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1973-08-13 - Orange Coast Pilot
7 ~ t ~ff----. ·-• • • • ur ·er IC I ill ·nun ...... -· -·~ ·--. . . . -. --.. ----. --. ~ .. -.. • • W~t!J . ' I• ThundershoUJers • Here on Coast!J MONDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 1.3, 1973 Bight -• , VOL. M. •a. m, I llCTIONJ, a PAOU • • • • • . • • • • • • • Consumer ' Prices and Running Off Meat Hunters Slaugliter Deer Jritruders who apparenUy saw I helpleio ani111a!a in an ltVlnt, Park ~n as ~ tempQraey ~ution ,&a 1he 'rrl~ ebort8ge ctit ~'"'ol • young doer during the we<kend and carried off the cilrcass, Orange P,unty Sherill's officers said today. Deputies said the intruders climbed the chain link fence sur- founding the animal pen at the park near Orange, slaughtered the deer and then dragged it out through a hole they cut in the fence. The deer was valued at $250. Thuu.dersliowers -. On Weather Age11da To11igTit . :rhundershowers -lhat's right -thun- dershowers are forecast for inland and possiblY coastal commwUties of Orange County tonight. The freak August weather brought rain to portions or Orange and Anaheim early today as thunderclaps rolled in the gra~ skies above. Commuters using the N e w p o r t Freeway are accustomed of late to the misty type of rain gray bummer-summer rnQlnings have produced. Today's drips I~ above·were big bold drops. 'Che National Weather Service con- tinued their existence. In fact in Riverside this mom.ink, thun'dershowers (lrenched the downtown area ln'62-degree temperatures. A surge of tropical moisture northward (See RAIN, Page I) ,Orange Coast . • Weather .More gloom is Jorecast for the._ . • morning hours Tuesday with a · 1 : 'slight· chance of thundershowers in ' the evening hours. Sunny in the : ~fternoon with highs of 70 at the i • '!Jeach.es. Lows in the 60s. •• : ~ . INSIDE TODA\' 1 ! "·As· Cambodian refugees con- , : li~ · to stream tnto t1ie capital , ~ ({Jfl 0/ Plinom Penh, the .. city11 : aim.art re po r t 1 reservations • ·booked up throUQ11 Augu•t· for' i ,~ippte trfling to get out of l~e . . ~oantl'l/. Set sto.;, and photos • ,O'Ji Paoe 2J~ )' 85 Persons After11.1ath ol A~~ident Said Dead LA CORUNA, Spain !UPI) - A Caravelle airliner of the Spanish Aviaco Air Company exploded in flight today while the pilot was malting his fourth : landing approach to La Coruna 's ck>ud· shrouded mountaintQp airport and fell in flames on a village below, an airline spokesman reported. The airline said all 85 persons aboard I.he twin·jet aircraft were thought dead and there were report$ that as many as nve inhabitants of the villaSe of Mon- trove also were killed. or the flight itself, the airline .said there is .. no hope. of survi.vors.~· Because of confusion at the village crash site and the dense clouds and rains, there were conflicting reports. · Police in La Coruna said rescue opera· tions were continuing and it was not definitely known whether there were survivors or any villagers had been kill· ed. A spokesman for La Corona airport and Spanish news reports said at least one person survived the plane crash. • , Dally 'il•t St.ft ,.MM The news agency EUropa Press said five inhabitants of the village of Mon· trove also were killed. The crash was the eighth in a series of fatal ace Iden ts · involving S p a n Is h airliners since early 1972. ORANGE COUNTY FIRE~EN·MOP t,IP AF'l'ER TWO,CAR CRASH SUNQAY IN IRV.INE ••. ~-Collision of Srri!!l'_C•rs •I, Red HUI •nd MoeArthur:~• ~l_ve -~ Hospil•I _ Iberia has lost three planes during the period, the chater company Spantax two, plus one plane damaged, and Aviaco, a subsidiary of Iberia, twp, wit~'iB total loss of 352 lives.r ' '.J Spain's worst air crash occurred last December when a Spantax ctmvair Coronado flipped on takeoff from Santi Cruz airport killing all 155 aboard. . ..Aviaco said the Ca'ravelle jet carried 79 passengers and a creW of six. An airport spokesman said "it crashed (See SPAIN, Page !)' SF BasebaUer Bo1ids Arrested Five }lospitalized -• . -i As Two Auto s Crash· in lrvi11e . A two-car collision at an Irvine in· tersection Sunday sent five people, two with major injuries , to ~1ercy Hospital in Santa An•. J>llllce reported. ' \::isled '•ffi· "good' coilditlon today by hospital authorities are Jeff Scott Taylor, 18, and Michael Gray, 12, both of Tustin. They were passengers in a 1970 Pinto driven by ~ark Wondolowski, 16, also of REDWOOD CITY (AP) -San Fran-Tu."ltin . Taylor suffered 'a broken elbow, clsco G_lants Ojlttlel®"·jj{,b~y Bonds, 27, · and cuts oo his orlght shoulder and hand was a,rre$ted on ~k~d driving .tl}arge9. in . the accident. · early lo<lay aftet rear,endJni andlh<r cat· Gray, wb<> had' a broken wrist and head at.. ~ speed,: the Highway· Patrol .'saidf injuries, Was uncohsclous when police of·. Dolli cars:were,.badlr dainllfled-'l'{o one. floors arrived at Red 11111 'Avenue and was hurt. .... ·tt -"' MacArthur Boulevard atioUi noorr &in-. Bonda'' new oar slammed 'liljito.411\e:rear; da9. ---· - of a small ·foreign iCir' "1 • 1bY,i C:O.,ta Mesa police said the car driven '· Fredeifck .D. '\lasset~ 18,· •I · og~ by _ Wondolowsl\I collided with a 1970 then oma.<hed lnto Ille ·•ealel\ . r on, Datsun dri•fn by David Bransky, 18, -Whipple Road here, a 5POl<esm.,i Said. \-~IJI. An•·, The "~" • "(ere "totaled," Bonds waa taken to $an Mateo tloupty' ·~; -" '' Jail in Redwood City,, where be . was Branslcy and his passenger, Diane booked !or Investigation of drunken drlv, l"alrc!illd, 17, '.Orange, and· Wondolowskl. Ing and driving without a lk<nle.. were ilbo liken to tMercy H09Pltal. They · He was . released on hl$ own were treated for minor cuts and releas· recognizance about an hour alter being ed, aull)or!Ues aald. , '· Victims of Sex Killer HOUSTON (UPI) -Sheriff's deputies today dug up from shallow graves on a Texas beach the 24.tb and ~th bodies kiU· ,ed during .a. Qtree,y:w,.,spree of.~ and sadism by two teen-lJ.Sers and a homosexual friend. -· The victims were wr~pped in black plastic bags and sprtnli:led wilh lime, like most of the others found during the past week al· three lOcations. · Officers, digging with a.back ·hoe an!'.f a giant road-grader, said they expected to • Golf Club~ Stolen : • E1·on1 Viejo Club A Mission Viejo veterinarian's golf game wefit to the dogs Suoday when he arHved at the Missioh Viejo Country Coub to find thal burglars-had removed ~is_gol! bag and dubs, from . the •storage area. · find at least one more body at the beachfront Site at High Island. "I think we got another one . down there," aaid Chambers County Sherill Louis:otter. · With the recovery of the 2Sih body, the mass murder equaled the worst such trag~y µi U.S. history. 'Juan V. Corona, 39, was convicted last January of killing 25 farm hands in C.llfornla. Officers on the Texas beach drove PARENtS CRITICIZE HOUSTON PO\,ICE ACTION-P•g• 4. truck! and. cars i~und the search site to g\lard it from onlookers. The bodies discovered today. were pull· ed from tl:le sa11d in an area ·covered by salt grass about a quarter rtitle from where two bodies were located Friday. The spot is ·about 35 miles east o! Galveston. · ~ Elmer Wayne Henley, 17, and David Brooks, 181 h,ave been cb4rged with mur<kr and admitted tak'llli parl In the homosexual slaylngs with Doan ~rll, 33. booked, a county jail sppkesman. said. A Police cited Branaky for failing to yield ..__..._~,,....--.,.....-,.,.--...... ~-,.. ""'1'1nfJ.s.scho!Jultd ~ l•;. ~ • to .thrvush tra!!ic. " · Orange County Sheriff's officers valued the loss of Norman Fohrman, 45, of 26871 Via Grando at more than '300. The theft is under investigation. Of!lcers IMI we<k dug up 17 bodies In- side a. liouston botlt shed and recovered (See BODIES, Paa• !) . -- ~; ~rr.I Big Fir~s Still Musi ' •I .. .. . ..... .. ~ ·:Give Notice By United Press lnternatktnal The price freeze was lifted today On everything except gasoline · and ~. A nwnber of major companies immediately saiii they would ask for price increases. Consumers will oot feel the full brunt of the price jump for some time because . under Phase IV companies with annual sales of $100 million. or more mµst .. giv~ the Cost of Living Council 30 days notice of such increases. · Chrysler Corp. immediately asked the council to allow an average $71 hike on 1974-model cars and trucks. Unless its application is turned down, the increate automatically will ·go. into effect beJore the vehicles go on public sale in late September. 1 American Motors is seeking an average $S5 price increase while General Motors · and Font have yet to file ap- plications. Spokesmen for the two largest . auto companies said they expected ap-~ plications. would soon be filed. Armco Steel Corp. in Middletown, Ohio said it was reinstp.ti,Dg price increases of sheet steel Products which had been scheduled but were not allowed under the freeze. The increase is scheduled for Sept 11. Reports ·from Sl)permarkets indicated lo{Kl prices teinained reasonably stable today.·~Prices tfad been out from under · ··the· ft'ette"'-fdr-·~':a 1riOl'tUh· .... ·under Phase JV, sellers can raise their prices, but only . as much as costs in· crease. . Gasoline and other petroleum prices will remain froien r for anothe"r Week. Beef will contirlU!! under price controls the longest, until Sept. ~. It is the freeie oo beef that htt broUght lhe most criticism on' Phase-JV. It remained , frozen when ,Other food prices were decontrolled June 13. While. beef prices cannot be raised the supply has <lwll/dled. A federal judge in Lincoln, Neb. tllme4 down a.• req~ !or an injunction seeking an end to the freeze on beef Jprlces. A JUdge In Seattle, WliSb., 'PromJsed a rul- ing today on a similar case. The ruling by U.S. District Court JUdge Warren Urbom in ·Uncoln was jssued (See FREEZE,' Page 2) ADVERl'lSING HAS ' 'DRAWING POWER' ' DaUy Pilot classified want ads have charbma. Look at this channer: '61 GALAXIE. Good trans· portatlon, 66,000 miles. $75 or make offer. (Phone N9.) . ' ' .. ' . .. . This advertiser called to 11 1 y • "Congratulftlons on the wonderful.dmr- ing power of your ads!" Dial the direct line -642-M78 -and let our cbannlnc ad·vl!or help you find some "dral'lnl power." • I ' Mol'lday, August l l , l 'JJ.1 Police Seek New Lead Pliotos of San Juan Wi fe to B e Iss ued By JOll:-1 VALTERZll 01 Ille O.lty .. lllf Stitt Orange County Sheriff 's lnvesligators today planned to issue new photographs of missing San Juan Capistra no housewife Rochelle White in an effort to seek new leads on her disa ppearance. Thus far the notebook appears blank despite intensive probing by co unt y of- ficers as well as detectives in Carlsb<td, where the woman's car was found aban- doned at her employer 's parking lot nearly two weeks ago. Spokesmen for the local depurtment said the original photo - ( o high school senior picture) of the pretty brunette di spensed to alt ttle news media -yield- ed no tlps from the general public. The issuance of newer, more recent pholos sho...,•ing a different hairstyle might yield something new to the case, they added. Teletypes to other police jurisdictions Real Tax Hike Sc liool Rate $56 Per $100 TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) -Rising taxes are bothering just about everyone, but be glad you don't live in the Indian Oasis School Dis- trict at Sells, Ariz. County officials announ""d today that the property tax rate for the district, which encompasses part of the Papago Indian Reserva· lion, will be $56 per $100 assessed valuation this fiscal year -a 900 percent increase from last year. The p roperty tax rate, which finances most school district ex· penses, averages about $2 per $100 assessed valuation in most other areas of Arizona. The reason for the jump at Sells, officials said, was that they do not expect a $200,000 federal education grant to be renewed. It made up a large part of the district budget last year. School officials declined to say if they. thou ght property owners would pay the tax. • Waldie Says Nixon's Villa Addition s 'Giant Ripofr Rep. Jerome Waldie (D-Antioch), the marathon walking gubernatorial can- didate, made it through gates of the Western White House today but never had a chance to see the controversial im- provements to President Nixon's seaside villa -installatlons which he termed "a giant ripoff." .. Security aide,, at the nearly deserted presidential compound said they were ac- ting on orders from Washington when they confined the candidate's tour to the presidential office complex on the San Diego side of the county line. "I was told that all the items that I wanted to see are on private property and arc not for public impection," Waldie saitl. "If a congressman represents the peo- ple, I should be able to see what the tax- payers are paying for," Waldie entered the compound carrying a detailed Ilsi issued recently by the General Services Administration showing every expenditure made at the compound for security reasons. The current total for such expenditures a l San Clemente is now pegged al $3 million. "I could have been shown structures that would not have endangered the privacy of the President, who wasn't even there," Waldie suggested. ''I couldn't FromPqeJ SPAI N ... on its fourth attempt to land in b,ad weather. Cifra reported the pilot had been told shortly before by the control lower that visibility dropped below minimum levels. The plane, on a scheduled flight from Madrid, made three attempts to land at La Coruna and had just started to circle the cloud-shrouded airport once again u'hen it apparently exploded in the air, the spokesman said. Most of its wreckage fell on an aban- doned farm house In the village oC Mon- trove, four miles from the airport. The airport spok esman said raruo COO· t.'.lct with !he plane broke off without any indication of anything being wrong with the plane, apart from Captain Lopez P ascual's apparent difficulU~ of landing the craft under tbe prevailing conditions . OIANGI COAIJ .. DAILY PILOT rll• Orl"'GI C~lll OAILV l"ILOT, wftll wllldl It ~("td !tit Nt•n -l"rn1, II 'tu1111..-WI' U. 0.l"'Gf c .. 11 PYblltll lftl ~l!Y. ~ r1l1 .011""11 ••t 11Ubll1Md, MIMtlrf """""" FrN1y, tor Co111 Mnt, """""' •Mdl. 11""1tlno~n 811clllFOUfll11'1 Vlllly, ~ llH~, lr~lnl/~&Odlf~C~ 1...S Sen C~/ S•n J111n CIPl•I••""· A 1111911 "'llontl lldnlon 11 Pllflli1~td S1turd1y1 Md luNMya, Tiie prloc\~t 11Ubll1lllr19 D-11nl 11 If Ja W•i ••Y .111..i, coi.11 Me11, C•lllof""-· nllm.! - ll.ob1d N, Wt.4 Prt:1icltn! I PICI Pwlll~ J 1d1 It Cwrl1y Viti ,,......,,, 1PICI CieM•ll Ml .... Otf Thom•• K1t•il EdllOt Tho..,., A.. M urp~i "• M-1"'9 ldi* Ch•t41t H. Leo1 1t1c••r4 ·p, Ni ll M1Jo1111t M~ f.•<i.r. see them because 1 was told they are too difficuJt to explain and this leads me to believe that the purchases made in the name of the President's security are not justifiable." One such lnstallation which stirred the campaigner's interest is an $8,000 system installed along the Santa Fe tracks in the President's front yard to alert the Presi- dent when a train is coming. Walcile said the rationale 1for that system was lhat it was needed because the noise of lhe·surf makes it impossible to hear an approaching train. Waldie termed that "a foolish e:r:penditure." The candidate, who is on a walking tour of Southern California, said that two other U.S. representatives are SMertedly arriving "pretty soon" but he does not know what sort of U:eatment they will rective nor the reason for their arrival. "If they are friends of the President I think that they will be treated differently than I was," he said. Waldie alleged that the GSA "is playing games with us and somebody is trying to hide something." The next atop on Waldie's 36-day lrek stretching 240 miles through Southern California is at Dana Point on Tuesday, followed by a stopover the following day in Corona del Mar and yet another on Thursday in Costa M.... Waldie said thet he Is in "excellent bhape down to my . ankles." His feet, he added, are killing him. First Traces as ~·ell are being sent out this week. Essentiall y, now that the initial leads have been e:r:hausted, proben have little left to explore. Mrs. White, 22, vanished late last month on the day before she was scheduled to appear in a divorce hearing in Orange County Superior Court. But before she vanished. she pbofled her parents and assertedJy expressed fears for her safety. Later in the week, when her disap. pea rance was reported to investigators by her lawyer, an intense search was launched -including four days of dig· ging at the county dump in San Juan where off icers ~·ere following up a strong hin t that the woman was slain and her body dumped among the refuse. That unpleasant task, however, failed to turn up a single due. The next stage, investigalors said, was to work the case from the Carlsbad end. A thorough examination of the missing woman's car heightened speculation that the housewife may have been slain. Mrs. White's purse, billfold containing a small amount of cash and the car keys all were found in the car and no fingerpimts were present, leading prob- ers to believe that someone wiped the cnlire vehicle clean before leaving it. One other suspicious aspect is the area of the employe parkiilg Jot where the car was left. investigators said. Mrs. White regularly used the same space when she broughl her car to work each day, but when the auto was discovered after her disappearance it was in another port,ion ol the Jot. Officers have tried to find witnesses in Carlsbad who may have seen the aban- donment of the car, but reportedJy have tWTicd up little or nothing when could help. Their only hope now is for new wit· IM!sses to turn up. From Pagel RAIN .•• from Mexico is at fault. As the moisture laden air arrives in the drfer desert areas of Southern California it condenses, cools and begins falling as rain. A forecaster said this moisture usually drops in inland mountain ranges and rarely makes it to the coastline. NevertheJess, today's forecast calls for slight chances of.' afternoon and evening thundershowers "almost anyplace in the South · Coast Basin," the National Weather Service forecaster said. The drift oC moist air from south of the border is expet'ted to continue through Wednesday. Meanwhile, temperatures aJong the Orange Coast will dip to 83 tonlght. lllghs Tuesday will be in the low 70s. Douglas to China HONG KONG (UPI) -U.S. Supreme Court Justice William 0. Douglas arrived here tonight en route to China, where be said he would like to meet Chinese leaders and exiled Prince Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia. However, in an airport news conference Douglas said he had no plans to meet any officials, either Chinese or of the exile Cambodian government. U ~I Yllllthoto BEEF ON HOOF LIKE MONEY 11'1 BANK AS SHORTAGE IN U.S. 3ROWS .~ND 13ROWS This Colorado Herd, Others Await Court Ruling on Price Freeze 'By Own Personal Choice' From Pagel Cox Claims President FREE ZE .•. Saturday night and made public today. At the same time, he refused the reque;,t for the temporary injunction, Urbom denied a government plea for dismissal of the suit. Withholding Evidence The judge ga ve no reason for his decision to deny the request by Minden Beef Co. of i\.1indcn, Neb., a processor. and the Greater New York Association of J\1eat and Poultry Dealers, a wholesale group. 'VASHINGTON (UPI) -Special pros- ecutor Archibald Cox charged to d a y that President Nixon is withholding vital criminal evidence about the Watergate scandal "by his personal choice" without any legal or constitutional right to do so. "Unlike a monarch," Cox said, "the President is not the sovereign." In a 67-page legal brief filed in U.S. District Court, Cox urged Judge John J . Sirica to order the President to produce for a grand jury tape recordings of nine conversations with a ides. Cox s aid the tapes could prove or disprove "criminal conspiracy and other illegal conduct" in the White House. Such an order, Cox said, would reaf- firm the American constitutional prin- ciple that "no mean is above the law. "The President has an enforceable legal duly not to withhold material evidence from a grand jury," Co:r: said. " .. , There is no exception for the Presi- dent from the guiding principle that the public, in the pursuit of ju.slice, has a right to every man's evidence ... "The grand jury is seeking evidence of crimlnal conduct that the respondent Nixon happens to have in his custody - largely bhis personal choice." Cox subpoenaed the tape recordings on July 23, one week.after it was disclosed at the Senate Watergate hearings that Ni:r:on 's conversations in two White · Hoose offices and on foui of his telephones bad b e e n automatically recorded since the spring of 1971. Ni:r:on refused to comply with the sub- poena. His lawyers argued in a lengthy brief Tuesday that it would be "simply impossible for any president of the United States to fuoction" if°1le-were forced to disclose confidential com- munications with aides. Cox contended that Watergate-related conversations were not conducted as part of the President's official duties and therefore cou1d not be withheld legally. Co:r: argued further that Nixon waived any claim to keep the tapes secret because (I) some persons involved in th e conversations already testified about them publicly and (2) Nixon permitted his former chief of staff, H. R. Haldeman, to listen to two of the tapes after leaving lhe \\'hite House April 30. "Not even a President can be allowed to select some accounts of a conversation for public disclosure and then to frustrate further grand jury inquiries by withholding the best evidence of what ac· tually took place," Cox said. Sirica has scheduJed oral arguments for Aug. 22 on th e tapes dispute. Meanwhile. a special grand jury was convened today at !he request of Co x lo investigate a "'ide range of activiti('s in the 1972 president ia l campaign as "'ell as the l'f'T antitrust settlement. Judge Sirica called the panel into session to inquire into matters separate from those being investigated by a grand jury that has been concentrating on the \Vatergate burglary and its aftermath. Border Officers Grab 270 Ali ens At San Onofre The plaintiffs claimed the freeze is un-· productive and is causing shortages. The government claimed it is necessary to hold down rising meat prices. From Page l BODIES ... four at a wooded site near Broaddus in East Texas. Two more were unearthed on the beach east of Galveston. Sheriff's deputies used the road grader ' to cut a quarter-,Ql.ile through a lioo of salt grass strewn with driftwood and Ut- ter. Otter and a deputy rode behind the grader, examining the broken ground for traces of graves described by Henley and Brooks. (\feanwhile. in Houston, Police O!.ief Herman B. Short defended his depart- n1ent today against charges from some parents of the victims that officers were Mo e than 'llo ·11 g 1 i·e 5 laX in investi gating missing persms r 1 e a a 1 n were ar· reports. rested near the San Onofre checkpoint "'Although some of the parents in the over the weekend, U.S. Border Patrol Heights a rea may have felt we have not spokesman reported today. been doing all "'C could have, we never Agents apprehended 101 persons on \\·ould have enough people to check out every runa"·ay youth," Short said at a Saturday and another 170 on SurKiay . ne"·s conference. However, only slightly more than half of t\-1eanwhile police Sunday said they those arrested were caught at the che(k-identified two ntore of the bodies. point, the patrolman said. The two \\'ere Dona,iWi:dv.·ard Waldrop, Five aliens on Saturday and two more 15, and hi s brothet; .JCrtY Lynn Waldrop, on Sunday were arrested while trying to 13. both of Atlanta, Ga. circumvent the checkpoint on a The identification by their father, passenger train. An additional 34 were E verett Waldrop, brought to five the apprehended during ranch checks around number of bodies defin itely identified. the area. and 21 aliens were turned over The l\\'O youths had been strangled. to the border agents by city police Others identified are : departments. Charles C. Cobble, 17, Houston. The remainder of the arrested persons Martin Ray Jones, 18, Houston. were apprehended by olher agencies, the Billy Lawrence, 15, Houston. patrolman said. Henley, charged with six counts or The number of arrestes were slightly murder. has admitted he killed Carll at higher this weekend than it has been in the bachelor electrician's home Wednes- recent weekends, the agent noted. day. '-~~~~~--'-~~~~~~~~~~ NOW AT PRICES 1 START FROM ...... U /111 ~-11 ... 5 l'ur P.lrb Guarentee T ... IOIOIOt'o pump, lilM>r, IHll"I Wlllf dl•Wltlufkln 91'lillf!I, hNltl Ot\O pull/to 11o1i110111 .,. 1111111111\Md '°' • ~" on "'°°"' SSl'ltt,. IS/Ill i nd &SltTI. WI P1J for ..,pltc;t ftor;t l1bor duflnQI Ills l<rll y.r. 90 DAY CASH WITH AIPIOYID CllDIT Phone 548-7788 1815 NEWPORT Bl YO. Downtown Costa Mesi Jay Flondella of Santa Monica, one of the financial backers of an el· fort to salvage valuable s from the wreck of the Andrea Dorla off Massachusetts\. holds one of lho fi rs! llems salvaged from the ship since it sank 7 ye ars ago -an electric swJtc.h. Two divers are Jiv· ing in an underwater habitat near !he lin er In hopes of finding the ship's safe and $2 million in cas h and jewel s. ........................................................... ,, ' I • Monday, A119ust 13, 1973 s DAILY PILOT ~ Niguel Homeowners Protest Action on Zoning • _JThe P.rtSidenl of tbe l.agunl) Niguel t-Wmeowners and Community Association today has a letter on file protesUng ac- liolt by , the Orange Counly Board of Supervisors in !'.lenying a •tone change on 3!.4 acres scheduled for condominiums. Supervisors voted 4 to O last Wednes-- iay not to reduce the density as re- quested by county planners. The tract is on both sides of Niguel Road west of Crown Valley Parkway. Developers Kaufman and Broad first uked for 294 unJts on the property in 1972 . The county board action fame during 5 Blacks Get Life I,,, Slayings CHRISTfANSTED, St. Croix, V.J . (UPI) -Five young black Virgin fslanders were sentenced today to eight terms of life imprisonment, to run con- secutively. for the murders of eight persons last fall at a luxurious go\! course here. , The sentences produced bedlam in the courtroom. The defendants shouted obscenities. spat on the floor and struck at U.S. marshals who subdued tbem and led them away. The maximum sentences were pro· nounced by U.S. District Judge Warren ~f. Young after a jury found the five :lefendants. ranging in age from 22 to 26. guilty on all 70 counts, including eight counts.apiece of first-degree murder. Young also sentenced the five, who profess to be Black . Muslims. to six terms each or 15 yearS imprisonment on lhe guilty verdicts for first-de gree assault and robbery. Those terms were lo run concurrently. Court sources said the defendants would be transferred to a federal penitentiary on the U,S, mainland later today. The chief defense counsel. New York :ivil rights attorney William Kunstler, announced all the verdicts and sentences would be appealed to the 3rd U.S. Court of Appeal in Philadelphia. 'The five were arrested after an armed attack. in which a machine gune \vas used, Sept. 6 on the outdoor dining ter· race of the Rockefellow-owned Fountain Valley Golf Course. Eight perosns. in· eluding Mr. and Mrs. John l\1eissingcr ana Mt. and Mrs. R. ·w. Griffin of ?\ti·" ami, were slain and four others wounded. The defendants, who stood quietly y,•hile the verdicts were read. began shouting obscenities and, despite their handcuffs, began striking at the 23 tnarshals guarding the courtroom when they were brought back after a recess to be sentenced. Friends and relatives of the men. oc· cupying two rO"".S of the spect:itors sec- )ion, joined the shouting match, as did Kunstler, who went to ·the microphone and screamed at Young, "You can't do this". The defefldants were finally removed from the room and led back in one by one. to hear the sentences. Each stood \Yith his back turned to the judge and on- ly one defendant , Rafael Joseph. 22. had anything to say, and he could not be understood. Ishmael Labeet. 26. considered the leader of the group, spat three times on the floor. abs~nce of Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Gaspers who \vas Vacationing in Alaska. "Due to slipups in Casters ' office, we were never notified or the hearing," declared Jim Thompson, president of the Laguna Niguel association. Present zoning would allow 482 units - or about 11 units per acre -on the prop- erty in question. But the county plan· ning department had requested a 1.one change that \YOuld reduce density to four dwelling units per acre. The request hinged on deletion last fall of the Pacific Coast Freeway bordering • ~ tht property. 'l'he homeoy.•ners' group pushed for !he downzoning bec'ouse they said deletion of the freeway called for lower densities. They said a density of 5.5 Wlits per acre y.·ould be "more equitable in light of sur- rounding densities." They also objected to the project's grading and architectural design. "Our immediate reaction is that all previous effort by this association is in vain.'' Thompson wrote in a letter to Caspers. "I know personally that this is not totally C()1Tect, but I must request the UPI Tlll'Pholo Pop Go e s tlae B tibble Tin1 Acorn, 8, (left) of Newfield. N.H .. and Gail Coppins, 9. of Win· chester, Mass .. match bubbles and 1'iin ends up with a nose full of gum as the youngsters pass the time blowing bubbles during a sun1· n1er rainstorm in \Volfeboro, N.FI. · Co11servative GOP G1·oup Tables A11ti-Nixo11 Move Ei\1ERYVTLLE I AP) -A resolution urging President Nixon to resign has been tabled by the conservative United Republicans of California, but its sponsor ~ays he will reintroduce it. George Brokate, of Newport Beach. ii member of the boa rd of governors y.•hich tabled the n1otion (12·7J Sunday. said he "'outd bring it up again when the body meets Dec. I in Sonta Cruz . The vote came after heated debate by the go vernors, who represent the 12,000 members of the state's l a r g est Republican volunteer organization . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- The resolution called for Nixon to I resign imn1edialely. saying "\Ve can no longer afford \Vatcrgate and a President . \\•hose vice president and most trusted confidants and assistants have been in- volved in grossly questionable acts. caus- ing an injurious and 1nalignant crisis of confidence in our system of govern· n1en!. .. "Should this resolution pass, it will be a disaster:· said UROC State Chairman Paul J\tagnanl. Times are ·T0119Ja The cost of living seems lo be calching up with .lohn T. Dunlop, di · reclor of the Cost of Living Council, as he appears for a news confer- ence with holes In hi s shoes. Dunlop briefed nc,vsnlcn on new regula- tions £or Phase IV of tl1e administration's econo1nic progratn. "It ·\vou!d destory lines of communica - tion between UROC and Republican legislators on a state and national level." Brokate, who supported conservative Rep. John Ashbrook (!{-Ohio). for the presidency last year, said the resolution "failed because of pressu re exerted all night by people from the State Centr,11 Committee.·• W estminste1· Man Killed by A11to A man \vas struck by a car and killed late Sunday in \Vestminster, police reported. Jack Tanner. 25. of 7922 11th Sl., Westminster died instantly. the Orange County Coroner's Office reported . He was stnick by a cfl r nea r Beach Boulevard and 14th Street shortly after 11 p.m. The victim. police said wos crossing Beach Boulevard when struck by a car d;iven by Denise E. Hinckley. 24. of Anaheim. Officers said the accident is still under investigation Bordello Ow11er To Lose Lea se RENO, Nev. tU P{I -The Interior Department has ruled .against a Nevada woman who 'vanted to <.'Ontinue leasing federal lnnd for her bordello. Be,•erly l-larrcll obtaint•d a lc:isc in 1970 for $100 a year on about four acres of Bureau of Land fvlana.gemcnt property In a rcmjlte desert seetion of Nevada, which permits legal prostitution in ccr· taln arcas .. She S<!t up a smaller trailer village pnd has been operating the'rc evtl' Si nce. The bureau. when it discovered the land was being used for a house of prosti tution, cancelt~ the Jcu sc in 1971. f\liss lh1rre\\ appealed. Board of Supervisors to reconsider tilt! resolution," he said. Caspers was not present for the hear· ing but sent a letter to Supervisor Ralph Clark asking that the hearing· be con- tinued to Aug. 22. "It 's a sad situation that the other supervisors did not respond to Caspers' request to postpone the hearing." said Ton1 fo"'uentes, the supervisor's execulive assistant. Fuentes indicated Caspers \YOutd bring the matter up for reconsideration at Tuesday's n1eeting. S. Coi11tty Be1acla "We did not make a special call to the homeowners because we thought the hearing would be Postponed," Fuentes added. "Our rapport wit h the homeowners is good. I fear thls 1s going to be painted as if there's a conUict going on -there isn't." Prior to last \\'eek's hearing. Kaufman a nd Broad attorney Rodger Howell had flied suit against the county because of delays in rhe project s approval. Following Wednesday's decision de· nying the county zone change request, New Judg~ Takes Rapid 'Action' John A. Griffin. a former civil litiga- tion attorney in Orange. has been sworn in as a judge in the South Orange County Irvine District Offers First Adult Education Economics, wood shop, drama and con- sumer law are a few of the classes in the first aduJt education program to be of- fered this fall by the Irvine Unified school District. A total of 18 semester.Jong classes have been scheduled so far by the district, 'vhich took over operation of area schools July L Enrollment is open to all persons 18 years of age or older and to persons un- der 18 who are high school graduates, married or in the armed forces. Registration will take place Sept. 11 in the classrooms. Semester fee is $4. A district official said other classes may be added at any time if 20 or more requests are received, depending on room and teacher availability. Most of the currently planned courses will take place at University High School in Irvine. Subjects listed in a brochure to be mailed to Irvine residents in late August include office skills, typing, speed reading, folklore, oil painting, ceramics, clothing, cooking, child growth, auto shop, photography, trim gym for wOO.en and citizenship. For more information call the adult education office at 832-1966. Judicial District Court. His first official act Frldey was to clamp his best friend into handcuffs. After the brief ceremony conducted by U.S. District Court of Appeal Justice Mildred Lillie, a family friend, Griffin ascended to his bench and Called for Bailiff Chuck ''Hipshot" J in1enez. "'Hipshot. put that man in handcuffs," Grif(in said sternly, pointing to Jack Lin· coin, Griffin's fonner law partner. Lincoln had made an irreverent, 15· n1inute speech about Griffin before the ceremony, saying the new judge could no1v be called "the proud bald eagle" of the municipal court. "\Vhat are n1y powers? Can I sentence him to five years?'' Griffin asked Justice Lillie as the crowd of 50 chuckling well- wishers looked on. "You 're going to have to let him out sooner or later," she replied. '·Well, okay, then let him out," Griffin said. Griffin, 51, the son o[ Conner Beverly Hills municipal court judge Charles Grif· fin, was appointed to the Laguna Niguel post July IO by Governor Reagan. Griffin was graduated from the University of Southern California and Southwestern University School of La"i. , His practice began in Beverly Hills m '' 1952 and moved to Orange in 1966. He specialized in civil litigation -personal injuries. domestic relations, landlord- tenant cases, and probate. Griffin, his wife, Claire, and two daughters Jive in Anaheim. I LIKE ROBERT TALBOTT TIES, TOO! l·lowell said the suit would be dropped. After the proposed freeway route was deleted last fall, the county passed an emergency ordinance delaying all tracts along the route until their density and uses for the transportation corridor could be re-eva luated. The ordinance expires Sept 1 t. Eight Laguna Niguel downzoning cases have been under consideration in the county planning department. The Kauf· man and Broad tract, part of the Crown Valley ~lighlands Planned Community, was the first to be discussed. O.llr P'/lot Si.ff P'""9 NEW NIGUEL .JURIST Judge John A. Griffin A1iaheim Safari Bags Pet Monkey · It was like an African wild animal safa"ri in a quiet Anaheim neighborhood • Swlday. Police, armed with rifles, were after a 50-pound monkey which had severely bitten an animal control officer. 1 The pet monkey of the macaqoe species escaped Sunday morning and led officers on a chase through backyards '"$ a1Jd, over rooftops in the UOO block of ' Laramie" Stre"et. Neighbors joined fbe h1,1nt armed with baseball bats, rocks·and ( fitearmS'. Officers finally cornered· the climber ' on-a roof. top at 11.20 Laramie St. and shot it. . \ ' . ,. ' ; All Silk Repps, Grenadines & All Wool Challis Fr om $8.50 to $1 I .SO. PHELPS MEAGER ~ Dl'tR OO YEARS !H CAUl'WIA .. , N~\VPO RT BEACH Wihh;ra, She rman Onk •, Pa sadcnt1, La kewood, We\t Covina ' J. .. r'ILUI ~ .... . '" ····!'! witla ·· Teaa ...,1a1ne . ..,,_. The Walking -Man Arrives P0LrnX AFOOT D E P T. Somewhere along our Orange Coast to- dlly .. CoagrOISman J.,.,,,,. R. Waldie, ~~~ along on hls earth pods in I of 11>e gub<matoria! nomination all of Calllomta. 1bat'1 right, Mr. Waldie is walking JP'""""-U all goes acoonllng to llChedule. passed through San Onofre with the \· sts of the morning and a bit later 1d have been miffing around the estem White House tn San Clemente. U. is W. to fooC>paddle through Dana oint and Laguna Beach tomorrow. ch for 'Votes in Corona del Mar e<lnesday, bathe hls tired feet in good Mesa water on Thursday and wander inland to the County Seat by Fri- day. From Santa Ana, he is scheduled to wander oo back dawn coastward over the weekend through places like Westminster and Seal Beach. IN A LE'ITER to our paper back a bit, he explajned, "I'm plaMing this 240-mile walk through Southern California to meet as many citizens as possible. "I've been looking forward to the walk, ..,hich will be held during our House Tecell, for many months. I believe it will ·f"IC invaluable in determining the soope of issues facing our state in the coming year!." Well, all ol this is a bit curious on our political scene. All that walking may do a lot for the scope of issues but I doubt ir it's going to help Congressman Waldie's corns very much. REP. W AWIE used to be in our t .. '5el'Tlbly where he was noted as an utute politician whereby he elevated hitn$elf into the Congress. He is from Antioch, in Contra Costa County, near the SF Bay Area. He is al.so a Democrat. Being a Democrat, you can understand why he is wa1klng up the Orange Coa¥. He probably can't Und anybody wlJ>'d give him a ride. Regardless of your politics. you have ~ have certain sympathy for the ~matoria1 hopefuJ. You just hope be 'l bum blisters on bi5 feet and wear b'Jt all his aocks without meeting a single :'":1J100'3t in our midst. ' I mean, I have grave doubts that Rep. Waldie wlll be met by a brass band in ' &an Clemente. Or even Newport Be:~h,.~ lor that matter. · ONE REASON HE'S walking through here In seeking the big chai r wherein Gov. Reagan now reposes is because Waldie is from up north and he wants to get to know Southern California heller. As he trudges through our heavy fog and chilled August weather, he may end up figuring that everything he ever he.a.rd about our region before was pure fan- tasy. Actually, however, with this 240 miles of walking, Congre11sman Waldie may just be a whole lot smarter than some folks figure. WITH OUR TRAFFIC congestion, smog, prices on gasoline and beef and a sagging general ecooomy, we may all be walking pretty soon. And at least Con.g,.t:essman Waldie will be in shape for it. Reds Await Deadline U.S. Bombing Continues Despite Cwuds P!L~O!d PENH (l1'1 l -Low~ylrlg mowtoan doudl and nin doted In today oo Plmom Pmh. hampering but DOI halting intensified American•ir strikes _.gainst Khmer Rouge imurgents believ- ed biding their time for an eventual assault on the city. O>mroonist forces reported 20.000 !trong have had Phnom Penh under siege for weeks but began pulling back snttal d.ays ago apparently to await the end of GOVERNMENT TROOPS toot ad- vantage ol the full In grwnd figbling to coruJOUdale and expand the capital's defense perimeter in anticipation of the bombing bait while tbe government brougjlt In convoys oo Bigl!way 4 from Gallup Poll Update_ U.S. Citizens Liberal -As Far as Sex Goes PRINCETON. N.J . (AP) ·-A re<:ent sw:\'ey indicates American attitudes toward premarital sex and some nudit y have become much more liberal than they were four years ago, says the Gallup Poll. In the July 6-9 survey. 48 per· cent of the l,&44 persons questioned said they thought premarital sex is wrong. ln a 1969 survey, 68 percent held that opin- ion. FORTV#111REE percent said it !NU not wrong when asked: •·Do you think it is wrong for people to have sex relations before marriage or not?" 11le remainder had no opinion. In July 55 percent of those surveyed said they would be offended by nude pic- tures in magazines, and 59 percent thought topless waitresses "'ould ofrend them .. 'Jbe 1969 survey showed 73 percent would be offended by magazine nudes; 76 percent by topless waitresses. Those who would object to nudity on She'• Running Isabel Peron, 40, former caba· ret dancer and wife of Argen- tine strongman Juan Peron, will run as vice president to her husband in Sept. 23 elec· tions. the siage have declined from 81 percmt in 1969 to 6S percent. The poll also indicated that American attitudes on premarital sex vary not only according to age and education but region and religion. Fifty-three percent of Protestants found premarital sex wrong, while 45 percent of .Roman Catholics expressed that view. In the 1969 poll. a greater percentage ol Roman Catholics, 72 per- cent, held that view than did Protest.ants, 70 percent. THE POLL showed most tolerance toward premarital sex in the East, ~'here 38 percent of those intervie'A·ed found it wrong. PerceDtages elsewhere with that view were 41 in the West , 51 in the ~fid~·est and 58 in the South. Percent.ages on that question from the 1969 poll were: 65 in the East, 55 in the West, 68 in the ~1idwest and 78 in the South. By age, the smallest percentage of those viewing premarital sex as wrong "·ere those Wlder 30, with 29 percent. Other percentages and age groups were 44 pen:ent of those 30 to 49 and 64 per- cent of those over 50. four years ago, the percentages holding that view were : under 30, 49 per- cent; 30-49, r;r percent; over 50, 80 per· cent. • FORTY-ONE pen:ent of those with col· Jege bactgrouod viewed premaritaJ sex as wrong , compared with 56 percent four years ago. 1be comparable percentages ~·ere 45 and 69 for those ~ith high school education and 60 and 77 for those ~ith grade school education. Nixon Signs Transit Bill WASHINGTON (UPI) -Presi· dent Nixon tod ay signed into law a $23 billion extension of the highway act which permits highway trust fund money to be spent for the first time on mass transit. 1be President said in a statement that he was "particularly pleased to sign Uilil: legislation ." He said it represents "a significant extension and reform of the federal highway program" and called it "an im· port.ant step forward" in provid ing better, more balanced transporla· lion. the port of K-Som road IOd GD the M•koQa Rlvtt wl1h ., -"'lll'llol u pooslble bdoro the ""'°""" Oxnmunlst OO&laught. The """"""'iclns of the American bombs reverllerated through the capi1al all through lhe nJgbl. Pilots reported, hcnreva-. that momrom mm were hampering the American air strues. The lull in ground fighting IU'OUlld Phnom Penh WU in sharp eoolrasl to the fighting at stoun, a higl!way j.-.... o. ty 50 miles "' the narth. Cambodian troops evacuated the town Sunday after a furious robe! assault. military ll<>llrCa said today. 111E SOURCES said that alU!r the govemment troops evacuated Stoun. located at the junctioo of ID&lnn1s I and 7, Cambodian alrmft began bombing the ffi><l-beld town wllidl bas best reported jammed with refug... fleeing there along the highways. A U.S. pi1o1 taking part in the raids said "the lituatkm is grim and untenable.•· In Phnom Penh, a ranking govmnnent official said informal cootact.s were con- tinuing with the Khmer Rouge but so long as North Vietnam cmtinued to in- tervene in Cambodia the war would <XlD- linue. Pt.sident I.on Nol Saturday nJght said in a rallying radio speech be has no in- tentioo d. leaving Cambodia. 'lbere have beert re<WT!ng reports that he wonld Jeave in order to pave the way for a , peace settlement in Cambodja. LOil Nol spote the same dJly ousted Cambodian chief of state Norodmn Sihanouk said be would o:mider a negotiated settlement if Loo Nol and other top members of the government ~·ouJd go into exile. Search for Bo)' Comes to End In New Mexico ALBUQUERQUE, N.~t (IJl'I) -The ground-air search for a small boy believ· ed loot in the mwntains ol C<n!ral New ~lexico has been called off. Officials say they were never certain the radioed "distress'' calls were legitimate. "We have not come up with any in- rormation that is defmite enough to say ( NEWS BRIEFS ) that there actually is someooe out there and where this person might be," State Police Chief Martin Vigil said &mday. Just in case, he said, four directiooal finding stations were established in the area to listen for any further signal and pinpoint its location. e Sk11lab Forecat SPACE CENTER. Houston (AP) - Mission Control is becoming more con- fident that the Skylab 2 astronauts will be able to return to earth Sept. 25 in their Own ferry ship and that a rescue flight won't be necessary. Asked by newsmen Stmday if it now appeared the astronauts will make a nonnal trip home. flight director Charles Lewis said: "At this point, you're prolr ably correct." e Hope Apolog11 . Rain, Hail Pound Midwest SEATl'LE, Wash. (IJl'I) -The Boy Scouts of American organizatioo has apologized to the Japaoest--American Citizens League for a joke comedian Bob Hope told at the S<X1uts Jamboree-West gathering In Idaho. Hope allegedly used the word "Jap" in a joke at the jubilee's opening session. Su1uiy Skies Promised for Rest of Cou11try llPIOIW'lld trttr tile conl1~nt, fM two prlnci~I t>ar>d1 ol 1ttlvlT'f -• In •n 1r11 Iron Colorlldo to Ml11--_.. •r>d from K1nw1 1no ArklnMI 10 11\t At11nt1c coau. HoweWf'. othltl' L.oc:•llY IM'IY'f r1ln1 bur1t D¥tr IN Mloweu s.-1'f night. w1nc11 qu>lld ro 51 rnUtt p.r" ftoo.W t i Slcfnty, Heti. (lyr. Inv • HYefl lllul'IOentorrn. Hiii 2.1J IMh 1'\ldl llOUl>dofd Mldrid, Mitt. Ev•n1vlll1. 1M. w11 wllhld wllll l.J k>c:l>ft OI' r•ln, O\ltslde f9l'f tllUl'l<ltr1IOf'm 1rq, most Mitt _,, l1lr lo pertly doudy. L.ow clol.lck aM loO tr1pt O¥ft' 1111 P11t;!llc c~sl during the Nrlv mornlnv l'lour1. Ttmotr•ture1 INlorl 0.wr> r•notd '""" 52 II SIW'Ylr Air Fort• 8••• ~II' ~rqu.tt1. Mith lo 100 11 Netdlt t. Cnn•tal '"""thPr P1rtl•l1Y 111!'11\'I' today. V1rf1ble ~ncli. nlOITI 11\d n'!Mnlng llourt bf.. coming Wfll lo -.tl'twe1t I lo It knot• In 1tterll0Dfls lod1y 1r>d Tllfl· dl'f. Hl9h lodl'I' In tllt '°9o. C011lll llfl'lolMflll"es r1nge from "' to 69. In· l1JICI Mmper1tur1s r1nge trom 62 to to. W•ltr temper1htre 10. Sun, Jllaat1, Tides MOHOAY ' 9;)(1 '·'"· 6.0 J :l7 p.m. 1/ TUESDAY First high ......... ., 10;371.m. •.6 Flrll low ..... , , • ,, , •:n 1.tr1. .(1,1 S.Concl ~gh •......... 10:03 p.m. J.I S«olld low ..•...•. •:n p.m. 1.7 1411'1 l'Ult •:O:t 1.m, ktt 7:42 o.11'1. e Strike End• DETROIT (UPI ) -A six.day wildcat strike by United Auto Workei-s at Chrysler's Detroit forge plant ended to- day in time to allow the company to begin production of 1974 model cars. The unauthorized ~"Blkout over health and safely conditions in rtic massive facility disrupted national cootract talks between Chrysler and the UAW. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtlirtry of the Dail1 Pilot ili guarantrtd MHNr·"rill•r: 11 ""' .. ,_., 111 ... .,_ ,...., •r S:le ,.lft., CIH f"41 '"' dn wlll M Wwtlll 19 .,... C•I" '" ,._ Wllltll ,,. ''"'' S1hlf'll1r 11111 l~•r : II \'99 tll -~ '"' Cl,., tr f f ,lft, lltmtr. tf' t f ,m, ·-··· Cl!I IR" • C.,, Wiii Ill .,..,.... .. y1~. Calll 1r1 llllf!I \111111 It 1,111, Ttltphonts Mfll Orlllft Clllftl'f Ar141 ... ,,,, MJ-ull Hertll-•I Mnllntltft l1tctl '"" wntrn111.i1r .... , ••••• ,.....,UI S.11 CJllMl!tl, C1.ittr1111 IH<ft. s .. I••• c1,i1lr1""' OllWI ,......, ... Ill LltWf!f , L, ...... H'-"' .... 4'11 .... MOOfl f'fltl 7:2A p.m. s.t~o~S~;Sl!;''.:'·~~....':=~=========== I -- ---· -~--. ---,. . --. -• --------·--- UPI T......,_ THEY TRIED TO FIND LOST SON WITH REWARD POSTERS Mr. 11'M1 Mn. Fred Helligel1t Fear Their Boy M..y Be Victim Fa111ilies Irate • . Houston Police Action Criticized HOUSTON (AP) -'!be police are ~ bitterly by some parents whose sons have hem mls!ing for as long as three years and may he ammg the grim remains ol Houstan 's mass sex murders. "We're higtily dis&usted with the Houston police department." said Walter Scott. His ta.year-old son A1ark left borne with parental permission for a trip to t.Iexico in April 1972 and never returned. "THEY COULD have helped and they didn't." Scott said a niece had told him lhat she had read Mark's name in the newspaper as l)OS3ibly being one of the 24 murder victims found ill mass graves in the Houstan area. Only five of the 24 bodies have been identified positively. Mart was not one of the five . Medical examiners continued to work lhroughout the weekend with dental records and X-rays in an attempt lo iden- tily the badly <leoomposed bodies. Police are said to be irritated bv criticism of their handling of missini· J>e""'1 """"'· and Police Cl1lel Merman Shx1 was es:pected to answer t.her. criticism during a news conference t~ da y. Ho.,..·e\•er. Houston police have said they haven't the resources to foll ow up every runaway report as thoroughly as parents would like. There are over 5,000 runaway reports in Houston each year. TlfE LAST ~·ord from Mark Scott ~·as a postcard sent from Austin, Tex. Scott said that, after Mark failed to return, be: "''rote Austin police twice but receiwd. no reply. Houston police said that Mart was 18 and. even ii found , could DOI be made to come home. After the nlece telephoned blm, Soott said he called police and told them: "My son is dead. You had news of il You should have called ... I've got to look to a newspaper for the death of my 1ort" Dorothy Hilligiest, wro,,e sm David never returned from going swimming at a local pool In May 19'11, said sho felt police could have done more to :teareb for her son. .. I KNEW MY boy wasn't a nmawwy.'' ;..1rs. Hillijiest said. "But they dul the rery ye.or~ and adults as mllsine perscns. Teen agers art runaways." The Hilligiests spent several tho.mnd dollars postins a reward, printing wanted posters and pictures and hiring a private detective. \\'hen Fred Hilligiest tried to paw on some inlormatioo from the detect!'" to a police inspector, he says the lnspector told him, "Private inYe3tlgaton are for rich people." Then IDlligiest says t!>e ~to his secretary and said, 41Chect him and see if he's licenSed.11 The private detective was not Ucenaed, and Hillig.iest said: "l was shocked thal they ...,"OU.Id go to the expense to prosecute him. but they cooldn't aflonl to go out and look for our boy." Maryl.and Contracwrs Say They Paid Agnew W ASll!NGTON !UPll - Vice Presi- dent Spiro Agnew returns from a golfing weekend late today, confrooted with allegations that as many as four ~taryland contractors have claimed they made cash payments lo him when he was governor. The \Vashington Star-News said reliable sources reported the four con- tractors had told federal prosecUtors in Baltimore they did so in the hope of get- ting favored treatment in the awarding of government consulting contractS. TIME MAGAZINE said two con- struction consultants had acrused Agnew of soliciting campaign contributions from them. Agnew, fonnally notified Aug. 2 that he is under federal lnvesllgaUoo, denied any wrongdoing and predicted at a news COO· ference that he would not be indicted. A federal grand jury is expected to start studying sme materials in the case Wedneoday In Baltlrnor<. The Star-News said allegations of payolls were made by Jerome B. Wolff, and aide to Agnew when he was governor, and Lester Matz and two·other unidentified contracting ofHcfals. Time Magazine also said Wolff and Matz had given Information agalnst the vice president. AS AGNEW wound up hi. stay at Ille Palm Sl>ttnl" estate of Frank Sinatra, In· veetlgatora oo Ille statt of U.S. Atto~y George Beall began ezamlnlng 130 -cartoos of records pertaining to Agnew'• tenure as Maryland 1ovemor before becoming vice pmlilent Jn 11119. The star·News said 11 Wlll not known whether the four contractors clalrDed In the fonn of Agnew campaign con- sideration In the awanllng ol contracts nor whether the alleged payments were In the lonn ol Agnew <>1.,.Pgn con· trlbutions. , The Star-News quoted what It called. a highly placed ""'""' as NY!n& tho pruo-ecuton feel "there is • loog way 11>.go bet!"een the claiming, the prov1na and shciW1t1g that the money was re<dved." D -CO CERT TO IGHT 9:15 P.M. AT FASRIO ISLA , I • ' DAILY PILUt 5 Occidental 'Bows' to ·Libya Five Kil"led in LA Air Crash . 51 Percent of <Jil Company Sold for $135 Millio1i TORRANCE (AP) -Five from lhe aiport. "People w..., J)ttSOM were killed when two running aCl'Ol!IS the street to light planea collided above a look and cars were lining up tmder JnvesUgalion and polkle said they did oot know which plane had been taking off. LOS ANGELES (AP) -~ cidental fetroleum Corp. say1 It bu sold oontl'ol of Its opera· lions In Libya to the Libyan govenuneot for $135 million. But tt wllt neither confirm nor deny rtllOl18 by the Libyan Radio that t!Je Tripoli govern- ment was nationalizing 51 per- cent of the firm's assets in that country. American oU firm "bas no choice but to bow to our decision." • 40 degree gravity erode oil wealth of the Llbyan Arab suburban Los Angeles arport, against the fence a n d whlch is exceptionally low In people," Al-Mabruk w 8 ~ plunged to the ground and everybody in the parlor was sulphur and high in quality," a reported to have said in burst into flames, police said. looking." The victims apparently had rented the planes, officera said. The Occl<ltntal spokesman would not comment on the radio report. statement by the company One plane was taking off The victims were three men, =========== aid. reference to the Occidental when It crashed into the other one woman and a girl. There: "In lts 49 percent ownership case. about 300 feet off the ground was no i m m e d J a t e iden- position., Occidental will have He said the compensation t1 at Torrance Municipal Airport tifketion. all the benefits provided for in the American firm would be CALIFORNIA Sunday, police said. All five The ptaneS were a Cessna the original concession agree-on the basis of the book value bodies were badly burned in 150, owned by Southwest Av ia- menL" of the company's assets. Many the ensuing fire, they said. lion and carrying two men, companies keep book values of "F18mes were shooting up and a c.essna 172, owned by Help prevent fo«!St fires. ~\ ~ A spokesman for Lo s Angele8rbased Occidental aaid Sunday the company has received the mooey following the slgnlng ol the agreement in Tripoli during the weekend. Occidental said the des! gives 51 percent ownership of the company's operations in Libya to the Libyan Nattooal Oil Co., but the American firm is permitted to buy •II the petroleum produced by the wells there for the remainder of the current concession period. 'lbe Ubyan news agency in-their assets well below tlle ac-into the air," said John Rolling Hills A via lion and car- dicated the Tripoli govem·1_Jt~u~al~v~al~u~e,~la:r~ge~J~y~for::_:ta=x-----------~C~a~r~sw~e~ll~, ~w~ho~w;or~k:s~a;t ~an~ic~e-r~ymg~· ~lh~e~otrbe~r~thr'.;ee~pe~r~so:na;. ~~~~~~~~~~~ ment is considering further purposes cream perlor across the street Cause of the collision was nationalization of America~ · owned· oil operations in the On Sunday, a Libyan broad- cast said the government was p-eparad to compeMate ~ ci d ental for the na- tionalization, but Oil Minister lu.eddin Al-Mabruk w a s quoted as declaring that the The company's Li b y a n QPen1t1ons produce 3 4. O , o o o barrels of olJ day, .....-it· ing about 15 percent of ~ cldeotal's gross revenue, Qc.. cldental said. "The price for the first six montm of the new pact bas been fixed at $4.9 per barrel of country. Libya nationalized the operations of Bunker-Hunt, based In Dallas, Tex., last June and the operations of British Petroleum in December 1971. "The nationaliz.ation de- cmon was designed to en- force the fullest control by the government over the o i 1 3 Held in Murder Attempt In Grape Strike Struggle NOW OPIN 7 DAYS •lM~Titief •Sllf"tt'dlpity •W ..... .._. Bakersfield and A r t h u r • "-aflllll 1'"'" • • U.A. Tri TI!....,. Slofl_. A cobblestone walk to good food ••• IS • St. ,.,.. • C.lic9 <=..-. •S""f..._. N.xt to South Coast Plox.a LAMONT (UPI) -Three men were held on charges of assaul t to commit murder SWlday in the shooting of a man who was driving a truck belonging to a vineyard being struck by the United Farm Workers Unlon . five shots as he drove his truck along a highway at dusk Saturday. The truck helonged t o Glumarra Vineyards, one of the major grape growers In- volved in a struggle between Cesar Chavez' farm workers union and the Teamsters over representing field bands. Galvon, 22, Tracy, were ar-• TOS<OllO • Hvnory Tigw • tt.idl'• ~..,.. wnH MOii TO COML I :====~~~~~·-~ .. ~·~~~~~======~ .. ~--~ .... ~====~~~~;;;;;;;;~~~~~==========~~~;;~~~~===--======::!! rested shortly after t h e • Krip'' ....._ ' • shooting and a .22-caliber rifle was seized. " • The Kem County Sheriff's office said Steve Riggenberg, 28, of Bakersfield, was wound- ed in the back in a burst of Raymond Galvin, 25, La- mont, Alfred Guerra, 22, A sheriff's spokesman said none of the three suspects was believed to be an official picket for the Carll), workers union. Chavez said at a weekend Legislator Junket,s Cost State $7,700 news conference that he would return to peace talks with the Teamsters "under c e r t a i n conditions," but be did not elaborate. Chavez walked out of a meeting with the Teamsters and oflicials of the AFLCIO Friday in Burlingame. lt wu tbe second day of talks aimed at settling the jurisdictional SACRAMENTO (A Pl More than a doun CaUfomla leglslato!\! traveled to points as distant as Florida and Canada at state expense dur- ing their five-week summer recesa. The COit ao far bu nm $7,700, wllh more expense ac4 OJUDla expected to be filed, controller'• afDoe r • e o r d • reveal. The most highly publicized trip was by five Jeglalators at AGNEW UP TOO EARLY PALM SPRINGS (UPI) -Vice Preaident Spiro AgneW was a guest at entertainer Frank Sinatra's home here dur- ing the weekend, but they rarely played golf together at the neighboring Tamarlslt Qllmtry Club. A spokesman for Sinatra said, '"lbe vice president ge<s up too eerly for Frank.' Agnew flies back to Washington today. a CXJCt of $2,683 to Canada lo study fairs and expositions. The trip, headed by Assemblywoman P a u I i n e Davi.s (D-Portota), covered July 11-20 and Included two. day stops at Calgary and Edmonton. Mrs. Davi.s ls chainnan o[ the Joint Committee on Fain Allocatloa and Cl.uaillcetioll. Other lawmakers who went on the tour were Aaaemhlymen Barry Keene (!).Santa Rooa); and Ray· mood Seeley (II-Blythe); and Sens. Peter Behr (R·Tlbllrn), and Randolph Colller (D- Yreta). dispute between the t w o unions. The walkout was prompted when the Teamsters signed contracts with a group of grape growers who previously held contracts with the farm workers union. Teamsters officials quickly repudiated the contracts a6d called for a new round of talka. Two Dead In Mining Accident The Itinerary tncluded a lour-day slgbtaeetng but trip between calgary and Edmon-ton, which are about 2tlO miles BARSTOW (APl -Funeral apart. arrangements are pending for None of the five could be two Montana men who died reached for direct comment while working in an old desert I th gold mine about 90 miles ate Is past week, but 8 northeast of here, sheriff's spokesman for Behr said the deputies say. aenator felt the trip wu The bodlea of John P. worth-whlJe. "He came back very en-Wbee1er, M, and his nephew thnala~•-bo 1 th r · th J<leph A. Wheeler, 39, will be :1U\: a u e aU'S ey mu.med to St. Jgnatiua, Mont. had seen," the Behr aide said. arter , ccroner's investigation, Some Ideas picked up at authoriUes said Sunday. catgary and Edmonton could The W h e e I e rs were be applied to the state fair at overcome by poisonous gas Cal Expo to make it more of a while working Saturday in the succeM, Behr said. Rainbow Mine, on which they Dru Taxpayer costs for the tour bad taken an option to buy, Cancer g ranged up to 1682 for Mrs. deputies said. They were tak· Davis. Collier weot along on Ing a series of samples from just part of the tour at a cost the mine to determine whether Sale Rapped of $$>1. it was worth purchasing, «· A1Semblyman John !leers said. A 'lblnnan Jr. (D-Mod-), had The younger Wheeler had LONG BEACH (AP) -signed up to go along but moved to this area a few Sy1mar mill bas been sent to dropped out after the trip was weeks ago to begin the mining prboo on a JWObatloo violation pubUcized beforehand. teats and the older man had after fumlsbing an illegal Several other state officials joined him Friday to help, cancer treatment drug. and legislative aides had been they said. Superior Court Judge L. scheduled. to make the trip. Rescue teams, w e a r i n g Steny Fagan Friday ordered 'lbelr expense accounts were special breathing devices to Imposition of a 1-to--lO-year not immediately available. combat the gases, spent 13 1t.11teDce for Harvey Howard, Other lawmakers made trips hours trying to bring out the 80.Howard was placed on pro-during the holiday reeess to bodies from the rock-faced batlon last May after pleading Washington, D.C., Vancouver, mine shaft, deputies said. guilty to practlcinl medicine l!.C., Boca, Raton, F1a., Ryan-John's body was found 70 feet without a licenae by selling the nis, Mass. and Aspen, Colo., down and Joseph's was found IUbltaniCe laetrile as 1 cancerl-:°";;::legia~;:J=at=lv=e=bu;::s:;:iness;::~· ;;;;;;;;:;;;;;=;;IOO;:;:;lee~t;do;;w;n~,=the=y=sai=d=.::::::-I ~=::::·holds a mail order urnrnrn~~ diploma In fo<e!ilry a n d botanic medicine from a British 1cboo1, authorities said. The neighborhood garage sale is sort or an American institution. Like baseball, apple pie. and Che.vrolets. So it seems only natural that Chevrolet should have a Garage Sale. Ah. but unlike some garage sales you've been to, Chevrolet is not selling antiques. Just shiny new cars, and some tough new trucks. ~ Ma8bl lltale w.,... A mat lootinr WlflOl'I. ailtd to lit moM. .families. You11 k>vt bow It feds on ........ We can't tell you, in this ad , exactly which model s and styles and colors. Alter all, there are over 6000 Chevrolet dealers across the country. We're simply here·to suggest that if you're even remotely jn the market for a new Chevrolet, you ought to go down io your dealer's and browse.. I/ With a little luck you'll come up with a .JiJJI big bargain. Ck'6 '-"-' °""'" .... _ lt11 ditlinctivt fJVnt end ii c:rvmd with r!Silienl \WUhane. ' <! ,r :· ,. I( " ·~ ~· '" I) " 'ij • " " .., '.l ,, , I/ Film Shotguns Made 'Legal' ~OUTH PACIFIC MEXICO AND THE CARIBBEAN • I ,, SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Motion plclw'e companlea thal own ,.wed olf shotguna for ..,. In gangster picture• have been violating the law for years, a spokesman for the mte attorney geMral'1 office suburi>an Los Angelet alJ,,ort, Deupty Attorney General Michael ¥ranchettl made the dhtclolure alter the Senate palled 1 bill l!llkln& It legal for the ftlm atudlol lo posaess the weapon. "In theoty, they h•ve been In violation of the law for many, many years," he said. "Join us /or o showing Of Select 1'1cvcl Flints" , , . WEDNESDAY AUCJ. 15th e 8 PM A MIMJI .,... • •tttr ... ,.... • '""' DAY•' HARBOR TRAVEL -VIA LIDO P.O. BOX 22311 NEWl'OftT BEACH, CALIFOftNIA 112883 61rl311 ••• aiettne !iflbH c.o,..~ For ~ •ho '°" driwWig u much N we do. A Uad1tlonal favorite. BuH11a better way to see the u.L'- • l • • • D AR.Y PILOT EDITORIAL· PAGE Somet imes Sometim .. the voice of the people does make itseU beard in Washington. II was loud enough to head off an apparently sure- 'tire plan to get a fat 25 percent pay raise for Congress- men and other top officia.la this year, instead of in Jan- uary as scheduled. This would have spotted future pay raises leso conspicuously In non-election years. The pay rru.se m.aneuver was hustled through the Senate without a roll call vote and seemed certain to get similar speedy treatment in the House. However, a few irate representatives demanded open committee hearings on the measure and threat· ened to call for a roll call vote if it should reach the floor of the House. Meanwhile some of the Senators had second thoughts and Pushed through a resolution recommend· in.<! that any pay increase be limited to the 5.5 percent guideline set by the Cost of Llving Council. News of all these developments apparently prompted some nasty notes from constituents on the home front and the Iawmaken finally went home on va· cation without voting on the raise. The last Congressional pay raise was in 1969, so they're probably entitled to the boost that's due in Jan- uary. Whether it will he the anticipated 25 percent - from .,U,500 to $53,125 -remains to he seen. Costly Bureaucra cy? The fracas over the Orange County Department of Education. continues. Grand Juries in 1970 and 1971 recommended aboli· tion of the county schools office, which was descr~~d as "a costly bureaucratic filter between program ong1n· ator and user." County Supt. Robert Peterson termed the 1971 Grand Jury report "flimsy, unfair and unbalanced." Latest bone of contention ls a management study by the County Administrative Office, which will he dis- USAF Leaves Sad Legacy In Thailand (JACK ANDERSON) \Vhen the bombing ends . the target country of Cambodia will bear an American legacy of scorched earth and death. Jn Thailand, from which tbe OOmbers new their missions, the U.S. Air Force has left • more insidious in· beritance. At Nakhon Phan- om, where 5,500 air~ men ran Operation IJ!ue Chip's multi· megaton air war against Cambodian insurgents. the Air Jo"orce folders given yomig American ser· · vicemen t o I d of swimming pool!!:L..~rlving ra~ges, arch- ery, bowling and ugbted tenrus cou~. But. these brlefin~ leaflets sald nothing or the little Thai village's. other "pasHmes" -drug• and proslltutlon, bolh fostered by the sudden and gigantic U.S. presence. ONE FOR.MER officer stationed at Nakhon Phanom told us 40 percent of the airmen used drugs and the ratio might be higher m Ute 18 to 25 a~ group. Radar technicians were "stoned" whHe they "''ere on duty before their sensitive "'1"eens, and gunsllip helicopter crewmen v.-ent to battle high on drugs. A helicopter pararetcUe man was wob- bly on heroin as he went searching for downed American pilots, the ex"fficer told us. The drugged airman was discovered and .sCnt home. AIR FORCE spokesmen and our OM1 obse rvers on the scene have convinced us heroin use has dropped dramatically Dear Gloo1ny Gu s Have we overextended our hel~ ing hand? Meat to Japan, caUk! to Canada, grain to Russia ... As a result our butcher, baker and can· dlestick·maker are fast becoming unemployed! -B.C. among airmen at Nakhon Pbanom. ~ it remains endemic among the nauve population whose drug addict! once numbered only a few old opium smokers. "Smack." as heroin is called, and other hard drugs are used by "most of the young girls .(prostitutes)," according to ~ ta~ interview with an 18-year-<>ld Thai proitltule near lbe U.S. base. Sbe "shot UJ>" with'heroin 4uring the interview. WHEN 'J1IE AIR Force influx began a few years ago, young girls came to town from the country to work in such em· paria' of sex as· the Hooey Massage Parlor. A photogra·ph in our possession of the Honey establishment shows a sign saying, "PurchMe raffle ticket. ... One prize, your choice of puying (woman ) and room all night free. Two prize, free puying aod room all night. (You) must furnish room. Three prize, free tv.·o-hour ma ssage. Drawing 20th every month." IN ANOTHER "house of joy" in NakOOn Phanom, women are dressed in white jackets with numbers. 'There, e.ager GI clients view them through a one·way mirror. With the end of lhe bombing, tbe hu~e airbase and others like it in Thailand will gradually be phased down. But as our on· !he-scene obser\ler and lhe ex·Air Force officer agree: "We ruined part of a culture. Nakhon Phanom is a product o1 our society." · Oh , To Be in England? (Ne ws item from London: 15,000 ~·chool chU4rt'li aidtd in the drawi1.lg of o: map that 1how1 thtre are only four parts: of BrittUn wh~re it is 1titl possible to breathe pure air). Oh . to be in England now that August's here, And whof"ver wakes in England sees, some morning, 1.d'laware, That the lowest boughl and the brushwood sheaf Ha\'e turned rotten brown from the bole to the leaf, \Vhile the cafflnch coughs asthm.atically on the orchard bouih In England -now! Oh. to be in England where pollution'• rife, And whoever wakes In England needs a knife To cut tht pall that hangs across the fens and moors, Where gasping guides fumble aloni con- ducted tours; \\'bile the plowman gobbles down an· Llhlstamlncs by the pack Jn England -hack I Oh , to be In England wber.e the smokestack'• atream . Awak es the dilly labom from big lull· ing rU1tlc dream, Groping to the window and throwlnc out the •hU1tera, ~ting in the i-rtlcJeo trom garb•ge- moonda and &Utlfn, 'line lhe childfl"' ~ 'their ;u-muu lgAIOJI the' ri>ominC breeze, Iii ~l•M -........ I ~YDNEY J.H:ARRl~ Oh, to be in England now that Brown· ing's dead, And her pallid poets can celebrate the b1· gredients of lead, The sweet scent of sulphur and carbon dioxide on the wold, \Vhile the mangy sheep browse on the sickly grass within the fold, And the robin wonders why the baby dies wilhln the shell, 1!' England -hell I ' • Oh. lo be In F.ngland, but only •ln ·tour pans, :' In Er.-or In Norlolk, but•nOI in Bucks. or Harts., The air ~ safe along lladrian's Wall and also Wordsworth's lakes, Elsewhere the lichens overrun the trees In thickets and brakes, And lhe fulHhroated sound ol the cuckoo · is but a hoarsened rasp, Tn England -gasp! Oh, to be in England, with a satchel full of pills, Oilpenslng tablets wholesale r 0 r • respiratory ills, Or aelllng oxygcn·machines lo hospltail . and schools. And supplying veterinarians with dubious ampules, Whll• building rl&ht near Hadri an's Wall a monopolisOc apa, In Eni!land -bah! They Hear cussed in a public bearing before tile county ll<>ard ·of Supervison ~ug. 29. While II commends aome of the department's proj· eels, incl~ding a central audiovisual Ubral'y, a lll&rine sciences laboratory and special schoollni for the band!· capped, the study blasi.,J.~m. of gQall, and tow em- ploye morale ;ind condemns a-number of.allegedly ''use- less" programs. · ' +The Grand Juries pointed out Ilia! county schools offices .originally were established to service small, niral school districts. With the growth of Orange County and the •disappearance of these rural pockets, it is argued that the state Department of &luc.ation 's regional serv- ice districts could very well deal directly with today's larger, unified school districts. In an era overloaded with layers of government, the possibility of eliminating any layer that may have out· lived its usefulness warrants close examination. It's Our ,Money ,- Th• last major exception to open meeting rules in the state Legislature would he re11l9ved by measures just approved by the Senate Rules Committee. These would end secret meetings '<In the state budget and insure the attendance of public and press at all budget discussions. ' By tradition, the Senate Finance Committee and the Assembly Ways and Means Committee bold many public meetings on the state budget. But the influential six-member, joint Senate-Assembly budget conference, which writes the final version of the budge~ meets in closed session. The proposed legislation would open these meet· ings, to,o. Said one legislatOr, "You're talkjpg: about an enormous piece of money. I certainly see nothing wrong with the public having an idea of what's going on." To which the public may say, Amen. •' ·SRASS KNU<KLES Fuel tor 'Guilt 'fJy ltnplkation' Arg1111ie1its Agnew Vindication Could A_id Nixon WASHINGTON -For a couple of months prior to recent disclosures Vice President Spiro T. Agnew had been grant· ing interviews to selected reporters and columnists. Nothing especially startling emerged from these numerous taped conversations but in their totality. they served to present a picture of a well col· lected, articulate and Wonned vice president with qual· ificatJoru: for the presidency, whatev· er mlgbt happen. · That was lUldou~ , edly the vice president's main ~· This was distilx:tly a departure from cus- tom. Few v~ p-esidents before Agl\eW had so )lllb~y asserted !!ielr ~ dnce of the White ]iouse. In an ln~lew on JWJe 8, for example, the viCe president expressed disagreement with"-econc:mic policies the President wa8 later _to an- nounce. He talked with a g\'eat deal ._.. (rankness than anyone else in the ad· ministration about th~ emigration p-ob- lem of Russian Jews, was heartily critical of the Ervin Committee 1n the Senate and dealt with other ·sensitive subjects. ' . (rucHARD WIISO~ wroogdoing a• governor ol Maryland 8nd ,vice president. , ·. Th1s brings into a little s~r fOCUI . certain potentialities if Agnew is not in- dicted (or otherwise brought to legSI ac:- count) for having been involved in kickbacks from state and federal C(ll}o tractors. If there proves to be no basis for action aiaJnst Agnew, he may emerge in the same posture as President Ni:s:on ot be inc. inferentially accused of wrong- doing without cooclusive proof. HOWEVER much suspicion might hover over either or both of them, they l{Ollkl be in a posilloo I<> make a poli- llcill response that the' lnstllutioo ol 1he iJresldency was being hounded 14 destruction in an lnquisil4ri81 faablon. lntimatiom ol tl\ll'liave already emerged in the Watergate hearings, and they were recessed at a moment when widely noted reaction. was setting in. Numerous Senators noted an increased pu,blic sen- timent tb.8t tbe main purpose was 'to "get" the Presi~ent under circqmstances unfair to him and to destroy the rightfUJ powers of the presidency. , Should the President's coming response to the Watergate hearings be more persuasive than previously there'may be further basis for conclusions that Nixon \\'as being pilloried. If absence of direct proof places Agnew in a some\~that similar position then the basis will have been laid for the charge that unmitigated ha.tred and distrust of Nixon-Agnew ex· ceeded all bowuls of decency and falmess by undermining the institution of the firesid<l!C)'. indictable case against Agnew. Their let· ter would thus becoJljt, inelltricably In· volved in the pauer of presidenUal destruction, and prime material for political outrage. Knowing as he did on June S ti. rumors of his criminal involvement Agnew said : "\Ve 're living in a very strange en· vironment right now. You might say .•. l don't go as far as some that have characlerized it as the 'day of the jackal' ... but I'd have to say that there iS a UttJe bi.t of intolerance of the Dlglish system of justice about. I was interested ... in comment that we were not adber· ing 14 lhe traditional Engllsb l)'ltem Qf 'innocent until proven guilty' but we're going to the French system of 'gUilty un- til proven innocent.' " IT RAS BEEN written that there is a tbreebokl beyond . which the public generally "-'ill not accept denigration of the presidency. The presidency, riibt or wrong, is a ftiuge to which many Of the faithful reflair. So,· it is Of·crttical.political importance AGNEW v:ent on to omerve that the whether or ncx the federal prosecutors in Watergate climate of disillusion "1nakes Baltimore. afttt infoniling A~w that for a very intolerant approach to any he , und · inal. · · •1 person v.1>o denies an aocusalioa." The was er cnm mvesUgauon. ac-reacticn ~will indeed be intolerant tf t11ally develop a case 'against him. There 'I' Agnew's "damned lies" denial is as ls ample lpdtcpti90 .U.t they. did not vannl'ftl1• ·as o01erl in the ......... But if he desire their notification of Agnew to r"' v-..-. become public. Having become public is not found criminally liable, then it can that notification tends to'Commit them to be mad~ to ~Pi>;ear. ~t the assault on a course they may not be able to follow . · t?e ~ti al institution has been cat· . . ned beyond l<llerable boonds in the ac· THE PROSECUTORS will. look more . cusa!My Watergale atmosphere of guilty Ilk• persecuto<, il lhey do ~ develop an: ... ~1 proven ~t. ONCE AGAIN Agnew is being hi's own man in refuting as "dammed Ues," in an open press cooference, any charges of Demo Chief The Pains of Prosperity Target of IRS Audit ( EVANS·NOVAK J WASillNGTON -Immediately after Lawrence F. O'Brien filed his Watergate suit as Democratic national chairman, President Nixon's senior aides developed an obsessiv~ interest In causlng' ta" troubles for him . According to reliable sourceS from the Whlte House, O'Brien becam'e Enemy No. t there after the Watergate burglary. It was O'Brien who then led the political attack to connect the crime with Presi· dent Nixon's high command. Fearful about what might be uncovered through O'Brien's lawsuit against the Committee I\\ lieelect the Preil~~ NlxOo ' aidt! responded l1Y p1arui1ng .a oountetatuo:i _ Tbe President was BMOWlcing Ph8se VII over the radio that morning as Fred Frisbee shaved. Frisbee caught the words , "America now enjoys the highest standard of Jiving in history .... " before the radio faded Out Radios were al· ways fading out these days. Nobody seemed to know why. "Probably the Energy Crisis," said Frfsbee, "whatever ls causing that."· He nicked himself with his et•ht-day- old; blade. ;rDamn it•" he said, "why can't anybody· find Oiit why there '1 a shortage of rAf,f)I' bladeJ1" After a hearty breakfast of stewed soy· beans which wero plentUul and cheap (nobody knew why), Frisbee headed !or work. He noticed that the tires were Oat on the family car which hatl been parked at the curb lot six rnoolbs.· No( that it mattered . "MAYBE if I get up at five tomor· row," he muttered, "I'll be able to get a Wlek• against hlin: •• i, · : >6.~ . ~ . "' . . ,.. THE SENA'!'E. waiei.a~. hearings ' revealed that the Wblte ll9llae probed private &OUrces of income for O'Brien, 1mpaid as national chairman. But the hearings did not develop that presidential aldef ' conleneil · at len1lh· about ln- tensllying Internal Revenue Ser\llce (IRS) pre8$Un1 on O'Brien. This pnt1ure was reflecttd ln memciranda wblcb may s1lll be In While lloule !Ues. ''i ~· " , ' ' O'Brien• 1 tu U.Ubla be&an after bl• election on l+jarch 1, 1m; lor a oecond hitch •• Democrallo naUooal chairman. The IRS ordend an IOdll' of his Ille tax ' relum. In 11111, tbe IRS audited hll' 1'10tJ retum. Netther 1udlt J>l'.Ol'Uced ~I • <ant adcDtiooal revenue kW 'the l'l"tm- lllOllt. Biii lf1er the Watergate siitl wu filed, tbe IRS «dcrod a re .. udit of bis 19'9 ta• ,.tum -again, without 1lgnifl- callt recapture of tues. 1. .. • , J ' . ,. ,;/ . . , • .(.__AR_T_H_o_PP_E~J gallon of gas for my scooter. I wish someone could explain why there's a gas shortage.." He hadn't reached the comer before a shady cha.racte.r sidled up to him: "Psst, Mac, wanna buy a kilo of beef? It's right off the boat from Argentbla. Man, it's the real stuff! " "I've kicked the habit,'' said Frisbee. "And will you please .tell me why I can't buy beef In the butcher shop the way I used I<>?" But the beef pusher bad drifted away. FRISBEE joined ' th• thl'()ng 0 I pede!trlans making the long walk downtown. Empty bb5es passed them. "Why do they stW demand exact fare?" a woman asked angrily. '!Don'( they know there's a quarter shortage?" Nobody answered her. People didn't talk to each other much any more. '. ' workers laid off by 1be lumber shortage. T wonder why there's a, lumber shortage! Doesn't God grow-trees any more?" HE LUNCHED on a soy.bean sandwich but vowed-to trut birnseU that evening to an egg, five sardines and maybe even an apple. (Nobody was. quite SlD'e wby food prices were so high,) : • . He was just opening the sardines when the radio inexplicably came on with a re- broadcast of the President's ·morning l!lpeech: "And I can assure · You. my fellow Americans, that never 'have Wt! been so affluent and p~Us. There is absolutely ~thing wron~ With our economy -nothing·that a11;fbody Can put a finger on." wim a sigh, FriSbee arose and scrawled a brief note which read, '1 can't atand prospffrity." . · , He then .stuck hia head in the oven and turned on tho gas, forgetting in hla 4esperatlon that tlle nationwl~e ll'llural gas shortage was now ln lt.s eighth m'onth -although nobody knew P•eclrely why. With the schools closed. the sidewalks were crowded with children. -No·one waa !l!tt.wey .lhe lchoolx weni clOllO\l>,&mi ~ ~· ·aa!d 11 ~r ~0& 1o a+\eadl<I!' sbcirta~. , · . ...: .. DAILY PILOT 0th~ blalJlOd the paper '~ge!''lllei.e· .. • ·l!ooert N. Wied, P!U>U.,..,. ~~ :ni!_ d~_-the Iat1er. Nol •• •lllgl? ·• • ; ITl1oma1 Kecvjl, Edltor bOi!\ or .n<Wll!11ipilt\ had been printed Iii Barbara Krtibich months. · Editorial Page Editor The elevators stUl weren't working (something about a part& shortage), so Frisbee had to. cUmb the elghl floors I<> his office. But.• pleasant surprise Wiii. wituna oo 1111 d .. t: tbe mail! It was the first mall delivery In weeks. .. ' OF COURSE, most of II WU mlsad- drel'O'l. But there w~ Pucb }e\ten 10 ~eep him busy on th~ P!>Orle all niomln1 -"lf only," Fri.bee safd i]oOmily, "the phones were -Icing." So be got out the pencJl atub he treuured am Idled+ fWIY hla day wrtilng hll own letters Witf!Ollt DJl!CP hope of their ever ieltlJlg tl!ri>li&'b-''Why Is there a ...rotary stiOrta"'.'' be iltlted aloud, "when so many people are unemployed! But I ,,_ they're moelly contlructlon Tile cditort&l .·~ of tht-Dtily Pilot ·Wk• ·10 lnfonn and atlmulate '......,. by· pt'esentlnr on this -lltwnel~ ·on topict Ot iD- lentt by Oj<ndtca1ed co1 ......... and cartoonists, tot prl'.Mttir'I( • Sonlrn for readers' vlcwt and b)' Pttaentlnr th.II iiewtpa,per'• opirUonl and tde&a on ........ -·Tho ~""'111 -~ ·.,. ))ally Pttot appear only In the edhorlal <Otumn '•t ~ top of the -· Opin!Qos expc e.,...i by the coi-umntstl .bd 1 ~ and lttttr wrtWn-. thwlr own ~ "°.....,.,. mcnt d ib.tf "1M bl' lhe Dilly• Pitot....., "".......,, . ' . ~londi.x: "-ugust ti, lp73 ,.· • Monday, AL19U1l 13, 1973 • DAILY PILOT l • • . I ' . . ·J f.' .. r . • 'A ; I I' .•l. '-l .• '1, <. ( • ·: ' ~r,, . .. ' , • Ii {1 .. . ' • • • I I . , , 0 \ I • I ' • • • • . . • • ........ __ .... :) . ' . , @,nite FrulS~hC>lll2 , ... . -· ; .. -. ·,; I ., .. . ....... ,. . . .. ' . .. . . \ . ' i-• . ' • ~~. ' ~ ..• -·.~ -~ .. :: •• ~.,t ):,;': ,'. . .. ' ~ ~. . . . ~ .. ' ::· ' ., . ·"·· ., ' ' ' " •"ir ..J 1.u.. • •II. . , I f l " I "" ·• 'l , .. "1:. 1\ gr,. • I' . \, .. ".:: ' ~· . ... ,, • 0 • M .! """'"'' ~ ' ...... ' .. . . ,, ' " · .... -, . .. .......... •" ~· , , uV " ., ·'· ·, ... ·.:.i ) .. .. The •e ,h•e -'\ . . . ... -. . . . ' • • ' • • .,.. ~ ' I ' . ' and -look what llllV're dOing to our storesl AFriendlet® is tbe mostaJJHI· .. ill little cr.eat111 u eirtk .. Ht r is maJical! He does 1opd tki11s. e He paints baJ)y s11i11S'01fac.1s .. · , He SJreads the rood. fnlint of · Fri11dlt1USs'® w .. reHf he CllS. He is th• . ' tlficial li1htb11rttd little fixer-upper. ne Fri11dlees® baYI taktR arer ewerywtrere ' af lnite Frill wiO ·oeir ma1icaf w1zardrj. · · A1al1st 1Y1r1i1ht thej ar, cre.aJ· . 111 MW d,,attments, tirintlnc · ~ i1 frisk merchndise,.ad.P,la~ . ill 1111 chick stand~ tl. make , sh•PPill phuomually easier and faster thu ever hfore. Then one night.when RD one . was around, tbey brought their ladders, paint brushes, magic . © paint and sparklint wallpaper. lhey set about redecaratint t~e whole store in the ·brightest, most exciting • c.elors tbey could find . They washed, they scrub~ed, they cleaned and sparkled until everywhe1e jou looked it ·was just as Friendlee~ as the smiles on their chee{!ul little. · faces. The only !hint . yet tti do was • to spiinkle nery- t~i11 with 'iarisible;· lilod cheer. · When tkey flilished·Prest~!! · It's like stePJint' into a whole world of color- ful Frl11dl11®-Hss! '· ,, CLOSED TEMPORARILY MON.·, AUG. 13,i TO ,.THURS., AUG. _.,' ' ~ I • ~ ~. , ' . . ... . . ..... ... , .. ' < • Then the Friendlees®invaded tbe world of fasbin. Frem all over they used .their magic 11 . fill White Front with fashions just for California. New lash· 101s for wome1 and new styles ' for mea in 11 ubelienbl1 ,seltcti11 el color anf fabrics! . The Friendlees® alwa1s per- sonally i,spett every-_1\el1! i• eY1ry stare and ~are placed their "satisfaction 111ranted or, your 11tne.J back" setl of · Fn11dlee ® --1tss ' 1n tkem ndpricd them s1 low that ·evea the savinrs are Frieadlee® ' ' WhH yn enter the new White Front 11d l11k around, you'll see Friendlees® popping DJ 1Y1ry- where ... peeking out from nery nook and -corner. It all adds . up to the fact that the Frie'ndlees® ·have Tnvaded White Front with the most .• 11citinr m1!ical wizardry yoa can imagine. If you haven t seen what Oey have · done ·1o 1he Friendle e®ne!I White Froilt, this is your special. invitatiol ti see it llOW ... but beware! The Friendlees have a very pleasant and , friendlee®~rame ·•I milMI. • ... , __ , - GPND®,uP•· AUGUST 17111 10 A.M. • 16 FOR FINAL REMODELING Exce~t lX & Appliani:~ Marts, Pharmac ies & Markets & Tire Cente" \t .. '~ "'~...; "' . • • • J,·~ ' ' !iHDP WITH C.Dl\IFIDEl\ICE AT WHITE .. fRCl"ll'···SAtl!iFACTIOl\l ·6UARAl\ITEED DR YOUR MDl\IEY eAcK ., ' .. , I . •. . .GRANO RlOl'l/111111 STO~I HOUH1 fl!DAT & SATURDAr IOAM !e llWM.,'. SUNDAr IOAM le 7,M 1411 r • • , 'COSTA .. M.ES A - .. . . \ . ' ' 3088 . BRISTOL ST. ' '· . San Dleio FrHw1y 11 llrlslol l aaa.11GI · , .. ,, ... , •• ~, • ·USI ro'UR CRIDIT IWtMIOI '•IMMll.llUll • IMS;tUUIMl cm· • ' • • l "' ' .. , • I ,J -· \ J ••l".> "A ,, •'<i o"I "" "" • •1!1 , Ill' m qo ·ni (•[ \)'~ iv ,,. T> 'to r' xi tJ ' Id . "" ot •ib 10 • •d ,. \o "' •G 10 .A 'T ,u ','I nr .0 1 A T I/ ,, ll 1) ~ 0 .J 'II ,, • f DAILY PILOT , . ., ""'"='= Mond11, A..,usl 13, 197J "rltUE tt.e, are, Daddy! There are thooe fiolUM W9 ,..ro tryin' to catch!" Police Helpless To Stop Ogling HARTFORD, Conn. (UPI) -Girl watchln&: will always be a favorite male sport.-po- lice notwltbstaodlng. Boat Ramp, Camp Fees Dropped WASHINGTON (AP) -Tiie U.S. Forest Service says it ill eliminating fees for most family campgrounds and boat ramp!'! to comply with a new Jaw, but will lose about $5 million a year as a resulL Fem at 99 boat-laU!'IChing ramps have been dropped arxJ. fees will continue at only about 30 of the 2,221 campgromds within the na- tional forest system, said a Forest Service spokesman. TeE NBW STATUTE, pass- ed by Congress last month, prohibits lhe government from chargtng the public to use basic rea-eatlonal facilities. Under the legislation, sites must be hlglily developed and maintained before fees can be cb1tged. Police Ollef Thom as Vaughan recently assigned lllffle officers to Ute two-bloclc Hartford Civic C e n t e r comtructioo $It! after a woman complained a worker ..many buassed her. BUI' 11IE OGLES and cat- calli 1t female passersby -"HOW can · they stop It~" .. ed ooe eonstru ction l'Ol'ke!'. "Men are always p na like '° watch girls no ~t ier what UIO)' do ." The -set said fewer men ate out oa. the street since the police detail arrived -"But only beeauae they're married and don't want to get inVolved with all the publicity." SOME WOl\fEN are sticking up for their oglers. One seven-woman of~ce on Asylum Street bore a sign on its foi.rth floor window ~ claiming, "Hard hats, we re for you." "These guys love their wort(,'" said the off i c e spokeswoman. "They come out here in any weather. and now they can't even go where the girls are." Words Taboo New Policy for Gays NEW YORK (AP) -A l1ornosexual by any olber name - except "gay" -is now taboo for New York's finest Polle\ Commissioner Donald F. Cawley issued an order forbidding use of derogatory or inflammatory names when re- ferring to different ethnic groups or those of different sexuaJ hablll. "WOIUll ClAN BELi' eliber smooth a lituaUon or con- trtbutt to its getting oot of hand," the commissioner said. "Therefore, in the coorse of department business, crime repcrts, communlcaUons, radio messages, missing persons, etc., the terms 'homosexual,' •gay,' shall be used whenever they are relevant. other expressions, which are often used as derocatory, are not lo be used." · ARBY:S OFFERS ROAST BEEF DINNER Dellclou1 Ro11t Bfff S1ndwich French Fries SERVED FROM 4 TO 9 P.M. SEVEN DAYS A WllK GH4 011tr 9t f•ll•wl .. LM•tl•• 7942 EDINGER AYE. HUNTINGTON BEACH ce;,,.., .... • 141..- Nearly Everyone Lisrens ro Landers • Graha1n Blitz Under Fire LONDON (AP) -Billy Graham is bringing • rad.le.ally new klnd of crusade to Brlt•in thil month, and already his "Spree 73" idea is under criticism. weekly magazine eipre:ssed ooncem a bout what t h e delegates will learo. n Mid the Billy Graham "-iatloQ gave "no '"""(late r<ply" lo il3qlltl'lel. travaganza," said Crowe, • Blnnlngbam evencellot and former crusader. C br ts t la n weekly newspapers carried ful page articles attacltlng sp... and have editorially urged 113 organl!en to clarify melhocll and jmtlfy the cost of the M.,. Security W1lh FALSE TEET .. Wllllo I.ii"', Talldn9 _.frali fU. MM• wtll drop at ti..! Wf'OQf tl-1 A dtntw. a4l*IV9 • Mlp. P:A8TEETH• POW1Ser ai dentllrtl a leatt'• Br~,, nted bold. Wby1Mentban.-clfF0t 11e11rl11 and eomlortf u1• PA S TEETH 0..nlin AdMil .. Po_.,. DenU1ret that lh .,._ -lW Matth. S.. )'o\11 ~UH ""'1arlY Cler~ymen and laymen call the $600,000 crusade, amon1 other things. a spiritual· luxury and hlt-and-run evangelism. The organiu:n say the event will be an "inveatment in eternity." / Spree -a name cltrl¥ed from "aplrftual re4aqihl1l!" -was patterned , 1fter Graham's succeuful Eipo f2 In Dallas. Spree's organizus reply that the event, which opens Aug. rt, could have ''astoumlina 1m1-ttrm effects for the Kingdom of God." MORNINGS WILL b e devoted to training sessloM in scripture and salesmanship, afternoons to house-t.cHiou.se canvassing, and evenings to addresses and entertainment. event. General direc:l« llfaur· rice Rowland5on allrlb\llfs the crltlclsm to tho acope of Spree, saylnf: ""'°Ille -~ ·know what they'ro Ill for ond so they're UJ\OllY lhaitt It all." Among the main objtctloos lo Spree• b Ill !600,lllO COii, to QoodDeed make tho """"" Sundays DURING PAl\T o[ tho crusade, deletates ag:ed lfi years and up will blitz the streets of London w i t h religious aalumanship. "'ft' II WllAL111V Chr;,o tians in the West lndultlnl In five days of spiritual luilU')'," aid the Rev. Philip Crowe, one of Spree'• most vociferowi critics. "'It is the essence of wo rldlin ess, an ex- The final day will be given over to a mass rally In Wembley Stadium, w I t b Graham and folk singer John- ny Cash in the star spots. bo ralMd Ill --lllll d<legale 1 ... at aln\oot 11:10 a head. Ortianluno .... _. ting on 25,000 del~1•te1, but IO far only 8,000 have roptered. in ltl8 l1Mlijijll1ll The Olurch of England's New buses, new routes. new times and new schedules. You might ebow JOU Mw, 11111 whn. to pt r,.,.. ooo point to ...U.. Each schedule has a aection for Ume tables, a section for general Information and an overall services map (like the one below). We've a specific service area map that sboWI, We're doing our beat to provide it for you. jn detai~ where the route goea. Them routes now 8erVe 2Z or the 26 cities in Orange County. All of the routes have been designed to take you to most of the major shopping centers and recreation areas in our county, 'l'he new times m'ean tnore11ed •llP'rice. On some routet, butea art! seheduled every 30 minutes. This means more · CODveoience for you. Our new buses, for eYample, are the most comfortable we've ever used. Air-conditioned, vinyl bucket seats, pacbge racks and the latest in pollution control equipment ere reason. enough to ride the ""Two Bit" is eve.n a section that ...----.. telb )'OU how to read and understand the other aectioDs. quickly, euily and accurately. Even l'rith all !:::::::::~-'·these changn; ODI thing mna!n1 the aame. Our fare, 11'1 •till onlJ • ••• on1J • quuter, for • one.war fare. Tnnsren are free and children, under tZ. ride free when accompanied by a rare-paying passenger. 5C! look us over. Check out our new routes end times. Ride our new buees and read OW' new schedulri. You'll find that the ""Two-Bit"" BUI Line is a real llterna.Uve to todays traffic. congestion IDd pollution problems. The lime ia rlghL LAHAlflA u .._. 1111&. ... :·: ........ -: Now, our new schedules. We've virtually reinveD.ted the bus schedule. We've colOMIOdtd the routes to the schedu1e9 fot • \. f .. -· i. ~i :ii" Here's where you awrt llDd the bua 1topa. Tbe1t 11Rn1 are at all major bu 1top1, announcing the mo1t economical and rol!abls transportaliOll around, Looi: for it on your oomer , ... 11·1 a 8lgn of the time& Jom convenience. All to insure that you get i..;;...---'--~ what you need. What you need i.s a schedol1 J • ·1 :i Ji that does what .---.._ to do: 1! ~ .._.... : I -!'] .. l'UUDITm : , ,. - ' a.-... : \ On: pl ,. .... : _.,.... u ........ -. ...... -.le:r ---m~,.----~ CYPflUS -I ANAHllM • ... ~-1 STNfTO. ..... ,,M, ----.-..··-···· -J_: l• ~t!I-. : ,i $ •• MU 1: f GNIOOI MOW • J: .t.• W a lea M._. SMIT~--•¥•••••••••-••--.,.,,.. ..,_tnt"1-..... ,. i! ~-""""" ·------':-- j 111 f<MfTNlt-! I • • • ,,., •. ,. . llall Toda~ ••• . ' . To 191 your n-..._ale, ttimpl7 detwmltN the -.area(•) you'll be traveling and check the -boxfea) below. Then mail the .roapon to the °Two'Blt" Bu Uoe, 11:18 Eut WllhingtonA....,SantaAno.CalJIQrDJaemn. .-···------·-----------·-···· : I ... a Jiit. Pl .... tmd., new leh.duln 1t llO c.t 'I I -~Wow. I : rwa I I I. I I :,es -·: ! OJtottte-4.l)I0,:110 0Ra.tt-tzt.U1,:l:Z8,:IU : : a 1toa.._..11e.1", 1n o hute-N.11, u. 11 : I ORDllllll •M.tts,141 DAii...... I I . D' I ............................. ,/ // :I' Ride the ·Bit'' Bus I,iae ORANGE COUNTY TRANSIT DISTRICT .. ' ' I i l I I ! I I I I I I l I l • I I I I ! I I - . I . ~ Phil lnt•rlan~l "It'ks ~~ry cute , but I only ·sit on park benches in par s. . f :.-1 ....... j ' ,, L~ ItJ. 'Boyd $ • -C -#>--· • • Douglas Ahnost Was President When a bachelor meets a single girl, that thing called physical attraction ls said N be what interests him most. Surprised? According to a 1H'Ofessor at the University of Louisville, thls average man rates said average girl as follows : About 40 percent, simply sex appeal. About 15 percent, her knack as a cook. About 15 percent, her skill with money, if any. About fi ve percent, her sewing. About 15 percen t, her health. And about 10 percent, whether her opinions match thole of the dlscrlmi· nating fellow who makes these im- pertinent judgment!. , . Was only 48 ~ears aio that Ufe word "sexy" was quoted as English slang in -a French magazine, its first ippear- ance in print ever. ' ' ., As they grow older, some birds get smaller,))Ot larger. ake certain young swallows. They loot a querttr. <if lhelr weight between adol escence and maturity. .. Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Boo: '1875 New· port Beach, Calif. 92660 . -' If: ·-·--~ - • -. u depaslts 1f $100,000 for six montbs to one ynr Tht number of th11 acnunts that wt ._ •• ,. _ ,.c.an ·~~''l is lim.ile.d . _ •. ~ WE PiAY .cordETITIYE INTEREST RATES . , ON All OTtlER ·ACCOUNTS , · · · FOUR.TEEl'llo.0.Ffl_CES. TO SERVE YOU IN Arcttll• •c1rrit11 Li Crncen11 •On111t ltll Gerd•M •Costa M... Lt1 ....... 12) . •sin "'""''"' 'C1•011 Porl< DOWMY 121 Ml•""'Y Ptrl< Wlllttlfr flH MditloHI 01llc11 I• lltrthll C1lll111i1 Pl11111t Hill SH Brtll 10111111 Sotn) flstor Cit1 ll111l1i• Yit• SH J111 *OPEN NIGHT & DAV and Saturdays . • Call (213) 923-9601 •. . or see the whii. peges . . . for your neorest ofllct ASSETS OVER $375 MILLION Monday, August l), 1973 TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY ONLY OPEN DAILY 10 , .. 10 SUNDAY 10.7 AQUA NET® SPRAY 12 oz. PEANUTS 2 FOR 99¢ • «11 1£ttrt&'<lrllirtr . ~ 111 '=l/IU cwoi..w --L ~. 3 for99¢ GIANT CANDY BARS . 4 for 99¢ {Limit 6) Ory Ro•1IH wltll llO OU ,, 1u1•r 11ffd In pr10e:t u ln1 (L!m lt ~) ' ·' i ~ " 2-LAMP LIGHT FIXTURE WOMEN'S SANDALS ~ Reg, 2.83 1 .• 00 i summer. Zip or button ' l Ideal .' f o r spring • n d 1 88 .I !f.ont ... Navy blu•, siz•s S, · :,: 11!4 < L, I Similar lo illus Ir•· · • ~ ~~"' . I . . •• : ~ 'l1l ' -' ' ~ ........ • '~·. """'!'-~--.i· .. ~ . Doubl,r, Y.cross-band whlle ~lnyl · · · ' ' wlfhcork sole ond helil~'s ~j o: : ,, e ~ .. Iii:~*'' 4•1f'~~~·'Jri .. · ."1.~~,~~~·; . " ,.. _____ ,,.,_ ... ..,,...,,.. .... ;.,. -,,1,(#':J·: !~, \ ROLL-UP BLINDS I ~ ' M JUNIPER SALE I ~ ~ I -Gallon 7 C Quality constructed with heavy· , 2 00 I • ,,. duty cordlock, Vlnylon• cords 3x6 ' r l> " vinyl slats. Wood·graln o; SIZE • r Tam, Phitzers, Armmons to beautify those dull spots ·>:1 green finish. Charge 111 . I "any yard. ~ d l lllU' 11 ••~11<~r·:e1 •1rritcamrli:Mw~-1 .... _ _. 1 ~ .-a1 v~~.u;c'l''ORG9'·& ~MArwtt dflii . 1· GAL PAINT .. ·THINNER ... 5oc j . r 1 I I. Made frorn fine min•ral spirits. for p•lnt thinning, brush eleanin9. I ~h-.9• Ill -! 50-FT. GARDEN HOSE • Look what you save! 97c Long-lasting vinyl C plastic hose. Bros s couplings. lS:" 1.0. • U~ ,Your Kmart Charl)e BankAmerlcard or Master Charqe I ' ' . · .... ---· .. ·:·'. CHARCOAL BRIQUETS I 2DaysOnly 97c ~ality charcool glws a last· 1ng hoot. 20.lb. bog • •--.,,,..,.. • f'IY..,_ ' • ~ ,,, • ,.., , I • ~ I Redw.ood Compost i :.:~~!.~!!J growth 60 pound bag. Highly or.. ~· gonic. !"deal soil conditioner. U1• your Kmart cr•cHt cord for Jpee4 ond con"'9riience. "fli::! ., " • ' ....... ., , CHARCOAL ST ARTER ,; 2 Days Only 2 8tr . Starts fire fast ... no tostt, o0 odor, no soot, Quart ~ize ·< .. , ' ' I, I j 1 JtJ IJ .. ; .. f J'iLVI Mottdaf. Augusl 13 1973 • " Gero11i1110 Lucille Ball takes up sky diving tonight on the _"Here's Lucy" show at 9 o'clock on CBS, Channel 2. I "WHAT'~ UP, DOC" ... "PLAY IT AGAIN. SAM" f lt) "S:JU NO 0 11: MU51C " NO ll E~ERVEO SEATS With Julie A,drOWl "S S S 'S S S S" '"' "THE BOY WHO CRIED WEAEWnLF" IPGI -•-" -'ll "' .. LEGEN D OF HELL HOUSE" '"' ST40/UM l '., "BOSTON STRANGLER'' tPGI .. .-u ~.t!.t·~2 . "LIVE AND LfT DIE" IPGJ "'' ''THE MfCHANIC" ''THE MACKINTOSH MAN" IPGI '"' "BULLET" (PGI ...... Sp•ce • ~ ,,, .. ,,..," ® ... Heny Enterta•nn1enc t ' ..... s.: .. ~""'~~ ........ ·-~ ,,.. .. ,_~ $UllGIO lllfllOES-IRAZll. 71 .SIEVE KRANTZ • ...-.. Sitvt: KRANTZ RALPH BAKSHI· • AMf:RtCAN INTERNATKlNAL-11 Starts WEDNESDAY I• . GEORGE c. scon FAYE DUNAWAY JOHN MILLS JACK PALANCE Ul\L HO MA CRUDE MATS O~ll Korean (] .s. Dollar Blatned • Violinist At Peak English Movies in Decline ... NEW YORK (UPfl -At 25. ''iolinist Kyung \Vha Chung sits on top of the world of t:l:issical music. All the great concert halls are her stage. In an interview, she had some words for boys and girls struggling with n1usic lessons nnd prac11ce sessions. She also h::id a few asides for parents of s:une. The elf-like violinist - she's a si ze Sl.'VC'll -has been liken- ed to j\\'O great fiddlers. I leiff'IZ and Oistrakh . But this teeny-tiny musical giant could pass for son1cbody's teen-age kid sister. She also leaves the impression she cou ldn't put on an air if her life depended on ii. UPI T•lelttlolo THE KOREAN miss started FINE FIDDLER piJno when four, violin when ~yung Wha Chung seven. Brothers and sisters ;~~~~~~~~~~~~-also were introduced to music __ ·! early. "Not because my pa<·cnlS BROADWAY By, BOB THOMAS LONDON (AP) -Movies on television, devaluatkin of the dollar, difficulty of guessing public taste are some of the factors blamed tor one of the worst slumps in English film industry hil!tory. The decline can be seen at Pinewood Studio, once Brit· ain's busiest in Britain. "We have only one small film sh.~ting here now," said Jan Lewis, a Pinewood official. "Usually it's difficult to get studio space in the sum· 1nertime. ' "There is hope for the future: we have two big pie· tures coming in. 'The Abdica- tion' and 'The Great Gatsby.' But the filn1 business has been going through a rather bleak period.'' THE SAME: feeling exists throughout the London film community. Much of the trou- bl e stems from the inability or some American film com- panies to resolve their finan- cial ill s. "\Ve arc almost totally were n1usicians." she said. 416 N, BROADWAY, SA,,.TA A,,.A ~~ "They \\'ere no t. But they s41.41~ \Vere \v ise. They had an in-1. HAR~:gu~~P~~~ENT tuitidvc f s 1 e_nse 1 adbout h o w 2. Woody All~.., \;? , ,~' . won er u il wou be to start EVERYTHING ABOUT 5 • • • their child on piano." ], BEST HOUSE IN LONDON. Bruce ~rown's At 11 she won two prizes 111111ec1 lll frotn Seoul University and at !~~~~~~~~~~~~ 12 her government sen t I Kyung \\'ha on a CQnccrt tour of Japan. Soon afler she was studying in America and came to the attention of Ivan Galamian. teacher of many of the fo remost co ncert izing violinists of the day. He ar· ranged a full scholarship for her at J uill iard in Ne\v York. Tom La119hli11 Dolores To.,lor "BILLY JACK" pl11s Jack L~m""'"' "ON ANY SUNDAY" (Gf Plus "BILLY JACK" (PG! MESA c~;;: 1884 N EW PORT f:IL VD S 4 81)~2 ~m~ "SCARECROW" -• "SAVE THE TIGER" A11other out1ta11din9 co1"blt1atlon! EXCLUSIVE! GENE HACKMAN f:i''b SC/WEOW.¥ AN AWARD TN an in· ternational CQmpetition in- cluded an engagement with the Pittsburgh Symphony in 1967. The next year she made her debut with the Ne w York Philharmonic. Hailed. she \Vas cJlled a major artist, ex- traordinary and a lot of nice things -all the way to sensa· "THE WAR BETWEEN MEN AND WOMEN" Co11tlnuou1 Sot. & Sun. 2 p.rn. Shoppers Matl11ff Wed. 1 p.111. tiona l~ Both i11 Color IFGJ , I \Vell. that turned out lo be_ . the word for her debut in [---__ -:-----=-:_==::' Europe in 1970. At London's ----···--··- Royal Festival Hall \Vith the l London Symphony Orchestra under Andre Previn she made her mark. It included an in· vit3tion from Previn to be his soloist on an 11-concert Far Eastern tour. 2nd FANTASTIC FANTASIA WEEK ! el< ~k~r~ Wl°'~ Starnrig (lri A1pnare1ica OrOO') ~ RICHAJID BENJAMIN· DYAN CANNON• JAMES COBURN JOAN HACKETT· JAMES MASON ·IAN McSHANE ·RAQUEL.WELCH l!'!!)o Tectri:Dol•·Celetra1V1W¥rei!lix~ ~QAW<11rt:t~~ 2ND TOP ATTRACTION AT BOTH GINEMA$ •TAN O'NfAl • JACQUILINE 11ssn "THE THIEF WHO CAME TO DINNER" j:nd AT CW #3 "LlGIND Of HELL HOUSF' lPGl • • w•••·•na PllllCftlM ~w w1111r fjl AP~~flr• j:ilu' JACK'LEMMON "SAVE THE TIGER" ill (~) LLY JACK plus Clint Easlwood "A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS" ' , anomalous situation that more people are seeing movies than ever before -'but seeing them on free television. If' we could somehow channel those funds into new production, wo could solve our problem::s." A trade paper reported that ()l\ly six films have been made in England so far this year vs. 16 at this time last yeai:. As In Hollywood, the unions have become increasingly: alarmed by. rising unemployinent and have been willing to make concessioM on the size of crews. ll""O II .,_, n •I ot ltnott 121..fO't ., .............. DAY OI THI JACKAL.., ' '#AUii MnMMI e CMiOI. 11..m Pm'NTIWh• 81n Ole~ Fwy 11 8rooihur11 .. I ( ., One bright spot has ap- peared on the producticn scene: the success or films based on television series. (So.) .,,;"~··~"~"--· ~1 :.~. OfOltl C. SCOTT m MOI. THRU THURS. I P.M. fRIDU 7 I U5 SATUROU 2-7 I "45 SUIOU 2-5 11 All SEATS $4.00 CNEMALANO 1 11•1·"••Hlelt~o. • 63S-7b01 Diil! 1·4'15 · "30 PAUL NEWMAN JAMES MASON "MACKINTOSH MAN" H I Ollll 11 HHlD·llJ5 STEVE McOUEEN "BULLITI • JilUI . ..;; DICK fATI DUJ(AWAY OklAHOMA CIUDf !Jlltl CHIYINNI 50CIAL ClUI !Ml Hubor 81•d • l Mc~::~1n 1,1.1211 Newftr •ond 001 HI! ll .. 1r Mot,.. LIVE AMO LET DIE (1"0) & ''THE MliCHANIC" !l"GI M111.-l"rl. Ofl'll 6 $.ti. & S..... II NMlll . ' . ' ·!· • . ... . .. -· ' . . ... h ' .r .... . . .. ·. ,,. . ! ' ··:·' t • .. "'" n.l 1 t lllllWI · VII DYi TECHNICOLOR'' IG>::- PLUS .. Kids Like To "SILVER FOX " EDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO ~~"[HI ',fl IW\ A' l.l "t / TUR .. orr ~ 111 f.'>'<0 ' . . • MIJllUEY ... ,_ .urflr .1ndliln I (!JGJ>- JAlellAANER '>IM MW ,_MO! ·CJorOWH·.W..DCl,QTtt 2nd ALL WALT DISNEY HIT '• ''LADY AND • THE TRAMP" I 101 . • :•. ... • • .. •• , ,,r .. , . ' ... . . . .. ' ,,. .• ii'. •' .... ."I •• • • " 'i , .. .-. '· ,, ,, II ,, , • • '· •., .. ' • '' • ' .. ... .. -~ . . " . ' ·' .. , •• " • • ... ' r . I •' I ,(1 ' I '' ' . ' · .. . " " ' I''" . . . ' "' ·' Otlier Deaths MONTEREY ( A P ) I Charleo 111. D•altlJ, 88, former national swlmmln.C champlon and llolder of fpur Olympic Gold medal>, di~ Thursday at 11is home in Carmel Valley toUowlng ,a k>ng illness. LOS ANGELES (AP) - ~long Poag Lee, 65, former Chinese conSlll general at Los Angeles who later taught at USC and Loyola University, died Thursday of a heart at- tack. Death Notfees AMO• (11on E. Amoa ol L-VllM HUI .. Sunrived oy wl .. Miry G. Amo... Otlot 4-ug/\ .. r i.11>1 R_.,,.rr ~ ot ktnr, Ohio. Twto l[1ttr1 Mr1. June Otl\Y Ind Mrl. JOM g1~!tl' ol SMn1Mlotll, -•· •-ry Mon· 0<!1 II 7:)(1 p.m. In McCormk k Lag11111 lleKll Cl'Mlpel. MIU WldnncllY •I SI . M1 rv1 C1tl>Ollc Ct11;rch In SMn1ndolo/\, ,.,..,, l'it!M c;~~ O. llttm 005 ef tlO Olk $~ COlll MtJI. 0111 of de1T/\ Alilll"'91 11, 1'1l. A91 tl ~urvlvod• llV wl .. JN.Ill ol lllf home. T~'" nlKll Ind -nec>/\olW. Servkli will Ill held Wedneld•V " 10 •.m In 8111 11r01C1w1y Ch•Pll with Rev, L. V. Tornow. •~Ttrmtnl 1t lngl1woad Mtrnor!1I P1,k. B•lt llroadw•v Mortu1r1 Dlre<;tlng. l lDWI' L Jonn Er1>11t llldwtll. 7U .S1ntan1. Coron• d~ Mer. 0111 of dlllh, A119111I 10, 197l. Survived by will H-4.,.1 91111thllr, Mrl. J1t kl• W•rr.,., of CO.ta Mt111 vr•ll<I· da"(lhltr. PtnnY Wor,...., Coal• Mt .. I ahltl'. Mrs. R1lpl'i Robb. W1lfllll Ct-Mk P•lv•i. wrvlc11 we,.. Mid "' Ptelllc Vltw Men.rl•I P•rk. lnunimtnt In Peclllc View M.t1110l1um. F1mlly Wtjg11!1 tho>I wl1h!nti to "llkl m1mor111 con· 1r11111tlon1. pll111 contrlbul• 10 11>1 Or•noe CD<lnl'V Crippled Chlldr•n• LMGIH. P1elnc vi1w Mod111ry, OlrK!or1. l HAll,•R Jo:>at'l>h T. '"'erper of P1lt11 Ve•IM. 0111 of d,..111 AU11u11 11. 1t1l. S11rvlved bv IOI! wtlll1m H1rper. 51rvlcli Will be l\lld. In Molint. Ill. ThurldtV •t 1 :lO p.m, Wnlclltl Mortu1rv Forwarding OL/-.:tor1. l'UllNIER Lon'°" Thurman Furnler o1 1~2 Gr.-n ~!.. Hunlinglon BllC"-Surlllvtd tiy Wiit SI.II of Ille hornl. 01>1 IOll R cll1rd f urllltr. ThrM brolllfr'; Epller, Vincent i nd Cl1rlfKI Furnler. P1r1nt1, Thurman ind Blnll• F11mi.r. Strvkes TUHc11 v at 1 p.111. In TM ChurUI of Jesus CIVIi!, Anttll>lm. OlrKled by PMk F1mlly (ol.,,,111 FUMrel K~., M•r91rel I. Keller ot QI E:. lev Aw .. N...,port 8M<:h. 01i. efA:letlll Alill!Ull 101 1'71 Survived llY brol'htr J1<k Mlrnclor'I OI St n •Diego. TMM .t1'en: llulh No111H of 5tant8fl, H111I H.,..,igorCI If ~Riii lil ted of MOlir0¥11 ,..our 1r1 hlldr111 . ll1<1ullm Miu ""'' hlld •' Out' v of Mt. C1rmel Ctlllollc Chure'PI, N....._t llHc ~ 1n1erm1nt 11 f1:11 urr1ctlo11 Ct<nttitrv of S•n G1brl1I. Paclllc View Mortu1ry Olrec't't!nLllll (l,.dt1 It. LllTI" ol Laqu111 Hiii•. t,llfvlVld bV Witt Hat~ ,D. of !hi hotnl. nP 90l'I CM•111 R. 1.ITTl*r .I•. ol Ao1· 11\11llfl• Vt. f'#O ftvlhlwn: Mtt. ~ti lo\(ltll ftf 511'1 Ollclo 111<'1 M"'. 1"~1•ttl1 8r1ka of """"'°" 9tKll. F I II t rJll<'<.~lld"lfl 11\d two Gr I 1 I · ;,..ndcllHdrftn. MeMorll'f &INIC"' !Oda" 2 p.m. 11 McCcnnlctr L..-8MCl't C ... jlll • wl"'I till Rr1. RobP'f Jtpllll of $1. r;..;,..°" EDIKOIWll '""un:h "'11d•!i"'1. 1'rlv1i. lnterm.nt McConnkk LlllUM lllKI\ OlrKll';ooDWAlllD Ctrollnl G. WOOdwl•d, IOI t'O. nf CM1• Mtt• 0111 of dNlll AUIUll lD. ltT.J. 1urv1~ bw • tl'll1111 ei.-Hl,k1 ot rosl• MeH. Gr1Yftldl Hrvk t l TIHsd•V .it IQ•):! 1"' In Geod SMo•rd t°lrntl•rY. Fer.,... T;..,,,:.,•• N'""n ottlcl1tlng. 11111 iS•NdwlV Ol•KIOA. ARBUCKLE II AON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 4Z7 E. 17tll St., Cotta Meu 1411111 • BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL ll06IE , -Corona de!Mar f!MIM' Colla Mesa llW04 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 111 Broadway, Cosla Mesa u "3133 • DILDAY BROTHERS MORTUAJllES 17111 Beach Blvd. illlalln"'"' -SO.mt %41 Redoado Av•. Lo1g Beach 11:1-133-1115 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 11.os Lapna Conyoa Rd. Ill-HU • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemelery Mortuary Chapel 3500 PaclDc View Drive Newport Beacb, CalUomla 841-1700 • PEEK FAMJLY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7801 Bolu Ave. Westmlnster ll3-3SU • • SMITHS' MORTUARY llZ7 Main St. Huntington Beacb - PUBUC NOTICE P'ICT1TtOUS atnlNf:SS Na.Ml STAT•Ml!NT Tiie foll-9nt person 11 doing t11nl11111 ••: 11:. 8. WH91:ESALE CO .• Ult E:. Edl"Vlf, $1nt1 An1, C1UI. '2711$ R1ymond l olc., '°512 ,.~. ln .. Huntington BHCh, C•lll. '26'16 Tnl1 bu.tn111 b conducted by 111 In· dlvldual. R1ymond Balcl I Thi• ,1.1emant wu llltd w!IPI 11\f Caun• IV (!trk of Or•na• COlllllY on Autllll 10, 1971. PUBLIC NOTICE NOTlC• IM:Vl,INO llOS l tO ITIM NO. tt7 NOTICE IS HElitllY GIVEN !rt.I M•I· H propos1ts will b9 rte.ivH by Ille tlf't' of COS!I Miii IO 'I'll~ TM CllY .COll"C'll, P.O. lox lJClt, C"ll Men. Ctllfornlt, '" or btfol'• !tit ,,_. .i 11 ~00 1,m. on Frt. day, Awvil ''· 1f1l. lkh wtn k ""°'ldv optMd t nd rNd t10Ud 11 11 !00 1,m; or .. t0011 ttierMfttl' .. pradlubi.. Oii Ftl4IY1 A.llOU'JI 24, 1'7J. I" IM Courkll CMmtatrt, City Hill. n ,,1, °''~r CO.I• Mt-M, C1llPoml1, tor tllf fvt11!1n1ng of two C2J Ncfl TUll:ll MOWIEltS. A.ddltiontl Mii of tllt 1PKlflc11lon1 mtv bt otit1lntd 11 11111 Offk1 of lllt 1'11rclll•· l"'O AOtnl, n F1lr 0r1 ..... Cotti MtM, Ctllforrli.. lld1 ti.vw bt rtfllr'lltd Jo ttM tlltnllOll of IM City Cltrll. In I Mli.d eftvtlaoti ld9flllrltd Oft "" OIM!d• wltfl '"' lld lttm NLH!'ltMf' ~ 11\t Qpfftlrtg D1l1. EICll bid .i..11 ll)KlfV IKh tNI l'ltfY County's Audit Unit Gets OK Slaying Plea Filed SANTA ANA -Two Orange -.oded In the fracu. from the heart. County dties and an insurance company have joined forces In BOTH CITIES claim that 80Tll MEN a('e scheduled a Superior Court action that suspended Cypress Police Sgt. to go on trial Sept. 17 in seeks a judge's aff'lrmation or Thomas Baroldl, 2$, and Superior Court. Baroldi is 1 .. onday, Auqust lJ, l'rl> DAILY PILOT j J Does More Than Help Shrink Swelling Of Hemorrhoidal Tissues Due To Infection Also Givea Prompt, Temporary Relief in Many Caaea h om Pain, ltching in Such Tiaues. s NT NA A f their claim that two policemen Garden Grove Patrolman Jer· charged with murder and A A A -report 0 facing trial Sept. 17 were nol ry Gray, 28, were not on o-r Gray is accused of assault Doctors have found a remark· ably auettuful medication that actually helps 1h rink awellinr nf hemorrhoidal tis1ue1 when infected and inftamed. And it doea more. In many cues it 1ive1 relief for hours from pain and ltchin1 in thne t iuue1. Te1 l1 by doctors proved thia true 1n many c~a. the Orange County Grand on duty when they allegedly ficial business last Jan. 5 when with a deadly weapon. Jury's contraet auditor on the were involved in a shootout at shooUng erupted at the Campise has sued both cities c ounty's Auditor-Omtrolle.r a Tustin ber. Bachelors 111 bar in Tustin. and both officers for a total of Department bu resulted in 'Jbe cities ol Garden Grove The gunplay ended with the $900,000. The action is and Cyp'es! and the Chubb-death of Marine Capt. Randall awaiting trial. generally favorable comment. Paldlc Indemnity Group filed s. Robinette, zs, a helicopter Also awaiting trial ls a The auditqr, Arthur Young ORANGE COUNJY the action In the wake of pilot from Phoenix, Ariz. Sam lawsuit In which Mrs. Daphne & Co., said in Its opinion, "the lawsuits filed·against the citll'S Ca mpise, 35, Tustin, narrowly Leigh Robinette, the mother of overall performance of the ln-by the mother of a dead escaped the same fate when a the dead Marine, seeks $1.5 ternal audit division is good Marine captain and a Tustin bullet fired in the altercation million damages from the City Th~ medication uted waa Pre-p· arallon H. And no prflKription is needed for Preparation H•. Ointment or auppos.itori ... Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers and rendered at a high level of man who was seriou s I y lodged in his chest an inch of Cypress and Sgt. Baroldi. pr~essional oompet..lce, but l~~~~~~~~~~--'---'-~~~~~~~-'-~-=-~~~~~~~~~....:.:'--~~...::..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ there remain some areas whe re improvements might be achieved and economles realized." "Our review of a u d i t workpapers revealed that the auditors were d r a w i n g judgemental conclusi<>ns about systems and procedures based on their tests or random samples," the jury's auditor said. The auditor recommended that' proper use of statistical testing techniques be emphasi1Ald by audit super· visors a n d U additional staff training is required it should be provided. The check also brought the comment that the division prepares an armual budget of available man hours for each fiscal year. "However, this budget is not updated during the year for changing or unan- ticipated conditions." The auditor suggested that the annual project budget should be updated on a quarterly basis to renect changing and unanticipated conditions. "The t I m e I y revisions or budget should be documented in order to avoid any confusion or misun- derstanding at a later date. "The monthly status reports should be redesigned to In· elude information which would be of interest to the AuditO!'- Controller such as estimated hours to complete t o t a 1 estimated hours and a com- parison of total estimated hours with the budget." Shoplift Suit Filed By Mother SANTA ANA - A Newport Beach woman who claims her lS.year~ld daughter w a s falsely accused ol sbopllfUng at J.C. Penney's Fashion Island 1tore l)llJ aued tbt store and three of its employea for $300,000. • Mrs. Adolfma·w. Yerouden, 1880 Pafl: N"'JIO't Drive, claims in her ~e County Superior Court action that her daughter, Margan~ was ar· mted ln the store last Nov. 12, locked In an Isolated room and later transported to Newport Beach city jail. She furthel' alleges that her daughter was tbe victim of assault and battecy during her apprehension on what she states were unf ou nded charges . Two Vying For League Presidency ORANGE -Fountain Valley ~1ayor George Scott and Cypress Co unci I man Robert Ilarvey are, nominees for president of. the Orange County League of Cities. Harvey was the choice of the League's nominating com- mittee. Scott's name was put on the ballot by Huntlnglon Beach Mayor Jerry Matney. VICE PRESIDENTIAL can· dJdates. are Tustin Mayor Don Salterelli, the committee's choice anti Orange. Mayor Jess Perez, also nominated by Mat. ney. The League members rcpresenUng 26 county ctUes will vote next month. Running without opposiOon for state director will b e Fullerton Councilman Duane Winters. He is the only one nominated for the two-yeor term. current president. or lhe League Is RDbert F'lnliell who has held ily pool for two 70/o . We have a savings plan to fit about every need. Whether you're just getting started in life and.need to be able to get your hands on your savings quickly, or whether you can Certificate accounts 63/40/o 61'9.0fo • *· ore afford to put your savings away for longer times. We can help you choose the terms and the savings plan that are exactly right for you. Ask us today. Bonus Passbook accounts accounts • 53/40/o 51/40/o annual Interest rate. annual Interest rate. annual Interest rate • annual Interest rate. annual Interest rate. Minimum $1,000- 4-10 years ••ml ........ yWd of 7.150/o Minimum $5,000-Minimum a) $1,000-1-2 years Minimum $1,000-90 days. 2~10years or b) $S.,000-2-10 years Addlllons-none ..,,.. ennull JMld Of 1111m1 1nnu1t ytekl of "'"' ennual yteld of 6.980/o 6.720/o 5.920/o AddRlonl cl $100 tit l'llON Cll'I ba IMlll Oii"" oart!llOllB 9IXlOllC pb' to ~ M ertlnllCtl d ltllt dtta IQ • !Ima at leell ~ to minimum le'tm It required. • 'lllu can -. -~-when "'-amounts q19 clepaslted for 4-5 yoan. -"' for details. CiLEl\D4LE FEDERAL -officeo to-you than any other Feclenol S..l"fll and LAlan -iation In 'the notion. And over $1.7 billion In auets • Minimum $5.00-da:t-ln,da}"OUI. Additions-any amount ••ma 1nnu1J Ptld of 5.39% tltrl'I 11 Ht foflll In tt1t tptelfl~l!oftt. Any 11111 111 1.11ct¢IOflt lo lllf N!Klflc•· llor11 mvsl bt clt11rlr lllllcl l'I the bid •lid l1Uwr1 to ... IOl'lll any lltm Ill IM 111telllt1tlon1 •""It bit orOll'llClt for r~·l-'---'---------1 l*=tlon of IM bid. Costa Mesa Branch: 2300 Harbor Boulevard (Harbor Center)• 642-4711 Fullerton Branch: 320 North Harbor Boulevard• 526-8331 l!Kll bid thlll Ml tor111 l'l'lt f\111 flJtntl llld tflldotllc" of Ill Pt:l'IOlll Ind P11rl1H l11ltfttffd 111 ,.,. ~1& .. prlr1clpt••· 111 ''" ftf (Ol'pol'tllo!l1. IMl!ildf lflf n•"'4• ot t!M' ,.rnlderlt, htrtt1rv, Tr .. wrtr. 11)11 Mlll'\Wtr. The City Council ot !lit CllY of Cotlt Mtll r1Hrw1 111• rlthl to rtlKI 1ny or ... bid•. OATl!O: AUV11tl I, 1'11, •1.10ll1Md Qtlntt COIU Dilly ,.Uol, AllQllll 13, lt13 l!0+7J \ Newport Beoc;h Branch: 500 Newport Center Drive (Newport Financial Center)• 644-5300 Santa Ana Branch: 51 Fashion Square (In the Santa Ana Fashion Square)• 541-3314 I I I J 2 DAILY PILOT Monday, A11gu1t. 13, 1973 • Coast Area Vital Statistics For Weekender Adl'.ertising CONEY ISLAHD DAYS Free Prizes Fun & ·Games "'"""'"""'......,..,,_., __ ,...,.,,....Ll.tl_,.,,,...._::nr.=....,_...,.mm•-,,;..,.----11 Phone Gr1nt, tt. t06 N. Jl1l11, t.1nl1 A111 Pttenon. Jo An11 1nd flog.,r John Ptf"•'f• ~'" K1ttwrln1 81Uey •nd.jll,,,===6424::::3:;2;;:};,,,==J~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!'!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~j-Marriage Licenses •tMJ M11,11 .,.,,,,,, ,1, 2l!\.11J °"""'' Pe1enon, Jo Afln 11Wl lloo•r John JOMpl! W1ISOl'I Ave., 1 .. 1_ b!lnd &:IVtloOW. 9n-1 A. Incl AOllCl'ltll C. Gr1nl, Anntttl EllUDell'I Ind Wllll1m J 'i~~~Lt~;f'.,.~"' o;:~',°'"l .. ~.1110;: A!Jtry. IMbtli;-M. Ind 04b e. H1rr•--• vcci.;r'de ind l•••'I' 'Lynn, i 1, 791 klluenemt111n. G1ry Edw1rd Ind Liiii., ll•rtNl•I JMn 1fld C..rl t ' WI$! l'llliOn. Apt. e. Co.11 Mew Cltudll 8111'1 8•0WM, lloblrl CllllOl'd afld J IMI L" -J <;-_ ,...,., 1 ... h •' ,. .. L.L·::.11occ ....... , -..,,,.,,au KllV, '.Ill, .. , ............................. _ ........ ... ........ ,, ... -··· ........................... . ........ ~ ..... ,' ....... -"'""""' .......... ""' ..... ,., .......... , ......................... . ......... ............. '"' ........................ . ........... ~ • ._ ,., 'L. L. A N·,..L..:1Nc:o.,,>._.1t .1' ........... """""' .... ··-· ........ ,;11.~. ~ ........ .;i ................................ n • ., •• , ..... .. _ ........ ~ .......... g,. ............ , A••uc:lt~"'ill'U'-''"'"" -""'"" ,,.., ... ,n, ..,, ''" ""'"'""'"' .,..,. .... n •. ~, .. ,,.. ... n...... """"• ... ,.,, •o•m ... ,.. ~'"""'''n~·~' l(u ...... ,.....I( 'U:i -t.lll1ord AlfrtO, •I, o.JO)l t>••Y••ll, L.""""" "''"""'' ""'' """"'' ""''"'°"' •>. .>A l.< ""'V"'"' '"""""" ,., .......... kc;,.,,.,.,.~., n..,..;NTON -W 11111 m JOlll'I, ~t, IU"4CI ~~""' Av.,., L)""'""' ellU "•ufC•• .,,y, ••• 'IW !• ;h,~, ""'· ,...,ijo, hOIWWfo D<htl.11. L"ft"c;N-.c ·U"'~"' -Wdl11m Ken· • IMlln. 50, llMtl Lltlden !>I., foul'1.1•n ... llU•Y .lllY ..-.a'""' J'1, 3~ l ..... I L.•tlO"fl ~ •• , ~0..11111111 "'•l•~Y. Cvr<wAY·l"v~• -.,,, ... ,. .... rlt10Plle•. JJ, :Ulil) l'•1t r$0<1 V.•y, "'"~"' MOIM .. na ••rn 1..ynn, 21, •oo6.> 1 ..... ve ._,.. c.e, .. oun111n vah•l'· M•L.Nl::.· ... VN ..... L. -"A"Llovo. $4, 611 :.ou1n '\.otn Hlgnwav, l.'*llU"" ge;,cu 'inD L.li•n.r T'"''"""' .,, :..... ur•"n ;:,,,, :.an t--r1nclKo TU1..i<l::.k-1.~N ... H -Tllonlll Nelson, 11, lCS>(;;i 1..ri..rro Dnve, ::,an J~un ._~l)l•"•"'o 1no Oltne u~oro, i1. ~,,,._ 1~1n SI., 11unllno1on tjeacn AfcNOL.D·WAl<O -Menr'/" PhlUp, 4), lo6n GOIOltn West, Hunt1n1110<1 lleac~ ana L11r15111! :.tnrt·R111, J~, 161>;2 Golden we,1, Hvntino100 Beach SOUl·HAARISON -lai 111mOU<11, 35, lS11 san11 AN Avt., CO$l.I Miii Ind Wlnl'llt L.eon1, 24, 2SJL S11n1t A,... Ave., C0$11 Mell . QUISEN8ERRY-EDOY -John Marlin, 21, 19132 MaanoUt Ave., HunliflQIOfl Bell(h 1fld J1ni<:t M1r1h1U, 11, 219 Wellfl,ley Unt, CO$ll Mesa JOHNSON·OOMMICK -8111 Bert, •2, 725"1 Ftnw1Y, At. A, we11mlns111r and S1rldr1 L.ynn, :zt, n.u Fenway, API. A, Wulm n11ar MARCH<EPENOA -Robert MIH11r, ..0, 16712 Sayliroolt Lane, Apt. :Kli!, Hlilntlng!Oll Bt1Ch .Ind T•nl1 Olflnl, 25,'1520 N. HaywOl"tll, HOllYWOOCI STOCKWELL-SCOTT -C•dl Mtrrm. .SO, 1973 Fedltr11. C0$1t Mist tncl Glorl1 Hope, '9, lt7l Fadtra!, Costa M•"· POH·SINGLETON -MlcMle John, 'T.l, llSl Sout1M11t Wtln1i1t Ave., Tustin and L.!ndt Dl1nnt, 19, 26611 P1pll1, Ml11lon \lle!o. . VOUGHT-COPEL.ANO -Normt!' A:ay, :20, SU Vlctorl1, Costa Me11 1nd Cynthia Ll11, 16, 5317 Welt 81rtH!1te, Sanla Ano NO\IAK-SCHAUT -Henrv, 31, fS.ll El Rev, Apt. 22. Fountain Valley ana PtOQV Lou. lS 18"85 Evergretl' Cir· cle, Founteln V•ll•v POWEL.L.·OAHL -J1me1 Gr1n!, 4$. 11"6 LI Llm1 SI,, Fount~I" Vllley and C1rol SLtSan, 36. 227 Monterey SI .. Aot. c, Sen Clemente Rl\IEAA·RASCON -David Jo~n, 2~. 211 Plll1yo. Apt, l!I, San Cl1mtnt1 •nd N1ncv Grace, JI, 211 Pelevo, San Clemen~ HAL.L·MCOOWE.LL -Wllll1m Euo1n1, ~~. 17372 Jei:>tll' Clrcl1, Hunl!llfl!On a1ac11 "'" Ellen c11n1. JO, 113n JeO«tn Cirri ... ,.,.,ntinoto!' Beach l"EL.TON·MOARISON -D e nni • Attacks On 'Maude' Assailed PROVIDENCE, R.I. (APl- 'Ibe weekly netvspaper or the Roman Calholic diocese or Providence says that efforts to; SL!ppress reruns of t h e "M.aude" television s e r i e s whlch deal with abortion amount to censorship. An editorial in the ''Provi· denee Visitor" said pressure to cancel the program "detracts Crom the important issue DC abortion or life, substituting a false one of censorship.'' THE U.S. Catholic Con· ference and va rious right-hr life groups have vigorously protested the reruns of h\'O episodes in the CBS series. "Both the reaction of CBS and the e'.'l:pression of dismay by those who found these P!'O- grams utterly obnoxious show the strengths and weaknesses of the pro-life campaign," the editorial said. The Catholic ConCerence said that 14 CBS affiliates ha ve decided not to air two reruns that deal with abortion. CBS said it kne\v of 13 af. filiates that planned to drop !he segments. HALLIOAY·SULLllOlN -A I c. II 1 r cl Wigner, 81rber1 Kllllfrlrie ll'l<l Vlc!Of Pur'C•ll, L.-Ditti! Ind EHtn AM 8r1Kt. », Mnl llolllllOWOOd ROid, Anthony Jr. Mertlrwi. R°"mfl'l' Ind MlrWll El Toro Ind K11Nff1'1. JS, U9ll vi. K1nntdr, Vtrnlll' D. and O.rl1 L.ff J Kll. J\ldV Mwlt and Rldlolril CNrla o.i $1i1r, Mls1lon \lltlo Gtrc!a, Chef'YI K. •nd Jet1 J. Jr. Ml'/ n. 1•n PMl•rov, Elnora Mlrlt 1nd Frink E1rl Fl«k. J1m1• L.. •nd Frink Jr • AL.L.EH·JUDD -.,111iero S11nley. 36, Stnebel1, Henry P1ul 1nd Ttrfll L.. Duk•tt1, SIUY •llCI Jatnff Edw1rd Jll7 1..cw-11 AW!., Apr. A, 1..011• IM•• K0<:h, v. D•I• 1na Fr1ncln• Adele 81~ JllWllll C. "~ Rh::h¥d C • •nd L.lnoa Ann • .,,,, 1/)5 ~,...rlng10<1 Cliy1.o11, Jtnlce Jonnell •nd conwir Grou, O.vtd A. and Mtrltyn R • P!fU, Newpore Btath Allen IC1rr, Bobbit C. Ind R1lph W • U:MMVND·TEAAt: -$ 11 n I• y H111~ty. Llnda Suiann• and MIChltl M1rl1r, 8111 0. Ind ROH IC • Norm1n, 3', 329 Mar11uerh1, <..orOIOll Zltko, Dclw• J, end Merlin G • ull Mir 1no JoJl.-ne, lS, ~•I' Rivmond Coll, $1r1h M11l1 and Ctelld1 Eule -ro111rUl', (.orooi oei Mir L.ouckt, Joh!' Ar!hur •nd Aonn Etnor1 Pompeo. flvron IC. afld L.lfld• L • Rtl0 ·1E.l..OFl.O -1l1rry Le1, :I>, 1~}1· Samplts, MelVll' F. Ind Helt!' Loulot Btrrlll, Glllt L. Incl Giry (,.. ZOtfl St., Wttlmlnlltr •nd Melin• Plttm~n. Deborah Cor~~n •nd Erntst Elchindy, carol Je•n •tld Larry M1rtln ~rl1. :20, IU1 ·2ilrll !>•., Wt~lmln"'' Wayne Mc~t!vY, Ronald A. •tld Donna M . WlloSE·KUSHMAN -Wllll1m Cn1rle1. Zwart, Susan M1rl1 end Gtrrttt Oale Cullen. Cllrltla A. Ind O•nlel L. 2(j, 1111 NOl'lhflll )II l..Ollf'I, Fon M1rtlnson. N"flCl" (,.. end Oennls M. 8•••· Ml"' M-HM •ncl Phlllo L.1Udtr<11le, Florld.1 afld Oltbt1 Ann, Simmons, Wiida &. ••Id Fred R. ,,,_ " 2~, 19011 NorwOOO T1rrac1 lrvlM p • •• PlE.RCE·BALKINO -D1vl11 Eugene. age, onald O. i'llld Beroara A. 81r100, Amelia M. 1nd w1m1m S. t•. JOll Fiiimore WIY. Lotte Meil Schwen, Pttr!cl1 M. and C1t1rl1s A. Fick, Nt ncv J. •tld Glen E. and Jeanne Lynn, ll. 3045 Flllmort S1mh1mmer, Ciak Allison Incl Pauline KuMow, Carol Anne afld AU-.n Ray Way, Apr. 161!, Costa M1til Jullel!e ' I o ' ""s• H o OlSEN·BAOOLATO -01Yld Wl!ll1m, Kaehler, Cheryl M1rle Porttr Ind Lynne 8~~:~, \.