' .( t / ... • Hiinti-..gton . Beach Foun-ain ·Valley * * \ Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL oo, NO. 205, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNIA TUESDAY, JULY 24, 1973 TEN CENTS • -··-... ~- Teachers: TTustees Stalling The teacber.s salary light in the Ocean \:'iew School District of Huntington Beach wanned up <this week "'ith two new twists: : .!.District · trustees refuse<l an offer rfom teachCrs which would have bound li>th sides to accept whatever pay set- tlement is suggested by a three-man· fa ct finding panel. -Teachers charged trustees \vith ·•stalling'' on the fact fi nding procedura. ·The district's board of education had declared an "impasse" in salary negotia- llons July 3, with teachers seeking a nine percent pay boost and the district of- fering five percent. Last week, teachers Said they would abide by whatever decisioo ls rendered by a three-man.fact finding panel to set- tle the Impasse, and they -asked trustees to do U!e same. J\.1onday, a letter was delivered to the teachers Wonning them the Board of Trustees would follow Its written policy and listen to the suggestions of the panel but would not be bound by ·the panel's proposals. Dwight Bletscher, one of the teachers negotiators. said today teachers feel the district is "putting us off. We ~re afraid for the moment that somebody is playing games with us." He was not referring to trustees r~fusal to accept the panel's decision, I.lot r.o the timing or meelings for that panel. 'Bletscher said the three man panel - one teacher repreSentative, one board representative and a third. neutral figure -were suppo!led ·to meet by .today, ac- cording to the district's written policy. "They hav.e · not met and the.ir representative says he doesn't mow when they can meet," Bletscber said. "We're ready to go, but frankly wi fffi !hey are stalling for some reesan." "ff the board is not going to follow its written policy, we'll have an attorney contact the board at its Aug. 7 meeting.'' . Woodis Chaddick. an assistant district superintendent, said today-he is not sure \¥hy the board 's spokesman could not meet. but plans to talk to the spokesman this afternoon. "We are trying to meet all of the legal requirements," Chaddick said. He also said the board refused the of. fer made earlier by teachers, because the board considers it "binding arbitra- tion. and that is not legal." Teachers. wb.o never wapted the im· passe procedure to start with. say they do~¥-J~elie,ye Jt. is bil)ding arbitration and they think the board can make a commitment to.follow the suggestions of the panel. • "For four years the board has ignored tbe panel 's findin g, and that's a waste of money," Linda Boitano. executive dire<:· tor of the West Orange County United Teachers,-said today. 'lJf w~ both agreed, the procedure would at least be \\'orlb\vhile." Bandit Gets $85 At Gas Station Fountain Valley police today are seek· ing the man who took $85 from the Thri£- ty Gas station early r.·tonday morning in a holdup. Michael Jolly, the lone attendant al lhe station at 17375 Brookhurst SI. said the man came into the station at about 4 a.m. asking for gas for his car which had run out. • Jolly said he was going to sell the man seven cenls \l·orth \vhen th'e customer demanded all the money from the till, in- dicating he had a gun, but not showing it. The allendant said he gave the man the money and the bandit fled on foot. Uf'I T~ BOOSTING THE PORK TABS Up, Up in" Chicago Deal Still Open For A cquisition Of Meadowlark Negotiations are still open for the city purchase ol Meadawlark Got( Course in liuntington Beach. Dick J{arlO\\', executive assistant to the city administrator, said today S & S Construction Company has agrttd lO allow the city 60 more days for purchase talks •. -.. S & S ts currently in escrow with the Meadlowlark Ccrp. to buy the 98.f>.acre golf course ph1s seva adjacent acns on Warner Avenue. Harlow said the agreement for ex· tension ol. escrow, signed by s & S, has been sent to attornevs for Meadowlark O>rp. who are also ei:pected to sign il. Monday was the original deadline set for the city to make an offer to preserve the course, but city officials hav!! been Wlable to put together a plan. 11oney has been the primary hangup. v.~th the city expected to find fr-Om S2 million to $4 million tO buy and save the course. Harlow said the picture is bright for the city being able to save the golf course, but he could not say how. City councilmen have expressed a determination to keep the golf course alive, both for its recreational value and for its opetl space. • -t· l{OME Council To H ear Speaker \\lilliam Ann strong , president of the 1-Iuntington Beach Public Facilities Corp., \Viii talk about construction ol the central library and cultural center when he meets with the HOME Council Wed- nesday night. The HOME Council. a coalitioo of city homeowners associations, meets at 8 p.m. in the city hall anex, 5th and ~1ain Streets. The meeting is open to the public. The public facilities corporation handles the bond money for construction of the library and the civic center com- plex. Armstrong is expected to discuss reported delays in library construction. '" Guard Seeks Triton SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -The Coast Guard Monday launched a long-range search for the 3l·foot Triton. a sloop- rigged trim11ran reparted overdue at Los Angeles \vith three persons aboard •neroine!' Dies . Her Story 'Saved Father's Life' ESCONDIDO (AP) -As he looked at the kidnaper holdfug a , pi stol to his head that day, ·Industrialist James Hawthorne tal~ed ' aloud about his daufhter'Linda Carol -"sort of plump and happy, wllll:a!rnlybtauUfu .life." \· • • . · "I told him about Linda •nd how-•lie was operated on for ·braih · cancer,'' Hawthorne says of that moment of terror Oct. 6. "Suddenl y, lhere was a rapJl-Ort. His attitude towards me changed completely. 1 know that Linda saved my life." Although a ransom of $186,500 was delivered, tlawthorne escaped and~a man Suspected in the kidnaping was arrested before the money could be picked up and was later convicted. The story o! Linda Carol Hawthorn e ended less happily. Alter sul!ering 14 month s with a mali~nant brain tumor, tho 9-yeaMld girl died Sunday in Palomor Memonal Hospital. The lunenl was today. • Pork, Bacon, Egg.s Up Prices Generally Stable in Huntington Beach. By JORN SCHADE Of .. o.lty f'l19t '"" Chain grocery . store managers in Costa Mesa and fflllltington Beach are talking very little about the possibility of a wholesale price increase now that President Nixon's Phase Foor economic rules have taken effect. Instead, most of them refer queslions to district or regional orficcs for answer- ing. (Related picture. Page 14.) Sparse though local ans-..•:ers may be, certain price trends are developing. Thus far , only the retail prices on pork , bacon and eggs seem lo be showing any Pair of Ohio Guards Slain By Prisoner LUCASVtLLE, Oh.io {AP) -T\vo guards at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility were shot and killed by a prisoner today, Gov. John J. Gilligan's office said. The unidentified inmate was ap- prehended and hospitalized \\'ilh injuries, said Max Brown, executive assistant for communications in Gilligan's office. Two other guards were overpowered by the armed convict but were not injured before the convic t was subdued, Brown said. 'Ibe governor's office said other guards subdued the convict, beating him dou'Jl with a gun Jl:utt. He .has been hospitaliz· ed . the spokesman said. 'Ibe dead guards were identifled only as Strauss and Underwood and the spell- ing could not be immediately confinned. Maj. Lowell G. Ridenour. acting superintendent of Ohio Peniten1iary in Columbus, said he understood the rebellious convict at Lucasvitle former ly had been on death row. Huck Finn Pier Fishing Derby Set Next Week On a lazy summer morning a youngste r just might be able to settle himself on the Hun tington Beach. Pier, close his eyes. cast a fishing line over the rail and prelend he's floating down the ~lississippi along ll'ith 11uck Finn. Next Tuesday. the pier will be filled wi th youngsters trying to capture the romantic ad ventures spun by !\iark Twain. 11 's lhe 21st annual Huck f inn Fishing IJcorby sponsored by the city recreation department. From 9 a.m. to noon. boys and girls six lhroogh 14 can fish for prizes. A1\•ards will be given for the bigges t fish, most unusual fi sh, best variety, first fish, smallest fish , best Tom Sa1.,.yer costume and best Becky Thatcher costume. The event is co-sponsored by the recreation department, the Tackle Box: on the pier and the Junior Woman's Club. Youths can sign up for the derby at the Tackle Box. For further information phone Bill Fowler at lhe recreation department. 5.%-5486. Dti'l f'lltt ., ... , ..... RESIGNS STATE POST Education Aide Hall significant increases. Regular, non· perishable grocery prices are holding at a steady level. Chain store pork prices ha\'e Increased as mucb as 15 cents per pound, while bacon, especially nat ionally advertised products, is also sign ificantly up. Egg prices on the avera ge are eight cents a dozen O\'cr last v.·cek "s price. .. \\'e can't even get any Farmer John·s bacon. n·ieners or saus<lge no11•, so \.\"e ha\'e to use oth er brands we normally don't handle."' said Jerry And r c , manager of Ralphs ~larket. 380 E. 17th Street in Costa !\tesa. Andre said the Farmer John's nation al chain has had to shut do\.\n some of ils plants because of the high cost of me3t, malrirtg wholesale prices for the grocer even more than v.·hat they can sell it for retail. George Colley , nlanagcr of the market Basket Store. 7i~2 Edinger A\1e. in Hun- tlngton Beach. said his store had its sec- ond best 1\'eek lll its 12·year history. "Christmas v.·eek is a\v.·ays !he best."' he explained. Coffey said he had a shor1age of , chic ken last \l'CCk bc!eausc he sold so rnuch. But the supply is up thi s u·eek 1rhich he termed •·already a bigger buying v.·cek than last \\"etk." lie added ground beef v.·as also<\, good srller. "They are buying S-O much meat that T COMPOSITES SHOW SUSPECT IN LINDA ANN O'KEEFE SLAYING C•uc.sian, 24 t_, 30, Brown Curly Ha ir, Droopy Eyes, Tanned don't know v.•here they arc pulling it," ht added. • ri.tost store managers say tbcrt wa~ some increase in sales last v.'Ctk, but of no great significance. One ~pokesman of a Costa h-1csa Alpha ncta Store notrd "the a\•eragc number of buy(•rs 11'as ubout the sa me, but they \1·erc JUSl buying in larger 1unounts." · 'l'hcy seemed to be buying mort dou- ble d1seount items 111 full case amount~." hi• :lddcd. The general trend then among the bl& fitorc managers in Costa Mesa and Hun· tingtoo Beach is an increase of pork, bacon and egg prices, and a walt~-aee attitude on the rest. Driver Kill.s Self After Coast Chase By JACK CHAPPELL . 0 1 1111 Dlily ,,, .. , St.tt A high·specd police pursuit from 1'ev.·port Bt'ach to Laguna Niguel ended in death Monday as 1hc man police from three a~cncies chased placed a gun to his he:id and fired. Jerry Ii. Grenoble, 28, or Alameda , diC'd at South Coast Communi ly Hospilal al 5:>15 p.m. slightl y more than two hours afte r the chase began in C.Orona de.I A1ar. An autopsy was scheduJed today to determine lhe exact cause of death. New Clues Disclosed The chase began in eorova dtl .Mar after police we.re alerted by i-e.sfdents of Cameo Shores. A woman told of:(ice:r1 the bearded man had been making in-~ coherent statements to her S..yuNlld grandson and had told the lad he -was God. In Slaying of Girl ,-11 By JOllN ZAI.LER Of lftt 01!11 f'llol 11111 Newport Beach police today released an artist's composite drawing of the man they believe may have abducted and kill- ed l 1-year-old Corona del ~1ar school girl Linda Ann O'Keefc two weeks ago. Police said information for the dra1\·· ings carrie from tv.·o witnesses who oQserved !11iss O"Keefc getting into a !ale mode l van dri ven by a curly haired man estimated to be 24 to :ro years old. \Vitnesscs said the incident took place about 3 p.m. on ?>.1arguerile Avenue. the street the young girl DOnnally wal ked on her "'ay hon1e from summer classes she was attending at Lincoln Jnlermcdiatc School. She disappeared on F'riday. July 6, and 1\·as found dead Saturday in a ditch along Back Bay Drive by L'pper Newport Bay. Cause of death v.·as strangulation. ,Police said they ha\'e had information about the suspect and his turquoise<0I· ored van since "early in the in· vestigation," but 14·ere reluctant to make ii public. "We didn't want the suspect to know we had any information about him." ex· plained Capt. Donald Oyaas or"the delec- tive division . Oyaas said that if the suspetl became worried , he might flee the area. But after following up literally hundreds of leads in the l\\'O We<!ks since the crime, Capt. Oyaas said a decision v.•as made to release information in the hope that the public v.·ou!d provide addi tional clues. "What v.·e v.•ant now is for someone to reco~nize the man in the picture and tell us about it," he said. "He has a very distinctive face." Oyaas said 1he man was estimated lo be 24 to 30 years old, with medium length curly brown hair and an unusually "long face ." A distinctive reature. he said, was the suspect's droopy eyellds. "ff anyone kno\\'S a man like this. they should recognize him from our composite draw- ings.·• Oyaas said the witnesses observed the O'Keefe girl getting into the suspecl's van 14>'hile drivi ng past In a vehicle of their own. He said they did not stop, but were certain lh~y rccogni:ted the girl gel- ling into bright turquoise van. He added , however, that the two witnesses had neve r before seen the O'Keefe girl. Oyaas sa id lh e girl appa rently got into the van under her own power and did oot seem to be und er duress at the time the \l>'ilncsses observed the event. Oyaas urged anyone "'ilh information about a person resembling the suspect 10 call the Ne1vpor1 Beach deteclit•e division at 673-2211. Dr. Hall , Former Beacl1 Educato1·, Re signs Po st ... Dr. Clarence Hail. 46, who served (1\'e years as superintendent of the Ocea n View School Dis trict in Jlun tington Beach, has quit his state education post alter a year on the job. Hall left Ocean View in June. 1972, to become a!SOO.iate superintendent in charge of Instruction, working under newly elected State Superintendent of Public Instruction Wilson Riles. fie reportedly resigned hi5 state post because Of frustration W\th lhC education bureaucracy as he tried 10 reorganize his department. In P letter to lhe Sta te Board of Educa · lion, Hall M'rote: "Those lalcnts I possess can best 5er\'C CalUorn ia cducat.1011 outside tht' state level burf'11urracy ." ltall u•as brought IB Ocean Vie.w as a saV'lor of a district on t h e \'trge o1 btinkruptcy and suffering from low prestige and even lo~·er teacher morale. In rive yea,,, he built the district Into one of the leading examples of innovati ve education and dP-~pite. rapid growth. put itJ!n a sound financial base. \Vhen he left Ocean View for the slat job, Hall said : "!"II be part of a huge organization. For the first lime in a long tJmc, I won 't be in charge. "Still, L'm looking forward to my new job \l>'ith the zeal of a 1nissionary. t'm ~oing to Sacramento with the hope of being able to make <1 difrerence. If r can 't. or If 1 find myself s1agnating, rn get out." Hall wa.s not lhc only stnlc educator to rcslgn. He was joined by Dr. David f:van.~. 41, assistant superintendent in cha rge of program planning and develop- , ment. , Bolh mcn wer mapplnJ.l future plans for the department of instruction, but were appilrently fru!lralcd by higher level educators kept by Rllr.s from the kafftt1y administration. Hall will 1ak"e a one-year appointment !Ste HAU., Paae. !I As the ~·oman went in to her house, Grenoble reportedly called out that he would come in and get her ii she didn't colllt' out. Police slopped the car minutes la ter bul the gaunt driver sped away as they walked loward him. Police units from Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and the California Highway Patrol raced in pursuit or a late model Volkswagen driven by the bearded suspect at speeds of 80 to 90 miles per hour through heavy summer afternoon traffic in downtown Laguna Beach. • The chase ended at the entrance lo The Sho res deve lopment at Niguel Road on Pacific Coast Highway in Laguna Nigue l as the foreign car skidded out of cootrol off the road and the Newport Beach police unit careened into a block wall beside it. Grenoble apparently shot himself at that time by placing the muzzle of a .22· caliber 11 and R revol .,.er in his mouth and pulling th~ trigger. Nol hearing the shot police officers 'See CHASE, rage %J Lihrar y to Off er Ca lcn<l a r of Events A calendar of fut ure civic events , scheduled by clubs and olher organiza- tions, \vii\ be on permanent display at the flunlington Reac h library. The calendar v.·ill list upcoming and current events. It is on display near the library office. for infonnation on future events phoot· the library al 536-5485 and ask for Ken White or Sherry Jack. Orange Coast Wea Cher Coasta l skies \\'l'dnesday Y.111 again be cloudy during nig ht and mo rning hours, bul 1hc sun ls ex- pected to break throu gh about 11 a.m. 1'emperatures "'ill range In the high six:ties ll'ith a sunny arter- noon forec ast. The low will be 60 degrees. Water temperature will be IW. INS IDE TODA\' lliincke rs bll.'ttl ttp a Japanese ;eufner at the Benoha:i .4.irport 1ltorf/y aftrr they and their. 137 hostogrs shd dou:n an cmrr- ge nry c'1uie . See stol"t/. Poge 4. 2 DAILY PILOT ti Ehrlichman Disagrees With Nixon ... \\' i\S!llNGTON ( .-\P \ .John D. Eltrl1chman today quot ed !'resident Nixon as saying 111 ~l areh tha t !he 197 1 EHslx.'rg brc·ak -\\''JS "a '1t;il nntion:ll se<·urity inquiry" "·ell 11·11tu11 his ron· 5tltu tional po"·ers and oblig;1!ions. Niion said f\lav 22 !h<i! he didn't <il1thorize the brt>ak·in, didn'! know about 1t unt il m :en1 ly. and \\'ou!d h<H'e disap- pro vc'<l ii if bruught to his at1t1nt1011. Ehrlich man denied trying to hide the incident fru1n FR I age nts 1nvesl1gal ing J3st yea r's \\':uerAate burglary and , "·1retapping, saying he had been told that the Justice Department already had the information. He said the break-in at the office of Daniel Etlsberg's psychiatrist 1vas a prop-- er way to track do~·n those 11·ho betrayed government secrets, said any government official would understand tha t and ketp the break-in confidential, and said even the public would agree if only news media would properly inform them of all the fact s. Testifying before the Senate Watergate commiUee. Ehrlichman also accused ousted \Vhite House Counsel. John \V. Dean Ill in general terms of lying to the rommittee. Ehrllchman said he beUeves he is personally innocent of any wrorl'gdoing. He said he wants to answer a number of accusations against him. Saying that national security con- siderations still prevent him from answering some questions, Ehrlichman said the Ellsberg break-in was performed by the White House S p e c i a I Investigations Unit, popularly known as the "plumbers." that included G. Gordon Liddy and E. Howard HunL Both were later convicted In the Watergate wiretap- ping. Ehrtichman said he didn't find out about the break·ln until after it happened Sept. 3, 1971. But he said he didn 't con· sider it a potential embarrassment for the While House because it was a proper way to Investigate leaks of nat ional security information. By contrast, former Atty. Gen . John N. Mitchell said he considered the Ellsberg break-In one of the "White !louse hor· rors" that he consciously hid from Lhe President fo r fe ar Nixon would "lower the boom," disclost! everything and l~e the election to Sen. George McGovern. Ehrlichman said Nixon didn't consider it embarrassing, either. "On the first occasion when I did discuSs this wilh the President, which was in March, he expressed essentially the same view that I have just stated," Ehrlichman said. "That this was an im- portant, a vital national security inquiry and that he considered il to be well within the oonstitutional, both obligation and function of the presidency." Drop in Students To Cut Scl1ool Disb·ict Budget A drop in enrollment has caused trustees in the \Vestminster School District to cut the district's tentative budget by more than $30,000 for fiscal 197:1-74. Projections for the coming school year Indicate an average daily attendance (ADA) of 11,200 studffi!S, compared to earlier esti mates~bJOO students. Last year's AD A was 1 l ,8Q(f'!;1udents. The loss in ADA results in a subse- quent drop in state aid, explained Don Stuckey. assistant superint endent. ·The new budget. takin g the lat est stu· dent. enrollment Jlrojections into account, calls for SI0,970.9 10 in rlistricl spending. Because of the hudgct cut si x teache rs \\'ill be reassign ed fron1 IX'nna nent teaching posts to full-lime substi tutes and be p;ud lh{'ir regular salaries, St uckey sa1d. They will then be reassigned back into their previous positions as other teachL·rs resign during !he school year. he said. The final budge t is up for adoption Aug. 7. Ol AHGI COAST Ml DAILY PILOT T~~ 0••r'l9• Cou t OAILY Pl. o• ...... Wh,,~ 11 t;&mbl,,.., !~t Ntw. P·~"· " r"tl"h"" b• tn• 0••119• (0.11 P~~, .. ~,~Q (Otnt4"Y 5•1W ••It ttlotlor• •rt PVbl.,ht'll, """5•• throutn Fr·d•y. ID• Co••• MU•. ''"'*f'°•! ~·•(•, ~""tmQ!O'O ft~•Clll'O"'"" " V• ... L•o~·· ft1ACll, tr~ont/Stt:ldl1Dl!Ck o'Vl ~·· (Jf,..,~,. s,... .Jw•~ C•11>1lr1no. A •·•olt '"0 '""I HI liotl !<o l>Vhl,.httl $U~1d1yt .... 5u'<llY< 1 ~, p•l,..111•1 p.,blll~rno ol•"' ,, •I J~ '*''l' fllY ~!•Ht, (Mii /.'•u, (•h•o•r.1, •ll/11 Rob•rt N. w •• .t ''""'•"' 1...l r un ·1"•' Jtc ~ It Cwtle1 y,,, ,,,,..,.., .... Gt""'"' M•M~ft' Thomt• l<te•il IEd•IO• T1'0,,.11 A. Mwrp~•ht """""'"'1 l;d>!OI' C1'1rl11 H, Looi Ric"'•'' '· Nall .... n 11!1nt Ml'\a91"9 El •hl•I Terry Cowilt1 Wf\I O'"~t (°""Ir Cd•lot H•lltiittt• kectii Offk. I Tl lS leech l owl1•e14 Moili"9 Allldroni ,.0 . lo• 7t0, t2•41 .,....._ L,,.urwo e.-cto· m 'Ill'"',,_ Cott• Mftl. JJlll W.-il l•Y $Ifft! N•....,., 8eti:ll1 »J,I N..,on eoui..1rd it~'""""'"· ~ """'"' t i , ........ It .. , , .. .,.. .. f71 41 "41-4111 Cl•lflHI ,&;..nltlllf 642·5671 ,...,. ~Or•-c;-y C-lllto 140·11.10 (,,.ytOgM, !"). O•t • (911! O\lttlllll .... (-•· No ,,. ... •IO•ln . 111w1tt1110t1., t!jllOtial l'!lllM<' ... .., ..... ,~. M<t!" _, k ttptMllCM wl!"OYI 1ote:a.I -· ,.., .. ,.,, • (Olly!""'' _..,, kcotllf t.ltll -!tOt H id 11 c .... 1,1.,_, Ct lllOr"lo, k1Ma'111tllfl b't c.orrlOr 1111 """"""'' 11\1' -11 u 1a """'"'"'/ ml!(!I•• •••l..,_,...,. u .. """'"''' 'VITAL SECURITY INQU IRY' Ehrli chm1n Testifies 'President Would Abi£le By Ruli11 gs' WASHINGTON (AP) -A \Vhite HouSe spo~esman said loday there is no ques· lion President Nixon wou.ld abide by court rulings, but refused to discuss \\'hat Nixon would do if the U.S. Suprem e Court orders him to release subpoenaed tapes and documents. "There's no question that he would abide by court rulings," said Deputy Press Secretary Gera ld L. Warren, add· ing. "Bu.t I a~ not going to get into a hypothetical discussion on this particulnr case because we are at a particular stage in a very complex legal situation." \Varren attempted to have it two ways at another point, when he said, "TI1c President abides by the law. but we arc in a ~iluation now where the subpoenas ha\'e just arrived at the \Vh ite House and this is what J am addressing thi~ morning." He would give no hint what legal tac- tics Nixon will take in response to sub- poenas from the Senate Watergate com· mittce and special prosecutor Archibal d Cox, s,'<ccpt to say a decision would be announced by Thursday. !\1canwhilc, Ally. Gen. Elliot L. Richardson said he believes Nixon has ''substanti al legal and constitutional foundation " for refusing to give up the sought-aft er documents and tape recordings, "'hich Nixon concedes can·t prove his innocence. Bu t Richardson called for Nixon, his boss, and Cox. his te chnical but in- depend ent subordinate, to •'try to work out some practical means of reconciling the competing interests at stake.'' Ri.chardson thus seemed to be sug· gesung an out-of-court compromise. Asked at a news briefing how the \Vhite House would respond to the subpoenas. \Varren said the office of the presidential counsel was studying the ··very complex legal situation involved" and that ''after such study will take appropriate action ... v.·ithin the time specified in the sub+ pocnas." He report ed th;il nil three documents call for a response by Thursday. In response to a question. \Varrcn said that Nixon of course would make the final decision on actions to be taken. Ne\\·smen tried lo glean from \Varrrn some hint as to the course Nixon "'ill adopt. "l can't speculate for yo u y,•hat ap· propriate 11ction mig ht be,., he replied. He promised newsmen v.·ould be furnished detailed information once ac- tion is taken. Asked if Nixon mig ht simply ignore the subpoenas . \\'arren said he did not "'ant to get into a legal discussion about a,·aitable options. To othf'r questions \\'arren said the 1<1p1:s covrring two years of presidential conferences .1nd 1('1l'phonl' calls "arc h··ing adeq u<1t1:ly protected" nntl nr ~t'CUre . "Thi·~· h;lVC not hf'cn edited.'' \Varr n :;;11<l 111 :1 t'P~l)()ll~(' to ;111othrr querv. le dl·i l11u·d ,IJ ~.1~ w h~·r1· 1hc t:1pes nrC no1v hw, r1 c·<l Se nio r Citize ns Set Castle Trip Senior c111zens who v;ould li ke lo join a l\\·o.dny lnp to the Jtearst Castle. San Simoon. should contact the St. Simon and .Jude Ca lhohc Church in ltuntington R('ach. The church's senior cititl!:n club has ~hedulcd an overnight tour of the castl e for S<>pt. 4 and 5, bul needs more in- t.erestC'd irav('lcrs. Cost of the IMP i~ $28.65 per person. in sh11n•r\ n10ms. 'nlt' price Incl ud es bu s fnrc. hotC'I and a double tour of lhe cas- tle. On the way up , tht group will nl!iO tour !he Dun15h lo\\'n of Solvnng. The lour lr;ivc~ from the Lake PArk clubhouse 8t 9:30 a.m., Sfpt 4. For reserva tions pbone Ann Koester. ~005. F ront PQfl e 1 CHASE ... ... from Laguna Beach and Newport Beach closed in, euns drawn, and ordered the man to exit the vehicle. When be did nol LaiWlll Btacb patrolman Terry Temple opproached-\ho suseect who was holdlng Ille 8'"' 1n his Icfl hand and took the WClij)Orl. ~ Bleeding from .the mouth and cars Grcneble \vas lifted from the car, handcuffed and laid face down on the i:rass where ambulance attendants pick· lid him up later and rushed him to the hospita l. ··\Ve really don't know why he ran. Wo went to investigate a report and "'hen \re got there he ran," Newport Beach dctcc· any connect ion ." Oyaas said. Oyaas said he doesn't know what the suspecl was doing in Newport Beach and declined to speculate on a connection between the dead man and the death of 11-year-0ld Linda Ann O'Keefe found strangled in the back bay early this n.onth . "There is no indication that there ts any conned On," Oyaas said. Grenoble used a pistol stolen from Los Angeles along with a number of other weapons. sheriff's Sgt. Bob Recd .said. No other weapons were found in the vehicle, officers said. Reed said a crime lab report on the gun and exact number or shots fired would be forthcoming. lteed said that other than an arrest in 1966 for petty theft Grenoble had no record that officers knew of at this time. "His actions v.·ere unusual, he was act- ing strangely in the area," Reed said ex· plaining what steps led to the Newport Beach department's attempted traffic stop of the car in Corona del ~1ar. Reed said there is no indication th.at the suspect fired at anyone other than himself. After Newport Beach police received the ca11 of a suspicious person who may have been drunk or acting strangely in the Cameo Shores community, two police units were dispatched to the scene. En route, they observed a vehicl.:? matchi ng the description of t h e suspicious person's car. The blue Volkswagen was stopped by Patrolmen Charles Morin and Y.'alt Furmann. Reports indicated officerlllliad been ad· vised the suspect was possibly anned. After the car was stopped in the vicini- ty or l\foming Canyon Road and Pacific Coast Highwa y, officers drew their service revolvers and ordered the man :o exit. Grenoble put the car in gear again and headed south at high speed 10.,..•ard Laguna Beach. Both officers ran to their units and gave chase and radioed for the aid of the Ne~'PQrl Beach police helicopter. During the ll·mile pursuil whi ch in· volved the two Newport Beach units, a Laguna Beach patrol car and two CHP units as well as the helicopter, the speeding Volksv.·agen swerved and dodg· ed through traffic attempting to evade the police units. Newport patrolmen reported oncoming traffic on congested Coast High.,..•ay wa s forced off the road several times in avoiding headon collisions v.•ith the fleeing vehicle. Drawing close to the car, Officer ~1orin reported he could observe a v.·eapon in the man's hand and that by the suspect's action it appeared as if he was preparing lo shoot at the patrolman's car. Heli copter observeni flying over the chase scene reported that the driver had appeared to be loading a gun during a portion of the pursuit. Newport Beach Lt. Bill Blue said today that in attempting to evade capture nea r the end of the chase, Grenoble drove his car over the curb and Officer f\1orin followed him, blocking escape with the patrol vehicle. The foreign car stopped just before colliding with the block \Vall. hO\\'e\•er. the patrol vehicle slammed into if. Officer ~forin \vas uninjured in the cra sh. Aside from the suicide death, no other persons were injured in the in- cident. Sanitary Board Ret1rrns Former Member to Seat Directors of the Midway City Sanitary Dist rict l\1onday filled one of two vacant 1X1Sitions on the board which had resulted from the conviction of Derck ~1cWhinney and Tad Fujita in the ~l lle Square ag ric ultural lease scandal. Lo\1·ell Amo, 63. a fom\er n\en\bcr of the boarct ""'ho "·as defea ted in 1969 by a slate including McWhinncy and f'uji!a . \1·as appointed and also s e I act c d sccretary pro tern . /\n10 had served on the board for 11 years before his defeat. He is a retired <'emetery superintendent at "Westminster Memorial Park, owned by the McWhin- ney family. Roland Edwards was elected chairman or the board, a position Fujita held before his convlct'<>n. hTe driecton have yet to fill the se<:· ood poslttoo. Front Page 1 HALL ... as profes,,or of CC'lucation at the ClBre· mont Craduate School while he considers his future. lie hnd a four-~ear contr11ct "'ilh the statt. Evans has accepted a job as a vice president of P.1cGra\Jl·flill Publlshing Co. As they left . both men said their resi gnations arc not direct~ ag;:iinst Rlles, but ralher the bureaucracy. ' 0•11~ f'!lol S1111 PllOI• CHASE ALONG PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY ENDED IN LAGUNA NIGUEL ; DRIVER SHOT HIMSELF Newport Beach Patrolman Ch arles Morin Investigates Sc•ne After Speeds of 90 MPH Throug h Traffic 'Up With People' Show Tickets Now Available Tickets arc no\v available at the Hun- tington Beach Chamber of Comnlcrcc for the •·t:p \Vith People" ni usical sho\v scheduled Jul y 31 and Aug. I at ~1arina lligh School. ··vp With People" fea !ures 140 hi gh school and college perfomiers seler!ed from throughout the t:.S. and 20 foreign nations. They \\'iii perfornl at 8 o'clork, e<1 ch night. in the Marina gymnasium. Ticket s cost $4 for reserved seat s, S3 for general admission 8nd $2.50 for students. The chamber office is in the To\vn and Country shopping center, 18582 Beach Blvd., Room 224. Tickets are also on sale at all Huntingto n Beach branches of Security National Bank. 1'his \viii be th e Una! Orange County performa nce of "Up \Vith Peo ple" before 1hc cast begins a three-month lour of r~urope. Cha111ber ofricia ls are al! still looking fo r hon\CS in w•hich to huusc the young singers during their three-day local stay , J uly 30 through Aug. I. The cha mber has found 67 homes and needs another 73. Each home shou ld pro· vidc a singer 11•it h a bed and transpo rta - tion to and from the sc hool for practices and the shov.·s. Any fam ily with a spare bed can phone thc _.<;hambcr at 962--6661. • Valley Scl1ool Prog1·am Seel(ing Mo1·e Fu11ding Operators of the Fountain Valley Com- nlunity School Program asked school trustees Thursday night fol' $17,78~ 10 fund the program for the second half of the school yea r. J)r. Patricia Clark. dirl'Ctor of \'Outh and communitv affairs for the School distr ict. said fCdc.ral fund ing for the pro.. gram "'ill end Ot'c. 31, leaving lhe pro-- gram without fund s to operate through June 30, 1974. The program. \\'hich is designed to pr0+ vide a variety of family oriented ac· tivities of a basicallv ed ucational nature, is operated by the Fountain Vall ey Com· munit y Services Project at l\loiola and Cox Schools. Discussion groups, classes in several differenl arts, crafts <tnd spo rts <t re of· fered on a r!'gular eight-v.'eek basis through the program. "The community response to lht' pro· gram has just been fantastic," Dr. Clark s.'