~u~n1i'l~ !nd Mri~.:i C~wir ll, IJ9•l LO!;Ull St.t WC11!mlns!er and Fllltd J11ly 30 .:.:.=:...:.::.:::...:._::_:=:.::c:c,::.:_:::_ __ I Ul\Od L.H Ell1tbeln, l•, 1l94S Locust Lobaugh. Herold King and Ellt•beth r· Sr., We11mln111r Ann SM ITH-YOHO -Andrew JuUan, 21, 726 zir.nlser, P1trH:l1 Ann trod Cla,100 W. GrUU!ll Pl1ce. L111VN Stach Ind P.nny Ltt, ll, •742 Jennrich Ave,, W!ld, Diane It. arid David W1stmln11tr Stephens, Cerol11 and Gerald O. STUTZMAN-MACCARONE G1ry Carr, Belly Frtncu t nd Kenneth MORTON, 22, 68n L111v.n1 Drive, Langley, l ol1 Ann and IUclltrd Harry Hun!lngron 8e1ch anCI Oon!'I A!'n, 22. Rogahn, Dtflnlf M. •n<I K1ryn D. 178•1 F!int1l0<11 L.1n1, Hun!lnor°" Ola~. Joanne Lee efld Wllllem Cl1y GA'•"o'~E•·M,Gll'•"•AV _ Donald LH, James and Shu Yen .. ~ v TtYlor, Edythe S. end Aobltrl Wiiiiam ThOm•~. 211 131?7 C•sa Unde, Apl. A, Woodward, Carole Dawn tnd Geor" Garden Grove Ind A o 1 em I r v P;otrtcla, 26, 1112 LaP•1, Apt. c, Hun· Val Honglon &each MeekJ, Ellirn Jane Incl CharlH 01nl11 MCG IRR·f:IAANESON -Mich et 1 Lu Preslo, Lavelle and Jtmes John senedltl, 21, 1'52 Cr•nmer Drive, !Serlon, Jackion Alfred and F1orene1~~~~;i;;,;~;ii;;-;;;:i;;;;;Oii;iiiil Walnu! and Sv51n, n, 21..0 Ea•I Mirlon II Balt>ol Blvd., Balboa Roge11, J1cQuellnt G. and Cert I. TAYLOR·KIEBMAN -Gary Eugene, Lyne1, Thomes Edward •nd Estelle 13. 1S2S Keel, Corooa dol M•r and Elliabelh Robyn Arle...e, 1(1, 11661 S . Thoml)lon, Alvin Dalt 11'd Ann Marie Brookhurst, Apt. t9S, Hunll~1on Stefley, Merlin Da is Jr.and Carol Ann L.~Jt~'O.aoERUM _ Aur~lo Ram1lH, Watson, Stephen Flercher tnc:t Kathy 16, 30291 Camino Caplslrano. San L.vnn Jue" Capl$1rtno afld Lifld• Ann, 16, Emmel!, Gavit Jean and TlmoThy Alan 111 valencla, Stn Clemente Fuller, Gall P111rlce •nd J ames Richard PONCE DE L.EON.f'HILLIPj -Jr. Firmin Aaroo. 26, 2190f S. M• n -~!·i Kati, El1ln1 A. •fld Stuart CtrlDll 1nd Patrtcla Lou, 21J, W.AI INTEAL.OCUTORY OECll.EES Worthy, Ap!. C, W1t9!m!n11er E11111rtd July 21 SINGEA<AVDILL -Simuel JOMl)h, Cherry, Donald A. Ind Charlene S. 39, ..a!H2ncl SI., Newport Beech and Ralkovlcl'I, Mlrl' Ellen and Ptler Louis• M1rlln1, 2', 41Mlrld St., Jcsop' Ntwoorl Bt•Cl'I VIOGT·TOOO -Walter Pa\01, 21, 2002 lr1J1rry, Juanita Pent and Jose Angele Entr&da P11r1l!ID, San Ci.menll tncl Divert, An" S. and ktnl'alh E. cmorrs SPORTSWEAR P1trlcl1 Hollr, Anne, 11. '1' Vla Vick. Glorg•llt JL.J'nd Jack Aleore, Sin C eme11te Poller. Lindi G. and Brian C. ..~ d !"ff Pl !7th --• • PINE•MAACHAK -Frank Leroy, SS, Be<ketl, MarlDl'l M1111ne Ind Tommy u•C CI az.a., illJU Jrvtne..- 1721 w. coast H!ghw•y, Apt, n1, Clyde Ncwpon Beach,Cali{omia92'""' Newoort Beach and Marth&. ~?. 1907 , 1 , - Mariners Drive. Newl'Qrl Beach li~~o~•·~·~~~'~"~J·~'~"";;.;'~"'~rt~E; ..... ~~iiiiiiii:~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~I LOCANAS·B IGALRAL -A!'tcnlo Vic· torlo, 28. l-2•2 Warner, ADI-116, Hun-t!nnlcn B~ach and Luci!• Pot>le!e, 26, 3n1 RansM! Ave .. Apt. J, L.ono Beech Births HOAG MEMOltl.1.L HOS,ITAL July 30, ''11 Mr. ~nd II••. Ant"nY Mty~•. 917 Junll)t!ro Drive, CMla Me!I, DOy Mr. """' Mrs. f':h••les Ge•11rd.,n, "'31 ReiltY Orlve, Hunllnqton e1•ch, Dov Mr. •nd M<1, Ak~~rd Schn~ll>lt, ?n112 Port Circle, Huntington B11cll, g!rl Mr. and Mr~. P•UI R .. ndell, 135 Cecil Place, CO'ltl Mesa, girl J111r J1, 1m Mr. and Mrs. El'lnl s Chauvin, 678 Senate St•HI, CO!!I Mesa. boy Mr. '"" Mrs. Oon•1d Ford. 2'10~1 C1!1lln1 Clrclf, Huntl~tan Beach, girt Mr. arid Mr~. Wllllam Purvis, 105•1 Oveen Park l ane, Hun!lngton B1ach, girl Mr. 1"'1 Mrs. Gr~nl Coor>er, lol!IO Ter- r1ce Wey. La11vn• Beach, t>oY Mr. end Mr1. Scoll Luc~5. 26526 \Ill L•••· Ml1slon V1elo. bay R. L. GREEN, D.V.M. of Blue Cro11 Veterinary Ho1pit•I l2ll Weit Florence Ave., Lo s Angeles i1 Pleased to Announce the opening of the SADDLEBACK PLAZA PET CLINIC 23b84 EL TORO RD .. EL TORO (S1ddleb1ck Valley Pla1<1 Shopping Ctnl.1rl PHONE SSb-4250 Mr. 1rld Mrs. Michael House, 16661 VlewPOlnt LIM, Apt, 56. HunllngiOl'll~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii fletch, Dov Ii ""'"' l . '"' Mr. and ~·· J1m1s Pierce, 913 Mission, Arit. 1, C1111 Mflll, bOY A<19\0ll 1, 1m Mr. Ind Mr1. Jorm lHCa, lUJf Valley Cltclt. CDllt MQI, bOY Mr. •!'Id Mrt. a<'Vea Jone .. 2941 Mtft. dOI•, Cost1 Meu. bo'i Mr. and Mr5. L111renc1 B0$1t1nt, :l26 Sl1trk1, CDlft Maw, bDV Mt. Ind Mn. Rontld FlnnHI, 1US Anaheim Awenue. Co:1ta MQI, boy Mr. tnd Ml'•, Thomer Higgins. st61 A•Phttl Dr/y1, Hun1lng10r1 Beacn, "" Mr. ind Mr1. Wllllem PederlOll. 16.tl Dor.....,., Hunftngton eeecll, girl AlllUll J, ltn Mr. tnd '11rt. Dennl1 MOll!Dl'l, 611U Rook Drive, Hunt!nglo!' 8Hch. tioy Mr. arid Mrs. Derek Allen, 1531 • Sendca1111 Drive, Coron• del M•r, 111•1 Mr. •ncl Mrs. Mt rlo F. Netto, .COO M•r· rlmac. Apt. •2. CO!ll Mnt, girl .., .. "'' •· 1m Mr. •fld Mr1. Joseph Shtckelford, 1339 Ba~er StrHI, Apt. A, COJlt Mellfl, ""' Mr. tnd Mrs. Alcllard Wfl lf•m5, ~O.. P1lmyrA. or•~· bO\' Mr. and M•J. l l •!'Y Reedy, 1$09 N0<lh Ross. Santa Ant, girl Dissolutio11 Of Marriage Flied J11ty 17 Sl1n1skl'I, Bonni• •rid MITCO Davi•. Sll-e•rv Christ!"' 111d Jerry Dunn Hudgi!'S, 1(1lhryn L.ou!11 Ind LOY• Euo1n1 Horton. Mary Rurh and LHler Lym1n Wal!Mll, EldDl'l cnr11 ana Siiiy Ann l lebhch. Rosem1r~ and Emll Rawley, Barbar• Ind Jt$1 McLeod, Keith David and L.orniine "~ He1ttl, Lezlie Elllllbllll tnd Toby lvnn <..1ebl, Kith~" and PtuJ W. Harbor DENTAL CENfER . DENTURES • CREDIT e PENTOTHA.L FILLINGS • EXTIACTIONS • IRID•I WORK ' X·lAYS " DENTURlS • llPAllS • JAClrTS PENTOTHAL .. aoor CANALS .CROWNS • WISDOM T!ETH & MINOit OllHODONTIA DR. A. FREDERICK SALTZMAN 2706 HARBOR BLVD-COSTA MESA .t Adctm St. • Nut to Pier 1 Phone 556-8013 .. Body Be~y~le~ MOST PANTS, SKIRTS, SWEATERS 49~ Fertilizer, Fuel, etc. the re.::tsury LONDON (UPI) -A Brilish tl e idea we do not stop con-DRY CLEANING doctor and conserva tionist tributing to socie ty when we GIANA DA HlllS 1800 Chats'll'otth St. ll. OllANCE Sepul~in and H3W!llorne contend that bodies should not . die,'' Smith said. 'People can WOODLAND HlllS 2J500YlctOfy Blvd lAlfWOOD Carson St. and Parmunt 81vt be buried or cremated, but in-already donate eyeS; kidneys llVEISIDI 3520 Tyler St. IUENA PAIK Stach and ()r;ingefhorpt and other vital organs. This is lANl A ANA 3~00 South Bristol St IANGE CariSen Grove Blvd. ""d Ml'iclle$W slead should be reprocessed an extension of the idea." Opt n weekdar1 9:30 to ':30 -Su11d11y1 10 to 7. with sewage t<\ make fertllizer1------------'-----------------------I and fuel. "\Ve do not burn sewage. Why burn the dead?" Dr. S.L. Henderson Smith said in a let- ter to the magazine World Medicine. MOST PEOPLE, he said have a Victorian attitude on dea th and are too squeamish to face tbe facts. But he said a new approach to the disposal of bodies could provide useful fertilizer and even help solve the world fuel crisis. "I got the idea reading about the American Indians." Smllh said. ''They tiad lhe right Idea Jn depositing the dead in earth without coffins so the enrJchment of humus might occur ... SINCE VICTORIAN times. Smllh sa!d, men have gOJle to great lcnglh.! to presen:e bodies, ua!ng lead-lined coffiM ~ embalming. "We h3ve Sol lo 1e1 uted to WE QUOTE PRICES OVER THE PHONE ••• ANYTIME -CHICK THHI SUPll SAU IPICtALS-1ft1,· •et. I our""· l'Tk• SURE ANl!PERSPIRANT, 6· or. -'•··· ••••••••••••• $1 .29 . SI .Of StNAC A MINT Mo uthw1•h, IS ot. ••• , , • , , •• , , , , 1.50 Sl.2t CHAPSTICK •••• , , • , , , , ••• , , , • , , , •• , , • , • , • • • • • 49c l9c TURTLE OIL Conc1nh1to, '4 or. , , , • , • • • • • • • • • • •• 1.00 ISc 2700 E. Coast H~way, at Fernleaf, Corona del Mar ..... ,,Ju 69c .,,. 25• 69• • 644-757'5 . I .. I Our ~results speok for themselves' We mow we con help you los .. th~se pounqs ond inches. We-know we can help you achi8ve a more· att~active figure this summer J '~ And we ·gua~antee -it in writing_ _ So, do · aS thou sonds of figure-consci6us firls before you hove done; reduce I.he Glcirio Morsholl way ond finish )he. summer with a new youl .• • •• 'l' ......... ,. •. ·•·,· ,. .:f"-·--·---·-G~;.;N;;-· .· .):.'° i~ ., 'l Tell us the dress 1ize you want to be. We' ..ii!I l~ ~ thel) analyte your figure and ttll you eiactly I• '~ the number of inches you· need, tlfk>M. We Ire.• , .so sure of your results that we auarantee in r. ~ -.: "'* ~1 writin1 th1t if your measurements are not as:I': ,\ ..• ; ~: " promised, you may continua your treatments 11•• :;1 at no charge until your goal is reached. .~ ~< . 1~ •r.:.~ .:~ !'l' ;~ • :"":" ·:"" • -.-:-· T";.-;-;--:-~ -~""----·. ~;· . .. - And you're looking at the proof. l.i.:: ..._I ... 1 11> / · ·1 • '." I ' , .. . ~ ·-' I ., ~- MILDRED WALSH llbrarlao I 113d always been overweight ind suf- fered ~ p1obltmt dUe lo llO!ll' l'CS· ture belcie I be11n my program w11h Gloria M¥WIL lo isst tbree mo111!1s I lost 22 LBS. and 25 INCHES an<! went f1om 1si1e16 to 12. My posture and circut1tian llawe improved •nd I loot and led yeotrs J$lll!lltf. • "" ... \ .. ' . l-1-, '· \~ ; ' { .. · . t -- , . /} . - ' ' '\ . . KATHY GRISE W•itn11 It's tanUsli&! · It's: dlatlted m, life-my Pf!'SOllalib -m1 wcrld, SIZE 20¥1 to I perfe(f PETIT[ 10. I klst 56 lltCHES tnd 60 POONOS iA lltt lllOlllllJ with y011, C\ori1 MafWIJ! fkanl )'OU and }'WI' Slllf. \ ' ·-'· .,,_ t~·'· '• . ~ - THELMA ROY Housewife It lfaity works! It's t~e createst! I ~ave LOST 17V. PoUAllS and 28\.'t llfCHES 111d tner looked °' fen belle• in m1 lite. \ KATHY PACKWOOD Ho•1twif1 I've lost 23~ INCHES in JO hours and am wuriAg a size 10 (w1s a size 1•1. I bad played tlM diet tatne wftll no rnullS. GloN Marwll has brcv&ht tht ifltlles off ind dte:ss si1es dow11Jm ready for 5110lm!I! AFFIDAVITS OF AUTf;tENTICITY ARE' ON Flt.E .IN TH6 HOME OFFICE • FREECOURTESYTREAT· MENT. NO OBLIGATION. Come in tor your free demonstra- tion and sample 1ra1ument. A trained Gloria Marihall s.peclalltl will then analyze your figu1e and des lg~ a program Just for you. "1111¥111'1 flltl • woll'lan )'•I ... hoH 1io~r• 1 cou1d11'1 +ll'lprow1;• V\-UJ~aMU FIGURE CONTROL SALONS wottdt leeding Ugure conuo1 1ysttm • THE MOST Pll:ASANT WAY TO REDUCE IN TH E WO~lOI Gloria Marshall Is nor a gym or I spa ao !here ia M dlsrOblng, no st1enuou8 eiierelaes and no meml>8rahtps.-Yo1.1 take your 1rea1ment1 ln CO(l1fortable, cheer• lul , &0ml•or111ate surroundings, • YOUR RE SUL TS _ Your results are ach ieved through• a p1ogram ol nulrillonal guidance and indl11ldually designed firming 11 and loning lechnlques. Bac1u1e . indlYldua1111gUra p'roblemt differ, 1 , your resu ta may be dUferent than ' lho&e achieved j)y someone else. t ' ij C1ll or vlalt I~ ulon -••l\rou tocl1y for your "• FREE per10111tlzecl llgur1 1n1lyol1 I lrHtm1nl. Th••• 11 no obll91llon. MQttr Ch1rgt • BankAmtrlc•N1 American Expr••• SPECIAL REDUCED RATES ,. Oj11111Qllil,¥ w IQ&,Saturday 9 to 4 . NE.~r'"K' BEACH 430 p .. ::;~;;11 Hwy. 111E c1n' 5' Bn1i111 South Oronge -'97.0211 1 · DAILY 9 ·9, SAT. 9.5 \ • " ' . ' ' ' BEA ANDERSON, Editor 11'.~ll IJ l H. ' 1t~r s Pinch . ' ""' A Real I I , ( DEAR ANN LANDERS: I coach a Lit· tie League baseball team here . in Nashville. One 14-year-oJd boy, call him aohnny, was on my team for two years. I During the la.st season . Johnnv's fa ther ~as killed in a car accident anci it fc~I io fn e to inform Johnny of the death. Since then I've bCcome Johnny's "big brother." ; I travel quite a bit and Johnny fre· quent.Jy accompanies me. _He's been a gue~t in the homes of my friends and ac- 4ua int ances. Because he is so likeable he ~as endeared himself to many of these fl'Ofessional peopl e. ! We recently learned that J~hnny has a terminal bone disease and will proba bly fOl live to see another winter. \Ve w~nt to do everything we can to make htm Uppy. Johnny 1vants to revisit some of $he places we've been and sec our mutual tiends again. ( Ho~ can I tell those we will visit or ohnny's condition without provoking an \fer-response? we want everything to be a normal as possible. Johnny knows and doesn 't want any sympathY. How d I handle it f Thank you. -FROM NljESSEE DEAR F.T.: I see no reason to say ytblq. I( the boy Is well cno11gh tn avtl be need aot be treated as' a sick fllld and nO one has tn koo'R. And, 1 ~Ip& add, you sound llke a beautUul k EAR ANN LANDERS: four . years I married a woman wllb a daughter a pr'111ous mmiage. The IJirl (no)" ti) h<ls always caused trouble between illy Wife and mo. I thought I could handle i , NO\f I'm not so !llrt . A year ago my wife gave Melissa rm!Mion to uSe her charge aceountt. Ince tha t time, the bills have been oot of ht. A few months ago I learned lh<lt Ussa let a fe.w friend$ charge: on her ther's account. So far the girls have repaid M<IISB& and I doubt they ever will. Last week I annoWlCCd that I was ' Winner writing to the stores stating that no one bat iny wife should be permitted to use ' her charge account. Melissa called me some choice names and her mother took her si de. That same nisJ}I my \vife retaliated by moving futo thc . .guest room. J don't want to live on lhe other side of a wall for the rest of my life. Should I hold my ground until next · September when Melissa goes away to school? I hate to \vait that long but if you say so, I will. -ODD ~1AN OUT DEAR MAN ' The girl Is not the prob- lem. Sile is merely the battlefield on wblcb you and your \vlre are fighUng y&ur own little ~'ar. A woman who "'ould impose this type or exlle on her husband has no reapect for tb e physical aspects of ·marriage. Wllen sex is used as payment for favors and withheld as punishment, the mar- riage Is pegged at the prosdtaUon level. Tell your wire you want her to go with you for counseling or you will put up a \Vall or your OYl'D. Like legal. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a middle-aged woman who has been reading your colu mn for many years. I don't like to criticize because l think you do a wOrld of good, but your language Is becoming unbelievably crude. Actu Blly it's not the things you say in your column that 1 take exception to, it's 1 the headlines you write. For example. the one.J' am looking at now : "STINKY AUS BAND CAN BE CURED." J lind such language ofleMive and I'm regUte ring a complaint. -UPSTATE NEW YORK READER DEAR NEiV YORI(, I llav• nothing lo say about the htadllnes. Evtry . paper v.-rlLel Its own. You sbould eomplalD to the newspaper-You don't need tO now, however -they wU1 ,....d )'HI' complolat when Ibey rteelve lhl1 copy. Is elool>oliam ruining your life? Know the danger signals and what lo do. React' the booltlet, "Aleobolism -Hope and Help,'' by Ann Londers. Enclooe 35 (Ollts in coin wlth your request end a· long, stamped, sell-addressed envelope to the Dally Pilot. • Employes Compatible Payrolls Paire ........ ';Let there be spaces i1t your together. ness." Gibra1i, "The Pf'opliet" By JO 01.'>0N Of Ille Daity ll'llol Still Some couples whO work in the same • business have more togetherness than others, but even those with the most prox- imity agree: It's great to be keeping an eye on the same clock. A poll of pairs who work together showed that the advantages usually outweigh the disadvantages, and only when one has, a hot personality does the temperat~e rise. '" · Some have a suceessful boss-employe reJ-...tionship and others merely share rides to work and a quick moment of ·COll;Versation during the day. One newlywed only gets a passilfg wink. Perhaps the most interesting working relationships are those found in a fam ily business, such as those run by Eleanor and JaY'Mas troiaMi and George and Bet~ ty McCracken, all of Huntington Beach. The Mastroiannis; owners of J ay's catering; worked together to build the food servi ce business from one to 60 trucks and a small party catering sideline which Eleanor takes care of.· In the beginning both worked in the business full lime, and both were able to do every operation, from spreading mayonnaise on sandwiches to ordering ice for the trucks. Then, the business started growing and Nancy and Howard Reese part for their respective jobs at Philco-Ford. Once they arrive they may not. see each other at all during the day. Togetherness' is not good for Jay and . - ·Eleanor Mastroiann i (above) J>~t seems to work out for Ruth and Milan Leavitt ' (at right, center). Leavitt talks with a co-worker, Benton Williams. more people were brought in, each ti1nc to replace Eleanor and let her m'ove to another job. ''MY wif.e worked herself out of a job," Jay said. "She can do the best job as Mrs. Mastroianni, do ing my public rela· tions \York." She admitted that during the phase-out period "we had a difficult period of ad- justment." ;,There is ult ima tely room for one cap- tain of a ship," Jay commented. ·'The \Vife's role has to change at different levels of business.'' THOUSAND TIMES They found that grudgC$ were carried over into the evenings and mornings, and when Eleanor could finally stay home and take care of the party caterin g, "il was the best. thing that could happen to us." Added Jay, ;<We live 1,000 ti mes bet- ter than we did a year'. ago." Eleanor, who was as.!listant director or nursing at Palm Harbor Hospital for six years and quit ber. 'job to help build the business. now·helps by playing a hostess role when they entertain clients. They . averted marital problems by realizin g that business disagreements were not to be taken seriously. "He used me as a buffe r, a vent for the problems of the day ," Eleanor explained. "Within a year's time I found out what a buffer I was." George McCracken, a general con- tractqr, employs his wife and calls her his "right arm." "Betty is a very <..'Ompetent bookkeeper and could run the business if I were out," !\IcCracken said. HOM E HERS \Vhile they work logether during the day, ''home is her bailiwick. I don't even know what 's in our personal checkbook," he added. "She's my listening arn1. She's very perceptive. !·!er instinct is better than mine in reading people." Bu t he doesn't have to have her sitting at his side all the time and there is no problem about ··who wears the pants." Many customers don't kno\v the McCrackens are married unless a !tray "honey " slips out When either of them are talking. McCracken highl y praises his wife's civic contributions as well as her business efficiency: "She does civic work too, but is more unheralded than I am. She's \veil-liked by everyone. I respect her fo r it" Ruth and I\fil an Leavitt. Dail y Pilot cmployes \vho \vork within 20 feet of each other, believe their marriage of 37 years has been strengthened by their close association at \VOrk. HE'S BOSS Leavitt is circu,lation manager arld his wife is office manager for the circulation department. He is her boss. "I ge t ba\vled out harder,'' Mrs. Leavitt said, "but it doesn 't bother rne. I figure I had it coming .. " She likes working with her husband because she gets to see him once in a while. Though they Vacation together, he comes back to the office in the evenings and checks back on weekends, cutting into their time at home. One problem is that "other people think I get special favors." l\.1rs. Leavitt said. "But that's not true." When asked if he minded having his wl fe watch everything he does Leavitt ·replied, "She's been doing that for a long tin1e!" He believes a plus factor in having his wife as his "right hand man" is that she!s interested in his work. And, "It's helpful to have a critic evaluating my work who has more interest than normal. She knows ev,e,.Ythillg,'" Leavitt com· mentecl. HANDS OFF "l have kept a hands.Off policy perbaJ)6 more than if she were a stranger. I don 't kno1v in detail what's going on out there." Prtiblems arise odly when it is Ume for LeaviU to e\!aluete Ns . staff for pay raises. Then it's··difficUlt-to be objectift. lie compares a ·good working rele· tion.ship to a good marriate~ "If ooe 1par· ty dominates, it won't work." • · They maintain an impersonal rela· tionsllip at work, he· added . Also in the circulation department are newlyweds Margie and Don WiJJiams. Margie, a clerk·typist, said it's "okay" to have her husband working for the same company. "We don't ride together and I hardly ever see him. He might '"alk by and wink." Daily Pilot teletype setter operator Evelyn Andersen also has her husband for a boss and likes it. "It's great." she said. "There are no problems. We work the same holiday sbilt and ha ve vaca tions together." MORE WORK Andersen, comPoSing room superin- tendent, is not his wife's direct boss., be pointed out. He likes his wif~ working for him because "she gets more done when she knows I have to get it done." Work is discussOO frequently at home, particularly when there are problems, he noted, bu t they aon't discuss personnel. She leaves for work a hall hour earlier than he does so he often wlits to com- pliment her dress until be arrives at work. !See WORKING TOG~R .. 1'age 141 I ! ,. I A 4 """L. Y PILOf Marriage-go-round : Will Everyone Get Off? By BEA ANDERSON Of .... Oti!Jy 1•1tet SI•!! "We'll always hive mar. riage in some fonn or another," belleves the Rev. David Crump, marriage counselor who conducted the fifth Marriage-go-round. Hil topic w as ?.far· riage-Moviog Into Tomorrow which dealt with "\vhat Is rt--· qulred; what will help .. , For marriage to move into the future, he said, we must employ t h e consciousness· awareness factor-how do you feel about you".' Because of the new freedom and sexual awareness, we hive to be respo~ible, he !laid. "lrrcsponslbility is cost· Jy." . -Trust. The best challcnce of the word is foW1d in the open marriage c on· lract-"mutual trust." The closed marriage contract uses the words "absolute fidelity ," and If your marriage is v.·ork· ing un~r these words you needn 't worry about trust because you're already locked in. -Development-growth -lt meMs new life is available for those who want it. His wife added that development and growth must be in an orderly fashion with respect for the other. WANT CHANGE -Change. Hopefully you want change. The opposite is "J've already got what it's ail about." -Expansion. lt's important to look back and realize you are bigger than were a year ago. U you're not involved in the process you're regrcs.sing. -Role behavior. Rigid role behavior has to open up. An example is men performing household chores and their wives allowing it.• In one discussion group, there was an easy but rapid give and take of ideas and questions. "I think it would be hard to go from a closed to open mar- riage:' "You'd have to have mutual trust. It's been my experience that we don't have it." DEFINE TRUST "What do yoll mean by mutual trust?" "Faith. Respect ." "If I trusted my wife 1 wouldn't care what she would do to enhance her own life. I guess it (trust) would be a relaxed feeling." '·Do you mean, then, that she Is open to have extra· marital relationships?" "I don't think so." "I think it's hard to make a distinction between trust and respect." "Is it easier for the younger people, who are open. who commwticat.e, to a c c e p t freedom Jn sexual relations?" "We (my boyrrlend and I) believe jn It, but we're not there yet." ''l went to a swap party with my ex.wife once. tt satisfied my fantasy, but l'm not keen about sharing some- one I care about. To me it's nowhere." DOUBLE STANDARD "Are your feeli ngs based on nol liking to share your wife? The double standard? How did you feel about it for yourself? "I didn't feel keen about myself either." "How did your wife feel about U1" "She didn't 1 .. 1 p>d about it." •Did it help or hurt your rnarrlqe!" "OUr marriage already was In trouble." "1 think most of "' put loo much emphasis on au. It's not lhe main lngredlenl lo bold a marriage toge~er." "lt's an old·laahloned Idea about su. but I don~ think you should have relations out of marriage." "That's very valid, but It depends on where you're at. Ir both feel the same way, then it's ckay (to have e:rtrn· marital relations). To me it is more important to trust my husband lo ~ a p>d lather, to be p>d In tho home." "In other word! lo be go<id to you." "Yes." "But, baclt lo the subject. Where is marriage going?" BRIEF, INTENSE 1 "I'll tell you what I lblnk. Marriage u going Jo be yrt•f and intense relationships.• "l JhJnk what would belp m&rrlage is people making commitments but not finaliza- tions." "That's the difference between marriage and living together. You don't go into it as deeply when you live together." "[ think I.be idea or contra•ct marriage Is beautllul. It's frank aod bones!." ··~t. it dou)o't leave n¥>m for bility." "But t gives tbe baJla ror commu cation." All agr«ld I h a I com· municatlon wu important to hold any r<laUOMblp together. Discussion gr®ps w11J COil· tl.nue for the next six weeki on Wednesdo ys at 8 ,l'·m· in lhe Newport Harbor L u,t ~er an Church. Groups will be' formed under the headings of general, mar- ried couples, pare nti ng , singles, women and marriage (married people who are not attending with their spo.use). Harborite To Marrv Horoscope: Leos' Opinions Sought LOSE WEIGHT THIS WEEK Tiit Odllnex Pl1n can help .yoc.i become the slim trim person 11111 you would like to br. Odrlnex h•t b1en used successluUy by thous1nds 111 Oller thr country for 14 ye11s. Gel rJd ol txtess lat and live IOngtr. , In Denmark An Oct. 13 wedding in Vaulose, Denmark is being planned by Joan Simonsen and David G. Muran of Newport Beach. News of the engagement and forthcoming marriage h a s been announced by h e r parents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Simonsen of Vaerlose. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph N, Muran of Newport Beach. The bric&e.to-be reeeived her education in Denmark and now attends a nursing school in Denmark. Her fiance is a graduate of Corona del Mar High School, Orange Coast College and Cal- JOAN SIMONSEN Poly School of Architecture, San Luis Obispo. During his senior year he studied in C.Openhagen. TUESDAY AUG UST 14 By SYDNEY OMARR Pisces persons love intrigue -t~se are the natural poets who can weave a fascinating web of mystery. The Pisces native feels compelled to unravel puzzles, to investigate. to probe beneath the surface. Some of the most imaginative and sensitive writers are Pis- ceans, including Anais Nin and Lawrence Durrell. These are the persons who seem to have extra.sensory perception. It has been said that being close lo a Piscean is the same as being with a human lie detec- tor. You may fool Pisces but it is almost impossible to deceive this person -and there is a difference. ARIES (March 2l·April 19): Special 1neeling is beneficial if you face issues in realistic manner. Avoid panic. Remem- ber feelings of one who may be confined, handicapped. You go through testing period. Allies gained through group, club or organization . From Page 13 Television appearance may be on agenda. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Money is realized from in· vestment, past oontact which now flouri shes. You get pro- ve rbial "breaks." One in authority sees things your way. Green light is flashed. In personal life, one you care for responds in desirable fa shion. GEMJNI (May 21-June 20 ): Finish rather than begin pro j· ect Aries, IJbra persons could f i g u re prominently. l..oog·range vi ew is a necessi· ty. Don't sell yourself -or product -short. You will get attention in quarters previous· Jy indifferent. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Good lunar aspect now coin· cides with chance for develop. ing idea into viable concept. H i g h I i g h t independence, creativity. Travel could be featured. You will make special contact with Leo, Aquarlos individual s. LEO (July 23-Aug. 221: Money changes hands. Your opinions are sought. Key now is to be perceptive. Put together pieces of puzzle ap- parently unre lated. Anal)"Le. you are and what you want to Take nothing for granted. be. Gemini, Virgo persons could SAGmARIUS (Nov. ~ be featured. Basic change Dec. 21): Home, personal en. vironment, relations w i t h occu". 2'Se 22) those close to you -these are VIRGO (Aug. .r pt. : emphasized. Ta urus, IJbra in-Lie low. Be a care ful observer. Study Leo message. diViduals figure in iffilX)l1Jlnt Spread area of i n terest , ways. Attend to basics . I I . . Sbortcuts now prove losers in Permit intel ectua cunos1ty to Jong run. Be thorough. Build have free rein . Go after facts, en soLid base, especially with regard to succeMfully take initiative. Make new starts in new direc· tions. Highlight -independence of thought. action. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are dynamic, active, expressive. You are a natural showman and capable of illustrating your feelings. Generall y you are restless and draw to you many persons born under Gemini and Virgo. Odrinex Is 1 tirry tablet ind e1sity swa llowrd.Contains nodangerous drua:s. No st1rvlng. No specl~I txerclses. Od1lnex Plan costs $3.25 ind lhe Iara:• economy slzt $5.25. You rnust lose ualy fat or your money wlll bt rt/ul'lded. No queslions asked. Accepl no substltules. Sold wlt!t this 111111ntee tlf:' THRIFTY OIS~i~~:~~OHI . partnerships, I e g a I CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. agreements. h-1ate, partner 19): Quotes are likely to bel:=;:::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:~~~~~~~~~~~ plays key role. taken out of con text. Be alert. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Go;ssi p is large part of picture. Individual who talks sweetly, Relative could get story wrong ma kes promises. probably is a n d Y 0 u m i g h t b e sincere. But don't delegate all misrepresented. Define terms. responsibility. Check details, Refine techniques. Pis ct s , Kee p on top of situation , Vlrgo persons may be in· volved. Protect your own weliare. Pisces person could play AQUARI US (Jan. 20-Feb. significant role. 18): Money, per so n a I possessions and valuables Powers Girls Hem The Look & The Style! YOU CAN s.11nft•n1 & M<•nced eo,.,, .. , LOOK BE TIER. •"'-~•Up&~ ... S1y11n1 FEEL EXCITING. • l1CtJrteo.uo1 GAIN CONF!Ot:NCE 'W••d«>bel. Fuh.on &SUCCESS .w.1"~t&Polhi•t INYOURLlf[ •Po~i~~Oo~!optMtlt • ~oa ' o.:r .... C1U or tOl'lll in tod~y !or a l1et ~rson.1 111alysiS. • Pl'olouiotl.l Mcdo""C. John Robert Powers ~RPJO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): command more than usual at· Change. trave l, variety are tention. You collect debts. You featured . Member of opposite add to special collection. sex flatters you. Tendency Caprtcora, Cancer persons now ls to act on impulse. could f i g u r e prominently. Beneficial move would be to PISCES (Feb. l~M·-h 20)·. N<Jtion'iOldtit&larg•1tSchoolForFi11ilhi1"1g &Mod•ling say. "stop." 1llis would .nve cu.. OR •· Lunar cycle is high; you can ANGE 3Town&Country•547-B22B you chance to see where you RIVERSIDE Riverside Plaza Center · 684·3012 are going and why -and wroj~f~=~~~~r-~==~=~==~:=~::~~-:~~~::~~~~~ st::~~:: ~FllBRJCS .. ·Working Together • • :25% DISCOUNT IC»: SllVlaS IEHDlllD • THIU AUGUST ~ht Wlleolu All UHION & MIDfCAL J'MIUIANu PlOGIAMJ Ome9a Clinic COSTA MESA 646-1633 1869 NEWPORT BLYD. SANTA ANA ANAHEIM l:tttt T1ut111 A•t. I~ W. ldwy. J41·•nt 111""4\ ' . They kid about their dual relationship, Andersen · said. "She's boss at home and l'm boss at work." He stresses that his wife 'does not tell him everything that goes on in the "tape room" where she works. "She speaks in generalities and does oot Jalk about the others," he explained. More than two dozen mar· ried couples are employed at UCJ, from academic personnel to office staff. Typical of the husband-wife team are Cannella and Frank Keating, who work in different don't miss the Miss Teenage America semi-finals Thursday, August 16 at 2:30pm on the mall . Beautiful pageant of talented teenagers. Spend an entertai ning afternoon at BULLOCK'S FASHION SQUARE IN SAtrrA ANA Santa Ana/Ga rden Grove Freeways at Main ·: t .. parts of the C3mpus and see each other only in the morning and evening. SECRETARIAL JOB She Ui a secretary. in the physical plant and be is a maintenance man in the warehouse corporation yard. "We have our own friends at lunch," Mrs. Keating said. "Once in a while we have to talk on the phone. I don't hesitate to caU hi m if it's necessary." They like working at the same place because they have the same time schedules and the same days off, and they have a lot more to talk about at home. They also enjoy the university functions m u c h more because they both feel at home. Nancy and Howard Reese, Philco Ford employees, it," Reese commented. "She can relate a little better to some of the things that go on and the pressures l have from time to time." He uses her for a sounding board, he added, but there is not much shop talk at home and no gossiping, · They like working together because they get the same vacations and can go places together after work much more conveniently. And they save money by riding together, ~1rs. Reese pointed out. Working together seems to be additional cement for an · already strong marriage or the wedge that drives a shaky one apart. I Only one thing is sure: it's not for everyone. met at Philco Ford. He isr·-========== manager of the general and I,. cost accounting department and she is secretary to the manager of the business systems and programming WHY BE SHY ••• ASK AIOUT PllSCll:l'110N Pll:ICfSI department. Call 642-4104 They ride to work together from their Fountain V~Jey home and seldom see each [ AiH•w l other at work. KNOWS PRESSURES ME:DICIKI !:SOP "She's aware or the organization and the people in 3tO r. 17tti St. et Ttlltl'11 An . Nut to ltelpht Mkt. - CMto Me10 642-4104 MCHI. lrtn,o Fri, t It 6-Sll, t 111 2 MARJORIE STAMPER SAYS Fashi on Boutique UPSTAIRS 445 EAST 17TH STREET COSTA MESA, 645-8322 BARGAINS GALORE! PRICE REDUCTIONS & CLOSEOUTS BRAND NAMES Y-i TO Y2 OFF ON Pants -Blouses. Blazers -Sweaters DRESSES FROM $5.00 .. UP ODDS & ENDS AT $2.00 To $5.00 CHA RGE CARDS WELCOME! -I Headquarters for "DAN RIVER" e WOVEN CHECK GINGHAMS 87~ YD. e WOVEN PLAID GINGHAMS 169 YO. e LOTS 0' KNOTS PLAIOS 198 YO. e WOVEN SEERSUCKER PLAIOS 229 YD . Dacron Polyester br ushed plaids, solids, •ll MACH INE WASHABL E 100% POLYESTER ®TREVIRA KNITS Nationally 1dvertl1ed on DR. JOYCE BROTHERS ''Easy Living" Show Tr1vel·M1te1 Double Kn its PLAID & SOLID COORDINATES Kira & Rivler1 Double Kn its MULTI-COLOR FANCIES Machlno W11h1bl1 58" I 62" Wldo 52"/54" Wldo RIBBLETIE SOLIDS ·5~! li(HOUSE OF FjliBRICS always first quality f abrica ' sovth CHtt Pl-. Bri1lcl •I San Di•go Fwy. Costa MIM -14 5· 1516 0,....,.11 Moll - Or-11o•01erpt •nd H•tbor f•llOrtOll -126•J2J4 ~ HNtr Pl- 1 l!h •t Bristol S.1to ..... -141·5551 l w.N Pot\ CYet1 .. r l• '•Im• ti Sttnttl'I ••• ,,. pen -121·6JJJ t AMBLER ·.GR, TMtS 15 A 'TlftL ..... 1'6 'llllJ. .-.... A El'6 MUSIC ctt.E8RITV! TUMBLEWEEDS LIMPIP LtiAR17, -me CHIEF WAN15 TO S~E YOU J ". by Doug Wildey by Tom K. Ryan •" . " 5 DOOLEY'S WORLD SALLY BANANAS -Jlvr!c:".srM /J~ _'\hou/tlers /JJ,,,· 1wv 1/Jrou!lh f.11tt crowd J1Jd c/()uses the lirr HI.KID. IM aN UNDeRcoveR sPY<NG Fl!RsoN. . YJ2aii '? iJ-P,,, &,:, "'°" ~-W<? i 1)1 0 .... . ~.~ .. -.. -## '---------' ,IJ!;. .J ........ ~ • MUTT & JEFF MlSTER,l'M AWFUL~Y \.... EMBARAASSEO.' I DON ~ USUAl..l..Y 001'1-'IS BUT MYL.UCKHAS BEEM AGAINST ME LATEl..Y.' c'9f'_, • ~·-...J i • I· ,. " •• i:~ !l ,, I :• . ' FIGMENTS .. 6 •J NANCY Fa~ rtlta11r. ,\fonday, At1~1u1 13. 191.1 ACROSS ,: 1 Equ10 ' Ston• 9 ro1mer Tu111lsh coin • 1• Eooch H 15 >.rthur -·-- ' Ooyle 16 cond!tlo" 49 w 111ol Acl1m SO ___ Aviv 5 1 F11How: lrilo1m•I 52 North A1l1Cll'I co1s111 hills 54 C1n. IHOV. ~8 U.S.S.R. 1 7 B•e•:tling River 19 Went 11tr1y 60 Couple \ 20 Fed U\t lllUy 61 Arab prlnc•: 21 Sailor: Var. 1ntorm1l 62 Steeple 22 Reta+n : 64 F1rmer1 Abbr. 66 Ov1rh111g1 I 23 Look 67 Afrlc1n obliQuf ly native 12• lcel1ndlc 68 ___ C1n1!1: n1r11t!ve1 N,.'im••- 26 Oeep·w1ter watercourse t vess11 69 Lock ot 4 29rac1 h1lr j Sleng 70 Con1idtr1 3 1 Time or d1y 7 1 See e1011 32 \laccines '33 Elt ,t 36 Units ot • relucl1nct ,JaTnno degree ~39Fake t "1 >.ddl .:. 1111 to t 43 Fi•ed I fOUllne '4<1 CICl\11~ <16 Elegant Slang "'4 7 Bedd11y lor t Ca111:nir • I I 3 ' " 17 ,. ll Lim ,, ... " ,, " ., " " l ~ h '. " , .. , ... .. '" DOW N 1 S1v1ge 2 "Good night'' oirl :'I J,, $e/'ISI 4 T Ir\ 5 Mild Brllllh o•tn 6 Slnge1 --- 0 ·01y 7 New Wo•ld bf'd 8 Cuta into I m1111111 -· • ' • " " " .~ lr~i " " JO ~·' :p .. •' .. .. l'.k .. " " •• ,_ .. ,_ • II Son o! Jacob: V1r. 10 ,Sub]•Cl 10 pfllllUll 11 Epllhet of .'i!hen1 12 Summe1 ln P11rl1J 13 Communist 18 >.ulhOllll I C I<. N " ll.. N [ 37 Seapor1 or Morocco <10 --·--··--Go Ile Ill •2 Highly spiced sau1eg1 <1 5 One esc101ng persecution 2-1 The lele Mr, •8 Great Tracy qu1ntitie1 25 Pick• aut 27 001111 53 Snoot •head hou1ehold 55 Rental chore agrtement 28 Dupe !>6 Voice 30 Sw•ettOP 57 Crime 33 Smell p11nt 59 Untidy •l•te snool 61 God ot love 3<1 o ... rly 62 Unyi1!dlng mnde11 petton 63 E1g!e plus 35 >.bl• lo ,., remember 65 Limb 7 ·11· " " 12 " ; ' 16 19 -· ~ II i~'f IC'i " 'A ,. " " ll , . .. " vii " I " .. .. 111' .. U ! -I".; : 1"'1J " •• " " ,. 5) " '" ' " . by Al Smith 8-1), by Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller PEANUTS '<., - GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS L'ILEO I DO 40(.) WA~T TO WliTcH 1HEMOv1e? by Charles M. Sc:hulz -. - JV5T A LITTLE ol COVNTR<{ 60'{ /XllN' HIS J06 ! • ·-·'1-1.J JUDGE PARKER by Harold Le Doux r::l 'M:::-S:::U::R:::E-:Y::O-:u"·u-..."1"·v"E:--Mc:A-::D-=E--MEANWHILE, SAM DRIVER LEAVES r ,=r=s=n"'cc:-:Ceuc:G::S:-M=E=r""H•=,:--- FEEL emER IN "OT"I"' 6UT WITH THE POLICE DETECTIVE... A" , S EEMINGLY SHAKEH BY R!CK 1-ASSITER'S ,.. n •'7 L :i:ilTER WA5NT 'ARMED! THE MO~ING, TROU5LE ev WKEN WILL THE IN A COUPLE MORE 'THAN THAT, I 'VE ~ET5Y ! _ _,,COMING HERE! INQUEST ae HELD, OF DAYS! CHECKED WITH THE t-IEW DEATH, BETSY FREMONT 1& HELPED TO HER ROOM 13Y _ ABBEY SPENCER! = MISS PEACH 'WHITE libu~E 'fA&,te Of-O~i.11'2-ATION. ! C hiep oP S1'o.PF I ~· !' • • DICK TRACY 16s:t: . f;:i,. forerq,., ~~f•1YT ~ ,.,,r, flOt; t>o Fl'lf{ fl (. Aff41t'! ~ c:Yi~ ( co0"re ~ o~ .. se.1 .,..,,_ {' ftC.11' I eo.....,re\ ........ I I SERGEANT? YORK POLICE! HE AAS NO SP<,;, I .:r...,itors A1r1r~"T HA"~"'"~ ~ '~"\.\(.,.._.,a J'.AtJ'l'\IA<~ c.h~t As:.r+. I-•'"£ ... , ... OOt.f """""' "°"" '-l.UOt'lt 4"(o..J 911t'ffl\,•N ~rs:1rt""'T tU-''" ~ootlf .......,..., ... 1.~ ... ~ I TR1EO TO c;o If,,-.~ STR...a!T, BUT RECORD OF AAY KIND! 1-\E WA5H'T A VIOLENT MAN! ·- - by Mell -AND "fMAi'~ 1,-, A~ NEA~L'f A$ f. GAN Fl,,Ull:E IT OUT ... by Chester Gould ME WOULDN'T , __ L_ET ME! •. ( •.. ~\l;:fo~ f((J i:;!.11'"-,... UAlL'I' t-J1.U1 J,5 'by Roger Bradfield 70 his $1Jrpr1SP, tf1e ftlJWtl /i117!S Oh /}1111 iJt'!j/l/y. MUSCl '° Mousr; t>O~NT 01.T 1NV'JnJ) 7'> MANY S\RSB:U6S by Charles Barsotti by Gus Arriola by Ferd Johnson HoNEYMOON1S OVER,EH, i<IDS? by Roger Bollen ... CARSOl<J, CAVETT OR \IJl>;!ERe>ATE '? THE GIRLS ''· ,_ ~~ ''!1#$8~3 '10h, that was an article on h~ to get along with your husband-I thought I'd memorize lt so I won't do anything that "'ill irritate you." DENNI S THE MENACE I \ 'Proi.\1SE 'ilXJ m cm: ANY OF MY FAVORITE STUFF WHILE WE'il£ G:?NE ?' i LARR Y SMITH Score Settled: Smith Kill ed At Tallageda TALLADEGA, Ala. IAP) -Larry Smith. a stock car driver who said before the Talladega 500 race Sunday that he had a score to settle at the big track. was killed when his car ran into a wall during the race. Dick Brooks went· on to win the race, bypassing Buddy Baker and Richard Pet- ty after starting 24th in the 5'kar field. No other car was near Smith's when it rammed into a concrete retaining wall on the 14th lap. Doctors said the 31-year-old driver suffered massive head injuries. Track officials said the head-rest on the car seat was broken by the impact. They said Smith apparently ran the two previous laps on a cut tire, \vilh only the safety inner liner keeping the car rolling. "I have a score to settle at Talladega," Smith had said before the race. "I have never been able to run well at thi s track. Things happen to me here rthat don't ha~ pen anywhere eJse. "Like in May, when I'm cruising a~, staying out of trouble, and there's this big pileup or cars on the backstretch. I can't avoid it, and I hit one or two cars spinning in £root or me. Just enough damage to my car .to put me out of ac~ ti on. "Tilat's why I bave a score to settle at Talladega." Arter striking the "'all, Smith's black and White Mercury rode the six.foot high barrier for more than 100 yards before rolling down ,to the infield and stopping. Secretariat Ill, May Miss Race SARATOGA SPRINGS. N. Y. (AP) - A fever and a cough are.expected to keep Triple Crown winner Secretariat from running in Saturday's $75,000 Travers Stakes. "I see no way how Secretariat will be ready for this forthcoming effort ," trainer Lucien Laurin said Sunday. While declining to elaborate. Laurin said he thought the ailment Secretariat picked up may have been a factor in the Joss to Onion Aug. 4 in the Whitney Stakes. The cold contacted by Secretariat has curtailed the horse's train ing. If he were to continue running with the cold, it could \vorsen the respiratory condition. llp, llp a1uf Away MOl'!dity, AL19ust 13, 1973 Ni·cklaus Rates Self ... As Best-ever Golfer CLEVELAND (AP) -No matter what his rivals say, Jack Nicklaus remains un- convinced he's golfs greatest player ever. "I don 't know if Bobby Jones is better or J am ," said the game's No. l superstar Sunday, even though he had just shattered Jones' revered 43-year-old major title record of 13 victories. "I do know he achieved his in shorter tirne." said the awesome Golden Bear. '"'hose final round charge to a three· under-par 69 gave him a 277 total and a bulging four-sbot decision over runnerup Bruce Crampton. ·iAt 33 , I know I'm going to play a long time,'' Nicklaus added, "and the only way to compare is when you're through . "The only measuring stick today is major titles. You can 't compare stroke averages. The courses are so diff~rent," he said. Regarding PGA "play, he sald: "l wasn't boiling over with con- fidence," he continued. "I'd say I was more determined. I don't like going through a year without winning a big one. I wanted to prove to n1yself I could win." Nicklaus had five bogeys and 11 birdies in 72 holes of pressure golf and said of his performance, "I played just good, solid golf all week.'' Nicklaus put his rivals away with con- secutive birdies on six and seven for a two shot lead. His advantage never JACK NICKLAUS dwindled under that figure down the stretch. Nicklaus' powering game crwnbled his Canterbury Golf Club opponents and brought these testimonials: Crampton -"Jt was a pleasure to be an eyewitness to history belng made. He borders on the unbelievable. Here's a man in his early 30s who could do this so early and with such e~. "It took the best in the world to beat n1e again in one or your major cham· pionships. It's difficult to beat the best in the world when he makes no mistakes until the 18th green." Tom We!skopf -"Jack's the gre~test player whci ever played the game. There isn't a shot he can't make. He's the greatest ever because the caliber of play is so much better now. It 's tougher to win." Consider these accomplishments for a man just reaching pro golf's prime age : -Four Masters, three PGA, three U.S. Open, two British Open, two U.S. Amateur. -12 major pro championships·, one more than Walter Hagen's previous record. -Just over $50,000 short of $2 million in official tour earnings since 1962. -49 official tour victories, not counting his two British Opens. -Five victories in 15 tour ap- prearances this year including 13 times in the top ten and six in the first 11. -$245,424 in 1973 earnings, second to Crampton's $270,841, with the $45,000 first prize cheek. Fln111 scorp I nd lflOMY·WlnnlnQS 5UM4y 1n Ille PGA NtlllDMI cl\lmplOMhlp: Nastase May Forfeit Pay After Lashing Officials Jack Nlckltlus, s.u.ooo n ..... ~-2n Bruce Crampton, SlS.700 71·73"7·70-2111 Masoo Rudolph, S11,90fl 69-7tl-7().7J.-712 J. C. Snead, Sll,908 71·7•-61·19-711 Lanny Wt1dlt.lns, Sll,,. ~9-71..ff-282 Oon Iverson, ,7,]12 67·1'?·7tl-7(-?8J D~n Sikes. $7,312 12.u.n.n-DJ Tom WelskDPI, S7.ll2 7tl-71·11·71-28J S•m SOEad, U,675 11·11·11·71-2~ Kermit Zarlfy, ,S,625 71t-11-68·79-:llU Hale Irwin, S.S,615 76.n-68.68-111• Bob Bruce, il.915 1Q.n.7J.70-78~ Larry Hinson, $l,91S 13·70-71·71-215 Dave S!ocklon, lJ.975 r:l-69"7M9-2& Jim CollX'r!, l3,91S n·l'IMf..14-215 ' CINCINNATI (AP) -Hot.tempered Jlie Nastase erupted with a stormy out- burst, then calmed down and took a COil· troversy-filled 5-7, 6-3, 6-4 victory over Manuel Orantes of Spain in the finals of lhe $75,000 Western Tennis Championship Sunday. His $9,000 fir st prize check \Vas withheld, however, when the meet referee registered a formal complaint for unsportsmanlike conduct. The action resulted from t\VO protested calls by linesmen. Play resumed after a one-hour delay \.\'hen high wind and rain 'Sent 4,000 spec- tators scurrying for cover at the Queen City Racquet C1ub. The complaint will go before a formal hearing of the U.S. Lawn Tennis Associa- tion. Nastase argued with referee Jim Meakin of Cincinnati \Vho ordered the Grand Prix standing leader to continue play. Nastase replied with an obscenity and f\.Ieakin lodged the seldom-invoked ruling on grounds of unsportsmanlike conduct. If upheld, Nastase would be refused his check. Nastase fumed after the two calls and successfully demanded the Wlseating of a linesman. He angrily reacted to the first call which he felt was inches out of bounds on the sideline. ?\finutcs later, he exploded over a baseline decision. Play was held up several minutes after each incident as Natase, noted for his temper, roamed the court in an apparent rage asking for decisioo reversal. The crowd responded with boos and jeers of "Go home" when Nastase pack· ed up his tennis gear and walked toward the exit. After stopping 10 oargue, he returned to the court and play resumed "'ith Orantes winning the first set. Orantes smiled throughout the delay but pleaded impatiently after the second outburst. ~!ore boos rang out Y:hen Nastase slammed two balls into the gallery and later sent a sizzling line drive toward the linesman. Oenny LyOnl, $3.97$ 13·111-.61-7S-21S Tom Walson, 13,975 7S.J0..71*-21S Bob Goattw, $2.3112 7J.J0.71·10-tt4i Al Geit>erger, S2.301 •7·76-7....,_216 Gibby Gllb9rt, $2,302 70-70-13-7)-28' J!m jamlnon, st,)(12 11·7J.71·71-1&6 JO!'lnny MJller, 52,302 n·11·1~2N Lee Tr.Ylr>O, $2.)02 11t-J0."'61-2N Miiier earbtr s1,m n.n-10>11-n1 Chi Chl RodrlaU.z. $1,m r:l-11·7'-10-217 Mike H111. s1;m 1t11-n-1s.1G-211 Bert Yanerf, s1,m ,._n..,.n-m Lee eto.r, s1.m n-16-1().10--211 6ruce Dew!ln, s1,m 13-11).7'"10--2*7 Oon Bies, $1..US »n·71·7S-211 Orville Moody. Sl..ul 13-7•·»71-7" Lou Gr•ham, $lA3J 1._11.n-10-211 john M•halley, Sl...U 1.!-Tl·r.1·10--211 Bud Allin, Sl,lOS 11·71"7·13-219 Sob Murphy, U.Os.t J(·Jl.11·1'2-'290 R1y Floyd, Sl.Os.t 70-73-13·7(-'290 6itly Casper. Sl.05• 1'-r.l·r:l·r.1-290 Jerry Pi!lman. Sl,O~ 13·10.1/i.Jl-m Die~ Heodrlcksoo, $1,M' n-n·Tl·1l-290 Ed Snffd, $1,0S.. r.J.JO.r.1·7•-790 Ch4rltt COody, Sl.os.t 7s.68·n·70-790 Leonard Tl>oo1PSon, Sl,OS<I Tl·1S.10-13-190 Rod Funselh, SLOS• T.1·13·1~-'l'IO Tommy Aaron, $715 1l·1J.i'f.7S-291 Halos Bombed, 14-8 Tempers Flare; Angels Flattenned by Red Sox BOSTON (AP) -Frank RobillSOll is normally a cool, likeable sort of fellow who is known more for his humorous lockerroom jibes at teammates tban verbal jabs at opponents. But second.year catcher Carlton Fisk of the Boston Reel Sox became Robinson's target Sunday in the wake of a 14-8 Boston victory over Califomia that _took second billing in importance. UPlfel_. The Red Sox belted 19 hits of( Bill Singer, 15-10, and three Angel relievers but Robinson did his thing, too, looping a double and a pair of home runs, the sec- cond of which eloquently told Fisk to watch out. The bitterness apparently began in the .eighth inning when Angel reliever Dave Sells sailed two pitches over Tommy Harper's head . Fisk then came out of the Boston dugout and made a threatening gesture to Sells. "\Vhat business did be bave sticking his nose into something that was strictly bet\\·een Sells and Harper," Robinson said after the game. In the ninth, Boston pitcher Bob Bolin thre'v a pair of high, tight pitches to Robinson , and afterwards Robby said : "I told Fisk to get his pitcher to throw the ball over the plate. I don't know whether Dolin was intentionally throwing at me, but he does have that history and reputation. "But that Fisk, he was the guy who came out of the dugout when Harper was at the plate and maybe be called for those pitches." Robinson slepped back up to tile plale in the ninth, took another Bolin offering and planted it far outside Fenway Park, a prodigious· blast that was No. 544 in Robinson's illustrious career. That tied him with Minnesota's Hannon KiJlebrew for fourth on the aU-titne career homer list. Clllfeniltl Il l ••r~rM Alornar, SS , 0 0 0 Ht1...,..,.. If Meotl, IS I 0 l 0 Guer~, II ... ,. Cl•> ••rllrbf 4 0 J I ' 0 0 0 3 2 2 0 2 0 0 0 s ' s 1 s ' ' ' S I 1 I. l I l 2 s ' 1 1 ' 0 ' 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Sllnton, ph I o 1 2 Y1lrmskl, lb StepllW!, C I 0 0 0 JKenllfdy, ai Berry, cf 5 I 1 o CllPtdl', dl'I FRoblntot1, di'! ( :) , ' C1lt1', ~ ROUver, 3b 4 l 0 O Fisk, c E1>1!1ln, lb , 0 I 0 RMIUer, c:f PlnllOll. If • 0 I I Grlllln, ?& Schnblrn, rl ' I 1 l Oflllvle, rf 6P8rllt1", 2b ' 1 2 0 Poll , p Torborg, c 1 I I 0 Skolt, p s111nauk. c o O o o lolln, p Llllnlf, 2b 1 0 O 0 Slng•r, p O 0 0 0 H•no,p 000 0 B1rt1tr, p 0 0 0 0 s.111,p 0000 Tottt l.i I 1, I TOltil• '' 14 If I) C11tlon111 000 OOl 221 -• ''"'" O» f(S 20ll -1• PITI'SBURGH (UPl)-An ollicial of the AUanla Braves disclosed Sun· day that outfielder Henry Aaron regularly receives police protection during trips . Marvin Joyce ol Helena, Montana, fa bucked off hi s mount during lbe cbamplonshfp saddleback bronc riding contest In !he ann "'I rodeo al Sidney, Iowa. Joyce lost any points made on the l'ide due lo the spill. He was unhurt. Aaron, 39, who is 13 home runs short ol Babe Ruth's career record 714, has been receiving hate maU throughout the season from per- sons who want to see Ruth's record stand. I '\ Onco111ing Reds Cincinnati's Pete Rose (left) crashes towards the plate in Sunday's 7-2 victory over St. Louis. Catcher Ted Simmons takes the throw high and Rose was safe on Dan Driessen's single to left field. Lou Brock made the throw to Simmons. LA's One-game Streak Menaced by Montreal LOS ANGELES (AP) ...... Joe Ferguson says it just might be the biggest win all season for the Los Angeles Dodgers. He was talking about Sunday's dramatic come-from-behind 2-1 triumph over the Philadelphia Phillies. "It's a big win, no question about it," he said. "Cincinnati's pushing us, sure, but we have to worry about what we 're doing, not v.•h3t they're doing. When the time com.es to play the Red.$, then we v.•orry about them . But now we have to worry about us .'' The Dodgers were in danger or seeing their once-commanding lead in the na- tional League West shrink another notch. to just one-half game over the Reds. when Ferguson dramatically tied the game with a pinch home run in the eighth iMing off Steve Carlton . Los Angeles won it in the ninth on successive two-out singles by Tom Paciorek, Steve Yeager and Davey Lopes. It kept Los Angeles lY.a games on top in the division as the ~Iontreal Expos arrive at Dodger Stadium tonight for the opener of e three-game homestand. Mike Torrez, 7-11, will start the opener for Montreal against Los Angele s' Claude Osteen, 13--5. "We showed that we can bit, that we cah come back," Ferguson said. It was the Dodgers' 29th come-from-behind triwnpb. "Our pattern has been that we get off a win streak after a big win and I can't think ol one any bigger than this one. So maybe we'll get going again." Ferguson said the Dodgers' minds have been wandering. ''We've been worrying too much about everything else and not what we can do. When we were playing good we didn't care who was pitching or what he was throwing. "It was like that in the ninth . My homer gave us a big lift. You cou1d reaJJy see it. When we go out there in the ninth and -bang, bang, bang, -we get a big win.'' Ferguson's homer, his 17th, ended a frustrating string of 21 consecutive scoreless iMings, and also took to'ugh- .... , ..... ,.. .. Ill "" """"' ltl •ll rllr111 · tiltrftrtll Tovt1r, l'f ' o , o RusMll. 11 ' o 1 o Doylt12ll •OOOMO!tl,11 •OIO IROtlln-L pt! I 0 0 o Brewer, p O O O o H•nnon. 1:1) o o o o WOtlvl•, c' ' o I o MOnt•ntr, 10 ' o 1 o G1rvev, lb ' o o o Lutfllfltl, II • l I I C.fVI lo 4 0 0 0 UMI!", d J 0 0 0 P11carek, rf • 1 I 0 80one,c 4000Yetgfl'",~ 3020 SC:hmklt, lb J o o o looa, ~ ' o t 1 CRallln.on, u ' O 1 o Meurslft, p 2 o o o Carllon, p • 0 2 o Fet0tn0n, ti l l I I Tal•I• 3J l • l fGl•ls ,. 2 • 2 TW'O out when winning rr.tn tcartd. PhllaeltlPlll• 000 100 000 -1 Lot A~ft 000 CJ00 011 -2 IPHlt&llllSO C1rlton (L, 10.14) t 2/3 I 2 1 1 S M"strtm!ll'I t 1 I 1 J ,J Sr.wtr (W, S·•) l I 0 0 0 0 WP...(:trlton. T-l:ot. A-:n.211. Pr.oteet "Everybody knows Aaron has been receiving hate mail and I guess !he ball clubs have decided to give bfm extra protection," said Donald Davidson, assistant to the Braves board chairman. "It all bepn In New York a few weeks ago/ he said. 1urbere were extra police to take him from !he team bus outside the stadium to !he clubhouse." luck pitcher Andy r-.1essersn1ith of! the hook. A l-0 loser his previous start, Messersmith again trailed 1-0 after Greg Luzinski hammered his 19th homer lo lead off the fourth . Messersmith, in his:. last eight starts, has allo\\o'ed only eight earned runs in 58 213 innings -a 1.22 e.r.a. for the span - but has still lost once and has two no decisions to show. "This is the first time we've come back to win one in a while,., f\.lessersmlth said. "It reaUy picked up the whole club. We've been down, no question, and we've been pressing." hnprisonment ·1 ~!0~~1SS~~~~ athletes I arriving for the World University Games - 'have run afoul ol Soviet bureaucracy end have been virtual prisoners in a towering "" Stalinistic castle for two days at Moscow University. "Nobody can come in and we can't get out." said George Killian, the U.S. Chief de Mission. "'Ve have run into an ac-• credilation problem." What happened was that all the American credentials mailed days ago i failed to arrive. Until accreditation Could be completed.~ with identification cards, pictur.es and other routine, the athletes were forbidden to leave the premises and take part in practice. ._ It was reparted Sunday night that only 45 of the some 325 American athletes had1 been cleared, keeping au the others closely restricted. Scores of newsmen, arrivlng from around the world, were irate over orders that they "'ere barred from tbe athlete.s• compound. Most or the some 4.500 com·' petltors from 71 nations are being quartered on the Moscow University: camp(fs in one or the towering neo-Gothic structures built by Stalin. 1 The campus is enclosed by tall iron fences with the gales guarded b)i; uniformed police. "l am not allowed inside. [ have noL been able to see any of our tithletes or of· llclals," said Gir9glo ~iudice, press • officer or the ItaliM team. 'They are not , oven able to telephone out." A similar lament was voiced by Bill Young, Opo<ts publicist of the University of Wyoming who ls handling press a~ • r'angements for the U.S. tearn. Aaron Aaron played only Saturday in a three-game serles with !he Pirates, and two extra policemen reportedly were stationed in a photographer's section adjacent to the Pirates dug·' o\tt Pirates officials said the Braves requested the extra security. Aaron· reportedly is disturbed by It. I I • .. Sports in Brief Giant·s Win, 13 7 . . .. FOXBORO, M•as. Vtteran Norm Snead capped a lqng. drive with a short touchdown pass to G a r y D,allman In the third period after a palr of first-half field goals by Pete Gogolak and t~e New York Giants held on Sunday night for 13--7 National Football League exhiblOon victory over the New England Patriots. Gogolak was set up for field goals of 12 and 35 yards by quarterback Randy Johnson before Snead took over the sec- ond half to help the Giants to their second straight preseason triumph. The Patriots, who held Oakland to a 17-17 tie last week after dropping a 20-7 decisioil to San Francisco in an exhibition opener, were plagued by mistakes at crucial times. They averted a shutout on Paul Gipson's one-yard touchdown plunge in the open- ing seconds or the fourth period after a pass in- terference penalty against the Giant._ e Brolaemer llot ARLINGTON Former HunUngtoo lle•ch High star Jack Brohamer continued bis mid-season batting comeback Sunday, stroking a pair of singles in three trips to the plat~ and an rbi in helping the Cleveland Indians to a 7-6 American League baseball victory over the T e x a s Rangers. e TrlelSet SALT LAKE CITY -Trial in the breach-of-eootract suit against Bill Sharman, former coach of the ·Utah Stars of the American Basketball Associa- tion, has been postponed until June 3, 1974 -three years after it was filed. The trial bad been set for Aug. 20. U. S. District Court Judge Aldon J . Anderson rescheduled it after a stipulation by at- torneys citing ·"unforeseen problems with witnesses." Pride of Yankees Set Back 15 Years Sharman was sued by Moun- tain States Sports, Inc., owner o( the Stars, after he resigned to become coach of the Los Angeles Lakers of the Na- tional Basketball Association. e Certy to Cubs CHICAGO -The Chicago Cubs announced Sunday the purchase of outfielder RiCo Carty from the Te x a s Rangers. 'lbey optioned pitcher Larry Gura to Wichita to make room for Carty. Carty, who will be 33 Sept. 1. came to the Rangers from Atlanta last winter and batted .232 with 33 runs for Texas, primarily as a designated hit-"' ter. His career average is .317. ¥ura was 2-4 with an earned run average of 4.87 for the Cubs in 19 games this season. e Fin Soars HYVINKAA, Finland -Ant· ti Kalliomaki of Finland toir ped the year's best mark in the pole vault for the second straight weekend, soaring 17 feet, 11 'h: inches Sunday at the Finnish Track and F ield Championships. Kalliomaki had gone -17·93/" last Sunday at C e l j e , Yugoslavia, only to have American Steve Smith top that mark with a 17-10 1h performance three days later. ' • D1ltv Pilot Plloto by llklllnS KMlller eKingVpset NASHVILLE, Tenn. LARRY BROOKS IS NOW A FIXTURE IN THE LOS ANGELES RAMS LINEUP. NEW YORK (AP) -"! don't think we'll win the pen- nant." said Sam McDowell or the New York Yankees. "We don't want it badly enough. "It makes me Sick to my stomach. This was the most disgraceful game l 've ever been associated with in my 13 years in the big leagues." The crowd 4t Yankee Stadium was ap( to agree with lhe New Yorlt left-hander after the Oakland J\'s erased a six-run deficit to pull out a wild 13-12 victory Saunday. Johnson hit his home run in- to the left field seats in the sixth inning with no one on base, so it wasn't the most damaging blow. The worst thing that happened to New York was the inability or the Yankee fielders lo catch and throw the ball. An error by Hal Lanier at shortstop allowed two Oakland runs to score in the fourth in- ning. Then in an outrageous seventh inning. when the A's scored six runs to tie the game at 11·11 , the Yankees made two infield errors. one by second baseman Horace Clarke that allowed the tying run to score. Margaret Court stunned Billie Jean King 6-3, 4-6, 6-2 in the $30,000 women's pro tennis tournament Sunday in their first match since Mrs. Court lost to Bobby Riggs on Mother's Day. It was l\.1rs. Court's 11th vic- tory on the women's tour this year in 14 tournaments. Mrs. King, who will play the ~ year-old Riggs Sept. 20 in the Houston Astrodome, has now won only one of eight on the tour. I Was Really Lucky, Says Rams' Brooks The Yankees made five er- rors -and several more that weren't listed in the box score. "We didn't deserve to wear the pinstripes today," said a disgusted f\.1cDowell . "I've never in my life seen a team make so many mental mistakes. It was a disgrace." McDowell refused to single out any of the Yankee culprits, except himselr. "As far as making mistakes, I'm right up there with the rest of th e guys," said McDowell. "Hell, J made a mistake by grooving a pitch to Deron Johnson. I t o o k something off the pitch. It was the stupidest thing I could have done. I had a big lead, so 1 eased up and gave him one." NEWPORT ' LEASES Z400 West Co•t Highway Leising all Vehicles FOREIGN & DOMl!'STIC 645-2202 DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO VACATION SPECIALS '66 DODGf. CAMPER % TON iloultmttlc 1r1n1 .. VI, 181111 $1677 '70 ARISTOCRAT TRAILER But -wait a minute - there was more grief in store for the Yankee fans, who booed their ''heroes '' throughout most of their inept play. Reggie Jackson, who col- lected three hits and knocked in three runs, walked in the eighth ofr reliever T o m Buskey, 0-l. When Johnson singled to left, Jackson came all the way around to score the tie-breaking run when Net· ties threw the relay wild past second trying to nail Johnson. Johnson went to third on the play and then scored the even- tual winning run on a sacrifice Dy by Gene Tenace. Jim Ray Hart homered for the Yankees in the bottom of the ninth and then Rollie Fingers came in to get the last out after New York put men on first and sec- ond. e Flflol Wins CLEMMONS, N. C . Second-seeded Jaime Fillol of Chile captured ~he singles championship in the finals of the $25,000 Tanglewood International tennis classic Sunday with a 6-2, 6-4 victory over Gerald Battrick of Great Britain. Unseeded Jeff Borowiak defeated fourth-seeded ViJay Amritraj o[ India 6-2, 7·5 in the singles consolation match. e Rish1g Ster CINCINNATI -Australia's Evonne Goolagong, maturing on schedule at age 22, will peak in 1974 and be the prime challenger for the Grand Slam of Tennis, her coach predicted Sunday. "I said nine years ago she would reach maturity in 1974. I stand by that. I can see it all coming together," said Vic Edwards, Miss Goolagong's 63-year-old strategist and legal guardian. By STEVE BRAND Of ni. DlllV Pilot Sllfl At this time last year, Larry Brooks looked around the Los Angeles Rams football camp and pondered his future. It didn't look very bright Ahead of him at defensive tackle were players 1 i k e Merlin Olsen, his brother Phil, whom the Rams had been forc- ed to give up a No. 1 draft choice to obtain, and Coy Bacon. "Why did they draft me?" he wondered. "It didn't make sense. Wasn't this the team that had the original Fearsome Foursome? Wasn't it one of the top defensive t e a m s around? Why did they want me: "Buffalo or New England might make sense because they figure to be young teams in need of linemen. But the Rams?" It wasn't like the Rams went out on the limb for the Little All·Ametican £rom well- known Virginia State, which will never be confused with Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division w L Pct. Detroit 65 52 .556 Baltimore 62 52 .544 Boston 62 54 .534 New York 64 56 .533 Mihvaukee 57 58 .496 Cleveland 47 71 .398 West Division Kansas City 68 51 .57! Oaklaiid 116 51 .564 Minnesota 56 59 .487 Chicago 57 6t .483 Angels 53 61 .465 Texas 42 73 SulMf•Y'• G1m .. D•lrt!I 6, Chlcaoo 1 O•kl•NI ll, New York 12 Btl!Orl U, A119tll I 81lll""1!'t 10. ICOntll CllY ' Mllwoutttt 10, Mlnnewto 9, 10 lrlTllntJ Cltvtl11'1d 1, T.it11 6, 11 lnn!119' Todrf'I GllMI .365 GB l'h 21> 21> 7 18¥.: l IO 101h 121h 24 NATIONAL LEAGUE East IMvision w L St. Louis 6t 57 Pittsburgh 56 58 Montreal 57 59 Chicago 56 6t Philadelphia 54 63 New York 52 63 Wtst Division Dodgers 73 45 Cincinnati 72 47 San Francisco 64 52 Houston 62 58 Atlanta 56 65 San Diego 41 76 Su1ul1Y'1 01mn Pittsburgh 5, All1n111 2 Hou1ton 3, Chlcevo 2 Cinclnn1tl 7, SI. Lou11 J Sin Frll'IC:IKO 4, Now York I Pct. .517 .491 .491 .479 .462 .452 .619 .605 .5,\2 .517 .463 .350 GB 3 3 41> 6',~ 7~~ Jl,l 8 t2 181h 31 ~~ Monlr"I 2·13. Sen Ole-go G-4, :t!ld 111mt 10 lnnlnot Otdttn J, Ph!tldtli:iftl1 1 TtoSly't OlmH Clnclnn.11 (Norman 10.tl 11 Pln1buf9tl (Brl!n 10.11) 11 11, L..,..llntt, Ilk• MW, t11tr.1 ~WRl119, 1un \'Tlllf • ttKlrlc•I llOot· ~pt, 644044 .11119111 (MIY 7·11J 11 NIW' York fMedlth •'61 011111nct tOdom 2·fl 11 Benton (Tl1n1 1$-tJ Chluoo (Forllet ,...) 