.lid. '"\Ve have requests every day to ex - pand the program, bul if \\·e can't gel <.d- dilional funds. it \Viii die al together." She ~aid the progra1n operators will ~eek altcmativc \vays of funding. in- cluding grants from private foundations. revenue sharing fwids. and the possibility that a joint po\1•ers agreement betweeu the city and the school district be est ablished. School district funding could con1e fro m tw·o sources, she s .. id. They include an a\loc aliorr fro1n the school district's rcser\'e funds or a rnaxin1um five·cent l>t'rmissivc tax Jc,·v. 1'rustces said thfy \\'ould consider the rrqucsts and make a possible deci sion \·;hen thC'? rnrcr Aug. 2, v..-!1ich \1•ould be the deadline if they choose lo levy th e tax 10 fuod rhe program. WALi\. SOFfLY! , Retardecl Patient Disappears From UC LA Dormitory No trace has been found of a 37-year· old patient from Fairview Stale Hospital in Costa Mesa who vanished from , a UCLA dormitory last Thursday where ~ was staying while participating in a "retarded olympics.'' Th e man, identified as Paul Rios, is a male Lalin, about 5 feet 6 inches tall. 1o;cighs 210 pounds and 1vAs "'ea ring a bro1rn shirt. green pan!s and black shoes al tbe time of his disappearance. lie is not considered dangerous. Fai rview llospit al officials sa id Rios speaks som'e English anrl some Spani sh and has r elatives in Fullerton. Ile may be attempting to make his way there. Rios ha s been the subject of a search by UCLA campus police and Los Angeles police. Although no leads have deve1opeq, p. hospital offici al expressed confidence that Rios \l'Ould be found . Junior Football Si g nups Slatecl Sa turday is the lasl chance for bo)·s eight lo 14 to sign up for Junior ATI 1\merican Football in Huntington Beach".: Signups ,,·ill be hclt.1 from JO a.m. to~ p.m. at the Edison High cafeteria, HlJlt. tington Beac h High gym and the ~1ariila High cafeteria. Boys Should apply at the locatign neares t their hoine and bring .... ·nh therll.: a parent, birth certificate, a report cafd 11i!h a C or better average and .a registration fee 1 $5-SlOl. For fu rther info rmation pa rents mlly phone league officials i1l south l·lun- ti ngton Beach . 963-1674 : ce ntr al Hui'i- !ington Beach. a.i2.~104 : and north llun- tington At>ac h, 847-4973. M•ny limes we l•lk to people who feel lh•I c•rpeling •I $5.00 lo $8.00 (c•rpel •lone) per squ•re y•rd is expensive. A housewife who buys dress materials knows that she is unlikely lo buy good malerial1 for le5s than $3.00 lo $4.00 . Also, a man might pay $1.00 for a foo+·square hand kerch ief, which works out to $9.00 a square yard. Can you imag ine how th ese materials would perform if you placed heavy furniture and walked on them? Consequently, when you spend $3.00 to $4.00 for c•rpeling, regardless of where you buy it, don't expect too much, wall very sof!ly ! • ALD EN'S CArtP~TS ~ Dct APES 1663 Placentia Ave . COSTA MESA 646-483 8 HOURS: Mon. Thrv Thun., t to 5:30 -FRI.. t to 9 -SAT., 9:30 to S ' , "' p, in nJ It ·• \ ir tt a t • ri i t ( t ( 1 d H DAILY PILOT :J Seven Air Pollµtion Warnings Issued in June Uy JACK BROBACK 01 IM o.ll'w ~llM S!afj Seven air pollution health wamln~a v.·ere issued by the Orange County Air Pollution Coottol District in June bring· mg the total warnings for lhe year 10 ... nine, Willilin..l'J\cilen •. air poUution~­ trol office said. ~ fitchen noted that oo two days warn- .• \ ings in<rluded the nonh coasta l area of the county. Th.is marked onlv the second ~nd third times that such \v8rnings were Bl Gls Kilwd Issued for the coastal area. No warnings were necessary for the southwest area Of the county. The rederal oxidant (ozone) standard ot .08 part! per milllon (ppm) ~·as eic· ceeded on 21 da):'s.dudag ~~....__the air pollution o(ficer said. Of these, 19 were at the La Habra air monitoring station. 15 at Anaheim , 10 3t El Toro and seven at Costa ~tesa. The highest reading was sho"11 at La Spy Stories WASlil NGTON (U PI ) -The Pentagon disclosed today that 81 U.S. servicemen died in Laos and Cambodia on secret in· telligence missions since 1965 and said their deaths were falsely reported to families and to Congress as having oc· curred in Sout h Vietnam. Defense Depanment spoke sman Jerry \V. Friedheim said the false reports were discovered Monday in a review of Vietnam war statistics provided to Congress in the wake or last week's disclosure that the Senate had been misled on a 14-month secret bombing campaign in Cambodia. The report listed 3,630 B52 bombing raids actually conducted in Cambodia in 1969 and 1970 as having been carried out in South Vietnam. Friedheim said Congress was Wormed Another Youth Bitten By Coyote in Clemente By JOHN \'ALTERZA Of t1M D1Uy Pllol Stiff San Clemente State Park's un- predictable coyote struck again today - inflicting dangerous bites to a 5-year-old boy from Mission Viejo v:ho had been sleeping on the ground. The youngster, Wayne Allan Preheim, immediately began the painful series of anti rabies injections. Of grave concern to authorities is the location of the bites -on the small boy's forehead. Authorities stressed that it could not be determined if the coyote was rabid, but that as a precaulion the in- jections would have to start immediately. The latest in a series of incidents -a grim repetition of attacks on campers by foxes last summer -occu rred as the youngster slept at space 74 this morning at about 6:30. The boy's mother, Mrs. Mary Alice Preheim of 22772 La Q\linta Drive, called rangers immediately after the attack. Local police were summoned as v.·elt Little \llayne suffered two minor puncture wolmds and a few scratches in the attack and was given emergency treatment at San Clemente General Hospital. The attack marked the second time in little over ~ week that a youngster at the park has been bitten by a coyote. On Monday of last week Denise Pimper, 8, of Norwalk, was bitten on the leg -apparently by the same wild canine. Park rangers and other authorities im- mediately set traps and ex tra patrols in an effort to catch the coyote. Over the weekend officers shot and wounded OOe coyote in the area and un- confirmed· repo rts stated late Monday that the animal's carcass had been found. But that coyote obviously was not the one that attacked this morning. As in the case of the foxes last year (none of which was found to be rabid /, the attacks generally occur in the predawn hours. You Can Get Justice- If You Can Affo1'd It By LEE PAYNE DI !tie Dilly l'llol St•ll J\10ST OF US try to keep clear or the la w. :0ur courts here along . the Orange Coast have a good reputation and although we all try to have as little to do with them as possible, we naturally a~ume that. if we sh?uld get into trouble we will encounter a legal system that 1s both fair and rational. Ke~ping this assumptioo in mind,_ let ~-s consi~er the curious case of a friend of mine who recently got a ticket l1l Huntmgton Beach for speeding on Coast H_ighway. . . He was cited for going 90 miles per hour 1n a 55 nule Zlilne. J\fY FRIEND WAS willing to admit that he was speed- ing and only disputed the 90 ~ile per hour fi~re which he thought was excessive for his Rambler station wagon .. He reported to the West Orange County courthouse in West minster at the appointed time intending to plead gui,llY with the explanation thal he thought he was only going , around 70. . l'AYNI! .. The judge informed him , however, that if he pleaded gwlty to the ong1n~I charge of 90 miles per hour, he would go to jail s.ince ther~ is an automatic jail sentence in lhis instance for a~y~ne found guilt y of going more than 2Q miles raster than the posted speed hm1t. J\tY FRIEND JIAD only t"·o choices : plead guilty and go to jail or plead Innocent and go to trial. He chose the trial. .. Now he needed a lawyer. And guess what . there are lawyers who spec1ahze Jn speed ing cases. He found one or these specialists "'ho took his case for $350. The lawyer asked for and was grant~ several .CO°:rt delays an,d when the ease finall y came to trial, he arranged wit~ ttJ; Di~~n~I Attorneys Office for .. my friend to change his plea from "not gwlty' to guilty to a lesser ofiense. J\fY FRIEND PLE..\DED guilty to going five miles per hour over the speed limit and paid a $10 fine . At the begiMing of this little tale, we noted that most of u.s try to_ ke~p clear of the law but when we do fall into its clutches, we assume that It will be .,both fair and rational. I'm not sure that either of these criteria were o~ served In my friend 's case . First, he has no quarrel with his lawyer. lie was paid to get him off, and he did. But what about the courtf After six months of paper work and sup- posedly crowded courtroom time. it allowed him_ to enter the ~lea that be wanted to enter in the first plact! and Instead of firung him S200 which he w~ld gladly have paid rather than go to jail, the coon !Oded up by aeeepting a fuM!t of $10. AS TAXPAYERS. I lhink v.•e got the short end of lhe deal. And v.·h.1t about the case itself? Either my friend "''as going 90 a! tht: police- man charged. or ht we:!m't. Why did the District Altorney allow him to plead guilty to going 60? None of the facts In the case had changed. BUT I TRINK"ttit mos t important qucstJon is the last one. \Vh a1 nbout i'.111 1he people who can't afford $350 for a liwyer? Apparently they go to Jail . Shouldn't justice ~ 4 question of guilt or innocence rather than a cstion of $.150? Habril on June 20 \\'hen .33 was recorded. The federal standard for nitrogen dioit - ide of .25 ppm was exceeded once at l ... 1 Habra and once al Anahfirh. The carbon mooox.ide 35 ppm WN exceeded ot the La Habra station oo two days, No other station recordtd carbon monox1dc levi•ls above the standard . Fitchen said two smog periods in June resulted in requesb that cUi7.ens \'Olun · Larily r~uce driving to an abs-Olute n1in1- False today about !he false account of the deaths. Since the fall of 1965, Friedheim said, 55 U.S. servicemen have died conducting "covert military reconnaissance activ- ities" in Laos. He said since 1967, an arl- ditional 26 have been killed on secret missions in Cambodia. Their families were told "the deaths occurred on classified missions along the border of South Vietnam." Friedheim said. and the report to Congress listed all 81 deaths among U.S. battle casualties in South Vietnam. Friedheim said the agents were operat· ing on missions so classified that even their places of death had to be kept secret. He said the cover story, sho"·ing they died in South Vietnam, \vas fed into Pen- tagon C{)mputers and the circumstances surrounding each death \\'ere kept in "paper files." Friedheim said information was still being checked when the spy missions end- ed and when the last deaths occurred. The families of the 81 men are being notified of the true circumstances under which thei r sons and husbands died. Friedheim said, and no names will be an- nounced until notification "'as completed. Most of the agents \\'ere Army Green Berets, he said. but some might have been Marine or Air Force personnel. Friedheim said their spy missions ,in- volved primarily observing activity along the Ho Chi ~tinh trail, gathering infor- mation in North Vietnamese base areas Inside Cambodia, and assessing the re- sults of the secret U.S. bombing raids in these base areas. UCI Lifts Ban 011 Fraternity, Sorority Groups UC Irvine officiaUy has ended its ban on f,·aternities and sororities by inviting six to form colonies on the campus this fall. None of the six is Phi Gamma Delta, the social fra ternity to "'hich Dr. Daniel G. Aldrich Jr., UC! chancellor, belonged "'hen he was a student al the University of Rhod e Island. The six Dr. Aldrich has invited were said to have been chosen because of their open membership -practices a n d reasonable costs. They are: Fraternities: Beta Theta Pi. Phi Della Th eta and Sigma Chi. Sororities : Delta Gamma . Gamma Phi Beta and Pi Beta Phi. ' Since l!CI opened in 1965 there has been a policy in force "'hich in effect banned fraternal social groups on the grounds such groups discriminated in the selection of members. A t9n U.S. Supreme C'.ourt ruling pav· ed the way for the change in UCI policy. The court held that national affiliation alone is not a permissible reason for de - nying an organization access lo a cam- pus. Some national fraternities require in their charters that local chapters exclude certain classes of students. Such charter provisions would violate U C I ad- ministrative and faculty policies. In writing to the si.x national societ ies. Dr. Aldrich emphasized that campus organiza tions may have nothing in their constitutions. rituals or practices that could be · interpreted as discriminating aga inst any student in the selection or their members. a can1pus spokcsn1an said. 1 Robert S. l..a\\'rcnce, assistant vice chancellor for student uffa1rs said na- tiona l social rr aternities and sororities "'ill be given !he same support rtnd pri vileges as all other student or gan1za. tions on the Irvine campus. "We are happy 10 be able to provide this additional social opoprtun11y for UCI students," he said. Woman, 72, Held For Extortion VAN NUYS (UPI) -Sus:.in Rttd \\'a'.'11 stnteneM ~1onday to 120 dnys in J»il fHKI three-year probation for attemptin g to e:ttort money lrom a North 1-\ollyv•OQd grocery store. Mn:. Reid pleaded guilty to chargt's she walked into the store and demanded & shopping bag full or mone y. saying the: na.-ded it to free her gr11nd ch1\dren . "'ho were being held hostage in a motel. She returned the money later And was arr~ted. ~rs. Reid is 72 . She Is on probation for a similar offense 111 Nevada \ mum fo alleviJte serious cond111ort-.;; in (11\·crs1dc and San BernKrdno C'O\U'\lles. On June 6 "'hen the hi£,h~Jil OllL'-hour ozone reading m Orang£• Coun1 y v.•as .26, ~ record .60 ppm "·as r1..'COrdcd If\ t..:p lond and 39 ill tl1vcrside. A Ill'"' air pollution control rule limit1n1: lhc c01rbon monox1d(' fron1 st1J1 1on:1rv :;ourcts bt'<'anll' ('ffl'C'll\'(' July I :\n}• sourtt'~ found 10 ('XCc<'d 2 pt>rct•nt carbon 1nonoxide "ill h\• rsubJt'C't lo 11olat1un no- tire and ~tion , Fil<'hen said . 0( %.1 compl&IllS investigated durinr; June, four conremed Orange Coo.st area ins1a1Ja11ons . A dust complainl agalNI ru1t.;trurt1on at 1he Nt11· Stars Center in \\'estmins tcr \1i'.ls nullified by "'atering TIK' Sit(' In th<> sJmt' wmmtmity, Chili Produr lS Corp:ir;111011 w;1s "an1cd follO\\'- i.ng numrrous l'01npla1n1s of odor and dust. The llu11t1ni;:ton h1tttl'Omn1un1ly Hos- pitals inc U1cra!or "·as 1SSU('d a \'1olat1on ltfe111ories of Etl(lie c.·apt. Eddie Rickenbacker. \V orld \\'a r f's "aee or aees" \Vho shot down more enemy aircraft than any o1her pilot. stands in the cockpit of his plane (tORJ and beside one of his 26 enemy aircraft in these 19 18 photos. I~ickenbarkcr died of a ht1art attack at 82 ri.tonda y. ISee story. Page 4.) nocice r't'g&rding optra11on of the faMl- ~ty 's incineralor. A San Clemente plunting flrm v.•hlch had twen operating "ithout a permit c·eas<'d operntions foJlo"ing co1np!:11nts vt p<unt fallout from a spray room. 'rtw· firm was S & P Speci11lty Coatu1gs. F1tchcn s1ud rontrol ck~vices 1nsu1llt'(I oo statlonnry sourt't'S cost $230,62~ in Junt' bringinli the ~·rarly tol:il to date to ~1 2 1n1lhon Cou11 ty Cons Will Sub1nit Grievances A lhreaten('d sit do"·n strike at I~ Orange County btanC'h juil rea.C"hed 01 s!and up agreement t>arly today "'hf>n 15 mutinous prisont•rs agrt'Ni to submit th\'1r rompl:nnl s 1n 11ril ing to jail ;1u1h(lritiri.. "\\'r alt had a friendly httle discussion a! th•• gal(· hou:;c and it ('ndcd w11h.thrll decision :ind the agrrC'1n£•n! of the men 111,•oh·t'<l 10 go lo ~ork ." said LL Bur ri Bi1ttl'lll' of the Tl)('() l..at·y f:lcility stafr. Lt. Battl'ltt" said thi.• only complaint aired by the n1C'n this morning "·as ""•hat \\·e've heard lx'fore -grumbling about the fact that \\'e don't relay mu.sil' 01'cr our loudspeaker system. "That just isn't feasible." the officer said. "\\'e have three di fferent systems ruMing through our gate house, the kitchen area and the cmtral building and 11 isn 't possible to interrupt them for any kind of music arrangement.'' Batlclle said only I~ of the 21j prisoners al tile mini1num seeuri ty jail in Orange "·ere affected by this morning's dts."t'nsion . "When \\'t> J:el their v.·rill<'n complaints "'e'll examine them and see what we can do." he said . "Y.'hatever else 1hey have in nund they didn't slalC' them \'Crball y. to me today ." The incident \\'as the first such in- dicalion thlit recent unrest at the ctnltal jail has spread to the branch facility. A!Jegat1ons of unfair treatment at the Santa Ana main jail have been aired 111 an action recently filed in federal court by lawyers • for the Arncrican Ci\•tl Liberties L:ruon. Khadafy Still Ruler CAI RO ! UPI\ -Col. l\loamme1 r Khadafy w1thdre"' his rcsigna11on as l'hairman of the n11ing Libyan military junta Monday after 12 days, saying he "·ac; doing so under public pressure. ~1~ BA NK OF COSTA MESA -i111r to announce I s the pleased HIGHEST INTEREST RATES permitted NEW INTERE ST RATES ON EXISTING DEPOSITS RETROACTIVE TO JULY AUTOMATIC . ' REGULAR PASS BOOK GOLDEN PASS BOOK 90 DAYS TO ONE YEAR I Min. $500 ) .. ONE YEAR TO 2 'Ii YEARS I Min. $500) 2'/i YEARS TO 4 YEARS (Min. $1000) FOUR YEARS I Min . $I 000 ) 5 °/o 51/2°/o S•/2°/o 6 °/o 6 '/2 °/o 7 °/o FREE checking accounts no m1n1mum balance BANKING HOURS: MONDAY THRU THUR $DA Y 9:30 To S:OC • FRIDAY 9:30 To 6:00 SATURDAY 9:3 0 To 1:00 HARBOR & BAK ER -979-4200 ,\fc mbc r t1f fr(fl'ral Deposit l us11rnncc Corp. I DAILY Pl LOT Just ~ . '\~ ' with Tom urphine Don't Mo1ikey • With Streets TO 'niE BARRICA DES : Some of the good folks dov.-n Mission Viejo way are yelling these days for the scalp of Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers. All this, just because a triG of streets got blocked oil. The issue in\'olves traffi c flow in the Viejo rommunily. It developed that some residents felt that streets like carranza Drive, Cordillera Drive and ~1onlilla Lane were becoming raceways for through traffic as folks cut out onto Jerooimo Road on their way to shopping and school. Complaints relative to this alleged con· clitioo brought a look from the Orange County Road Department. The road peo- ple dec ided that a solution might be to barricade the three streets so people oouldn't speed out onto Jeronimo Road anymore. WElL. THAT DID IT. Pretty soon you've got l'leighbors marching at the barricades demanding that the streets be opened again. Some of them are carrying placards with uncomplimentary slogans about their Fifth District supervisor. Some are mounting a cry for the recall of Caspers. So the solution is simple, right? 1\Jl Gaspers has to do Is order the barricades torn down and the street reopened. WEIL l\1AYBE. But after the reopen· ings, just wait until the finlt kid gets hit by a fast·moving auto and the other side -the folks "'ho wanted the roads closed in the first place -v.·i!I be out there car· rying their own placards, calling for Caspers' hide. Thus Caspers is learning another great truth in local politics. You may jack around with the tax rate, fidd1e in the govenunental personnel department and make grand speeches about the en· virooment. But close somebody's streeti;t budclY. and you've bought yoorseU real . trouble. Clearly, a neighborhood street and where it goes -or doesn't go -is a real gut issue. It compares to messing around with the pi ckup dates for garbage and trash or the increasing of charges for service thereof. INDE'E.t, THESE Issues are not just eome theoretical musings in government balls. They deal with the neighbhorhood, the famil y, and the American \Vay. You mess around with these and whole governments can be loosed out right on the left ear. You don·t need a Watergate. Just fid· dJe with the water rate. Even the Mission Viejo Company is nervous about y,·hat's going oo in the streets of their community. Marty Russo, director of community relations for the company, surveyed the st reet barricade situation and thoughtfully commcn ied : "I think these barricades may prove to be an unv.·orkab\e solution to our traffic probJerns .. .'' That may prove to be the understate- ment of the YL·ar. MEANWHILE, observers are reminded that streets and roads have long been an issue in the F'iflh Supervisoria! District . Opponents used photos of v.·1de. vacant and unused county roads aroun d l..aguna Niguel's Rock'-\'ell plant 1n the C.'.l mpaign against former supervisor Alton E. A!\en. Now Ron Caspers has the seat. And he has some road problems, too. You suspect Alton Alle.n might be ~ig· gling a bit. calculating how lucky he is to be out of ii all. TutMl•r. Julr 24, 197) Lightning Blamed • Ill St. Louis Crash \.IPI Tt--11 RESCUE WORKERS EXAMINE TURBO·PROP PLANE IN ST. LOUIS SUBURB Witness Says She Heard "Boom Like Lightning Followed by More Booms" Hijackers Blow Up Plane BENGHAZI, Libya (AP) -The hi· jackers of a Japanese jumbo jelliner blew up the Boeing 747 at the Benghazi airport a few minutes afte.r they and their 137 hostages slid down an emergen· cy ch ute. The hijackers were arrested. Passengers and crew members who had been held hostage since Friday had run about a quarter of a mile from the plane when explosive charges set by lhe four hijackers went off in the cockpit. Libyan troops armed with submachine guns arresled the four hijackers. mE IDJACKERS who seized the plane shortly after it took off from Amsterdam last Friday kept it on the ground with 139 other persons aboard for nearly three da ys 1t Dubai, a Persian Gulf sheikdom. Monday they released an elderly Services Slated For Flyi11g Ace Rickenbacker MIAMI (AP) -Th< body of Capt Ed· die Rickenbacker, World \Var I daredevil hero of the skies who became one of the leaders of American aviation. is being cremated and will be returned to the United States Wednesday for burial . Rickenb~cker died Monday of heart failure in h Zurich, Switzerland, hospital. He was 82. Eastern Airlines, the company Ricken· backer built from a small operation into a major corporation, senl a plane to bring back the ashes. Members of 1he family were reported aboard the plane and will join t\lrs. Rickenbacker, who was at her husband's bedside when he died. The ashes will be buried later this week in Columbus. Ohio, Ri ckenbacker's birthplace. Rickenbacker was called "the ace of aces" in honor of his exploits during World War L He v.·as credited with ~stroying 26 German aircraft, including a number of the fam ous Red Baron's Flying Circu.s. Jn 1941, he \.\'as seriously injured "'hen the commercial airliner on v.•hich he was riding crashed near Atlanta. Japanese couple from among the passengers, had the plane nown to Damasctls and, after ·three hours there, ordered it on to Libya. Everybody aboard slid down the emergency chute after the plane came to a stop at Benghazi, on the Mediterranean coast. Members of the crew said no one was hurt during the evacuation, bul blood was spurting from a cut above the eye of one old Japanese v.•oman and her glasses were smashed. ALL 111E HOSTAG~ looked worn out by their 3'h..ctay ordeal, and some ap- peared on the verge of collapse. ll: Japanese terrorist serving a life term in Israel for the Tel Aviv airport massacre and that they also Y."ere seek· ing $5 million ransom . A wounded Japanese crewman who was released after the plane landed in Dubai sa id the hijackers included a Japanese, a Lati n Anerican, a European, an Arab and a Latin American woman who blew herself up accidentally with a hand grenade in her dress soon after the takeoff from Amsterdam. But the pilot of the plane, Capt. Kenzi Konuma, told newsmen at Benghazj that there were three Arab men, one Japanese and the woman. One young Japanese hostess kept tell· •==== Jng Libyans lrying to help her; ·•t'm all right, I'm all right." Then her knees buckled, and a policeman carried her away in his arms. Security me n kept newsmen and photographers away from the wreckage of the plane while the passengers were loaded into small buses and taken to the tenninal. Benghazi airport was closed to civilian traffic after the blast. WHTLE IN DUBAI, the hijackers iden- tified themselves variously as Sons of the Occupied Territory, Mt. Carmer Martyr Sada and the Japanese Red Army but never made clear whether they were af- filiated "''ilh any known Arab guerrilla group. Nor "A'ere their demands ever made public. But there \\·ere unconfirmed reports th at they demanded freedom for DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtlivtry of the Daily Pilot is quara11teed MoftN Y·"'•id•vr II Ytu do ""' ~•¥• Your ~...,. •Y S:JO p,m,, c•ll Ind your copy w!lt IHr ~t"Ouqllt !• Y<tU. C•"• l •I 11_.., unlil 7:JO p.m. S•ll.tnl•' Ind S\lfld1y: ti , ... 0• ... , rectlYI ,...,, c1py by I 1.m, Si!unl1y. •• I 1.m. S"ndtV, c111 t ftd 1 copy w/11 a. lf'l"'9111 r. , .... C•llt 1r1 tPtft Wftlil 10 I .II\, 1,1ephoMs M11t o •• ,.. c ...... 1, -'•»• ..... ., 441,..nr Htrlll .. 1! H""llf\t:left 11•<11 '"'° WitthTtlfltler ·-· ••••.• 1*1111 Sift c11 .... nt•, C•,O•l•IM l•ICll. S•ft J11•R Clt>hlr-. OMii H 1nl, i<l~lll l.1t111M1, 1....,._. Hie""" •••• ffl·lflt 36 Perish; Pilot Says 'He Flew-Into Tornado ST. LOUIS (APl -The pilot of an Ozark Air Lines plane that crashed in a St. Louis suburb thinks he flew through a tornado and is sure the plane was hH by lightning. Authorities say at least 36 persons died . C>-lark Flight 825, which originated in Nashville, Tenn., and was carrying 41 passengers and a crew of three, craShed into a wooded ravine Monday night dur· ing a violent thunderstorm. The Federal Aviation Administration said Arvid Linke, pilot ol the turboprop Fairchild 227, radioed shorlly bcfbre the crash that he believed he was in a tornado ,and that he had been hit by lightning. Authorities recovered tapes of conversations between Linke and the control tower at Lambert Airport and began today to attempt Jo detennine the cause of the crash that "lit up the sky." A WITNESS TO the crash, Debbie Schwab, said she heard a "boom like lightning followed by more booms." Mrs. Schwab said her husband ran from their home and saw a ball of name. "l heard a loud crash and then another crash," said Howard r·orter, a resident of the area. "It sounded like an ex· plosion." Porter said he leaped a fence, ran to the scene and assisted another man in removing bodies from the torn fuselage. "I saw a bolt of lightning come from nowhere," said Joan Weber, who was on her back porch at the time of the crash. "Then r heard a high whine, a scream, and lhe trees exploded. I couldn't see a plane." A BRIEF FIRE followed the impact at 3:45 p.m. (PDT) as the plane disin. tegrated, knocking down trees and strew· ing power lines in lts path. An FAA spakesman said the control toy,•er at the airport lost sight of the aircraft on radar about a mile from the. airport as it descended to an altitude of about 600 feet. Authorities said today they had reports of eight survivors in several area hospitals. Aniong the injured was Llnke, who authorities said was carried from the plane's wreckage. 'lbe extent of his in- juries was not inunediately known. The Red Cross said Beth ... Williams, the SPORTSWEAR plane's stewardess, was among the vie- lims. The plane left Nashville ~1onday en route to st. Louis. lt had made in- termediate stops at Clarksville, Tenn.; Paducah. Ky.; Cape Girardeau, Mo; and ~1arion, Ill. Winds peaking at 37 miles per hour ac· companied a downpoor ot nearly two tnch- es ol rain during the brief storm that came at the time of the crash. TWO GIANT OAK trees stopped tho plane's descent just short of an unoc- cupied gymnasiwn on the campus of the University of Missouri.St. Louis in suburban Normandy. Conditions at the airport, althougb bad, were described by W1 FM official as "not bad enough to close down opera· lions." * * * Passenger List On Ozark Flight ST. lOUl5 Cl.IP!) -Hert 11 1 111! of tilt >5 ~1Hfl0e'1 •nd °"' 1'9w•rdes1 kllltd In tilt c•a1n Mor>d•Y n!11ht of Ol•rk Alr LIMI Fll11/11 IOt •I SI, Louis: 1. Jltt Seth Ann Wlllltml, St, lauh l'9w•t0et.1. '· Mr1. 1-ilVIM Rull!Og•. M11rr1y. l(y. J. Mlts P1mel• Rull~, Murr1y. Ky, •. John G!ISI, C•.Dt Glr1rde•11, Mo. 5. R. M. Rasl'I, Map!.lon, Ill. .. a.rt Hllll, Mu""'""°"" Ill. 1. Wiiiiam Walton!, Ckarlotht, N.C. I. Mark Wiihite, 1•, Amarillo, Te•. 9. No•mlln A~n, Ct1rltllvl/!f, TMn. IO. Mar~ 8oerlo. 11. J. Gramblhlirr. 12. Henry Tibbs I~. Elmer H~n11«1. 1•. 8ob Bw<:tiw, P..,l.lelfl, Kr. 15. Robert Fl.ic11t-r. 1&. L. Dvwellu~. 17. Armando Pirrtt, 11, HO\llton. 11. Gttr1ld Tucker, Bueno P•rk, C11lll. 19. John Olebold. 2tl. M'1. Jahn Oltbold. 21. Ruswl1 L•n•. '12. 8 111 Pl'lllllitS. OelroU. 2'3. Frank Wl!1l1m Stxtoo. 2•. Mrs. Shllfi.tt. 2S, Jllhn BartO<I, Suttle. 25. Oorls Conlin. 27. Jll~ Ooy!O!. ~. Or. A. IC1tr1nldn, '9. Mrs. R. MOOrt. Ja. Jeffrey Moort. Mt' &Oft. 31. Ou1ne Mavblf'ry. 32. Pl'llf S!&dr. Plldui:•h, Kv. JJ. R~ M(k!MU, Ch1nute, 111. ~-Mr. Roger. lS. Mr. l-.i. 36. Mr. Thom11 or ThornPMlfl. T,,,. 1urvlY"'11 wtrt: T: ,lrvld Linke. $1, Ckarln, Mo., !hi PllGI. 2. Mich.-! Wllll1mt, St. L.o1111, tn. COPiiot. l. St1w1n Slklvlll, XI, ChlcllQO. •. James F,._n, 39, Arll11g!on, Te•. s. 8at1111r1 Robtrtson, Creilwood, Mo. 6. Tlnll Conlin, 6. Oetrol!. 1. Mick.-,. Cordln, S. Oetrolt. I. An unklentllllld lwn~ 111rr. Tornadoes Spread Havoc 10 Hurt Sli g htly in South Dakota's Capiuil I 111<"91 ol '"'" In °"" ""'1r llfll ~1art m!dnlcrl ! W1t10, hi! )~ IT'ii'!\ !)tit"°"' f" tnictoo, r.•wv ••!nt ,.,9111 11'1•-" 1klfr m1t1~111"'' c"~"~a \Ol~ fl-1"'0 •"Cl ~-1"'0 -11-- 1'•1• lo ~•lly clOUd'I' "hl' or•v•Ol>d -lftOtf rtolori\ ouhldt ttM MIO· COllllMftP, T~411,trh befol't dt"" •Jl'IOl'd ,,_ M 11 .\f'Utt, Clllff., 10 .. tt l'f\Ottll•, .... rll , l'ld N••••ll""· (111• Coaslal Wealher Nlg/11 Ind mon'llf19 low CIOlld1 llonO Ille toll!, otllttwl~ lllMJ llltrnoonl 1nd cl .. r ftltil'lta., to.11.i l'lleh• M•• ~. lcrwt 5$, Horftrwesl wlndl U IQ :io ~""'' oH P'Oint C~lon t l'ld Ol.lttr C,..nrwl 11/IMI. Li.tir ta modtrlll• (t\OCI In 1111!'1'.-. l"'tl'ld 1"'1Ptf'tWt'" 'lllO• from '°"'°' W1tw ltmPfl"•lvrf v . Sun, llfoon. Tides TUESDAY, Jllf'( H $«-Hl9!1 l·01 p "" Second L-lf·.Sl 11.1t1. WlDNlSo.t.Y, Jlilf U First 1-dOll t:l l •.in. f 1'11 Low 11.H •·"'· 1-• $1<;ond HIOl'I •:10 p,tft, 6.11 Su,., rlta ~:st•.!TI., Ml• t :OOp.m. ~ • toll1J.Uo.fl'I. Pt W11t"9r .. MON., THURS., FRI. 10:00 -9:00 Tuesday • July 24th Westcliff Plaza · • 17th and Irvine ' TUES., WED., SAT. 10:00 -6:00 • Newport --• . Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 205 , 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JULY 24, 1973 N TEN CENTS • ues are on I er D11Uy Piiot Slllf Pl\oto··· ··CHASE ALONG .PACIFIC-OOAS:r .HIGHWAY ~NDED IN LAGUNA NIGUEL; DRIVER SHOT HIMSELF Nol"fl!'rl·llNch P•lrol"'l!n f;harl'5.(t\o<in la'(W•lifalH Sun• After SpMds ol 90 MPH Through Traffic Cha~e Ends-I Dead Newport-Laguna Run Ends • Suicide in By .j,;\CK CHAPPELL 01 Ille D•JIY Piiot Sl1ff A high-speed p:ilice pursuit from NewPort Beach to Laguna Niguel ettded in death '-1onday as the man police from three agencies chased· placed a gun to his head and fired. Jerry H. Greooble. 28, of Alameda . died at South Coas{ Commw}ity Hospital at .~;,,s p .. m .. sllghUJ~~e !~-~wo ~u~~-' alter tfie chase began in C01"9na del Mar. An _ autop~y w.~s , scheduled · today ··to detennine lhe~exact ca use of death. The chase' bfgan in Corona del h1ar after police were alerted by residents or Cameo Shores. A 'voman told officers the bearded man had been making in· coherent statements to her 8--year-old - grandson and had told the lad he was God . As the \Voman went into her house, Grenoble reportedly called out that he would come in and get her ii she didn't come out. Police stopped the car minutes later but the gaunt driver sped away as they walked toward him. Police units from Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and the California Highway Patrol raced in pursuit of a late model Volkswagen driven by the bearded suspect at speeds of 80 to 90 miles per hour through heavy .summer afternoon traffic in downtown Laguna Beach. The chase ·ended at, the entrance to The Shores development at Niguel Road on · • Pacific Coast Highway in Laguna Niguel gs the foreign car skidded out of control off the road and lhe Newport Beach police unit careened into a block waif beside it. \ Grenoble apparently shot himself at that time by placing the muu.le of a .2Z.. caliber 11 and R revolver in his mouth and pulling the trigger. Not hearing the shot police officers from Laguna Beach and Newport Beach . closed in,~guns drawn, and 'ordered •the man to exit the vehicle. When he did ·oot · Laguna, .Beach patrolman Terry Temple approached the sµspect who was holding the gun in his l•rt hand and look.lhe weaPQP. Bleeding from the mouth and ears Greneble was lifted from the car, handcuffed ind laid face dov.,t on the grass where...unbulance a1tcodant1_pick· ed him •• Jet•r and nlslled him, to the "" Ita l jl•Jo , .• • •. uu$p . •·we really don 't know why he ran. We -·ent to investtgate a report ind when '4't got there he ran.'' Newport Beach dctec· any connection.'' Oyaas saia. Oyaa~ he doesn't knOw •·b:lt the suspect was doing in Newport ~a<!b a.nd declined ,to speculate on a COl\Oeet!Oll between the-dead man and the death o( 11-year-okt Linda Ann O'Keefe found strangled cln the" b><k"· bay ~•My• this rt!Ohth. ) 0 111y ,.;1o1 s11r1 ~Mt~ VOLKS'(/AGEN WITH SHATTERED WINDOW DRIVEN BY SUSPECT Po1trol Unit Also Crashed Against Wall of Niguel Shores •·'J'hore is no .indication that there is anf connectlon," Oy!as saiCt Grenoble used a pistol stolen lrom Los Angeles ' atOng with a number of other weapons, sherllf's Sgt. Bob Reed said .. No othfr wea~s Wert ,found in t~e Veh!cle, offa:.r.t wdl . -.aid • criml' lab report ·on the gun and exact ·number of sbc)ta•Jire!i 1'1!uld ,oo · rortbcOming. Reed' said that104.ber.than an a'rrest in 1966 for petty the'!t Gr.noble had no r<COrd t(lat ol6<tJ:S knew or at UM time. "His acUoos were unusuaJ, he was act· ing strangely in the area," Reed said ex· ptainlng what steps led to the Ne\\'port Beach department's __!!temJ>!