11 Ml!Wlullff (Sl1ton ... B1tl!more (Cvtltlr f.11) II TtXltf (Sltblttl 6-tl Dtlron cFrvrn1n 4.n 11 Mtnnetol1 tllylevtn Houlton fftoberlt 11·9) 11 $1, Ltuls {N11;v Q.Ol New York (Mllll(k f.14) 11 6-n D!tvo (G,ell 7.12) $1877 '69 EL CAMINO CUSTOM. Aulom•llc lr•n1., IMWlr tptth. top. ertett 1111trlor • eltc); 111- tttlor, 2'7•11E. $2177 '72 IEEP rJe 4 Wh•ll drlv.., PtWtr ll•~1 • ,, ;,1-F:.. ~3@77 , ... 11) Only 01me1 1cl!tdultd. TlllflllY'l Olm .. Bltllrnor• II 1•~·· Ch!W!tnd •l )(anu1 Cllv Oelroll 11 MlnnHOll (lllClllO •I MllW•uk~ Aftft11 11 New York Otkl1nd •t BOtlO"I I MonlrMI (Torru ,.111 11 Oocltln (01tl!@n .... , °'1lY OIMh IC.hedui.d Tu..Uy•1 Olrfltl Clnclnn1!1 It Pllltburoh AU1nl1 11 Clll(;ffo M0111ton 11 SI, Ltull Montre1t 111 Docl"rt Ntw York 11 $In 011!9<1 Pllltl<!fli:iftt1 II $11'1 FrtnCIKO USC, Notre Dame o r Oklahoma as a football power. ~t's enrollment js more than a 1000 fewer students than at- tend Fountain Valley High School. A 14th round draft choice, even if he is 6-3 and 255 pounds, isn't exactly a gam- ble. The Huntington Beach resi- dent made it until the final cut in September and then was put on the taxi squad. For SQme, it's a fast freight to obliV'ion. "What did I have to lose?" he says while lounging in his room at the Cal State (Fullerton) training camp. "You know those stories about players wAo hide in the v.·ings until their big chance comes and then they become a star? Well, I figured maybe I'd get the chance." fie did. The week before the Rams were to play oakland on the final weekend of October. Brooks was activated. "I didn't figure I'd even get a chance to play but I knew if something happened and I got in there, I'd try to do a job." By the second quarter the Rams were hopeles s l y outclassed en route to a 45-17 shellacking. Then coach Tom- my Prothro cleared out the regulars early in the period . "I guess he didn't want them to get hurt," says Brooks, looking back. "But I got my chance." Brooks was the single bright light on the darkest of Rams days. He was all over the £ield, making headache-pro- ducing tackles and chasing the quarterbacks. It earned 'him a start the next week against Atlanta. "Atlanta ran the first three plays right at me," says the 23-year-0ld. "All tbey got for it was a fourth and Jong yardage situation. They bad to punt. 1 guess they figured I'd had enough testing for one day because they mixed·it up after that." During the off-season, the Rams traded away Bacon and moved Olsen to defensive end. It leaves little doubt who the other defensive tackle, op. posite Merlin Olsen, is at this point. "Nothing's sure," s a ys Brooks, "But it look s a lot bet· ter now than a year ago. Only there are problems. too. "Now lhe others arc corning after me, instead of me after them. It seems this group is Ftuuhl"s Mark n t\I ' AS "'l' 1 r> 1· i r;; 11 .. bri'1:idcrost('r Don \~cr~lt1i jr; in the Nntl n..,1 F ·1 o th a 11 League record book for at least one mark he doesn't care about. Meredith holds the dubious record or 16 fumbles in one season. made In 1964 ·with the CowbOys. j really team oriented and the coaches are trying hard to get us to react to every play in a certain way. "I think I'll miss Coy. He helped me an awful lot and when he played defensive end, I'd go to him for pointers dur- ing the game because he was on my side of the line." But Larry Brooks knows now that he is definitely wanted by the Los Angeles Rams. And there aren't many 14th round draft choices around who can say that about any team. Deep Sea Vista: Bass Hold Pace Bass fishing along t h e Orange Coast has been steadv while flashes of yellowtail stiil creep into the fi sh counts on a sporadic basis. "We picked up 95 yellows on our all-day boat outside of Oceanside," a spokesman for Dana Wharf reported Sunday night. "Our boats picked up 71 yellows Friday at Sa n Onofre," a spakesman for Davey's Locker out of Balboa Pavilion reports. But otherwise, it's mostly bass and rock cod being taken on the boats out of the four area landings . Carl McCullah at Huntington Beach Pier reports a good catch of sand bass with some bonito and halibut also being taken. Art's Landing reports a bait problem has limited fishing but that a large number of rock cod and bass along with blue bass were taken on the weekend . Rock cod and bass are the main items on the half-Oay boats out of Davey's ~ile Dana Wharf reports some bonito and barracuda, along with the bass catch. NllrM"OllT (D1wn LOCll'trJ -t50 tlllllltll: 2 btPTl(:\ldl, 4S IKlnllO. 1n b.11», I rellowltll, «XI tOClt cod. Pllllbu!, .S m1Ck1r.i. (Art't ~I - t14 •lllllert: t bOtlllo, 224 blu. '""' rock clld, 2 l'ltllbut, I mtt kl'l"ll, 1~ blue b•ll$. LONG •IACH CPl1rpoh1t Uinltbltl -112 1111110,1: 1 bl•r1c\1'1111. 1to boolto, 1zt c11llco b•ss. 745 rock COCI, 4 m1ck1reL lltll'llOlll Pieri -149 11nqter1: 10 tNirr1c1.K11. 141 Mnd bl1s <'ti l)Onllo, 71 rock cOd, 200 fl'llCkerel'. Bll'fJt -130 1t101t,..: 1 1>1rrtc1Jff, " llrwl bl••· & !ttllliuf SEAL IEACM -28S •nol•r•: 910 N'1d bits, 23S bOnUo, 115 "'lckerl'I, U rock codl 12 blr,tcude, ••roe -11$ lllllhtrs: , 1)1rr1cuo., 390 bOl\lto, t 11ncl ..... 1 llftlljw )II 1:1111, 1• l'ltllllut, M ltltD IAY (Vl,...1 Ulldhlllll -20j •1111l1r11 17 nno cod. ),'14 rock cod. ~ll:l"a>rl, fS1111 SIMHnl -11 ,.,,..,..,. •• '1 1111'1 CO(I, 161 roe• c<Wt. l•"""""'l ,.. llft"!f>-S: ~ (11N>t'')"(' t '!) ~O"' -., 11..., «Kt. . ..... '"""'""' 1.,.. ..... , ........ . 'l~ lll'lt~.., 1• .,,.. •• M">'rl" 1r " "'"' ' ' •• , .... 13• ,.,, ~' ,. '""(11:~ .. r. 11~ t'Ot'' • ~ • is...,~1·1111111• -212 .",,....... 1 wt10W1•U. ie1 b"'r•llC •'<I..,, 17• .,.."1· .. !RO caneo bt''· s na11riu1, 1 whlt1 wn bf\t, 116 ml'(kf>rel l)AfllA WMAlll' -127 11nqler1: :m c•lleo lnltt, s !Nn'ltud•, 1$1 llpftllo, t h1tllbvt. ts vtllowl11t. 10 roo;ll; (Od, 3 wlllle NII b<IJ\, OCIANSICI -36-' 1no!.r1: J.3 ~t· tllCU!J,,, UI bo"tto, '.36 )ctttp !>IU. I wtltte \II blS. 4 htltbtft, S rotlt eodl, ,,, vt!lowll!I. 2 m1ck1r11. Mond•r. August 13, 1973 OAIL Y Pt LOT J7 Yankees Top South, 14-10 By ROGER CARLSON Of ttM Dlilty f"lllf Sl•ff LOS ANGELES -Records and near-records were the major topic provided by SWl- day afternoon's 22nd annual Shrine football classic after the North surprised with a 14- JO upset victory. The South ofrense was without question the worst ef- fort ever by -!l Rebels con- tingent in the 22-year-old series. Rustlers Nab 18-3 Triumph The Senik Rustlers rolled a pair of sevens in the first two innings Sunday afternoon on the Golden West College field to post an 18--3 victory over the El Toro Marines. They canned a playoff berth against the Anaheim-Fullerton Ti ta n s Tuesday night at Anaheim's METRO STAN 'GJNG~ T Ga Sllnlk Rusll1rs 15 6 0 Ant.·Full. Ti!ans 15 6 O OrM>{le Panrl>eri ll 1 1 l\if Cyprim Clllrgert. 13 t 0 2 La Fond• Dol1s 10 9 1 ·~~ W11rd's Pirates 9 12 0 6 El Toro Marlnts I 11 0 11 SIOdlt*k GIU(;l'!Of 2 18 0 12'11 Sun...,,Y'l ll•1uns Ser1!k Ruslters lf, El T«o Mlrintl 3 Cyprtt$ Chari;iers 11, w1rd'l Plrtttt lO (10 lnnl11111l Ana.·Ful!erlon Titans 12, Or•ngt Panthers 1 Orange P•nll!ers I. Saddleback Gaucl'>O$ l Tu.MllY'• Glmt Senlk Rulllers vi. An1,.Full1rton Titans 11 Boysen P1rk (7) tor lhe ieaoue ct11mplons1>1p, Wlldntad1y Nlfhl L& Fonda Dont 111. Saddk!back Ga\IChOS at BQY&en Pttk (7), Boysen Park for t h e Metropolitan League sum- mer baseball championship. In other action involving area teams, Ward's Pirates lost, 11-10, in 10 innings to the Cypress Chargers despite a six-run Pirates uprising in the bottom of the ninth inning. In a night game at Santa Ana's Memorial Park in- volving the Saddle b ack Gauchos that was moved from Wednesday night., the Orange Panthers posted an 8-3 vic- lory. The Rustlers scored seven times in the first and second innings and coasted to victory. ·Ray Eckles had a home run and double for three rbi and Gordon Blakeley had four hits in five plate appearances in- cluding two doubles and a tri· pie with four rbi to pace the attack. Stalk llUJll'" 01) Kennedy, cf·lf Wl'lll'4t1" 20 8i.keley, '' Peler,.on, 1 b aractrey, ct J . Brown, c Tttsrer. c Esplr'I01a, p Mlllt, JO Engstrom. lb S1111rks, rt·lto.c Eckltt, dh"f"f Rungo. If R. Brown. dh-t4 EllllOn, p Toltls 1b r fl rb.I 6 2 3 0 5 1 2 1 S 1 I I 3 2 2 1 2 l 0 1 l 1 I 0 l A & & ~ ~ ~ i I 1 1 I .s 1 2 3 3 2 I J 2 0 0 0 ,g 1~ 1Y 1~ Seen by IMll'llll ' .. S.nlk llustlH"I no 100 021-11 17 1 E.T. M1rlnH 000 200 010.-3 1 3 Ward'I PlrllH (It) 1b r II 11:11 Gr1n1, u Mever~. cl Kubesk11, c Jonnton. 3b Rull, 2b VllUQhl, 2b Postel, lb Chtrd, rt While, II keUv. p S 1 I 0 • 1 'l I 3 ) 2 2 j 0 4 1 j v t ~ s 0 2 0 5 1 1 0 5 I 1 0 Tot1lt :l 2 0 0 41101$6 SCfl"' tiy ht11i111t ' .. Cyo. Cllll'9ff't 030 000 151-H 14 2 W1rd'1 Pirate 002 002 00.-10 11 " ~-·llHk' !l) .. ' '"I cf 3 S Avl OS, lb 4 0 °""oM:n, 11).o ' 0 W11111ms, c t O PereoUG. It-lb ' o Hesl•r, 2b 3 O Moen, ss 3 O ..,.,ougl!nn, rf.Jf 33 o M~lm9,..n, p.t1 2, o, Tol1l1 Sc-by lnnht111s 9 •M , ' g i i ' • 8 ~ g ' ' ' .. Dfll\ff Panthtt• 3112 300 0.-.. 7 0 Saddlm.ck G. OOl OlQ..-.3 1 1 Hornets P11t FansonR1m CLEVELAND (APl Hornets, trees, goU balls and even caterpillars were among the course hazards for the galleries at the PGA national champlonshlP< last ....it. The approximately 200 em- battled goll laN who sought medic•! attention at the first aid tent needed aid for a variety of reason5, but none was more biurre th3n the Cleveland man chomped by a furry, multi-legged crawler he found on his neck. Hornet and bee stings were the biggest ......,, !or first aid, although 80me of tho."' were related directlv to th" "·lflnq. OnP 14-vea~lrl hov ' !l"'t O., n h"'"'lf'!f whn' ti hP.,k-llfl clnW'f\ li'I ttet :i • .,, ... view or the rreen. A Cleveland man, intent on the play, walked Into a lree and slashed hls forehead, Another •ix persons. more wary of their fooUteP-', were htt In the head by goll balls. And it was a game rtcOl'd 76-yard touchdown run by Ron Inge of Stockton 's St. Mary's J High in the fourth quarter that proved the winning margin. A turnout or 29.496 was the fewest to witness the charity event since the inaugural in t952. The South had its chance to put the game out of reach in the third quarter, but one or three Jost fumbles -all due to sloppy ball carrying -ended a Rebels march at the North 12 with 4:29 left in the period. Inge took off through the right side of the line I: 14 later for his TD and Jim Chun- berlain's second PAT made it 14-10. Only moments before it appeared the South would be up by a 17-7 count until San Bernardino's Shelton Diggs ' coughed up the ball The South's inabillty to move the ball was evident ear- ly when it lost possession at the North 33. Late in the sec- ond quarter an eight-yant punt by the North gave the losers the ball on the Yankees• 24. But the Rebs had to settle for a 32-yard field goal by Brad Rice when it couldn't generate an offense. Jack Davis passed to Wes Walker for 32 yards and a TD ' in the third quarter to negate the North's one-yard TD run by Mike Carey and it was 10-7 1 in favor of the South. 1 But that was the end of the t• South's offense as first Diggs fumbled to set the stage for • i Inge's 76-yard dash, then 1 Davis was intercepted and 1 finally Davis fumbled the ball away at the North 35 with 2:43 left. Newport Harbor High stand· out Jim Swick tunled in a •' creditable job at linebacker for the South, nailing the op- position four times, asfils ting ,~ on four other tackles and forc- ing a fumble in the flrSt perioo. ·, Swick and former Mater Dei High tackle Richard Genzel went all the way for the South on defense. Score by Quarttn North 0 7 7 ~14 South o 3 7 ~10 Racing Entries For Mefldly, ... .,lilt I~ .. fn.t POii 7.U f'.M. . I • oJ,~•fi11!~~~ P~n~ si~~··c1!1.Zr; :· prkt 12.500. Sim MOOn CR. AcM!lrl Ttwny Bl1sl (H. CrosbV) D11K1y'1 Secret (W, Morrison) Rockln, SN (M. 81,kel) T••nqull Siar IL. WrlgM) Wow'I 1Srot11r (R. Bank1I Mery 0on 81tt !H. P11ge) Summer Sun.ti!ne <D. Morris) Ven P1Uto Stirn (IC. H1rl) Cok1 TM Note IS. Tl'llasura) Aho EHtlbl1 '" , 120 ... '" JU 111 •'( '" l\7 ' "' "' ,,. ' Ap1'11 Thre 81n (L. Wrfgnl) 117 1 ICllliP c,urst (L. Myles> '20 .t Mii C~mtnllne (K. Hirt) 117 $1VIMl'I Moon (J, W1rd\ 1'0 SECOND ••Cl! -818 Ytrcls. l ve1r old & 119. Claiming. PurH 11.800. Clelrnlno Prlc1 U,000. " Queen's HIQll (R. &1t1kJ) 117 Dlntk (0. Morris) lll Meno SllSY IM. Bickel) ltt •r scooper Sport IL Mvte•l 1Z2 Dffr Land's a .. t (E, G1ru) 111 Big Spy (L. Wrlohl) 12) THIRD llACE -CIO Y•rd1, 2 year olds. Cl1lrnlno. Purse SIMO. Clalrnlng price 12.$00. W!llowcreeic rs1 rlev (0. Morr!I) Nice A So (J. WtlM>nl Mr. Supercllllroe (J. Oreyer) Mlssme IE. Gerul !ot1clrfd Deck (0. MltcMlll Qu11rte-r Bender CF. Gari.ti Mod Art ($. Tr .. wrel Ring of Sllwr IL. Wrl9ht) Rockll And'f (J, Wetd) SWtPS Bit' (H. Cro.byl AIM El._btl "' '" "' "' JU "' "' "' "' "' A~ R.tlel11on (J, Df'tWrl \11 Oarnno Etti (J. M1hud•J 111 Elmer G/kk (L. Wflglll) 120 Slsh Cllf'd ,E, Gtrtu) 111 l'OUllTff aAC• -.ao y1rd1., .1 nar old1 & uo. CLl1mh~. Put1e $1 ,900. CL1lrnll'l{I price u,000. S(Oll M1tc:lllll'I (S, Tl'llllUft) lit Ach•f'Dlll' (L. Wrlgllll 119 Welch EU CM. Blckell 111 Art Pippin (L. MY1 .. l lit M.1vr11nlmov1 1a, Mtlrl 172 Sent1nnlh CJ . W1rd) Ht l'lfl'TN llACE -400 v•n:lt. l Jiit olds, AHOWll'ICt. PurM $2,200. Color Mt Pink ID. MOfTLf) FUck1 0.Ck IR . 8•r1kJ) Trlcle Truc:kle 10. Cltdot•I Tl!lrd Jm191 (R, -'dolrl Luckv &Mith (M, Pt;el Go Twig Go (L, Wtlghll Toolln Arouno IJ. Dt1Vf"1 Chic Pit Go IS. Tl'ffJurel Al'• ilollbl {L. Myle1) T-Bonini. rs1r (J. W•!wnl Alt.0 Eli11lb11 "' m "' "' "' "' "' "' on '" St1rT1m1r ot 5evDT1lY (II:. Adal•) 111 Sl>CTH RACE -S19 vtrds. l ve•r tktl .. VP. AllOWGl'ICe. Purw $1,71)0. Vtrld1 llncl11 ! IC. H~rtl '" "' '" >n 01vld Cock!! (M. 8iclrrll Doofac• lloy (J. W11rd) W1tcl! Boy (R, l1r1k1l Maveku { J. D•tv•' l N•llvt Twl1l 10 . Holbrook) Doris Jane 10 . Ct rdouol My ltomat1 lndl1n IR. Adair) Come On O~lr cc. Srnllhl JOflnnle 8tlr!L. w rlol'IH AlfO IEUtlblt "' '" "' '" "' "' Mr. lmportrmt CH. Crotbyl llt lt:VIEMtH llACe: -JSO v1rd1, 3 v•~~ olds & up, Flllltt a. m1r115. Allow1nu. P11ru $3,SOO. Trul~ P•uum CL. Wrl9hl) n• Will Sloom (J, Wtrdl 111 J8~h•Wktt Moon IS. Tre•~urt~ Cit Ruby 8~rreo111 fM. 81C~tll llf 111.0ll't Queon Cllt. Ad11lf) Ut A"'ber Due !J. Oreverl Ill Rebel 001! (H. C•OtbV) 111 Duslv P11rr !O. CerdOl8) 11t &IGHTH 11,t.CE -400 11rctt. J yttr olds & ~p. Cl1lrnlng, l'urw 11,700. c111mlno prlc1 p ,ooo, P111 C~rln, IA;. 81ne'l ttt Ptlleo'• lier .(J, Or9,.erl t12 ., ••• 8 11'1r (IC H~•t) lit C1IHornl1 Smov (R, AMI•) 1,. ~ • ,., r ~· "'' 11• H~'~"" 0.1"91• (D. Holbr°") llf .,. <o·illh) ltt ,;,.!'"(' UD !L, W••'!'ll) 1Jt ll'T. --l'O y1'"1h. ) ~I' otdl Cl•lf'llno. 11lll>twlld. Pwu ll,100. r1 ,.,..1,,1 r ·:(( lOOO. F~~· Jov /I(, H•fll Av!!~•' lt~lttl~ !t-1 Cro!lwl MIO'I (L Wr!gllt} rirrt lf:u!•llf! IC Mor•i•) Ttllo Cl!lc (!l. l•11ktl Ml~t (hot~Oll~ (J Wt'<I ) Tonlt't 81y Oi.ttct (I!. Otn•l W,1tth l't F11ricv-ID Cttd\1.1•) Oeck Bow IS. Tretiurel 1n "' m "' '" '" "' "' .,, I I ' ,, I d UAIL'I' PILO I FINANCE Beck1nan Cites 23% Increase FULLERTON -Net earn- ings increased 23 percent on a 9 percent gain in sa les in fiscal 1973 and the upward trend_ is expected to continue. Beckman Instruments Inc. has reported. For the 12 months ended June 30. Beckman reported net earnings of $5,969.062. or $1.66 per share, on sales of $161.5 million. In the prior year, Beckman earned $4.8 million. or $1.36 per share, on sales of $147.9 million . "INCOMING ORDERS are continuing to exceed ship- ments and the outlook is ex- cellent for sustained growth in earnings and sales." said Dr. Arnold 0 . Beckman , chairman, and Dr. William F'; Ballhaus, president. "We ex- pect earnings to continue ris· ing faster than sales." Beckman increased I 9 7 3 capital expenditures to a record $12.2 million to support ex panding operations in the United States and abroad, th e executives reported. They said 1974 capital ex- penditures will tot a I ap- proximately $10 mi llion, Bankruptcy ~· Bids Filed The following persons have filed petitions for bankruptcy with federal co urt at Santa Ana: JONES Mk:hael O•~fd, m~<:J!•n••t. t431 GrMnwlcn Orlve. Hun!<nqlon 8e•cll. Ll•bili!les UJ.620, •~•ell $')()00, Relertt Peter Etlloll. GRAVES Mertie Ann. le!ler p•e•• oi>er•tor, "6J N. Wll!IOn St., L<l>'" Mesa. Ll1bllllle1 U.152, 1ise•1 $500, ReferH A.It;. Phelps. HEISSER Alv!n Theodore, lru'~ drlv•r, •5'1'2 Gi.s.gow Circle, HuMl<1gton B••ch. Llebllll!es $.t,8Sol, a1sets s l,510, refertt Ellloll. HEISSER Liiiie 8., hous1twl!e, ell att>er detei11 es 1bove. CARTWRIGHT James Rlkey, p01t111 clerk, 15,lS Golden We•I SI., Hun· llng!On Be&ell. L!1bllille1 Sll.76', eUf!5 Sl.60tl. reflrfe Elllatl. Monday, August 13 J'71.> Americans 'Eat ·Out' • E ven Ill Own Home Uy SYL\'11\ PORTEil Despite lht> fact that the cost ~ of food is skyrocketing and ~t almost al\\'ay~ costs lt"SS to evl at home than to "al out, you are running il\1'ay from the ho1nc kitch(•Jl ;1s nc\'(•r beforr. Even in tl1•· face o f c;normou.s sales of tookbooks, <1 publicized ·· qourmet " t r c n d in t t.c U.S. 'and an upsurge in cookint: classes for 1ncn and \vomcn . you arc in a PORTER stampede from the home stove and pan- try tov.•ard the corporate-com- mercial kitchen. i\nd C\'en when \l'e cat in . \ve"re "eating out" more and more . i\s one illustration. the foods l\'C eat have increasing- amounts of built-in chef service . ~lore than half the foods we buy are ready to cook. reports the Department of Agriculture. Most of the rest are ready to e::i t. Only 3.3 percent need further prepara- tion (e.g., flour, shortening). As another illustration, when 1\·e'rc home. we are more and more "sending out" for din- ners or lunch-'-a batch of egg- ro1\s from the Chinese restaurant, a plzza from the pizzeria. a barbe<!ued chicken from the supermarket hot foods department, a yard-long hero sandwich from the delicatessen. whole ho m c - delivered meals frnm a varie- ty of catering services. I HAVE NO explanations ,.,.ith v;•hich to dazzle you. One point that seems c 1 e a r . .though, is !hat this trend con- tinues to reflect our affluence and mobility . And although today's galloping inflat~on is making a mockery of our af}- parent prosperity and un- dercutting security, we still arc the ·world's most affluent society. Our mounting demands for foods. goods and services ~ across the board are at the ti foundation of 1973's demand- pul\ inflation . These demands , arc the result of rising dollar ' incomes and expanding after- tax speQ.dffilt_power. AnotMrJ>Ofbt. is that eating out Is" increasingly viewed as a .. ned':ssity rather than a luxury ._'Particularly among young me,n and women -and this ~ 1nust be tied to o u r restlessness, mobility, basic insecurities. rifying annual rate ol 17 per· cent. What are some of the key eating-out rrend s? --One is NOT any boom in old.fashioned res tau rant eating. -The real action is in fast food places, drive-ins, com· pany and college cafeterias, limited menu places (pizza, ch i c ken-in-a-basket, clam barsJ, vending machines. -Vending machines are of- "~ fering more and more com- plete meals -not just cokes and candy -ranging frofn canned soups to sandwiches, frults , TV-type dinners . The numbel(of\.sopbyiticated vend· ing rnach\n~ more than doubled bet.,.,·een 1963 and 1970 -l\1en eat out far more fre- quently than women : twice as rnany men as women eat at company lunchrooms and other eating facilities. Covttitlrl 1'71 Field EnlGrptlMI, Inc. SHINY SQUARE IN CENTER'S THE CHIP Does Function of 5,000 Transistors ·uig Produ~t ... Comes in S1nall Size A paper-thin s i I i con chip, so sn1all t\VO \VOUld fit on your small fingernail with room left over, are !he heart of m in i -ca 1 c ulators of Western Digital Corpora- tion in New~rt .Beacti. . It haS ·tfecn three years · since Al Phillips formed a one -man coi::poratiQn to nianufacture the tiny chips. And now his crea- tion has SOO employes. and. a backlog of $20 million in orders. Another plant will be opened soon . i n Malaysia. thing. a requirement th nt auto seat belts be keyed to the ignition system will re- quire that. each seat be!t have one pf the silicon chips such as Phillips manufactures. t DUNCAN Odow 0. p11rtner In Merenthe Inn 11nd church voutn direr· tur. 119" Atl1n1e Way, Casi• Me•"· Ll11blllt1r1 $7.l,1)26, esse!s $4,1,0, re~ref I Phelps. · AN.D A THIBD point is ,tha t by eating . l)Llt so much in the type of places we -favor, .,.,,c must still be losing out nutri- tionally. Ape! we 've been going do,vnhill niil'rttionally since the mid·1950s. llE'S !\ti\KJNG chips at the rate of 3 million a year, and sees a big de- mand for them as elec- tronic rniniaturization is applied to more consumer and computer products. Phillips !!f,YS the rnini- calcolafo'r rs just the beginning of ne\v products 1nade possible by the MOS/LSI 'in t e gr a t c d t:!ircuit. "The era of f)ick Tracy \Vrist watch elec- tronics is here?. \Ve \Viii soon see the MOS /l SI J;le vices i n appliances . digital clocks and organs. The day or the automated kitchen . with tiny ~10S co m p uters controlling di shwashers. ovens and ranges is not far off." I-DUNCAN Joan C11rolyn, will!ress, ell atlw:'r del•lf• 11 above. OWENS ~nnt• An~er, sMoolr.g Cler~. j 7'22 (yoreH SI., Huntingt~n Beath. ( ~11T1~11rr1ies SU.636. essets 5310. referee I FARENICIC Al!rNI Ke n n II th, m•chlnlst, 16613 M~ple St .. Fountain Ve!l1v. LJebUIT lll!I 59l,120, •••ell SS,?05. r11ertt Pllelos. I ' I ' . " FAREHl(K Helen EvtlYn. l'IOusewlft, 111 olher deMll' 11 above. DEGENNARO C:l\~rlt11 Jr.. food service OJ)eralor, U.O P~rk Hewoorl Odve. Newparl 8e1c11. Ll•bllll!es s11.101. 1s!ltll $1,100, referee P11e1i:i,. PRIVATE TRUST FUNDS AVAIUBLE FOR AEAL £STATE LOANS 1.-1 lo 2nd TRUST DEEDS $1.500 To '250.000 IJP TO 80"1f. LOA.NS OH TRUST DEED COLLATERAL NEWPORT EQUITY FUMDS Hewport Cencer 6'20 N1wport Cenlar Drhoe Newport S.1ell, C1lil. (71<t) ~ ORDER YOURS TODAY! To suggest how huge a part or American life this is. iii '73 ,ve'll spend more than $27 billion just to eat out in . restaurants, lunch· counters. •, fast food places. pizza joints --approximalely twice the 1 am ount we spent two decades ago and equivalent to an aVeragC Of $130 per person. We'll have eaten abut 145 1nillion meals away from home by ye::ir-end. a number which has been rising about 9 percent a year. AS FOR COST, the expense of ealing out is ri sing at a hor- 1000 Beautiful Stic:k-on LABELS f"ONL Y "\, $125 ~X INC1" § I I I' Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Order For Yourself or a Friend• ' The chips arc called metal oxide semi- conductor-large scale in· l eg r atio n a sophisti cated s em i -con- ductor technology that pcrn1its the inter-con- nection of as n1any as 5.000 transistors within the tiny chip. It will perform the electronic functions equivalent to a digital computer. 1'he tiny chip, for ex- ample, performs · all the transactions in Tn in I - calculators. PhiUips founded his O\vn firm in Newport Beach, be says. becciusc "I got tired of running into prob1Cn1s because or corporate inanagement's inabili ty to n1ake decisions." PH I LL I PS IS A' recogniu....t expert . in the MOS/LSI field, and is lhe author of a textbook on the subject. He has work· cd for Gene ral Electri c, i\<lotorola, S)'!Vania, and Rockwell lnternationaj. Th e m i n i-calculator boo1n has spurrecfdetnand for the MOS/LSI. bu t Phillips sees a far greater market ahead. For one THE MOS chip is made on a silicon base, and con- tains five layers of circuitry, all sandwiched together to form a paper- thin chip. The circui try is . ~esigned and stored by computer. which produces images on a photographic plate, ten times the final chip size. \Vhen i( is reduced. the accurac y must be .,.,•ithin t en millionths or an inch. All of the operations are carried out in a "clean room", sterile as a hospital operating room, with super-clean devices to strictly control dust and humidity . One thing lacking at Western Digital is a separate proc ess develop- ment laboratory. PH ILLIPS •I AS a n unusual aftiiUde a bout tha t. .. ,. know from past _experience.''. he s a y s , "that when a process is developed · in an R & D laboratory, it never work s in a factory. : .we do our process development on the manufacturing fl oor. with manufa cturing-type equipment, so that when the process development is done, it works." L:. ~.;n: zw;w~"".llrr..-; cms:a.... ...Jll\. " May be used on envelopes as return address la.bals. Also very ha ndy as identification l•bels f or marking person al items such ai books, records, photos, etc. l abels stick on glass a nd may bit used for marking home canned foc.:d items. All labels are printed with st yfislt Vogue type on fine quality whit9' gummed paper. 1 l • OCC Scheduling Employe Course -----------------------, r 11'!11 111 "''' c•upo11, cll11 MUI rrui11 will! $1.U IG: I I Pllef P11trt1111 LeMI p1v., ,,o. •~• 1u11 I I C•U• MH•· C•IH. HU' I I I I I I I . I I I I I : PILOT PRINTIM'G J L----------------------- I Employe Selection a n d Placement is the title of a new business course being offered .iit tbe evening .11.t Orange Coast College this fall. 'l'he three-unit class will meet Tuesday . evenings from 7-10 p.m. in Room 6 of the OCC Environmental Center. The course will examine ha sic recc plion techniques, sl·rcening, tr.~ting, interview techniques. applicant rating. rl'sum rs. salary urld wa ge :-urveys, recruiting, sccu'rity processing, placement, and tra\ning programs. It begins Sept. 11. Registration is being held by appointment only from Aug. 1 through Sept. 3. Appointments may be secured by filling out the re- quest form in the Evening College brochure. They are also available at the Evening College office located in the OCC Hd1ninlslratio11 building. \ Street • • ~· ~ -j 3 .•,~ ·~ I e • •• • T'. J. •1• etll• o • • a e • ~ i .. ; 1.'0.uay· s': -.'lf'Ct1od ;; l'd ~!1·ou~'S ~ · irewS:1111nef;~ ;!. u '5 ~ • •:ti>t (;.,.., •• • • .~r: .. . . .l'.'!I' ... o ., I • •• ~ • • ~ a~ ~ $• •• ~ o • • • •e•••• J '\ • ~ "-··1 ~ .... -- Fifteen out of every 100 Americans today own stock. We .cou l d~'t p rove it, of course , but it see ri s likely th a t° the percent age is even greater '· here in the Or- ange Coast area ... and it's growing every day. " Tha't's why the DAILY PILOT was proud, years ago , to be -the first newspaper in Orange County to bring its readers "today's final stocks today" via super high ' speed wire services. We 're still doing it in every home- delivered edition and the service gets better all the time. in Wall Street's compute rs "talk to" comp u le rs DAILY PILOT plant every trading day at the rate the of 12 more than l,000 word s per minute . It takes only minutes to move the enti re York and American New the Stock Exchange reports from Street to the typ esetting of Wall DAILY PILOT canyons machines of the right here on the Orange Coast. And when tec hnology finds a way to beat that speed record, first to When the DA ILY PILOT, no doubt, will be among the use readers "today's action today.'' to financial news, the one that means it to bring it tomes business is the ' ' • < •\ • ; DAILY PILOlf. ~ •; \ '~ .I \ I t • . . INGREDIENTS MAl(E . , THE DIFFER.ENCE ) Reeipe For Variety a dash of Sydney Harris a pinch of Art Hoppe a hint of spice a la Jack Anderson . season well with S. I. Hayakawa Good chefs know in any recipe it's the ingredients that count. The DAILY PILOT emphasizes the 'home grown' and local ingredients (letters to the editor, Gloomy Gus, local editorials), but only top quality ingredients are used on the DAILY PIWT'S editorial page, whether local or national. Besides its strong local emphasis, the DAILY PILOT serves up a variety of columnists with a wide range of flavor. Here are a few of the diverse columnists that can be found on the DAILY PILOT'S edit.orial page. (There is no set schedule as local material has priority over columnists, but some of the top national columns appear several times each week.) Art Hoppe Even just a pinch of Art Hopp• is 10 sharp it adds flavor to your doy'a reeding. An ouhtonding politico! end sociol setlriat, Hoppe hos been liken1d to Will Rog1ra end Mork Twain. His topic of the day can b1 anything. H1 r1ed1 through the paper until he finds en it1m he doesn't undetstend - thin he explains it to evetybody, he says. · He combines solid feet end his own whimsy to create • unique column on the people end forc11 shaping our world. Art Hoppe hes 'the perfect solution to absolutely ev•ry· thing,' he will gleefully tell you -end moat of his solutions will eppeor sooner or loter on the DAILY PILOT 1ditori1I poge where they will make delightful reeding. S. I. Hayakawa An editorial page 1ee1oned wtll with the writings of S. I. Hey1kewe is • tasty dish, indeed, His dis· tinctive writings on higher educe· tion, semantics end communic•· tion add much to the veriety of flavor. He writes ebout the mechenica of understanding end mlaunderstend· ing, about wey1 in which our de· ci1ions about race or war or public policy ere 1h1ped by the words we use in talking. 'I hope,' says Hayakewo, 'thot my column is like e weekly letter to a friend, telling him whit's on my mind end why I think it is importont.' His peppery prose cen be found often 1clding to the reeding pleasure pecked into the columns of the DAILY PILOT editorial page. · Jaek Andel'SOD H1re'1 the columnist who h11 been spicing up life for som1 of the nation's moat powerful busi· neu end politico! figures ·during the peat aeverol months. He's the muckrecker (that's his fevorite neme for himself) who broke the ITT scendel kept his own neme in htedlines for weeks end wea ewerded the Pulitzer Prixe for hla reporting on administration policies during the lndo-P1ki· sten war. As the lete Drew Peeraon'a No. I auistant end inheritor of the Pearson column, Anderson learned from the mister muckreker. Ha sees himself •• 'voice of the voiceleu' and 'th1 men with the X-ray •y•a on the secret files.' Nothing end no one i1 sacred when this herd.hitting columnist 1eek1 • t1rget. · Sydney Harri• If you think th1 pen is mightier then th• awerd, you should feel the ne1dle. And Sydney Harris is just the men to wield the needle. He delights in using the 1h11rp point of his 'pen' to deflate the pompous end di111rm the stupid among the people he observes in the world eround him. Humenity 11 his beet. He finds · stories to tell and foibles to tell ebout in 1ome of the most unexpected pieces. His column i1 • toned seled of ideea skillfully presented, smell stories artfully told, big stories modestly offered end the humen equation meaterfully expound•d. The H•rris touch is often •vid1nt on th1 1ditoriel page of the DAILY PILOT. Simple it soon. They Add 'Tasty' Editorial Page to • in the up a ' ,I • f·-:::-:::-..:....;.;;:::.:.-,_------_::M:•nd::::oy~,_:A:uo~u:n_:l:::l:_, :19:::'.t:I 'Gm· Wood ; l : Son Plans ' i Will Test ' From Wire Services ' The will of the I a t.,, milliooaire spoedbott king Gill-· Wood is being challenged by his son even though It contains clause saying that any enger of the document 1 oses his inheritance. • The elder Wood changed his ill It days before his deaU1 t age 91 io June 1971. The iJ>revious will left everything to Gar Jr., 54. 1 'Mie son contends his father iWas mentally confused and ~ubjected to pressure when be ·signed the second wiU. * " The Internal Revenu e !Service filed a tax lien charg-fng San Francisco Symphony ~nductor Selji Ozawa and his c __ PE_O_PL_E__,) TV lUGHLIGHTS < < KCET ID 8:00 -C.mbrldge Debate -on-Women's r Llb. Conservative spokesman William F. Buckley Jr. clashes with femininist Germaine Greer in a ~ossl'I!' •l the Cambridge Uni(lll. Deb;lliag Society m En_glana. • . , KJ{J D 11:00 -"Paths oC Glory." Kirk l>ouglis. ija.lph Meeker and A~olp~e . Menjo slar in S!(lllley KUbrl~k's drama of responsibillly in ·wartime from 19~7.' . . • • . . . ABC 0 11:30 -Wide World of Entertainment. "On Location With Howard Cose!) Training With the Super Bowl Champs." Cosell visits the training camp of the ?11iami Dolphins for in·depth inter- views. ' , TV DAILY LOG· ml MlfUtlltt V11dt1 Show m Movie Cluslcs: (211r) "ON , .. tll Hour" (d11) '36--HumphrtJ ~ aart, Bevtr1y Roberts. 200 ~ts ~ f Sail Race · . I fu the · ••• ' < .. For C-up ....-~~i-!l>o'""!,...., ~ • rllar~ W a111 'ii. S1"'ti, or 'i. < • • .. 17442 l\eledo Lane, Huntington Some. 200 bOats 14115 clwu~ Beach h rted r d t groped their way tllrougJI IDS ' as repo or u Y and smog and tight airs Satur-at the Marine Corps Base at c Le · N c day and SU.day in Newport amp Jeune, · · Harbor Yacht Club's Summer Gold Cup Regatta which lakes Marine Lance C 0 r P 0 r a 1 the place of the traditional Cllrlstopber R. Kilby, son of Race Week. Mr. and Mrs. I-Jarry R. Kilby Among the inside classes, of 204 4lst St., Newport Beacb, Mark Gaudio was lbe winner has reported for duty at the tn the one-man Laser Class. Marine Corps Air Station at The regatta was being used as Cherry Point, N.C. a tune-up for the West Coast . --.., ~ . Junior Champ~onshlps to be Airman Michael R. WlgJey, , ~el~"~t1.!!HYC ne.xt Saturday ~ of Mc." a~d Mrs: .Michael ' -, ibd ....,a)V · T·, \Vigley of 9141 Ellsworth, ·Following are trophy win~ Huntington Be a ch , has ners in each class: graduated at Sheppard AFIJ, ' INSIDE CLASSES 1'ex., froril the · U.S. Air Force Llbo.tfA .i__ (1) Gared missile mechanic course coq-Smith, BYC; (2) Rowland ducted by the Air ' tfalpiijg LoJ;unah, 1 BYC; · (3) Merlin I Command. · ' · · Gayman, J\BYC. '1 • The airman, who studied ~ID0-1_48 ~ (I) R i c.!t,l ma.int.enance .and opetatiQD:of • Cr1sfutld, . 1VY~: · ,(2_) F~ Monday Evening AUGUST 13 'ife·. Vera, with failure to pay r----------.,J l :lO m Mtrv Crllfi11 Show ' mNMla ,14,,661 in personal income WATIMATE HEARINIS 9:00 0 (j) Htrt's LllCJ' (R) Lucy takes the Titan missile, is being Toepel, BYC ; (3) Jtm ~-. . '3ssigned · lo Davis-~on\h')n r~gan, B_CYC. . . °NEWPORT HARBOR YACHT CLUB GOLD CUP REGATTA DRAWS CR :AFB, Ariz., ~for · duty. with ·a JQ'J'E i"'""1 (l) .-Steve. Schock, · OIY,,,plc Soling Class Shown in Horse Rice St1rt ~xes. All PfO&rt..inc b svbject to clll11t1 up skydivinr 1s a "hobby" to per. The document alleges that wltltout 11otlce for ttnra11 ol th suade Kim to a:ivt up her d1n11•r· Pzawa owes $1 ,839 in federal Wallraat. Ht1rf11p. ous p1stim1s. income taxes for 1964 and 00 Civillmlo11 fl2,821 for 1969. &:Ill IJ 0 0 I!) iL) a;) !ii) N.., 0 ffi !ill AIC Moodoy """' (C) * (I) Ntws (21\r) .. Red Tomllui.W" (R) (drt) g lollinu '67 -Howard Keel, Join C3u1field, ' T h e b U i I d i n g t h a t @ Covrhhlp tr Edilt's Fithtf Broderick Cr1wford. The disastrous housed Jai:k Ruby's Carousel 0 Wtnted Dtllll or Alin ddeal of Gtneral Custe.r ind the Club and more recently the ®l Mijor L"iu• lutblff Cont'd 7th Cavalry at the Little Blrtiorn Blue Front Restaurant has · from 5PM. · te1d1 to mo~ bloodshed in th• been closed in Dallas by city m JIM FlllbtHa battle 111ins1 the Slou-. officials on grounds that it is ID Star Trtk !ml Movie: (C) (211r) "Wllat'1 St unsafe. EE Los Torrn Std About Fulin1 Cood1"' (com) Ruby, the man who shot ac-1 @!Hodpl*fp Ledp '68 -George Peppard, M11y Tyler Cuse<J presidential assassin m Three Stlo111 Moore. J.ee Harvey Oswald, operat~ •. M ~ ... , "' !l ,~,~"', ••••• · ht cl b 1h •:.Wl.!U pns fHS , ~ .,,,. I n1g u on c Se<'X> Q Mowit: (C) f90) ''flit Des11t @:I Mpterlous Mr. []lot A BBC por. fioor of the building at the Son(' Part I (mus) '53-Kathryn trait of 1111 Nobel Prize·winnin1 time President John F . Ken· Gr8)'SOl1, Gordon Mic Rat, Stevt poet, interweavinr films of T.S. El· 11.edy w~s shot and killed in Cochran. iot with excerpb from his poellJ Dallas. (jJ CBS Nm Wetter Cronkite and drama. Keir Dullta n1rr1tes. * 0 ttlvt Cun Will T,•'1'11 @D la Criad1 Bieri Crilda San Francisco Mayor Joseph m AlldJ Crfffltti t :lO 8 (}) Daris D•J !how (R) Henry )I. Alioto filed a $2.5 million fD Sut TUii TJ111 Ye1 Jones fU!Sls l$ feisty Sam John· suit agail".st the American al) Lirilr f.lsr son, i feti~ment·iae employte or ftjver Construction Co. of al> 1111 Cutltrm SIMlw Tod1"'s World whom Doris decida DJa Count G) Dulrt Thettft 1 ~ cer Y · to sav• from retirement I The SUit, alleges the firm m IJttle blCllS 0 """ • conspired to de'prive Alioto of J:ooe rn DmNews meet Smart that amount in legal fees after e low1l111 !Of Doll,111 m l1h1chlchl ltali1n1 ~ helped seftle a dispute 00 Mtvlt: cz•,) ''Cre•t Sinitel" aiJ Y11le1J between it and Placer County (dra) '49 -GrtfOIY Pack, Av110:00 8 00 Mtclkal Center (R) The di· over construCtion of a dam on Girdner. lemma of how much to !ell 1 P•· the American River in 1963. 00 Wlld6f1 The1tr1 !lent about an illnw confronts or · * 0 Wbl'1 My Unt? GannOn In ttle uses of 1 not1d ' 1be young Widow or Delta QI I lM Lucy women pilot and 1 widowed mother. Air Lines Capt. Sidney \V. Ill I Df••• ff hlnnll 0 Gl 0) Htn Burrill Jr. delivered a fB Sl•llllllMlll Min. (i) TwlH&fit Zone itiUbom chili.:I at Boston's m WllMh. lllu & Clay 0 1t1,is Pllilbin T1lk1 T1 ••• Lying-In Hospital. I::' fim @I V1fff1 ~,. Face of War" (R) 'BurrlH was the ~pilot of ' ~~-·· l0:300Tilk lack ihe Dat which crashed tn 7:30 U "'-r Mliil's •• UJ •!Id Cl) On• Step llfond heavy fog w,hile attempting to Cheer (R) Vlncant Prlet 1u1sts. m True Mmlfu11 land JUiy 31 ·at Logan lntema. (]) l:flpl'I KlrtllS al TY M11'1cll ~al Airport. onr• .. '"" b .,.,.. m• ... ts.om . Mrs. Su ... Burrlll, 29, has ~:'::'~ u,001100 !!>mlill"'"' et< other child. Scott, 2. D ""'"' $ ""'" (C) £21o~ @ CIJ ~ fil"'"' ' * "M• ti tht•w..t'' (wes) '58 -O OR• Step hyeld • AstroP1aut James Lovell will Guy c,oper, Julll London, Le• l (!) Plfrr Mut•· · make an earthly swOOp Satur· Cobb. • \ O Movie: "Patt. tt Glory'" (d11) day in one of the preliminaries CDn.t• '57-Kltl DOu&1µ, R1lph Metktr, t.o the All-American Soap Box m ~ ' Ado!ph· Menjou. l)en)y at Akron. erll Lit Aietla-CoUICUwt "Huts, m TM!! tr Clalcut1t11 Lovell joins pro basketb.-ill fruits'& loots" ID MMe: "Phndlr111 If PalnW' 3tar Jerry Lucas and com· m 1111 AIM!llmf f~ (wts) '59 -Corinne Calvtf. edian Martie Allen in the ml UsW ' '-• &trlnu Skip Homeier. ... &J Th Md1111s Fa111i1J marathon Oil Can Race which 11:301J CIJ cas l.ltl Motl•: (t) "A -precedes the 1 p.m. start of l :008())ll1111s••• "This Golden &llW Atf•i(" (com) '64 -Boi the derby championships. land" (R) An 11nusu11 end movtn1 Hope, Yvonne OeC11lo, Lilo Pulver. ,Champions from Germany. story of 1 Jewish imm lgr1n1 fam· O ®la;'lJollPlnJ C.rSOll Sheckf Venezuela and Canada are Uy comlna to arlps with the turb11· GrHn• is 1u1st host among the 139 youngsters who ltnt llf1 on lh1 KallSls fronli1r ol 8 Mowlt: "fert Ven11t11et,. (1dv) wjli compete for $30,000 il'l' the 1870s: '5S-Keith Larsen. Rita More11t1. !rllolarships, includin g the 0 m pilatof ll11Uf l1seblll Cin· fJ (])al Wide World of cm.r. clnn1ti Rids on. PltUburrti P111tes. blnmtllt "On Loc1tion-With How· $7,500 first prize. OM• (C) (Zllr) "'Whtr1 Lon 1rd Cose!I Tr1inina with tht Super * Hu Cflll':! (dreJ '64-S11s1n Har· Bowl Champs" Pert I Howard c;o.. Charles Stackhouse, a Navy lietenant commander w h o spent six years in a Hanoi ?ison. 'viii marry a Dallas airline hostess Aug. 21 at Lemoore. Calif. Stackhouse, a Cin cinnati nati ve. met Alanna Whelan in May and proposed to her the nj.ght of a salute to Vietnam ~terans at the Cotton BO\\.'I. * The $74.Sf>S estate 'vhic-h an Jtalian·born retired San Fran· cisoo waiter bequeathed to the United States has b e e n tqrwarded to the Treasury qeoartmenl. ~The \viii of John Rosetta , 83, who died Dec. 8. 1 9 7 I . specifically om itt ed all heirs. ward, Bette Orvis, Miki Ct>nnor&, sell visits the tra lnlnr camp of th• Joey H11thertan. Miami Dotphlns lo prestnt the tn· 0 (]) &) Tiie ll:aotits ''A Fare· ti11 pre.season icene in in·depth well Tret from M1rly" (RJ A sli,ihl· interviews with cotches, t11iner1, 11 ret1rded airl is deeply 1ff1ded players, p:l1yers' wives ind football after S11ina 1n old derelict d11 of fans. 1 h11rt 11t1ck whi11 he Is bein& m Tt Ttll tlll Tnft ~ h1r1sMd by 1 •••ltt!J younr m11t on 1 ,cfn.lnktn sprtt, Tyr11 Dal)' lZ:OO 00 Ma~al Di11011 auesl:l. • .GJ"AlllM Hitdlcod: Pr...U ®J• 1"30111-.... " .... ..,. [mys) m ~ 'sllest •d MIL Mair •511-~te't't 81odlt S.ndrt frantiL Q) ""-U~bMdlabln .~ , ' Ea LI Senora Joven 1:00 (JJ BO (jJ Nm ED I s•1c141 C.mbr'-a• llbltt OI a HI,...,.,..,.. Wom1n's LIO ConsaMUvt stJO•tt- man Wm. F. Bud\0 k. et1,lles with ltminlst 1dvoeari/1uthor Ger· m1l111 Grffr in t ~ ~tld by th1· Clmbridae Union Deb.tins So· cietYin Cnr!end. III a Ct••lldl• 1:45 IJ Mtw;t: ''Tiii Jee leb .,,- (dra) '53-JafOU EdWirds, ColtJ W111aoe, Ptul SI.Wait. l:10 II Maril: ..,..,., :f11n"" (dr•> ''8 -Jot t Brown, Josephine Hutchin~. b)cluding brothers Guy in L-Os --------------------A;ngeles and Ja1ncs i n 1:00 m (C) N,,.., Ctnaptlldllt' r.Jasserm o. Italy, and all other Tuesday (dra) '6~~·~il·Josl Nat. persons. an attorney said. 1:30 O "Tht W1on1 Min" (drl) '57- 1 I do this in grati!udc for thf' DAYTIME MOVIES Henry Fonda. Ver1 Miits. care and help I ha ve received l:OD (I) "Tllrtt Si&tus'"'P•rt 1 (dr•) '65 (tom the government of the t:SO D (C) "1'111 Dutlltts 1f '"""' Unnited States of America." (rom) 'SO-Esther Williama. -Kim Stanl" G!caldi_ne P•a•. ®)"MM..,. Loco" Conti. (""Pl unit of the Strategic Air Com-NHYC. ---------'--'---'-----------------.1--mand. . LASER -(1) Mark Gaudio, Marine Pvt. Michael T. Con-- cepclon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Juan M. Concepcion of 13451 La Pat Place, Westminster, graduated from basic training at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot here. Navy Airman Paul D. Gustafson, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Gustafson of 16672 trky Larie, Huntington Beach , completed as hononnan of )!is company, the AViation Machinists Mate School in ?vlillington, Tenn. Marine Sgt. ~tlcbael Y, Shimizu, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sam I. Shimizu of 17697 Bay Circle, Fountain Valley, ~as promoted to his present rank while serving at the U.S. Marine Corps Base a t Okinawa. Navy Fireman Apprentice Lawrence D. Cronkrlte of 5082 Flamingo Circle, Huntington Beach, is a crewmember ()f the multi-purpose aircraft ~r rier ,fhe USS Kitty Hawk sta- 1.ioned at the Hunters Point :1,'aval Shipyard in San Fran- ' isco. Navy Hu 11 Maintenance '.'echnician Second C I a· s s 'l'bomas N. Oark, son of Mr. e.nd Mrs. H.N. Clark of 641 St. ~a mes Road, Newport Beach, it1 participating in clearing mines from North Vietnam's n1ajor ha rbors and coastal ~-'alerways as a crewmember aboard the USS Edson. · MfU'ine First Lieutenant Robert J. Friend Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Friend of Fir Avenue, Irvine, has quaHfied as a pilot in the A•I· IJ "Sea Cobra" helicopter at the Marine Corps Air Station at New River, N.C. l\farine Pvt. David L. Saylor Jr .. son of Mr. and Mrs. Da vid L. Saylor of 1856 Tustin Ave., Newport Beach, graduated from basic training at the Ma.rine Corps Recrui t Depot here. hiarine Second Lieutenant Jeffrey T. Powell, husband of the former Miss Patricia L. Alward ()f 4151 Bla ckfin Ave., Irvj.ne, ma.de his first solo flight in a Navy aircraft here. NHYC; (2) Mark Hinshaw, :fiii6. <3> Jim Buckingham, Hobie Cats SABOT A -(I) Wallie Ger- ri<; NllYC: (2) Mike Hatch, Hold R'ace NHYC; (3) Laura Shelton, LlYC: (4) Brooke Benjamin, MJYC. F T SABOT Ii -(I) JJOnna Or rophy· Williams, BYC; (2) B 111 Fodor, DPYC; (3) Kalhy I! b' ca Tyler, BYC. o 1e ts some 150 strong SABOT C -(1 ) Craig in the 14 and .16 foot classes Fletcher, DPYC; (2) Scott swarmed over Long Beach Allebom, NHYC; (3) Eric Harbof "Saturday aiid surl<fay Doering, MlYC; ( 4 \ Henry Mackel. NHYC; (5) Scott in the Division II, Southern Gien, BCYC. California Championships. oursmE CLASSES Trophy winners in t h e PHRF-(1) Pussycat, John various divisions : Szalay, BCYC; (2) Linda, Hap HOBIE·16A -(l) Richard Lord, BYC; (J) Uncanny, Louf«tk and Eric Barton, Costa Hobart Denny, BCYC. M (2) Di k RHODEs-33 -(I) Maruja, esa; c and carol Bob Kettenhofen, BYC; (2) Beauchamp. Corona del Mar; Folly, Blair Barnette, BYC; (3 ) Bob Seaman .and Jana (3) Therapy, Gayle Post, Haynes, Venice; (4) Jerry BYC. King aruf Tony 'C a 'b b o t t . ETCHELLS-22 -(I) Ole, Newport Beach; (5 ) Wayne John ruddell, NHYC. . Schaef~r, an<! Toy NeaJ.e, San SOLING -(1) Ul·Ut Aah, Juan Capistrano. . Rick Jenness, BYC: ( 2 ) HOBIE-168 -(l) Richard Quicksilver, Tom ,Jorgenson, and Sandy Maxey, Long LAYC; (3) Wet Drawers, Tom Beach; (2) Jim Cotton and Willson, BYC. Robyn Ross, Dana Point; (3) SI'AR -(1) Streaker, Tom Alan and Don Johnstone, La Blackaller, NHYC; (2 ) No Canada ; (4 ) Steve Trainor and name, Dennis Connor, SDYC; Kris Faulkess, Big Bear Lake; (3) Glory, BiU Gerrard, SB,YC._ ._(5) .!lt!'l.IY Soden and ~ojm SlllELDS -(I) Charlotte, Burlie, Big Bear Lake. Joe O'Hara, Nl!\'.C: ( 2 ) l:fOBJE.l!C -(l) Steve Leo Prudence, Larry Beu TQ, and Debbie Wilkinsin, Newport BYC: (3) Tornina, Bill Martin, ileacll~. (2) Robert and Sandy NHYC. Howland, Santa Ana; (3 ) Tom LUDERS-16 -(1) Kildee, Eckles ·and Roy Kronk, San Ben Hromadka, LYC. Diego: (4) Norm and Patty 470 -(1 ) Calliopsis, Al F~rquhar, Seal Beach. Smith, ABYC ; (2) No name, HOBIE-f4 -(l) Randy Will Johnson, ABYC; (3) Hatfield, !JJng Beach; (2) Pipit, Len Jones, SCCYC. John Ross-Duggan, Newport New La:ser Dinghies Set Regatta Beach ;· (3) Craig Barto , Newport Beach: (4) Guriter Hagen. Malibu; (5) Bob Johnson, Irvine. HOBIE-148 -(I) Wes Goleman, Oxnard ; (2) Burt Sheriff, Lakewood; (3) Jerry Kei;mode._ Laguna: (4) Joe Beinhanft, Long Beach; (5) lvfac Wright, ToJTance. HOBIE-14C -(I) Bruce Fields, LaWndale; (2) · Milt Rudge, Cej-ri1os,. (3) Mark Awnann, Long Beach; ( 4) Rick. Tomp~. Long Beach; (5) Fred Willis, Torrance. Nearly 100 Laser dinghies. the popular new single-handed class, are expected to be ·on the starting line in the ocean off Balboa Pier next Saturday and Sunday when Newport Harbor Yacht Club sponsors the Western Regional ~or Slim· Leacl Championship for the class. The regatta . is expected to be an amual event for ski~ Still ·Held pers 18 years old or younger ' Midshlpman Lawrence E. who li ve in California, Oregon. Erikson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Nevada, WasbingtOn and · :u1 Ski · · BEdth"'.anl MDr. Erikson of 19312 ArThiizona. , . be1 · Y . . . pp~ e any 1ve, Irvine, 1s s year s races are ng , , assisting in the train ing of the ' limited to JOO enlrieS,1 ac-Jef.f Brauch of Los AflgiileS U.S. Naval Academy in An-cording to Geral4 t.Ma~an. YachkCIUb chmg to a.nar10w napolis M.D. chairman. PJads are being lead in the 5-0-S Pacific C.oast SANTA ANA -Veterans of Navy submarine combat ln 'Vorld . War II will gather for their 19th Aiinua\ National Convention ·in San Diego on \Ve~esday, Aug. I, for four days, at,fie Sberaton Airport Inn oh pi.Cturesque Harbor Island. Chapter members of the U.S. Submarine -Veterans of World War 11 meet monthly at a local level• but Southland meJJ1.berS are urged to attend made for future races to have 1 • • • eliminatjon to-~le<;t •IQP. skip-• ~)lior)s,hiJI' at .Ai.m11o& pers from different al-eas 10 Bay: SUnday at the conClusloh come lo Nowport . ·for ·the· ,of1 four,..of .the schedulod sis championship. 1 .. -• • • z:a~e,. ~., . · , .• NHYC eommilcjore 'T e·d · JJrauch tiad a one point lead · Monroe has ·announced that • ov,er ·Dennis &n1ess ·of Palo the Joseph A. Beek Gold S Alto 'Yacht 'Club in the best award, Originally dedicated to five of six series. The two the Snowbird aass. has been •. ~kippers are tied on the basis redeeded to the Laser JUnlor 'Of~a throwout after four races. championships. The series ooncluties today · with' two races. Tuesday wUI Welcome Aboard By ALMON LOCKABEY '/ • Believe it or not, things are not all lj'Weelness and li ght in the "corinthian" sport of Yacft racing. Especially in the offshore yachting kternily where there is a continuing battle over a compli· cated bit or · computeriz.ing known as the Interna- tional Offshore Rule Mark III. This is the measurement rule. you Ju recall, that replaced the old Cruising Club f America measurement rule which reputedly h3"d ore loop- holes than a giant sized chunk of Swiss · eese. BUT THE CCA method of "equalizi!ll" various yachts for long distance racing was solid1 compared to the gaping holes in !he !OR. ' Take, for example, !be biller fighl going on on the East Coast over a yacht called Cascade. And never fear, you haven't heard the last of the ULDB (Ultra·Ligbl Displacement Baits), one of which won the reCent Transpac despite a heavy time penally. A classic example or the East Coast furor is chronici~d in !he August issue of Yathling Maga· z1ne which features back-to-back interviews with Jerry Mil~mi designed of the controversial "cal· ketch" Cascade, •and Olin Stephens IJi chairman of the International Technical committ'OO and one of the authors of !OR. Ml LG RAM, an MIT professor who carries the title "doctor'' (of •omething) before •is name pulls no punches in slating Iha! after the rrc raised Cas- cade's rating lo 27.2 feet (as a result of the boat's performance in the Southern Ocean Racing Circuit) it has killed Cascade and that the OOat's value has been diminished. In a spirited interview con ducted by Yachting's associate editor, Jeff Hammond, Mil· gram slated: "A lot of people and companies have been dam· aged by the unfair competition associated with the making of and the alterations of !he !OR. I think the 'Switch from Mark II lo Mark m somewhat pre- maturely has damaged some people, and I think the frequent rule changes have damaged the sport as a whole." MILGRAM charges. that "Up until now the Off· shore Raling Council (the governing body of ocean racmg) has been ~ rubber stamp for the ITC" and "Olin Stephen~ and Robin Glovet control !he ITC." (He will· ·find a Joi of "amen s" in Newport Beach aild".nlher yachtlng cente'rs on both coasts.) In his first public stalemeht since !he latest flurcy of ·criticism 1n !he American yachting press over the, Cascade)ssue, {)!in Stephens says !here ... was some carQlesao~s-.. Involved when the controls oµ two-masted rigs were put into the !OR. Basically, he says, these iiaSsages were picked up from the CCA rule. , ' · In the interview, also conducted by Hammond, Stephens defends !he development aspects of !OR. Said be: · "I don't lhlnk anyo~ wants a mere handicap formula. I think a modUled handicap formula ls \)'hat is wanted. Perfonnance handicapping, even It It was possible, would be ,the most retro~rade sort of step that couJd ·be taken fa the sport. • lD:OO(J) "Nlalltm&rl'" (wsp) '64-0evid '80 -Doria D1y, Ru Harrltan. Kniatit. Moira Redmond, "'"" '' 1fM 11 .. · the nationwide convention. La Volpe be a lay--day and lhe 6$-boal ~eet will start compeUtkln Wednesday for the N'o'tt h , Am~r\con cltamplonshlpo. (Thal statement alone will gel Stephens some loud guffaws from the ranks of the Performance •Hantlicap ,Racing Fleet·-'formerly Pacific Handi· clip Racing Fleet -wb0se membership has sky- rocketed slnee the JOR c~me Into being.) ;W'ed<li1ig Violent ZERLO. Italy (AP I -A wedding party developed into a free-for-all involving 1!<Jndreds -Including the mayor -after youths made some nasty remarks 10 the hnde. 'The fight moved from a ~staurant ,.., the squ~re. fthere opposing ractlons Qattled nnd o o Io o k e r 11 6-om n e a r by buildings pclt<d them with fruit. J1 look JOO policemen to restore order. 0 ., ......... ~-(mys) '59-3,30"""' ...,,,,.. ( ... ) ''2 - Wll1iam tuas, O•vid Summer, John W1)'111, M1rl111t Dlettlcb. lZ:OO I) "Viril111te Ttn'Of" (wu) '54- Wi!d BUI Elliott "DSS·117, MlssloR 4:00 fJ (C) *'Bi11btt S.Ueef' (scl·ft) for 1 Kiiler' ('d~) '66 _ Mylen• '67-Din Oury11, Lois Nettl1ton. Demon1eot. 4:30 (1) SUM a lOi\M 11111& • KOCE, cm1NNEL 50 Orange County's ln lF television station, KocE-TV, has s.c~:luJed the following special programs today. Detailed h~un~s of Channel SO's ptograms are carried 1n the DaiJy Pilots TV Week each Sunday. 3:00 TUltNINO l"OINTS (Cl "Tti. Ne,1 Ctlt!t : O...th In "" Mfnet" -••• emll'lft mlnlnt di••'''' Md pr°'°'•i. IOI' l"llll'OYll'IO f'lllllnt.1ot1lt1y, J:JO CAAlt~fi.IHOAS ICI a U!ntutl COfM'l1111ktllM lllllt 1n,1ructlon 10r cnlldrtt1. 4:00 MJSTlll lt0081tS' Nl1Glt901· MOOD fCI l ob Ind J\ICIV 8TOWl'I •"°w Mr, Roo•r• llow to mt kt pvppe11 tr°"" '*"'llol" , .. _, 4:)0 4!Ll:CTRIC COo'.l.,.ANV tea "' CObblSll COVlllV Crotkfllg (O!'l1911 '"a IM "er" SOU'nd. J ;OI) llSAMI ITlll lT CC> O.C..r IMcU t DOa: of .,_ IO l'lll COVlll'I In JllOl'!da ''° min.I t :OO I.A'«." l'Ot Tltl 'JM (Cl LffllCWI 3t "'Cellfornle Lew'' -COlltfl e°"'11 fOf" ertcftl, u:, r::~t.:~·:::!:~,:~.~ Of 0rtl!Of County"1 CUllll!'~I Tt!IOllT~ 7:00 Tit• COMING ASUNPllt ·Of' Jl"""Y artlOHT CCI A 5Pe<ltl dr~IM fb0\11 I ~nt Vttllt rt ceMo¥0rll.,.. ltO ml11.I ~ •::JO aooic &IAT (Cl "FllClllO lht LIOt11" tw Tom Wicke<' It rtotl.rwtd. t iOO INTartNATIONAL l"lltJOOIM· ANCI CCI "l.e l \llOhHll'' -Pllllllll!M T•ollolll't IMUtl. !60 mll'I,} Qualilled shipmates of lhe World War ll submarine service rriay1 contact Los . ' I Wins 'Race Angeles Area Chapter Presl-_ dent William Holland, of 20172 La Volpe. a 46-foot schooner Cypress . St.. Santa A n a sl<ipperod b)" Peter Dupuy of Jlolgbts. 91'107 for lurtfu:•, la-, ~-Mol!ic• ¥~chi IJl.ub was k!rmatlell . • • ' • \Ill& ~·r or caurornla '()!chi He may also be caUed ai.. Clubs Pacinc Cup in a 151· 545-3728 directly for details mlle race for schooners and and how to register. ketches. , First lo 'finish at 6:08 p.m. Navy Persormelman First Cina David L. Schoenberger, son or Mr. and Mrs. Donald L, Schoenb<>riter al 5tt42 Trophy Drive, Hunttni!lon Beach, ha! left for an exlcnded deploy· mcnt with the .U.S. 7th Fleet in t&c Western •P11clOc aboard the store ship USS Vega. Schedu led port visits include Japan,. PhUllplne-, Thailand, Hong KOng an ct' Taiwan. Sunday W.s !tie 83 • I o o t schoOner Ser~oa. 'lbe race started Friday at 1:30 p.m. Serena's elapsed 'Hme was 52 hours and 38 minutes. - La Voije was 'lllltr-jbe han- dicap winner in the schooner class. Winner in the ketch class was Pcregrlna, a 40-foot Morgan designed ketch skip- pered py Roy Qisney of Califorrua Yocht Club. Third race -(I) Jeff Brauch, LA YC; (2) DeMIS Surtees, PAYC; (3) Al;ln Johnson, CBYC. F'ourth race -(1) Surtees: (l) ·srauch; .. (3) Henry Jotz, fAY". American Killed COWES, Isle of Wight (AP) -A· Unltoo Stares naval of· fleer was found shot dead I~ day In a cobin aboanl tfii> U.S. naval tug SaJinan which was acting as a guard!hlp fot com· J>!'ting rachts during Royal Regatta \\>eek. IN A' surpi-lse 'statement, StepheM Indicated that a mtted sur!ace factor would probably be brou~ht into lhe !OR when there aro "sweeping cqanges" mad . in 1978. Fie indicated the new weited surface factor \!tOUld probably be similar lo !lie one now ~ing u•ed' by lhe Storm TrysaU Club in its modlllcation of !OR. Stephens ilso silld there is another move afoot which would combine !he rule with the lime allow· ance system In •uch a way that the parameters of mea•urep>enl will be adjusted according lo Wl!ather condftfoni;, ' (That last will rek'ndle still llflother cont.re> versy.) Yachting sald !he two 'Interviews were pub-"- lished to "clear the alr" and lo allow racing yachts- men to know exactly where. these two Individuals stood on the Cascade controversy as well as other Issues aCCecling the future of blue-water 3acbl rac· Ing. I I • • •• • .... -~ . ::a --•• •• • 1 •1 ~I •• • j ' • ... .::M.::ond::::;".::' .::'.::"9:.:"'.::l:..l:.;3.;.' _l 9_7_3 ________ v-·-• i' I .. , _ ·Eaces ol Cambodia as War BrOgs On • . ' GRIM WAR REMINDER Soldier Ex1mlnff•Skull • CAMBODIAN VILLAGERS HUDDLE AND WAIT PORA VEHICLE TO CARRY THEM TO SAFETY FOLLOWING INTENSIFIED BOMBING Phnom Penh: City Shaky By PETER ARNET!' ., ...... (...,._ ...... PHNOM PENH, Cambodia -This is a city that tried hard to stay out of war but failed. ' There is still ITNch ol the old Phnom Penh. A worK elephant will suddenly ap- pear in downtown traffic, strolling ma- jestically along, Its trunk sniffing at the tamarind trees. The streetside dentists ply their an- cient trade, foot-pedalling their drills into action while the patients, eyes filled "'ith fear but otherwise showing no signs of tbe obvious pa.In, are fitted with gold caps. THE 9 P.~I. CURFEW has barely slow- ed down the whirl of parties. Few West.em women remain because the diplopl8tic corim J;lU evacua~ its families. But there are pl"'!ty .o! local girls. Thrice-married Bopha Dev\, ·the at· tracfive high-living daughter of the ·former chief of state, Prince Norodom Sihanouk, dances with A m e r i c a n diplomats. The grownup children of Sihanouk's premier-in-exile, Penn Nouth, throw parties for friends in high Cambodian society. But there is no mistaking oow that war is at hand. Up to a few weeks ago, the roar of ex- ploding American bontbs in the distant cotmtryside could be brushed aside as monsoon thunderheads. Today, the bombs are visible. U.S. Air Force F4 Phantom jets sometimes wheel over the · city on their way to bombings and the black pillars of smoke rise beymd the urban sprawl alter the explosives hit. the countryside. As many as 45 people are living in a one-family home. Phnom Penh is bursting at the seams. More than a million refugees. have streamed in, in- flatfng the population to nearly three times nonnal. Tra(fic clogs the bouleVards from early morning till evening. There is no place to go but Phnom Penh because the roa<b oul of town are only open to military con- voys. The poorer Tefugees can be seen in the local cyclos, sitting high upon their possessions, searching tor some"'·here to stay. The people from the 00\mtrysido bring People for 9ear• tuMted their eyu Ir o nt tlae . b~Jied in tl1e eo11ntr11· -,, ' . . " ' •We. .. ' . ~ tales of the, war that Phnom Penh cannot ignore: of flattened villages, of atrocities by both !ides, of fear. THE BLOODY -F ~CFS of the war Tic- tims are also appearing in greater fre- quency in the city. Ambulances scream- ed through the nights bringing in the hun- dreds ol wounded after last week's ac- cidental U.S. BS2 bombing of Neak Luong. 'l1le four Pho!)lll Penh hospitals· were already packed with war wounded "''hen the Neat Luong victims arrived. Horror tales ol. dead chi 1 d re n , mutilated women, dismembered men flashed through the city after the Neak Luong bombing. Sometimes the stories · are greatly inflated because local newspapers are heavily censored and only lhe flimsiest details of the mistaken bombing appeared for the public. with much greater force. The govern· ment decided to go into full mobilization and ordered the men of !Phnont Penh be drafted. Military trucks prowled fhe streets, grabbing young men aitd old and forci~ly enlisting them. The government wanted 20,000 men initially, but there was near panic in a city whose inhabitants never had to fight the war. The vast majority or soldiers are peasants from the coUfl- tryside. TO STOP THE panic, high government officials apologir.ed on the local radio. But the draft goes on, in a less _obvious way. Men of military age are quietly ordered to report to the authorities. The near panic when full mobilization was ordered is a.true indication of the at- titude otPhnom Penh to the war. The ci· ty does no.t appear conunitted to the Lon Nol govenunent any more than it was to ·Sihanouk until his March 1970 overthrow. The people of Phnom Penh don't want to die In the war; that ts obvious. Talks with scores of local residents in the past few days makes it seem clear that they don't intend to die, certainly not in some last-ditch stand against the insurgents. "The Communists after all are Cam- bodians, too, and Prince Sihanouk pr<>- fessed to be their leader," a Western diplomat commented. "The people of Phnom "P'enh have lived with Sihanouk before; they could live with him again." SO UNTU.. ONE denouement or another comes, the people of Phnom Penh wait. By day they bustled through the streets. With datkness the streets become deserted, even before curfew. No one wants to be conspicuous these days. • Photos by United Press International THE RAPIDLY encroaching war has become obviOU.!I in other ways to the peo- ple of Phnom Penh, who for years turned their eyes from the bloodshed In the countryside, as il it wasn't really hap- pening. But something happened to Phnom Penh recently that brought the war home The wealthier and privileged families have an alternative to waiting -escape by commercial airliner. Planes are book- ed up tl!rough August. CIVILIANS WOUNDED IN U.S: BOMBING ERROR AWAIT AID Distant relatives are streaming in from CAMBODIAN WOMAN SOLDIERS CARRY RIFL ES ON PATROL • ' . '~ .... ~ .. ~ ~ ..... l - WITH PAINTING AND STATUE OF BUDDHA AT HIS SIDE, CAMBODIAN SOLDIER CARE S FDR HIS WEAPON ' l I B·uddlia Survives, But Cambodia.11 Towri Destroyed VEAL SBOV, C.mbodia (UPI ) -The Buddha sits serene now in his pagoda at this small town five mileS southeast or Phnom Penh. All arowxt him lies the rubble and destruction left by the war In ·Cambodia. The town was occupied by Communist rebels 24 hours earlier. Then government troops moved in after a fierce battle that forced the insurgents to withdraw in 'Scattered confusion. THE TOWN was about 80 percent destroyed with some of the houses little more than piles of ash, still smoking. The pagoda where the buddha sits with small pockmarks in his leg, stomach and nose was at the center of the lighting. An estimated 100 Communist in-- surgents occupied the pagoda and made their unsuccessful stand a g a I n 1 t determined government troops intent on recapturing the village. THE ORANGE ROOF ol the paaod• Is gone and smllght tlnred with smoke rrom smoldering nearby buildings shines through, illuminating the rubble-littered floor. Outside the pock-marked yellow wall of the pagoda is a crater apparently caused by a government artillery shell that land· ed two loel from the building: A:mcrlcan pllots coordlnntlng U.S. air strikes could not give the govcrnmctit troops close-in air support because of the heavy {i"ghtlng und c\vlllans Who wt.rt trappOO In their homes. .. ) .I I " I • ' .I ~t ; ' . , ' • ' I ' ' • ' 1 • ,- • -.- ... ZZ U~L.1 r'll.UI PUBLIC N0'11CI': PUBLIC NOTICE "'""''°"' •utl-.bl ,.ICTITIOUS •us•••» 'PICTITIOUS • .,, .... NAM8 STAtHMellfT NAM• ST.t.T•Jrit•HT 111.uta STATaMaMT '!''" tollo\llT"f '*'fl b ....._ ...,...... Ti. ~'-"• _._., •r• OOll'IO Ttit fOl1ow1no plftOll •• ..i,. l!Wlfttta '"· """-· ., ' ... l'U!ol.IH·fll lGHT, .. cy..,..., Apt. s. l-OlN (QUll'MI NT, ,,, '· Htrtior • MEDICAL OFfl"ICI' S«ltvtce ..... l.ltOUNI a.ac:t1. C.111, '1651 11...... JM, %2' Mllll"lll Adclr"' f'.O. Ct•Mrt O•-11'111,. G.,._. Gt..,., htry Ju n Ft fftr, >60 Cv.r.u. Atlf, 1011 ftll, s.itto Ari-. C1111. ff70I C-111. """' S, l~ 8tkh, t llJ!I. t16J1 Af1N 1..Q\I L.f11l""1!on, nt S. ~•rtloo' Ml(llHI o.MtJ FifMl"f, j )f Thlt ~llfll II COl'ldlld.cl bv ·~ lit-11.,.d., No. n, S.nll An&, Ctlll .. '2™1 CorOMOo. No. •· l.°"9 ._h C.111. •111-...1. Mitll ·P.O. l o• S2Tl tm" .... letty , .. " F-.rrar MOrllt El"'O LIYlllflfOf'I, 329 s. /11fOOI' Tiii• butlnt .. ,. Uondllcitd bV lft, I~ 1nl1 tltttmitnt wa1 ni..t Wiii\ tM eeun. 11-.d,. Ho. n. hM• "'""' Gallf. '210o4i dlvldutl. f't' ci.n; Of O••• county Oii My .. ""*" . P.O. II*. st/I MlcttMt D. lli.ldll'IQ lm. Tiii• 111111-It ~UC:ttcl by '" In-Tlll1 ,,,,_, w•• flied wltll fto• COUfl· """' di"""". ty Cltrk ol' °'"""'* COl,ll'lty on J11ly 20, ~lthtd 0..-•l'IO• C0.11 01fty Piiot, J"" At1t1• loo.I L1Yl1'9tl_~ lt13. ty D. .1Q, •llO Aug1111 6. 11. lf73: 2Jiit.7' Tlllt .. 11t1rns11t w•t !Qfl[wlfll t~ Coi.m-FWIJ IV Clwll of Orlt'IOll Cou11tY Oii Aueu.t 10. l"llOlltflH Of•noe Coelf 0.lly Piiot, J IJ< PUBUC NOTICE 1m. ro•11 1y 10 _, Auolllt " 1:a. 20. 1m 22»·73 PlCTfTIOU$ I UllNa ll Pu911thed Ol'.-1'$1 Cc.sl O•llY Piiot, MAM• STA'f•M•WT .f.wvll u. to, ,,, llld g_,,,.,,,. '· PUBUC NOTICE The followl11g Pltrtons •r• dolnt lt1S 241.n -----1 tM.11~ ••t U C NOTICE PtCTITIOUI •usu1•-1-1 LA (ot.JA ltEALITY, t20 Vi• P•llnno, PUB NAM• STATWI NT N ........ Setdl, C•lll, 9U60 T"9 IClllowlno Wtonl ''' dol119 Tilonlu R. YOUll(I, 220-VI• P'•lltft'IO, STATlfMl!"NT 01" A•ANDOMMINT tiull""I 11: N~ llMctl, C.11. t2iMO Clfl' us• OP PICTITIOUJ CAPITOL SYSTEMS. ,,,, 0.rdtll •ftlvft YOllflCI, Z20 VI• P•lltmo. BUSIN ISI NAMlf Grove l lvd., Sultl f , O.rOtn Gro..,., NtwpOrt l!lted'I, C•llf, t2ut Tlls foll-I~ pe<>ton hll •btilldollld 1"'-C•Uf, 9Ul1 Thi• lwllnttl 11 COl'ldllcltld IJrf" 1n Jn. -Of t"9 flctl!IOIJI butlne\s M,.,. D.l.A. Otnnlt JOl4'Pll Hl~!Nln, 1341 Mtrlon Cllvldllotl. AltT CltAFT DECOJI ATORS, .. 111U Ml, Cr., WntlTlln1t1r, C1llfornl• '2613 T~I It. Ywr111 l1klr Clrd 1, Foonl1ln V.1ll1y, C.lllf'Ol'nl1 W•rrtn O.ryl Mt....,, 1tu2 Tlrn- Tltlt tflltlmfftl Wiii llltd with '"" c-nw. 1>«1•111, Yorba Lind•, C•lllornl• tr Cllrtl of Ot•lllt COl,tnty on Jr.tly 21, Thi flc,ltlo~ bust ..... i n11'111 rlfttrtd ~ J imt• T. 8•kla, 1"' Lucr1n11 A.,.., 1'1>. 1bolltl w11 !Hid In Ora• CounlV on Lot Angtlft. C.111'omli toDU '"1ftll H-mblr 2~. l•n . Tlll1 bullneu 11 condvcltCI by • ttnu•I Pvbll1111C1 Or•nt11 C11111 Dtlly Pilot, Ju-Edwlr<$ L.,,,•Mkl, 1M05 Tfl~lnd Pll•llllrahlp, •v 23.. '°' •nd A1.19ust " ll, 1'1:1 :W.S-73 St., FOUllllln V1ll•Y· C•l11. n70I ' J•m11 T. 1!11kl1 Tltll bV1ln111 Wl l Conducttd by In Thll 11•1-I Wit llltCI .illh tM C_. PUBUC NO'nCE lndlvldu11. ty Ci.tk of Ot•flOI County on Julr 20. Edw•rcl L1n"n1kl ltn. l'ICTITIOUS I USIMllS ,,...,, PJffl1 HAMI STAT•MlfHT Put>lf111td Orl l\OI Cot1t O.lly Piiot, Pllblllhld Or111111 Coa1! 01llr fl'llol July Thi 1ooowtng .,.non 11 Hing MIMta A_,,.,_•_•_•1· >i"ii· ii"r· :i"c;'c'Nmii>im;,-'---n_ i."~·-"':._· ~·M..:._•~":.:._'":._'~· _"_· _m_• __ """ __ n_ 1 ... • THE SCHOOL l>()Olt, 1601 Whit• 01M, PUBLIC NOTICE Cot!• Metfl, C11ff. nt2• PUBUC NOTICE Dorl• e. Mlctlall, 1.01 Wiii•• Olk. STATIMENT OP WITHDllAWAL FllOM Cost• M111, C1llf. fU2t PAllTHlillSHIP OPlllATIHO UHOlilt ~ Thlt 11111111111 II Conclllcll(I 11" fin In-PICTITIOUI I UllHISS HAMI HOTIClf TO CllllDITOltl Cllvldlllll. Tiii lollowlng PlfllOfl h111 withdrawn as SUPl!lllOll COUllT OP TH• Dorff 8 . Mlcll.HI • tener•I p&rtlllf' from the p&rl11'""lp STATIE OP" CALJPOllNIA Hiii Tlll1 1t1l1mtnt w111 llltd With 1flt Cou,.. ~r1tl119 lllldtr IM !1ct!Uou1 b111l11i!11 THI! COUHTY 01' Oii.i.NOi tv C'9rk OI Or•l)OI Coullty on Augull 10, n1n11 ol s.c::.u .a.A. LIMITED ., 100.S. Ho. A·'"'' ln3, 1015 W. ltllt Sh'"', CO.I• Mlsll, C1. E1!1t1 ot ELOISE M 1 c 0 1 N NI SS, '' 11'2141$ '"'-llc1111ov. 111111,..,, nan11 111111,•enl OecN M!d. PUl:ltlthld OrlnQ• Cc.st Dilly PUof, for IM pertlllf"shlp Wllti Iliad oro J1nu1ry NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to 11111 "1.19u1t 13, 20, '11, •l'ld S1¢1mber :!, 12. lfn. 111 IM Or•ne-ol Or11199. crtc:1Uor1 of tllfl 1bov1 n•mld llleldlnl 1m 1$0!).7J Full N111111 of tM Ptn0n Wlthc:lrawlng !hit all person' h•vlng d 1Fm• ag111111 1111 Ron11CI Ot11nl1 Ntwell Utld dleecknt 1r• r1qulr9d to 1111 tlllom PUBUC NOTICE .f.l:! 811VV1 L111t wlm !hi n«tt11ry vouc,.,...,, In thl ofllc1 lalllofl, CA 92U I of lhl clefk ol lllfl •bove .ritlttld court, OI' l'ICTIT!OUS aUllHl!SI Jt222SJ to Pt'ltltnl ll'llm, w!tn !111 NCHH J'y' HAMI! STAT IMIHT PllbUlhld Orang.e CO.II O.lly P!lol, Ju· vouclllf'•, to 1111 unclenlgned •I thl otff« Thi l'ollow1119 penon 11 doing Min ... ty 30. •t'lcl AUlll,lll .. 13. 20, 1973 UU·73 of hf• lllOl'Tll)', JOHN c. SAL YER. 20d 1,. • We&ld!lf Orlv1, Svll1 301, N1wport 8ffdl. • BEL AUit co.. 7171 T r 1 , k PUBUC NOTICE C1tlfornr1 92660, whletl 11 !flt p1ac1 of W•Slmfntllf", Call!. ff61l -butlntu O\' 1111 undefllgned In •II ma"'" llOOll\ E. H11llQ11lt1, 7171 Tr11k. FICTITIOUS BUllNl"SS pert1lnf119 lo 1111 Hl1t1 of H ICI CltcllM'ftl, W1ttmlmt1r, C.1111. '2"3 NAM.Ii STATEMENT ll'llhln lwr montto1 •fl1r 1hl fin! publlc• Thi• bvtl,..~ 11 coneludld by 111 111-Thi following ptr11>n1 are ciotna "°" of this no11c:1. dlY!Mf, llullMU ••; Ol lld J1,1lr 24, 1913. ltottr E. H11ftq\ll1t KOlL•WELLS/&AY AREA, 17.IS Sky Mll'Cldn MllCG/nnls llodcwtll Thi• tllll!Mnt ••• !Utd wlltt"" '°""" ,..rtt Clrd1, 11"'1111(!, Clllfornl• 92664 E:JCllCUlrb: Of IM Wiii ot tr Clllrtc cf Clnln111 County Gl'I J~y :.tO, 1. OOMld M. Koll, 609 Via Lklo SM. thl •boVI n11Nd Cltcedent l n3. NtwpOrl 8111ch, Calllornla 92~.0 JOHN C. SAL VIII F24tll 2. Richard C. El!loll, 96 Lindi 1111, toU WHlcllll Dr .. Suitt :M1 Put>l1111ed Oranoe COiis! 01lly Pilot, Ju· NIWPOrl Beach, C1Jllornf1 92UO Htwpert 811(11, Cfllf, ""° ly 13. XI ind Aueusl •· 13, 1973 2267·73 3. Lte C .. Sammis, 9' Lindi Illa, Tlli fnl) '*'*" Nl'Wl'Ol"I l llCh, Callfornfa 91660 Atlornlr tor &x1cutrl1 PUBLIC NOTICE '· Dav!CI P. MIC1dllm111, 11 Hal! Moen Publ!shed Or11111e Coa$1 Oallv Piiot, J1,1. Drfv1, Corm1 ~I Mar. Ca!Uornla 9762S IV lQ, •l'ld AUQllll 6 IJ, 20 1,73 2351·73 PICTITIOUI BUilNISS S. Everett 01vt1, 3eOt S1rldvr'll Lone, ' ' HAM• STATIEM£HT Coron• Cl•1 M1r. C1olltornl1 n•2s PUBLIC NOTICE •··I •• Tll'l'IO!lty L. Str1CIB!', 1930 Port TM following Plf'SOll II dOlll!I ""1 MIS Albens, NeWPOrt Bitch, Callfornla '26'1111-----..::_=_:__.:__c.:_ ___ I ••:COPY GIRL, 3ADO lrvlnt, No. 10J, 7, Georo1 0. Glb$ar1, Jr,, 311 Old LI NOTICE TO CONTllACTOllS NIWPCN'f "'di. C.IUI, '26'&0 Ho!ld1 ltOICI, WOOC11ld1, C•1llor11t1 Notlta I• her1br g lV1n that the Hun· Monie• M. Maori, 1221 w. coa1t L Wlllt F1roci Morl011!11 lll\l11tor1. ll"lllon Bnclt Unloro High School Olslrkl 1 ....... '°' Nortll SeourV1C11, Sull1 1100, El wm rtcelve waltd bkl1 '°' lttrnhhl11g 111 Hwy,. Ntwporl B1ac1t, Cat 1• ~-Sfloulldo. C1Ulornl1 fO'J.CS l1bor, 1T1altrJa1, tran1"""f111~ •' o Thll bul!Mil 11 conducted by •n Ill-.. w. ...,, CllvlClutl Thl1 buaiMU 11 bllnlil roncluclad bY • servkes tor the ptrlorm111c1 ol the Monie. M Moor• lilt'Ml"•t P.rln ... 1hlp, fOllOWfllf -".: Tiiis atiltlmtn1 ;,,111 fltld Wllll 1"" Covn-ICOLL·WELU/llAY AREA Tltl con1truc;tt011 of Ille New iv Cllrk of Orlntt cwnry on Jufr 20. By Timothy L. Slrtd1r Cl111room Bulldlng, Huntington Btach 1t7l Thi• S11t1ment w1s fllld Wltlt till Coull· High School, •ller1ollon1 to 1111 t klstlno • 1'2'Wll IV Citric of Or1not. Cou111Y, C11lfornl1 on Homern•klng &ulkllng, clamolltlo11 of thl Pllblllhld oranoe CO.ti Dally Piiot. Auiw-t 2. 1973. l kl llinQ Cl•uroom Bu1ldln11. ! h I ly n, 30. •lld A119w1 6. 13. 1m 2266-13 '17U2 rlhabUlt11fl011 Ill' 1111 e:dsllna Stlldium Publfll'lld Orll'llll Cotti 01lly Piiot, Blnthlrl at'lcl Slt1 lmprov11T1111!1 1s PUBLIC NOTICE A1.19ust 6, 13. 20, 27, 1113 Ull).r.J Cllllnld °" !ht Clr.tWfngs. Snlld bldli win bl recefvtd no l1ler PUBU C NOTICE tllln s:30 ""'·• Slopttmber 21, 1m. In 1t11 PICTrTtOVI BUSIHUS confwtn(I rootn 111 tt1t-Hunllfll!IOll IHch NAM• STAT•MlfNT PICTITIOUS IUSINISI Urilon Hlglt k llool Dl1trlc!, 1902 S.Vtn• Tiii foflowl"' ptfl01I It dollllfl busl""' MAME STATEM•NT t11nlh Slr11t, Hunllnolon 8 e 1 c h , ••• Tl'le tollowlng per.Jons 1r1 doing Calllornti 92"'9, at wl'llch llmt ind pl•c• • MA JIOOLS. 26012 II. ~ty Or., bvsl~Llll~USINESS CENTERS • IAY 1111 l>ld1 Wiii be publle1y OPlned I nd reld. Lt0\11'1• Nlgue[, Call!, tul7 ARE" 1"'S 5' p I All bld1 shill bl cl1.11'1v m1rkld H1111-F"r1nk \YkUe, t48"6 Lll~tlltld, El Toro, C•ll~lt '26'4 y i rk C rcle, lrvlnt, ll"'ton 1-11 Hlgli Scllool 1tlh1lllll11tlon, C1llf. '26)1) 1. OOMtd M. KClll, 6ot Via Lieto Souel, PhllM l -Bid No. lff, Tlllt blilllfllll• Is concklcltCI bV 1n In· Newport Bii cll, Cillfarnl• 91660 Etch bid lo bti In 1ccorC1111C1 with dlvldllfll. t. ll:lchlrCI c. EIUolt, 96 Lind• lilt, pl11n1, •Plcillc11tlon1 I nd on.tr Contract Fr1t1k Wldll N~I ll••ch, C•lffornl• t:2660 cloatmtnls flow °" flle wlln Ille Hun. Thi• al•lemlnl w1s llltCI w!ln !ht Coun-3. Ut c. sammls, ,4 LIM• 111,, tlnoton Buch Unlo11 High Scllool Ol11tlct ty Cllr1t of Orane' Counl'I on AUllUSI 2, NIWPOrt &llCh, Cillforril.I '2'560 Offlc.t, 1901 Sevl!'nl81111h Street, Hun- 1•7:1. 4, 0, P. Mldcll1mat. It Hell Moon o r., flflOIOll BNeh, C1ollloml1 9'164, .Ind ltte '%12M C-dll Mir, Celllornl• 9U2S olfka ol It.. Ar-chlltct': Allen & Mflflr Pllbllfhld O!'lnoe Co.it O.l)y Piiot, s. Everitt Divl1, 3'09 Sit'lclune Lint, Arclltltld,, 1'°6 Bush Street, S111t11 Alla, °"UUU&f 6. ll-20, t7, 1'973 :UOS..73 corona Oii Mir, Cllllornl• '2425 Calltomla '2101. Copltt m1y bt' oblllned " Tlmoltlv L. Sfrld1r. 1930 Port Al· trv °'"""•' Contractor. ond 1nos1 bldellng PUBUC NOTICE bloM, Newport Seidl. C1llfornl1o 92660 work under l eHr••• Contr1ch 11 1!'11 7 6IOl"IJ'I O GJblon. Jr 311 Old ll Ar-chlltcb oflltl Ollly upon e clePOStl of l'ICTJTIOUI a UllNISS Horid. ROid, Wooe1sldt, c&irtomli sioo.oo per set. E1eh C011trac1or J1 lllTll!ed NAMI STATI MI MT 1. °" E ~Ill Inc .. !Sl Firnil'IQfon 10 ltlrw Mis. howlver, oddlllor-..1 copies Thi followlftg ptf"llOfll are d011'19 A-, HirttorCI, COlllltcllc\11 06115 mlV bl purclt1sed by I~ Conlrtclor. but.I_, •• Tltll &u1l111ts Is condllcitd by • lfmlltd °'POllls wlll be l"9fl.Nlded on r1tum of WALKEll: GRAPHICS, 01 E. 171h pertnlnlllp. IUCh COPIK 111 oOOCI cOl'felltton within 11.,. StrMf, Cot111 Mfft, C1llfoml1 91Q7 Tlmoltly t.. S1rldlr d1v1 11111' !hi bld1 1r1 (ll)tnld. No HASTY PRINT, INC., (C•lllornle), AH Thie s!•lemanl WIS flied Wflll 1111 Coun· ::c:s...,w!U bl m1d1 for tJClra Mb E. 17111 StrMI, Cotti MISfl, C.lllornl• IY Cllf'll: ol Oral'lll• County, Ctlltornl1 on Ei ch bid 111111 111 •ccomparilld br 1111 pc!f"~JOfl bull11M1 II canclucttd bv • COi'· J uly :U, 1m. Pnotl llC:tJrfty rllB!'rtd lo In lhf ContrlCI DarTVt L. Wilker President Putifllhed Or•1191 Cotll D•Uv Pilot Jir doc:11mtnl1 111<1 bY tile llSI of Pf"OpOsed ' ty 30 nd A t ' 13. 20 ' Wb<ontraclors. Tlllt st1t-t W11 !UICI wl!tt 1111 COIJ.f"· e Ulilut • • 1'73 UQ.13 Thi DISTRICT reMNH Iha right to r .. ';';,rflltrk ol' Orlontt C1111ntr Oii """"'' 2, PUBUC NOTICE feet '"Ti or •II bids or to w1lv. •11r 1r. F·:DW r911ul1r tin or lnform1lllles 111 1ny blCls or IN THI SUPlf•IOll COURT 0 1' In 1111 blCICl!ng, IQl-OC TH• STAT• 0 1' CALlllOllHIA IH Thi DISTRICT his Cleterml11ed 1111 P\lblllllld Ortlllll Coast D1Tfv PHol, A"D Hiit THIE COUNTY 01' OltAHOI ;t1111r1t prtv•Ulng r11!1 of per d11m WIQes "uout l 6.-1:1. 20, 21, 197:1 U\4-73 Na. A77!n 111 thl loc1lltv 111 wlllcll 11111 work 11 to bl PUBLIC N-cE OltDllt TO SHOW CAUSli POil CH.I.NOi! ptrformld tor ••ch cr1lt or 1)'111 ol V J.I OP NAM• wort<man nltdtd to n tcute !I'll Conlrect. ln lhl M1t11r of tfll Al'l)llc1ll011 of Thnl rates were put>Uahed In !hi Him-.,ICTrTIOUS •Ust .. •ss JAYNE ELIZABETH THOMPSON, FOf" lfngton Beac~ NIW. Auou11 31 •rid HAM.Ii ITAT!:MIHT er.,... ol' Niimi. S1pllmbll' 1, 1'12 •lld ••• on 11!1 ,, '"' Tl'MI followi ng Plf'tonl are dolnt Tiii tWllcttlon of JAYNE ELIZABETH OISTltlCT offlc1 loc•fld 11 1'°2 SIVtn bullt'llU ••: THOMP$,ON for Cfllnge of ,.,..,,, h•~lng IH lllh Sl•HI, H1,111tlngto11 B I • 'h • THE HOlllTT & CO., 214 Jlh St .. be111 flltd In Court, and It 1ppa11rlng lrorn C1Ufor11l1 ~ Copt" m1v be oblalntd HUll!lflllfOll I NClt. C•I. nut HfCI •PPllC1tl1111 lltlt hll flied an I P· on l'"lqutll. A CCV>' of "'·~· rile$ 1hall bl Rao« ~k Griffith. 417 20th St. NO. PllC•llon Pl"OPOS11'19 ttoll her rwom1 bl PO!llll'd 1t tn1 fob s.llt. C, Hunllnthln Btacll. C.I, 92'4 Chlnoect to JAYNE ELIZABETH ELG. Oltld; Augu1t 10, 1J73, ICalhlrlM J11ll1 O'IC"ll, ,17 20!11 St., N-. tl!lrefor1, 11 11 hertbr orC11rld Ind S!11nlCI : P111I E. Hill Ho. C, Huntl11111on 8tKll, Cal, t:26'11 CllrtcteCI, lh1t all penon1 lnte•Kltd In B111rn1u Au lsl1n1 Tiii• bllllf\ffl 11 Clllld\lcttcl by I v-H ICI mtlfw Clo 1ppe1r IMlor• !hi• COllrt In 011er1!lons •ral pe"""""'p. D1111rlm1111 3 on lh1 i!th Cl•V cl Sei>-Pub411hld Or•nve C011t Dilly Piiot. RoOtt" M. Griffith t1mblr, ttn. '' 2:00 o'clock P.M .. ol 1.11CI Aut1ust 13, 20, 27, 1973 2S19·1l This 1t1llrnant w111 t111d With tM coun-d•v to thow Cl llll wllv the OPJ1llc1tion tor 1y Cflrk of Or•11111 County °" Aug111t 2, ClltnQI of n1n11 1hould not 1'>ti ur11ntec1. PUBLIC NOTICE lt n. II 11 lvrll'ltr orC11rt'd th1t a COPY of !his _------I P·27UJ 0nStr bl IWbllthld Ill !hi Ort~ COiis! HOT IC I!! OP" TRUST!E'S SALi P\lblllllld Orlona• C0111t O•llY Piiot. 01Uy Piiot, a lltWICll>lr of o-r•I Ts N 9$71 AllQWI e, lS. 20, 17, 1973 U11·13 clrcutlhOll, printtd 111 11ICI CO\ll'lly, 11 tea•! On $"tem~· _; 1°,·_ 0 I I ·llO o' 0 k :::::::_::_:_:::..:::_c.:.:_ ____ ___c I°""• -" wftlf for toor succeulve wHk' ""' • ·~ • · c oc P B CE prior to thl d•V of 11ld htlrlnq. A.M, •I l"9 lronl 1ntr1nce m1l11 lot>by cf U UC NOTJ Otlld thll 91n daV of 4.ugu•l, 1913. Security Tiiie 1n,ur111ce Compal\y, 8'5 CLAUO E M. OWENS Nor!h BroedwlV, Jn 1111 CllV or Santa Ana, FICTITIOUS I USlNESI J udge I'll s~ICI S•"'erll'I<" Court Stilt ct C1lllorn!1. SECUR17V TITLE NAME STATEMENT HICICliY, CAPRETt AND BIUCICNER INSURANCE COMPANV, 11 corpartllo", Tht tollowfng perlOfl ls do!11g bu1f11ess &Y JAMES T. CAPRETt, as Tru~lee u~ 1111 Deed of Trust t ktcU· 11: 11JS2 Mtc:Arthur I 01Jlev1rC1, Sull1 No t7S led l)y EUGENE W, 8ENSON and STRESS RIO CO. 2156 R11r1I Pl. 11"111'11, C .. lfornl• '2707 ' MA RJORIE E. BENSON, HusOlnd 1!1d C~t• MHI, C1. '2621 T•I· ln4J ~" Wiii II Jclnt Te111nts, r. c 0 r Cl Id Jim" JOlll)l'I LeOoux, 1156 R11r11 Pl, All0rn.y ,.,_, ApPllcint Dtc•mbef" u , 1'71. 111 document no. lJUl, Cott• Me11, C1. '21121 p bllllfleod ·Or C 1 Dal In book 1001, Olll4! 9$3 of Otfld el Records Tiiis bVs1111H II col'IClucled by 111 In· 11 . .,,ge oas Ir Piiot, In !I'll office of 1111 Recordrr ot O••na• OlvJaual f';'ust l3, 20, 27• ll'ICI SlfJ!imbl• 3, Ccuntv, C•lllof11l11, by rtl lOll of del.1111! 111 J1mn J . LeOouk 9 3 2.115·n the OIVlllll'll or perlor1T11nc1 ol Oblf91· This 111t11T1enl we1 llftd wlll'I the Coull· PUBLIC NOTICE Uons 11(;11,.0 lhlrrby lnduCll"ll !I'll brtech Ir Clerk ol' Or1ng1 COlltlly on J 1,1ty ,J, or cllf11111, nottc1 of which w1, recorded 1973. M•Y 3, 1t 73, •• Cloc11111111t no. •1 13, tn book F·270n NOTICE OP TlllJJTl!li'S SALi 10671, PtQ9 279, of MICI Officli l Rtcorch , PubHt.htd Or11111e Coast 0 1!1y Piiot, T.S. NI. '410-7J WUI Siil II PVbilc •ucllon ~, Clllh Jijly 31) and Augu1t •• 1), 20, 1973 2l2J..73 T. 0 . SERVICE COMPANY •1 dijly I P. without w•rt1nty •t to tllll llOJlllllOll' ::.:;;_:;..::-'-.C.::.C.."--.::..C:.""---l;polnlld Trusl" undtr thl lollow!n11 or encumbr•11C••• 1111 tntM••t' coro ... rld t~ PUBLIC NOTICE 1111crlbld C!eed of trust WILL SELL AT 1110 Truit~ IW si!CI ONCI of Truit 111 PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST propertr 1111.11111 In 1111 City OI lrv!ni FICTITIOUS BUSINESS BIDOER FOR CASH (payibll I f time ol Cou111V of Or111111, Still of C11!~r111,' 1111 In l1wtul mort1Y of lh• Unrtl<t St1trs) dnctll)ed •• ' HAMI STATEMENT all right, 11111 111C1 tnt1r11t conveYld to ll)(HIBIT "A" Tiit lol!owlng pe11on Is 11~1119 butlneu ind now hlld by II Ulldtr salCI Offd of PARCEL t• L t )3 of T t N ms II: WALl<ER COLOR GRAPHICS, .. E. ~~~~ltiecl~ lhl prQPtrly tllraln•fltr In the City of 1r!1111, Cou:i~col g~1n;t1: 11th Str•tt, Cosra Me11, Calllornla 92617 TRUSi'OR: RICHARD L. DORSETT St1te of C1olllornl1, 11 per m1p rtcordlod HASTY PRINT. INC, IC•tllornl1), "86 ANO CAROL A. DORSETT, hl.lsDllld In boal< 21.S, P•QH 20 to 23 l111;l111lv1 01 E. 17111 SlrH!, Ccn.!11 Mn.1, C1lll0tnl1 I ncl Wlla MJ1c1ll11110U1 M1P1, In lhl olllc1 of tht Tlt11 fKllll'ltU Is corod!Jcled by fl COi'· BENEFICIARY! TRUST DEEDS !IY Counly RtcorClll' Of llld County. por•tlon McVAY EXCE PT an oll, OU rights, ITll1111"1t1, 0.1rrr l L •. W1l~er ll~td All'OUSt 1. lt 1'2 11 ln.ir. No. mln1r11 rfghlt, 111t11rel o•• rights 1111<1 Prts11.,,,1 1:?27 In boolt 10llJ, P'9t 2.j.& or Ollkl•I Olhlr hvdrccarbons by Whltlolver namt ThlJ 1ra1tment wa1 titll'd with 1111 Coun. Record• In !he offlc• Of the lllKOl'dtr of known lhll m1y DI Wl lhl11 or vfldlr lflkl tv Clerk of Ora n111 Countv 1111 August 2. Ortll§I COl.!ntyr Hid c1a1c1 to truil l•ncl tOOllhtr wttlt IN perptlUfll right of 1913. deicrlDH Ille tollowl"ll pl"Ol)lrty: Clrllllng, mfnl1111, tkplorlng •nd 001<1ttna 102.QC Lot 116 ~I Traci No. 31\S, 111 lhl (lty tltlrtlor 111'1<1 ltorll'ICI In Ind r1movlng 1'11236 of Cotta Me!lol, Coultly of Or•np, 511111 t• 11m1 from H JCI land or •nw olhtt "ubl!slltd Oranoe COlltl Otily Piiot. 01 Cillfornli, 11 per map ritorClld 111 .,,Cl, lnch1C1l1111 1"9 right to whlpstoc:k or Auoust 6. 13. :11), 21, ltll U1 l-1l book lClf, P•ll•• .tl M '6. Inclusive of dlr•<:1loro1t1y Clrlll •nd ml111 /torn l.1nd1 Mltcellaneous M11p1, In t"" office of 1111 olhB!' thin llloM lt8!'el1111bove C111cr!bld, PUBLIC NOT(CE coun ty r1eorC11r to t •ld county. <Ill or 1111 w11111, tunn111 llld 1h1lh Into. :)064 Glf)t11t1r, Cllll MIH Callf1)(nla ll\r0V9ll or ICt011 1"9 Sllbl111"111c1 of Int "0 1 1 t Cid ' ltlld hlr1ln1bov1 descrlbld, 111<1 to ticl· FICTITIOUS I USIMl!:SS 1 1 rtt 1 rHI or com,.-.on tom such whlPllocked OI'" dlr1ct!on1Uy HAM( STATEMENT Cital~n1tlon Is lhoWn •b0\11. llO w1rriril)' Clrlllld .... 111, lunn1l1 •nd l hltlt IJMler Tht lollowlr>g perllOfl 11 CICl"ll blltlnt11 h 0 VIII .~• 10 lti compi.t-11 or COi'· •rid Olfll•lh or blYond !I'll et1trlor •1; ''f'ne••). Jl mlb Thlrlof, •nd ~ rtdrUI, re!U1111el, T£RM0 LEX, ltJli Fo.1:glov1, lrvt111 hi bentlld 1ry unOtr NICI OMCI ol l(lulp, milntalri, repelr, CIHO.n •nd C•lll. 92.66ol Tnn.t, by r11son of 1 br•ICh or Cl•l•ull 1" ~•1t1 •nr 1ucll w1Uf or ml1111. Carol I. Ttrrrlottltn, lttlJ l"oi191_, lhl otit!oillons ste:Urld 1 h•r 1 by ' wll~OVI. nowtutr, !hi rloht 10 drlll, ltvln1. C•lll, '2~ hlrllolort tJ11t11led •lld d1Uv1rtd lo fM mine. store, 1._ lore •lld 11 111h Du1ln111 11 COl'lductld br an 1n· 11rldt1'1lQllld a wrlt"11 O.Cl11r111on ot 1~roUOh 111, 111rr.f. or the uo::"'Joo C1lv!C111tl O.l1uU 11111 Oemarld for i•I•, •l'ld wrltlln 1 t ... ... _,, C 1 I T -""I nollc1 of b•H ch en<t °' e11etron to c11111 •• "' "'' 1ub1u .. ac1 Of 1111 land •ro • t r .. ...,, •11 !hi -~-1 1 11 Id _ lo h1<1ln1b0.,. dncrtbld, •• r"'1vect 111 Tt1b t l1t1mtnl wit fllld wllh tile Coun-u,...,n gried o H H propt, '' thl dffd rtcorded NO¥tmblr u 1971 ty Cllrk of O••llOc count'!' o~ J1.1lv ,,, 1011 111111, Hid obllg11lons. •nd thtre•ttM '"" PA R.CeL 2• A non•xclu:i 1 ·,, l'·IJMI unclert!olled <•Ulld ttld llOllc1 ol br'11ch 1 · v ' Pubtlthl<I 0tt<'IOI Cotti 01lly Piiot, •1,rld OI 1lecllon Iii be lltcOl'ff:I Aprlt 19, :: ::~I l~l~mt~ ~hi n::=~~~ J I -"'A•..,•-t. ll ..., 1'1) "33·13 73. as lnt!r. NO. 1'211) 111 book IOUl, I A II .. V 1 11 Y -• ~s"~ ' ' ·~· 11111111 J70, ol t•!d Offlclal 1t1Cord1. n r c • Stc!lon o1 that certain -lltld &111 wm bl mlodt bit! wllltoul Otcl•r•ll1111 11'1 cov1n11nh, conClltton1 tftCI PUBLIC NOTJCt; co~111111t or w11,.,.1ntv, 1xprf11 or lmplltd, l'H!rlcff-r«orCltd In BOC* tW, P191 rt0trC1l119 tltlt , POtllftion, or In• 3f7, OIHC:l•I RtCOrdl o1' Or•~• Co.,1ntr, l'ICTITIOUS BUSIMl lS CUITltlrlo~IS. to ~·y "'' l'll'llllnlna prJn· C•oltlornl•. I • HAM• STAT•M•NT CIP•I IUl'l'I ot lhl llOltl•I ucurtd bY NICI N Tl: Stld Ind ,, CllK .. blcl on 1hf Tiie fotlOWl"ll Pl'IOf'I It doing t>u1l111u DHCI of TrU$1, with lnttrtit •• Ill Hid County Tio)" Auffanllnt Roll IOI' lhl tltefll ••: llO!t f)rO'lldld, 1(7VIRCfl, 11 tny. l!ndlr the )'Mr ,,72.n •• A.P. No. .Uf.202·111 THE TYPfll!TTe•s ..... I!.. lnll flfl'l'IS of WICI DPICI of Trutt, ""· cll1rt111 CA 2.MJG?, $trH I, Coal• MIW, C1ll ror11r1. 97~t1 I ncl ... ptn .. , OI "" Tr111111 llt'lcl ot !hi Tiit llrlt1 loddreu of N ld propert'I 11 H.AJTY PRINT, IN(. ((•lllomlaJ truslt Crlllltd by lfllCI DllCI Of T1 utl, PUtl)Ol'ltd 10 bl 411 lr\dolWay Slr1tl, • 1. 11th Sir"'' Ccsta Mew . Sl ld Wit wUI bl lleld on TUlldly, lrvfnt, C::•., l nCI 11 olwn wftltCll.lt llablllty t llllfOn'tl• All911tl 21 , 191) •I l\;00 A.M. 11 lhl ofll(I •• lo t111 COO'rtct11111 !llel'lof, Tiii• livMM» It (Ol'lducttd by • Of T. 0 , S.rVlc• Compeny, B•nk ol S.ICI .,11 11 bllnt mlcl• for 1111 PUl'llOM <Cll'tkN'•flon. Al!'lll"lct TO*lr, One City 8\vCI. Wn!, of HYlfl9 ob!tg1tloll• llCllrlll bY N ICI D•rtYf Wtlk1r. Sutt. 1110, Or1111111. CaHfornl•. Oltd of Tru1t, l'r••kllrrt 01,.: July 20. 1t73. Ottllli A1111w1 6. 191:! Tift •••t«Mnl -· flllll w!lh '"' '°""" T. 0 . Servltl COf'l'lllloll'f SECUIUTY TfTLI!' ly Cllrll o1 Orlnot C.ounty on At.IOllll 2, 111 tlld tr1111'ff l~SUlllANCE COMPANY tt11 ly Rl.lfh IL Brown Br Chrlf LollMtl. $;upel"'lltor lUI« Ats.IS!1nl S.Cr1t1ry TrutlM Slocilon Jtmf1 ST.A•14't SPI J70ll .,.,,.._..., Or•!WI (IHI O.llt Pf'°.!J: Publltl'lld Orll'IOI Golsl Ot11y l'llot, Ju-Publltl'Mld Or1r1111 Cotti O•llY Piiot, AlllVV " JJ. -. u. lm 211t.11 11 30 •l'ICI A\lllU1t '• 13, 1m :nn .1JA1111U1• l:l. 20. 21. lm )'6P.T.I 6 4 2 - 5 6 7 8 c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 -5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T ~ ..... irz====------------------------------1 DAILY· ,PILOT WANT .ADS --- Gener•! -~IEW . $79,500 b.Jtom built 2 story family bome 111 excellent Newport !leach locution. Quiet area with country atnlosphere. Leas tha.n a 1nlle from the beach. Walker&Lee ll•L llTAT& Realtors ~3 Westclitf Drive 646-7711 Open eves [~INJEXJ I .......... ,., .. i[ieJ HIUJH for Siii ......... ,. •• , 1 .. MHl.ll•r!P,...¥111 lflmu .... lto Mollilt Hem" P1r s.11 , , .... us AcrM" ,.,. Hll . •. • ... .. •• . 150 Aparllnlflh for Hl1 ........ , • 1S2 l uslM11 P'rolllrlY .. .. . • • .. • •• 154 Cemllwy Uh/Ciyph ........ 15' Clmmtre111 l'roPlf'fy ......... 1st Cllldlmllll1111"11 for 1o111 , ....... 160 lkl1111XHJU111t1 H it. , .... , ... 161 H~-19 bl 11111111d , •• ., .• , , .. 1'4 lnc:omt PrtPlrfY .......... ., , • 1'6 llld11.,r111 Prolllfly .......... , 1• Loh i.r Str. ................ no MtMlt HO-.'Trlll9r t"lr111 •• 171 Mounllolll, O..lrt, lt111rt . ... Ut Or11111 Cl. Pn party .......... r 116 out If 11111 Prt01rty ........ 1n l •ndlM, Par"'t. Gf'OV"IS ... •· 1M RMI 111•111 l •Chllltl , .•.. ,. , 111 I HI lstlllo W11111111 • •• •• .. ••• IM General VERMONT FARM HOUSE % ACRE · REDUCED .$29,950 Rolling green lawns and stateb' t:l'ffs surround pie· tur e s q ue Vermo n t farmhouse. Old '"or I d charm and architecture. Formal entry. Step down master suite with 5th bath. Man size dep wlth rugged beams. Maids quarters. 23' TAVERN KITCHEN with cathedral beams. Banquet formal dining. E I e g an t French doors to s ecluded garden paradise, ,Walled patio with outdoOr fireplace and BB.Q. RED BARN 2nd story In-law a partment, 2 guest cottages and covered dance pavilllon overlooking magnificent free form pool. ENTERTAINERS PARA· DlSEJ CAIL 645-0303. IOlll.\1 .1. 01\0\ RrA t 10 /.?S G.nor•I SPACIOUS 4 BEDROOM (jlUIET CORNER LOT LDvely, bright home on quiet cori1er lot inside the tract. Perfect for S\.vlmming pool, boat a nd trailer and p r i va cy. Well -k e pt neighborhood . New carpets and paint. Fast possession possible at $35,950. This is an excellent value. Call 842-2535. ~~N TILO 'iii1lii "WANTED" SIX CHILDREN IN SOUTH COAST PLAZA Super 4 br, model home - two fireplaces -wet bnr - paneling, tile 0 001"$ -21h baths -great family home! 15 months o!d ! $4500 dO\\.'n. I~ [ -. ...... I~ Ge"er•I Salesman of the month Mika N1illlng COil• MllSD Ollie• Mike Nalllfng ha1 been named Salesman cl !he Month at our Costa Mesa Olllce, Mike, who resides In Hunt- ington Beach with his wife Bonnie, hes received ise~ eral awards for his sales perlormance, lie Is aci!ve ln lhe comm11nily, 11nd a member of the Q,ango Coast College track. and gymnastics toam. Win ning sale s me n like Mike Naill Ing make Wal ke r & Lee an outa1andl11g company, Call him. AT THE BEACH NEWPORT DUPLEX FIXER UPPER White water ~ Mlcony view. Magnif.ictnt d11Uy IUn&el& over the Pacltlc Ocean from the balcony of the owners 4 bedroom apartment. . Ask about the outatandlna: ad· vanta&es <lf tax lhelter, and appreclatlon potential on this well loc11ted duplex. Call 546-2313 for a,p- polntment. OPEN TIL f • IT'S FIM YO M MCE1 ~ Ri~ll1tl CUL-DE-SAC EASTSIDE COSTA MESA. This is a large home which \VIII allO\v you to rtally use ycur itnagination. Over 2300 l!l.l· n. Zoned R..-2. It now has 2 Bedrooms plus guest quarters. Large Back Yard. S-14,950. Call ~ 1or details. .______""""_~1 _J[i] BIG DAD DY Walker &Lee Realtors 54&-0J22 lll AL f l llfl (714) 545-9491 :0790 Harbor Bl•d. Bu1IRnl OpportumTy .......... 200 Bu1Jn1Ss W11nlld .... , . , . , •.•.. 110 tnvKlment Opporlunlly . . . . . 220 1n ... 11m1n1 Wiftlll'd •......•.•.• 2)0 MOnty to LOI-II •. .. . .. .... . .. . 1IO Ml "I Y W1ntff ............. .,. 2JO Ml rlfQes, TNSI DHlll .•. ' .. 114 .___._'"_"" _ _,Jl...s J Ho1111s rum1,nec1 •....•...•.•. .JOC HOUWI 1111fum. . ............. JOJ H•UHs furn. 1r 11nl11rR. • •• . . 311 Conllllmlnl111Y1t tum. . . . . . 3U (llldOllllnlulY!t untum. • ..... , • nt Cel'ldl. 1ur11, 1r 11nt11ni. ........ ru Tow11hotlll f11r11. • . . lJO Towntto1111 11nt11m. . ........... UI TownlMHIH, llltfl. or untum, SfO Cluplu:n f11m. • ...... , . , . . • . . lU 0UPtllK !111111m ... , • . . . . . • . . . • lSO Dvpltll'.H, him. or uni urn •.... JSS A"'" furn. • ........ , •.• , , . , . , . .uo Allf. unlvm •• , .... , . . . . .. •. . .. :Ml AtH1., lurll. er ltftfum ••.•... , . 370 I OOft'!I ........................ 400 Room & &Oln:I ................ llOI Hol1t1, M1t1l1 •.... , . . 110 G11"t HOITM . . .. . . . . .. . . • .. 41J Sum1111r llll!f.111 ........... , , , 420 V-.:ltlon lt1r1tal1 .............. IU Rtnl1l1 11 Shflr1 ........ , .... , • 430 G.1r.11n tor Rini .......... t .. 415 Olllcl Rtnll l •.. , • , ..•.... , •.. , .f.ilO lndudl'l•I Rfllfll ..• , , , . , . , . . .. 410 Slorllft • . . , ..• , • , ..• IJI Rtnt1l1 W1ntld ...... , ........ 440 MllCllll-1 Jt1nt111 .•. , •.• ,. 4U A n llOllftCln'll•ll• • • . . . • . . . • . . •..• C•nl •I Tlllnkl/ln MflMrlum Llflll HOiiett •.•.....•• .......... 4.1111 1r1nt 110rllllon P1non1l1 .•.•..••• So<lll Clubs •..•. Tr•Ytl " .• ,. • .•.. ............... 18] Fo.und Urll llCI$) . • SSO Lost ... ., .... .. .. ..... SSJ IMtrucUon I~ 5thffll & ln$1r\ldlon1 , , , ..... J7S Th11 lrlC1I .. . ......... Siii I --.. ..... ~ .. I~ 51rv1e1 01rtcl1rv .,. ,·-,-, .... 400 Joo wanf«I, Miii '·''···"··· 100 Job W1nttc1, Fl mi ll .......... 701 Jan w1n1111, M&F" 70o! H1lp W111t..i, M&F ne Anliqves 100 ApptlinCll 101 Aucllon ...... .... Ht &ulldllll Mllll"llll •.. , •.. , •. , . I°' C•mll"ll .. E11111lpmtflt •.•.•.•.•• IOI Fu>'l!l!ure ...................... 110 G1r1111 S•l1 ,_ ................ 112 HOUHl!old OloclJ . . . . . . . . . . . • • • 11 t Jewtlry ................. -....... 11! M•chln...,. .................... 11' MLKlllln-.................. 111 MIKllll-Winlld ...... ., 110 MvllCll ln•llVftllnll .. , .... ., • a:n . otflCI P1t"'lt¥n/l!4i\llp .... " ... ltt Pl1"°"0 ,...,... ................ A• s.-11111 Mac:h11111 .............. aaa 5porllfl9 ..................... . s1or1, Jt:1tt1111"1n1. 11r •...••• , 1n lw1pt ........................ Ut TV, ltldll, Hl·PI, SI-, •.. , • t U Pih, 0.trll , • • .. • • • . .. • .. .. • • tJO Clh .......... .,, .... , .... 112 000• ...................... ™ "'•h ....................... m HOl"Mll .................... IJ.11 4 BR + den + fan1ily roo m with n early 2000 sq. ft of fa n1ily Jiving. NC'\vly dOOJ· rated inside. Vacant & r eady [or oecuj)al1cy. Adjacent to school & park, $38,950 NEWPORT BEACH BEST Co1ua Mc~o, CA 9~:>& BUY Walker & Lee ON TllE WATER • Foe u:·Jlilll [&f,1):.;'.ID $87.500, no\v vacant, ready _____ ----- for iinn1Mia lc occupant:y. 7o/o ASSUME .. Boni slip by your front door. E 5 N.wport Sp.:1,·ious 2 BR, 2~~ BA. Gor. NO F E BEST BUY IN THE BEACH geous , L'Ull\'cnlent, private. •t CALL 540·1151 Open Eves. • Ul tra deluxe 3 BR + 2 BR, SfC'Ps 10 Ol'Can and Fairview shopping. CALL 645-7221 646-8811 EXQUISITE RIVIERA LIV ING . (anytime) 1 ....................... ~15 BR, 3 BA - 9 ROOl\fS. English style m a n o r . IRVINE TERRACE Beautiful View Home in exclusive Irvine Terrace East 3 Large Be<.h'ooms Formal poolside dining r n1. View side den SUper gourmet kitchen £xpansive living roon1 \Vil.h bean1ed ceiling Tastefully and Elegantly decorated thruout llll6.llOO HARBOR COM .. ANV REALTORS SINCE 1944 67~ $14,000. NO MORE This home includes a house trailer - rented at St60. The home ii.sell is rented for S150. Home has ne1\' copper plumbing, electrical wiring , and s tucco. R-2 lot too! Walker &Lee lllAl llflt l NEWPORT BEACH IN BEFORE SCHOOL All llC\\'IY refurbished a nd painted! * LOVELY 3 BR 2BA patio hon1e, Lido Sands. * Cl-IARl\tING :{ BR family room ho1ne, Back Bay. * LARGE 4 BR formal din + lam rm + plush oUk:e, Baycrest FOR INf"'ORMATION CALI.. 400E.17° FOR m C.M. • -I POOL TIME Gorgt'Ous clean hon1e with a POOi. located in a quiet neighborhood of I o v c I y Costa Mesa. We got lt! J qu~n sized bed1'00n1s \\'i1h 2 luxurious baths. 16x26 family room. Close to schools & s hopping. orrere-d at a low price of $37,95(1, \Ve \\•ill arrange an appointment call Walker&Lee lllAL l t T At l Panoramic ocean view from every room -unusual wine cellar . many other exciting featw-es CALL &15-7221 9:f21 173.1 \Vestcllff Dr., N.B. 3 BEDROOM MESS 1'6 baths. Suitable for a slum lord minimum main· tenance required -6!4% loan assumable -second T.D. a vailable -lenant OC· c upied. A truly great In· vestment -$23,500 or '?. Call 962-8851. PIER & SLIP Low ly 4 bedro o m, 3 bath \\.'8ter!ront hon1c. Choice Balboa Peninsula location. Completer with pier & 111l p, home complet('ly rt!ll"IOdf.'led a nd \\"hat a bcauliful view. Priced to sell at $298.~,00. Call for appolntn1ent -Rl-d Carpet, Realtors 6-15-8060 _ _ _ 5-15-9491 {open evening,:•c> ___ _ Boa uliful B•ck B•v--C-O R_O_N_A-~D~E~L-OLDI E BUT ROOM TO RAMBLE Over 1800 IWI ft ln Mesa Verde for only S.36,500, 3 - Big bedrooms, 2 baths. hua:e bonus room with room for pooltable. Lots of pr ivacy with low maintenance. 546.5880 0pen e .... ~-1 .... HERITAGE . • REALTORS YOU'LL BE MORE THAN PROUD TO OWN THISI 4 BR & Family room wfth large yard. fFalrvlew It Warner) -newly painted & carpets -15 minutes to Newport Beach. o n I y $26,500 -early occupancy! Walker&Lee ···~ .. ,.,. 7% ASSUME-NO FEES Best buy In the ~ttch-Ultra deluxe 3 BR + 2BR.. 1lt'ps to OCf'ftn Anlf llhopp~. CALL 645-7721 2 Story S Bed rm/3 BA A GOODIE 1 Priced for QUICK sale MAR DUPLEX Cule 2 bdr, 1 ha fran1e \\'Ith 1733 W l"ff D B a1 $44,500 By Owner'. SO OF HWY 1 d f 1. d ~..i , estc 1 r., N .. 9:f21 Big Family Room • • oa s o pa.ne 111..: an """" * $28S,OOO * F I . brick flre pl.11ce. J.,.i_rge R-3 011na Din11ig Room J ust listed. Chat·ming duplex lot in <-·llllice Ehst Cosla P1'f'stigious \'ia Lido Nord Builtln Appliances on tree·lined street. Ciosc to 1\1i;>Sa plus alley acc('SS. water front hon1e. 5 br, 5 Drapes, NC'\v!y Ca1'Ptd IJ(onches, cl)Se 1·0 shopping. Close to all shopp ing you ha, t•uston1 uniqoc fratw~ ,f ireplace, Bricked Yd Lovely t\\.'O bedroom Unit in \\"Un't l'll?ed a ca r here. thru~t. lg. U·slip \\'/land· Full Landscape \Vith front \\-ith fi replace and like p • II · d 1 $30 000 lng , P rincipal s onl\'. Sc P Cl',i"C: y pn l'C a , , . reened atio ne\\", spacious l\VO bC'droom this one will 5::0 fast. Call E X E CUTIVE 9 Iron fD Golf Course 1·ear unit \Vi!h sunny patio Red Carpet, Jl ea Ito r s Real Estate Jn,·estmcnts 2:>142 Kline Dr. behvccn. Only SW.500. Call 546-864() 832 7353 CalJ 567·2767 TODAY! NO\V -673-8550 .• SPACIOUS ' 4 BDR-OPENTILO •rr'S FUNTO BE NICEI SEE USI For tho nghl homo tar you. * 4 BEDROOM. 2 batbl, $45,ooo f · ' . I •I ~ Complete selection of homes double garage. $30,000. Bt111 Sharp ·large family home tn the beach area. of tehns. "with over 2600 sq. rt . ot liv· HARIOR VIEW HOMES * COMMERCIAL ZONE • 2 Ing. Immediate possession REALTY BR hvo story older home, available on this 4 bedroom. IMM EDIATE 83J..0780 cor ner lot. $24,50), 4 bath family room and Ro y McCerdle Rtaltor formal dining room, two POSSESSION I 1810 NewJlOr~ Blvd., C.M. Blocy homo. Don 't h•sllato 4 BDR-CAPE COD e e ONE CAL L e e 54a-7729 10 call R<d Ca r p el. FAMILY HOME Realtors &IS-8080 Copen Extra large two !ltory home CAN DO IT AL L + 4-PLEX * REAL SHARP ;ng. 4 bodroom, 4 bath faml· ' ' · · ' w/lpl, 1650 sq. ft., big yd. & l l•t•r.cll ••. ................ IM .ioiiviieiinlii"""iiil)iOiiOiiOiiii;;;;;;;;;;;I wtlh over 2600 sq ft of liv· ~ 3 BR,' 2~ ha. owner's Apt. ly. room, fonnal dining INVtSf OMSION patio + three 2-bdrm. 3 Bedroom, dining, .2 bath, room newly d eco r a I e d ~)96S....W units. $85,000. buUUns, fireplace, n e w h o n1 e . I m m e d I a I e ---·GEM--- c.tn1r1I ......... . ........... tot loats, lrMlnt./krvkl •• , ...•. to:t I01t1/M1rtn1 •11111p, , , •.• ,, .. , "4 IOlll, ,..,,_,. ,, ...... , ........ , POI loth, lttnt!Ctt•rl•r .......... Ml Bololl, Slit ...................... '°' ... ". lllP91DOck• ............ ,,. possesslon lo that fa8t nc· ,., carpets, fresh paint. Room N·-E-EDE-D 1~F T 1 for camper, boo.I, etc. Ask· ling lumily, p-rlccd for fiu:t . ....,. uat n Ave. N.B. !'ale a t $45.000. Ca ll Reel to 11atl1rty buyers REAi.TORS ' 642-4623 c~f ~~ Open Eves. Car pet, Renltol's 546--8640 EASTSIDI (oJ>t'!'I evenings) * RENTABLE hon1es mod· era1cly p~ccd with ,.,...,. GIANT COUNTRY MESA VERDE ablo down paymenll. KITCHEN • -! x. HERITAGE IMh, I ..... I. W •···••·•·•·· Jll !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ... !!!!!!!!!!'"' IHb, Sllf'91 ,. ......... , ... , tit LIVE IN IRVINE . • REALTORS IMMACULATE I 4 BDR * RESIDENTIAL I n c ome 3 Bodroom, 2 bath plua fami- Almost new, beautltul 4 bd.r, units who8C ownen wish to ly room with beauUtul new 2 tmth home on lrrtgular lot trade for tax advantaae. ell electric country kitchen. In lovely MeM Verde, Only PA(.1J'JC PROPERTIES Large AAadcd paUo sur-.__.,,.._.....,..._, ... _,!~ AJrcr11t ....................... tu c.,,,,.,., 1111/ltl!ll • •• .. ... •• fto C)'t ......... ~ •••••••• '" lilctrk Clon .................. t)I MoMi. "°'"" ................ 9U Me•r ..._ .................. '* Tr11t1n. Ttl'lll ................ tu Tr•lltrs. Ulllltr .............. tt1 Auti kn'lc• 6 ,,.1m , •• , ..... 941 ,,__Au•_ .. _""--~JIM J ......,., ........................ ,,. .a..1141.,../Cllblu ... , , , .. • . • • • • KJ 0.. ..,.. ..................... JJ.11 "9rt-. A1e1. ll:Ht .... , ... ,. tf9 T'11Cb ""' ............... : •• fft \lmt ............. , .......... , "' Allll l.11111"' , . , .... , ., , ....... H4 All!e S1Nk1 I. ,..rtl ...... ,. ,._ Alftll W1111tM ... ,., .......... t• A\llM, ''""""' .............. 9'9 ........ Ntw .................. '" A.i., UllM .................... "9 ' On Jrvlnc's Rlt.nch, 4 br, 1 year old. An offering no one can JU:~'USE! $3900 down, call now. • Walke r &Lee 1 1 .t.l ••t•t• . 714: 546-0022 NEW 4-PL EX-$80.000 NO FI NANCING PROBLEM Seller will support flnanctna:! DcnuWul new 4-plex VA.CAnl and Nt111dy for that rlrat owner tax advantage, Sub- mit l1t11d exchana:cs, com· mcrclnl or unit!I In this area. Cli.11 Red Carpel, Realtors 546-8640 $45,950. Hurry on thi!I one! 675-GID or 548·8796 rounded by Klau. A real RL'(I Carpet, R e a I t o r s )rokers ~loome to cooperate beauty for 139.950. Call Red 546-8640 {open evenings) 1 R EADY TO BUILDI-Carpel, Realtol"ll 64.S4080 * CORNER LOT* WHIL E YOU L:IVE :<:"!0"'e:.:•:,•"";::.;•""'1~l~=~ Bu.sy interHectJon, 19th & Cute 2 bed.room, 1 bath home EASTSIDE SPECIALll F-Ullerton, downtown Costa with room to buUd three ad~ Bright and airy ntw all elec- Mesa. Owner will llruln~ <lltlonal units. Build with a trlc country kitchen, lll'R'e RIVIERA REAL TY view. Ridiculously low .Prlc· family room with used brick 149 Broadway, c .M. cd at $30,000. Call RtCI fireplace, large pe,tlo, loads 642-7007 645-5609 Ev•• Cnrt>ot, ReallOr> -· of al ... Md What. dellah1. · 3 b<droom, 2 bath 1""'ly COND0-$21,000 61/2°/o LOAN!!! home for only 139,ll!O. Call Vrry sM.rp 2 bedroom, 1"' Like new 3 BR, 2 BA, on Red Carpet, Rt a 1t or1 brith condo located In choice rrutnlcured tree llhadcd Iott 546-8640 (open evenlnaa>' Huntington Beach location. Crp!g, drpi, patio, 2 car Call Red Carpet, Realtors praae, 11poUt111 $29.~. 546-8640 Copen eveninas> Low down and take over TIME FOR t>;w33""'"1 loan!! Bl'oktt DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS W BR boule•. nu ca.rpeta, drapea, plumbil)i, pain! t. gns ap~ll. $85.500. 64~ • (jlUICK CASH THROUGH A WANT AD 642-5678 • • Monday, Aug11st 13, 197 3 ~AILY PILOT 23 The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast MoOle Hon. lor Sde , • l2S -l-49 ~, ••••••• .S00 •.$2' Auton'!Clbile. • • , • • , , , QSO • 990 loot' & Morine tquipmetit 900 • 9W fmploymenl • • ' • 100 • 799 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS Ptr>onoh. • , , • , . S'2S -~ Pm ond Suppl'"'. • , 850 • m R.a1 Eitot• Qenetol. . ISO · '99 finondal • • . . • . 200 . 299 Hous.et for Sale ' LMt & Found Merchondi50. . • • •• 100 • 124 ,550 .574 •. 800 -849 You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678] ......,,..._ General General A U""l()UI: ti()MI: IN CORONA DEL MAR Duplexes under con- struction amid towering pine trees \Vilh n1ountain views just a walk from the beach. T\VO, 3 and 4 bedroom units with nun1erous decks and patios, massive fireplaces and all wood siding e:i.teriors. Priced from $122,000. UNIQUE HOM!$ OF CORONA DEL MAR, 675·6000 Usth•t of Lyi..n Ewl"fl U !11111 l()U I: ti()MI:§ REALTORS General General ****** *TAYLOR CO.* SPYGLASS HILL -$125,000 Brand NEW 2 story beauty! Large rooms. 4 Bdrms, family rm, formal dining rm & huge finished bonus rm for family fun . Beautiful corner location. Include s the land. Will be cptd & landscaped. Ready for occupancy. ''Our 28th Year'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 Son Joaquin Hills Rood ''Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club'' · NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 General Gener1I OCEAN __ VIEW CONDOMINIUMS BY THE SEA NEWPORT CREST RESALES 2, 3 & 4 Bedrooms -2 or 21h Baths. Formal Dining Rooms. Pool, Sauna & Tennis Courts. OUTSTANDING VALUES NOW BROKER PARTICIPATION Real E state Consultants 1525 Superior -Suite 3 Newport Beach (714) 645-3230 A LITTLE CHARMER Baycrest. $72 ,000. Light & airy 3 bdrm., at- tractively decorated home. Excellent loca- tion. 2'h Bath. Room for pool & boat. Mary Lou Marion PRICE REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE Can you believe? Two pretty 3 BR. Lusk homes w/large fam . rm. Proximity tO schools, shopping & beach. Only $77,500. Call Harriett Davies HIGH ON A HILLTOP Panoramic view -Turtle Rock Hills "President" home. 4 BR.. family room, swim/tennis, too! $94,500. Paul Quick BAYFRONT INCOME Irreplaceable tr iplex; spec. view, pier & float -beach. Two 3 BR., 2 ba., one 2·BR., 2 ba. units. J<""'irst owner deprec. $270,000. Bents HORSE PROPERTY-LAGUNA BEACH 3.3 Acres! Ca nyon view . Charming 2 bed- room 2 bath home w /beautiful stone fire- place & enclosed w/stone wall. $79,500 MOVE BEFORE SCHOOL Palermo Model . Harbor View Homes. 4 Bd- rrns., Jge. !Smily rootn : 21h baths, 2 fire- places, bar plus many extras. $79,900. Howard Wells THE BLUFFS BEST BUY I "X'' is this super floor plan. One yr . old condo is being offered for $69.500 IN CL. LAND ! 3 BR's., 2'h ba., !am. rm. !BOO Sq. Ft. Call Toni Escobar EASTBLUPF Lovely & sharp 3 bdrm. Lusk home near the park. Only $69,000 & you can have immedi- ate occupancy. Ca ll now! Jim Muller CAPISTRANO COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE One Acre sites; 3 & 5 bdrms. -pools - family Jiving. Horses O.K. Near marina. J-Yr. old. 3 BR., pool, air-cond. Best value $67,500. Call George Grupe .....-- Coldwell.Banker ~ 83i.G700 644-2430 550 N•wport C•nter Dr., N.B. , H~ p)cptning a ~ir~~ Hall gone in half a year and the rest will not ]ast long. Hurry to see this distinctive Newport Beach deve lopment of condominium homes, built·in clusters around handsome courtyards. Eight superb models, each a masterpiece of luxury, comfort, convenience and quality construction. Sundecks, firepl ace, wet-bar, elegant Master Suite, Sun-Litec kitchen, private enclosed double garage. Recreational facilities inc lude heated swimming pool, li ghted tennis courts, sauna, therapy ,pool. All exterior building and grounds maintenance provided. Satisfy your curiositrsee Newport Crest today! From Pacific Coast Highway and Superior Avenue (B<llboa Blvd.), drive up Superior lo · Tlcondei-oga, and directly to Newport Crest Information Cenler.TeleJ:hone: (714) 645-6141 Sales Office open daily 10 a.m, to sunset CSLI No. 2666lf P,~, -·•"" '"" o.d '"""""' k._l>.ow ,.oci.,., ""'' ,j ,., .._,o...,l<h"''lbo """""""" ---..... .,_., _ .. •-•• , •• ....., ""b"'•' 1,_ ....... 1'.ul«N.C. W_. _ ........... .-"" ... ~-'~1'1-..... .----, General General * BAYCREST * On a Budget Large 4 BR., 3 ba. family home on a lge., well located lot . Owner is leaving town & has priced the home for quick sale. $69,750. CORBIN-MARTIN REALTORS Call Anytime 644-7662 14~ ~?Hlid ~ "'=REALTORS ROOM TO ROAM Exclusive location in a QUIET AREA. Lots or TWO-STORY, 4 Bedroon1, 21~ baths, r ire p I a cc . SUNDECI< ofr large n1aster parents hide·a\11ay i.-uite. Liu·gc brick patio. Sho\11 to· clay and brin;-; off<>r. $52,500. 644-7270 ENJOY HAPPY DAYS and enjoy this lovely home: nt•111 ca1'J*fs and drapes, family roon1 or formal din· lng roon1, but 111hat a value thi:;; 3 bedroom, 2~~ ba!h. fireplace hon1 c is! Large patio for your entertaining pleasures. AU youl's [or only $31.450. 644-7270 When you list with us, YOUR HOME is advertised in Home for Living maga- zine in more than 900 areas -and cus- tomers are sent to you as referrals from our over 500 affiliates of NMLS', 2828 E . Coast Hiway Corona del Mar WHERE CAN YOU BUY A THREE BEDROOM HOME FOR $25,900?? Right here! Give us a call right OO\V lo see ttiis prop- erty because ot this price it'll go quickly. Extra!! in· elude fresh paint, ne\1· · carpeting, and a huge yard witil boat access. See it !10\V! 847...£010. OPE.N Tll P • IT'S FUN 10 BE NICE• ~-THE REAL ESTATE RS WATERFRONT DUPLEX • $170,000 int·ludes two boat docks and ndjacf'nt vaenn! Joi for ad· ditionnl building or just plilin pri\'aey. ----------2043 \Vestclilf Drive MESA VERDEi ARE YOU A 646-7711 Ope" •v". POOL TIME ! Fantastic Fixer!!! Ek'autifully decorl\terl, lo\'ely BEACH NUT? OUR 24TH YEAR Offering Service Only Experience Can Provide CHINA COVE Ruslic individuality in China Cove, across fron1 the beach. Lots of wood paneling for easy care & charm. Sundeck overlooking water. $149,500 GET AWAY FROM IT ALL! Separate mstr. suite -priv. beach, & an ocean view. too! Just listed, 4 bdrm., beau- tiful ho1ne. $82,500 PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT Linda Isle Waterfront Cus~om 4-.bdrm., 11h bath ho1ne on lagoon. Full y equipped island kitchen, waterfront family room THE REAL ESTATERS •'. f:"· HERITAGE REALTORS billiard room ......................... $245,000 ·1 ~~~~1 For Complete lnform1tion On All Homes & Lots, Ple1se Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside 'Dr., Si.rite 1, N.8 . 675-6161 General General NEWPORT HEIGHTS CAPE COD Big 2600 sq. ft. 4 Bedroom, 2 Bath home with forn1al din· ing 1wn1. Large counll')' kilchC"n with dini ng area PLUS BIG DEN. Only $5,750 down. lnunediate possession. FOREVER WONDROUS WEEPING ~ COATS OCEAN VIEW WILLOW & I in !his most unusual fa mily $32,500. WALLACE hon1c. 4 bcdroonis. den, Jn clesircable Eastside Cost;i REALTORS I~ MOTIVATION SPECIAL BUY llarbor Vk•1v, 4 hcdroom, !el' land. 01vn<'r high I y n1otivated. $77.500. SPYGLASS JUST REDUCED $1000! vmRANS WELCOME! The owner wU1 practically let you steal his three bedroom home located in a beauti ful tree s hade d 11€.'ighlxirhoo<l. You'll hav<' the best buy In town when you truce advantage of this. Cal l no\\' to see. 847-6010 f "'" "" • ITHUN 10 BE NICE'~ STEAL THIS ONE DECORATOR'S DELIGHT family room. !\1 0 st Mesa a giant \\'eeping -546-4141-11 willow k tr 1 1 -Cozy 3 BR&. den ho1ne, round thoughtfu y planned wit h a ma es a ee s 1a1 ed (Open Evenings) drean1 kitchen for Mothl'r, paradise of a huge fen<:cdi,.,..,~~!!""~~ ... ..,., brick Swedish ti.replace, plus .,...orkshop, dark room, 1'<'~1'. yard wilh your O\l'nt' nice carpet.lug. separate boat or trailer storage, play m1n1-0rchard of fruit trees. STOP-LOOK· \vork shop & washroo1n . 2 yard and access to Corona h'l'cs and prolific plantings patios, double garage. All dC"I Mar's finest beaches. of shrubs and llmvers alsn N•MOVE this for only S:.l,500. Try $98,500 -fee . 67~. grace th_e front of this je\\'c\ into Uiis family ready ho1nc J12'L dO\vn, ., .. .,1771 OP£N TIL I'· IT'S FUN ro BE NICE! box meticulously cared for 3 in a delightful neighborhood. .,..v ~ ! broroon1 home. 0 \II n e I' Thr<>e bedrooms rn·o baths Ontu ~und for out of state and ;irlcl convertible' f a n1 i I y t; \v11l consider seriou~ offers room . pr 0 f c s s i o n a I i bef!mJ ea ve . re~gerator decorating includes elegant ~21 . . too. An 1dylhc restful carpets and d r a p e s . 6 Bd M retreat lor. one or ~· a Beautirully larxlscap€'<1. Too rm ansion tree house Jungle for kid~ to many features and extras to ..... !!""' .................... [ 1\'ilh over 4,000 sq, ft. of u11ra ~ro\v up or a pets paradlSe. advertise. lrrrplaceahle at ••VERY PRIVATE" Jiving situated on ~~ acre. 0.me in or call for an ap-lhe low S42,950. Call Now• Lots of trees and lush pointment. Red Car JJ e I 962--8851 · landscaping. Great area to Realtors 2TI E. 17th St' . ~~is~ui!': .. :tii~l~. Ao:~~~d s~~ ~~) 645-SOOD {open even: ~0Pf"NTIL9. /J'S FUN TO BE NICE/~ m.~. T~~~:,~~!1V~m~ou~~,; ~ ~ Because or bellutiM land· ~ SCilping and location. 3 bed· rooms, fan1ily room. unfin- ished bonus roon1. Home is appeELlingly d('(.'Orated, per- fL'CLly maintained. A hon1e for a lifl'tin1e, $36,950. Act now. 842-25.15. h.ome built to owner's spcci-l 7=====~~~-I1cations. Finest grade of STORYBOOK CHARM OPEN rtL 11 . 1rs FUN ro BE NICE! OWNER ANXIOUS To prove it. they reduced the prh"f' fl'o1n S,17,500 to S41.500. Delightful upper bay !o('U· 11nn on quiet c:ul·cl<'·!'af'. Sr.racious 3 BR & fan1ilv room, freshly pain!ffi insid°e & oul. Short 11·;ijk to school. 1..0\V INTEREST V1\ LOA:'l. ASSU~'IABLE BY AJiYONE. Call 540-1151 Open Eves. ..,, ~~ HERITAGE • • REALTORS peries throughout \vith pro-H . 3 bed Icssional d Lio 1 ere s • rooms or 2 & a Se ec;ora n, ?O· convertible den, .,.., i th 1 I THE REAL ESTATERS carpeting and custom dra-In Harbor View Hills ,-.II, .. parate f11.f!11ly JU?m with custom details thruout that · ' ~stom _bnck . fi replace. give a warm, homey at-l iiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~I ~e. bright l.1tchen "."i1h 1nosphcrc. There's A garden £11111.ng area. Super. spacious patio orf convenient kitchen !·nasrcr bedroom wtth dress. for outdoor dining, that is a 1ng aN'a .. Separate Jaund_ry real patio off convenient kit- roon1. Dchgh1!ul , 10111 main· chen, for outdoor dining, tena~cc. Profl'Ss1onal land· that is a real delight. scF1.p1ng fronl and rear. Reason;ibly priced at $64,950 Con1plctaly sound insula!ed ... you own the land. ~~-~etN~ privacy. Call C. F. Colesworthy OFEN TIL". IT'S FUN ro BE NICE/ Realtors 640-0020 l NEW TRIPLEXES ~ and DUPLEXES * 6 UNITS* Nearly new 2 BR., 2 ba., deluxe un its on oceanfront in Balboa! Elec. frlilcs., heavy shag carp., bltns; sundeck or balcony v.·/each unit; 7 t'OV'd, carports plus 1-park· ing space, $330.000. Call: 673-3663, 642-~ Eves. associated BROKERS-RE AL TORS 202'> W Bolboo 613·166} pool hon1e just 2 hlol'ks to 1 nlini block from the \\'[lier. Ruslic ranch style on huge Mesa Verde Country Club. 3 Plus an inconH' unit above R-2 lo!! N<"t'ds painter and 1.,..,.,,._..., __ _,..,.., 1 licdrooni 2 balh plus fam ily the large doubll' garage. a gardener, Roon1 for boat, --POOL TIME!-- room, large Jot \\'ith custom l'ricl'fl at only s7o.OCXI. Hur-camper and lots of kids! pool & jacuzzi .... 1u1 loads of ry. Call 646--7171 . $23,000 · Lo\\' clo\11n and $35,950. NO NO DN GI in COSTA MESA OPEN DAILY Placentia a t Wilson * Huge Rumpus Orange County Apartment Room * SELLER \\'ill pay all costs. 3 E.xclus\ve Ag('nt 547-8791 .... \\·Uh frplc . & BBQ. 4 brick dl"Cking. A re a I OPE.N Tll 9 • IJ"S F-UN TO BE NICE• ~:~n~~IV\ 1~·iJJ finance!~ Call Charming :1 bcdrwm, 2 b~th delight to shOI\' and o\\·ners ..,.,._,.....,.,,.,... honie with large fan11\y are motiva!cd to ~ell. Prie· ~ ~ 7 FF .· R'./l"I Y !CY'f.N r1t 9 "10111 and hui;t• bri1·k <'<l to gn fast at S79,500. Cati ~ ,. L~ I'--rd & Co • fh't'placc. 14 x ~ pool \\"\lh H<''d Carpet, Re a! tors '. r... lm''D. • loads of r!l.'cking. Largt'.' ,6~4;"-;;"";'='='"~'~"'~"~'='"':o:"=;";::•~'=' ='1 """'.---11ro:::~ 1\·orl< shop in N'<ir for 1h<' . , . _ .. -~--· )11:u1dy n1an. This is a hot $©\l.~:r~-LGt.~S " Thal Intriguing Word Game with a Chuckle ------llllted by CLAY II, POL\AN 0 Reorrange letters of th• ,,,--ir-.... /--... four Krombled W'Ol'dS b .. IO¥t to form fo1Jr simple words. I HAWSEC · I I I I I I· IT l·A t El I i I I IT 1 1 D I~ Tl I : Why hove there been no romantic aong$ written about I HIPRAS I -pants? e*rl 1---r-I ....,,,..,... -.1---.1•~·""17.-i O Comploto •ho <h"'kle q'oted . . _ . . . by fi111no In the mhalno word ,__,._.__,._.__,__. you d..,..lop ffom step No. 3 below, f) PRINT NUM8£REO LETTERS I IN THESE SQUARES ' E) ~~i':~~\~ Lt!TEIS lO I I I I I I I I SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSlflCATION 818 I one~ Call Red CnrJl('t , H.l;'l\ltors 546-&i<!O ~ o Jl c n evcningsi NEWPORT! BACK BAY $67,500 5 l.wdroon1 plus offi ce/den, 2 hath and ]o,1ely atriunt. Over 2500 sq. ft. of luxuriou~ living. Beautiful do u b If' !)rick fircplt1.cc, beamed ceiling custom home. Refl Carpet. Realtors 645--8080 (open evenings'; BEAUT I F=u=L-- FAM IL Y ROOM EASTSJDEI 1A1·f'ly :1 tlt"cl)'(l(lnl. 2 hath. lanHly roon1 plus \4X~' pool l\'1111 ln:u'lr< of df'!'k!nii:. Choice East!lidC! lot'allon :;nil in1 nJ::in1• this (or $35,!)50. Thls onP \Vtll not la..~t long? full Rcrl CtU'J>l!I. P..1'11 l111r:s 645-8080 topen evenings) By Owner 3 Bedroom + den , nrnr l!!'hOOl:s nnd !1hOf>'4. Cnvef'l><l patio -kid !Jiie yard. Prin· cipals only, Cull • 545-5196 . 54.').8157 after 6 pn1, no down terms Close to school!! HURe family rn1 , flrepl!!.cc. 0 r ca 111 kilchen .,...\\h built lr1s. 3 bclrms, 2 baths Dining rn1 . $28.500. hrk 540-1720 TARBELL l~rge BR, 2 baths, plus cozy I BR., I~ ba. $27,500. f1replaee s, n 9Xl-I den. 'ell Idle Items . . 642-5678 Fortin Co., Rltrs. 642-5000 Hon1e on 50Xll"l ft. lot near G I I G I Ws An1igos Hi School! Call enera enera 11()\\1 546--0022- GROWING CHILDREN-OR GROWING PLANTS- noo~1 FOR BOTI-1. La.~(' lot .with nlN' 5 Bcdroon1, fan11!y room homl' & 3 Baths. Ne\11port Beach. -REALTOR- PETE BARRETT 642-5200 ~ FAMILY ROOM Caitunl luxury in I\ ~rf('<'I setting for lhe family lhat \\'3nh; everything. F o u r lnrge bedrooms, f11.mlly room. dining area, and work· frL>e kitchen built nround magnilicent IA.nd!IC!a.plnA: on an extra lnrgf' lot. &-e It - you'll love it. Lo'>I.· 11! 1-1s.m. 962--1851. f •r• "' • · '" ""' ro " •<r• ~ MACNAB IRVINE BIG CANYON FAMILY HOME 5 BR's, FR. Ref. air conditioning. Com- pletely fenced. Great location. BeautifuUy decorated. 3 fireplaces. $150,000. Joel Smith 642-8235. (DU) OFFICE AT HOME? Se~arate 12xl5 office an extra bonus w/thi s bright & cheery 3BR/~-R -2 fireplaces. $56,000. Lois Egan 644-6200. (012) BUILT-IN BABYSITTER! Ideal location across street from commun· ity pools. park & recreation. Exceptional 4BR executive home in Village o! Harbor View. $69,900. J oyce Edlund 642-8235. (Dl3) --·-...- [Irvine I IOI Dover Drive U2·12SI 1144 MacArthur M•·l200 Newport hacl\. Cllllotnl1 12111 MOft(U,y, August lJ. l91J I~( ..__-_1or_ .. __,)~ [ l~ ~[ -.. 1 ........ ;;;;1~~.e I iiiiiiii_for .... C .. t. ~--· H ti gt •-ch Mou Vor'Clo ]~ [ -.... I lil ,I.__ _1to..::.;:_:1t~~1 ~ :..I --for--m;;;;l~.;*'i lncotne Property 166 Real Estate W•nted 1&4 HouMs Furni•Md 300 -liufl1t11., - BY Owntt, Ol"!!ao Fron!, 31 =~~:;-~;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;.j "n n on DS• 1 •n"lnQlon S.~ch Bri blue, ideal loeallnn.1: aol1 C!UI 6lltl--3627 or 12131 12>.1511. MO~"l'ICEl.LO OON· LOOKING FOR A MAGNIFICENT Nowporl S..ch 4 BR. 2 BA, cwtom ldtd,.n, DOVER SHORES SpanWi Ille &: ,,...l'OU.lllhl lron.. -TU.. DO -s -.. t bath. HOME? TIU-LEVEL ~ P•rk best abag. $192 per mo. pays LOOKING for room. room. Aasumable 6~r loan. V1•ry s Bed 4 Bath 11 '"" clean. P.1any tea tu res. room, • v .. ,. room, duti.ng room & den. H~e 3 bdrm home with 3 5'19-0076, 646-4212. SUpcr pool, Automatic ear· bulhis. %IOO llQ. ft. lolally MESA Verde pool home, 3 age, sprinklet!l &: llghdng. upgraded to an offered price BR. 2 BA. tarn rm &: oHice. $139,000. 1315 Santiago Dr., ot $54,000. Ankle deep pile "'--Id atr1wn plLU1! $49,950. NB B ~---... -U h Iv lk ""'!\; . . y vwr...,r. O"IOrO,•.J. ----''-~--Covinglon Built '-PLEX x::Jn1 (O("fltiOn. ~luxe O.....n- 1:1'"11 Unit. Only 5 YN oJd. A.Vc'lfll $66,IXXI. TRANsn:RRED ·NEW YORK . AtAR.KE'TlNG EXECUTIVE urgently nL"Cds 3-S bednn, tam nn w/poot. Costa ~tl'SU, Hwitlngton Beach tu't'ff. To $60,000. Agen1. s.M>-6107. Lido Isle CONTEMPO 4 Br, 3 Ba, trpl, bltn1. Ckme to waler, $48$ month. Winter. 67}-49'l3. :I BR., 3i,t Ba.. den. Sept. thru J~ $450. 67S-7667 1·-----..-..='----· I all. -159 Yorktown, right on roon1? Ho~"s about S t'Ou..EGE Park hon1e by U)t IQuatt. bedrooms, 1 '-+ % baths. owarr. 3 Br. din rm &: fam $38.950. MESA DEL M;\R _ 3 1om18.l dining, huge family rm combo lfll: llvtng rm. Bedroom 2 bath (() room, built on three levels. w/rfic. 1~ ba. nu rrrurb1a~ In ~· 0 u":~ Large c.'Ul-de·sac lot. pro- dratiwuM:r, lrg patio Assumable .FHA loon. $262 fcsslonally man I cured W/BBQ, llnl8lltd I a r . per mo 28'1' MontertY la'lt'N. Thia home is really CIU'J?C. ng t ru--Out. n to By Owner, J\.tr. Kent. Principals only. Pacific Ocean , Se 11 (' r 556-8431 traruiferred and n1u111 ~II """"'"'-~,.-,-----I Newport Heights lmml'dialely. Call now M ission Vlelo ~~~~~~~~~~ / Newport Beach \--__ ~_--:'"_'_.Jll •I IVINTER RENTAL -Ex-fll\I -clu!live-Newport Island. 2 Wlbar. Frelh paint In &: . ' • nice at $4.2,700. To see CALL ASSUME 71.1.t VA 3 Bil, 2 o U l 1 f e II c-e d yard $'19,250. MESA VERDE -3 963--M21. NE\V J\fadrld Plu.n 6'W, pool BA, Fam Rm, fp, on cul-de· w I lprinkler front/rear. Yr old 2,story. 2200 sq. fl .. 4 PRESTIGE AREA & vu lot, ·I BR, frplc's In ~c. $<15,000 646-151·1 or xlnt move-in rond, Sl7,900 bedroom, 1 bath. family Fantaauc Spanl!lh b<'auiy. Walker n lee f'am H.n1 & ~ta11er BR, 521-7560, oo agts. Shown by appt on I y . rm., fabulous exec u 1 Ive T~·o story, huge himily 11 parquet Iloor en l i 1· e. ~--~~~~~~~~ 5'IMJl5'7 ·~·-•···. E·-ry posa1'bl• "'"'l .,,,,. downisla!r1. comp! lndscpd, ,.,,... .. ,............. ""' room with wet bllr. 3 large ~ Coron• del Mllr bullltn convenience. bedt'OOJllil, 2 bll.ths, formal 545-M!II $77,500, 831--0324 r · I,_. Asswnable VA loan. S357 dining, with 101s of paper --HUNTINGTON--Newport 81Jach _ llobDe Homes . ""'"9" We'd Like To per mo. By appt or open and upgraded carpeL"!. This TOWNSHIP house Sun. 1-5. 3 3 4 ~ hon\e is professionally NEWPORT Buy A Duplex Call!omia St. landscaped for the executivt-3 BEDRt.1 2 story 10\\·nhouse, Mobile Homes B and Is in I~ prestige aJ't'a ~'8.1.k:Cittyo ~· o'vehorpl~~ H~GHTS For Sale 125 • • • ut ON ALL ABOVE ADS, of ~fun11ngton li.each. CALL .....,..., Where "iii the kid& ploy?? AFTER 6 PM, CA1L 5574617 847-3584. pool. $2S,900 lfl<'Judes su-WIT A VIEW 12' x 40' ~fobile home "<ith R Costa Mesa Realty FOUR +A POOL perlor grade shag carpct . Sparling Investment Corp. 833-3544 ----=EA~s=-TSIDE CM Business Opport~~'!!--. _2~ !2 Xlnt furn. units plu~ II & • Sweeping Service $2K mo F' pool. L.o1v, J01\' vacancy. e Sporting Goods $10K mo Top rental 11~n. Nr all e Beauty Shop . 8 Stations transp. & Shops. Xlnt in-• Decorative Hardware corne. A real bargain at 400K yr. reduced price. Owner leav-Hollard Bus. S•les ing stat('. Consider some &t5-4170 or S40-()6M BR. 1'~urn. l m tn a c I $250/MO. 5().1 38th St, N.B. Do not disturb tenant. Call c."OUect. 1-213-377-4640. WALK to bench 1 Br. hse. Al!iO CdM $95. •lnlg Bch. 2 Br. Bach. unit~. Bfilboa, Sl05. Agt. Fee. 979-8430. LOVELY 4BR, ba 1iz, outside Sho\\·er, Bayfronl, Winier rental, 400 38th St. Houses Unfurn. 305 ow about the nearby yourh throughOut custom drapes Brand new home located 1n s· x ~· Glassene room. cent.er or tht' park 11.e1"0SS * 541-nl I * Owner Rnxlous · This is a many oth~r extras. \Vi th most desired neighbor~. Eastside C&f Adult Park. 1 the street from this our-I'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""!!!' fabulous 4 bedroorn. 1~ 37,600 can assume 7..,.;, CJ 3 huge bed~f!lS with blk to shopping. $6CXJO. Snug standing 3 .Bedroom. 2 bath Home & Income bath pool hon1e 11·1th IO\\' loan. Q\,•ner 842.7595. 1\·al~·in closets, d1n1ng roo_m. Harbor, 1626 Ne\''port Blvd. trade. '""""''""'"'""""".-"'""""'I ~~i~.A~.~~~S:: MACHINE SHOP _G•-"-0 -'"- 1----- ownf'r's unit and 1 Bcdroon1 nai:itenancr la11·ns, on fa1n1ly room and rccreauon Space 43. CM 645-8892 rental. $89.500. \Vhy rent? live free at the beauti!ul cut.de·sac street Irvine roon1. This custom built Bx3.5· BIL TJ\10RE. Air cond, CALL 644-nl I beach. 2 bdrm home plus 1 close to Goldcnwesl College, I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I hon1e is quality b u i J t clean. In Npt. Beach pa. rk. bdrm apartment. Double Huntington Centt'r and all 1 • H II throughout. You will enjoy i~• Pl . A S F'S ••. gi, ~$'!!, ~ ~,:;a_,500~:.~eai~s,:,1~~d~:~Js:~~ ~~~:1s. $34,900. CALL T~hl~!~~~J~!~t;~::~~c~ ~*;I,y1~~'~.cS~.m! c~"T"~~-s.=•rv"·,~"'°=_n_"_··~m=v~,·~"~39--028~p--i ,~,~·-~aft ., ceiling. 2 bdrms. and is NEWPORT BAY . d I ? OPENTIL!I • fT'SFUNTOBENICEI , , price al on Y S-4,000. New 2 BR, J. BA hving nn. Vision-[ ~ ~ ~~~'.~k w/p.;v•t;.6'.'.'~I Estate Sale!!! '~ I 2 BR, 2 BA. By O\vner. 20x50 red h.•11 w/porch, patio & •hed•. In Walker&Lee "'"'~ '''"''' GRAND OPENING Bayside Village, N. B. Sl3,500. Ph: 639-21.a3. Newport Bay Towers ·n BROADMOOR 12X&I, 2 ,LJ~~W!,,.,.l.1':!/L'l!""'~'rll"l';lcozy home on R-2 corner lot. REALTY 1 & 2 BEDROOM Br, a\vnings, skits, porch, V. E. ~llJ'd & Co Nice trees & large, cJeai: A Company With Vision CONDOJ\lJNJU~1 HOMES shf'd. $6500. El T oro • ._. .:-......_,,. • l>lcf..~. !rite for another unit. Univ. Park Center, Irvine Bay[ront lfomcs 586-2143. -------'I CALL '="' '46·2~1• Call Anytime. 552-7500 Boa! Slips -~ ~ Oflice hours g AM to 8 PM Full Security lfighrisc SACRIFICE 2 Br Expando WHITE SAi LS l\lfld#C.. Steel & concrete consrruc!ion Bay view, beach. pool. new beautiful 3 BR. & family rm. ~£!..{TY IRVlll.'E. University Par!<, 5 Private Balconies . shag. Only S4500. 675-8220. Terrific view of ocean! N N P Off! SUMMER FUN Br. 2•,· B•. Chon-llor 2 garage spaces per unil. Poolsize lot; pr 0 fess. ear e11pert ost c:e ,_,_ CAN BE YOURS today ill S-19,500 Ov.'Jler 552-7-180 Roof top sundt'('k . decorated. Ne\vly painted. CLUTTERED this fantastic vacant pool ----------1UnllSUal Oppo11un1ty to Pur-~~· 2 bl::i~~. fD:'~f ~~ BEAUTY hon1e. 3 Bdrms, 2 baths, Laguna Beach chN ""' rtSaif_:onht Properly in "-I · · room r,, • bo•t ond m""'' I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I f'\vpo .....-ac · ut.•St ocalton!I In to"·n. J\IOVt' 4 Bednn 2 Bath w/w car-.. ,_ 310 F ndo Rd NB Real Estate, Genet al 150 ;n i'6 school time. peling thruout. 400 WT. fan1 -more, ftnd would you believe a10NARCH BAY alk t orn67'5 8551 ., · · Acreag e for sale M RGAN REALTY ...., only $29.900. Call quick! 1 • w 0 -ily rm, dshwshr, sprinklers O\\'ner anxious. CALL private beach & tennis court ---0-U-P_L_E_X___ ~;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 673-6642 675-6459 front & rear. Asking price 842_9_17l. froin this 3 BR, 2 bath fami· SPYGLASS Hill's Best Vu $36.500. p wners a~ious! TRADE YOUR ly rm hon1e. Split level, 6 DOORS TO 100 LOTS New 4BR, 2~3ba, Sep. dining larw1n realty inc. comfortable & convenient Rm. 25 Carmel Bay Dr. By 968-4405 (24 hrs) EQUITY for entertaining indoors & BEACH NEAR LAKE PERRIS Lochenmyer l Rea ltor 1 NEW 4-PLEX Brand new. Spanish motif, 3 BR, 2 ba. deluxe unit w/fl"Plc., & 3 2-BR units ea. \v/patio or s unde ck. Eastside Costa ~1csa nr. Ne,vporl Hts. Buyer gets 1st user tax deprcclallon. Ask· ing $110,000 CALL G> '46·2-4 14 1Jw'4.. REALTY Near ~ewport Po11 Offlte BY 0\VNER, Beach duplex, big, 3 BR, 2 BA units, firepl. dsh\\•shrs, new carpet, ft'fi;h paint and an all loo shon bikini-watching stroll to the water $87,500. 