~ trafflc stop of the car in Corona del Mar. . Reed said there is no indication Iha I the suspect fired at anyone other ttlan hlmstlf. After Ncwporl Beach Pollet received the call of 11 suspicious person who may have been dnmk or acting strangely in tho Ouneo Shores community. two police units y,·ere dispatched to the scene . En rwte, they observed a vehicle matching tbe description of l h e su$p\cious per9M>'s car. Tile bluo V°"""11aen was atopped by Pa1rolmcn Charles :'llor1n and \Vall Furmann. Reports indicated oHicc.rs had been ad· vised the suspect was passi bly armed. After tbe car was stopped in the vicini· ty ol A1oming Canyon Road and Pacific Coast Highway,. office rs drew their 3ervice revolvers and ordered the man :o exit: Grenoble put the car in gear again and headed . south at high speed toward Laguna Beach. Bolh officers ran to their units and gnve chase and radioed for the aid of the Newport Beach police helicopter. During the 11-rnile pursu11 \\hi ch in-- \'Olved the two Ne14'JX>tt Beach 11nlts. a Laguna Beach patrol car and 1 .... 0 C~IP units as ,.,·ell as the helicopter. the speeding Volkswagen s" Cl'\'ed and dodg· ed through traffic attcmpfing to ev:ide the pglicc i1nits. Newport patrolmen reported oocomlng traffic on congl!Sted Coast 11Lghway was (arced off the road ~vcral limes ln avoiding htadon colli~ioos: '41th the fleeing vchiclt. Ora"'ing close to lhc car. OUicer i\lotin !See CHASE, Pip !l Witnesses Describe S11spect Uy JOllN ZALLER 01 111• 0.11., '"''°' it1fl Newport Beach police today released an artist's composite drawing of the man lhey believe ma y have abducted and kill· ed ll·year-old Corona del ~iar school girl Linda Ann O'Kecfe two week.! ago. Police said information for the draY:· ir.gs came from two witnesses who oMerved Miss O'Keefe getting into a late model van driven by a curly haired man estimated to be 2'1 to 30 years old. \Vitnesses said the incident took place about 3 p.m. on r-.larguerite Avenue. the slrect the young girl normally \valk cd on her "'ay home from sun1mer classes she y,·as attending at Lincoln ln1ermediate School. Sh~ disappeared on Friday, July 6, and \Y:il foond dead Saturday in a ditch along Back ~)' Drive by Upper Newport Bay . Cau* of death \\'as strangulation. Police said they have had inlormalion about the suspect and his turquoise~!· ored van since "early . in the in· vestigation," but were reluctant to make it public. "We didn't want the suspect to know \Ve had any information about him," ex· plained Capt. Donald Oyaas of the detec· tive division, Oyaas said that If the suspect became worried, he might flee the area. But after following up literally hundreds of leads in the two weeks since the crime. Capt. Oyaas said a decision was made to release information in the hope that the public would provide additional clues. "\Vhat we 1vant now is for · someone tn recognize !he man in the picture and tell us about it," he said. "He has a very distinctive face.'' Oyaas said the man was estimated to be 24 to 30 years old, wHh medium leng th curly brown hair and an unusually "long face." A distinctive featu re. he said, was the suspect's droopy eyelids. "If anyone knou·s a man like !his. they should recognize him from our composite draw· ings." Oyaas said the l\'itnesses observed the o·Kccfe girl getting into the suspect'.!! va n \Vhil c driving past in a vehicle or their 0111n. He said they did not stop. but were certain they reco~nized the gi rl get· ting into bright turquotSe van. lie added. however. lhat the t\\·o witnesses had never before seen lhe O'Keefe girl. Oyaas said the girl apparently got into the van under her own power and did not seem to be under duress at the tinle the witnesses observed the event. Oyaas urged anyone with informa~ion about a person resembling the suspect lo call the Ne\vpo rt Beach detective division at 673·2211 . • I l ' ; , t COMPOSITES SHOW SUSPECT IN LINDA ANN O'KEEFE SLAYING Caucasian, 24 to 30, Brown Curly H1ir, Droopy Eyes, Tann.cl Sl1op1•ers Contplaita Newpo1·t Prices Jump; Baco11, Eggs 15% Hike u,.r T•ll•llol• BOOSTING THE PORK TABS Up, Up in Chicago Duvalier iu Char11e "' PORT AU PRTNCE, HAITI (API President Jean-Claude Duvalier ass•Jrcd countrymen r-.tonday !hat he remained in "full command" follo\\·ing a scril!s of ex· plosions that dam aged the prcsidcntl.11 palace. By WIULUI SCHREIBE R 0 1 ''" 0~1-, "n•t ''"" FoOO. prices are of( and runnlng 1n Newport Beach as a result in the thaw in President Ni1on'1 frttz:e laat wetk and grocers surveyed today say there 1tUt may be a long v.·ay to go. A chetk of several Newport markelt indicated !hat price3 on most commodity items such as pork and bacon and egg!I have jumped 15 percent and a few pro- duce items are shoWinC signs of taklng a sharp upward t.um any day now, r.l ean y.•hire. the people paying the spiraling <'ClSts for food are complaining aboul it unanimously. Shoppers qu<>Slioncd al Richard 's Lido :'.larket. "·here prices arc not known to be diseountcd, \1•i1hout exception said food costs have increased notlceablt across the board in just the past few days. "I market e\'ery day lo help keep track of my budget ," said Ritchie Lancaster of Ney,·port Beach. "But even doing ii that way ," she 1aid, "l noticed an increase in many things - especially meal." i\1rs. Lancaster said she was aware o[ !ht' 1ncrcast'!I for lhe first time over the Y.('('kend. ,\lrs. June Rolh said she's definitely no11ccd increases on lettuce and meal.! and some packaged .goods. "It's gone up a couple of pennies on almost e\•crything. since last week," said ~!rs. Roth . who shops once a week. George Spink. manager of Albertson's !\larkel in Corona del r-.rar, said his pro- duce prices have held the line so far but he thinks they will soon go the way ol his other commodities "Pork has gone up IO cents a pound in the last few da ys and eggs are now around 79 10 8."i cents a dozen depending on size:· he said. Spin k said the eggs y.·rre ll9 to 75 cen ts a dozen last week. South Coast Shipyard Bought by Investors Spink said he doesn't know for sure if prr>d1ct1ons that eggs will hit $1 a dozen v.·111 come true hut he said, ··t heard they tSee PRICES. rage %1 Orange Cout South Coast Shipyard. Newport Beach's first boat·bullding plant, has been purchased by a group of Corona del r-.tar investors for an est imated $1.4 million. it \.\'as learned today. The 4Q..year-old shipyard, which oc- cupies a string of weathered buildings along Ne\\'PQrt Boulevard between 21st and 23rd Streets, has bee:n sold to \Villiam Blurock and Partners by Anthony Industries. a Southgate sv.im· ming pool company which owned it for live years. Blurock and a li~cd partnership made up of his y,•ife, s veral architects and some cnginctn, sn they plan to spend the next fn·e lO 10 )' ars giving the old facility a facelihing job. ··we hope to preserve the boat-bu1Id1ng tind add a dcsign..:iricnlcd office cenlt:!r '>''00rt m.arin..oriented people can do their business," Blurock said. blurock said !her~ wlll pn:>bably be a ha\f-doztn offices, some marine retail stores ape! continued boat-building but he said the structures will be cleaned up and made. more flltractivc. "\\1t doo·t intend lO change th e character at all." he said. "\Ye "''ant to put in some landscaping and generally make it look better." Blurock said a number of other in· vestment groups have already been bid· ding for lhe property for use as a restaurant site but he said there are no plans to use the 485 feet of waterfront for that kind or acti vity. Blurock said some of the buildings will h3ve to come down to bring the nrca up fo rode but !here 14•ill !lt1ll be 37.000 square fer! of noor area lo "·ork "''1th. South Coast Shipy;ird is :i lnndmark' in Newport Beach and "'as lht' first 00.11 building and .repair facility In NC\\l>Qft Harbor y,hcn Prectcd in the late 1920's. \\'hen \\'orld \Var II rolled ilroun<l. th(' '}~rd COO\'f'rled to COMUuetion of fa sl Na\j' patrol craft such as 11ub-chascr$ and mines\\'e<·perit. After lhc war, owner Walter F'ranz btgan bulldlng tbt: fast racing sailboats of the Rhodes class and several olhcr designs. Franz sold to AnJ.tlOny lndwtries IS.. SIUPYARD, PIK'%) Weather Coastal skies \Vcdnesday will again be cloudy .during night and morning hours, but the sun is tX· peeled to break 1brough about Il a.m. Temperatures will range in the high sixties \\'it h a sunny alter· noon forecast. The low will be flO degrees. \Valer temperature wlll be 64 . INSIDE TODAY ll11atkers b/c:1v up a Japo11.r.se J<'tlit1rr at tht Benglta:i Airport ~11ortlrf a/tttr tll tlJ a11.d lht'r 137 hoslnQl'! ,,hrl do1r11 mt emtra r.1e11cy t"ltute. Sfc story, Page 4. I <, """ L~' U MtrflH D<D "'""''' .... ,. lrj11-.1 "'" .. , Or•lltt C4'UlllY 11 ,,two ....,,., ,. ,_.. lt•ll ''•dt Mlltt!•ll ,t>lt Tltn"'*I n T-..t•rt l'NJ '#Ml"''' ·-,, .•.• w-. .......... , I Ehrlichman Disagrees _With Nixon ... WASHINGTON ~t\PJ -John D. Ehrlichman today quoted President Nixon as sayin13 In ~1arch that thl• 1971 Ellsberg b~k·lfl-\\'a<; "a vital na11onal security inquiry " "'e:ll within his con- stitutional po'ft·er! and obligaUons. Nixon Sllid tl.·lay 22 that he didn't authorize 1hc break-In, didn't know about it until recenllv, and would have dls11p· proved it if brOught to his attention. Ehrlichman denied trying to hide the illC'ident from FBI ngcnts investigating last year's \V:1tcrgate burglary and ~·1retapping. saying he had bet n told that the Justice Department already had the Information. He said the break-in at the office or Danlel Ellsberg's psychiatrist was a prop- er way to track down those 'A'ho betrayed government secrets, said any government oUlcial would understand that and keep the break-in confldential. and said even the public would agree if only news media would properly infomi them of all the facts. Testifying before the Senate Watergatt' committee. Ehrlichman also accused ousted White House C.Ounsel John \V. Dean Ill In general ternu of lying to the committee. Ehrlichman said he believes he is personally innocent of any wrongdoing. He said he wants to answer a number of accusations against him. Saying that national security con- siderations still prevent him [rom answering some questions, Ehrlichman said the Ellsberg break-in was perfonned by the White House S p e c I a l Investigations Unit, popularly known as 1he "plumbers," that included G. Gordon Llddy and E. Howard Hunt. Both were tat.er convicted in the Watergate ·wlretap- ping. Ehrlichman said he didn't find out about the break·ln until after it happened Sept. 3. 1971. But he said he didn't con- sider it a potential embarrassment for the White House b<!<:ause it was a proper way to invettigate leaks of national security lnfonnation. By contrast. former Atty. Gen. John N. 1"1itchell said he considered the Ellsberg break-in one of the "Wbite House hor· rol"s" that he ccnsclously hid from the President for fear Nixon wouJd "lower t.he boom," di sc.lose everything and lose the election to Sen. George McGovern. Ehrlichman said Nixon didn't consider it embarrassing, either. "On the first occasion when J did discUss this with the President, which was in March, he expressed essenlia11y the same view tRat I have just 11tated," Ebrlichman said. "That this was an im- portant, a vital national security inquiry and that he considered lt to be well within the constitutional, both obligation and fUnction of the presidency." SD Tuna Vessel ()perators Strike SAN DIEGO ( APJ -Operators of 26 tuna fishing boats have agreed not to sail from San Diego until canneries raise the price for the fishermen's catch. '"The boat owners feeJ that because there has been only a SS-a-ton raise in prtce since the first of the year. the prices aren't commensurate with in- creased operating costs," Lester , Ball- inger, executive director of the American Tuna Sales Association. said Monday. The 26 boats are some of the largest in San Diego's 100-boat tuna fleet . From Page l SHIPYARD ... live years ago. Blurock admits reconstructing lop- quality boatyard facilities will be a cost- ly, time-consuming job. "We will have to rehabilitate the docks and with the ecology thing, we 'll have to install equipment to make sure none of the waste materials get into the harbor;· he said. Oll:ANGI co.t.n H DAILY PILOT nt. Or•-Co.Ill Dlli!LY PIL01. '*'"' Wlll(J'I II ~on«I ll'lt Nf wt. Pre3', 11 publ•Mltd DY W.. 0.•"9• c ... i l Pul>l,.11tf>ll C-11~ 5~ ••It MhhOl'I\ ••I -hi·'""• M°""'fY ltirOl.oOI> frlO•~, IO• C<nll MUA, N1wpo1I BU<h, H""•lng!on l!tA~hlrov~ltln ll•llfy, L•gu,.. (Iner.. l•vl.,.IS"'1dlflM<.IC •nd S•n C,.mtntel '~" J 11<111 C.•p1Ur1no A J,"lllt •19"'"•1 tollllOn II !M>Pl,.htd M1ufdttt •nd $11nclt\'t. TN Pfiflc:IPtl IMIO!tlrllllt •lft1t It e! HO Wt'! .,t '''"'' C<ntt Mtw, '-l\1ror~11. ,.l., Rolitrl N. w,,,. Prn."""' '"" """1111111' J•ck R. Curl1y \'kt Prn.il!ttlt l-l'ld 0.-.i 1Mro1tW Tiio1111i K•••il Ital tor llio11111 A. Murpkl"' MtMtlfil (OllO< L 1'1t1r Kti•t H-""'1 111<11 CITY dlror N_,.n h«llo Offke l))) Newport l o11l1•1rcl M1 !1!119 Ad .. r•1ii P.O. 101 1111, t266J ...... °""" CO.It Mttt ~ Ull Wf'll l1y Sir"' U,11111 l!fftfl: 122 l'W•I AYlfllOf """"'iftt..., 111(11: 1n1s '""' ""''"''11 $tn Cllllllftlll JU Hortll II C.1111"' .... T .. ....._ (71 41 Ml-4121 C.....,... A-4 ........ MJ·l671 c.oy.ltflt, un. o.,.,,., c;o.11 l"llbli.l\lllt ~ ,.. _, .-i... mu.tr'"-. tdlltrfl'I IMJIV " .,.(~fttltlfl'lfl'l!t ""ti" ""' ... ,~.., "'"""'1 .... ,11. -...... ie."' ~, ....,..,. S~ tit ........ NW 11 C"ll MtM. """'"""'· .-Ulltfllfl ., c1rr1tr 9'M ~I !It llMll UJ S llWl!trlYI lftlllt9"1' -.tlntt..... ··" """'"'"'· ' ~---- VPITfllltlltlt 'VITAL SECURITY INQUIRY' Ehrllchman Testifies 'President Would Abide By Ruli11gs' WASRING'J'ON (AP) -A White House spokesman said today there is no ques- tion President Nixon would abide by court rulings, but refused to discuss what Nixon would do If the U.S. Supreme Court orders him to release subpoenaed tapes and documents. "There's no question lhat he v.·ould abide by court rulings," said Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren. add· ing. "But I am not going to get into a hypothetical discussion on lhis particular case because we are at a particular stage in a very complex legal situation." \Varren a1tempted to ha\·e it two v.·ays at another point , "'hen he said, "The President abides by the law, but v.·e are in a situation now where the subpoenas have just arrived at the Wh ite House, and this is what I am addressing this morning.'' He would give no hint what legal tac- tics Nixo6 will take in response to sub- poena5 from the Senate Watergate corn· mittee and special prosecutor Archibald Cox, exctpt to say a decision would be announced by Thursday. 1"1eanwhile, Atty. Gen. Elliot L. 1 Ricbardson~sald be believes Nixon has "substantiat legal and constltutlonal roundation" for refusing to give up the sought-after documents and tap c recordings ... which Nixon concedes can't prove his innocence. But Richardson called for Nixon, his boss, and Cox, his technical but in- dependent subordinate, to ''try to work out some practical means of reconciling the competing interests at stake." Richardson thus seemed to be sug- gesting an out-of-court compromise. Asked at a news briefing how the White House would respond to the subpoenas. Warren said the office of the presidential counsel was studying the "very complex legal situation involved" and that "after such study will take appropriate action ..• within the time specified in the sub· poenas." He reported that all three documents call for a response by Thursday. In response to a question, Warren said that Nixon of course v.·ould make the final decision on actions to be taken. End Sought To 'People Pollution' fn the \vnke of a huge. rowdy party in \Vest Newport late last month that left one man S('riously y,·ouudcd by police bullets, residents of the area have demanded the City Council take action lo ab<it.e such nulsances. Several people wt\<) live in the 39th Street area told <.'OUncilmen fo.1onday afterOOQn the situation ls btcoming unbearable. 'There are big parties all the time that go on unlil the early morning Y.'ilh noi:re and kids drinking ~r.'