4 BEAClf units, just a hop to !he v.·uter. Tremendous ren· !al history & good potential for increase. Serious con- sideration given reasonable cash-<>ut oUers, Good tenns also avail. $125,000. I Grindle. R.E. 968-6767 No E<ology P•oblem• 10 UNITS oo~""'~'"'·~=~-~--11..,~;:i;~~~~~~!!'I FOR Tl{IS gorgrous spiral out. Much pri\·acy, $89,000 -staircase Franciscan Foun· -· Don't pay high summer rent DUPLEX-Conier Lot CUSTOM BUTLT HO~fE lain l-fon1e. Loads of up. \VQODS COVE. 3 BR + Den w~en you can collect it, ~ncl Xlnt cond. 3BR, 2BA, + new On comer lot, CM Back ~Y grading. CALL 8<12·9371. home, \Vood paneled Ji,•ing still reserve the best (l('l'iocl No Impact Repo•h $130,000 Subdivided. unintproved, re· NICE COSTA MESA corded, lots. Only $2500. AREA each. Subordination. 1 n1ilC' Income $16,056. to ntain entrance road to Bkr. 67a-5800 or lake. Realtor Ed Babson C'\'PS 646-~I l -~~~D~U~P~L~E~Xc--'-~~ OPEN HOUSt: 2BR, IBA. 500 Poinsettia, 11:rea, 4 Br .. & 2 Ba u~ta1rs, 3 BEDROOM 1 BATH rm w-frplc, secluded brick for you and yours. 3 B('{f. open 1-5. hv. rm, din . rm., kitchen, do 2 B 1 Fam., <len & Ba downstairs. HUGE LOT. Use your GI. patio, \VOl'kshop & dble gar. ~ms wn, e< roon1s up. LRG. 2 story, ~ Br. OOn1e. Lots of closet space. Lrg sel!eN! will help finance. only $79,500. $oYt,500 fee. 10'~ do"m. sundeck, patio, built-Ins, nr dbte car gar., 2 patio CALL 842-9371. CALL 644-,211 shop, sch & OC·h. By O\vner, covers. Citrus Ire es . fAJ\llLY J.!Ot.'IE, 3 BR, 2 ba g .. !.ill~B. • $72,500. Pri. only 646-4ll9. Woodland Sehl dist r i c 1 . + fain rm. in Laguna :• -·· CHOICE 49' LOT $87.500 Owner 548-4732 or Beach, close to schools. So. or H"J'. lovely home & 531-0660 ~Jay be sold furn. One (714) 645-3333 Same customers, 17 years. Runs itself, good -help. 1'-1oncy n1aker. Terms 10 suit. Tired O\vner v.1ll fi. nan<.'f!. ED RIDDLE REALTY 646-8811 \VANT to sell good Plumbing Repair· Business in Nev.'J)Ort Beach area. Take over hun· dreds or 1~gular custom<>rs. 642-3128. Money to Loan 241) 1st TD Loans UP TO 90% 2nd TD Loan s Lowest rates Orange Co. Sattler Mtg. Co. 642-2171 SIS-4611 Serving ffarbor area 21 yrs. --00N'T-BORROW- 'TIL YOU CALL USI Borrow on your home equity for any good purpose. &rv. Ing Los Angeles County for over 20 years and NOW in Ol'ange County! SIGNAL l\fORTGAGE CO. (714) 556-0106 4500 Can1pus Drive. N.B. 2ND Trust Deeds PRIVATE F UN DS AVAIL. Any Amount * Call 675-4494 BKR. BORRO\V on your equity Lo\\·est availablf' ratrs * Broker 642-74!11 * RENTALS Apartments Duptems -433 \V. 19th St .. Costa Mesa 1854 S. Coust Jlwy., Laguna COSTA !'.1ESA OFFICE $110-Nwpt Bch Bachelor. P1trtly Ju1'n. All util pd. $135-l BR. Gar Apt. Cons child & pet. Slove, ,c/d crpls, drps. Carpol't. $15()...2 BR. House. \v/gar. Child & pet ok. Incl. yard. $210-3 BR. Condo. in nice area. Car & Pool. Klds & pets ok CALL 645--0111 LAGUNA BEAOf OFFICE $11f>...Furn. Bachelors. All util pd. Avail OO\\'! $16f>...Studio. All util pd. Stove k refrig. No. end. S26G-Oiarming 2 BR Hse. Bltins. Cpts/drps. Child, & pet ok. $35()-Nice 3 BR Hse. All util pd. Frplc. Nr Beach! CALI~ 494-9-'91 * LANDLORDS * FREE RENT AL SERVICE EASl'STDE COTI ACE in ~·nlking distance to shop- ping and bus llne. O....·ncr ! sa~ no singl('s. $225 per n\onth. Walker&Lee 111.t.L tll.t.TI income. $89.500. Call Denison o~w=N=E=R-,pa-rk~,-mg-4~Bd~. -,.~. I ov.•ner hom£', $47,950 Assoc. 673-7311. Ba plus large 14 x 25 ft. PRIVACY, s;-iuded home in BEACH DUPLEX NE\VPORT Beach -Custom R1 lot. 153' frontage on 8th Fairway of Big Canyon Country Club. View of Fashion Island & Corona del f.far. Private planned Com· munity with guard gate. Priced to sell! Terms available. ~1537. S . .\ TUROA Y 1-4Pi\f 2037 Lauri!" Lane Cosra l\lcsa sro.950. Mortgages, Trust Deeds ~ \\'cstclirt Drlvc>, 260 64&-ITll * DUPLEX So. of Highv.y. Family room w/fireplace, \\'oods cove. 1 BR hon1e . 2 & 3 Bdrn1 units, one block Xlnt local'ion & condition. l built.ins, forced air, fully guest apt. Hrd\\'OOCI firs, from beach. Needs paint & &. 2 BR, Call: ~1736 carpeted & drapes, large lrplc. lge decks & many fix up. Best buy on the 1-;;~::;;;;~~~::;;;;;;;;;;:;1 fenced yard. Close in to HIGH ON II school.s. chur(.'hes and shop-• • ll"Ces. $59,500. beach. $69,500. ping areas. OnJy $29,900. THE-HILL 1797 Orange", C.t.·I. &12-1771 CLASSIFIED HOURS ON 1,4 ACRE DUPLEX, Ideal for O\vner I 838-U57 UNIQUE CUSTOl\1 Omtu I * MESA VERDE * Huge added-on rain rn• w/ occupancy. 2 BR. 2 bas + II/' Advertisers may placo 3 BR. Family nn. 2 Baths r· & . . den each unit "'it h 'Tl21 ~~.::onn • 10'"'-down rustm irC'p! air condition-panoran\ic ocean -~ coastal ~ their ads by telephone -.. ""II /fl ing. plus dl'n & 3 BR. ,\ S:OO a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Excell"nt opem·ng for real l>uy at only $34,990. ''it;ws. dum,·ts have frplc. lge J\'Jonday thru Friday ~ pnv. ec s, mitred glass g to noon Saturday Top Sal~man If "·lndo11•s, EZ \ralk to beach * BAYCREST * BALBOA BAY PROP. & shopping, $157,000. B\. O\\'NER. Elc.>ga.nt custom COSTA MESA OFFICE * 556-8800 * 162 4471 ( ~··) 546 8103 b";11 4 BR+ lrg. Fam Rm, 330 W. Bay ll ====~---,-7~~ . ••u. -Ei\1ERr\LD BAY LOT, one 2 Master BR+ 2 frplcs, 642.5678 EASTSIDE assun\able 6',0. ";;:;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;; of only a fe\~' lots reinaining Huge LR, Formal Dr. Com. O\\·ner "'ill carry 2nd T.D. • in beaut. private com-pletely private 28' covert'd NEWPORT BEACH SG.000 do ..... 11. 3 Br., 2 Ba., * POOL TIME * munily. Spectacular ISO outdoor living area with lush 3333 New1>0rl Bl vd. fam .. frplc, h1.1ge yd. on cul-deg. vie\v of coast. Plans for landscaping. O\\•ner \Viii 642-5678 de-sac/ S.15.950. 646-512,1, or 4 BR, 1% BA, frplc, 15· x 33' lnr-P •,or-e ;.,~!. S7::1.000. finance rcsponslb!e buyer. HUNTINGTON BEAdCH 2 645-"646BR Tow. agnhousee.nt. I h l:.~~Jth loads of decking. LIN~7~'RS ECAL ESTATE Principals only 1>45.r.'l{l() 17875 Beach Blv . • w 'vs ag Call 874-3111 "'"" · ·nast H\\'Y· PENINSULA S40-1220 crprs. drps. stv, full Ba & So. ~guna. 499-1397 TRIPLEX ~i. 1'~enced patio. encl gar. Ontu ,110 Clenneyre St., 1 2 & 3 B· •. , d LAGUNA BEACH Alature adults only. No child ~11/21 Laguna Beach. -194-8086 · · •"-'l_lt con · 222 Forest Ave. or pets. Park-like surround-'Tl O!!!!!!!!!!!~":'.""!!'~!!!!!!!!!!I 0\\ ncr "·\II f 1nan c e , 494-9466 ings. 548-6920 SOLID iv/$30.000 do\\TI. Prin. only. CUSTOM 5 BDRMS 675,'!321. SAN CLEl\lENTE c.o · 1 rr & 6 · 305 N. El Camino Real East.side by owner. 3 Ba, mmercia 0 ·ice ln· WALK TO BEACH 4924420 fam rm, hrdwd flrs, 2 beaut 17301 BeRch Blvd., HB. con1e units. Never a vacan. Large 2.sfy. 21,-'z Baths. Fri>lc., orange trees. S.'19,900. 2021 cy. A block. froni the beach. atrium off liY. rm. Pool, NORTH COUNTY Al' A 646-2634 GI BUYERS These units pa~ ! .0 r club & tennis n"arby. ISO Ve., • lhent•0 !VO & d ( ' dial free 540-1220 = s . prov1 e ine S-18 950 BY 0\\ner E. Side. 3 Br. 11,2 WANTED tax shelter. Sit back & cA'yw' OOD REALTY CLASSIFIED Ba + ~ Ba. Hard\vood V.'a1ch this investment grow DEADLINES floors. Nu paint. $32,500. 258 \\'e hnvr S('Vcral Cine homei. \\'ith Laguna. Priced at * 548-1290 * Deadline for copy & ki!ls ~ln~t~lyli45-8375 aft 5. that can be purchased no $l60,00l. * TWO UNITS~ is 5:30 11.m. the day be-do"TI by clegible veterans. ~'4 Sn1all bul cu1~ & clo.~e to fore publication, except EAsrSIDE: 3 Br, 1 ~' ha, e 962-2456 e 0 ·~,. beach, park & shops. Trade. tur Sunday & ?>londay fam. nn. newly pntd in & .,.,,, ,., Sa.n C!en1ente CH' Laguna Editions "'hen deadline out. Crpts, drps, Sl'.'im pool I' REAL ESTATE Bl'ach. $52,500. is Saturday. 12 noon. $34.950. 642-1811. 1190 Glenneyre St. BALBOA BAY PROP. CLASSIFIED BY owner 3 br, 2 ha lg den. SS.13 Adams. HB 494-9473 549--0316 * 673-7420 * 6% assumable loan. Owner ( t 1\1 r ) REGULATIONS ,viii carry 2nd . Principals a agno ia IMAGINE ERRORS; Advertisers only. For appnt. 557-4765 I ''PRIVATE BEACH'' $165000 for 60' deep \vater should check their ads FRANCJSC(lN FOUNTAINS. O\~ner leaving s.ate. Splen. baYfron .. 3 Br. 3 BA, + daily & report errors O\VNER transf. Clean 3 BR, Spiral _staircase leads to a I did 3 BR, 3 BA residence in g~tcst, pier & sJip Consider immediately. THE 1 ~' ba. Xlnt carpel. Nice proft~sstonaholly,dcco~!,!~ exit. i\10NARCH BAY. Priced trades. Call DeniSon Assoc. DAILY PILOT assumes garden, large yard. ecu 1ve s . wp ac:e. "°'111 sq I for quick sal£' $94,500. 673_7311 liability for the first In-Fortin Co. Rltrs. 642-5000 of the ul.11mate in suprenic. GRUBB & ELLIS I~'==''-'==----Ju x u r 10 us decor. 5 OlITSTAl\'DlNG !\arbor correct insertion only. B\' Owner-$31.000. 3 br, bedrooms, 3 baths, huge Realtors Vie1v l\fonaco 2 Br. Convert conip refurbished. cov patio, CANCELLATIONS: frplc. fi.llHU!i6 or &10-0227 master suit P. BKR. 2863 E. Cs1. Hwy., CdM Den, 2 Ba. Enclosed fron! \Vhen killing an. ad be 548-m.t: af1 6 pm, call 675-7080 patio, pro fess ion a 11 y sure to make a record 2 ~11 TO BOI • 3 BR, 2 BA 557-4617 landscaped, highly upgrad- of the KtU, NUMBER All llC\\' carpet. Dbl gar. • PLUSH • ed. Adult Occupied. Fee given you by your ad Fruit trees. $27,000 ~2168 * OC-EAN VIEW* S67.500 l!H 7 Port Cardiff Pl. taker as receipt of your . , , carpeting. NO OOWN to Huge, ocean vic\v Hv. rm. O\VNER 6'1·1-22-14. cancellation. This kill Dana Potnf veterans, or submit your w/lrpl: din area, 2 BR, den Harbor Vu Homes number must be pre-11-----'-----terms. Xlnt. 4 bednn. 2 bat11 + guest rm, 1v/w carp, Nt'\v un it . November move sented by thl' advcrtiKr FOR Sale by O\\'ner, Alnt home in quiet tree-shaded thruoul. Central k i 1 . in. Montcl':o. 4 br. 1 level. In case ot a dispute. condition 2 BR, 2 BA, fam location. Cozy fireplace, w range oven, rlishwshr. fllllside vu lot. By owner, rm Wf\v cpt.s, drps, bltns. 2 r ily/dl · •nd only •·· CANCELLATION 0 R. . 1 am n1ng, '"""" rhis one! $53.500. "A4-4887 m1ns rom marina. $39,000, ,,, 500 B t h • C 11 ~ CORRECI'TON OF' NEW 171 "9' ~. "" , . es urry. n ~Iission R_ee.lty 494-0731 SUPER CONDO ......, .:r--JIJ'" 545-8424 SouthCo Realtors. AD BEFORE RUNNING: F t • V fl BEAUTIFUL location -l stor;.-, 3 Br. 2 Ba. pools, Every effort Is made to l ',:·,:o;;u;;n;;a;;i;;";;;;;;';;;;";;Y;;;;;;;;;:;, $26,950 SOUTH LAG UNA. J block nur 111,.,. ~rr>e""s r.vriuisite kill or con-cct a new ad I I BRING YOUR POOL TABLE, to beach. Newly remodeled ·arden si!'linr. 's4S.00o. Cnll that has been ordered, Elegant Mansion for 1hls beaut. 2 B':-condo. 1 2 Bd11n, family rm, large n,..11;5011 Ac;soc. G7.1-7.~1 1 _ but we cannot guaran· Old F T Bon .1,' rm 20' x 20. 2 ,..a.r deck w/ocean view. Guest --__ to do so until the ad arm ract encl. gar., bltlns, xtra cab. apt. $62.500 firm. By owtl<'r. Bluffs New X ModeT h8J •Ppearcd In l he Dclighr ful 3 bdrm, bonus rm. incts, shag cri>ts. Adlt occ. Call 499-1204. Would con· CRrpelln1; chu•c'tl. 3 br, din - paper. form! din & lrg tront rm. rronts i:;rcenbel! &: sl<'PS to sider !IUmn1er rentals also. f;un rn1, 2'~ ha. Open 1-5 O~'"A·LINE ADS-. Thi!! l\vo-story geni is eel pool. RED CARPE T BEAUTIFUL ocean view lot daily. 2749 Vfsla Umbro!lt1. !U"u;r-among a ip'OUP or real fine 536·oo'M' NB Ph 640-1075 o 1bese ads are tilrictly hornes "'hen! ;ill o~-ne~ Heallors -oo.N. Only $11.900 1 , one , wner. cash Jn adva nce by mall show prirlH>f-ownersh1p. ~~P0$St: -5~0NS Oceanview i:ealty 673-8500 BLUFFS fior ..,.!t aNey fo:,:;! ~~e~: 11 ·~ ll('a.r r·.v. I.fi, ond you fl" inrorirui\k>n and location Lagune N1gutl BY 01vncr 3 Br, 21,i Ba, over. .. -. 10 definitely ~hould !j('t' ii I r I ,.,, \ •• ,, ho . looking bay. $67,500. 426 Oee4lfne: p.m. Friday, Ix-fore you l>uy another. 0 I ic~c ' ~ mt>S, CON00-2 br, 2 ha, on golf Vista Parada. 6#1180. Cotta Me$1. office 12 $39,999 v.•-mln. 10';~ dn. Sl'i' le 'l"' • en & tennis club. View. EASTBLUJ''fo~ hcaut. 4 BR, 3 noon -all bn.nch of· 11. yoo'lt like it! KASA DIAN 10% d"'71• $37,500. 831-fl638. BA, CPlnn, $73,500. Broker Ii-I' Real Estate 962-6644 Lido Isle COOperRlk>n w c Jc om e d . 'THE DAILY PILOT tt· e VACANT e Agcnl "'6-5022. ..,_ ... the right IQ cW-53)·5111 ( ::r.J 5Jl·5IOQ REPOSSESSION * $7',500 * BAY VIEW DUPLEX si!Y. ~edit. cemor or re-"l::========r.-I ThiJI 4 Bdrm, 2 bath, only Spanl!lh style home on large 2 BR, 2 Ba -double ga.rage, ru.., •R.Y edW!l"Ulftnent. • 121.-. N-· new! M"~ bo ~~-3 IBR. &:. drn, open less than 1 _year old. end t.o cha.np ttl rates .,_ ..... .., '-";"iln•s. nt~tlnit tpl. Nt'Ar M8-Zl21 a. Jadonl without REPO iiold this week end. C.11 Lido ten"l/4 "I. ====--,-----,---,--;.i... ~lice. $150 DOWN SOJTT HEAL TY e 536-lS.13 LI DO REAL TY llA VF'RONT -Jorge bo•"h, 2 or 3 BR Townhouse, hKe FOR sale by owner ol· 3377 Vin I !rfl1 ' .. Pl Dench S32,SOO. l...ea11e space $Di. CLASSfPllD runipus room dble gar, tractive 3 Br. I Ba. Aqunie * 673-7300 * mo. 675-1l02. MAILING ADDltlSS l\\'lm pool, few left. llurry! 5~ perct!nt Loan. low mo. 1---;, -BLUFt~s C.01Klo $60,000. 3 Br, P 0 e~ .. 11u:n 842-4421 968-7177 p11ymrn1.&, llB, '3 1 , 8 5 o * BAY FRONT * 21.fi Bt1. O\vner. \Volk to ten- • • -~ Fl Pl R I ~· "116. 21! ,,,.... .. _, old. Beautiful !\,~nl~•-c~lb_. _64_r>-_1_000 ___ _ Cott• M... "' onoor 11 ty ~ ,._ , _ 121129 Don't Rive up the ship! BR, 5 Bi\, U-shapl'd dock. Duplexes neor 10<' ocean Commercial Property 158 \\'EBB REALTY 493-0761 • * • DUPLEX * * * i .=;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; LANDLORDS! PUT YOUR MONEY To WORK FOR You I We Spectallze in Newport Beach • Corona del MIJ' e EAnl 10% interest 1 n \\'ell· l:. Laguna. Our Rental ~r- 2 BR & 1 BR, income .$360 s.."Cured 2nd Trust Deeds on vice is FREE to You! Try mo. Lge lot. nice patios, Oran~l' rounty reaJ es!ate. :.:u-Vil'W' beam Cl'iling & fplc in each. SIGNAL &IORTGAGE r:o. NU-VIEW RENTALS $37,600. by ov•ner 646-0011 (714) 556-0106 5734030 or 494-3248 12-2 BR. FURN. UNITS, "!!4'00 .. -~ .. C!!am..,pu!!s!!!!D!!r.,.. !!N!!·8,.·..,, I Ho RS E ranch o n OFFICE \V/pool $190,000. Inc. $25,321) =: acreage - S \1ringers or by o'vner. Prine. only. lST TD 40~0 disc SS.WOO families. rn h.o me BUILDING 642-9520 aft 5 P.~'f. balance pays $640 a n10. Unli mitC"d horses. S l 4 o. 101k : Bx 3 Apple Valley, Costa 11-fesa excellent op· 4 Plex, Hnt. Bch. Ca. CTI4l 242-3144 ~~n tan)'On. Agt l'"ec portunily for user or in-(41 2 Br Units. Income ::-::-----,------ vt>stor. Attractive 7200 sq ft S600 per mo. $48,950. Balboa Island bldg. Good condition. Ample Call S.l9-00'.i4 Ji-1 parking. Near Harbor & 6 ATTRAC units on Balboa tto..afor"9nt~ LOVELY t'le\\' 3 br, 3 ba Ne\\•pon Blvds. S 2 5, 0 0 0 Peninsula. Loni?: term \~·/den hon1e. YC'arly rental. down. Mr. Denver: No. 293 tenants. $150.000. By Owner. $&k1 mo. 673--0897 phonl.' 639-1501 r>JS-9695. LEVERAGE Fully l'f!ntcd comm. center $174,500 . only 107.i 00..\•n. lligh·potential, rast-gro\\'• Ing bus. area on n\ain 1ood lo Lake Pe1Tis. REALTOR ED BABSON 1114) 645-3333 Nine Units + Office $59,500. PT'l"*!n income $525. fl.1o. Lo: siz(' 5cr x 240' Bldg, 4500 sq. ft. e CALL 1'0 SEE e 1-:d Riddle Really 646-8811 C·2 LOT w /INCOME 19,SIX> sq, ft. on Newport Blvd,. nr Fair Dr., C.~f. SJ.25/sq ft. Owner/Bier. Other parcels avail. 642--0590 Condominium• _________H __ o_u_ .. _,_F_u_r_n_is_h_oc1 __ 3_00_ Bayshores Industrial Property 168 Balboa tsl111nd LEASE OR SALE LITILE Balboa Is I and . Ready August 30th. 10,500 sq. winter rental, beaut 2 BR r.. i\-1-1 building in cool honlE', nicely tum, & ~ry \\'estside Ci\1. Big yard & delwce, walk by 1 511 office area. \Viii divide. Ab&lone Pl and see before ED RIDDLE REALTY calling 6~ daily or 646-8811 673-2195 weekend. $300 per mo. M-1 lot Costa Mesa. Corner. Ready to build. phi I COZY Collage on Little Sullivan. Realtor. 548-6761. Island. -Park Ave. 2 BR. Sept-J une. $210/mo. Lot1 for Sale 170 675-2005 eves. ... ._ ... .-···AMERICAN·· ... '·HOME .: "··. RCAL TOR • .' .......... LG. Bay frnt w/pier. Avail from Aug. 5th s;ioo. \\k. 454-2433 or T~9 . YRLY. !o"·er duplex $250, 2 blrm, 2 ha. 320 Alvarado Place. Balboa. qalboa Peninsula Corona del Mar • • • • • • • • • 1 • • • NEAH BEAOf, dclU."tP 3 BR, 212 BA. Huge o~'flC'r's un\1 i:i l'lC\\' cuslom duplex, beam 1 clng, view, patios. fplc, nr shopping, no pets, S425 mo. 675-6900 -· ~ ••••••• I S200 -Uri l Pd. Clean & neat 2 Br. \\'/garag<'. $325 - 2 Br. Bltns. frplc, gara.qe. lilt patio. $425 - 3 BR 2 Ra. 2 !tplc. garage, 3 patios, pool. Vie\\•! NU-VIEW RENTALS 673-4030 or 494-3248 OCEAN VIEW LOT I n ''U H 1 Nor h e. ·d Lai~unn \VINTER & yearly: $200 :i. 2 & 3 Bcdroo;-:is & 'f,.,RBOR Vie"' 1-111 11, spacious, 5 Br/den/fam rm, pool. spectacular vu. /\v.1. nfler Aug. 151h, for mon. to mon. rental. S850. ner mon. &l-t-2359. ;:: . ....1., \ .. " .. ' • ...-.ri, 49'-1001 * 494-7513 S.:i :\. Cs1 JI .,_., La,.,una lkh VIE'\V LOT Spectacular panorama day or nite. NB. $-13.500. !l79-31.S4. NE\VPORT •I E I G •t T S : 6.i'x150· R-1. On Irvine Blvd. $15,000. PH: 962-7771 Mountain, Desert }·fi.r.:i.lall l:cal y 675-4600 Corona del Mar $100 -Ulil Pd. Bachelor npt. private patio. l blk beach! $235 -Lrg 1 BR. Frplc. pool, garage, deck. $390 -2 + Den. Frplc dbl garage. lovely gar d tn . Irvine Terrace. NU.VIEW RENTALS I M f.1 EDIATE possession. Spygla.~, Hill, TJOO Plan 2-sty, 3:'100 sq. fl. 4 BR .+ hoMus rm, 3 Ba, ocean vu. 644-""35 for sale Resort 174 160 1--------673-4030 or ~ VIEW + POOL 3 BR. 2 BA, completely remodeled, beaut. location. Adults: only~. m o , 673-1658 Huntington Beach VACANT e 4 BDRM. i ~ ba..h, brond new car- p!'..'IS & paint. Only $23,8.riO. .::r--c J. todny. call ' 'r1· n .·:ALTY • 536-7533 B!Ci lrees surround this l Br. home on spacious lot In Fern Valley, ldylwlld . 1 yrs old, y,:cll bulll h ome '"/sundecks on 2 slrfes . C<.'dar paneling t hr u out . Shower 11t111J. tub, nu w/w 3 Bedroom -2 Bath $475 LEASE Rltr. 644-7270 LARGE 3 BR .. 2 ha., dbl. gar . Walk to 1Jlore1 &: beach $375 Mo. Avail. now. BOYD, Realtors 675-5930 l 1 CHINA Cove, winier ise. 3 Br, 2 Ba. Ocean vu. S400. mo 544-6130 or 613-7838 u unle xes/Units crpls, drps. Big store rm S.I. 162 "'/pantry, I au n dry & ,..0,,ta Mesa DARLING house 2 br, trplc, natlo, p:arage, adults only, $2'75. mo. Seaward Rd. After 6 pm 557-5179 workshop. All yenr roi\d. ------------------1 $29,500 Terms. FI c h er a ~ BR N' · Lg DUPLEX -llorse Country! Really, ldylwlld. • · ice patK>. e, stone Santn Ana lielghts S37,500. frpl., bit-ins. $325 Mo., IRVINE TERRACE lnimo.c. 4 BR, 4 BA home. Lrg fenced ya.rd. $600 incl. gardener. Ph: 6~. Prtncipals only. App t. 2.79 AC, !.ncd, sm. barn & yearly lcnse 5'10-29TI or 642-12.80 corral. \valcr & etee. Many I ----'*-6'-'13-'--'-1()'-7-"9-* __ _ 2 BR. Nice paUO. tee. stone frplc., bit-in•. $325 Month yrly. 673-7079/673-2222 Agt. 2 Br. hOufle + duplex, by O\\'f'll'r, xlnT area in Costa Mesa, 544,000, 557-7300 lncom• Property 166 * I 2-BR HOUSES * On l(ts' x 300' ?.l·I Lot • Rear 90' vacant Yearly incom(' S1'1.136 A'l{lnp $11n 000 RIVIERA REAL TY t ' .r • 1 642-7007 645-5609 Evu. * 31 UNITS* $395,000 \ II locnted I , Cotffl Ml'Stl 61~ :· r.roq LIDO REALTY 3377 Via lJrlo, ~'pt. Beach * 673-7300 * oaks. $19, 700. Ag!. 54.')..3766 L B • aft. 7 pin, Principals only. 1gun1 Hen 6.47 AC SC'cluded pv1, watttr $190 -1 BR near beach, & elee. All ttnlm11ls OK. fri>lc, pool, deck . Asking S32.~. AKI. 545-3766 $225 -2 BR. D-plc, dcek, art. 7 pn1. Pr1nclpa.l!1 only. • ,;nragc oceanfront. Winter. Ranches f'11trms. $775 -UtJI Pd. 2 BR, ocean Grove; llO vl~. ft'J!!c, yurd, patio. NU-VIEW RENTALS LOOKING FOR ll loal, 673-d030 or ~ RL>Clud~ 2~ 11.cre parcel SMAU.. turn h!e for salaried v.1th \Vtlt<!l', elec. hor1eii &: bn<'hclor, fl70 -Also _,.,,, nnlmnl8 0 .K." If 4~W ml. of r•im li~c . .t'M R17fl r>ve· unpnved roAd dt.(t<ln·1 -holhor YoU, CAll 833--'U'l1. I.Id'"' ,,,. 2 BR, Nr. bead!. cPt. ~ I stove, reittg. $25() + Utils. Adnlls 494·78S.1. LRG 2 BR. 1 BA house \v/gar. 2 yards, $200 mo. 673-MOJ, G7l-724.i. Cost• Mesa ~~~-----1 . J .F.ASE wlth ot>Hon. sn>. 3 • hr, "()V. f'l!1Uo, f'rr)lt', no pell. r.·o n1re1r40-0227 "---,,-:---=o I I " nn. $141'1 '1 ... 2 Br. SIM $8,00() And up, full prl~. R1Jo l Estate Wanted 184 .,.. !i'"I .,r ,., iJlcs. A.gt. fee, 1 rn; '''"' 11 .. Ir" r~ 979 84:Jtl. bl'.'tirh, 111vel.i. 2TlR, 2BA , DR, Sl!Y• ~·<.-nctd. Mabmt hou.se, beauUfuU_v f 1rn .~ fnm~l , rcb . .....,..d. ~94-M2? WANTED Rcildcn!lAl Lot 5000 lo 6000 sq. f1. l.fB. aren. \VlU pay cash. call alt 6 PM 58&"411. c1c<:0ntted. MJnt oond. Etel:'I ... ,. kllch b1tln1, $510 monlhly.1 o-"'=' -o< 0-03;ol-;"40"~'-36=:18'--!Y=•- \Vintcr rental from Sept. NE\V 3 Br townhome, Nr. Call Dr. Saks. 213: 611--6161, pool. Re!ldy for oceup S4!pt. A pod want ad ll a cood to-"List" It ln clusUled, Ship By owner. 675-4242. Mile~ Llu·'!On, ReaJtor l~=========l --~-•-•1_-------~t~o"S"-ho'-'re"-'-R'-'e'-'•ul"ltt"'"-! "64"'H6'1ll~~· Want ad rnsults .•.•• &12-56'1R ___ *_6_7_:i.&;63_--"---CL.ASSTFtEO will te.D ii! Seil Idle Items , •.•.. 642-5678 or 714: 673--2424 1"1. $285. J•ck 9TI)..1633. I I 3 l A Q 3 A F 4 3 •• 4 3 4 v 2 3 3 3 3 3 4 2 4 • 'D.lllY PILOT 25 [ -·-•··-... -1~ l.__~_-_--__,11'J I Ap .. ·-"'-1~ [ ···~ I~ I ..... 1~1 1 i.oi•-l[S] 1H:;o;u;_;;;U;n;fu;r;n;.;~30;5 Aou ... dn1um. YU c-~""'1m1. 360 Apt. Unfum. J65 Apt. Unfum. 36.5 Sum ... r Rontats 420 Buslnau Renlal 445 ~F-.u·n·d-(fnoiiiiiiiiiiiOadiiisiii);;;,;;~5;501 Irvin• ~1111om n umt ""-=.;...------! FNO Fml dog mJxed bte8J Costa Mola Costa Mna Cotta Mosa N.wport -h TEMPORARY ,.ntal. 3 F OR LEASE "· w/blk 1!atk 4 wht und« 1;;:;;;;;;~~;;;:;;;:;:;;;;;:;;, J 4 BR, 2 BA, crpta:. drps, _Ge_n_e_r•_I ------I '-";;;.;..-'-.;:..;.:;..____ Bdrm bowie w/pool thN New 31orts or ornces , 11 he side, 2 Milan. Some brwn. Y.a·~1v-.Pool Home bltns, air cond. Chlldtt:n & 4 BDRM nd "' ba 1 11 LAROE. 1 br, twin bed11, DELUXE THE NEW ~pt. IC.~I.} Re•ponsible available in aboul 3 months. V1c Brookhunt & ~lamilton ' ' sonal~ta k '"""' co o. ~ · u Y Ideal tor •bachelOl't. S/""""I. APARTMENTS BA~·vooo APARTMENTS =il only. 12 5 O Imo. ldea.I Hunt11111l0n Be a ch HB. -•~. 3 BR, FR w/bar-lovely 0 · ........ mo. c:rpt., drps. Avail. 8/1'1, Adults n~s"•. ••• :;;;-;,, · :s.• ......,.... ...... ,, •nt f, r ta I nm e n t ho""'· _83<'"i7-'C9;:;.--o;;r:75U.14290::::i:':--;;:= I 847""6497 1993 Ch"'-~h 5~,. ""°"'iJU>W Air Cond • Frplc'a • 3 Swim· In Newport Bt.aeh are L location in !Shopping cent.er. FOUND: hi!ale gray ~ ' 1 "" BEAUT ...... -1--Pools • Htalth ~... • ready. The 5e.les oltice ls 3 BR, 2 Ba, hse. 2 bloci... For inlonnatlon call Jerry n _,, __ ~375 Mo. Call Lois Miller University Park, Costa .. _,.. .,_,. .,... d .,., , __ 1 AM 1 ~ GWeapo'o cat -rraY e-yes, et ........... 642-8235 (045) 3BR, 2BA, pool, avail Im· m. Hun t ington &..ch TeMis Court& • Cym and open a1v \.1"01 0 to ocean. poo, linen.,, phone Village Re-al Estate Vic: Oa:le I: Santa An. Macnab ·lrvine med, $375 mo. Year¥ lsc. ** 3 BDRMS, BA newll St".$11!'<: Billiard Room, 6:30 Pt.1. ~lacArthur Blvd. rurn ftplc, pl\llO, \V/D, P . ..,,...2456 or , .. \'es. 968-2974 Ctrcle. C'all 646«18 &tttt ~140 ""' w l BR. From $150 & San Joaquin Hills Road. Fenton 673-2110 or ~159. .,.,._ ~ 6 ' dee., all bltns + ~t, poo • BACHELOR & 1 BR .• patios, 1 BR & Den Fro1n 1190 64+55.55 SUCCESSFUL p.m. UNIV P"M'· "' _..... .. clubho···· '"" "" ·~o AVAIL. 9/1-!l/8. 3 Br. 2 Ba, FND·. Sm! Jon•·halred · ..... ~owuuuuse. ·1 """"· -· ..........-.,,,, trplc's prlv. garages -2 BR from $210 NE 2 BR alk EAST 17TH STREET • Br 2Jh Ba tam rm JdeaJ . _,, 2 \V conoo, w to $175. 2 Br, 1 Ba, $150. Nr. or&r1ge fml cat wht chclt A toe. Pools: & tennis.· Ref's. l\1111ion Vleto ~1vid""' Rbe.th &1 Jots 1 ot BR. 'I\.,.nhses From $250 Huntington Center, pool ooean. 615-5366. Location, Costa Mesi. paws __ 00 collu, vie. H.B. LeRSe. $435/mo. 5#-1912. ALISO Villa plan A+ 2 BR. l ~~t'tabte~· :1una si:u: MEDITERRANEAN ~· pl~~· laundry. Vacation Rentats 425 1430 Sq. tt. wHh additional 96)..3875. LEASE. 4 BR, fam, rm., 2 TURTLEROCK, 4 BR, AIC, BA, cpld, drps, bltns, cov See for yourself. 17301 VILLAGE TOP mo. . 1---------1R400EAoq.OnN. o°'M'1'0c""s c''oRP FNO: l{jtten charcoal grey BA. Dbl. ear. Futly cpt'd, view, 1,i ac. Deck, 2 trpl's. patio, 1 car gar., use of pnol Keelson Ln. (1 blk W. ol of Towers on bayhonl BALBOA LlTILE ISL. · ~L • male H wks old, Sunset tlreplace, patio, neat 'scap. Unusual, $5..10. 833--0647 $215 w/lease, 830--589L Beach. 1 blk N. of Slalerl. 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.M. Deluxe 2 Br, 2 Ba. Vie\v of Near bch. 1·2 br. $175 wk. BROKERS 675.6700 Bch. Can't keep. (213) 1,ng. Prime prop. Need ;-:::CC::-;i;':':::;:'"-'=--842--7848 (TI~l 551·8020 ocean, newly redec. $600. Aug 18 & Sep! I. 5~5ru references ~pt only. Avail. Laguna Beach Townhouse Unfurn. 335 1140 _ ULTRA NICE Apt. ,,_ OPEN EVERYDAY mo. 64s--0934. 675-0532 1213l 698-3021 OFFICE on New-port Blvd. Sept l I ""2971 or v I-lours: Fri·Tues 10-6 SEACLJFF Manor Apia. 2 br ' Avail on lease, partially MALE Great Dane ~ Brindle ' • • .rftr 111-1 BR " blk •· h' Pool 4 Gard Sa na MAMMOTH Hight Sierra's f ·-~ · d --•-1'-~ Vi 642-1280. ;> -• 111 u•:flC • Huntinnton Harbour ~· ens. u · Wed. & ThW"S. J().7 • urn, c ... r--,<:\<, air con ., 1..vwr • ouer ....,.. • 1C Stove, refl'ig, crpts drps. -'-'-""""'----"-'--·I Tennis, Private pat Io. unfum $l65. l~'i ba, pool. luxury condo's. $90-$15(). per parking. Approx, 1000 sq. Anaheim area. Chippewa CLOSEP!to new Bullock11, So. $235 -2 BR. Bllns, private ON the water, 3 s R Adulls. Ph. 846--0259 El Puerto Mesa :S~ 8P~~~~~ ~~~u~~2 wk. nf-84&...353.1. Ft. $250 mo \llarehouse alllO st., 530-7788. Coast aza. Nt'W 3 BR, 2 patio. Beaut. ocean view! 1'ownhou.se w/30' boat slip L"d 1 I I & 2 BR •-Rentals to Share 430 avail. Ideal for Contractor FND·. Male blk .. whl cat m· Ba. Greenbrook home . $325 -Roomy 3 BR, 2 Ba, 714 : 53&-4900 · ;c1;;:;.:0c..;.•=•------....-ts., Unfurn. EASTBLUFF Condo, 3 Br, 548-2616 Turtlerock, lrvfue $385/mo, 992 CamaUon, gar, Near beach. L NI 1 TERRiflC Bay Vu·2 Br, 1 $l30. & Up. 1 ~~ Ba. New crpts. drps. MALE -35, Y.111 share furn . 1600 sq. ft. rnousr. shop, 1 ~~~~~833-~~-~~~~~I CM. 675-0771 NU~VIEW RENTALS . •tuna Mue ba tul'n apt. Lido Island All Utilities Paid peP°i:,t.' J.175· 644-2788. No 2BR house in Cdl\1 S.150 $225. Aleo 600 sq. ft. oH\ce A'M'RAC. 4 Br, 2 ~ + 673-4030 or 494-3 OCEAN vw. 3 Br, 2 ha, elos-Summer rental or lease. Pool & Recreation with mature male 0 r w/liv'g qtrs, $1;)5. CM. bOnus rm. Nu crpls. tncd OCEJ\NVJEW, 1 8 r g e 3 ed. gar. Nlee yard. Pvt bch. Phone 675-4646 Garage for rent \VATERFRONT Apt -2 br, female. 673-7400 aft 5 646-2130 Ilg] ynlSun" pall'!",· 336S275/mcoa.bi·o·S..J<o. bedrooni. 2 bath ney.·ly 644-2259 or 493-1>679 Newport Beach 1959 Maple Ave, C.M. ~~~ly pdredeco511ratcdA. 1271 5· FE?tfl. roommate wantt>d to c=uc.TC.EO"'ADO'=~B~E~H~O~U7.S"'E'°."'1=000 Lott lftd FOlnl -v doeorate<l, new draperies, N rt a ch ALL ELECTRIC 1 · ·• P v a 1 · shr w/same. 22-25, 2BR, sq. tt., adjoining busy cor-'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmm;;;;1 2ll:243'-8949. fireplace, family room, built ewpo " $35 & Up. 1 BR., 2 BR & GOLD MEDALLION 673-2182 or 64~8496 COM, ner, for business or office 1 QUIET, sml lBR, balh, ins, available Aug. l:)th, CHAR·li-J. trplc. 3 bd, 2 ba., Bachelors. Color TV, n_iaid 2 BR Apt w/patio, encl gar, BAYfo'RONT w/priv beach & 675-6230 & 644-9868 use. Costa Mesa. secluded $150 per mo. 2559 $425.00 per month 644-~13 patio, shag, new paint. Adlt, serv, pool. The Mesa, 4l:i N. w/storage & laund. facil. pier. New 3 BR, 2 BA, $550/ STRAIGHT & square male,1~64"5-"20""20°'/64~2-656<!~;;..,=,.--.,, Santa 'Ana, unit C. Call 2 BR 2 bas. near new home baby OK. PiO. 642-1176 Newport Bl., N.B. 646-9G8J. Adlts only, no pet 5 • mo. Yrly. 979-0631, 644-4510. 43, has nice 2 BR house on SHOP SI'ORAGE 1350 sq. ft, 545-0Xl2 for appt. to show, bit of ocean view. w-beam D I F 345 ANNUAL 1 bdrm steps to $165/tno. Melody Ln. in MAGNIFICENT view large E. 19th to share. Lady OK in rear nr. Npt Post Offi~. avail Sept. lst. ceil, cvls. drps. bit-ins, up exes urn. bay & beach, responsible c.M. GMM>977 Ol"-646-1809.. rooms 2 lrpJcs, 2 baths, 1~64S-~"U~57.=· ,,.·----.,-,-,i,,o1°'175.:;a.~Ag~•'Cn~t • ..,64""6-"24°'1=4·_.,.,., Lost 555 3 BR . plus lrg fam rm, new Avail. now. $300. 494-.5291 Newport Beich cpl only. $190. Avail 9/15. TIRED OF NOISE? garages. $450. Near stores & DIVORCED man wants 1600 sq ft INDUS'l'. shop, crpts, dnp, freshJy painted 3 ARCH Bay, 2BR, 2BA, big 673-0072 schools. 642--6889. roommate to share his Con· $2'25. Also 300 sq ft oUice inside and out. lrg .fncd lot w/lrees. Pri beach, $450 ~ONT. Winter ren-BALBOA LITTLE ISLAND ~111;90~ G~~ Alts. 2~;· 2 BR, l ba. Frplc. l·Blk. to do in C.M. 54a.oo45 or $95. C.M. 646·2430. f'; return or lnkrrma yard, ava. approx. 8/8. per mo. 8.11-0554. ta1. Lower 2 Br. Nicely 2 BR, Sept-June, $195. mo. ~1!ture'adults,'no~~. · ocean. Yrly. $325. 546-2054. Industrial Rentil 450 :n leading toa%rum or.'~ $275. 547~791. L Hll furn. Avail Sept. 15 . 675-0532 or (213) 698-3021 Ask for Mike , lsi;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;~~;;;; •GBIROUS• •REWARD• agun1 Is 646-2830 ONLY $162.50/MO. JONES REALTY 6~210 SHARE Apt or J.iouse Save gold four teal clover pin, ATTRAC. -4 Br, 2 Ba + · . 1 BR, den, 2 Ba. spacious 2'283 Fountain Way East Call HOME PARTNER approx. 2 inches in diameter, bonus rm. Nu crpts, fncd 4 BR, lam rm, lease/option, OCEANFRONT, wmter ren-duplex, Near beach. Adults. <W. Of Harboi· on Wilsonl 2 BR. Balboa Bay Club 836-ll94 or 54S-1479 NOW LEASING with jeweled honesboe in yrd, patio. S275/mo, 336 S300 mo. $36,900. Avail for ta!, lower 3 BR, $325. Upper $250. 642-&m HARBOR GREENS Ocean View Apt Avail no"'· Huntington Beach C<'nter; also, gold loclret ca'brillo. 213: Ul-8949. opening or school year, 2 2 BR, $250 . .Avail 9·15. 2 BR. 2 BA furn apt. No Call owner for a pp t . Garages for Rent 435 NEW M·l (was on chain), approx. the • 4BR, 2BA -$225 mo, dbl Yrs old, fenced ya r d. GT~ children or pets, 820 Center ~~h. t 2U:1iBR.'s~M~~~ 548-~. Garage for rent. $20 nlo. 940 Sq. Ft. & UP size of a nlckeJ, inscribed gar, stove/ref, Jg lot, Irids/ 673--0216. Owner/Agent. WINTER rental, nicely furn St. e 64.2-5848. Open 10 'til 7 pm. 2700 * ANFRONT 2 Br, 2 Hunti~tOn Beach area. Hamilton & NPW!Rnd in script, FLA. These are pe1s ok. Business use ok. LACUNA Hills, lease 3 BR, 3 & 1 br, 2 ba, steps to bch. San Clemente Peterson Way, CM. nr. Har-ba. Yearly. $450 Month 557-9833 or 646-2ti87 644-0697 or m.o519 deeply tn!a!ured family Gt2-2Zll, (msg, 646-9666) l~ ba, frplr., crpts, drps, Lower $300, upper 8 1350.1 :;::.:...::;::.:.;.~;;.:.----bor Blvd. & Adams. Ask for Jl;l!kC" '"""."!~~l':'~~i':::'!"~ mementos & the loss ts ir· El Toro avail Sept. $315 m 0 . . Avail Sept 8th. 548~1 OCEANFRONT bachelor 1_2 r:A'-" JONES REALTY 6i3-6210 STORAGE Gal'ages for Rent.1~ · replaceable. p LE ASE, ·~ -6 350 -370 NEW 3 19j9 Nraple Ave. No. 5. LAGUNA NIGUEL PLEASE help :• ....,, ......... ~· · Duplexes Unfurn. br apts. pool, view. Comp! BR, 2 ba, yr c M M I :u. .~~ no. ... --"--------1 $13" e TROPICAL POOL e t/d 40" f ,osta esa. • any ~atfon . 642-3589 FOR lease, nr Lake Forest, 2 Laguna Nlguel redecorated, util pd, a-crp rps, l'On1 ocean. -· Sty Colonial Style House. 3 ;;;;"'-".:;.;;..;.c.:.,,;o=.; ____ Belboa Island SI95. No children or pets. 2 Br Studio, 11,ii Ba. Frpl, $425 mo. 5-18-2819. Garage for Storage 2400 Sq. rt . & Up. Eves. &: weekends. BR. 2 full ba., lg liv rm, 3 BR, 2 bas. frplc, blt·ins, :i .,:"'=·361""5'-. ~----= ~~~~h.s~itJ200. E/side DELUXE 2 BR. 2 BA, ':: blk \\'anted 675-7009 On ~1D~e1~~· SM. F. kitten. Org w/wbite w/frplc crpts, dl"PS. garden lge yd, $325. \n("I \\'flt~ & OCBaE.AN+ FDeronnt&updpco·sh'·w'aBshe'·,'. Apt. Unfurn. 365 to beuch Yearly. S2t:i5. Off' 9 Rental 440 face, cbM & paws. Die. spot kit w/cov patio, all bltns, gard'nr. U>ase 4!N·3704. NEW -Large 1 BR. Frplc, 675-3126 Eves. tc COSTA MESA in middle of fDrehead, white fncd/lndscpd yard p 1 a y Lido Isle $550 mo. yearly. 673-5729 General walk i": closets, frplc, bltns, NEAR liOAG l-IOSP OFFICE SPACE 1600 sq ft. 2 ofiices, 3 phased flea collar. Vic. Bay & area, close to schools & CC~o~ro~n~e~d~e~l~Mo~!:'---1--;;;;;;u;-;;;;-;;:~-lrg patiO, encl gar. Pool & '3 Bedrm 2 bath fi;·cpl power, 1 yr old. Good loca· Orange, owner heartbroken. shops, Cal 1837-90.34. BESf location, Jge l bdrm, .: NOW READY I ree. _$160/mo. No pets. 393 ADULTS! $25() mo. ·642.4387· Costa i\icsa, up to 7200 sq. ft. tion $225mo. TI7 C Ohms =64'=S."064""1"°8~/l"°"'or~8'°'/2=c:-=·I F !rplc Pvl patl·0 dbl gar 2 BR, 2 ba, frpl c, 1600 sq , ft. Itanulton St., CM. 645-44ll offire Space area for leuse. \Vay, 646-7663 /646-1201. RE\VARD • v·~"-ter> ovntaln Veil-' ' vu of bay. Walk to bch. CASA JIEMPQ 642-8520 LRG 3 BR 2 BA I · ~--· -# w/opener. $300. Yr l y • or . . ' . s iag single offi~c or_ . ~uites. 4 DELUXE OFFICES rier, blk/golden pan, clip- 642-0306 $350/mo. Avail 9115. Gar-NEWLY DECORATED ct·pts, drps, encl palio. Nr. Antplt> parking. V1c1n1ty of Carpeted, Illuminated Ceil-p e d short, V 1 c. 4 BR Exec. beauty. Tri·level. I 'M~='°v,-r°'ti.-----1 age, Adults. No pets 673.(i(l().:I , h CLOCK 2 Br w/gar, wtr. pd. OCC. Sl85. 557--0350. li~rbor & Newport Blv~s. ings. Plus 400. Warehouse Adams/Main St., HB. Lg fam rn1., Choice area. He • N VI lrg 2 BR (\ou can see t e Call btwn l & s, 636-4120 2 BR nr ocean, furn/unfurn .3~ pr sq. ft. J\lr. Denver No. Space. 1370 _0 Logan, CM 536-3249 Sharply crptd & drpd. $550. OC~ ew ·. · ' Crom the San Diego Frwy. 2176 "E" Placentia $145. $205 yrly. shag; no pets. 293 63~1501 846-2881 or 821-8042. SBR, 3 ba, fam rm. 'vet bar, refr1g, stove. patio. J>:iv. Just No. of the San Diego 2192 'A'" Pl . 1140 ,~., '6th Sl ,.2_3331 · 1 :::64:.::4-:;22"28~===--.=-2 SIAMESE cats, l male Tri-level on cul-.de-sac, beach. Lse. $275. 675-614:i. Frwy. at Mafjlia.) ' acentia · .......,~7"=-"""'-=· ---~=..::::: i-4001 BIRCH, NB w/flea collar, 1 fem :J BR, 2 BA, 2 car gar, all 540-1683 c-~ .. __ DELUXE & 2 BR I BACHELOR Apt. $140. Pool Apts .. _ ..... ~ w/scar on ,.; ..... t forearm bltns, fplc swim pool, kids v.•• .._a • S 2000, 2000, 3600 sq. ft. or com· ''4" • OK. Like new. Only $255. Newport Beach W!nREPLACESI & ~pa, w/w erpts, frplc, -:urn. or Unfurn. 370 bo. thereof. Avail. 10/1/73. Vic: Monarch Bay Ternoe. nto. No tee Agent 842-4421 NEW 3 br., 1% ba., frplc., e Private Patios blt·ms, walk In closets. No f.1r. Baumgardner, 541-5032. 493-0294. -• patio gar quiet St e DI h .i.. pets. 393 Hamilton St., C.M. Balboa Penrnsula LOST· Wall•t blue -·~-s l'••· • ·· ·• s wa .... ers 645-441.lor642-8520. f\1·1 corner. 1 27x90 ' · -. 4n~~ .. ~~.Flrgam.f~ ~: EA TBLUFP ~ .. ~613th Pl., CM. $325. Ph .• All Heating Pd. NR. n .... 2 BR. Upper. Year· w/buildlng. 991 w. 19th St., trwa/!ringil .REWe. ARDvlc '· ~~~· ~.ver ..... y.. 4 BR. 2 ba., fam. rm . Well O'ft><IV NEW 2 Br, 2 Ba, bltns, drps, >JO.J til ~ CM $225 642-349() ""~ children wel(come S325 7(213) landscaped; sprlnklers, 2 Dana Point e Jacuui crptg, pool, gar. Spac. rms, ly boaS215 lncl. u · 507 E.1 _!;:;;;;;~~~;;:~~.1 · · · DIAMOND e"'-gement ring 596-45.)7 or 213) 592-5 43. Cflr garage. Avail. 9/1. $475 e Heated Pool quiet secluded complex. Bal • 673-6880. Storage 455 Jost. Reube~ .. E. Lee ft8t. 1 BR, 2~S ba twnhse. 2 story, 3 BR., fnm. rm .. den. 2 frpl. PANORA.VIC OCEAN VIEW e Recreation Bldg. AdllS, no pets. 376 W. Bay Costa Mesa PRESTIGE or vo·c Rew·~ 837 '-' •·m -n·111 rm .,·, cond Just redecor. Avail 9/2, x lrg 3 B I tha 1 St.. CM. SI'ORACE Jot, locked yard. · ""'" ·.-. w ''"' • · $415 • tra r. ess n yr e luxurious Lndscpg OFFICES pools, ,$350. 968-8551. o~d. 27' living rm. bltn ADULTS ONLY 2 BR, carpi, drps, bit-ins. PALTHEM MEXESCITINAGP S lain V ll Be . NBo'u'1"Neotr~s,I c,tc .• i;·so337:fo. Garden Grow red h1'll ~1tchcn. Si>e<:tacular view or STOP BY & SEE us • DA y Call 548-88196 or 675--£776 or A T • Foun a ey, autI· e • n ., ;) - ' I h.ghls at rught $300, mo. OR NIGHT • FOR YOUR see 2246-A Canyon Dr. Rent MINUTES TO NPl'. BCH. ful new building, ground Rentals Wanted 460 .. trvcaon ,. 3 BR, trplc, 2 BA, BBQ dbl 499-2895 CliOICE OF APARTMENT. $150 mo. 1st & last + $100. Bach, l & 2 BR. from $150 fioor, 3,000 square feet, ~;;·----~·.'iii.:! ~ •-•~-·~ d 't -N -Adults No ~1s will dlvldc into ma!Jcr * TWO AOU'·TS * gar. 6"""' ne..,. ......... -....... Newport Be1ch 8912 Heil Ave. H.B. epos1. -~... 0 pe.,,, • co: • .,. trpts, water paid. Big yrd. v• 0 Mgr Mr & Mn Bonner Eoshi..1-·Lrg 2 BJs 1561 Mesa Dr. offices.in50cl d per ~ Want smaU apt. or house. ~· ·~ mo. Vacant now. ISIOR-LARGE 2 Br, 2 Ba. Upper · 147_..992 uw • (5 bl.ks from Newport Blvd.) foot, cu es carpets, Will cl!!'an, paint & repair in Schools & 9fi0.-1127, Mon.f'ri, 3'-T. duplex. W/W crpts, drps, =~=-~~~--,..,.-.., w/w, i>J.1:· /frig, pool $160. 54&-9860 drapea, all utilities, janj. exchange for low rent. Have inftructforit 575 H ti-.._h REALTY bl:t·lns. 2 blks to ocean. Np! ONE BR partially furnished. ,.. ...... 95"20 00 1,.!?"'181·6 GRAND OPENING tor service. Call Marilyn one cat. Prefer Daily Pilot ---------1 un •••·-" "'"-s ..,.,,. mo. y,Jy. 231 Conv('nient to So. Co a .st vu ~ Stovall (TI41 832-5440. C 11 c•= 01.,,.. ENROU.ING now tor Fall. Univ. Parle C.enter. Irvine ... ...,,~ ""'" 1140 UP 2 Br 3 B 2 Ba Award winning l, 2 &: 3 br """o~~i"""""o~ffi~""""ls""ERJO. usa : ... -,,ki··ng ·cpl, ..... Superb taellit1e1, shad y EKECtrrIVE 4 BR. 2 BA • Call Anytime 552-T:.iOO Prospect NB. 548-8912. Plaza. Utilities pd. 642-iJ.161. . . ; r., . apts w/family rms. No .. ,..., spacious playground. Hot llrand new Prestige Office Houn 8 AM to 8 PM YEARLY, Seuriore by $1J;t, 8albo1 lsl1nd ui::~r ~~-:s~::=i. lease. Sorry, no pets. From e UXe IC8 kids/~ts, looking for area lunches. Qualified teachen. neighborh>od -upgraded Ltg 2BR, avail 8110, $300. 2212 Qillege No. 1 646-6032 just $175. OUR TOWN Space to build 32' boat + living Nr. Hoag Hosp. For info thruout. Near Brookhunt & $150 _ sn1all 2 BR. 1 blk 548-1607 or 213-33.~2. BACHELOR to 2 Br. Family Apts, 1250 Adams quarters. 5 yr. project. Phone 64G-7ll7. Indianapolis. $'25. Ask tor beach. Balboa Peninsula. iiiiml monthly. 1st & last. ROOMY l Br apt. Con-Ave. (Adams at Fairview), 550 11q. ft. e..,vallable in prime 64S-8285 Newport Christian Dale -962-4471. $200 _ 3 BR. 2 Ba, ~le 1 l[t] (Z13) 697-1496 venlent to schls & shopping Costa Mesa. Phone 55&-0166. Costa_ Mesa location, S275l;EXE;;;;.;CUT""i;;!VE;;~--:;dC".,:;ci...,=s-t:-0. C.enter Pre.School I d k Lld Isl • P Sl~ mo. incld utll. 642-2240 p/m 545-7131 !~~~~~~~~~! $~ UP. 3 & 4 Br. No ease gmaarac~. e, ec . o e. Ol-Apwtmtntt for Rent 'albo1 enln1ula * CASA VICTORIA * lease or rent 3 to 4 'Br. required. Others avail in . . LG. 2 br, 1 child OK, $140 l & 2 BR. Furn & Unfurn. house in NB or CM. Grown Org Cty. Call Dept of $450 -3 BR, Bayshores. 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiii;;:JEXTRA Ige 2 Br. duplex, mo., crpts, drps, bltins. aft Carpets, drapes D/\V TV children, 556-0330, ask for I ·~ ..,-1~ T r a n s po r 1 at lo n . Frple. Dbl gar, yard, patio. 1 360 \\'alk to water & shops. 4, 548-5686 ant Pool etc 525 v1·c1on·a w lk I} l Jackie ~ 213/GW-3310 from 9 • 3 $140. UP. 2 Br: 3 Br, 2 Ba. St. at Harbor, CM. 642-$970. NU-VIEW RENTALS Apts. Furn. Adults. No pets. 6ra-4112 . • . 8 Br 88 J ll ~~~~~~~~ ""kdayt. 673-4030 or 494-3 &Ibo.I Island Corona del Mir Pool, Blt·ins, play yard. EXTRA Large 1 or 2 Br. ••AL ,,,,,,. 3BR, 2 BA. w/fam./din mi TIIE BLUFFS lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1996 Maple Ave.·· .642-3813 Heated pool. From $145. BAYFR6NT OFFICES I ~nils 11•1 Babysitting combo, frplc, covr'd patio, NE\V :;· Br, pool & yard. NEW 2 Br. decorator tum.I I OCEAN VIEW -1 BR. Mature adults. Infant ok. No . I . bltns, nr. F.dinger 4 Spring. maintenance custom crpts, apt, yearly $325. \Vlnlf'r ._ Sl.50. Ne ch ildren/pets. UGI pets. 1887 a.ton r o vi a. Prestige offices. over ooking1;~mmjilmmm;;;~ HAVE opening for two dale, S~. Ask for Dale. & drps. $.)75. per mo. lst & $250. Ava.ii Sept. 10, 67~3703 re ~v le 64:'r2174. Balboa Bay m . Newport children, 6 mos to 5 )'Ul'I. -"n last & dcposo't ""I•'" 'll b Gleneast Te1T: 548-0259. Beach. Various size suites P I 530 f !··•·•-- ......,....... • .,.. .... .,...., Ol' ti73--0llO. ff 6rCs Huntington BHch 2 BDRM, 2 BAnt $205. aa low as Sl20 per mo. Jn-__ •_rso_n_•_•_____ Re erences, hot ...:.~. 4 BR POOL HOME w/bonus evenings & \.\'knds. B•lboi Penln1ul1 151 E 21st c ?¥I tiliti Fenced bade yard. 646-018> nn, loll! of decking. 1 Yr \'~V;i;R;;ilTiiE>iRS"-':.scc:':';l;':u';dod:.-;.,.:'.::'.-;1 * 64&-m * . ~lu~es . drps, c;rpt, u es, FULLY LICENSED BABYSITI'ING in my home lease. S3T3/mo. RED blk fron1 bch. 3 Br. 2 Ba. $35 WEEK & UP VILLA YORBA Janttonal services. Monthly * SPIRITUALisr * ~r age 2 to 4 )'I'S. $25 CARPE.'I' RE ALT 0 RS, 1;',.,.,.lc, pri. patio on Estrada e Slecp;•• n·-ms 2 B r,.OWI NHOUSI E . t 1. S2larti& ~ BR. UI~!!?°"· Newport Be1ch oNll' '"'675:-_,3~ Newport Blvd., Spiritual readings 10 6m-10 wk. CUI-de-sac, 548-2147. ''l' -... .rwu r, 1rep ace. poo, pnva c nQ'. at u...i. • .,..u~v. pm. Advlce on all matters 893-1351. to pool. S350 n10. Yrly lse. e Housekeeping Rooms patios, C?nt1nenta1 break-Refrig.-UTIL. INCL'D * 2. 3, 4 BR apts * NEW OP:FICES 312 N. El Camino Real, San BABYSt'ITING in our home ALONE on lot 1 Br hse, gar. Ad;;::u;,;lts~o:;;n;;'lyc:.· .:;646-;::.,1:;860=·-.,-,, e Ocean View Apts f s d 1,i blk to beach, yearly AIRPORT Clement• . ..on-. m'>L' • ..,. ...,.... ..i ••• a or nights, all ,.,,..... "-. walk to water 2 Br, :'NEWPORT Beach 0 • 11 BALBOA INN e1s1. pacJOUs groun s, near ltiOOO Villa Yorba ~or 673-6370 · ...,_..,......, ""~ ....., .... ~ .. AL"" • ".. shopping & line beach. Fur. (nr SD. Fn.vy of'framp) No lease req'd. full service, PROF. man 50 non-drinker welcome, H.B. 962-72!6, $165. View of fJc«oan 3 Br. $72,500 or lease $550/mo. 105 Matn Street ntsht>d or unfurnished, front I 714/842·9622 1700 WESTCLIFF OR. drps, cpts, music, air cond .. w/qulet habils pleasant WILL babysit for Teacher's $235. A~t. Fee. 536-2575· Spac. Condo 3 Br, pool & 675-87.W $240. Corona de! Mar, -2 BR., 1 & 2 BA. Bltn. ap-all util. Single oUices fron1 personality desiies quarters children. My home. Vle. VERY CLEAN •J BR home 2 rlrpsn .;.,.,1!:,.,~ la<n, $200 dC'p. YEARLY 'I BR adlls no 64~·2611. HARBOUR VILLAGE, Hun· pliances. Pool, 64U274. $125. mo. in boat or house in exchange Baker & Fairview 54()..00«). miles to ocean. Very sharp! 41~· pets 11' 'b~k tO beach or tington Harbour area. only YEARLY. 1 To 4 BR. Ocean-PALISADES CENTER for reasonable du t I es. Carpenter $300/month. Faniily only. 3 BR, l blk to beach. pvt bay,' $235. 675-2079 2 BR Townhouse, l~ ba, rd~t & i a;~n !e:~:: front and others. Call: 2072 S. E. Bristol 962-7Z16. Agent. 546-4141. pool. ~St We11t Nf'wport ad· Cctrona del M•r trplc, nr bch, pool, no Brand nu. Fl-om SOO. 4561 Property House 642-3850 Ne1vport ~ch 557.701~ P"R"O"B"L"EM=,-,.,..,=-gnancy=--. "eo'"'n-. NEW, remodel, 1rame a: 2 BR w/gar. $145. Also 2 dress. $400/MO. l.se. Family children, pets. Yr lease Heil St 962-8838 or 846-507G San Clemente (Can1pus·lrvme lntersecbon) fldent, s y m.p_ at he tie finish, 11tore1, offtces A BR, walk to water, singles only. 493-5768 LRG . Prtv single rm. & ba. $235. 543-3CM3. 557-8717 I,-=...-... · ...-c"-'i--~CC,=,c OCEAN VIEW pregnancy counseUng. Abor-homes etc. Custom work. families. Agt. Fee. 536-2575. * 4 BR, 2BA, 1 yr old POSH w/1.rplc, no cooking. Sl25 BRAND new & beautiful + 1_ BR. carpealtks, drapeks, built· EXCITING NEW APTS Spacious, exec. oflice-in lion & adoptions rel Uc. BI-191801. 96)-1961 CLEAN 3 br, 2 ba, upper in Harbor View home Eve. 675-4048 or 673-1903. view. 2 Br, 1 Ba, beam ceil-!!1~ ~~. S~p~~.-~'!i"ij Ready by Schooltime Union Barut Bldg, Newport APCARE 642-4436 WOODWORK, cabinet g, 4-plex. Bltru, crpt/drps, no Montego model. For lease. VIEW Apt . Large l br furn. ings. Adults only. $350. nto. eve. <213) 596-4557 or (213) 1. 2 3 BR Apts. See at Ce nter w/recpt. area , PREGNANT? Th Ink 1 n g panellne, gen repairs, Duke pets. $190. 847-5384. 644-7348. $225. per mo. ~ Seaview, 673-1658. 592-575.1. · 686 Camino De Los Mare.s phone service, Xerox & part abortion? Know all the facts Da Durka, 646-7598, 84$-9495 3 BR. 2 Ba, children ok, 3 BDRM., family rm, 2 Ba, Call 675--6443. FOR lease-Nu View Apt. 4 WALK TO BE.ACH (Down the St from San rtme secy, Mr. McFarland. rirst! Call LIFE LINE-24 * CARPENTRY * tencd, S260 mo. rent or :1'rd house from PflJ'k & Costa Mesa br. 3 ba, fam rm. All Elect, 1 & 2 BR, Crpt/drps, bit· Clemente Gen'l HO!!pital). 644-9440 hMJ, 541.-6522. BUILD-ALL lease. 842-4827. JP~lay~gro~und~. f$4~25"'·;64~4-::c1124~':;· CI::-::::;::::;:;:;:;:-::;-:;:'.:;"; bltlns, crpts, drps, SrJO. per ins gar 308 16th 536-5086 ~-~1~021~~*~~~-~~ C.D.M. 900, 800, 500 Sq. Ft. LADIES July ~pedal 1 yr * 548-1837 * ** l BR, Jge yard, prage, BLUFFS CONDO y.·/pool. LOW WEEKLY RATES i.:.:'":::•:o· 673-6~_:99'l'.::;;-;;;;--;;;=oc I '205 .15th. 960:1749 From 37 cents. Air cond. membership $5. Ca 11 Carpet Service $110 per month. 5 0 3 Lovely 2 Br, 2 Ba. $465. nio. Executfve Suites * CdM - 2 BR. CRPTS, -*,.-,$"l"4:-9/"M"O~N=T"'Ho'-c*c--priv. parking , 1vill 'Partner' 8 3 6 -1 2 71 Or Alabl.mt!i, 53'&-7983. yr Jge, BKR ~13<1 2080 Newport Blvd. DRPS, STOVE, ADtn."tS. Rental' 11.-aJ redecorate. 2700 E. Coast 548-1479 JOHN'S Carpet A Upholstery EXEC. 4 bdrm., 2 ba .. 3,000 VACANT 3 Br, $225. Also Cost• Mesa NO PETS, $250 month. 2_BR8Agt. ~·~a.ch & S~'f ~~t C.~~e:rs Olvner · A·"u:o~"H'°'o"u=c=s-~A-no_n_ymo--us. Dri Shampoo free Stotch- tq. fL, wallpaper, 3 car gar. Balboa 3 Br, klda/peb ok. 673-2957. tn · · 0 gar. • ea OT, Phone 542-1217 or write gard. Soil Retardanta). S425 1 yr. letu1e. 968-7461 Agt. Fee. 979-84.10. STUD64I02-S26 4 11 1 BR'S OCEAN Blvd. lrg 3 Br. 2 ba. rec. room. 842·3&4S. ORANGE Count.Y Alrpo1·t. 3 P .O.aox-1223. Costa Mesa. Degrel\sert & all color I d ' ., N po t Shor es frplc, vle\\'. $365. Eve. CUTE l·Bdrm., ear p . , Rooms 400 man law firm ha11 interior: I:~~~~~~~~:~ brlghtenera & 10 minute 3 BR, 2 BA, new Y ecora cu. ew r e FREE Lo'nens dr pe,. No t A ·1 bl ---------oUJ-avao'J. Jn ll"W attr. bleach for white c•......,ta:, Nr. the beach. $265. lsc. 3 BR. 2 ba, trplc, 2 patios, • FREE Utilities 675-4048 or 673-1903. ,,.!! Sias Mg:t~: ~ e ROOMS $J:> wk up w/Jrit $30 swle':" for economy'" nUnded l Save your money by Sa';irc 96&-6215 or 962-8851. walk to bch. TeMls en, • Full Kitchen EFFICIENCY for rent · LRG 2 Br 1111 Ba y.•k up apts. Childrn & pet young auorncy. sm mo. Lost nl found \f?)l me extra trip$. Wilt dean Irvine pool, clbtu;e. Leage $350. • Hee.ted Pool ~· $145/month. New carpet. Enci gar,, mature =~~: section. 2376 Newport Blvd., Furn/unturn. Ail scrvice11·1 ~-----;;;;L:ij;;; living rm. dinln& nn .. a 548-2825 aft 5:30. • Laundry Facilities call 556-8790 1 c"":;;;:,'·~548:0-::'9755'=::':::645-:..:;;.0'39677'.=~ l..!a~val!'!:.l...!833-36~~22:..,.==~ II hall $15. Any rm. $7.50, i.... '' ... ..,,,,.. I • TV & m~.ld serv avail. 2 BR. DUPLEX. Reftlg, VE~RpetsY ~5 l,!JOB/Rmo.inJ!42.smll350all LUX. Priv. entr. Ba. & Maid PRES'I'IGE 2 ROO. M Found (frM ads) 550 couch $10. 018.lr $5. 15 yn. 3 Sn.., 1.,.. """· .......... ~ Westm Mter e Phont: Service stove. Lease $275. Mature ...... i;erv. Non smokers. CM, A exp. Is what counts, nol 3 BR., 2 be. ••• •• •• ••••• $375 :.;.;:.;,;.;.:.;.;.:.;;;.;..;.... ____ -=-"'==,,.-.-,=:--1 adults. 64(H)747 complex. No c hi Id re n r,.ig..7197 Exec. ollicl', adj. irportl "l:.C:.:..C.c:c.:.;.;..:.:c..;.:;.;.;_...;.'-' metfiod. I do work myself. 3 BR., ~·ba. ••····•• $390 3 BR 1 BA, newly pnlnled $30 WEEK & UP or pe!s. $140/mo. 837-9517. Hotel. Full glass vew, FOUND black & white Good ret. 531-0101. 4 Bft 2~ baths , ..• $3151400 tnslde and out. Gardener • Studio A I BR Apt11. BACHELOR apt. Sept. 1st, ROOMS S25 & up. Overlook-paneled walls, all util .. un· dalrnation dog \\'lth collar. 2.aR: 2 bP. den, A/C .• $.27!'i lncld. S300 mo. $.100 dep. e 1'V & Maid Service Avail. inc. utilities & gr. $165. Huntington H1rbour ing hnrbor & ocean. 1/2 blk crowded parking. 2 I. 7 2 Vic WilfKln and Rutgers Dr., Ce'!::, CINnl.:r.... 4 BR 2"' ba ••.....•.•• $425 894-8840, e Phone Service -Hld. Pool 70.1~ Acacia Ave. FOR rent or lcaM, brand ocean. 2500 Seaview, CdM. ~ .. o 223 nt, Rm. S, Irvine. Costa Mesa, 548-5678. Floor ire & WI . v•-• H f e Children It Pet Section 2BR T ho Im Guest Home 415 ~ • "ND Sllv•• ~rs•·-f'.1 Fm!. Duteh Malnt. Sen. 5.17-1508 I.Ion-oUusefl urn.. or JIO 2316 Newport Blvd., CM new own use, sw . -FULL SERVICE ,.Recent ~th~,':' .... ""'!ntle. DIBERNARDO and SONS d h.11 "urn. CA548-d _9'.;15,or•r16-00 rentJ .~~"'-~"-~!.~~ ::f .. ~:i:,&k ~~:~":at~~ * PRfVATE room in Sm•ll W11tcllff Building Vic. Oif1A CdM' 'i,;,ach. carpet salea. ln•tallation A Ge-nertl a"""' ,.... Must see to appretlate, call Guest Home. Family at· Cornf'r \Vestclltf DMve & 673-0359. repaln . Free Est. 963-2639 ie I $175 .... ATTRACT Uvely rurn collec1, 213: 322-4421 afl mosphere. Good food. lrvino Blvd., N c w po r ti ~;;;;:;;:;;;::;::;::;::;::;:;:..~~==:;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;;;'1 ~-1 2 BR Qui t I 7pm * 556-1531 * Beach. ~lr. lfot.<ard l . .. 3 BR 2 be. vi Fu .uvn . , c ' ¢ ean. ON TEN ACRES ' CdM • ·• ew, m. PaUo. Garage. Adults, no Le Linuna 8 h VACANCY for elderly lady c645-fil:.:::,~01".===,.-,,,,--l l REALTY A company With Vtlkin µntv. Parle Center, J1'Vtne Call Anytime, 552--7000 omce hours 8 AM IO 8 PM !~. WE HAVE RENTALS May WC: be O( 1oervice tn JiOlving )'.'our how.Ina •letdl? $500 Mo/yearly. pet. OPEN 2'234-A Rutgers Apts. 1urn./unturn. I.Se • eic In lie. Guest honw:. Good OFFICE SUITE·Npt. Finart- Penln. Pt. 3 BR, 2 b8. Unf. Dr CM Ftttplace I prtv. patios. LACUNA estate llvtng on food ter.oed. 64&-3391 cial Center: 4 lg, off'\ee1, rm $3'/S Mo/yearly. suS;mo ' DLX Mob. Rm. Pools Tetinls Contnt'l Bk1st acres ot rna Int a In e d Summer Re-nt1l1 420 SQ rt: beau~. de~r: !!hott Compl turn. fltd pool. 900 Sea Lane, Cdltt 644·26~ 1u1.rdens. Pool .tr spa. Ocean ;.:...;......;......;.....;.....;..;._.....;:.: lea.<ie w/optiOfl;. immediate associated Mature adl!M. No pet. 4 (MacArthur lU' COasf Hwy views. Oote lo beach & TERRIFIC Bay View-2 br, 1 ()(.'CUj){lnC:y: 644·5633. SeaMn'!il, 235fl New po r I • ~hopping. Lee· 2 BR., 2 ha. bn rum apt. Udo Island. DESK spa~ available S.10 518-6332. Costl Mesa apt. w/amenittes. Al!IO, Summer rental or lease. mo. \VIII provide furniture FURN 2 br apt, pool, close to ---'·----~--1 studio l\pt., $~$350 nio.. PhOne 6'f5..4646 at $l mo. Answt.rlna: strv1oe !!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!PI •hoPll, adult.I. No petc. VERY nice 2 BDRM apt, partlaJly furn., incl. ut\L • BALBOA Beach Apt -avallablc. 17875 Bear.h Blvd. Newport Beech From $165. mo. 19 4 l frplc, pvt patJo. $170. nlO. Mature adults. 494-4653 Or Slp1 6, $100/wkiy &: up or Huntlngtoo Beach. 64M321 Pomona, Costa Meaa . 64a.-o739 ,your='-"bro='"'"i-' -,..---~~ $175/mo. 675-MlO; 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB BA OK~RS-"[~LT ORS ~1'1 ~ W ftt1!1>"" 1.I ? l i 11 e BAYSHORES -Interior AITRACT. l"URN. 2 BR. LArae 2 BR, b It n,. Legun.1 Niguel 1980, 912. 7S6 A 540 Sq. Ft. Trader's Paradise lines times dollars Designer Home. 4 BR, 2 Ba, $180. Blt·iM w/w, pool, dishwubtt, adults, no pet"· Condo-New 3 Br, 2 Ba, NE\VPORT bcachfront, sJps Art:tple parking. Uti1. Baum· 1epr, din rm. la~. prlv. adultt, no J)f!t.s. &42-9520. $160. 707 Shallmu, 642-5168. 00 golf crte. $350 mo. 9, wath/dryerJ 40' window, prt'tner, !>11·5032. '-------------------'! beach. Cardener. $550. Yrly AVAIL. now, 2 Bt turn. Pool, J BR unturn. ltoated p<>ol . Call 644-9046 July 28-Aug. 11 83.3-8350. I R I "5 LIKE to traOe '87 Dat5\U\ LGE. C·l propeny, heart ot 1"· Owntr. S48-5l9& rec room, Rood loc. Adult. Utll pd exoept Ua:hts $150. + l BR Oupl. 1lp1 -4. 1 blk Bus n_ess enta -1600 for aQOd dirt or street ctty1 sull for n.\D'Slnt ~ • "SINCE l San Clement• only .~ _!!S<e~·~De~P~·..;54~;~~~· =,,..-,,,-! :M:-:'::11:-•:-:V_e'."'rde""::--::-:--::-: ocean. SlOO per we e k "THE Factor)'" has a Irv: bike. mea. mtr or 40 on, $110.IDI lJ:t W1?1tttn B&nk Bldf, -......... -... I U II I.ARCE 2 BR 11!!01•'0 No OLX 2 • 3 Br. 2 Ba. Encl Augu.'-t. 642-lm •hop •val! $1=/....... ..._ Coll before -4 Pht will subord\nate !Qt;(,, For DUrtlvml.s5J.t=· 1N!~~ .. ,2 :a~opAdul°t.: 2~= t~f!x~:;r·u~i!~~ .j. sk Pets ... Drlvt. b)' 781. W. itor. $16s \IP· Rental Ofe., A.~ .. w0~t ad 1s u good l.l-Cannt.ry vuiagc 4~"i)th s~ . ~1 what havt )IOQf 6~. •Y• '»' $250. "9i-49«. Sec.~· S48-9S48. \Vll!l<'ln, to sec call 673-8193 3095 ~ace 1\ve. HJ..1034. .. ......... '" NB. 673-9606 or ~20. -----.. ---------•••ti I I • • DAILY PILOT ., Monday, AuguJl ll, 197.J ~;;:::~::I--~-]~[~ _1"''*_·•••_l[il]I.__ _., .... _'"""_ID] I •;I ; 1 llll 1 .,,..,... l[il]I '--_1 '1-'"""'_l[(I]L..I ........ _Jm•~Jlll1~1;'~"'~,..,,~,-~]~~· : Swv1«1 Pl bl Help Wanted, M&F 710 .. H I W led M & F 710 um ng Help Wanted, M & F 710Halp Wanted, M & F 710 :;;~:;::::;:;;;::f.~=1 :H~a~l~p=W~e=n~ted~,~Mg&~F~7~1~0 Halp Wented, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 a P en ' -§: 81R,,~., D ~l~;n~.:;,: n .. ~.!.,~!s ~~~~'('.~,.. -Co mmerclel Taller ELECTRONICS GENERAL Offl.,,, Electrical _____.. J~!TOf,,r F'u&,i/:''· N~ Windov.'8. fi'\.--e l"SL heatl'nl, diS)>OM.15, turru1ees, BULLOCKS E • ed Contru.ctors OftiC'<!, ntatun> building. Penn. truploy,' ddtwashn;. 642-6263 11.f/C &. xper11nc WE NEED rel.s, dependable, o \\I II T ;tf Ref11 f't'(f ph 841·9696 9-5. B/A .. Complete Plun1blnG -UNITED--trun:spl)rtlltion 642-3482 _ '• J ' ' ' ~. Concrete Sorv<oo. CALIFORNIA BANK GIRLS-TRAVEL .J: m>, JOBS CIJST'OM Concrete Wock. PLU•ffiING m:PA!R South Coast Plaza YOU Over 18 """' ~Reino•-,,. •• 11 ,1,.,·,,, .. ,, .. ,,. No job too small 6 l\lonnrch Bay Plaia "'-~·' 1 ·-· 1 ••-.. ~i '""' '"' ~· ... ..., * * 642-3128 .. .. South l..a!,:una i 1"'1 o u uw suwa11 . ., ex· w oonctf'lc fiOc r1. Is Now lntervi•wing For 4!JG.l173 VARIAN DATA lco Ci!y & 1najor cltlrit. Liz Reinders Personnel Agency MEN-WOMEN Sklllad-Unsklllad ::!~•·Free 1•ltl . \VulkK, Remodel & Repair Musl be neal & slngle. No ~ Patio.. No JOb too Full & Part• Time Equal Oppo ... Employm· MACHINES """'· ""'~"""'· A 11 ;;jj;;~-~~==;==:·~~-~-1 HOA1E n.epa.Jr & Iteniodeling ~ r ansportatlon furnished. PATIOS, walks. drives. Savo. Vallc-y \\'est l~u1Jd ~faint. Sales Supporti"n11 Pos1"t1"ons COOK -Non-p1uff!ssMlnaL Due to rnpld expansk:ln has '"'2 w~k CXJ)(!nsc pllid 4121 Westerly Place Suite 115 Ell'C. 1'cchnician to $4 hr Tloto Hooter 'l'rne St S380 n10 ~1u!il have own van break. remove & replace • 552-837•1 * ':I l\11~lu1 ... ladies. mt>n or ('OU· ininiedlate Of>enin"s. in training program. F 0 r <nncrete. 548-8008 for est. pie, Every Friday Night. sevt>ral <1rea•: .. appnt. 1or personal in· S I A Housekeeping He1vy Stock Plain Sea Food. ~ d\n. tl'rvic.w Call l\fiss Sandi, Contractor ew ng/ Jter•ti?n1 Kitchen Staff W1itresses ners. Serve l.rom 6-9pzn . •Sr. Tech Wr"rter 1714) 774-8097 JOam to 5p1n, . N ewport Beach rorcnu111 to $950 n10 "''ood lan1inutes Prinl{'<I Circuit ll'ne Turret Lathe Opr Alt II -"2 ss•s Display Trimmer ''our own business in srnall l\iond1ty tht'U Frid a y. JACK e ra on-• ,. Req's digital writina t'X''''"'. Pal'enls wclcon1e at in· Taulal!e1 r c-p ::i I r. Neat, accurate. 20 years l!'Xp. Ne\\1port \Vaterfront club. -..,. ,...._. 1.,,..,,·cw. 833-8190 $2 hr S2.93 hr "'mod, add. uc B-1 260072.. Experienced preferred for all positions Equipped kitchen. Util, & related to mini oomputen & .... ~ u •. Wa Co "'7-"''" 1 d r · h d N n kJIO\Vlcdge of related GIRL FRIDAY Genera.I Ole $450 n1~ uy Y . ,,.. P '){J Television Repair aun ry urnis e . o rent. software. Apply Personnel Office Minimum guarantee. Call Crowing sales offk.-c in • r-.iachine T1·11es $1.&."i hr h'vine Co1nplt>x. Good tigui-e Aj YOU ?O\V 've burned Faclory \l'Ol'kc.rs S2 hr Furniture COLOR TV Repair. exl'.l('rt, At the side of the ne\v store 673-5070 for appnt. rcason!tblc, n1ost in home. COOK needed (or con· • Data Control 11ptilude Lite accurate 1y~ bow,n.. b~ever, Thwed. are Stenographer $600 n10 FURNITURE S 1 r i p 11 in g Free estimale, H.B .. N.B. &. 3333 Bristol, Costa Mesa valescent hospital, apply 340 refinishing, repairs, an· C.M. Bert Gallemore Victoria, Costa f\-1 es a, . · " ac In us1ncss. e ltcC'· '1AN" 0·~1E"• ing .. Salary t~ $600. Call tions to get to our tcni· " .. 1 1 '''"", Gloria Gray :> 4 0 -6 O 5 5 , porary offil.-c (we'll ~n be No Oc1'10si1 .~ No Clerk ~~ Chem-Cle11n \Vest fl6S..27S3. · Enter North Side of Building &12--0387. Tile Apply Monday thru Friday COUPLES to ea.i11 $100 to t.lust bl.' h ii;: h school graduate, pre le ra U l y \v/some data control or production conlrol exper. ~n~'lal Personnel A),"ency. in our beautiful new offices fee Until Placed 2790 Harbol' Blvd, CM on Birth~ arc situated GIRL Friday -Sl.--cty for bet,.,.een Dovt> & Quail, 2 small nursing home in La· blocks Eust of Cnn1pus Dr. guna ofiicc exp & typing in the new Don Koll center, req'd. 40 ht' \\"k, call So. of MacArthur, No. ot APEX Gardening Between 10 am & 12 noon & 2 pm-3 p1n SlOOO per mo, previous CERAM IC 11LE NE\V & business cxpcr. nol nee. MOW & EDGE remodel. Free est. Sn1. jobs Equal Opportunity Employer 675-4846 EXPERT & welcoine. 536-2426, 8:>89 C..'USTODIAN. days [/lin1c 49<-S075 fo<' appt. Bci"ol & nnt •hown on "'"'·" EMPLOYMENT AGENCY • Software DEPENDABLE Top Soll Personnel Dept, Hoag Hosp, Help Yf1ntec:I, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 _N_e_"~·pn_rt_Be_•_d_•· __ _ Ca ll For Prompt, Clerk 2nd ~hirt positon req's data proc'essing expcr. or other relat<.'d clerical eXJX'r, GUARDS n1aps. Call us lt you cant F U find us ..• 833-8190. 1810 " N Bl d Free Estimate. * QUALITY • u & P/tin1c Positions, --... ewporl \' . open in Orange Co., Lo 11 g , . Costu r-.Iesa 645-<1:!20 968-08l2 * ?l·lULCH & TOP SOIL * ~930 * Creativ• G ardening Tree Service "J>ut life in you1· garrlen & a song in your heart." BULLOCKS DAY DISHWASHER • Inspectors Several 2nd shift positions open for in-process ,r, l'eceiving inspectors. Req's recent exper. Beach, Laguna Nigut>I in La. 'I OU AH.E NE F. DE D•l•""'""""""--""'"""""'I gwia & Conipton areas for ~a!J$e \\'C have 37 outstan· qualified applicants ,,·ho de. du~g openuigs all En1ploye1· JR. ACCOUNTANT sire steady c1nployn1cn1. IS Paid fees.. fee . l'ttid. l..cx.:aJ inYcst1nl'.Ut Trfoe and Stump Removal Trin1ming -Spraying Call Dave 675-5435 South Coast Plaza Experienced Y1'S. of age or oldcl'. Apply Cinn needs ind iv Ir! u al in person, 326 So. U-n1on Secretaries -\\lith or \VithOul w/colleg:e degree & l yeur St., Anaheini, behvll !.I arn & sh. For large or small of-e.xper. Salary Cu $.SOO. 1\lso I::x~r. Irishrnan. Cl(•anup, !da1 nt. L ands c aping, Sprinklers inslallcd/rt•J>air. 646-1072. Is Now Interviewing For e Se et 1 pn1. ficcs. Son1e demanding jobs, ~·ec ~~bs. Call J::d \\'ult. Cr ary <\D'I' Sterling Secw·ity &rvicc others quiet. All Avnilablt• ~10-Gtni, C01.1sLal Pc1'SOnlk.'I ' Apply In Person EXPERT JAPANESE GARDENING .__"-_·--·_!ITT] Complete. Gardening Service Job Wanted Male 700 Full & Part-Time Sales Positions Gardf'n Grove office req's :A~ni;;iE~q~u~nli.iiU~ppoiii'·~·~E~n~<p~l~oy~<~l•'I No'''! Also, Bt>ginning Agcnt•y, 27~ l·larbor BlvU .. typing 60, sh 80. 3-5 yrs ex-• Clerks as "'ell as'Execulivf' CM. per. GUARDS &'Crctaries, A Dr a f 1 sl ............................. iil Coinpany benefits include Pcl'son & Social Secretary. KELLY GIRL Free Estimntes 546-0724 ' Television . Furniture health & life insuranoo, 12 days a year vacation, profit sharing & stock options. Full & P /time OUR Ei\lPLOYERS are llS JAPANESE Gardener, ex-EX PERIENCED licensed per .. Cleanups, yard serv. Class J driver nel'd full time ~li!:n ... f. neat. Free cs!. \l'Ol'k -\l'iil drive local or ll't.rvu::>'+ short line, non-union but Carpet/Draperies Women's Shoes General Protection nice as you ary-. so get in Otu' clliltoincrs 1;(1 the skill~ her\'.' toda~! \Viii all of our lhcy n~'\.'tl, nol 111tlal's avaiJ . past apph.can1s plea~ scnd ablt·. \\'11cn you're U1c lead· us 2 copies or their llC\v er 111 1hc 1e1npot·aiy hcl11 Experienced Preferred For AU Positions 16 Fashion Island Newport Beach Bef\\TI 9 & 1.1 am or 3 & 5 pnl EquHI Oppor. Employer MODERN FACILITIES IMMED. Service, Corp. GARDENING -CLEANUP Reasonable Price -Free Est. e :;.1J-2M3 e \1•ill join. 8'16-1677 Job Wanted, Female 702 Comp.11'.'le Lawn & Gardl'.'ning NEED help at hon1e ? \Ve Apply Personnel Office At the side of the ne'v store 3333 Bristol, Costa Mesa OPENINGS \Vork near hon1e in C.M., Ne"'port area. !11ust have car, telephone, good record 8t health. 1'1'sun1es. licl<l you have to t>c ~ood. Marketing Secretary ~~REE $680-ST:iO To dynn1nie hardworking g:C'neral rnana~cr. Phoni>s, 1·epo11s, sonic statistirnl l)'llittf;, •ravel l't'SCl'\•ntions & lots or customer rontact. Con1e in & regi~h·r today in our new olJ1cc Joca!l.'t'.I in 1\'c\\'IJUft lic;.ich by the O.C. ;\11·1.0011. Service _ l'fauling & have aides, nu rs es , CJeanups. 548•0405 ho Us ckprs. companions. l-Iotnemakers U p j o h n , Eh'PERIENCED JapaneS(' 547-6681 Gardener. Maintenance & ~F~U~L~L=~ .. h~..--.-,-Boo-~kk~e-0-pe-,, Cleanup. Call 545-48&1 part·tin1e. Thru financial EXPER. Japanese Gardeni>r. statements. 548--0487. Enter North Side of Building Apply Monday thru Friday Between 10 am & 12 noon & 2 pm-3 pm Equal Opportunity Employer ----- ------------ DEL Taco, Costa r-.Iesa. Days, full or pn11 li1nc. J\l:r. Crl'nsha'"· 11~ Baker s1. C.M. Please Apply In Pl'.'rson Or Contact B. KRAFKA 2122 Michelson D r Irvine Uniforms, Equip. Life Ins & Vac furn See Mr. Barnhill Security Manager At White Front Store • Typists • Secretaries Yard serv. Oi>anups. Relia. Jobs Wanted, M & F 704 & neat. Free est. 642-4389. . Help Wanted M&F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 MOW & Edge. Expert & GOING a"'ay for a \\'hile? I ' DELICATESSEN 1nan. ~1us1 be ncat & n1otivalcd. Sec Terry, f-Ti Tin1c Delieatl'ssen, 495 E. 17th St., Costa ?11esa. DELIVERY Men, per 111 . p/Un1e. Early n1 or n ne.\vspaper deliv to homes in N.B. $200 per 1110 + bonus. Call L.A . Times. &t2-4800. 833-2400, ext 336 ,In Costa Me'a 12-4 pm Monday thru Friday. • Acc:ounting Clerks • Receptionists dependable. Call for prompt Honest, reliable, couple \Viii BOOKKEEPER free est. John, 546-3446. housesit or boatsit for you. ANCIENT Dynainic orange C o u n t y Equal Oppor. En1ployer • Ute Industrial Assemblers Gardening &. t;ean·ups 548--7901 au 6 pm. firn1 nct'ds a bookke..•pe1· 554-0657 Help Wanted M & F 710 MARINER \1'i l!1 full ch~ge manufac· • DELIVERY """ ovm· 2' ELECTRONICS ------'----luring experience. Please General Services ~&--..A..__._ call J\.IN. Hanson at (714) ne('{f~ in ll.B .. l'.V., .ror ?lh1nufactur~r or elt>ctronic I~A Tunes, aut? routi•. 2'!! I cquip111r111 & printed cir cuit Hri;. per n1orn1ng. $200 + boards [11unt'tliute Pl1tccn1;•n1 \\'ilh ui1tng1~ Cuu111 y's '11111 fu·iu~ --w----v--v--828-5151 or send a leller or HOi\tE Repair. All Types in· Ari 5Pi\1 By Appointn1ent Now Accepting resu111e or experience lo Mr. cl~~ 1'.'lec.. plumbing, Proposal \\'riter/BSEE Sl2K Applications: r~or Grcent'. P.O. Box 201, Stan· JX'I' 1110. S~7-897!l · Pfl;lnting, cabinets. shelves. Conslr/Cust Service S12K+ DAY HELP Ion, California, 90680. An DELIVET? Early Morning Immediate Openings Permanent Positions Minor alterations. fixture Control Engineer/BSEE to Equal 0 pp or t un i y t y Tinles &'ti. & Sun only. repair & install. etc, Time & $12 K Employer Employer * 548-4752 * material. F&B Home Sec'y/Stal Typist to $800 BOOKKEEPER to V.'Ork in DENTAL Receptionist. Repair. 642-l<lOJ. PC Bnl Inspector to ST."JO Broiler -Kitchen Travel Cenln'!, 20 hrs a wk. Orthodontic Pr 3 ct 1 c e • ASSEMBLERS HOTEL De k Cl ·ks ExC<'lle.nt ~ne!its, d.ignified SAN Cl..EMENTE AREA Exec. Secretaries to ST:JO \Vork into full time. Xlrrt op-outstanding opportunity ror Paint'g -Plumb'g _ Repairs. Pub. Rel. Sercetary $700 Hours 9 am4 pm portun. 645-5333 qualified person. To $700. J\·lin 6 mo's exper in wiring & soldering of chassis. con- nectors & pl'intcd circuit boa rds. I> l'.I needed, atmosphere Reliable, honest, neat. Good ' KEYPUNCH OPERATOR ~ob~m. s & Apts. 496-5717. Legal Sec'y/General $650 BOO!\:h"EEPER. P""l~•·n<c. Send resunte to Clas.~ificd .....-u;i1r General O!rice $600 Apply In Person "' ' Ad No. 901. Daily Piloc, H I J r. Drafts Person 10 $600 3 pn1·5 pm, Mon·Fri experienced. l\1ature lady P.O. Box 1J60, Costa Mesa, at figures. CR.II r-.lr. Johnson, 494-6574 betwn 8 & Secretary TRANSCHEM 4 Pm To A Bunch Of \\'e llN'd an rxtx•i·icoc..:ed l\eytapt' Otx•r:1tur 10 \\'Ol'k fil'st sh1f1 on our i\loha\\·k cun1pute.r. J<; .... cc 11 en t benefits package. tall for appoi11ln1i.>n1. aul ng Diclaphonc Typist to SSOO 2607 \\'. Coast 1-hvy. \\"/J'('fercnces. 646-5033 Ca. 92626. Replies sttictly RUBBISH Hauling: Yarri , In .... Clain1s Assistant $J75 Nr,vport Beach 646-0201 BOOKKEEPER -20-25 hrs ~cn_n_r._·a_e_nt_in_I_. ____ _ H 0 US EKEEPER/BabysH· Sr. Scientists 3767 Birch, Nc1vport B. ter tlC'eded 7:30 to 4:30,1 gar a g c, warehouse. Order Desk Assistant lo $500 per \\·k. Trail bal, general DENTAL Assis.la n 1 clean-up. Rentovc 1 ....... , R1~ccpt/Typist to $5T:l AUTOJ\-IOTIVE -Brake ,r,. ledger, payroll. 642-9990. ChairsidC', at least 6 nio's near Orange Co. Airport r.1on thru Fri, starting Aug. FREE $7W E I 0 E I /I 27. !\lust enjoy childl'en, . h '-~ '""' · A/P Clerk to •·>23 rront-end n1en -(2l needed. sooc·v~EPER k l' B 84" "''0 s ru.,,,, WISightly trash and CALL ~PISfl flOPK!N•S Xlnl sala'"'• & \VOtkin• con· , ..... 'U;< ' J'IO\vledgc t>Xl'.l('r. .,,. · arl'a. .,....,,..., qua ppor. mp oyer m have car, niature, e.>;p'd, Super 1cchn1c'.ll. You must tw refs req'd. 644-5447 cheerful, t.>r1ght & ~hie to debris of all types. 7 days a 1 '" '-' pegboard systen1 th1'11 1'6. bet\\'Tl. 8-12 ain or :>-8 pn1. v.reek. Fast, reliable. reas. JERRI \\'H ITTE~10RE ditions, ~'32-4426· AIL 6• \Vestsail Corp, 1626 Platen· D ENT AL Ex c e u t i v c Electronic Test Tech l.'OJX' \\'/th<' confus10n or Esper. nee. $3.65 hr HOUSBKE:EPER -Babysit· \\'orking 1y/aJI Phd's. Pe1"SOnrlt'l De1m1·t1nt·nt lil4i~:!(J South Coast Jiau Jing fRYJNE PERSONNEL 6·12-1140· lia Ave, CM 642-8961 secretary, exp in office 67:H>036 ' SER.VICES AVON SAYS c AM p En ~'fanufucturer management. insurance, ac- WestcliU !er needed, 8 to 5 daily, Pf'rsonnl'.'I Agency start Aug. 20th. !\-Just love AVERY PRODUCTS M O VI N G, li nu I i n g, •AGENCY ''Be Your Own Boss'' ne<.'ds exp'd help. Apply 838 counting. Salary o P e n. clean-ups. }(ea 8 0 nab 1 e ~ E. 17th St. (at Irvine) C~T Earn an income of your O\\'ll, \Vest 18th St, Costa Mesa ~2481. 1651 E. Eriinger, S.A.. children. Have ear. Mature, (?11u1·k III Center~ cxp·d, refs req'd. 963·3778 Adm. Secretary Tates. Free est i 111 ates. Suite 274 642·1470 right in yo ur o\vn ncighbor- Col!ege Studenis. ( 714) "'"• ,,, hood. Be an AVON Repr<>-832-7581 -v ·11 se.ntati .. ·,c. Call no\v: 540·70.11. MOVING & haulingl i .............................. B.<\BYSmER in my hotnc, anywhere. Furniture, misc. ASSEMBLERS noor Brookhurst & Victoria. ilems, etc. Bill & Skeeter VARIAN 7:45-4pm, Mon thru Fri. 645-2161 ' 6<IB-6706 --~~------CLE AN UP, Hauling. 1rees. BABYSITTER needed in nly \\"ill help you move 1viUt my A SSE MB LE RS hon1e 5 dys a wk. 8 Hrs a truck. Cheap. Refs . dny. \Vjll pay ""'ell. Must 646-5534. have exp. Art 6. 979-3198. SKIPLOADER & dun1p tnick WANTED B1\RYS£ITER 2 children, work. Concrete, asphalt n1ust have 0\111 lranspo. 111y sawing, breaking. 846-7UO. ho1ne call aft a wk dayi;;, CLEANUPS, remove dirt, • Immediate ~55(;-ffil=.o~'~~-,..~--trees, ivy. drive\vays _grad-BABYSIT l infan!, part ing. 847-2666. Lie. 240182. Openings lin1e. so 1n e house1vork. 1-IAULING. lite moving. • Outstanding ~t5100Sept. 4. NB area. garage & yard cleanups. 548-3129 01' ~l'IS--0405. Opportunities • • BABYSITTER. my LOCAL n1oving & hauling by • I st & 2nd hon1c, .) day \VCek, After 5. student. 1.."""l' truck. Roa•. call: ·~. s ifts • 811-5416 * BaITy. 534-1846 oc 613·0647. h 32 ft. FURNITURE Van for 'BABYSITTER, 3 day week, local furn hauls •"-' ~en'l VARIAN DATA iny ho111c, Irvine, 10 1no haiding. 548-1862, 557-27?.ii. child. Start Sep! 4, 811--0507. Houseclean;ng MACHINES Balboa Bay Club MEN'S SPA lfOUSE OF' CLEAN llns St'vC'r:il ATTENDANT $1.eain Carpet cleaning, 1\in· Openings :ror Need young man over 21. p/t :Wi-&1f floor!;, free CSL Electro Mechanical osnly.Nl l Ai\T-7:30 PM., Sal & Assemblers . un. o ~xp. nee. DEPENDABLE, Ex-p·d L.idy See Prrsonnel mgr. 1\·ill clean by rl;1y On their Jst & 2nd shitls. 6 12'11 W. Coast Hwy., NB 67'.h~l 17 1no's exJ)C'1'. rrq\1ired l~ne BAR i\faid. Queen Bee, 1562 \\'OMAN \\'ishcs dayi; \York. of the follo1vtng art' s: Nevvpor! Blvd, Cosla J\1esa, Good and relillblc. Ref's. Cablring, \vi 1·c1vrar1. solrl r-64&-99iG * 54J·Sl0.'\ * ing or PC board as~n1bly. BE:AUTICIAN. i;nll. lovely, Ironing e 2nd Shill dirfercnUal paid. bu.~y shop ;:idjnc:enl llong '---------• f.xf'Cllcnt llf'ncflts 1-lospital, N.B. Call 846-3678 Pr ofessional lronir>g e Modern facillici; & &12-2371. S1.1u1 lmmrd. * * 645-8873 • * Painting & Paperhang ing P~NG in C.r.t In· trr I cxter. Small j o b .~ '14'Clcomc. 1'"'rcc egt, J im, 979-8186. PROF. "'alloovt>ting stnt1· He .. no. 219314, insur., all types of paper. n4~ 842-4386 No Wasting * WALLPAPER * When you call "Mac" 548-1444 ~es. IN'l'/EXT PAJNTmG Qutllfly Work. Rcuonable Itel's. 61$--0IOO, lln-8186 PAINTING &. PAPERHANGING CAJ..L Al.. 502-837 4 ENGUSll PAIN'l'ER lnll!rior A Exl<rior f.vto.t. 546-7887 Pla1or1r, P•teh, R.,lr • PATOI PLASTERlNG * All lfPN1 F'r8 esHro.11te1 Call~ Plea.<c APl>ly In Pt'NOn Or Contact: J . Fuller VDM 2n2 M lchel1on Dr. Irvine, California 833-2400, ext. 336 F.\'iual Oppor. E1nploycr e Al""!blers • Cross country Drivers e Foremen • M•nagers e Mold.rs • Inspectors e CHI R tpeirmen All l Strlfls \\'e \\'HI Trnln M•cGragor Y echl Corp. 1&11 J>J1t<"rl'llil\, C.~I Beller Tcn1pcu·ru-y PositiOns • • • • Volt Instant Personnel Secretaries Typists Keypunc:h PBX Oprs Ten1porary Sen.1cr 3.~8 Catnpus Or .. Suitt• 106 Newport Beach 546-4741 EquaJ Oppor. Employer Boat Carpenter With Jo~JIX!ritlus C':llpe.T1~nce to wntk on -.17' Trawler type yachts. J'>acl/ic Trawler Corp. 547-6908 Put a l.lllle •·toot" in Your l.Rvl~sell those b..iubtes for "hucks". Call Cluslfied &JM61lf, \ CAR mechanic ,.,. ant I'd . DENTAL Sec \\'anted, xlnt 542-8836 HOUSEKEEPER. live . in FREE $800-$1000 n1ostly domestic, sn1og lie. salary ,t benefits exper. Employment Counselor Babysitt~r ro:. 3~:: yr girl. 1·~ Sales oriented, brains. Must req'd. Contac! Fred San· pr'('ferred, Call 8-5 548-Sf& Due to expan ... ion ot our of· day. Irvinc. ;};)2-7347 travel & negotiate (.'()n- Con.o;u111cr Dlvisi"n 2G20 S, Susan cters. 831-1375 or 493-3.17'5 DENTAL asst. clmir side. fiee \\'l' \Vill train lop career HOUSEKEEPEH. Laguna tracts. CASHIER·EXPER. i\-1ust be csper. Full tin1e oriented person to interview Nigu('l, 2 days a \1·k. Salary. &infa Ana. California !Near Hrii·bor & \Varncr' Equnl opportunity e1n1>loyer 1n/f Sharp gal over 21 .vrs. Malh· inc. 1! day Sa!. NB 640-lJZl & screen applicants ror na· oix•n. 496-(195,S DISHWASHER Hon ally known co. Call Jl'11n H OU SEK EEPER cniutieal!y inclined for a Bl'own. S40-Q15J, c 0 a i;i, 1 a 1 ' /comp. Girl Friday conlcn1porary high fashion I ''lust be near & cll'an. Q\'C'r Personnel ,•g•nc}•, 2 7 9 0 i\1usr drive. No sn1oke, FREE '·om"< •I 0 R ' ·a ,, De I 11 A I 0 f ., ' live-in or OU!, l·LB. 962-512·1. 1 "is i p. es rcq . . penc a 1 e. PP y, -~ur J-Jarhor Blvd, CM 547·7733. & Sirloin, 5930 \V. Coast c.ccc._cc.-=cc.:::c_::'::..---r-.TECHANJC On<' girl -Office. Fashion * Key Entry * CHEMICAL OPRS ··"-"·~y·~·-N_'._B_. _____ ENGINEER Iniport auto .Mc r ha n i c lsl~rnt Good a1ritude ini· -B'EE ,yston--3 _,,., ,,_, s-cr·a1,·,,·,,, 1·n SA AB , poi !uni, no sh. lnHllNI. 'J."":nirnz on 2nd 01. For expanding n> ct a I DJSJ-1\VASHER evt· shift, ~ ~ '• · '""' " · ·~· 1·~ '" --\\I rt hru S New position, Write dl.'tail H.t'n<1utl. Finl, & Al RonlC'(l., .1rd shifls & 11 knd-. in our refinery in Santfl F C' c · t. , un. 8 a h i 11 technic11I prop o s a Is. Santa Ana's newest ln1porr Or~ Co. da!:l l't'lllf•1-. Springs.Chen1is l ry Cor1n.th1nn \aeht Club. 1601 lntcrfa<:c w/mktng Car Specialist. Exec. Secretery background in school or ~bsidc Dr., Cdr.r. Sec Chef f'ngincering & customers. Dick Miller Motors For Attorney Competetive salary past exper. nee. Good co. .::.~'~"~· =====~-J~cpo11 to ehier engine-er. rates benefits. 213/921-7464. DISTRIBUTORS The range is $12-$15,000 120 \\1, \\'arner, Santa ,\na In Land Development Convenient location & CLEAN ING lady v.·antc<l, !i No investment. no franchise Call For Appl 833--8190 Insurance Sales L'f!f::E 1=, ,750 Easy Commute "°'"'h/da-';.'.r5 dal5/\l't"ek.3$2 f('('. Exclusivc part or full Liz Reinders Agency \V.c nn 1 w 1 havc 11 2 11 ope&nding·'bro 1 r ~ ,_..,....,,. Nknd Sht"fl p•em. ~!r r. "ust '"' over J. tin1c territories ::available 1121 \Vcsterty Place agen s o ge 1 e 1sa i I· Excellent skills. a f( s i s 1 _ • . rates '"-' el'('nccs needed. 67?.-2199 tor bondablc, qua I i r i e d Suile 115, NB 833-8190 ty ror a l\ol1dwestem oo "'/escrows. 1.1 ca v y co•·· ~ ull or. 11 1 t1~1c CLERICAL, part tiine help, persons to sell 1vholcsale EXECUTIVES Xln't products & tools l() rcspondent.-c. l:li & 1-\,•y l>1PK' Huntington Bch :1rea. Call unic1ue quality products. i--or $l2,000 lo STS,OOO "·ork with. Also JOO',; JO to 5 wkdays 847-5806 more: inro call! GD A n n nu alizcd comn1ission. COCK~AIL 714:639-5372 or \Vritc 1140 S<>nd re.i;ume 01· call TODAY Con1e in & see our product:-1. Accounts Payeblo CnJJ 111 11 516-60.<iO Fo1· i\ppo!nt1nen1 • \V;titress 'vanled for confidential NO COST B k I F P""I ti·m· Appl" Don th" \V. Collins Ave... Orange. ro ers we come. or appl A Safeguard Busr·ness •u • .... .v " Calif. 9~7 exe<"Uti\•e intervie\v. call Ray Rico Associates, FREE ".-= '"~ S Beachcon1bcr. 3901 E. Paci!-EXECUTIVE SERVICES, i84iii;2-;i9ii389ii ..... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ·~l0iiiiiy~s~lt~m'.""10iiCiiomiiip;iai;n,:yiiii•I ie Coast llwy. D/\~~1;~;nd ~ge~ncy?~~ INC. 10 Key touch & lite typing ti/ &IS N. Ma;n, San<•Ana INSURANCE SALES mu". KEYPUNCH Coco~ ~a6hion .!)6/anJ BUSBOY APPLY In Person 78 Fashion Island Newport Bea ch COMBINATION On'l'er ~k. Tnventory tontrol, ship & Rec, Exper. helprul. Will train energetic p e r s o n . 642-3472 N.B. Commercial Teller J-.:xDCricncrd J>/Ume UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK :lO!) MR\n Slrttt Huntington Be11.1~h 536·881l F.qual Oppor. Emplnyt'r f E. 16th St., S.A. 547-0395 (714) 547-962."i. DRAPERY mlg. n<eds .xp. SWING SHIFT Ol' trainee!!, cuttina, tablin" i--ACTORY Packagers, fen1. , F'I & Codi Cl k M'b .. $2 per hr to start. Meri! No exp nee., earn 1vhile you I e ng er s 6 Mo's actunl \.\'Ol'k CX"''"". on & machine operators. Good raises. 548-Sl2."i learn, part lime, evf.'S & kevpuncli kevi ,,..._,k 1 pay. Holiday & vacation11, wknds, full 1in1e \l'hen quali· Jo"REE $35().-$375 di.SC dcvi~e. ~ rq)C or ey Beach Drapery Setviet!, 900 }"EMALE. to drive Van, f' d \\I . .17th St., CM. pickups & de I iv er y , l-l~r;ncrs lnsw·ancc Croup Start your ca1'Cl·r \\'ilh Pc Appl1y fn The \Van:house work, full tin1c, ' , · out11tanding financial fil'nl r!IOiu11• Dc11U11ment G °' 3 p N k Ed l,.anl * 540-1834 in rashion Isla-". r-.tonday-l"rl. 9um -12 Noo ' :.w an1-m. on smo er. ,,....,,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..1 · ·~ PACIFIC Dr's Assistant interview• 3·5. fl.75 ""' "' MUTUAL to start. Window Designs, It's An E xec Secr•tary 700 Ncwporl Ct>nter or. Young lady flS-28) to nssist 3737 Birch N.B. It's a Prof Assistant) Exec. S.cret•ry New1)()rt l~ch in hcttlth spa. Will train, no .;,;c;.c==;,..;""''-~~-' 1 · $4 PER HR It's SUPER WOMANI To Traasurer rsp. nee ... pp y m """"" • • KEYPUNCH '' .ft 0 2930 \" Con1t' to !he n:•scUl' o( our a Y r eve. '· SALARY Const Hwy., N.B. execulive deal n1aker. lie FREE $650 Top $.$$ 2 OURS needs an c x pc rl en ce d . . /\II sblfl JI 11 DRIVER \Vanted for Ille H PER DAY i;ecrctary to organize his ol· 11Andlc conf1~en1111I dalil , Irvloo !! uva o $t~50 lruck, pref retired or sen1i 'Vork from 10:30 am to 12:30 flee, do his typing, filing, & cJean1ncc desirable. 17802 Sky Park Pn1 dclivcrin"" lunch<' Jo bookk · JI I I A · bu! ,viii con~ld(r othrrs. Ph "' ccp111_e. · e a "° ncef 11 nuhc1n1 5.1.1·2322 ~3280 for appt. bu!'iilnt'si1es nn . ln1elllgrn1 , rc!.Our(.'('ful Sec:reto1ry 1730 \\I. Lil P:irn1a IRVINE -COSTA MESA asiustanl, 1vhn ha~ \\'Orking NEVER A FF.~· AT Tn..mn DRIVERS • EVENINGS NEWPORT AREA kno,vledge of nir1ekcrln•, To Market ing Director • . _. :-; .. :· Y Prr. C k C II -···7 J • d il Tempo Tcrnpora-· Help 1n1e oo -fl .,.;r-o.>f • -Jpm a Y odvt'rtisin~. finant(' real ·~ Cull 642-945.'> * GARDENER * e.stutf', and corporatC law. FREE $6T~$T:>5 KEYPUNCH OPR-EARLY mo.rn . nc\vspaper 8 Bo INo tf:'lephone booth chanae, . . delivery. Must have Cllr. e your own ss cxnctly, but flexibil ity lll a Lots of cui;tomcr rclutions, Fee , Pa.id. Be11uflf\IJ llf!w cf· Pay approx. $2-$22J 1110. Full or p/thne In your niu!lt! 1, G re n 1 ~ncflt~. capa~I~ of c h o o s Ing rl<....,s In 1'~t1.11hlon Island. r-runt. Sch area. g.1?-2.1()() own tU'ta. Hip-I\ income. t'i;peclally if you nrc looking prklr1ucs. Must like people. Muitt ha.vc 6 n1o'J1 recent cx- bi>t. IOani Guarante.d Cu1to11Mr1 tor a per s 011 a I & l>C':r. on 029 & 059. Grea.t 1 No Cash Down profcsi;ional gro\\•th. Call _ benetlls. Also Fee Johll. Cull Electronic Development Earn Nn"'· Pl'lv Later ~7620 Secretary $elly Hart, !',4()-6055, Cotu!'lal · Penonnc>I Agency, 2 7 9 O • Techniclen 968-0812 JUNIOR SALESMAN: industrial Raletlons Ha,tx>c Blvd. CM ~-. 1 & b ·ia ~,-.-.~,,~Off~ lee $450.$So0 Eam $20-$40 Ptr week \vork-FREE $600 LADY bar!ende1 ~ cocktalls 1..1\'!!lgn, 11yout, test ui Ing after .1thool and Satur. exr.;r. fl{'at. •llracr.r•~. ea11' ' MlilJ 1tllte test equipment TV ADVERTL'ilNG d II b 'l'1 " for volc:c waniing 11ystems. '1 FP.t Paid By Eml'leyrr. llYA 8e ing nt'w ltU 8'-P· Learn the ra11einatlng person· be ore 3 PM. 846-9750 I Jl(.•1f11 min. 4 yrs exper. Type ~<"r,11rn1rlv, flgul'!' ao, tlon~ tor lhe DAILY PJUYJ', 1'CI business. LARGE corp. forming new ~me college electronics Lenr11 lhl' excitirnt field of Thl8 111 not n paper route cornmcrctal -lndulll'l81 fn. l delllrl\bfe. TV 1tdvert.liolnJt. Omni:ic Co. and dOC!l not lncludr. de· hrtior design dlvirfon N~ Alrpott area. Al~ Fee Jobs. liver!~ or collectlng. Open. K•ypunch (3) exp designer &: ace•' exeC Matter Specialties J .R. Plercc lnrs In Coirto. Mtsa, Fountain Re11~1iue & • 8. I a r y ,;.. 1640 Monrovia /\lt.~ia.tes A~ncy, Jfl('. Valley 8nd South ~funtington FREE $550--$565 quirements held In RbietCG ' Costa M.sa 1885 NeWIX'lrt, CM 642--6720 Beach. Apply now by caUJna: tlful c:onntlence. \Vrtte., ciauJfied 548-3013, Expcr. on (J29..009. Beau Ad No 504 Daily Pilot PO. EA11UJI Oppt:1r. Ernploycr Dally Ptlot Wsnt Ads have Equnl Oppor. Employ.ir oUleea lncludlng co. gym. Box!l560, Co.ta MC!11a,1c.i bat'lfa\ntc galort, Cla.'isiOed AdM •••••• 64i.6878. ~_,.._. 926:al I " I I· • IL-_L •• _. I t_ffill Dr9ie>••fl l[Il1 !..___ ..... ,_ .. ··__,lfIIJ .__I _ .... _,·-__.l[j}] 11 Helo Wontod, M & fl 71DHolp W.,nct, M & F 710 MACHINISTS' Top pay & liberal wage program. Paid health & denW Insurance. 11 paid holidays a year. Long term security. Royal Industries, a maior manufacturer of nu· clear comJ)O:nents, ts now hiring experienced machinists in th.e following categories. All shifts. Jig Bore Mac:hlnlst Profile Machinist NC Machinist Engine Lathe Machinist Grinder Machinist ID-OD Miiiing Machinist Personnel Department \viii be open for in· ,terviews 8 AM-6 PM Mon-Fri. & 8-noon Sat. Other interviewing times can be arranged, ROYAL INDUSTRIES 2040 E. Dyer Rd., !Redhill & Dyor) S•nt• Ana, C1. 540-3210 An Equal Opportunity Employer PBX ope:rator lor ans~ sen<ice. £\lt111ng work . Steady job, 53&-4881 REAL ESTATE SALES FREE LICENSE TRAINING Famous Real Estate Llce11s0 Ing Course now tav&llable thru Tarbell Realtors. Free Placen\Cut Servlcl'. F'rf'e Tt-alnirig Pro(train. Eurn u·hile )'OU learn. Ql.11 Al Sloan (TI4) &32-54-40. R.E . SALESMAN Investip.te the new approach &: Innovative marketing techniques of TI:IE GAL- LERY OF HOMES. You \Vii i be glad you did; Call 963·5611 for a.ppointment. LICefl.!lcd or unlicensed \Ve \\•JU train. R.E. SALESMEN Why not work 1n the hottesl Beach/Fountaln Valley. Ltt u!'I train you! Call Phil t.1eNamtt, VILLAG E REAL ESTATE, 963-4567 REAL EST A'f~ SALES SUCCESS CAREER New or experienced. Join the World's l..u'iest and fas~st growing resale orga.nlr.atlon with a network of over 300 ottlces and become a member of our Mllllonaln! Club. Multi-million dollar advertialng proeram. Free H•fp W•nted, M & F 710 Help W•nted, M & P 710 ~~~ ~e~~!f~~: LEGAL SEC'Y *•OO MEDICAL transcr:lptionlat· What Is your license worth -.,... front office girl for x·ra.v of· to you! Clteck our monthly Fee i;1a.id. Great spot for flee, In Mission Viejo. bonus program "'hich means lcannng. A!!slst In prepar· 495-4700. sn to you! Please call ing cases. Great profit shar· '""='='"'-="------v· · I J o?z:: AOJl Ing. Also Fee Jobi. Call t.10TOR Route Driver for 1rg1n a ones ~ . Elly Ellis 5.56-85ffi, Control ~ ~l~n ~th~ RED CARPET Career Employment Agen· valid drivers 1icen 1 e . R1•ltor1 oy. 3400 !<vine Blvd., NB REAL ESTATE LIQUOR STORE ~od..::~~~to~H~ SALES MANAGER Clerk Sccley, 642-4321 Resale Office n~ manager APPLY AT Equal Oppor. Employer with 2 years of Real Estate PALISADES LIQUOR NEED an extra income? experience. Newport Beach 21'J72 S.E. Brlslol J>C"rmanent part lime help area. Expanding company. St. (Nr. OC. Airport) needed. Eves. only, incl Excellent opportunity for Newport Beach wknds. Over 18. Male & profesalonal growth. Apply ~tachinist JIG BORER Top man nee®d to do precision aircraft "''Ork on I a r & e • numerically con- trolled SIP. Stead)' day shift .,...orl< in a tine shop. Please apply at: female. Apply Paulo In confidence. Send resume Drive-In Theatre alter 8 to Clasalfled ad no. 638, c/o pn1. Daily Pilot, P. O. Box 1560, NO EXPERIENCE eo.1a Mesa, Calli. 92626. REAL ESTATE NECESSARY YOU'RE TO BLAME TRAINEE POSITION tor not sue"'<dlng with R"'· • NOW OPEN st>ll & Auoclates ReaJ Es· tale. Educat1on by the CX• GB Industries of So. Calif. elusive Russell Method. Sec ha11 Immediate openings for our saJes executive library tntinecs in display, 'th he L. Da '" YARD NEWPORT marketing distribution & "·1 t manaaer Vru at 22311 Broold'IUTb1. l-funt-ll24 W. WARNER c:rMit roercha.ndising. 6 new lngtoo Beach (TI41 962·7787 locations to open in irn- SANTA ANA nledlatc future. Many posl-RECEPTIONIST S4S.71S4 lions J1Q\V open for full Hme Fe<> Paid. Rapidly growin2 1'.:.0u11.I Opportunity Employer pt>1in1ull'nt people. rirm needs your good typing M•chlne ·~ritors * :\'LNT TRAINING PRO. skills & pleasant personality ....,.... GRAM _ to handle the.lr busy front Plastics, opening on 2od & * COh1PANY BENEFITS desk. Salary to $550. Also lrd shift& for exper. opn: & * SOME PART TIME POSI· Fee Jobs. Call Sally Hart. trainees. Clean lite \\"Ork in TIONS ALSO AV AIL.ABLE 540--6055, Coutal Per90nnel SECRETARIES F.qwt.I Oppor. Employer Secr1taries-P /time PART-TIME SECRETARIES Equal Oppor. Employer . . ..... '" Mondt)', Au;usl U , 1973 I~! l[Il] I l~I &\tjjlleJ• •• • - DAILY PILOT 27 PIANOS -ORGANS New 1. Ullt'd. C~al aelecHon. Com,petetive prlcet. Open Eves. 6 Sundays. The best deal~ure l\l"''llYll at: W allichs Music City South Coli.It Plam 540-2830 130 POOL table, &'en u In e Brunswick. 4~-; ic 9. slate, leather pockets, acceuories $750. 540-2971 or 612-1280 TV, R1dio, HiFI, Stereo 136 MORJUS stereo co ns o 1 e w/tumtable AM/FM radk), $50. 960-1127 Mon-Fri 3-T FREE to good home, spayed • fem G Shepherd, 1 ~~ yrs. Good w/chUdrcn 493-7100 FREE kittens-housebroken Adorable and loving. • 501-2594 • LOVABLE 1 yr old oranee male cat. altered, ~ bole trained, 644-0139 aft 6 PM. """' .... em "'w, __ bldg1t· •. ~1 FOR PERSONAL Al:<ncy, 2790 Harbor m..i. SE<:;GIRL FRI. ... prem. ~-• • ~. INTERVIEW CALL: CM TRAINEE TOOL & DIE MAKEiis Oppor. for · advancement. Xln't !linge benefita lo-536-2"1 PTIO IST Smoll growing aggressive TOOL ROOM MACH'S eluding prof.it sharing. A~ Mon & Tues from RECE N sales company needs a Days At swing. Xhrt working 15' Eugenia $15, S gal. Aza- 1 lea or hydrangea $5. Cypress Pets Ml ...... S4, -$4, Cherry $5, 'liiiiiii ply In penon, 10 AM .. 7 PM Day or night. no exp. ne<.'., sharp attractive, young & conditions & over time. Pro-56-0797 • Callfornia JnjecHon easy, fun job. Will train, no aggresslw girl to take over gress.ive die experience re· htolding NurH1 Aides-typing or shorthand. etc. all offiee duties. PhonP.s. quired. , 3i.5 Briggs Avtnuc Orderlies Apply in person a.ny aft or typing, books, etc. Irvine Barry L. Miller Eng. Inc. Costa Mesa Openings all shifts. Good eve. at 2930 \Vest Cst J-lwy., Industrial complex. 17200 Redhill Ave., Irvine Irvine Indu11. Complex starting Wagt"S • xln't bene-N.B. CALIF. COPYING PROD. An Equal Oppty Employer MACHINIST ""· Trainee• .,,.,.,....,, .... ~!!'!!!!!!l!!!!!!!"""!!!!l!!!!!!!~I C•ll Lou Blsbal 97"2333 *TRAINEE * }.1nt opportunity bx man \vith oldtt womeri prd'd. LVN • RECEPITONIST -TYPIST· SEC'Y TO PRES No Experience All-around machine &hop Charge ll·T shift. Relief Wanted for beautiful new Occasionally 1rave1 to Start $315. Recent h.\gh.school background to handle wide LVN • All shifts. Bayvitow Real Estate office In Costa Acapulco. Good skills y.i ll grqd. Type 45-5(1. O>. \YIU variety of wtirk in &mal.I Conv. Hospital 540-5690. Mesa. Ex ce 11 en l Co . land this once in a lifetime train in a varlety of office Mop. Lathe, mtll, surface NURSES. RN & LVN, full or Benefits caJJ 833-1931. " oppor. Call Kay Wing. duties. Orange Co. Airport grindet' &: IOme progressive put time to "'Ork in at· RECEP110NIST-Part time ~. Coa&tal Pen;onnel area. die experience required. Call tni.ctive con v a I es cent recept & assistant i n Agency, 2790 Harbor Bl\•d. J .R. Pierce CTI4l 642-8030. hospitaJ. Good wages & Optometry office. No CX· Cht A~iates Agency, Jne, -730• ' AUTOMATIC Ga.rage Door Opener. Finest Brand. Reg. $200. Special $129. Installed w/5 yr. Guar 893-3577 SONI·Trlnitron Color TV, 12" nu Fi.scher Supergla11 w/Nevada Binding, K-2 Poles $225 64$-3559 2 SINGLE box sprlng1, mat· tresses. Great condltk>n. $45. 138 E 18 CM S4S-44S5 h10VING & STORAGE l...ov.'es t rates in area 96S-4765 Cits 952 PSRSIAN k1ttens, CFA reg., shotir, beautiful long hair, Xlnt. linl'S. Al.so stud ser-' viee. Starting at $75. • 892.-2970. REGISTERED 6 yr POA 1 show mare. English &. I Western, Prof. trained. $250. ~. HIMALAYAN Siamese kit- lens. Sealpolnt. l\1alc & Female. Cal. 892-3117 YAotlNIST-Exper. in pro-beneftts. Call M2-2410 Ask I!,fl~ nttessary, Call SECRETARY 1885 Newport, CM &12-6720 duction & tool makfni. 301 tor Mr. Snyder OI' apply at ~ RECEPTIONIST TRAINEE wanted, injection AIR compressor &: gun, psi. near new SlOO. 673-1658 100 Dogs 854 AW. Dyer Rd., Sanla Ana. .:.1.:.14::5c:5"=pe::elo=r..:A:.:v:.:•::.··.:.N:.:B::·--1 RN -male or fem. Nite shilt. molding machine. Sl.tG hr NURSES.RN's, L V ~' s, Raleigh Hills Hosplta1, Call Exf'C'Utive offices', con.genial start. 1346 South Logan. C~1 .. MAID t.ive-ln \\"1o would 5, ...... ;..,..,. •-_._.,. .......ttton" .,_.,. "-. atmosphere. Typing 70, I twin ~.~ ... 2 ..,... 2 • ·-.,. &Ltlll r-.,.. ~•v• ......... H nd 90 M TY Pl Sf-Lite Secretarial ave ... .,. .,.-. All ...... _. F/tlme. P/time. .:xiv.-.. a . ature. ex· mo'•M~---• "ced--1~-·--~~-. e PUPPY WORLD • ENGLI SH Bull ml:x, Music•l Instruments 122 Chihuahuas, Amer l can . ~ &;A.,_,_ Top sa.lar:l~s. Xln't benefits. ROUTE SALESMEN pcnen ' w11;1 ,....M"ll ......... Housework In .t Br home. Park Lido F1agahip, Conv. retary required. Starting S/H or speed writing ~fust be lmmac. wfrefs. Ct •= Fl hi N 8 salary $750. Excellent fringe helpful. Will do typing. , Delli.red age late 30's l'arly r., """ ags p, • • ti o c lranscribing, swbrd reliel, 40's. 673-<&2 or 642-9650. ,64:,::;2-8044,.:::,~· ~=~~~-Large National Co. is looking z:;,~~~· ~d:f near · · nns1ver phone, var orr ~tAID _ Seacllff l\1otel NURSE'S AIDES -We are tor permanent 11table men. R duties. Growing tinanrial increasing our stat( & need • Excellent starting salary. SEC'Y .. BKKP ol'!;anizntion. loc. In FJJshlon 1661 S. Coast ""''Y, experieneed people A 11 If interested.Call: G~1ing C.osta Mesa Co. Island an.•a. Good oppor, I.ACUNA, 4M-tR92 shifls. Good benefits & 714: n4-0330 needs sharp Gal F'riday for xlnl romp. ben. Applicant M_AIDS NEEDED Y.'Ri<'S. Apply at 14 4 5 ~ ...... ~!!!!!!"'"!!!!!!!!! ... ~ j l i;ir\ office. Bookk~ping. 1nust be anlibitious. E.....:p'd Apply JAMAICA INN Superior Ave., N.B. RUBBISH TRUCK payroll, typing, shorthand. pref. 644--4360 .. 673-3l20 * NURSES·Aides & Orderlies, DRIVERS 642-8080· ~-U-N~D~E~R~W=R~l~T~E~R~ MAINTENANCE MAN all thlfts, mature exper. on. wanlro •No exp. nee. Earn * * SECRETARY -8:30 • Fee Paid. HeA.vy personals ~'or metal rennery In Santa ly. Top salaries. Hlrlng for Class II Llc. & other 12:30 (Mon. thru F'li.) &/or-commercial expcr. in Fe Springs, exper. In plum-present & fall staffing. Park benefits. Apply In penon General clerical duties , agency Insurance co. Must bing, carpentry, masonry. Lido Flagship Conv. Ctr., ~m. Dewey's Rubbish some shorthand. accurate know rating. Top benefits lite clec. &. welding. Hand 406 F1.ag!hip Rd., N.B. Service, 2113 Canyon Dr, t y p Ing. CALL l\1R. including dental & profit tools req'd. Good oppor. 2 OFFICE GIRLS ~~P·~!_~ual Opportunity McNAMEE. 963-4567 sharing. Salary to S725. Al!IO Steady empl. 213: 92l-74&t NEEDED .:::'°"'-='""'-~~----ISFCRET1\RY / Bookkeeper, Fee Jobs. Call I-I c I en MANAGER TRAINEE Radk> tt:lephone dispatch Rusty Pelican FO'l" small Marine oriented l\lason. 540-.fi055. Coaslal Ou"tand.,ng opportunity to ._1 1 be 25 bl 1 drl • Positions open for business. 64()..4520 Personnel Agency, 2 7 9 0 1 I ., us ' a e o ve • Hostes-•n-u-~, Bl·~ C'! Our ._ • Broiler Mil.fl • days " ~· • '' .w. I ' o I ' I 0 ' ' 0 I , 0 0 l ! l !i ... ·~ \ < , .. "'' ~' } I .;:;, - . .... ' . ~ .' . •· MUSI' SEU. Hand made CANDELAS Classical Span. ish Guitar • PERFFL"I' CONDITION -Appraised at S!j().00 -for only SIOO . .,..,Ith Hard Shell Case . l\IJKE• 839--1427 QUILTER AMPLIFIER 6 12" speakers S35CJ. 979-4199 GIBOON Guitar &. amplifier . CoUector's Item $55 • 646-5503 . Office Furniture/ Equip • 824 AD LER Electric 21 Typewriter, New platen, Xlnt cond. 5200. 675-lOll. EXEC swvl chrs Sl5/25 Sec advance to mnnageria pos -App~ In P"l'90n ,,....,. "" SEnVICE Cashier & PBX .... r...., vt.1, 1~ lion ln 30-00 days. cur· YELL W CAB CO relief. Good typiJll. Ac:eurate Underwriter Trainee • • l\1alnt. -dishwasher . days rent managers earn 186 E. 16th, Costa Mesa 2735 West Coast """'· N.B. " painstaking in figuring AAA flnn offers outstanding 9343 Great for can1pu11. country, Piinos/Org•ns $11)00·$1500 mo. Must have -., repair orders. 5 Day, wk oppor. for college graduate. toi\•n -lops pa.nls, skirts! door to door canvassing ex· OF1'"ICE Girl wanted -SALESW0h1AN llHi. Cnll htrs. Brant RI Accounting l.Jnckgt'Ound a SIZES a..16 Go places in th is smartly F ee Onran Lessons ch~ $8124 Desks fm/90 Pierce 867 \V 19 Of 642-3408 826 pcrlcnce. Young aharp k:ioCalirt.. Part Home Ct:nter Sa.Jes, mUJt Johnson & Son Lincoln plus. Salary to $825. Call ,_ --'11'T • .....rr.-:. Sl\Shcd topper wiU1 fashion's r . I~ r.;.-11 Mr. Nev.'l'llan 979-52'lZ time, typ~ ap-have a good eye for color Mercury, al~ llarbor Blvd, fo]d Wolf. 540-0055. Coastal U1f lltM1,,_. Ill"""-favorite sht\WI co 11 a r . f'J"!• 1ttNG. fully cxper. lop poin~2272ewport Beach coordinating. Some exp. In C.M. 54().5630, Penonnel AgellC)', 27901-lar· Crochet in easy shell·stltch As Long As You like! ret req. tee. adUlt com· firm. drapery, carpet sale11. Draw SERVICE Sta. Salesman, bor Blvd. CM. GenUy flowing lines sug· ol knitllng \\o'Orstcd. Pattern Non-players &:: player11 wtl· pl_ex, sal open. 673-030'7 OUT B 0 ARD Motor & comm. 5 dl\Y wk, must P / time. eves/weekend!!. ~ F . gc11t a lul ip shape -even to 7?,06: Misses' Sizes 8-16 in· come 10 ottend Tuesday Mechanic, Exp. 5 day weelc:. v.'Ork wkends:. Call for appt. N-t ap-arance. Apply WAIT e.xpcr. antastic the l(tV(!ly cnrves or the eluded M .. ··-~· ~ds Ne.·-" Mr • -•-Niguel Jolerlo--=a ,.,.. chance for a pro(csslo~al """'kots. No .wai•t sea, m~ _ • ; 'T8 nlght at 7:30 PM. We \van! Marl<etlnr Stt'y $650 Bci;, ~2s~"" · .......... ~•.n, .... morns, 2590 Newport Blvd, ~~s. Grnveyd 11h1.11. ;;h It or not as you wish. st;\ F.?\"TV·Fl\ltr. CF.N everyone to Jeam to play ){eypunch lo $565 -"'""-"-"":..::=~~~~-I~·::'.!:~~=-~~-.,-., CM. Xln t lips. Refs req d. Scndt for each riattern -adr4 25 the .organ! All n1aterinls "p;Sccrctarle11 to $650 PART or full t Im e SALESI.J\DY -Cashier. Art SERVICE Sta. Salesman, 646JJ304 cents lor each pattern for furnished -r-• &c·y $700 Manicurist &: li1lrdreMer & Craft background helpful. !/lime, -·es. I Yr lite . d d Printed Pattern 9 3 4 3: Air Mail and Special Hnndl· Tom 0 .,,,,· n"cb in <h•••c ·--1100 B 1~-I J nd ~-O ·~ •· Brot .. A .... Waitress Nu I ~,,,·,~,.s· Sizes 8, tO, 12 14. 16. in · otherwise th!rd~las!'I · -~8 • Ex-. .,A_,..,..., for a .....,.. s a -. ..... p. ver ·lV· 4"'ron in:rs, m--•. ex-•. Neat a"-" ~ g; Phone "2 2851 ~ •·1• ~·· M ,..__, ·"""'" ''"' ~ Al EY WEST 1 718 d ""1 h fahrl \\'eeks or nwre. Send to COAST MUSIC Eskimo CSpitz), Pit Bulls Greyhound, Bull Tmier, T-cup Poodles, l ta 1 lan Greyhound, Bun Tenier, Cockapoo. 100 ?tf I X E D PUPS! ! Stud Service Mo1t Breedi'I. OPEN E V E S : 531-5027. OBEDIENCE Clasa to start \\led., Aug 29, 7:30 p.m. in the lrvine/NB area. .. ~·1928 ... *M IN IA TURE SCHNAUZERS AKC. 11 \Yttk1, Ch Sitt &: Dam 646-'385 • lRISH Setter P.1ale, 6 mo., shots, hou1e broken, AKC. champ. stock. $85. 49'J.-'537 all .. AFGHAN male, 15 mos. $75, papers & all shoi.. Call 642-9180 or 97$.-S.itt. Aak for Li2. I IRISH Setter Puppy, AKC. ren1ale, pick of the llttrr. Shots. 5~ IRISH SE'I"TERS AKC, 6 WEEKS, Sl!f, * 548-1288 * h11NIATURE Doxles $35, 8 \\."eek~. males • 83()..8284 • 1-tAPPlNESS IS An AKC SlLKY TERRJER Pup M/F, ado-rable 652-9312 Cl::;. ~~;~t;l" $;175 673-7438 1TI4 Newport Blvd. Colli. .. =.-·--. A~~ly mo-· ... :&. Aptly Jn Person Slzr 12 1 busl 34\ ret1ulres de.livery wlll take three -- uw.... 'y, no ah S600 Mesa . ., .,_.., r • ...uviey. Newport Blv ., Costa Meas. ynr s ON-nc e. ··--~ M ......... ··~ 21116 IV 0 ·-I N B Alice Brooks. the DAILY Newport Blvd. at }!arbor 'ExecSecConstr..._...A, ..... 'IYVV y Q L SALESMAN -power SERVICEStatioitAttendent. · ccanu"n· · · SE\'ENTl •PtVI!: CENTS PILOT. 105, Needlecratt CostaMesa j A/Pay Clerk $500 PA R l transmisftm, bearings, tn. full or part time, exp. neat. WANTED: Child Care for for eech pattern .. add 25 Dept., Box 163, Old Chelstl \VURLITZER Stereo Spinet AKC LhMa AJ)80, malfo, 14 I Sec/P'Yt!!_~t~ I: dCou"810ri~•I. w'"r11epp101eL.,.in°"ed"""d Apply in peraon, 300 E. 17th one heA.lthy 7 mo. old girl. cents for each pattern tor StntiOn, New York. N.Y . ........., .. Ex cond ir yr mo•. Miols & lJcenstd-, * Miniature SchnaUttr * Stud Scr'\1« 614-1300 A ~-CLERK Ad St CM your home. 5 day "-·k., 8· Air l\1aU and Speclo.l H&ndl· lOOll . Print Name:, Addreu, ;;id~a..'WatnUt. riiU1ti-:iw.tiC Good hoine. 5a7·9318 I Elec Tech .50-$5.50 hr no. . Dnll,y PUot, P .O. -=co.·-=·=·------4P~f. No 11mokers. Moving tnK : otherwise thlrd.cJass Zip rattem Number 88e'y p/tlme $2.60 hr Box 1560, om. )1esa, Ca. SERVICE Sia. Attend1 ao1t. Into your 11.ret1. Sept. 1. Call delivery will take three • • 72 pef'CUSSion cassette deck. ARC Germ. Shep. poppl~ Bookk"'per l6!lO -~:::M!l:=C...-~-----fUll or p/timc. App Y n ll 1 J -"3689 k ••n<t t NEED L £CRAFT ' ! ;54~1Hl::!!!l84:!..._·~---~-Blk/silvcr. $i10 for fem ., S50 , t.tU!t have experience in con-81 d co cc • -·'Inn-. • wet> • or mora. <ft' o "-~-t. lml" elc. n.. v 0 --' $650 ~rtOn, 3195 1h1rboro v , • __. •1 In •~ DAILY ~~~ • PIANO lo ri 11 for malf'!J $4&-7406 ~ ~u,,. 1tn1ction Industry. Must SALES \VO P.1 EN , asst. WO?\tAN to do 11 gh t 1•fa1·111n .. art • u.., directions, 50c, • Fur ng . up g 1 , ..::::,...:=:.:·::.· .:.:::..:.:=·~- fixtc. Secre1al')' S875 have knowledfe of reportinc manager. Import (; If t O{ houWccepl~ .~ bob)'!olt B PILOT. «2, Pattern Dept., tn11ttinl Mlcramti ltoell:. Xlnt cond. Refurbished, an-Af'CllAN . 3 yrs old. no ' f1le ClM $.1?5 cer11fi!'d ~lt Shops. }'uU &. P/Tinw. SERVICE Sta. Graveyard yr , old + achl. children, 2:t2 \Vrst 18th St, New Baslc, fAncy knots, pat· tlque. $500. 9 6 0 -I 1 2 7 papcnL $30. Sec'y, Ind Rtl Sf1IO lntervle\\'I, Gialleon GU~. Shift 10-7 fltn. Mu.,t be neat ?afwt be reliable. hl\ve own York, N.Y. lOOU. 'Print t('ML't S1 OD l'-'Me;on-;:,;:ni~,;3-;7;,.__,=o-==-Sl6-l6ffi P NEWPI~'!! f!Salary8 -AM. PM South Cout Plal8, 01, B&l·~pttc.' .. ~1ppl)' 3190 Harbor lnuviportatlon. 5 day• orily zN1•1tm·.IZ!-OD_'!_1JSS ....:~'!! Jnft~nt . ciroehet BooJc -• TIME FOR TRISll Sc-UM' $6.,j, Ah"C 12 ' ersonne ,....ncy ours ..., ;.~:;:Ion:;_;. • .!:A,,uo.,._,13:::.., 4-<l;:::o:P!'.!m"---I ~~:.;::;·•:,;::::""·~-=~~-1 S1'.i0-n10. 96Z-9960 aft 6:30 NU~rar.a."" ... .,. 0 ............ Le,,!~ JI~>'-. plcturts! Pit-\\-ks. aft<'r s. 1 W l>owr Dr., N .B. -I Medical Plan, lOO% ..... 14 Siles SHARP Alert Girl for p.m. SE" Moft~ Q u I ck ..... 00 962-7129 1 642-a70 by !ht compaey. .,... TOY A: GIFT PARTIES dlveraltitd office work. WHO WANTS ·m WORK! 1'"a11hions andn.c.chonse one ;eo.l.OO,:....pletet~Jx,01!!~~ QUICK CASH H-.,_--==:..---,~56~1 1' 1,.,..,_...,.,. __ ,...,..I ./ P•ld Vacation ll()f.UIMV!ves demon.t1raton. MacGreaor Yacht Q)rp. ORJVE A CABt p::i.ltern tree from our .., ..... MARKET-Llquor Stora has ./ Vrry Attrective I.ocatlOn earn to ~.ooo by De1::. 1. No um Placentia, C.M. OIOOSE your hours, work Sprlna:-Summtr Catalog. AU .. eoml.00.plt:le Art;h• Boot -THROUGH A 10 YR Old lhoroughbred. 8eVera1 openlnp for xtn·1 .f Excellent Wortd.ng Condi delivery -no collecUon. SliOE Sales. exp. nee. Self for )'OUJ"Hlf, be )'OUr own 1be11! Only SOc. .., Gentle but 11p\rUe<t. Clcptt. Cle rk• w/manarerlal Frte Hosten rift•, riced 1tarttr, lull or put tlnic. hon. Men or women. Can JNSTAN't SEWlNG BOOK 11 iH U)' n.., 11oo1c,,. 50c: rtder, $350.s.>7-5358 Potential. Xln't wor1c:lna Located In Newpof1 'BMch car, &23-54Mi Cllts: 'n Salary + lncenUves + be sltahtly handicapped. sew today, wear tomorrow. ~. • ol 11 rri. At&lrwl1o DAILY PILOT REG. Quarter M1t~, 6 yrs., , condi. D~ or' nlle1. Salary Across From Orange Co. Ga~t1 benefits, pltll.S&nt F a m • N e a t,.ciean Appearance. n. ...,.,. Show pro11pet.'1, La(una. , OtM\n. Apj)lf tn pmon, 3041 A.lrport. -SALES rtprtlW'.':ntatl~ M/F ~~~~oA ~rB. Maro w It :t VS.It, ll't!tittdl. Aat: 251 lo ~· BOOINSTKANT 11~..1!~ I 0 N! QuUt Book t -lP paltetnt. , , .... . . •. . 4!W·3397. e\'tS, 1 S. Briltol, santa Ana. St-nd nt•~uin<" To to sell of Oct 1upplle11 In ~ 1.. •PP emen your ncom..-. -........ ,~" 0 50c WANT AD .::::::::::=.::.:.:::::. _____ , MEOlCAL oUIC4l In Hunt. Cla!l!liflnd Ali no. 931 NeW'j)Ort &och 11re1t. STATJON Altendent 40 hr Drive a c11b 6 hn or~ II fn.shlcin focts. n . ~f;1~1n QV.llt Book t .. APPALOOSA Celdtna. g )'1'I 1 ::.~: ::1~.K1;1, \~:ry <'lo l.laily JliJol ~~";L~l r:s!l~~'r r':lr ~=~y ~i:,~: ~v%~~ ~~iow ~~1b...1~86 ~~h 'l;~;s ~=e;m: ;:1 ~~ ~it1 fllf Toda7'11 fJ'°hll • 642-5678 (~r~StE::ri~ ~ e d' 1 Pllol P.O. Box 1560 Costa eo.: M~~~~ 92626 ~h Stalioncni, l 8 O 7 Station, 3IXX) t a I r v I e w , St., CostA Mt:ll. Pilot Classtfted. 642-5678. 15 beautiful patterns. 50c. 1 Fa~t ttaih• are J'ml a Pbol>e r..Meu, Cat lm26 !l!!l!! ... !!IB.,...,!!!!!l! I Nowport Blvd., Colla J.1esa. Colli. Meii• ".N~•ed:!!..!•!..:':.!'P:!ad~'::C'T!_>'l~ao~"':.!'!!"C!'!!!d~I '·-----------------11 _________ .;•·•:;;llc..•cc"'.;ay,,....;61o.;2-16'!1.:...::=---' I \ \ ') • I I Motor Homes S•lt/Rent .. l~I _..,_ ' ....... - A_uto_•_W_•_•_•..i ____ ,68_ Autos, '~"': 1§1 [ 1§11'--_"''"_""_-_]§!1.:;;' _ ..... ~ .... ;; .. ;;;;;; ____ .,. ....... I 970 AvtM, U... 990 Autos, """' . ' _ ..... 970 A-,,_...,. TOP DATSUN DOLLAR 1973 D'AJSUNS CLASSIC '58 Porsc~e Lifotimc, Superior, Open PAID Ca"'1o!et ~•v. Mint OO<ld. *RENTALS* P9flSCHE Jt().'ld , Landau, Ovet'land & All "OOELS N .. •-t-~· ' •-• 1 Qiarocter boats needed for I ][d;i] Winnebago Moiurbom" IMMEDIATELY M ...Z.,.~-a.,;'~whls'. ~ ~-~"'ull Olaracter Boal y,.._.,,... RECREATION FOR ALL IN STOCK raek, whll'e w/tan Int. .--on Sa ... ....i .... , Aogwit . iiiiiiiii ... ~~ RENT.\!. AND SERVICE BARWICK IMPORTS 673-ia87, evci :&>. 11...,,;.j'j, r <X· tt6 N. Ciara, SA FOREIGN '59 PORSCHE O>upe w/re. dtraordlMcy boats or boots Campers, Sale/ Rent 920 71'1·836-86lS CARS 333~ C:: ~::::::O hit eng.. radiats &: rack. eeontted to thil'I year's ,;,.;.-''---'---'---Winneba go -For Sale 493~ or 831.1375 Inlmac inside & out. $1700. tl>tme. "The swing ing '69 -%T can1per St-c. Air, "l'l Chictton pt1 ply 640-0482 WE ARE IN 67U424 Y~an." Contacl Newpon R/H. Lo 1ni, sl ps 4, loaded '71240.Z1 owner, nu radials, l:larbor Oiamber of Com· $3600. 557 Plun1er, CM Trailers, Trave1 945 DESPERATE NEED mags, am/lm stereo tape, '71 PORSCHE 914. l'nerc:t at 644-821.l or ~546-.:,;,-5632;;;;';--=:=-;;::::--:;c:;:-.67 N 1 MR OD T.-.,1. OF GOOD, CLEAN auto, air lo mi. $3650. Black/black, ~~st d1'>p b ••-ff t 270 " ~· S 642-3392/STa-3008. sell. Call aft 5 pm 9·~•o 'Y u..: o 1ce 8. 8' SHELL, cra"'l thru, sink, TRAILER Good cond. litany FOREIGN CAR Newport Center Drive in the let'! box \vatcr & stove $300. extra'I. Asking $800. :>18--1822 TOP DOLLAR-PAID '62 PORSCHE S. Reblt ena. & I>esJan Plaia. A fun ex· ~ ' FOR OR NOTI FIAT trans. Super clean car. perience _and 'a communityl-"c=="c· ~~---~. ~~~~~~~:~~ j Maw extras. 646-8559 seMce tor a ll \Vh o FIBERGLASS camper shell r Call or t'Ome in to see us. .70 FIAT U4 Sport Spyder ..:::=c..::==='-""'--- particlpate. for '68 Hu-u '72 El Camino, l§J ronver t.lbl.e 5 spd, 1st owner, TOYOTA 26' 1968 Chris Cutlass, xlnl Like new $8.i 673--IG58 Autos for~· ~ good L'Ond. 54o--0685 oond., retldy to go, excep. c._3y~cl~•;•·~B;i~k•:•:_ __ E~ !~~~~~~~~~: '69 FIAT 124 Spyder con· buy. RhOdes t-.1o!orsailC't'46 ' _Scooters 925 vertible, Al\f/FM, mag TOYOTAS 1972 fiberglass \viHt every C CLE SALE * Auto Service, Parts 949 wheels,;, speed. 493-4789. conceivable extra, pract. * Bl Y 310f' \V. CooSt H"'Y·, N.B. FIAT 850 Coupe 1967. Needs ,:oR new must see. 47' 1967 Chris NE\V 10 SPEED ITALIAN 3 Joguar \Vire \Vheels ~764_2~·~940~5-=-,,--I clutch & brakes: MAKE IMMEDIATE Conunander M.Y. all extras BICYCLES $59.95. Be1H'h $100. for all --: <7 f 7 tncl. radar, :rr.:lnt cond. priced Bicycles, 806 E. Balboa 642-6878 Honolulu Auto Dealer OFFER! 548-4l at pm. DELIVERY to sell. 1 of kind diesel Brit-Blvd., 675'-7282. Authorized 953 Desperately Needs Used '73 FIAT, Spider, Model 124, M.X ish Dory x.Jnt oond. $3.500. NISHIKJ deale1'. Antiques/Classics Cars 9,000 mi. Orig owner $3910. m LUX YACHTING ASSOC. 1970 SL 350 Honda motorcy-1931 FORD 4 dr sedan, black All Makes 492-4244 CELICA 2.105 W. Coast l·il1'Y. N.B. cle. Needs slight gear box w/ycllow pln str ipe, All Models CORONA (7141 646-0j.51 work & tune up, lo mileage. recently rcblt n1 0 t 0 r , Receive Higher Than JAGUAR LAND CRUISER * BOAT WAXING * Far out bike. $300 but \Viii hydrolic brks. vi nyl int. Mainland Prices ~-WC. · t••,.:I Exp: qual. materials used. talk. Call 645-2659 Xlnt 001\U, lUUSI sell. $2795. * 645-0281 * '72 Jaguar Xl-6 WllO Polish & wax. Eve6, phone 73 HUSQV1\RNA 125 ~o_,_m_a_k_e7o_ff_e~r_64_~_"5_ .. _2_. __ , ---;;c;;:;;o:-:;:~;;o0-I 979-1451 CRMX. 125 '73 Yamaha Recreational TOP CASH TOYOTA 13, BOSfON \\'haler, 40 hp MX, Leaving area. ~1ust Vehicles 956 for clean late model cars only 10,200 n1~cs, Air Cond, II M k ff 670 ~"" k 1 Powet· Steering, Po \v e r 1966 If bo C 'I ,,,9303 Johnson, American Trlr. sc . a .e o er, ,,.-,;uvv. ancl true s. \.'"indoivs, Stereo. \vhite \vith ar r, .i• • .,...,... XJnt cond. $9H5. or best of-'71 HONDA ct. 350. Looks DUNE BUGGY Howard Chevrolet Beige interior, Immaculate WE BUY fer, 675-5475. like new. Needs clutch, Tube fr.inu• i\'lacArlhur and J antborec cond. 1 5 ';ii , F 1 8 ERG LA s s plate. Must sell,: $475 or f'l'csh Corvair Nc,vport Beach $7895 runabout. Big wheel, Hit trade for truck. 556-0276 Nc\1' sand lircs S33-05a5 USED back trlr, 75 Johnson motor. WANTED, Mini or super i\'iu.'>t sell $500. $595. or best offer. 96.>-2963 mini motorcycle. Also mini 675-6910 After 4:30 pn1, Bob PRIVATE party '71).'72 Ford safpet ed6. pmway cycle, 551-2833 19n JEEPSTER Commando Econoline van, Shorty. Must TOYOTAS Boats/Marine A-1 cond, Warn Hubs, be in top ('Qndil'ion. 642-3490 Equip. 904 '70 HONDA CL 175. Good Michelin radials, a I u nl • .;an=.ytc:jc:m:::';-· .,,,:c:;c::.--,,., • NEWPORT ' IMPORTS ---'-'-------Condition $..'100 or Best of. mags, rear tire racks, 500 lb Autos, ·tmported 970 6-71 WITH 64 HN 4 gear box. fer. Byron 557-7266 capacity luggage rack, driv· Good oond. $1800. =-.72~Y"A°"MAH""'~A~E'""°'duro-°"2SO"'"° ing lites. $3200. 675-J20<1 AUDI 3100 W. 640>2~l!!wy5 ., N.B. BUDA DA -$350. ---------~ Marine SUrplus Com"'<'lny like new -$6~ Trucks 962 -1---~~=ccc---r * o,o '""' * '72 AUDI, 1\'hile, Orig. ovm, MAZDA 3307 So. Main, Santa Ana .,..,,....""-"N 545-(;551 '67 TRIUMPH ch 0 PP e r , air, radio, beaut. cond, r.tust -----------~===---='-"I · er hn-·' tail many 71 SPORTS CUSTOM sell. $2950. 494-3278 *Mazda 173 Rotary. * Boall, Power 906 spring · <Uu • F oo s extras. $1000. • . 54>-1708 ·I uper sharp. 4 spd. AUSTIN HEALEY $66 MONTH _ '71 SIDEWINDER, 85 HP DIRT bike 1971 Yamaha 125 rad & heat. New 12 x 16.5 36 li10NTHS OPEN LEASE Out-Board Chrysler, gold .~ just ovrhijuled, per(ect. $375 tires plus orig tires & rims '64 A-Healy, xlnt cond., FM, 'Viii accept trade·ins bronze. Xlnt oond. $2400. 646-1724 * 892·1832 * \Vires, J\<Iichelins O'drive, CALL MR. FRY 842·6666 646-6032. 2212 College No. 1,1,250c""-,~B'"u"'u-... ~Pu°""r.,.sa-.-•. """'19'-'70 ~~~'!"'""'""'~""'""'I lug r~ck, new top, 552-73G6 Hunt Beach C.M. $400. Ph: 6444498 after DODGE 1963, 4 spd, no spin monnngs. • J h difierential, R/H, 6 cyl, MW 16' BOAT ll hp. 0 nson. ,;5::.P"M".==,,.-..,-=:7"= runs l\'Cil. S475. 495-52::>9 B Bll:-in b!!it tank -tilt '64 TRIUMPH gd. cond, runs \Veekdays. 496-2865 eves & MAZDA trader, $450. 548-8174 gel. $700. or bst ofr. 642--8196. \Vknds. LEASE A 1973 21' ~CTER BOAT Bay '71 HONDA 450. Xlnt oond. '68 CHEVY 6 * 1'2 ton BAVARIA favorite. Many xtras. Call $650. or best offer. Helmets, custom cab, 3 sp d. 833-1445 Best offer. 642-2661 eves $1350/bcst offer. 556--0567 CHRISC'RAFT 27', 10' beam, YA'IAHA 1972 17-Dirt' l alt 5pm ·wkdays .,...,o s lean. :r.tany " . ;> • se -"~~='="~--~-uoo. uper c up, custom paint Job. Ex-1969 FORD Van. as is, xtras. 673-8583· cellent condition. $1495/Best offer. 21' LYMAN. Recently haul-:>1(}-8308 * 963-2839 * eel, painted, varnished. X!nt '69 BULTACO 1\'L'\ Ready. * 1967 FORD %, ton pick-up, cond. 64&-4131 Rcblt engine, never used. Camper Special, a uto. $1300. 25' TROJAN '67 only 170 Xtras. 536-&187 * 644-4119 * hours, galley, ·head. xlnl * 19n Honda 500. Chopped. "•72 ___ B_LA_Z_E_R-.-,-w7h-ce~l-d~r~iv-,, cond, &1849 Really clean. $1000. xlnt cone!. All hvy tluty. BOSTON Whaler, 13', 40 HP· * 545-4708 * S.1395. 552-9551 Evi.nrude, xlnt rond. $lOOJ. '69 HONDA 350 CB street. '62 CHEV. P.U. Good cond. '* ~14 * 8 Loaded. 2,600 miles. Immac. Good tires. $550. Boats, Rent/Chart'r 90 $395. 673--87ti0 * 544-3417 * , CH '70 NORTON 750ce bike in * 1967 c• 100 Foro p1'ckup CHARTER 57 KET good shape. M"•t ""quick· .. -' .... white, good condition. $900. ''TIOGA'' ly $650. (TI4l 962-2739. can &14-4814 Coas~I & Offshore lslarid '70 CL 350 Honda, gpod cond. cV_a_n-,------~9~6~3 Cnns1ng. Xlnt rates .. Daily lifust sell immed. $350. firm, ---------- or Weekly. Chet . Sahsbtll'Y 4~15 Tom '73 CHEVY Van. ~4 ion, 1akC' II. 675-8344 or Tioga, Box • . 316 Balboa Jsland. ·72 HOND.A 750. K2, hkc over lease. Lo n1i, good • 909 ne1v lo mi. $1400. or best of-eond. 968-B669 Boats, Sail fer. 642-0576 '67 FORD Van. Ne\\· tires ,'\:. =-'===~==~RANGER 26, like neiv, 3 ·~ HONDA SL 350 K2. Il~ov-1nags. Xlnt cond. t-.1ust sell, bags North sails, R.D.F. 1ng.:. n1ust sell, 4,400 n11les, $6.10. or orter. 557--0757. cbmpass, Chrysler 12.9 O.B. $725. 64.2--8363 DODGE '67 Sportsn1an Van, Fully equipped · $8500. Motor HonM• Hvy duty, v.s. 38,000 nii. 6421079 Impeccable. · Sale/Rent 940 Beaut, custom int. 494-6908. RH~O~D;;E~S~33'f'.cio1f:.,:;:,;;ic;:--r;:;a;;,;;;n;;;g l-~~~'.'.!,'.---_:;:::'. I 'G9 FORD, \vindo,vs. stan· champion "HANAHULI." e SALl:S • dard shift, xlnt niileagc. Top condition. ~-Ph: e SERVICE e Sl5001best offer. ~16--4027 6'13>-1232. HOBIE CAT 14. Many extras Great shape. Priced to sell. 493-5195. ISLANDER 24. Fiberglass, race & cruise, OB, $3000. Call 644--0209. e RENTALS e EXPLORER o, HUNTINGTON BEACH lilBOI fl!A(H l!LV[' s.l1 8803 HUNTINGION BEACH 23' SLOOP, wood. hull. 2 sails, o/b, head, sink. $1150 ===""::""'~;=== or bst otfr . (714) 526-2479. GMC 18' UNICORN Catamaran Motorhomes Trophy class, fast, trailer. 23• & 26' Chen')' r.ond. 640-1402. I~'i~tEDlATE DELIVERY * 24' YA\VL, Gaff rigged, Orange Co.'s dacrons. redar hull, 25 hp "Exclusive i)ealer ·71 FORD Van. Shor1 1vheel base. Paneled, carpelcd, stcro, lo n1i. Xlnt condition. Eves 714: 846-1492 Auto Leasing LEASE '7•1's at '73 prices. All makes & models. Cars available unlil ne\\' 'j.I delivery. Order now & S<1ve. CALL 963-2457 Autos Wanted 968 We Buy Used BMW's Top Dollar Paid CREVIER BMW Sales -Service -Leasing 20S \V. 1st St .. Santa Ana 835-3171 ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST G SALES-SERVICE-LEASING OVERSEAS DE.LIVERY' ROY CARVER, Inc. Z:4 E. 17th St. Costa !\1esa ~S-4441 173.11 Beach Bl. 8<12·6636 BOB LONGPRE MAZDA -SERVICE FIRST- l st S1reet at the Santa Ana f'1"11)'. 2001 E. 1st Street Santa Ana 558-7871 TRADE R.X-2, 1972 li11:1zda, ~1int cond. for Toyota Land Cruiser, similar shape Eves. 497-2670 Laguna. MERCEDES BENZ 50 USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY Sharp New Car LEASE: A '73 BAVARIA Trade.ins D<'mo _ Serial #3132993 Coming In Every Day for $166.41 per month Ask About Our Unique OEL 01· buy tor $8.299. Used Mercedes Ltase Bob Mclaren, BMW, Plans (714/~~9-5624 House of Imports ...... ~~~::;:"'!'";"::':'i::;";'l6862 Manchester, Buena Park .-&_" BM\V lliOO. nc\v paint & un the Santa Ana Frwy radials, Al\1ff'M, engine 523-72":JO '""'" '""' bcautilully. Scon JIM SLEMONS to he a classic $1800. 673-1005 IMPORTS '68 BMIV t002. Red , MERCEDES BENZ Al\1/FM, mags. tape deck, AUTHORIZED $2000. ~2850 days 642-9194 SALES & SERVICE eves. Jim Slemons CAPRI Imports 1301 Quail Newport Beach • 833.9300 Ei\TER FROM MacARTHUR NOW OWN THE MERCEDES '71SEL31J0.<.3, FABULOUS 1973 less than 1500 miles. Beige ALL 1973 MODELS IN STOCK ~lll.in1111,; lllriti11~. IOO\l~J.l.:i.111 '.\I~ I~,, . ' ' ' . WE'RE MOVING '70 Toyol• 4 Dr. Real Sharp, '-uio Trans., radio, Air Cond. $1599 NE\Orof<f DATSUN 100) W. Coast H\\'Y .• Newport Beach ~ Open Sunday \VANTED -Clean Toyota Corona \\•/blown eng, have rocked Toyota \V I g o o d engine. Object matrimony. + Spare pans. 847~11 '69 TOY OT A Crown wagon. Auto., xlnt cond. ?.'loving East. Sae. $1,0z:i. 847-1154 '69 TOYOTA Corona, 2 dr, radio, f spd,, ~ cond. Lo mileage.~ VOLKSWAGEN '69 V.W. Fastbaek. Auto .. disc front brks. Must sell. $800. 544.3417. '68 VW Converliblt • 64&-9247 • '68 V\V Bus. Xlnt coud. Radio, $1100. 644-4709 '63 vw Baja Bug, $400 or best offer. 1621 Indus., San· ta Ana Heights 546-6068 V\V '61 VAN ••.•.••••••• "5() Bed & good engine. * 673-4285 * '66 BUG. Front end smashed. Int. a mess! Runs good. Good dune buggy material. $200 or ofier. ~5 '68 VW BUG, Blue, AM/FM radio, heater. good con- dition. $825. 548-1547 '67 VW Van. Perfect engine & trans. Nu tires, fm 8 trk, $880. 536-4313. vw '69 11095 '65 Vl.V Baja Call 646-2022, 548-7482 '6.1 V\V Bu~. New brakes, nf!\\'ly rebuilt tinglne. $595. 220 30tH st. N.B. VOL,YO EtONOMY " SAfETY PLUS S•ving1 a Comfort In Our Remaining 35 NEW V()j,VOS lmmtdl•tt DtllYtry ' ~w. lf.llli& .. YDLYO CHEVROl,£1' FORD '66 atEV\r Im.pala 4 dr, '72 MAVERICK couPe, A ,)' brdtp, • -Jtea) nlce .. burryl Trans., Power--Slee • '$000. Good deal. 1 ! A : radio, . hc•tor 250 CU ~3 ECONOMY 6 cy~I engine, '67 CHEVY' % dr ltnf>ala. kM m1lea. A REAL CA Sharp. Nu tires, p/s, p}b, SAVER AT JI ldlLF.$ PE& I Orig ncr ~ -Go:;A;;l:'::;O"'N,C'Pri:..:.::·..:P_,ty":. ::.84;:,7·.::::;;::;:i auo .• ow. , 11050. · Good Tran•porlation · '67 atEV Impala Sta.Uon '60 FORD 4 dr, V8, auto, • wagon,. A·l cond lnside &: great 2nd car, $251). or w~ oot. ?.Take oUer. 496-0108 trade for furinture or 1 1970 CHEV Impala, 2 dr ---*~·0j.'l-300~-1-*---r hrdtop, good cond, must sell JEEP this week, $1380. 837-9".>21 '70 RED Malibu. Sharp '88 V 'power, This \\'eek, Sac. JEEP Wagonecr, ' ''°=/o"er or deal 6\12--5969. auto, PS, PB, R/H, air, .....-. u ' Low mi, extras, $2700 ' '58 O·IEVY, .283 eng, Runs. 4~2367 aft 5 wkd,ati:. 1966 Harbor, C.Af. 646·9303 $75, or offer 1009 Arbor '64 RECONDITIONED mil: Autos, UMCI 990 cC:'.!':CM::: .. ~646-59~;;;10:o;::c;-;;:;;;--Jeep. Vinyl Sf!ats ~ to&,. ----------CHRYkLER CJ'ptd, recent overhaul BUICK "' 551-5333 ---'73 'REGAL BlllCK tor lease by LeaSc Company Executive. $120 PER MO. 0. E. to approved credit. c.11 963-2457 '72 EXT, Wgn, 9 pass. Cust. int, wood grain, air, P/S, P/B, lug rack hvy duty shocks & trlr hitch. AM,' tape deck, tilt wheel. $4600. Orig, $7500. 644-4466. '66 RIVIERA. Full power. litetallic gray. Exceptionally clean! !Aw mileage $1300. 640--0949. 3429 Seabreeze Ln, Cdlil MUsr sell, '69 Bu l ck LeSabre. Very good co~ dition. Runs well. Best of· fer. 842--0528 '68 BUICK Skylark. .One 0\.\11er. 24,000 mi. Like new! $1595. 3'J4 E. 20th, No. 1, ~I 548-1618. '71 ELECTRA, 4 door, \vbite top, & bro~vn. · n1ost xtras, $3!01 644--0962 CADILLAC EL .DORADOS 14 TO CHOOSE COUPES.CONVERTIBLES • DE VILLES 31 TO CHOOSE COUPES SEDANS CONVERTIBLES Pi.fany excellent colors Oloice of interiors' (Cloth & leather) Factory air concUtloning Full power. Choice o{: Stereo Al\t/FM rfldio Cruise rontrol Trunk opener&: more AU in immaculate \JOndition Largest selecUon in Orange County , Chance of a Lffe•Time '70 JEEP Comm and o, Mvst Sell \\'agon, V--6, xlnt eond. to 70 CUSTOM Chryfler 300 miles, $2600. 963-1613 "Hunt" 2 yr&/12,000 mi. MAVERICK remain on \vatranty. Only ----------1 2 in this area. Superior cond. Best offer. Li, No 195BEQ·. Owner 536--4680 CONTINEN'l'.AL. '72 MAVERICK couj)e, Auto Trana., J><n\.'er Steering, radio, heater 250 CU In ECONOfltY 6 cyl engine, ·Jow miles. A REAL· GAS SAVER AT 18 MILES PER GAULIN. prl. pty. 847-3095. MERCURY COLON\' Park '6.1 station wgn, all pm\'~r. ~at shape. !late to sell but leaving state $350. 642-5219 MERC '72 Col. PK. g..pass, all pwr, A/C, $3000. Pr\ pty. 714 : 558-1185 1964 Mere. Runs• good. Xlnt trans. PIS, P!'B. Best offer over $75. 557·9.194. MUST4NG LINCOLN CONTININTAL '70 ltfUSTANG Mach II 49,000 NOW'1' Tlil TIMI! mi. Body In good shape. y .. ,....,. st• .... l'•llt•stlc ,,. Mech. goQC!. A M IF M "11••11'-. ,Cht .... nr )'9V¥• stereo, Power st e er i n g • cir .. ...-aMut •Wlllnt .... .,. Power front disc brka. Call: tt1111, Ctll'lfwt•..... Chia.it. -<:AC ........... Ben "AU; ftr H.,-M ..... lt." 645-7015, ........-vwo - 540·5630 ·59 Ml'S'.i'4.l'l0 Grande. All JOHNSON & SON e x 1 r a s ~rl!.)'lf/W'lwN1• L incaln .. Mercu'l vin. top. Michelin tires, 2626 Haf'bor Blv ., Priced under book at $200). Cost• Mesa See-a t 17021 Westport Dr., . ..,,.....,==--c"'°"cc--:o;--I llntg. Harbor, 846-5659. '"73 CONT. 4 Dr. '·Town '69 MARK r1· 351 auto, Car.'' Every conceivable am/fm 5tereo, custom tape, extra. Only 6,600 m i · many extras. MS-2699 A B S 0 L U T E L Y I 1\1· ,67 '!USTANG, 2 dr hrdlp, MACULATE! Blue Book •• $7.235. \Viii sacrifice for a/cond, p/1, p/b. $995. be1 $6,295. Can,.finance s:;, 775. .!_pm or aft 6 pm. ~48. Pnv. pty. -'65 MUSTANG 552-1000 or 828--43.i2 DODGE '69 DODGE ~-custon1 in- terior, steroOtCassctl, \1-8. AfuSt ·seu •. 497-1667 VS, radio, $450. Call 67S--O'l'OO OLDSMOBILE 1956 Dodge. ~· door V8. Ex· celJent. ~ original mi. ~--Nabers caclillac A~O=~w.: '68 OODGE!(Polan., xlnt OOSI'A MESA oond, low ml, $1095. Salc&'tt Se~ce OLDSMOBl~E GMC.TRUCKS HONDA CARS UNIJIRsm: OLDS 2850 llllrbor llMI. 540-9100 Open Sunday ---.*:=:586;a;;;;;, :-;llXi;,;*,---·n CAOJILAC Se d a n de FIREllRD Ville. Mu•l be sold al a ----..:.·--- sacrlfiC'C. Hn.s been lovingly 1972 FIR.EBJRD Esprit. ale, cared for by one owner auto ttans,'l clean. owner since birth ~ 16,0CX> must aell, aft 6:00, 673-7403 mile•. Call 64&-7227 !or FORP details. 2-'67 CAD. Coupe DeVilles. Very Clean. Call 675-7102 '65 CAD. Sedan DeVilte. Sliver w/blk vinyl top. Loaded $1175. 979-5716 CA MARO 19TJ GRAN Torino 'vagon, 4200 miles, fa.qt. wmty, air, rack. P/S, P/B, tinted, bronze, bnmac. Custom in- terior. Sac. S391Ei. Pvt pty. Costa Mesa 540-9840 '66 OLDS FIS gd rond, S475. 962-9832 PINTO '73 PINTO Squire, Executive lease ear, small depo1lt & take over to qualified..party. Call 963-2457 '73 PINTO Runabout, air 4 speed, lrg. eng. 10,0C» mi. Loaded! $2695. 545--3215 P.LYMOUTH Eves, ~3667, day 642-7474 ---------1 1970 FORD Cortina 1600. 4 '70 PL YAIOUTH Du s,t er , speed, R&H mags, wide xln't cond. Great economy '70 CAMARO Rallye Sport. tires, headers, etc. New car. Auto. Rad, P/a. p/b Orig owner. lmmac! P/s, clutch. brakes, etc. l!Just a/c. 548--2492 or 645-&05. P/b, air, bucket aealll, "'"' .. u. 546-9187 alter 6. PONTIAC sole, auto, radio, vinyl top, 'Tl LTD 4 Or. Hardtop. Full tinted glau. Pri. pty. power. &lied tireo. 26.000 LliASI! 011 IUY 831-1300 miles. ·Must see to ap. •n thru •73 Pontiacs '69 CMIARO. rlh. stereo, predate! Priv party. ?.take DAVE ROSS rea1 ""°" conc1. 11650. a nu -~o"'°u'°"er°". "'~~~=,---,,--PONTIAC tires. 644-6933. 1961 FORD FALCON • Runs CHEVROLET Good • Ne<ds Brakes for on· 241111 Harbor Blvd., at Fair ly ~100. MIKE 839-1427 Drive, €osta Mesa 546-8017 Gray, $2300. 827--4249 Bill Barry Pontiac \VE PAY T()P DOLLAR 3' t 'IBERGLASS sailboat, Gi\·!C REC. CE~TER FOR TOP USED CAf~S CAPRI Gray Slt.7.JO. Call 541-2235. From 9-5 pm. aft 5 & Sport roupe decor, bOOy side ,,·kends, 532-2000 Orange moulding!l, reclining front Ca. ·n lilALIBU, under 30,0CO mi '70 FORD Torino GT, air, Good trans. '68 Pontiac Tem· mint cond! Radial tires, p/s, p/b, .sml V-8, cl~an. pest Sta wgn. Clen n. nu trs, Call 644--4744 $18(Xj. 646--0895 aft 6 tine running order. $600/ * '72 MOr-+'TE CARLO* '69"1\0f.U)Raqeh Wagon, air, best, 673·19(k) '65 V\V. Very clean, new Very clean, many· xtnu, p/s, •p/b. Like new. 1i1f00. 19&1 PonUac. Reblt, trans. engine. $600. 493-37'20646-0895 ·~;;-;,::•;,!1..:6;,,,,---,,= Gd. tires. See le make olfer great shape, give away 2000 E. 1st SI., Sanla Ana If your car is extra clean. price ~ $29i ~>48--;,168 558-100) see us first. BAUER BUJCJ( • LUDERS--16, ra c ing 1973 Discn\·erer and Sundial 292.'i llarbor Blvd. Sloop xfnt t'ond, $1900 t-.1otor Homes for rent, make Costa liltsa 979.2500 ' * 4\"6-2t:i0 1t reservafions for Sun1n1er 1 ------~--- Q.IPPER 2I, S2750. Boal. l\O\V, Phone Miss Be~~ct at \VE HUY seat!l, contour reflr seats. 4 ---~~=---- speed transn1ission. po1ver MGB front disc brakes, style steel 1----------1 "'heels, bucket seats, radial '67 MGB $450 ply 1ir1·s. (GAJ<:CN899742), 5.57-3023 * Ms.41J3 * I '61 Chevy. ;g9. FGJU> Cortina, ,$400. c5'9=·39:::2oc4c..af:;:.;:t.o'6'.:'p."m::.. -- '69 VW Camper, lo nrlleage, Very good condition. M~n:y n!W 'part!, ]>ho~ 'Jbp, VEGA Ne'v tires $1875. Good cone!. Call 548-8482 &m 496-;13-t7 . ?-IJon ~1 ~8-585.1 1 '66 i\1ALIBU very k> mi, gd '60 FORD Statibh ~Wagon '71 VW, low mllMge cond, pis, auto. trans, Good shape, $150. 1009 $1600. * 6T>8600 675--5157 or 00-5993 Arbor, C.M. 646-5910 '71 VEGA GT, xlnt cond, dlx Int., new tlreg. Must sell, 644-4839: 673-0507 990 Autot, Usea ·990 Autos, UHd 990 A'utot, Uwd ------~----- OVERSTOCKED I IMMEOIATE Autos, Used trailer, motor, r u 11 ni 11 g Bob !-ongp1; ~o n , 1 a r, TMPORTED AUTOS tf&hts etc., pri pty. 546-7254 892-6651 or 636·2500. BEST PRICES PAID! HOBIE Cat 14. 1 yr old. 2'l' . \VIN.N~A.GO, f u 11 y Dean Lewis Imports 990 . Autos, Usea 990 "~ · olud ng 1 r a i I c r equip. Air, xln t niech c:ond. 1966 H<1rbor, C.111, ~i. 1 • Sips 8. $5950. 833-8\:f"l. 646-930:l E 24, '7:1 \V/poptop. DELUXE \VINNEBAGO T1\1PORTS '\'AN1'ED 3 sails sips 1 Loaded 1\1.1-1. RENT Orange County's /extra~ $4000 .&:ll-76::>1 64(H).J82, N.B. TOP S BUYER w • ·, .. 11 . . ·73 CHArwtPION 20'. full y I BILL MA.XF.:Y TOYOTA LEHMAN 12~ ntl\, a xtls, equip. Take over payments. 18.S!ll Bench Blv '. - inc. ~r673-:ci6? * ~70 l H. Br'lch P h. R47.Jl5.")3 -·---* 10' LEltMAi\' *' DELIVERY GUSTAFSON Lincoln-Mercury 15800 Beach at Warner 1-lunli ngton Beach 842-8844 * (213) 592-5544 ''Home of the Viking" good condition wi1 h tTailer $300. 646-9070 STAN l\1iller Racing !'<ihol No. 5960, good rond. Ne.t'I champ. $3.10. 494-:il1 6 ~TAR GA'ZEE"~ AlllS B7 CLU R. POUAN UIU Boats, Sllp1r.i-ks 910 34 FOOT SUP, l.funtington Hal'bor. $68. per mo. C,\lJ. SlG-3272 Boats, Spetd & Ski 911 14' SKIBOAT MERC 75 MUST SEIL uns WEEK GREAT BARGAIN _.Aft >IM. JI )/-.. Your Daily J.cthlfy GoiJ• Jf,. WT. JI t'h =~J.,;, 1, or d ''1co1Ji"g lo th•,"•7"' d ocT.21~L~ 1• 2.11. 1a eve op message. ar ues oy, .._ 1 .. '.!'C'~it :.0-68 nodwords correspond1ngtorunbers 74 of your Zodloc birth sign. 1 Be 31 And 2A 32PushJ..g 38tlt~ Jl h .C SoclOI 34 Mott~ SAul'1onc:e 35 You'll i>Awa•ti: 36Could 7 lmiMloe.11 31 Yovir 8 Fovo11. 3S Your 9 Yo..t J9 Br.ol( 10 Now-.co And 11 lt~r Al Int-It 125"'k .C1 The ' " ••• ,. ~ ... , A World Of Difference With Allen Oldsmobile-Cadillac! " . ' . ~ '72 CAlllUAC Edando r~ ..... -· ... ft.""· '" .. s7495· .... ~ .. Iii, ... roof, firtlllilt lrolnt, crylse ...... """' _.., •-: ... •. split -lrlllJ • i..tihll · auto. 5a. SSS. '71 CAlllUAC Cpe. & Sed1n l "'''-"°" 01 with Ml ,.., $4695 IN !Kl ilr. Priced front '71 OlQSMOBILE Taranado rua p1" .. fact •Ir. c,,rns llten. whllt s3995 lalld1U IO!I'. matchint 1ritft i~tlllcr. low mills. Uc. 19l·Yl.O. 13 M1711M .CJ Plons 14 Publ•t. A4 You 1 S Foorlt AS Rftf 531·2164 or ' 548$95 ~~ 19' HYDROFLfTE, $4801). BIO'fl.'tln Olev. Altff'"P11ton11, ?.toon Cam, wet ~tll, Ed TrailP.r .,, /..m a g s , S1:hl730 days -...._ • • • 9UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS l6Pri"'IXY .46Too 17 Md A7 °"'" 1 8~'-i .48 ~ 19 Rflmiorts A9A 20Could 50 '" 2 1 Rt+to/n SI &!t 2l Don't 52 YClll 23~ S30uf 24 Hl!s1to'11 ~<Nt 2sfi>t ~s ~ 26 St!l'"9 ~Good :17To S1 Hllfmt 28 hntllf' ~ Hu .... 29'·-.sl/Of ;JO Noowt 60 Htltit ®Goo.l @M .. a.e I .. 7 ·I \ ' rr d. ~ I\ ~ y g p ti u • • B• l'E c ll1 YI di u S! Yf tt in fa 4 • ] C1 Al w: la sb DJ Sf u; i~ er fl ' ti< iii 811 fd "' 09 ., fi1 fr, ' j ( •' jj ' . ' ~· ~ C<i .. , lo toe sk! .. .:.~ "' mi "" Ir< ' ,, flt RI• dr. let ., • frc lac ~ • dft rlJ •rn 'ttl\ ~ t>Qi 1!1 ~ . -.. ~ .. .. ... • • • • ~ • • • •• t t ' ' ' l' • San Clemente Capistrano • VOL. 66, NO. 225, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES EDITION ' '''·'li •• ,.,. ~~ '· • • • , . Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS Waldie Calls President'1s Vil ·nipoll~ Rep. Jerome Waldie (0.Antioch), the marathon walking gubernatorial can· dldate, made it through gates of the Western W.hite House today but never had a chance to see the controversial im- provements to President Nixon's seaside Villa -installations which he termed "a giant ripoU." , Security aides at the nearly deserted presidential compound. said they were ac- ting on orders from Washington when lhey confined the candidate's tour to the presidential o[rice complex OD the San Diego side of the county Ilne. ''I was told that all the items that I wanted to see are on private property and are not for publlC inspection," Waldie said. "If a congressman represents the peer ple, I .should be able to see what the tax- payers are paying for." Waldie entered the compound carrying a detailed List issued r.ctnUy by the GeneraJ Services Adminis~atlon showing Jason to Return~ Comatose Boy May Come Home Unless the condition of. Jason Rea, 3, gets worse, all lndi~tions point to a return to home for the comatose Capistrano Beach boy, but spc;>kesman for the Denver hospital said today that ad- vance notice of his trip 1vill not be given. The boy ls still listed in serious COO· dition. and, the spokesman for the University of Colorado Medical Center said. she had •·no idea" 1vhen the youngster will be reutming. She added that doctors are cautious about releasing informatK>n at>out the boy's night home for fear of a "rash of publicity." Jason was nown to the Denver hMpital Aug. 2 to donate his kidneys and liver after injuries from a pool accident on Ju- ly 14. appeared to be fatal. The blond-haired tot had suffered brain damage from the near-drowning, and when death seemed imminent, his mother, ~frs. Linda Rea, arranged /or her only child to be nown to Denver to die "so that others may li ve." But following his arrival in Denver, the boy's condition improved and, two days later, Jason was taken off the respirator that had been keeping him alive. 