· said Thomas BW1dy of 3901 Seashore Drive. "There has been some incredible harrassmc.11t of people by these kids." Bwidy said cars driving down the streets in the area have been attacked IJy dozens of young people v.'ho "climb en the hood and even onto the roof and I don 't know v.•hat damage that does." "The city has t.o put some teeth into law abating thi s nuisance," he said. "This is people pollution.'' Councilmen "'ere tnken a b a c k somewhat by Bundy's demands and were at a loss to dctennine how people can be controlled if they aren 't caught breaking the law. Bundy suggested the crux of the prob- lem is absentee landlords who take no interest in who they rent to. He also snit! landlords should be held responsible for the actions of their tenants. Mayor Donald ~1clnnis, who represnls West Newport Beach on the counci.1, re- quested the complaining residents COO· tact the owners of troublesome apartments and tell them the problem. In the meantime, he directed City Al· tomey Dennis O'Neil to rev i e w ordinances related to such problems to try and come up with an enforceable solulioo. Mcinnis also ordered Community Development Director Richard V. Hogan to send inspectors into the area to make certain rental units are occupied onJy by the legal number of people and that ii· legal units have not been installed. Bundy claims there are several duplex· es that have shacks in the back that arc occuped from time to time with young people out for a good time at the beach. From Pagel CHASE ••• reported he couJd observe a v;eapon In the man's hand and that by lhe suspect's action it appeared as if be was preparing to shoot al the patrolman's car. Helicopter observers Dying over the chase scene reported that the driver had appeared to be loading a gun during a portion of the pursuit. Newpcrt Beach Lt. Bill Blue said today that In attempting to evade capture near the end of the chase, Grenoble drove hi s car over the curb and Officer Morin followed him , blocking escape with the patrol vehicle. The foreign car stopped just before colliding "'ith the block 1;1all, however, the patrol vehicle slammed into it. Officer f\.1orin was uninjured in the crash. Aside from the suicide death, no other persons v.·ere injured in the in· cidcnt. Mishap Kills Sister SAN LORENZO (APJ - A teen·age boy accidentally shot and killed his sister after finding a rine under a bed in their parents' home here . the Alameda County Sheriff's Dept. said. Lt. Eugene Saper said \Vayne Kelly. 14, found the v.·eapon J\londay and apparently jokingly ain1ed it at his sister Sherry , IS. Newport Council Okays Big Canyon Nature Park Newport Beach councilmen. on a split vote. l\londay nighl agreed to establish iln eig ht-acre nature park in Upper Big Canyon on land donated by the Irvine C-01npany. The park. bet ween Har bor View l-fo1nes und Irvine'!> ne"' Baywood Apartm('nts on San Joaquin fli l!s Road. v.as contro- ''C~in l becaust some coonciln1en felt there \\'ould be liltlc public access lo it. Council1nnn Carl Kymla, one of the objectors. f;i 1lc<l al lhc.Jnst minute to get a requirement for A park ing lot in the specifications for the nAture park that were Approved on a 4·3 vote . JoiMg Kymla In opposition were Coun- cilman Paul Ryckoff and f\tayor Donald r-.tcinnis. The mayor balked nt the approval on different grounds. however. tie wanted the city to complete a state mandated study of the effects of flooding should the Big Canyon R~ervoir. in the hill! at the uppt~r end of the canyon . give way. ··There's no question in my mlnd that a nature park is a good thing," Mclnnis stressed , "but it is not the proper time until we complete our inundation study." TI1c action also called for Newport Beach to cornmlt $.10.000 in fundlJ t.o re- imburse 1be Irvine Company over the next two years for I.ht cost of develop- ing the park. And later on 1he agenda rouncilmcn were schedull'd to approve ll SS0,000 ex· pendllure for lhe flood study. This prompted i\.fclnnis to say : "I don't f~I right !lttlng up here and spending $.10,000 ror a nature park then later in the evening spending ~.000 to find cut U we should or not.'' Irvine Company general plannlnR ad- ministrator Larry Jl,foore said there "·ould be no conflict in taking both actions. He pointed out that the state legisl:i- tion requiring the study intends to de- termine onw v.•hat damage v.·ou]d occur if there is a break in the dam and v.•hat v.·onld be done to evacuate people. ··n1ere is no indication in the lcgisl:i- tion that this means that If the area could be inundated. you shouldn't do :inything there.'' Moore said. lie and trlclnnis go t Into a brier 4!X· change later in the meeting when ~1oorc pointed out that the only things planned for the park is landscaping, "There v.•111 be no playground equipment or ball field!!." he said. "You may be talking about some shrub5 and grass, I'm talking about $30,000 of public money," Mcinn is snapped. "But we're talking about a big chunck of ground." ~1oore said. "Were talking about a big chunck or mont:y ." Mcinnis shot back. Kymla and Ryckoff again urged a de- lay saying they wanted to l'iee If other community organizations could help fi. nance the park. Coon !Iman John Stare. v.·ho supported it, had oointed out that !ht. park v.·as backed by local school officials v.·ho ht1d deluged the council with lcller5. "The council obligated hstlf to Require the park a year and a half ago," 5aid Vice Mayor Howard Roger~. nolln g In mlnut.et of the M8rch 13. 1972 m('f'ting supplied by City Clerk l,auni L"glos that the count:IJ had agreed to 1ccept the park pending approval ol pl1ns Jnd spedflca· tlnns for developing It. -~-. •neroine' Dies Balboa Isle Her Story 'Saved Father's Life' Unit Hits ESCONDIDO (AP) -A> he looked at the .kldnaper holding 1 pistol to bis head that d•f· industrialist James Hawthorne tal~ed aloud about his dauihter Linda Carol -"sort of plump and happy, with a truly beautifllf life." ·Selection --j7 tora· h1 ii]jo\JtLl.nda and now she was operated on for brain cancer," Hawthorne says of that n101nent of terror Oct. 6. "Suddenly, there was a rapport. flis attitude towards· Ille changed completely. I know that Linda saved my life.'' Although a ransom or $186.500 was delivered, J~awthorne escaped and a man suspected in the kidnaping was Arrested before the rnoney could be picked up and was later convicted. 'f!1e story of Linda Carol llawthorne ended less happily. After suffering 14 months with a 1naUgnant brain tun1or. the 9-year-old girl died Sunday in Palomar Mc1nor1al 1-lospital. The funeral was today . USC Teacher Now Eligible, Back in Race David C. Hen ley or Newport Beach is back In the running for possible ap- pointment to the vacant Fifth District scat on the Orange County School Board . The assistant professor of journalism at USC, originally declared ineligible because he was registered to vote in Los Angeles County has re-registered in Orange County. Henley, 36, of' 2662 Circle Drive, joins a field of five other candidates to fil l the unexpired term of Roger C. Anderson of llwitingt.on Beach. Anderson resigned five days into his last year on the board to move to the state of Washington. County trustees will appoint a suc- cessor, after completing interviews scheduJed in early August. Henley and his wife, Ludie, have three children, two of whom attended NewJXJrl Heights School. They have lived in Orange County two and one-half years. He said today he registered in Los Angeles during the recent Presidential election because his family had moved there briefly while their house was being renovated. He didn't know he was ineligible for appointment to the county board until he read a story in the Daily Pilot. He said county Superintendent Robert Peterson told him be could still be considered after re· registering. Applications for the position are being taken until Aug. 2. Employes of any Orange County school district aren't eligible. Candidates must reside ln trustee area five, which follows the same boundaries as the Fifth Supervisorial District represented by Ronald Caspers. It includes Costa ~fcsa, Irvine. Laguna Beach, Newport Beach , San Clemente, San Juan Capistrano, Tustin, portions of Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach, Capistrano Beach, Dana Point, El Toro, Jl,'lission Viejo and South Laguna. For more inforn1alion, conlact the department of Education at 834.3908. Colombia Blaze Takes Five Lives BOGOTA, C.Olombia (AP) -Officials say a short circuit caused a fire that roared through Colombia's ta 11 est building, kllling at least five persons and injuring ISO. But several persons said they heard an explosion Monday as the fire broke out. An investigation was under way. Tu·o of those killed jumped from 13th· story windows. Many of the survivors 11·ere pulled into helicopters that landed on the roof of the $7 million Avianca Building. !be headquarters of the Colom- bian airline. Fr0111 Page 1 PRICES ... have. already hit $1.19 in New York and we should be grateful to live in California where they are only BS cents." Spink and several other market managers are pretty sure everything in general will rise a little bit. "All coinmoditles will go just as high as the demand will allow it to go," said Richard 's general 1nanager Robert Blythe. "lf people keep buying three pounds or bacon for every two we pvt out, the price will go over teh $2 people are predicting." Blythe said his market had to hike prices on many long frozen items because "we had gotten to the point where we were paying more for them than we could sell them for ." Ernie Camp, owner of Newport Produce Market, said the problem on produce prices .. wll_l be compounded when the farm strikes start taking effect. "Everything is ready to be picked this week and they are all waiting to see what will happen," Camp s,aid. But for now Camp said produce is about the most reasonable buy for shop- pecs. "Now is the time for j!Veryone to become a vegetarian," he said. "It's bet· ter for you and you'll save a little money for a while." 2 Guards Killed By Inmate's Fire At Ohio P1·ison LUCASVILLE, Ohio (AP ) -Two guards at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility were shot and killed by a prisoner today, Gov. John J ... Cilligan's office said . The unidentified inmate ~·a11 a~ prehended and hospitalized with injuries, said 1"1ax Bro"'"· executive assistant for com1nunications in Gilligan's office. T1vo other guards ~'ere overpowered by l he armed convict but were not injured before the convict v.·as subdued, Brown said . The governor's office said other guards subdued the Ct>nvict, beating him down with a gun butt. He has been hospitaliz- ed. the spokesman said. The dead guards were identified only as Strauss and Underwood and the spell- ing could not be immediately confinned. ~;aj. Lowell G. ltidenour, acting superintendent or Ohio Penitentiary in Columbus, said he understood the rebellious convict at Lucasville formerly had been on death row. "I can't identify him yet,'' he said. The governor's office said offlcials had not yet found the source of the gun used by the convict. 1'he outbreak, v.·hich did not involve other convicts , came during the noon lunch hour. WALi( SOFTLY! An angry Balboa Island lrnprovemrn1 Association officilll todav V0\1•ed 10 takr Nr"·port Beach to cour't for :ippointlng Balboa Frrry O\.\'rX"r Allan Beek to tht city'!!. Ricycll' Trail~ Committtc BllA J>r(!siden1 Kenne th l~\.!!in said Bl'ek's presence on !he co1n1n ill1·l' l-on· sJltu tcs u coofli ct of interest. _He charged that Bee k's su1>1>0rt for :r bic.ycte . lr~il around !he prunarily resufent1:il island stems from the fact it y,·ould boost business for th e ferrv 1hat (.'Onnects Balboa Island at Agate A\'enuc "'1th the Balbo.1 Peninsula at Palm Avenue. Beek w<i s routinely reappointed to the comn1ith .. 'e. along with severu l others. v.·ithout comment by councilmen Monday night even though Elgin had attacked tl'lf' appointment during the aftemooo study session. "Beek bragged at a recent Bicyclf' Trails Colnmittee meeting that he makes more 1nooey off bicycles t h a n automobiles," Elgin said later to reporter s. Bicyclists are charged JS cents a trip whi le automobiles with a single occupant are charged 40 cents for a one·v.·ay ride. Beek Monday night said he couldn't un· derstand \vhy Elgin was upset but he made no additional comment. Elgin, . during the council's study session, said island resident s are adamantly opposed to allowing bicyclists to ride on the sidewalk that enc:ircles the island. Bicycles are allowed only on cer- tain PiJ1s of the walk now. "We are going to keep the island for islanders," Elgin said, "We don 't want 4.000 bicyclists from outside the area coming down here to use trails." The Bicycle Trails Committee has recommended. and both the Parks. Beaches and Recreation Commission and Planning Commission have endorsed, a proposed trail circling the perimeter of the island . The proposed master ·plan of bicycle trails is scheduled for a final public hear- ing by councilmen Aug. 27 be£ore thev act on it. · As now proposed, it al.so includes a trail in West Newport but does not define v.·hether it should be built on the ocean- front or in alleys behind the waterfront homes. Elgin said Monday night the BJIA will obtain the services of a lawyer to press its charges. "I can't give you his name tonight because the lawyer who advised us is a member of the Bicycle Trails Committee and he's going to appoirlt an attorney for us." Elgin said. Herring Franklin, a patboa Island resi- dent and member of the committee is a retired lawyer. ' Newport Council H·onors Mason Newport Beach councilmen ~1ondaY night adjourned their meeting in memor9 or fonner Irvine Company president. William R. Mason , who died of a heart attack July 14. Councilmen also adopted a resolutiorl honoring his memory. It cites his work in developing the Irvine Ranch lands arxl his contributions to a wide variety ot youth oriented programs in the Harboi- Area. · It read . in part: "Therefore be it resofved that the City Council of the city of Newport Beach does hereby honor the memory of William R. Mason and expresses ap-- preci~tion for his dynamic leadership, .devotion to corporate respon si bility and many lasting C<1ntribctions to this CQm- n1unit y." Many tim .. wa talk to people who I.eel that carpeting at $5.00 to $8.00 (carpet alone) per square yard is expensive. • A housewife who buys dress materials knows that she is unl;kely lo buy good material• for lelS than $3 .00 to $4.00. Also, a man might pay $1.00 for a fool-square handkerchief, which works out t o $9.00 a square yard. Can you imagine how these materials would. perform if you placed heavy furniture end walked on them 1 .Consequently, when you spend $3 .00 to $4.00 for carpeting, regardle1S of where you buy ii, don't expect loo much, walk very softly! ALDEN'S CARPETS o DClAPES 16~3 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA • 646-4838 HOURS: Moo. nw. n.ur.., 9 to 5:30 -FRI. 9 to 9 -SAT, 9:30 to S • " 1 -~------------• -~---- Today's Flnal N.Y. Stocks VOL. oo, NO. 205, .2. SECTIONS, 30 PAG.ES... ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDA '(,_JULY 2.4. 1973 c TEN CENTS Mesa Panel Turns Down Sigi1 Bid Costa Mesa'~ emergency s i g n ordinance is intact today despite a challenge rrom ·a Newport Boulevard art store operator who appeared before the Planning Commission ~1ooday night. ' Arlan P, Hurwitz found no support among commissioners for his request to add additional signing to the Aaron Brothers Art ~1art. 1722 NC\\rport Blvd .. {or hardship reasons. l·lis request for a zoning variance allowing a 120 square foot fascia sign v.'as rejected by a 4 to O vote. . . That sign. ~lus the already existing pole sign, would have given the Art l\1art t"·o-and-a-half times as much square footage as is allowed under the emergen- cy <>rdinance. Jt was argued by Hurwitz that the hardship clause allow~g exceptionst o the regulations applied because ~he storefront is already fitted with a Hghtrng "can" for the fascia sign. Earlier this year Costa ~1esa city of· ricials already made one exceptio_n for the Art Mart by allowing the pole sign to measure 145 square foot instead of the 112 ·square feet allowed by the emergen· cy ordinance. . . . The emergency ord1~ance 1s_ 1n effe~t until a permanent s1gn ordinance _is enacted by the Costa Mesa City CounCJI. The emergency ordinance sign standards are substantially the same as those con- tained in a "draft" version of lhe nC\\' ordinance. ,_.,...,. Retarded Patient Disappears Fron1 UCLA Dormitory No trace has been found of a 37-year· old patient from Fairview State Hospital in Costa Mesa who vanished from a UCLA dormitory last Thursday where he \Vas st-eying while participating in a ''retarded o\ympics." ' The man, idcnlificd as Paul Rios, is a male Latin, about 5 feet 6 inches tall, "''eighs 210 pounds and Y.'as \rearing a brown shirt, green pants and black shoes at the time of his disappearance. He is not considered dangerous. Fairview Hospital officials said Rios speaks some English and some Spanish and has relatives in Fullerton. He may be attempting to make his way tnere. Rios has been the subject of a search by UCLA campus police and Los Angeles police. Although no leads have developed , a hospital official expressed confidence that Rios would be found . ' Whitehead to Resign NEW YORK (U PI) -Clay T. \\'hitehcad. Prfsident Ni~on's ::01_n- munications director who gained notor1e· ty last year when he suggested that local stations refuse to run network news they considered unfair to President Nixon, will soon resign, New York magazine reported h1onday. The magazine said sources disclosed that W h i t e h e a d ' s resignalion will end the \Yhite Ho~'s attempts "to frighten the telev1s1on net"'orks and independent stations" into being friendlier. Orange Coast Weather Coastal skies \Vednesday will again be cloudy during night and morning hours. but the sun is ex· peeled to break through about tt a.m. Temperatures will range.~in the high sixties \\'ilh a suMy after- noon forecast. The low will be 60 degrees. Water temperature will be 61. INSIDE TODA l:' 1Jt;ackers blew up 11 !al'!lnese jetliner at the Be11gh.o:::1 Airport shortl11 after tlte11 otul !heir 131 liostaaes 1lid down an emer- oencu cl1utt. See story, Page 4. ' ~ ' L.M. ltt'lll I AM l.Mlftn I, C.ilhnll• s Mtvi.t '2-U Clnt!llH )t.)I Mv1ll1l ,...... It C...-iln IJ N1tMNI Htwl 4. 1 C........... It ~·CMMY ll De•l'll IMtkn 11 IYMt ,_,., 14 ••11w111 '""' • '"'" 1"11 l"~•lllfM!tt Jt-U Si.di Martlltlt 1 ... 11 'lfl•Mt U·U Tt'"111e!! tt ,_, t'llt llt-rll II, '4 ""*°""' 2'-tS H-II W-'• H•I IJ>.ll '" k"ke ,. ........ ...... .. , Breakfast Costlier Pork , Baco1i , Egg Prices Up By JOllN SC JIADE 01 t11e D1llY ,.ill! S1•" Chain grocery store managers ln Costa ~lesa and Jlun1 ington Beach arc talking very little about the possibiU!y of a ,,..,holesale price increase now ·that President Nixon's Phase fo~our economic rules have taken eff~t. Instead, most of them refer questions to district or regional offices for answer· ing. (Related picture. Page 14.) COMPOSITES SHOW SUSPECT IN LINDA ANN O'KEEFE SLAYING Caucasia n, 24 to 30, Brown Cu rly Hair, Droopy Eyes, Tanned Sparse thou gl1 Iota\ ansy,·ers may bt. cer tain price trends are developing. Thus far . only the retail pri«s OJI pork. bacon and eggs SC<'nl to be sho1\ing any significant increases. Regular. non- perishable grocery prices arc holding a1 a st.eady lev('I. New Clues Disclosed In Slaying of Girl, 11 Chain store pork prices have increased as much as 15 cents per poWJd, white bacon. especially nationally adverlised products, is also significantly up. Egg prices on the average are eight cents a dozen over last \\'eek's price. By JOHN ZAU.ER Of lltti OellY ,.Ost S1111 Newport Beach police today released an artist's composite drawing of the man they believe may have alxlucted and kill- Ei'd 11-year-old Corona de! l\.1ar school girl Linda Ann O'Kcefe two weeks ago. Police said information for the draw· ir.gs came fron1 two witnesses who observed Miss O'Keefe getting into a late model van driven by a curly haired man estimated to be 24 to 30 years old. Witnesses said the incident took place ahoul 3 p.m. on ~tarcuerite Avenue. the street the young girl normally walked on her way home from sum1ner classes she \\"as attending at Lincoln Jntermediale School. She disappeared on Friday, July 6, and v;as found dead Saturday in a ditch along Back Bay Drive by VP,.,Per Newport Bay. Cause of death was strangulation. · Poli~ said they_have bad infonnation .about the suspect aMl his turquoise-col· ored "an ' since "early in th e in- vestigation," but were reluctant to ma ke it public. "We didn't want the suspect to kno\v we had any information abd\Jt him ." ex- plained Capt. Donald Oyaas of the detec- tive division. Oyaas said that if the suspect became worried, he might flee the area. But after folJoy,•ing up literally hundreds of leads in the two weeks since the crime, Capt. Oyaas said a decision was made lo release information in the hope that the public would provide additional clues. "\\!hat we \Vant now is ·ror son1eonc to recognize the man in the picture and tell us about it." he said. "He has a very distinctive face .·· Oyaas said the man "''as estimated lo be 24 to 30 years old, with medium len gt h curly brown hair and an unusually ··long face ."' A distinctive feature. he said. was the suspecfs droopy eyelids. ·'If anyone kno"·s a man like this. they shol.}!d recognize him from our composite draw- ings." Oyaas said the witnesses observed !he O'Keefc girl getting into the suspect's van while driving past in a vehicle of their own. He said they did not stop, but were certain tbey>tt.togtllzed the girl get· ling into bright turquoise van. He added , however, that the two witnesses had never before seen the O'Keefe girl. Oyaas said the girl apparently got into the van under her own power and did not seem to be under duress at the time the witnesses observed the event. Oyaas urged anyone with informalion about a person resembling the suspect to call the Newport Beach detective division at 673·2211. "We can't even get any farmer John's bacon, y,•ieners or sausa ge now, so Y.'C have to use other brands ...,.e normally don't handle.'' said Jerry Andre. manager of Ralphs U1.:trkel. 380 E. 17th Street in Costa ~lesa. Andrr said the farmer John's national chain has had to shut doY.'n some of its Bob Hope Horne, Ill ill ion-dollar Drea111 , Burn~ PALt\l SPRINGS (AP l -Comedian Bob Hope's million-dollar desert dream house bumed down today, just as it \\'as ~ing completed. \,_The Palm Springs Fire Department said it had no immediate idea what caus- ed the blaze. Hope was not at the si te. The imposing home overlooked th~ e:<· elusive resort area. Hope had claimed the mushroon1-shapcd ceiling alone cost $6.54.000. The building. located on 2.3 acres. reportedly rontained 29.000 square feet or noor space. Newport-Laguna Pursuit Ends iI1 Suspect's Suicide Last month Hope said of the house: "t\1y architecls say it will be one of ~e most beautiful hon1es in t~.t world. It will certainly be one of the bi~ges~ in the \\'Orld. \Vhen irs finished . 11 Y.'111 make Bing Croshy"s house look like an outdoor privy. That house will be so big you_ ro.ul~ hold next year's Super Bowl game 1n 11. Planners said the total rost of the home \\'OUld reach ~ million . H?,pt" reportedly rcfcn·rd to 1t as "The Hut. By JACK CHAPPELL Of Tri. Oltlf ,.Jlol Stiff A high-speed JXlliCe pursuit from Ne\vport Beach to Laguna Niguel ended in death Monday as the man police from three agencies chased pla~d a gun to his head and fired . Jerry H. Grenoble, 18, of Alameda . died at South Coast Community Hospital at 5:45 p.m. slightly more than two hours after the chase began in Corona de! Mar . An autopsy was scheduled today to determine the exact cause of death. The chase began in Corona del J\far alter police were alerted by residents of Cameo Shores. A woman told officers the bearded man had been making in~ coherent statements to her 8-year-old grandson and had told the lad he was God. As the woman went into her house. Grenoble reportedly calll'<S out that he wou.ld come in and get her if she didn"l come out. Police stopped the car minutes later but the gaunt .iriver sped away as they walked toward him . Police units from Newport Beach, Mesa Collision Injures Woman A SB-year-old Laguna Hills woman wa! injured 1'1onday at Sl>e was thrown from her car during a collision with another ''thicle on the BMstol Street offramp of the San Diego Freewsy in Costa Mesa. The woman. Identified as Matilda J. Skebe, 3221 B Via Carrizo, did not rt· qulre hospitalization. Mrs. Skebe W8$ tttated by her ov.·n physlcian for wounds suffered in the 9:30 a.m. crash. Roger Allen OeYoung . SO, of Los Angeles, drlver of the other ~r. was cited on charges of failure to obey • stop Sign. PoUce said DeYoung'• vehlde smashed Into hirs. Skebe's economy sedan, throw· tng her out onto the pavement 1.s lhe driverle.ss car conlinUt'd for 100 feet and wtnt ovtr an embankment. • Laguna Beach and the California 11ighway Patrol raced in pursuit of a lat e model Volkswagen driven by the bearded suspect at speeds of 80 to 90 n1iles per hour through heavy summer· afternoon traffic in downtown Laguna Beach. The chase ended at the entrance to The Shores development at Niguel Road on Pacific Coast Highway in Laguna Niguel as the foreign car skidded out of control off the road and the Newport Beach police unit careened into a block wall beside it . Grenoble apparently shot himself at that lime by placing the muzzle of a .22-- caliber H and R revolver in his mouth and pulling the trigger. Not hearing the shot police orncers from Laguna Beach and Newport Beach closed in, guns drawn, and ordered the man to exit the vehicle. \Vhcn he did not Laguna Beach patrolman Terry Temple approached the suspect who was holding the gun in his left hand and took the \\'Capon. Bleeding from ,the JTl()U!h and ears Greneble was lifted from the car, (See CH1\SE, Page ZI It was patterned after th e Trans \\'or!d Airlines tC'rminal at Ne1v York's Kenne~y Airport. It \\'as to be the biggest home in Palm Springs. The Hopes had shunned publicity about the house and even posted an armed guard al the building site to repel reporters and curiosity see~ers. J-fopc's \\'ifc. Dolores, said the couple. planned lo move ln nex t February. Construction began last Januarr. I-lope who \\'as at his home 1n Toluc:1 Lake near Ho\Jyy,·ood, was not available for comment. 2 Navy l\Te n Arrested SAN DIEGO (AP) -Ty,·o Navy men have been arrested in ronnect1on ~·ith the cutting of engine \rires in fo~r jrt fighter planes at ~liramar Naval_A1r Sta- l ion. the Navy says. The vandalism was discovered t1\·o 1\·ecks ago in a routine inspection or four fl4 Tomcat jets and :i spare engine, a Navy spokesman said ~·!onday. Ae said the planes have been rep<iircd. ~Heroine~ Dies Her Story 'S aved Fatlier's Life' ESCONDIDO (A P) -As he looked at the kidnaper holdin g a pistol to his head that day, industrialist James llawthorne talked aloud about his daughter Linda Carol -"sort of plump and happy, with a truly beautiful life." ''l told him about Linda and how she was operated on for brain cancer," Hawthorne says of that moment ?f terror Oct. 6. 11Suddenly, there was a rapport. 11is attitude towards me changed completely. t know that Linda saved mv Hfe.'' Although a ransom of $186,500 was delivered. 1-iawt.hornc escaped and a man suspected in the kidnaping was arrested before the money-could be pi cked up and was later tonvicted. . The story of Linda Carol Hawthorne ended less happily, Aft~r suffering 14 months with a malignant brain tumor. the 9-year-old girl died SundJly in Palomar Memorial Hospital. The funeral was loday. plants because of the high cost of meat, making Y.holesale priet:s for the grocer e\'en more than ..,.,·hat they can sell it for retail. George Coffey, manager of the market Basket Store. 77~2 Edinger A\'e. in Hun- tington Beach. said his store h:id its St.'C· ond best week in i1s 12-year hi.stor)", "(,11ristmas \\·eek is aly,·ays the bes!," he explained. Coffey said he had a shorlaR'.l' or rhickcn last "~ck because he sold so much. But the supply is UJ) this "~k \\hich he tern1ccl "already :i bii;:gt'r L>uy111.s:: "'cck than last \\C<'k." lie added ground beef ""as also :i good seller . .. They are buying so much meat 1ha1 t don't know \\here I hey arc putting it ," hi• added. i\lost store managers say the> re \1 a.~ some increase in sales last week, but of no great significance. One spokesman of a Costa ~lcsa Al pha Beta Store noted "the &\'erage number of buyers \1·as about the same, but they y,·ere just buying in larger anlOUnts." "They seemed to be buying more dou· blc discount items ifl full case an10unts," he added. The generi1I trend then among the big !<tort' managers in Costa ~lesa and Hun- tington ~ach is an increase of pork, bacon and egg prices, and a y,•ait-and·st•e altitude on the resl. U,.1 Te....,_.. BOOSTING THE PORK TABS Up, Up in Chic•go El11·liclnnan Says He Ol('d Ellshe1·g Reco1·cl s Scl1eme \VASHINGTON I APJ -f'onner White House aide ~ohn D. Ehrlictnnan testified this afternoon thnt he persooally ap- prO\'ed a covert operation to gain access to the files of Daniel Ellsberg'11 psychoanalyst in Califomi;i. fie said he did not authorize the burglary lh<ll follo~·ed. but considered it legal for national security reasons. Ehrlichman lold the Scnale \\lalergale com1niltee th.1t v1hat troubled him about !he burglary . in September 1971. was not legalily but "that it \\"as totally unan- ticipated by me , unauthorized by me.'' The former domestic policy chief said President Nixon agreed with him that the operation \\·as \\ilhin presidCfltial po'A·crs. and capacities under the Constitution. Ehrlichman said i"us impression \l'as 1ha! Egil Krogh Jr., who SCl"\'ed on his staff at the \\'hite l·Iousc, author i1ed 1he brcak·in at the Beverly llllls office of F.l!:.bcrg's psychiatri st. lie confirmed !h:it hC .'.lpprovcd an Au(: I!. 1971 memorandum fron1 Krogh and /)avid Young , another \\'hitc House aide, 'Tccon1mend ing ··1hot a covert operation be underta ken lo examine :ill of the medical files still held by El1sberg's ~ychoa nalyst ... " Ehrtichman initialed I h ;i t 1,1•ith the notation : ''If done under your assurance that it is not traceable."' Ehrlichman denied participating in any cover-up of the \\'aterga tc \\'1retapping. said oustC'd \\1hitc House counsel .John \V. Dc:in Ill lied to !he Senale committee. and said he consid(•rs himself iruiocent of any y,·rongdoing. Charges againsl Ellsberg for leaking lhe Pentagon papers "·ere dismissed this rear after !he break-in \\'as disclosed at his trial in Los Angcl(•S. Ellsberg. in Los Angeles. said today hf' \1·ould havr no unmcdia1e commC'llt on !he Ehrlich1nan testimony . l::hrlichrnan said the secret \\'hJtc House in\'est1ga11on of !'.:llshcrg in !9il \1 as dcsigncd lo find out c\·eryth111g possible i1hout lhc people an cl circumstances surrounding h1rn "Thi• rca.~on 1 acquiesced ln the use or thi• term 'covert· hr re is th;it I y,·as not k(•e n on the coocept of the \Vhitc Mousr having investigators in lhe field ;ind kl'IO\\'fl to be in !he field," he sa id. Ehrlichm:in said that ~·ould nol hnve been desirable from a public relations virwpoint. He said that lo him. cover t meant> "!he~ people ~ould not identify themselvt'S &! 1nvestigatori of the \\·tutc lfOUS<' ... " Ehrhchman said he d1setissed the Ellsbtrg maller v.ith J>residcnt t-;ixon around t>.1arch :?I or 22 this year. lie quoted Nixon as saying he, too, con· ..:1dered the <>pc.ration . including the burglary. to be \\'ith1n the Pres1denrs poY.ers and obligations. Guard Seek · T riton SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The Coast Guard Monday launched a long-range s<'a.rr.h for the 31 -foot Triton, a sloop-- rigged trim11ran rtporled O\'Crduc at Los Angelts wllh three persons aboard. U,.1 T1...-.ie 'VITAL SECURITY INQ UIRY' Ehrlichman Testifies Neig hbors Beat Do1cn Dru1n1ner's Zo11e Re<1u e.<>t Rob<'rt l;eorge \\'rnie of Costa ~lega l1stcncd to the be:it of <t dif(crcnt drum- 1ncr ~londny night The 32-year-old mu~1e1an went ~fore. tht· Plann1n.1? Comrn1,.s1011 lo :1pply for a zone cxcrpt1on permitting him 10 teach pn\'tlt(' drl1m lt"ssons at his home on 138.1 c;arlingford St R\1l h<' \1•as dro"'flt.'CI out b\· 2~ llalC'crt'~t lra<·t re!'i idC'nts v.•ho compiaint'd lhnl noise :ilrcHdy said to emanate from \Vrate 'i; house was loud enough without adding the drum ... 1·hc co1nm1ssion turned down his vananef by a 4 to 0 \Ott. \\'r~te's argument th.it tlltre Y.'OUld be no noise because the drumming practice \\"Olllrl be on rubber p:ids failed lo win the support of his nc1~hbors. They clai med they "'ere annoyed by noise from frl-quent pracllct ~ssion5 ln- \'Ol\·1ng \\'r:ite and other musicians. \\'ra1e. who ch11ms to have soundproof· cd his stud10. adm11tf'CI today that music has driflcd Into the street but tlllt "no one had every mentioned a noitJC prob- lem ·· '"This whole th111g came as a surprise to me. :"\o one had ever complained to n1e before. I'd like to show my neighbors th:'lt rm not really such a bod WJY .'' -Ot....co::.•::IL::Vc...:.P::IL::D::_T ___ _:C:_ ____ _:T::"'.:'~day, July 24, 1973 Will Obey Court Ord er WASHINGTON (AP) -A White House spokesman said today there is no ques- tion Presidf'nt Nixon would abide by coun rulings, but refused to discuss "''hat Nixon would do if t.he U.S. Supreme Court orders him to release subpoenaed tapes and documents. (See F.ditorial, Page 6.) "There's no quC'stlon !hot he "\\·ould abide by court ruling s," said Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. \Yarren . add- ing. "But I am not going to get into a hypothetical discussion on this particular case because we are a1 a parti("Ular stage in a very complex legal situation." Warren attempted to have it tv.·o ways at another point, when he said, "The ?resident abides by the Jaw, but we are in a situation now where the subpoenas have tu.st arrived at the White House, and this Is what I am addressltlg this morning." · He would give no hint what legal tac- tics Nixon will take in response to sub- poenas from the Senate Watergate com· mlttee and special prosecutor Archibald Cox, except to say a decision would be .announced by Thursday. Meanwhile, Atty. Gen. Elliot L. Richardson said he believes Nixon has "substantial legal and conslltutlonal foundation" for refusing to give up the sought-after documents and t a p e recordings, which Nixon concedea can't prove his Innocence. But Rlchardscn called for Nixon, his bou, and Cox, his tedmlcal but ln· dependent subordinate, to "try to work out some practical means of reconciling the compeUng lntereats at stake." Richard.!On thus seemed to be aug· geaUng an out-of~urt compromise. Asked at a news briefing how the White House would reapond. to the subpoenas:, W1.trtn said the office of the presidential counsel was atudylng the "very complex legal situation involved" and that "after such study \l,'ill take appropriate actJon ..• within the time specified in the sub- poenas." Death Leap From the 16th floor of the 44- story Avianca Tower, Bogota. Col umbia's tallest building. a man jumps to hi s death. after a fire began raging through floors 13 lQ/27. At least five were ltillecY and 132 injured. Sanitary Board Returns Former Member to Seat He reported that all three documents call for a response by Thursday. Directors or the 1'-1idway City Sanitary Jn response to a question, Warren said District Monda y filled one or t\\'O vacant that Nixon of course would make the positions on the board which had resulted final decision on actions to be taken. from the conviction or Derek li-1cWhinney Newsmen tried to 1Jean from Warren and Tad Fujita in the Mile Square some hint as lo the course Nixon will adopt. agricultural lease scandal. "I can't speculate ror you what ap-Lowell Amo, 63, a fonner member of propriate action might be," he replied. the board who was defeated in 19G9 by a He promised newsmen would be slate including McWhlnney and Fujita. furnished detailed infonnation once ac-was appointed and also s e I e ct e d tion is taken. Asked if Nixon might simply ignore the secretary pro tern. subpoenas. Wamn said he did not want Amo had served on the board for 11 to get tnto a legal discussion about years be.lore his defeat. lie I! a retired available opUons. cemetery superintendent at Westminster To other questions Warren aald the Memorial Park, owned by the ~!cWhin- tapes covering two yeara of presidential ~ family. con!erences and tel~ne calla 11are'"-Roland Edwards was elected hal be.1Dg adequately protected" and are c rman aecure. · of the board, a position Fujita held "'lbey have not been edited," Warren before his conviction. u.1d in a response to another query. He The directors have yet to fill the sec· declined to say where the tapes are now ood position. located. Plane Crash Kills Countian A man reportedly from Buena Park was among the 36 per.900S killed Monda y night when an Ozark Alt Unes turboprop airplane was apparently struck by lightning and cruhed near St. Louis. Thirty-six of the 44 persons aboard the flight which originated in NashvlUC, Tenn., \\'ere kllled. 'Ibe Orange County resident was reported by Associated Press as Gerald Tucker. No Orange County address was available. The only other California residents listed "'ere ~1.rs. Robert Moore and Jeff Moore ~ Carmichael. For more additional details, see story and photo on Page 4. OU.N&I COAST CM 5 Touris ts Die In Plane Cra sh Near Honolulu JIONOLULU (AP) -A light plane car- rying tourists on a sight-seeing trip crashed into a reef shortly after laking off from Honolulu Airport today. Police said five persons aboard 1i,rere kill!XI. Four others were taken to a h-Ospital. There was no immediate inlor1nation on their eondilion . Police said the twin~ngine Bcechraft crashed into a reef about a quarter mile offshore. The plane was owned by Air llawaii, which leased it to Panorama Air Tours for the flight. No additional details ~·ere available.. Identities of !he vi ctims "'ere v.ithhcld pending notification of relati"es. Helicopters and fishing boats con- Tw9 Guards Shot Dead By Prisone1· LUCASVILLE. Ohio I A Pl -Two ic:uards at the Southern Ohio Correctional ·Facility \Vere shot and killed by a prisoner today , Gov. John J. Gilligan's ofrlce said. The unidentified inmate was ap. prehended and hospitalized with injurirs. said 1'1ax Brown, executive assistant for <.'()mn1unications in Gilligan 's office. Tu·o other guards "·ere overpov•ered by the arrMd convict but were not injured Ix-fore the convict \vas subdued , Bro\vn sa id. The governor's office said other guards subdued the convict, beating him down \rilh a gun butt . He has been hospitaliz· ed. the spokesman said. The dead guards were identified only as Strauss and Unde~·ood and the spell. Ing could not be. immediately confirmed. rv;aj. Lowell G. Ridenour. acting superintendent of Ohio Penitentiary in Columbus, said he understood the rebe lUous coovict at Lucasvillc formerly had been on death rovr. "I can't identify him yet," he said, The governor's office said offlcials had not yet found the source of the gun used by the convict. 'fhe outbreak, which did not involve other convicts, came during the noon lunch hour. The Lucasville prison. so new it still has not been officially accepted by the state from the contractors. has been lhe site of successive episodes of trouble. ibere ha\'e been guard strikes. inmate fasts, inmate strikes and a multitude of difficulties with the physical plant that is costing the state $.12.5 million. The prison bas about 1,250 inmates. Quake Jostle s 30-mile Area LAKEPORT (AP) -A moderate ea rthquake jostled at least a 30- mile area of Northern California to- day. No damage or injuries 1i,rere reported . Doug Rhoades, program director of radio station KBLC, said the . tf'mblor shook objects in his studio at 6:50 a.m. At about the same time, ~like O'Neil of Ukiah radio station KUK! experienced "a rolling sensation" and "took a look at the radio tower and it was y,·eaving back and forth a few times." Mutilated Bod y Found Near Yuba YUBA CITY (AP ) -Sutter County authorities are seeking the Identity of a brown-haired young \'.'Oman '"hose body \\"RS found with 29 stab wounds on a rural road south of Yuba City. Investigators said the woman v.·as \\"earing a brown and white polka dot miniskirt over a bikini swimsuit. Her body was found Sunday along Pleasant Valley road by a fisherman. She was described as being in her late teens or early 20s and v.·ore a St. Christopher's medal and a "Christ in Peace" medallion around her neck. KISS I NG ER ASKS OF BELL Y DANCER \VASHJNGTON fUPI) -Presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger had only one question when the shah of Iran arrii,red at the White House today: "\Vhere's Nadia?" Ki ssinger was referring to the Iranian belly dancer who plopped herself in his lap at a night club in Teheran when he accompanied President Nixon to Iran on a slate visit a year ago. After the incident, Kissinger quipped he was "trying to make the v.·orld safe for belly dancers." DAILY PILOT verged on the area to help in the rescue. -------------- TM Ol"•ll09 Coat.I DAILT l"IL.OT, wilfl ..._ldl Is ~ tM IMM·l'rn1, 11 .,w11....,. "' ,.,. Ot9flll'9 c.o.11 1'11111111111'19 c_.,. s-.- ,,r, 9dlll"'" 1rt ,w!IJ,..., ~' "'"-" ,....... ..... Coa!• Mnt, N ...... ,, ·~. H••'"t!noMn ltK!'l./f-ltlft Ytllti<, L_. •MC.II, !rvlM /S-ltO.c\ tnd 1411 CW.-hl/ s.~ J~n C1p111r1no. A 1l11tl• r.,aon.r lldlllon l• J1Ultll1-1.arwa1't'I •1111 lllnd•v•. filo9 p<ifl(lp.11 publltlll"t pl•"I h II lJll Wftl llY Sll'MI, Cffl• M.W, Clllfornlf, t2'2t. 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(AP) -T\\"O San Diego divers prepared today lo drop slov.·ly 245 feet below the surface inside a 12-foot cylindf'r that wilt serve as thei r base camp for a salvage assaull on the Andrea Doria. The two y,·ill Jii,re in the underwater home -called the "Habitat" -for a scheduled JO days while they attempt to cut their ~·ay into the sunken ocean llner that has eluded treasure hunters for 17 years. The Habitat has living quarters as v.·cll as air and communicati on lines to A tr-av.•ler moored on the surfAce. The divers fig ure they can .:o from !heir tank lo the sunken ship and retu rn. thu." avoiding tlmc--consuming decompression ascents after t'ach dive. The huge ocean liner lies on her side and the divers expect t41 be able to cut au t>.ntrance In the metal to get iruilde. An expedition spokesman said the fi~l attempt lo cut lnU> the ship 1n::iy be mad e late todey. He said all that is needed 10 Jcai,re thf' cylinder is pul on scuba gear and sv.•im out. \\lea ther at the dive site was reported good. In 1956. when !he Italian luxury liner and a S\\'edish ship collided in heavy rog 45 miles off Nantucket Island . the Dorla y,•as considered a virtual floating art ga llery. Cash. negotiable bonds . art treasures and jewelry \\'Orth a n es timated S4 million reportedly are on the sunken liner. · The divers s11y the art. money and je"·elry are still there, protec ted by the sharks and deep \\'alers of the stormy 1\\lantic. "The Andrta Dorla is the Mt. Everest of the seas." said Donald Rodocker, an organizer of the mlS!lon. "\Ve picked the ship because It had enough on it. but It's 11\so one of thOr.'le 'because It's t.htre' things." 1\odoc.ker, 'rl . ha!I !!pent 15 montbs planning lhe advt:nt11re with Ou'l!topher l~Lucchl. 22. Both learned. diving in the Navy. • ' -----------1r-1 .. ~ CHASE ALONG PAC IFIC COAST HIGHWAY ENDED IN LAGUNA NIGUEL; DRIVER SHOT HIMSEL F Newport Beach Patrolman Charles Morin Investigates Sce ne Afte r Speeds of 90 MPH Through Traffic USC Teacher Now Eli gible, Back in Race David C. Henley or Newport Beach is back in the running for possible ap- 1>0intment to the vacant Fifth District scat on the Orange County School Board. The assistant professor or journalism at USC, originally declared ineligible bccuuse he was registered to vote in Los Angeles County has re-registered in Orange County. l·lenley. 36. of 2662 Circle Drive, joins a field of five other candidates to fill lhe unexpired term of Roger C. Anderson of Huntington Beach . Anderson resigned five days into his last year on the board 10 move to the state of Washington. County trustees will appoint a suc- cessor, after completing interviews scheduled in early August. Henley and his wife, Ludie, have three children. two of whom attended Newport Heights School. They have lived in Orange County t\\'O and one-half years. · He said today he registered in Los Angeles during the recent Presidential election because his family had moved there briefly while their house was being renovated. !·le didn 't know he v.·as ineligible ror appointment to the county board until he read a story in the Daily Pilot. He said eounty Superintendent Roberl Peterson told him he could still be considered after re-rf'gistC'ring. Applicat ions for the position arc being 1aken witil Aug. 2. Employes of any Orange County school district aren't eligible. Candidatf's n111st reside in trustf'e area fi\'e, which fo\Jov.·s the same boundaries as the Fifth Supervisorial District represented by Ronald Caspers. It includes Costa ~lesa, Irvine. Laguna Beach. Newport Beach. San Clemente. San Juan Capistrano, Tustin, portions of Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach , Capistrano Beach, Dana Point, El Toro. ~1ission. Vif'jo and South Laguna. F'or more information. conlact the department of Education at 834·3908. From Page l CHASE ENDS FATALLY • • • handcuffed and laid fact down on the grass whf're ambulance attendants pick- ed hin1 up later and rushed him to the hospi tal. ''We really don't know Why he ran . We \vent to investigate a report and when '"e got there he ran,'' Newport Beach detec- any CQnnection," Oyaas said. Oyaas said he doesn't know what the suspect was doing in Newport Beach and declined .to speculate on a CQnnection beh'leen the dead n1an and th e death or I I-year-old Linda Ann O'Keefe found strangled in the bJck bay early this n1onth. "There is no indication that there is an y connection," Oyaas said. GrC'noble used a pistol stolen from Los Angeles along with a number of other weapons. sheriff's Sgt. Bob Reed said. No other weapons were found in the vehicle, officers said. Reed said a crime lab report on !he gun and exact number of shots fired would be forthcoming. Recd said that other than an arrest in 1966 for petty theft Grenoble had no record that officers knew of at this time. "His actions were unusual, he was act- ing'strangely in the area ," Reed said ex· plaining what steps led to the Newport Beach department's attempted traffic stop of the car in Corona de! Mar. Recd said there is no indication that the suspect fired at anyone other than himself. ...._ After Newport Beach police received the call of a suspicious person who may have been drunk or acting strangely in the Cameo Shores community, two police units were dispatched lo the scene. En route, they observed a vehicle matching the desf'ription of t h e suspif'ious person·s car. The blue Volkswagen was stopped by Patrolmen Charles lvforin and 'Valt Furmann. Reports ind icated officers had ~n ad- vised the suspect was possibly armed. After the car was stopped In the vicini- ty of 1'-loming Canyon Road and Pacific Coast 1-lighway, oH icers drew their servi ce revolvers and ordered the man to f'Xi l. Greno ble put the car in gear again and headed south at high speed toward Laguna Beach. , Both offtcc rs ran to th eir units and gave chase and radioed for the aid of the ., . Newport Beach polif'e helicopter. 1f During the ll·mile pursuit which in- volved the t\\"O Newport Beach units, a Laguna Beach patrol car and two CHP units as well as the helicopter, the speeding Volkswagen swerved and dodg- ed through !raffle attempting to evade the police Wlits. Newport patrolmen reported oncoming trafnc on congested Coast Highway was forced off the road several times in avoiding head-On collisions with the fleeing vehif'le. Drawing f'losc to the car, Officer Morin reported he could observe a weapon in the man's hand and !hat by !he suspect"s action it appeared as if he \l'as preparing to shoot al the patrol man's car. Hf'licopter observers flying ove r the chase scene reported that the driver had appeared to be loading a gun during a portion or the pursuit. Newport Beach Lt. Bill Blue said today that in attempting to evade capture near the end of the chase, Grenoble drove bis car over the curb and Officer Morin followed him. blocking escape with the patrol vehicle. The for eign car stopped just before c:olliding with lhe block ,.,.al~ hov.·evcr, the patrol vehicle slammed int6 it. Officer Morin was uninjured in the crash. Aside fronl the suicide death, nQ other persons y,·erc injured in the in· cident. Astrona11 ts Seen 'Ready to Fly' CAPE KENNEDY (U PI) -The Skylab 2 astronauts today practiced set- ting up a special gyroscope paf'kage they will take lo the space station Saturday to ensure the giant \'chicle will stay in a stable orbit. The pilots will carry the 145-pound package aboard their Apollo command ship to Skylab but 1l'ill only use it if patt of the falt ering attitude control systems fails com plete ly. WALi\. SOFTLY! • Many times we talk to people who feel that carpeting at $5.00 to $8.00 (carpet alon") per •quare yard ;, expensive. A housewife who buys dress materials knows that she 1s unlikely to buy good material• for le" than $3 .00 to $4.00. Al•o, a man might pay $1.00 for a foot .. quare handkerchief, which works out -to $9 .00 a square yard. Can you ima'gin'e how these materials would perform if you placed heavy furniture and wa lked on t~em? ConsequQntly, when you •pend $3.00 to $4.00 for carpeting, regardle" of whe re you buy it, don 't expect too much, walk very softly ! ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4 838 HO URS: Mon. Thrv Thon., t to S:lO -FRI., 9 to 9 -SAT., t :JO to 5 7 ] - -. . 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