85 Persons Feared Dead In Span1sh Air~xp osion LA CORUNA. Spain (UPl l -A Caravell e alrlioer of the Spanish Aviaco Air Company exploded in flight today While the pilot was making hls fourth landing iipproach to La Corona's cloud~ shrouded mountaintop airport and fell in fl.ames on a village below, an airllne spokesman reported. The airline said au 85 persons aboard tfie twin·jet aircraft wtre feared dead. Of the flight itself. the airline said there is ''no hope of survivoni." '•Because of confusion at the village crash site and the dense clouds and rains, there were conflicting reports. ' Police in La Coruna said rescue opera· tk>ns were conUnuing and it was not ~finitely known whet.her there were sUrvivors or any villagers had been kill· !d· -A spokesman for La Coruna airport and Spanish news reports said at least OP.e person survived the plane crash. ·The ne"'s agency Europa Press said P.-ive 1'1habltar'tts or the village of Mon· t'tove also were killed . Thu1idershowers On Weather Agenda TQni ght ' ,;nrundershowers -lbat's right -lhun- ~ershow'!rs are forecast for inland -and possibly coastal co1IU11un1Ues of Orange cfunty tonight. ~ ·The freak August weather brought rain lo\portions of Orange and Anaheim early today as thunderclaps rolled in the gray sk.les above. . ;,.:Commuters using the Ne w P or l £teewsy are accustomed of late .to the ml!t}' type of rain gr~ bummer-aummer mornings have produced. Today's drips .from above were big bold drOps. rrhe National Weather 5ervice con- flnnod their existence. ln fact io Riverside this momlng, thundershowers drenched the downtown area ln 62-degree temperatures. ·A surge of tropical moisture northward from Mexlco is ,at fault. As the moisture Jidtn air Rrrives in the drier desert a!Ul'Of Southern CalUomla It condenses, <0!>11 and btglna falling as rain. • torteaator said thiJ mol.lture usually dtopo ln t)lland mountoin rona.. and ril'e!Y makn ii to the coutline. • ]'levertheit.11, today's lorecaot calfs for sl)lht 'chances .cl 1fternoim and evening 't61pidenhowers "•lmott anyplace in the SQpth Coaot Basin,• the National w;~ather Service forecaster aild. ' ;fl'" drift of rN>lst air from 10U1h of ll)e tilirHer Is •'ll"oted to con0nll6 thro!Jih edn .. day. 7'1canwblle, temperatures llonJ the Qi:ange Coast will dip to 83 tonlgbt. 11iJbJ · Tliuday will be in the low 70i. But later police said the houses on which the wreckage feU were abandoned and no villagers were killed. The crash was the eighth in a series of fatal accidents· Involving Sp an is h airli~rs since early 1972. IQeria has loot three planes during the period, lhe chater company Spantax two, plus one plane damaged, and Aviaco. a subsidiary of Iberia, two, with a total loss of 352 lives. Spain's worst air cr~h occurred last DeceQlber when a Spantax Convair Coronado flipped on takeoff .from Santa Cruz airport kilting all 15.1 aboard. Aviaco said the Caravelle jet 'carried 79 passengers and a crew of six. An •irport spoke.smao said it crashed on its fourth attempt to land in bad weather. Cifra reported the pilot had been told shortly before by the control tower that visibility dropped belO\V minimum levels. The plane, on a scheduled flight from Ma<kid, made three auempts to land at La Coruna and bad just started to circle the cloud-shrouded airport once again when it apparently exploded in the air, the spokesman said. Most of Its wreckage fell on an aban· dooed fann house ln the village of Moir trove, four miles from the airport. The airport spokesman said radio con- tact with the plane broke oU without any indication of anything being wrong with the plane, apart trom Captain Lopez Pascual's apparent difficulties of landing the craft under the prevailing conditions. Most passengers aboard the plane ap- peared to be vacationeni. La Coruna is one of three airports serving the north,,.,tem Galiclan prov· ince:s and Its seaside resorts. The ill fated flight, AV-118, is a special vacatim flight nm dally by Avlco during the sum· mer season. The plane tell Madrid at 9: 14 a.m. (1:14 a.in. PDT), more than an boor late for the 60-minute flight. The crash oc- curred an hour later. Cifra said members o[ a Barcelona swimming club (Cub Nat a c i on Barcelona) were aboard the plane fl ying to a 1wimming meet in La Corona. A.DVERTISING HAS 'DRAWING FOWER' bally Piiot classmed want ads have charllma. Look at thJ& chermeri '81 GALAXIE. Good· trans· portatlon, es.ooo rn1i.s. m or make oiler. (l'hoao No.) Thls adv-ertiler called to sty , "Congratulations on the wonderful draw· Ing pbrir O! )'Ollr ads!'' Dlal the dlroct line -64}-5673 -and lot our cbtlrming ad-vilor help you fin"' oome "drawing power." every expenditure made at the compound for securily reasons. The current total for such expenditures at San Clemente is now pegged at $3 million. "I could have been shown structures that would not have endangered the privacy of the President, who wasn 't even there," Waldie suggested. "[couldn't see them because I was told they are too difficult to eJ:plain and this leads me to believe that the purchases made in the name of the President's security are not justifiable.'' One such _installation which stirred the campaigncr1s interest is an $8,000 system installed along the Santa Fe tracks in the President's front yard to alert the Presi- dent when a train is coming. \Valdie said the rationale for that system was that it was needed because the noise of the surf makes it impossi bl'e to hear an approaching train. Waldie termed that "a foolish ex: nditure." The candidate, who ls on a walking tour of Southern Californi a, aid that two other U.S. representatives are assertedly arriving "pretty soon" but he does not know what sort of treatment they will receive nor the reason for their arrival. "If they are friends of the President I think that !hey will be treated differently than I was," he said. Waldie alleged that the GSA "is ssue \11"1 T._..,. BEEF ON HOOF LIKE MONEY IN BANK AS SHORT·AGE IN U.5. :;ROWS ANO ilROWS This Color•do Herd, Others Awa it Court Ruling on Price Freeze ~~--~~~~~~~~ Border Officers Grab 270 Aliens At San Onofre l\-1ore than 270 illegal aliens were ar- rested near the San 1 Onofre checkpoint over the weekend, U.S. Border Patrol spokesma n 'reported today. Agents apprehended 101 persons on Saturday and another 170 on Sunday. However, only slightly more than half of those arrested were caught at the check- point, the patrolman said. , Five aliens on Saturday and two more on Sunday were arrested. while trying to circumvent . the .checkpoint on a passenger train. An fld(iitiooal 34 were apprehended during ran<;h checks around the area, and 21 aliens were turned over to the border agents by city police departments. The remairider of the arrested perSQns were apprehended ·by other agencies, the patrolman said. The number of arrestes were slightly higher thls weekend than it has been in recent weekends, the agent noted. Clues Souglit Iii 3 Slayings CllRJSTIANSTED, Virgin · f s I a n d s {UPI) -St. Croix detectives aided ·by Po1ice dogs Oown lll from Mlaml and l'Uorto Rico sought clues today in the acparatc weekend slaytna.9 of two women and a wealthy former New York restaurateur. The d••ths brought to five the number of whitu who hive been murdered in 18 day1 In this ~Uy btacli Carib- bean tourist lstaiid. Nooe of 'the killings has been aolvtd. 1 • ___... ,J!olice said. the liltelt vlcUm, S\aniey Rldillovle, !01 wu cut down by several shott111n blast1 Saturdiy night tn the parklna lo! of iheJlalnbow Beach Club,'• plush ,_.. complex he managed ncar the west coast dly cl F~rlkJted. ; Price Freeze Lifted; Consumers Await Brunt By United Press International The price· freeze wa s lifted today on ev.erylhing except ga.sOline and beef. A number of major companies immediately said they would ask for price increases. Consumers will not feel the full brunt of the price jump for some time because under Phase IV companies with annual sales of $100 million or more must give the Cost of Living Council 30 days notice of such increases. Chrysler Corp. immediately asked the council to allow an average $71 hike on 1974-.model cars and trucks. Unless. its application is turned do't\,'D, .the increase automatically will gc, into effect before the vehicles go on publ'c sale in late September. American Motors is seeking an average $55 price increase while General Motors and Ford have yet to file ap- plications. SPokesmen for the two largest auto companies said they expected BJ>* plications would soon be filed . Armco Stet! Corp. in l\iliddletown, Ohio said it was reinstati ng price increases of sheet sleet products "'hich had been scheduled but were not allowed under the !reeze. The increase is scheduled for Sept. 12. Reports from supermarket!: indicated foo(f prices rema ined reasooably stable today. Prices had been out from under the freeze for nearly a monlh. Under Phase JV, scllcni can raise their prices, but only as much as costs In· crease. Gasoline and other petroleum prices wttt remain frozen for another week. Bttf will continue under priee controls the l1111geit, unUI Sept. il, 'lt ls I.he freeze on beef that has brought tho most criticism on Phasc IV. It rcmalned frozen ' when other food prices were decontrolled June 13. Whllc beef ·prices caMot be raised the supply ltas dwlndl<d. A federal judge tn Lincoln, Neb. tumod down a.request for 1n injunction setklng ' an end to the freeze on beef "prices. A judge in Seattle, Wash., promised a rul- ing today on a similar case. The ruling by U.S. District Court Judge Warren Urbml in Lincoln was issued Saturday night and made public today. At the same time, he refused the request for the temporary injunction, Urbom denied a government plea for dismissal or the suit. TI)e judge gave no reason ror his decision tO deny the request by J.i.inden Beef Co. of Minden, Neb. 1 a proeeksor, and th.e Greater New York ASSoc.iatfon of Meat and, Poultry DeaJers, a ·wholesale group. The plaintiffs claimed the freeze is un- produotiw. aod is causing shoitagm. The government ·claimed it is necessary to hold down rising meat prices. Dana Ma1·ina Vess~I Looted hy Burglars Equipment valued at more than l250 \\'8S stolen during the weekend by burglars who entered a boat moored at Dana Marina, Orange ·County Sheriff's officers said. 1 Boat owner John G. Tearney, 591 Riverside, . told DeputJes a compass, stereo and portable radio were taken from the cabin of his vessel. Mayor's Enemy List PHfLADELPHIA {AP) -May<>r JoTank Rim's controversial special pollce squad used confidential city tax records to help fill dossie.rs on the mayor's political enemies, a.ccordlng to the Philadelphia Sunday Bulletin. The Bulletin said It had documeJ;Jta 1.hat "In· dlcatc the dossiers trace the 'subjects' from birth to the present ." playing games with us and somebOO.y is trying to hide something." The next stop on Waldie 's 36-day trek stretching 240 miles through Southern California is at Dana Point on Tuesday. followed by a stopover the following day in Corona del Mar and yet another on Thursda y in Costa J\.1esa. Waldie said thet he is in."exccllent :,hape down to my ankles." His feet, he added, are killing him. Detectives Use Recent Photograph By JOHN V ALTERZA Of ltl• D.tlr, "lleit Slaff Orange County Sheriff's investigators today planned to issue new photographs of mi~ing San Juan Ca pistrano housewife Rochelle White in an effort to seek new leads on her disappearance. Thus far the notebook. a'ppears blank: ~pile intensive probing by county of- ficers as well as detectives in Cldsbad, where the woman's car was fOUDd ·a~ doned at her employer's Parkin& Jot nearly two weeb .~o .. Spokesmen for the 1ocaJ department sail! the origbial photo -(a bicJ! ...,.f serilor picture) ol the pretty tinmette dispensed to all the news --Jleld- ed no tips trom flte geoersl public. The llSUMce or newer, more recent photos showing a different hairstyle migltt 1'•1d something new to lbe case, they added. Teletypes to other police jurisdictions a:; well are being sent out tbis week. EssenUally, now that the initial leads have been exhausted, probers have little left to explore. Mrs. White, 22, vanished late last month oo lhe day before she was ~heduled to appear in a divorce hearing 1n Orange County Superior Court. But before she vanished, she phoned her parents and assertedly expressed !ears for her safety. Later in the week, when her <lisa~ pearance was reported to investigaton (See MISSING, Pap I) 2 San Clemente Residents Injured . Two San Clemente residents were in- JUred Sunday· night In a one-car accident on the San Diego Freeway near La Paz Road, the califomla lfighway Patrol re parted. Frank Rodriques, 38, of 147 Rosa st.: was southbound on the freeway when his car went out o! control near the La Paz intersection. Rodriques and his passenger Angel Sanchez from the same San Clemente ad-dr~s~-were treated for head injuries at M1SS1on Community Hospital, t h e highway patrol said. Orange <:out Welitller 1.-Jore gloom is forecast for the moming hours Tuesday with a slight chance of thundershowers in the evening hours. Sunny Jn tho aftemoon with highs of 70 at the beaches. Lows in the 60s. INSIDE TODAY As Canibodicn f'tfugees con .. tinue to $tredm into the capital city of Ph11om Pevh. the city's ai-rport r e p o r t a reservations book<d up through Augwt for people trvlng to get ottt of the country. See atory and photos Olt Pag~ 21 . ' \ ., ,, DAILY PILOT SC . ' Monday, Aug11Jt lli l4'73 r ·'' Toll Now 25--and Climbing 2 More Bodie·s Found HOUSTON <UPI) -Sherill's deputies today dug up Crom shallow grave:s on a Texas beach the 24th and 25th bodies kill· ed during a three-year spree of sex and sadism by two teen-agers and a homosexual friend. The Victims were wrapped in black plastic bags and sprinkled with lime, like _most of the others found during the past week at three locations. Officers, digging with a back hoe and a . giant road-srader, said they expected to find at least one more body at the beachfront Bite at High Island. "I think we got another one down there," said Chambers County Sheriff Louis Otter. With the recovery or the ZSth body, the mass murder equaled the worst such tragedy in U.S. history. Juan V. Co:o!la, 39, was convicted last January of k1lhng 25 farm hands in California. Officers on the Texas bench drove ~Anybody's Guess' Burroughs Viejo Pinnt Opening I mpactS tudied The economic impact .of the r~g of the $9 million BuITOOghs Corporation plant in Mission Viejo "is anybody's guess," Orange County Tax Assessor Jack Vallerga said today. "It won't be near the impact of the Rockwell International building if its trede to the federal government goes through, because that's a much bigger operation. "But the only thing it can do is add to the area's tax base," Vallerga said. Th.e Burroughs Corporation annoonced Friday it is moving in a large computer , systems operati<>n next spring, bringing about 750 employes to the plant. The plant, on Jeronimo Road between Meat Hunters Slaughter Deer Intruders who apparently saw helpless animals in an Irvine Park pen as a temporary solution to the meat shortage cut the throat of a young deer during the weekend and carried off the carcass, Orange County Sheriff's officers SS;id today. Deputies said the mtruders climbed the chain link fence sur~ rounding the animal pen at the park near Orange, slaughtered the deer and then dragged It out lhrough a bole they cut in the fence. The deer was valued at $250. SF Baseballer Bonds Arrested REDWOOD CITY (AP) -San Fran- cisco Giants outfielder Bobby Bonds, 27, was arrested on drunken driving charges early today after rear-ending another car at high speed, the Highway Patrol said. Both cars were badly damaged. No one was hurt. Bonds' new car slammed into the rear of a sma\1 foreign car driven by Frederick D. Hassett, 18, of Saratoga, then smashed into the center divider on Whipple Road here, a spo~an sia.id. Bonds was taken to San Mateo County Jail in Redwood City, where he was booked (or inves tigation of drunken driv- ing and driving without a license. He was released on his a w n rerognizance about an hour after being booked, a county jail spokesman said. A hearing is scheduled Sept. 10. $28 Million Lawsuit CIDCAGO (API -United States Gympsum Co. said Sunday it agreed to a $28 million settlement of a price-fixing suit filed by a home builders' group in 1970. U. S. Gypsum was sued by the Home Builders Association of Greater Chicago and 24 members for alleged col- lusion to fix prices of gypsu m wallboard, keeping prices artificially high. , Oll:AN•t COAST IC DAILY PILOT ,,. Or•noe Coetl DAILY PILOT. '*il!I wllldl 11 COtl'lblllecl ti" N..._.pr .. l, fl Pllblllllm " 1119 0o--. CM•I Pwblltfl1no C~r. hlM r11e •111ons •r• Pllbli.hed, .v..an.Mr t11reoioti f'rlll-Y. for Coll• MltH. NNPOrt 8Nch, Hunflno!Oft 81.c:~/Foun111n VIII~. LllJUlll 8Mdl, lf¥1ne/$..sdln.dr. ..... 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SVbt«I••• w umw a.u ,_l"IYI bi' ffllll IJ.11 """"'""' MlllflrY *"*'""' u.u "'°""''~" P. Alicia Parkway and l<ls A 1 is o s Boulevard, has been empty since late 1971 . It is one of two large industrial buildings that have been vacant in the S~ddleback Valley. The other, the $25 million Rockwell International "ziggurat" in Laguna Niguel, has been proposed for trade to the federal General Service s Administration for more than a year, though that deal is not yet final. It is called Ille ziggurate because of its stepped Babylonian design. "As for the BWTOUghs plant, it all depends on what the corporation doe3 in- side the building. The real property value has not changed .since the property bas been empty,'' Vallerga said. Jack Schumaker, associate superin- tendent for business administration in the Saddleback Valley Unified School al Di9trict, said the impact on school fi- nancing would depend on how many h<lme.s are available for resaJe when new employes begin moving to the area. "People have to live in a home in the district to have an impact on the schools, since our mooey comes from property taxes," Schumaker said. 111bis may mean that people selling their homes may have an easier time of it -though I don't know bow tlley could sell any faster," he added. Burrouglls authorities · said Friday employes at the company's plant in the city of Industry would be given first choice for the Missioo VJejo jobs. The plant bafl a ~pacity of about 1,500 employes. Minister Raps Church Control ANAHEIM (AP) -Freedom is the most important tenet of religion and no church should try to force its members to obey the standards it sets for itself, says the· 3S}Ociate minister of the Anaheim United Methodist Olurch. ''.No church has the prerogative of tell- ing you what to believe," the Rev. Glen- don E. Harris told two congregations Sunday. "Churches employ creeds, but creeds are guidelines, not enforced dogmas ; they are human products, presenting the best understandings \\1hen they were written, but not lmmune to change," he said • Harris also told his listeners that the church "should encourage responsible decision and ethical action, and if it loses sight or these, il \Vill result in h . .. ypocnsy. Fttll Moon Hikes Rate of Murder ATLANTA (UPI) -Police say alcohol, handguns and the full moon may have had more than a little to do with the 10 killings reported in Atlanta over the v.·eekend. Maj. M.E. Moon , head of the police de- partment's criminal in vestigation di- vision , said Sunday a large number or the homicides were the result of domestic quarrels. "When there's a full moon, the homi- tide rate always go up,'' detective S.C. Dorsey added . "A1cohol is definitely a big motivator ..• if people didn 't h.11.ve these weapons and could walk out of the room and cool off for just a minute, then the person he kill- ed would probably still be alive ," he said, Pi11g Pong Mark Set in Anaheim ANAHEIM (UPI) -Hotel manager Terry Geer, 32. claimed a new ping pong endurance record Sunday after a game that lasted 49 hours, 12 minutes and 40 seconds. The old record was 48 hours. The current edition or the Guinnes.~ Book of World Records falls to list any tategory for marathon table tennis for les.s than four persons, but Geer said he had ~ In contact with the editors of the record book and he said he wa11 confi~ dent his record would be &ancUoncd. Geer won more than 80 percent of the 400 malches played during the exhibition , which slarted Friday. ft was held to benefi\3 the Easler Seal C.mJ"'lgn . • - • truckti and cars aroood the aearch site to guard Jt from onlookers. The bodies discovered today were pull- ed from the sand in ao area covered by salt grass about a quarter mile from where two bodies were located Friday. The spot is about 35 miles east of Galveston. Elmer Wayne Henley, 17, and David Brooks, 18, have been charged with murder and admitted taking part in the PARENTS CRITICIZE HOUSTON POLICE ACTION-Pogo 4 homosexual slayings with Dean Corll, 33. Officers last week dug up 17 l;lodies in- side a Houston boat shed and recovered four at a wooded site near Broaddus in East Texas. Two more were unearthed on the beach east of Galveston. Sheriff's deputies used the road grader to cut a quarter-mile through a line of salt grass strewn with driftwood and Jit- ter. Otter and a deputy rode behind the . grader, examining the broken ground for traces of graves described by Henley and Brooks. Meanwhile, in Houston, Police Clief Herman B. Short defended his depart- ment today against charges from ·some parents of the victims that officers were lax in investigating missing persons reports. "Although some of the parents in the lleights area may have felt we have not been doing all we could have, we never \\'OUld have enough peaple to cheek out every runaway youth,'' Short said at a news conference. Meanwhile police Sw!day said they identified two more of the bodies. The two were Donald Edward Waldrop, 15, and his brother, Jerry L)'llll Waldrop, 13, both of Atianta, Ga. The • identification by their lather, Everett Waldrop, brought to five the number of bodies definitely identified. The two youths had been strangled. Others identified are: Charles C. Cobble, 11, Houston. Martin Ray Jones, 18, Houston. Billy Lawrence, 15, Houston. Henley, charged with six counts of murder, has admitled he killed CorU at the bachelor electrician's home Wednes-- day. Quarantine Set For Rabies In Chico Area. . CIDOO (AP) -A rabies quanntine was Imposed today oo a 16-bJock section of Chico in the wake of an epidemic ol. the dreaded disease, a Butte County health official reporied. The quarantine was declared after discovery Saturday that an lDlvaccinated six-month-old puppy had died of rabies after biting two children. Although six other cases of rabies have been reported in the Chico area since May, Nino Calarco, a spokesman fCK the county health department, said thi• was the first case of a pet being infected in a residential section. Calarco said seven r abid animal cases had been conflI'?lled in the county the past two weeks and 12 this year. That is twice the number reported last year, he said. Asked if it were an epidemic, Calarco replied, "Yes." But later he said-h€alth officials were not worried that the outbreak would spread "into the general population of animals" because of the high percentage of immunized animals among the coun- ty's dogs and caU:. Except for the puppy and two cases of rabies in a cow and a bull earlier th is summer, Calarco said all the cases were in wild 8Jlimals, mainly skunks and bats. "lbe county is a rabies area and cases have been reported in practically all sec- tions of the county,'' he said. Calarco said the two neighbor children bitten by the pup shortly before it died were undergoing a !~shot series of an- tirabies serum injections. Nixon Ordered 'Secret' Marine Raid in 1969 NEW YORK (UPJ ) -President Nixon ordered a secret ~farine C<lrps raid against Communist installation! in Laos just two days alter he was Inaugurated in 1969, the New York Times has rep:irted. Quoting "government sources,'' the Times said Sunday lhat similar ground 8M3ults against North Vietnamese sup. ply lines and base camps Jn Laos had been repeatedly proi-cl and rejected during the Johnson admlnlstratlon. "Miiitary aources said that at least one Marine battalion -about l,500 men - wa.,, sent Into Laos, where It suffered e1· tremely heavy casualties during pitched battles with North Vietnamese troops," the Times uld. Beating the Heat One of the St. Louis ioo's polar bears uses his head to beat the heat and bring, back Arctic memories. The bear is shaking water off after taking a dip in the pool in his cage. . • .. Cox Raps Nixon on Tapes i_ 'Witholding Vital Evidence By Personal Choice' WASHINGTON (UPI) -Speeial pros- ecutor Archibald Cox charged t o d a y that President Nixon i3 withholding vital criminal evidence about the Watergate scandal "by his personal choice" without any legal or constitutional right to do so. "Unlike a monarch," Cox said, "the President is not the sovereign.'' In a 67·page legal brief filed in U.S. District Court, Cox urged Judge John J. Sirica to order the President to produce for a grand jury tape recordings of nine conversations with aides. Cox said the tapes could prove or disprove "criminal conspiracy and other illegal conduct" in the White House. Such an order, Cox said, would reaf· firm the American constitutional prin- Frot11 P .. e 1 MISSING . • • by her lawyer, an intense search v.:as launched -lncluding four days of dig- ging at the county dump in San Juan where officers were following up a strong hint that the woman was slain and her body dumped among the refuse. That unpleasant task, howe"1:!r, failed to tum up a single clue. The next stage, investigators said, was to work the case from the Carlsbad end. A thorough examination of the missing woman's car heightened specula~ion that the housewife may have been slam. ~tr.I. White's purse, billfold containing a small amount of cash and the car keys all were found in the car and no flngerpimts were present, leadil_lg prob- ers to believe that someone wiped the entire vehicle clean before leaving it. One other suspicious aspect is the area of the employe parking Jot where the car was left , investigators said. Mrs. White regularly used the same space when she brought her car to work each day, but when the auto was discovered after her disappearance it was in another portion of the lot. Officers have tried to find witnesses in Carlsbad who may have seen the aban- dorunent of the car, but reportedly have turned up little or nothing that could help. Thei r only hope now is for new wit- nesses to turn up. ciple that "no man is above the law. "The President has an enforceable legal duty not to wit.hhald material evidence from a grand jury,'' Cox said. " ... There is no exception for the Presi- dent from the guiding principle that the public. in the pursuit of justice, has a right to every man's evidence ... "The grand jury is seeking evidence of criminal conduct that the 'respondent Nixon happens to have in his custody - largely by his personal choice." Cox subpoenaed the tape recordings on July 23, one week after it was disclosed at the Senate Watergate hearings that Nixon's conversations in two White House offices and on four of his telepbanes had b e e n automatically recorded since the spring of 1971. Nixon refused to comply with the !Ub- ~na. His lawyers .argued in a lengthy ~r1ef 'J'.Uesday that Jt would be . ..,,simply 1mposs1ble for any president of the United s~~ to fW>Ction" if b~ were fon::ed . to diSciose conlidenUal com· munications with aides. C<lx contended that Waterga te-related conversations were not conducted as part of the President's official duties and therefore could not be withheld legally. Cox argued further that Nixon waived ' any claim to keep the tapes secret because (1) some persons in":olved in the conversations already testified about them publicly and (2) Nixon permitted his former chief of staff, H. R.' llaldeman, to listen to two of the tapes, after leaving the White House April 30. "Not even a President can be allowed to select some accounts of a conversation for public disclosure and then to' frustrate further grand jury inquiries by withholding the best evidence ol what ac- tually. took place," Coz: said. Sirica has scheduled oral arguments· for Aug. 22 on the tapes dispute. Meanwhile, a special grand jury was convened today at the request of Cox to investigate a wide range of activities in the 1972 preSidentiaJ Q\mpaign as well as' the ITT a.Dtitrust seffiemtlll. ,Jucjge , ~ ~ .. !h< panel lnlo, ses:J,ion to inquire into malteNJ separate from those being investigated by a grand1 jury that has been concentrating on the Watergate burglary and its aftermath. ., Real Tax Hike School Rate $56 Per $100 TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) -Rising taxes are bothering just about everyone, but be glad you don't live in the Indian Oasis School Dis- trict at Sells, Ariz. County officials announced today that the property tax rate for the district, which encompasses part of the Papago Indian Reserva- tion, will be $56 per $100 assessed valuation this fiscal year -a 900 percent increase from last year. The property tax rate, which finances most school district ex- penses, averages about $2 per $100 assessed valuation in most other areas of Arizona. The reason for the jump at Sells, officials said, was that they do not expect a $200,000 federal education grant to be renewed. It made up a large part of the district budget last year. School officials declined to say if they thought property owners would pay the tax. • NOW AT •-ss1m 8-5\'url'atll- Tiii lflO!Ot, p11mp, !lflllr· t'l'ltif9 W'ltet d~ibutlor'I l)'tltm. llh]tt ltrd P~lh llutlone •rt 9111rl1111Md tor t 'f'tM'I °" l!\o0tt1 S'Slf7t. '&Sflll 1 t'lld SS/978. Wt P11 IOf lflPIM:tlMtll ll bot durlnQ , ! !ht Im 'l'Mr. • _ , 90 DAY CASH WITH"Al'tllOYIO CUDIT H EA Il!l U 1\ RTER S. • The Times reported that "a variety or sources" said the raid, code-named Dewey canyon I, began Jan. 22, 1969, and Involved "an all-out, pre-planned assault into the border areas of Laos. involving the 2nd Battalion or the 9th Marine Regl· ment." Dewey Canyon II was the code name for a larger U.S. Jncursioo lnlo Laos In 1972. Pllone 548-7788 f 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. 11mto111 Costa Mesi ............................................................ ' , I I • . . . . . • f -~ Sports in Brie f Giant·s Win, 13-7 FOXBORO, M ass. Veteran Nonn Snead capped r long drive with a short touchdown pus to G a r y 1 Ballman in the third period after a patr of first-h~lf netd goals by Pe!b ~ak and the New York Giants held on Sunday night for 13-7 National Football League exhlblUon victory over the New England Pal(lols. terferenee penally against the Giants. e Brofuuner llot ARLINGTON Former Sharman was sued by Mowi~ t&ln States Sports, Inc., owner of the Sturs, after he resigned to become coach of the Los Angeles Laken of J.he Na· tional Basketball Association. e Carty to Cubs ClflCAGO -The Chicago Cubs announced Swlday the .purehase of outflelder Rico Carty from the Tex a a I~ Rangers. ' , .. • ... . . ...... Gogolak was set up for field goals of 12 and 35 yards by quarterback Randy Johnson before Snead took ovet, the sec- ond half to help the Giants to their second s tr a ight preseason triumph. Huntington Beach High star Jack Brohamer continued his ffiid-seasott 'tiartin'g comeback &inday, stroking a J>(lir of singles in three trips to the plate and an rbi in helping the Cleveland Indiana to a 7-6 American League 'baseball victory over the Te :1: a s Rangers. They optioned pitcher Larcy ~_.,;~'.J;L_~~'-::..S Gura to Wichita to make room The Patriots, who held Oakland to a 17-17 tie last week after dropping a 21)..7 decision to San Francisco in an exhibition opener, were plagued by mistakes at crucial times. They averted a shutout on Paul Gipson's one -yard touchdown plunge in the open- ing seconds of the fourth period after a pass in· e Trial Set SALT LAKE CITY -Trial in the breacb-of-eontract suit against Bill·,Bbarmap., former roach of the Utah ~tars of the American Basketball Associa· tion, has been postponed witll June 3, 1974 -three years after it was filed. The trial had been set for Aug. 20. U. S. District Court J udge Aldon J. Anderson rescheduled it after a stipu1ation by at· torncys citing "unforeseen problems with witnesses." Pride of Yankees Set Back 15 Years for Carty. Carty, who will be 33 Sepl 1, came to the Rangers from Atlanta last winter and batted .i.32 with 33 runs for Texas, primarily as a designated hit· ter. His career average is .317. Gura was 2-4 with an earned run average of 4.87 for the Cubs in 19 games this season. e 1'111 Soars HYVINKAA, Finland - Ant. ti Ka lliomaki of ~inland top- ped the year's best mark in ' the pole vault for the second straight weekend, soaring 17 feet, 11 lh inches Sunday at the Finnish Track and Field Championships. Kalliomaki had gone 17·9*' last Sunday at Ce I j e , Yugoslavia, only to have American Steve Smith top that mark with a 17-lOY.r: performance three days later. • • • . ' . ' • , eKlngVpset NASHVrLLE, Tenn. LARRY BROOKS IS NOW A FIXTURE IN THE LOS ANGELES RAMS LINEUP. NEW YORK CAP) -"I don't think we'll win the pen· nanl," said Sam McDowell of the New York Yankees. "\Ve don't want it badly enough. "It makes me sick to m y stomach. This was the most disgraceful game I've ever been associated with In my 13 years in the big leagues." The crowd at Yankee Stadium was apt to agree with the New York left-hander after the Oakland A's erased a six-run defjci t to pull out a wild 13--12 victory Saunday. The Yankees made rive er· rors -and several more that weren't listed in the box score. "\Ve didn 't deserve to wear lhe pinstripes today." said a disgusted f\.1cDo\li·ell. "I've never in my life seen a leilm make so many me n t a l mistakes. It was a disgrace.·• McDowell refused to single out/any of the Yankee culprits, except himself. "As far as making mistakes, I'm righl up there with the rest of the guys," said McDoweU. ''}fell, I made a mistake by grooving a pitch to Deron Johnson. 1 t o o k something orf the pitch. It was the stupidest thing I could have done. I had a big lead, so I eased up and gave him one." NEWPORT LEASES 2400 West Coast Hi9lrway Leasing 111 Vehicles FOREIGN & DOMESTIC 645-2202 DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO VACATION SPECIALS ... DODGE, CAMPER % TON &.vlemltlc ""'"'" Vt, Tlllll $1677 '10 ARISTOCRAT TRAILER " fl. l•W·Hner. Hiit lltw. ..,,. •Wllllll, tllft mor & fltctrie•I l\Ooll:· Ill".~ $1877 'ff I L CAMI NO CU,TOM, A..ttmtfk tnn., ,..., ~ru ,.,, !'"" •xtwtw & 111.o ..., liritr, tn·I I . , $2177 $3677 Johnson hit his home run in· to the left field seats in the sixth inn ing with no one on base, so it wasn't the most damaging blow. The worst thing that happened to New York was the inability of the Yankee fielders to catch and throw the ball. An error by Hal Lanier at shortstop allowed two Oakland runs to score in the fourth in- ning. Then in an outrageous seventh inning, when the A's scored six rt.UlS to tie the game at 11·11, the Yankees made two infield errors, one by second baseman Horace Clarke that allowed the tying run to score. Margaret Court stunned Billie Jean King S.3, +ti, 6-2 in the $30,000 women's pro tennis tournament Stlnday in their first match since J\frs. Court lost to Bobby Riggs on Mother's Day. It was Mrs. Court's l ltb vie· tory on the women's tour this year in It tournaments. Mrs. King, who will play the SS. year-old Riggs Sept. 20 in the Houston Astrodome, bas now won only one of eight on the tour. I Was Really Lucky, Says Rams' Brooks But - wait a minute - there was more grief in ·store for 1he Yankee fans, who booed their ''h e roes '' throughout most of their inept play, · Reggie Jackson, who col- lected three bits and knocked in three runs, walked in the eighth off reliever To m Buskey, ()..1. When Johnson singled to left, Jackson came all the way around to score the tie-breaking run when Net- tles threw the relay wild past second trying to nail Johnson. Johnson went to third on the play and then scored the even- tual winning rllll on a sacrifice ny by Gene Tenace. Jim Ray Hart homered for the Yankees in the bottom of the ninth and then Rollie Fingers came in to get !he last out after New York put men oo fmit and sec· ood. e FIUolWins CLEMMONS, N . C . Second-seeded Jaime Fillo! of Chile captured the singles championship in the rma1s of the $25.000 Tanglewood International tennis classic Sunday with a 6-2, 6-4 victory over Gerald Battrick of Great Britain. Unseeded Jeff Borowiak defeated fourth-seeded Vijay Amritraj of India 6-2, 7-5 in the singles consolation match. e Rising Star CINCINNATI -Australia's EvoMe Goolagong, maturing on schedu1e at age 22, will peak in 19'/t and be the prime challenger for the Grand Slam of Tennis , her coach predicted Sunday. "I said nine years ago she would reach maturity in 1974. I stand by that. I can see it all coming together," said Vic Edwards, Miss Goolagong's 63-year-old strategist and legal guardian. By STEVE BRA ND Of tlll o.lly l"llot Sltff At this time last year, Larry Brooks looked around the Los Angeles Rams football camp and pondered his future. It didn't look very bright. Ahead of him at defensive tackle were players I i k e Merlin Olsen, his brother Phil, whom the Rams had been fore. ed to give up a No. I draft choice to obtain, and Coy Bacon. "Wby did they drart me?" he wmdered. "It didn't make sense. Wasn't this the team that had the o ri gina l Fearsome Foursome? Wasn't it one of the top defensive t e a m s around? Why did they want me' "Buffalo or New England might make sense because they figure to be young teams in need of linemen. But the Rams?" It wasn't like the Rams went out on the limb for the Little All·American Crom well· known Virginia State, which will never be confused with Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division w L Pct. Detroit 65 52 Baltimore 62 52 Boston 62 54 New York 64 56 Milwaukee 57 58 Cleveland 47 71 West Division Kansas City 68 51 Oakland 68 51 Minnesota 56 59 Chicago 57 61 Angels 53 61 Texas 42 73 SUlldtY'I 01"°'" Dltlrolt 6, Chlc1190 2 Oat.l1nd 13, NM York 12 Boston 14, A11t1ll I 8•111~ 10, 1(111111 CITY ' Mllw•ukH 10. Mlnrtttot.! t, If l11nl1101 C"vet111C11, Te"'' 6, 11 ll'lflll!n TldlY't Otll'ltt .556 .544 .534 .533 .496 .398 .571 .564 .487 .483 .465 .365 GB )Ii; 2" ,, 21'. 7 181> I 10 101h 121\ 24 A1111el1 CMI\' 1·111 ti Ntw YQl'k (Medich l·al O•kltr'ld {Odom Ml 11 lloston (Tltnl U•'I (h!Cl90 1For1ter l-.11 II MllWl lJkff (51•1on .,, 81ttlmor1 (CWlllr t·11l ti T1-t1 !Sllbff't 6·f) DtlrO(I iFrYm•n 4-7) It Mlnne10t1 (81Yle\1n '"'lll OnlY g1mu Khtdul1c:t T_.i1y•1 0•- lttllmort 11 T llCl l C1tvei.Fld .. IClf'I-Ct1y Ottroll ti Mlr111110l1 Clllclto tt Mltw.t*.11 Al!Htl If ~ Yortt Oiokltnd II lottofl Eas t Division St. Louis Pittsburgh f\.tontreal Chicago Philadelphia New York W L 61 57 56 58 57 59 56 61 54 s:t 52 s:t West Division Dodgen Cincinnati San Francisco Houstoo Atlanta San Diego 73 45 72 47 64 52 62 58 56 65 41 76 SlllldtY'I G- Pltllb\INlh S, Attt"tl 2 Hou1lon 3. ChlCffJO 2 Cln<lnnalf 7, SI. loul1 2 Stn Frtnclsco •· New YOrlc 1 Montr .. 1 loll, Sin Dll'llo 0-4, lnnl1193 OOC11'" 2, Phlladeh>hll 1 Tod.l'f"t Otltltl Pct. GB .517 .491 3 .491 3 .419 4'h .462 61\ .452 71\ .619 .605 11\ .552 8 .517 12 .463 181,;- .350 311\ 211d Otmt 10 Cln<l"1111! {Norm111 10-91 11 Pitttb!Jrth (8rl!11 10.11) Moulton {Rot1erl1 11•9) ti SI, Loul1 CNIOY 0.0) NIW York IM1l11<k ... UJ II Sin c r"o !Grell 7·12) M°"lrHt CTorrei 7°111 ti OOd"" !Osltffl l,l.J) Only 1•""" ldltdulfd TMtdlY'• CH"'" ClncJ1111etl If Plll10ul"lft Allt"lt 11 Clllelto Hout!Oll ,, $!. loul• MOlll1-I 11 °'""'9 ~ YOl1f lit 5an DllOI l'tlllldltOfllt •I Sin Frlf'ICltco DEA!r:ri~il~WIS ~ 1966 HARB OR BLVD., COSTA MES A 64 6-930 3 USC, Notre Dame o r Oklahoma as a football power. It's enroUment is more than a 1000 fewer students than at- tend Fountain Valley High School. A 14th round draft choice, even if lle is 6-3 and 255 pounds, isn't exactly a gam· ble. The Huntington Beach resi- dent made it until the final cut in September and then was put on the taxi squad. For some, it's a fast freight to obliVion. "What did I have to lose?" he says while lounging in his room at the Cal State ( FuUerton) training camp. "You know those stories about players who hide in the wings until their big chance comes and then they become a star? Well, I figured maybe I'd get the chance." He did . The week be£ore the Rams were to play Oakland · on the final weekend of October. Brooks was activated. "I didn 't figure I'd even get a chance to play but I knew i[ something happened and I got in there, I'd try to do a job." By the second quarter the Rams were hopel ess l y outclassed en route to a 4S.I7 shellacking. Then coach Tom· my Prothro cleared out the regu1ars early in the period. "1 guess he didn't want them to get hurt," says Brooks, looking back. "But r got my chance." Brooks was the single bright light on the darkest of Rams days. He was all over the field, making beadacbe-pro- ducing tackles and chasing the quarterbacks. It earned him a start the next week against Atlanta. "Atlanta ran the first three plays right at me," says the 23-year-old. "All they got for it was a fourth and long yardage situation. They had to punt. I guess they figured I'd had enough testing for one day because they mixed it up after th at." During the off-season, the Rams traded away Bacon and moved 015'ln to defensive end. It leaves llttle doubt who the other defensive tackle, op- posite Merlin Olsen, is at \his point. "Nothing's sure," says Brooks, "But ft looks a lot bet· ter now than a yeer ago. Only there are problems, too. "Now the others are coming after me, tnstC!ad of me alter them . It """"" this group Is Fumbles Mark DALLAS -Te I e v Is Ion broadcaster Don Meredith is ln the National F ootbal l Leng11c r~cord book for at Jeost one mark he doesn 't care about. Meredith holds the dubious record or 16 fumbles in one season, made in 1964 with the Cowboys. really team oriented and the coaches are trying hard to get us to react to every play in a certain way. "I think I'll miss Coy. He helped me an awful lot and when he played defensive end, I'd go to him £or pointers dur· ing the game because he was on my side of the line." But Larry Brooks knows now that he is definitely wanted by the Los Angeles Rams. And there aren't many 14th round draft choices arotmd who can say that about any team. Deep Sea Vista: Bass Hold Pace Bass fishing along t h e Orange Coast has been steadv while flashes ,of yellowtail stifl creep into the fish counts on a sporadic basis. "We picked up 95 yellows on our all-day boat outside or Oceanside," a spokesman for Dana Wharf reported Sunday night . ' '"Our boats picked up 71 yellows Friday at S a n Onofre,'' a spokesma n for Davey's Locker out of Balboa Pavilion reports. But otherwise, it's mostly bass and rock cod being taken on the boats out of the four area landings. Carl McCullah at Huntington Beach Pier reports a good catch ol sand bass with aome bonito and halibut also being taken . Art's Landing report! a bait problem has limited fishing but that a large number or rock cod and bass along with blue bass were taken on the weekend. Rock cod and bass are the main items on the haU-day boats out of Davey's while Dana Wharf reports some bonito and barracuda, ulong with the bass catch. NEWf'OltT (DIYI''• Lectc1r) -HO lll!llffl: 2 ~rTKl/01, •S l>Orll!ll, 125 bl11, I yt1lowt1l!. .a3 rock eod, lltllbVt, $ mt<:k1rtl. {Ar1'• L1IMlll"1) - t$4 •lllll•n: t OO!lllo, ttt Deas, 4'64 roctc. cod, 2 llllllWI, I Mtckertl, 153 Dive .. ~ LONO llACM !P....,..nt LIMhltJ - 112 111111 ..... : 1 llln'1<ucta. ''° bO<lllt>. 12' c•lleo blu, 7.S roctc c.od. 41 lnKklf"'tl. , ... _. ..,..., -149 lflCllt1'1: 10 l>tfrKudt, 2•7 Miid bl••• 2U 1>cw1l1v, n n>et clld. 200 m1e1.:""-1. 111111 -JJO ..-.Vlln! I btrrte...o., • ..,i•T blu ' hllll!!IT SEAL IE&.CM -2U tnglln: tlO Ml'lll blu. ru tor1l1t>. 1ts IM(k1r11r, ,., rott C"Od, 12 blrPtcud•. Blt'D' -17S '"81 ...... : ) blrr1<11C11, lta b(lrlll&, t Miid bl1s, I whltl -bltt, I• hlUIWI. MOltltO IAY (Vlf't'J, L•Mlhttl -203 •l!Oltft: 17 l!no COCI. 1,n• rac;ll cOd. s 1ll)llCOl'I, (Stn s.i-1 -•• ~1111~1 : o t!l!Q cod. 461 rock cod. 111'9t!ttl - 11! 1119ltr11 1 •lbaf:oro, tcO roe' cOd. JJ n~ cod. UN PIDlllO (ttlld St, ll~M1 - 115 tll(tlt•1; .t$ ~"aclldt. 141 c1t1~0 llto11, 1 fl~U!M, llS ·~lld .,,,H. ,, I)'"!!!!') ?II m11ck1r•I, 31• roe• cod • CS1H1r1fllfll111tl -U1 ar1qJwr1' 1 vellowt•U. 111 b41rrtc:toda, 17• t.onl111 1.-0 c•llco bits. S h1!1b~t. l wtl!lw Mt bl1s, 416 ""ltCltfrtl DANA WHl.lllP -317 e~qle"~ 701 c1llco bl1J, s b•rrtcud1, •!'7 botlllo, • h•llbut, 9S v-llow!lll, 10 rOC.k cOd. l wft11t ... "'"'· OCIANSIDI -l64 tl'IQ!trs! U 111•· •It""'•· 1)4 bonl!o, •31 ktlfl lM111. • wllltl WI bH, 4 ll1t!tM, S ro(lc ud, n1 VtlloWlall, 2 ~ckertl. l.-tonday, Au9ust 13, 1~7J DAILY PILOT J 7 Yankees Top' South, 14-10 '\ By ROGER CARLSON OI ttlt D1Ur Piiot 11111 LOS ANGELES -Reeords and near-records were the major topic provided by SwJ. day afternoon's 22nd annua l Shrine football classic after the North surprised .with a 14- IO upset victory. The Sou1h offense was without question the worst ef- fort ever by a Rebels con· tingent in the 22-year-old series. Rustlers Nab 18-3 Triumph The Senik Rustlers rolled a pair of sevens in the first two iMings Sunday afternoon on the Golden \Vest College field to post an IS.3 victory over the El Toro Marines. They caMed a playoff berth against the Anaheim-Fullerton T i ta n s Tuesday night at Anaheim's METRO STANDINGS W L. T G8 5eon!t Rustler~. 15 6 G Ant.·Full. TUens 15 ' o O•ange Pant~·~ JJ 7 1 1•7 Cyprns Cho1'9'!rs lJ l o 2 Lii For>da Doo~ 10 9 1 •V. Wtrcl's Plrtlts t 12 0 6 El Toro Mtr1nes • 17 0 11 Slddl10.Ck G;iiouchol 2 18 o 12'1:i SUndlY'I RllUl!S :S!'nlk Rusller5 11, El Torq Marines l Cypress Chargers J1, Ward'I Plr11re1 10 (10 l""!ng•) Ana.·Fuller1<'lfl Tll1ns -12. Orange Panll'lers • Or1ng1 Pl"thers 8, :S1ddlebatk G1ud1os J T"""4ilr'• Gam• Senlk RuUleri. V$. Ana •FUlll'trlo" Tll11ns at Boysen Park (1) for Ille lr11gve championship. wec1 ..... 111y Nlglll L• Fo"d' Do"s vs. S1ddltback Gavd1os 11 Soywn P1rk (1). Boysen Park for t h e Metropolitan League sum- mer baseball championship. In other action involving area teams, Ward's Pirates lost, 11-10, in 10 innings to the Cypress Chargers despite a six-run Pirates uprising in the bottom of the ninth iMing. In a night game at Santa Ana's Memorial Park in· volving the Saddle ba ck Gauchos that was moved from Wednesday ni ght, the Orange Panthers posted an 8-3 vic- tory. The Rustlers scored seven times in tbe first and second innings and coasted to victory. Ray Eckles had a home run and double for three rbi and Gordon Blakeley had four hits in five plate appearances in· eluding two doubles and a tri- ple with four rbi to pace the attack. Stnlk lllll$ll1n 1111 Kennedy, cl·lf Wh!!tlty. 211 Bl1keley, s.s Pe!e•.on, lb 6rlldley, cf J. erown. c Tessier, c Esplnoit, p Mills, lb E"9strom. 3b SparlU, •f·lb-c Eckl•\, dh·rt Rungo, If R Brown. dh·s.s E llllCn, p 111 r II rbl ' 2 3 0 s 2 2 1 5 2 • • J 2 1 1 2 1 0 I J 1 1 0 l I 0 0 l o o G 1 2 1 1 2 1 0 0 ~ 1 1 1 6 2 2 J J 2 I J 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Tol•I• '3 18 17 16 score lly 1 M lllll• ' ' • Senlk Rustltrs no 100 t121-1e 11 ' E.T. M1rlnes 000 200 01~ 3 ' ' W1rd•1 Plrtle1 Otl .. ' ' "' Gren!. •• ' ' ' 0 Mevers. cf • ' ' ' Kube•ka. c ' ' , , Jollnsoo, " ' 0 • ' Ru!!. 211 • • ' ' Va~ht, 1b ' ' ' ' Pos al, lb ' 0 , • ChlrCI, rl ' ' ' • While, lf ' ' ' 0 KeUv. fs ' ' 0 ' To1a s " " " • score 11¥ lnnl"llll ' ' • Cvp. Charge•• OlO 000 1!1-11 It , Ward'I Pirate 001 001 006--10 14 ' S1cldl1D1d1 (JI •• ' • •M Ltk, cl ' ' ' ' Avalo•. 31! • ' ' ' 0--01111~,,, lb·P • ' ' ' WClll1m1, c ' 0 ' 0 P1r9111/d, ll·ID • ' 0 ' Htsler, 1b ' ' ' 0 Moeri .•• ' ' 0 0 ""ouohen. rf·Cf ' ' ' ' M~l.....,rll"' p.rf ' 0 " ' Tot II• " ' ' ' Score by 1"111"'' ' ' • ..._ P11r1"-5 302 )Ill o-t ' • ...,,,_ .. 001 011)...4 ' ' Hornets Pitt Fans onR1m CLEVELAND (AP1 l·lornets, trees, golf balls and even caterpillars were among the course hazilrds £or the gall eries at the PGA national championships ln sl week. The approximately 200 em- battled golf fans who sought medicaJ attention at the first aid tent needed aid for a Vfl:rtety of rtasons, but none was more bluuTe than the Cleveland man chomped by a furry, multi-legged crawler be round on his neck. Hornet and bee stings were the biggert reason ror first aid. although some of °""" were related direct!)' to the golfing. One 14-year-old boy sat on n hornet when hC' hunkered down to get a better view or the green. A Cleveland mln. intent on the play, walked into a tree and slnshed his Corehead. Another six persons, more wary or their footsteps. were hit in the bead by golf balls. And it was a game ~ 76-yard touchdown run by Inge of Stockton's St. Mary's •Ugh in the fourth quarter tha~ proved the wlMing margin. A tw-nout of 29,496 waS' ~he fewest to witness the charity event since the inaugural lrl" 1952. The South had Its chance lo put the game out of reach in the third quarter. but one of three Jost fumbles -all due to sloppy ball carrying -ended a Rebels march at the Nor th 12 with 4:29 left in lhe period. Inge took off through the right side of the line 1:14 later for his TD and Jim Own-I berlain's second PAT made tt • 14-10. Only n1oments before it appeared the South would be up by a 17·7 count until SanJ Bernardino's Shelton Diggs : coughed up the ball. The SOuth's ina~ility t.~ move the ball was evident ear· ly when it lost possession at ' the North 33. Late in the sec.. ond quarter an eight-yard punt by the North gave the ·~ losers the ball on the Yankees• •i 24. But the Rebs bad to settle •I for a ;12.yard field goal by ' Brad Rice when it couldn't '' generate an offense. Jack Davis passed to Wes r~ \Valker for 32 yards and a TD I in the third quarter to negate the North's one-yard TD run "' by Mike Carey and it was 1~7 I in fa\•or of the South. •l But that was the end of the South's offense as first Diggs 41 fumbled to set the stage for 1' Inge's 76-yard dash, then •C Davis was intercepted and , fina lly Dovis fu mbl ed the ball away at the North 35 with 2:43 ,'. left. ,, Newport Harbor High stand11 r out Jim Swick turned in a \1 creditable job at linebacker for the South, nailing the op-1)1 position four limes, assisting , ;J on four other tackles and fore. i ing a fumble in the first 1N period. It Swick and rorffier J\tater Dei .: High tackle Richard Genzel ~·enl all the way for the South i' on defense. Score by Quarters 1n North 0 7 7 l>-14 1t South 0 3 7 0.-10 ,, Racing Entries For MOltdtY1 Au11,11t 11 •t F inl POii 7.4! P.M. T FIAST ltl.CIE -.rx1 \'llrdl. 2 ye1r olds. C!11lmlniiJ. P1,1r11 $1600. Cl1lml"ll I' prle1 12..soo. • S11m MOO!! IR. Ad11\rf 120 If! Ttwny Bl11t IH. Crosbvl 110 D1111dy's Secr111t IW. M .... risoo) 110 Rockln, Set fM. a1ck1I) 111 ~I Tranquil Sltr !L. Wrlqhl! 117 I I W<1W'• Brok1r (R. aa"k.t) 120 Mary Doll Btr (H. Pl~l 117 summer Sllnthlne 10. Morrl1J 117 V1111 P11lleo Slim fl<. H11rll 117 r.JI Colle let Nole fS. Tre11ureJ 120 ~-AISO Ell9lbl1 Ap.rll Thre tltrl IL. WrlQhl) 117 K1"1js Crulw CL. Myles) 110 tl\ Mii Cl-tine {I(, H&rtl 117 Sev111ntll Moon {J W11nll 120 SECOND RACE -QI! y1rds, 3 year o• old & oo. Cl1lmlng. Purse Sl,IOO. ~ ~ Cltl,,.1119 Priet $2.000. ~f Qul!ot01'J Hloh fR. Btnksl 117 .... Oirelc fO. Mortis) 111 '" Meno Sluy CM. Blcklllll 122 -• Scooper Spor1 IL. M'(1M) 122 Dff1' La!Ml'1 611! IE. Gt rll) 111 Big SpY {L. Wrl9tltl 122 THIRD lllACIE -40C) ytn:I .. 2 Ye1r olds. Cl1fml1111. Pllf'M $1 ,400. Cltlmlllg 1trk1 $2.SOO. Wlllowcreek Birley ft). Morrl1l 120 Nice A Bo fJ. wau,onl 120 Mr. su111rchaflle fJ. c.._yerl no Ml11rne IE. Gerti) 120 Stacked OKk tD. Mllchetll 117 Qu111rtor Bel\der CF. G11rl1I 120 Mod Ari (S. Tre11urel 110 Rlno of Sliver {L. WrlOlll) 117 Rocket Andv (J. W1rd) 120 Swt1>• B~r tH. Crosby) 110 AIM l!lltlblt Above Rm.Ill°" IJ. Dreyer) 117 • D111rllniiJ' Elli CJ. M1lsud1) 117 Erm1r Glick IL. Wrlgtlll 120 Sis" CQl'd (E. G•riul 117 l<Ot>RTH lllA(li -0 Ylrd1. 3 Yffr oku & 111>. Cl11!m!"11, Pur1111 11,900. Cl•imlnQ prlce U,GOD. ~Ml Maclun (S. Tre1,ur•l 111 Acll1rver (l . Wrlglll) 119 Wilch Ell (M. Bickel) 111 .Ari Pippin (l.. M...,_l 111 M~-(ll. Adair) 1n 5.tnlt""'h (J , Wtrdl 11t Fll"TM ltACE -«IO Yitrdl. l year olds. Al~. P"""" s~.200, Color N.-Pink. ID. Mon'lll 111 \ Fllckt Olcji Ot. BlnUl 117 Trlclt Trvc!U-t (D. Clnlou) 11, Third I~ (Ill. Adllrl 12:2 LUC:kY Shlloh !H. Pl{ltl) 122 Go Tw!o Go (L. Wrlgtrll 117 Tooll" Around (J. Oreverl 117 Chic P•I Go (l. Tl'fflllf'll 117 A1'1 Allbl IL. MylM) 1'2 Top 1-i. Bir (J. WtliOI\) llt AllO Ell'lllllt Summer' ot Sevl:flty (R. Adtlrl 11' SIXTH lllACI! -Mt Yltdl, 1 \'ltr olds & up,.Atlow•nce. Pur•• fl,700. UVfldt l,llld& !IC. Hirn 11:1 David Coe.kl! {M. lllcktll 11'9 Ooal•~ aw 11. w..-t11 11• Walch Boy !It. a11nks) 12' Haytku (J. Ore¥1rl 111 N1th11 Tw1s! CO. HolbtOOiol 111 OOtis J11ne <D. C1ntou1l 113 My ll:ornt" ll'dl1" (R. AOttr) II' Come On Dtc" !C. Smllll) 119 Johntrle Bell (l. Wr/QllU 111 ...... •11911Ht Mr. lmport1"1 (H. Cl'OIOyl 119 SIVl!NTH RAC• -"° Y1'11'-3 n•r oldl I up. f'llll .. & "'411' .. AlloMflCa. Pl/f'M 13.-'°°. Trut'I '"•-IL. WrlvNI 11' Wiii 11'-n IJ. W•rdl 111 Jt~ MOOtr !S. Tl"llwrel 1" illuby Blrrtdllf (M. 9lctctil ,11• Reble's a-(R. Adtl•I .ti ...... -o-.. (J, Or-} Iii lllbtl Doll (H. Crmtl¥) He 0 1•·.I" P~·r ID Ctrdol~I 111 llOKTM ltACa -«IO YtrOt. l Y'MI' okl1 f. uo. Cl,l"llng. ~ .. SI,,., Cl•lmlflO grks ll.000. ,..,1 C~tln, (Ill. B"n"-11 12' Pltlt'O'I llr {J, Dreyer} 112 F11r s1111r (K H••ll n• C1llffll'nl1 Smog (It. AO.Ir) Ut Ba!!htr lS T,..1w•eJ 111 N1111,,.n Dttroli to. Koltwooltl 111 l 1lpft C T•11!¥ !C Stnllhl 1'2 4 Sult«! Vo !!. •. Wrlghl) 19' 'llNT"l ltA,.I lW V'•dol. l <;ttr llld •• Cl•!ml119 Ctlll•brtd. ~ll•M 11.rm. c1111tnino pdc1 \.l.ctO, F•~s JDy tlC. H•rll 121 Rnfl•n lttldV OL Crodwl 11• Mlolt:1 (L. Wr!Qllll 11? pi1..i ill11U11> lO. MDrtltl l)t Tlko Clll< Ill. ltnttl 1'7 M111 Cf\\lelcl'll• (J , Wtre) lllf T1111lo'1 la't DllU (&. OWQI lt WtlCll l'• lltflC't ID. C9"tloul 1\7 Otoe.._ IOW ti. T,....,..11 U• • I • _t -. ! 1 I -i 1 • ·- •• -·-...... IS i.t-.JL f PILO r SC Americans 'Eat Out' Even in Own Home FINANCE B eck1rta11 Cites 23% Increase FULLERTON -Net earn· ings increased 23 percent on a 9 percent gain in sales in fiscal 1973 and the upward lrend is expected to conlinu(', Beckman Instrun1cnts Inc. has reported. For the 12 1nonths ended June 30, Beckman reported net earnings of $5.969.062, or $1.66 per share. on sales of $161.5 million. rn the prior year, Beckman earned $4.8 million, or $1.36 per shnrc. on sales of $147.9 million. By SYL\'IA P(lflTJ:o;R ~pitc the fact that lhe cost of food is skyroc keting and :1 almost <ihvays cos ts less 10 crt at ho1ne than to ea t out, yo11 arc running a\\'ti Y rrom the horne kitchen as ncv c.r ~rorl l~\'Cn In !he face o ( enormous sales of cookbook s. :i publicizf'd " gourmel " t ren d in the U.S. nnd au upsurge in cooking classes for men an d \\·omen, you are in a "ORTE• stain pc d c from the home stove and pan· try IO\Yard the corporate~m· \ rncrclal kitchen. And even when \Ve eat in. v.•e're ''eating out" 1nore and 1norc. As one illustrat'1on, the foods \ve eat have increasinr:t amounts of built-in chef service. l\.1ore than half the foods \\IC. buy are ready to cook. reports the Department of Agriculture. l\.1ost of lhe rest are ready to eat. Only 3.3 percent need further prepara· "INCOMING ORDERS are lion (e.g .. nour. shortening). continuing to exceed ship--. ~s another il,lustration. u•hen ments and the outlook is ex· }\\ere ~me .. ~e are .. more a~d r cellent for sustained growth in more sei:iding out for din· earnings arxl sales," said Dr. ners or lunch-a batch of. egg· Arnold Q. B e c k m a n , rolls from the Chinese chairman and Dr. \Villiam F restaurant. a pwa from the Ballhaus.' president. "We ex: pizzeria. a barbecued chicken pect earnings to continue ris· from the supermarket hot ing faster than sales.'' foods dep:i~!'nt, a yard-long rifyi ng annual rate of 17 per- cent. \Vhat arc some of the key eating.out trends? -One Js NOT any boom in old-fashioned r c s tau rant eating. -The real action Is in fast food pl11ces, drive-ins, com- pany and college cafeterias. lin1ited menu places (pizw , c h i c k cn·in·a-OOsket, clam ba rsl, vending machines. -Vending nlach1nes are of· Beckman increased 1 9 7 3 he~ sandwich from the capital expenditures to a cfel~catessen. ~-hole ho m ~ · record $12.2 million lo support dch\'ered ~eals f~m a varie- ex-panding operations in the ty of catering scr\ ices. United States and abroad, the f JI AVE XO explanations executives. reported. . with \~·hich to dazzle you. One SHINY SQUARE IN CENTER'S THE CHIP Doe5 Function of 5,000 Transistors Th~y said ~974 capita! ex· point that seems c I ea r . pend_1tures will .t ~ta 1 ap-though. is that this trend con· proXJmately $10 mllhon. tinues to reflect ou r affluence and n1obility. And although today's galloping inflation is making a mockery of our ap- parent prosperity and , un- dercutting security, we still • are the world's most affluent society. Big Produ~t Ba1ikruptcy Bids Filed The following persons have filed petitions for bankruptcy with federal court at Santa Ana : JONES .Y.IClllH'I D•vhf, '"•cn•nl•'· 9~1 Gr.enw•~h Dr1~t. Hunt.nyl~n Stach. Li•Dilll!u lU.~~o. il•Sth l!IOOO, Rtteree P~!tr EHloll. GRAVES Mlrcll ,t.nn, le!ltr pttSJ ouera!or. 483 N. w 111on St , t:.o'1a M9UI. Ll1blUUtt SS.152, 1ue!s ~. Rtlertt A.K. Pnetin. HEISSER Alvin Tlll!OOotr, !ruck d river, I~? Gt11s11ow C1tClr, Hvn!1n1JIQn Brach. Ll1b!ll!111 51,83.6, 111i.e1s $1,.S~O. referee Elllott. HE ISSER Liiiie 8 .. 1!ou11wl!e, 11!1 O!lllr d1lal!1 II lboYI. CARTWRIGHT Jamt1 Rlkry, poi!lll clt•lr.. IS.?.S Goldin W11! S!, Hun. linQlon B1acn, Ll1blHll11 UJ.161. 1Hrls SS,600, reler1e Ellloll. DUNCAN Odow O. parln1r In Mfttanllla Inn tnd churcl! vou11! 0+•0<-tor, 1199S Allen!• W1 v. Costt Mes<'I. Liati'lltlr1 IZ!,026, llHll 14,UO, rrlt<er Pllelpt. OUNC..t,N Joan Cerolyn, w1ltrru, all ot~r det1!11 It 1bov1. OWENS Dennlt Anker. 111101)11111 clr •k, 768? CVPf'fH SI .. Hunll'!Oli n Beacll. Liabi!llle1 114"36, '''"' iJIO, r1t1rr1 Ellio11. l'ARENICk Allred ke n n I I II , m&clllnlsl. 16673 M'ple St.. Founlalfl Valley, Li11t>lll!lr1 193.110, '11111 U .205. refer" P"elp1. 1'1ll~ENt'"IC t-11l11n Evelyn, l>ou~lte. <'111 olMr delllls 11 1bov1. Dft;ENNARO Clv'•l1~ Jr . 100(! •rrv!ce operator. 1•.0 P1rk N~rt D·lv• NewDtlrt 8e11c~. 1.1,.l!l!l!les 111.101, ••MIJ l l,100. relerff PMIPI. Our mounting demands for foods. goods and services across the board are at the foundation or 1973's demand· pull inflation. These demands are the result of rising dollar incomes and expanding after- tax spending power. Another point is that eati11g 1 out is increasingly viewed as a necessity rather than a luxury -particularly among young men ;ind women -and this must be tied lo o u r restlessness, mobility, basic insecurities. ANO A THIBD Point i<; th at by eating out so much in the type of places '>''e favor. '"'e must still be losing out nutri· lionally. And \\·e·ve been going downhill nutritionally since the mid-I950s. To suggest how huge a part of American lire this is, in '73 v.·e'll spend more than $2i billion just to eat out in restaurants. lunch counters, rast food places, pizza joints ·-approximately twice the amount we spent I wo decades PRIVATE TRUST ago and equivalent to an FUNDS AVAILABLE average of $130 per person_ FOR REAL ESTATE LOANS We'll have eaten abut 145 1• .1. 211<1 TRusr oeEos n1illion meals <nvay from $1,SCO To $260,000 lJP ro eo% LOANS ON home by ycJr·end . a number musr DEED CO\.lATERAL \vhi ch has been rising about 9 N£WP0"1' t:ou1rv l'U•IMI percent a year. N•WllD<I Center 610 N•wport Center on.,. "'•"Port ae.c11. c aut. i71•J tM.c.am4 AS FOR COST, the expen~c 11._!!"--"--"---~~~~~~~:J__o~f~e~a~l~in~g~o~u~t~i'i ri sing at a hor- §1 -1000 ORDER "I ,, s:., ' ;. YOURS " }_ \ ,'u Beautiful • Stick-on LABELS ,/ TODAY! L-:: .?'"oN L Y °"\ $125 ~X INC~ Personalized • Stylish • Efficient ... Comes • I.It A paper-!hin s i I icon chip, so s mall t\YO would rit on your s m a 11 fingernail \vilh room lefi over. are the heart or mln i -calcutaiors of Western Digital Corpora- tion in NC\\'port Beach. It has been three }'ears since Al Phillips formed a one -man corporation to 1nanufaclure the t i n y chips. And now his crea- tion has 500 employes, and a b.:icklog of $20 million in orders. Another plant \i:ill be opened soon 1 n ~l a\aysia. 11E'S l\1AK ING chips al the ralc of 3 million a year. and sees a big de- mand for them as elec- tronic n1i niaturization is applied to 1nore consumer and computer products. Th e c hip s ar e called metal oxide semi· conductor-large scale in· tegration a sophisticated semi. con· ductor technology that permits the inter-con- nect ion or as many as 5.000 transistors within the tiny chip. It will perform the electronic functions cquivalt>nt to a digi13J computer. The tiny chip. tor ex- <1 mple, performs all the I ransac! ions in m i n i · c<1lcul ators. Phillips founded his O\\'n firm in NeYlport Beach. he says. because "I ~ol tired ot running into problems because of corporat e management's inability to n1ake decisions.'' PH I LLIPS IS A recognized expert in lhc MOS/LSI field, and is the author of a textbook on the subject. He has work· ed for General Electric. l\tlotorola, Sylvania, and Rockwell lnlernational. Th e m i n i-calculator boom has spurred demand ror the l\105/LSI, bu t J'hitllps sees a far great.er n1a rkct ahead. For one Small Size thing, a requirement that auto seat belts be keyed to the ignition syste1n \\'ill re-- quire th at each seat belt have one of the . silicon chips such as Phillips manufactures. Phillips says the mini· calculator is just the beginning of ne\v products made possible by the MOS/LSI integrated circuit. "The era of Dick Tracy ,.,.ris t \vatch clcc· tronics is here. \Ve will soon sec the MOS/l SI devices i n appliances digital clocks and organs'. The day of the automated kitchen \Yith tinv r..1os c 0 mp uters controlling dishwashers. ov ens <ind ranges is not far ofJ. ·• TllE /\fOS chip is nlade on a silicon base, and con· tains five layers 0 r circuitry, all sandwiched together to form a paper· thin chip. The circuitry is designed and stored by computer, which produces images on a photographic plate, ten limes the fina l ch ip size. When it is reduced. the a c curacy must be within ten millionths of an inch. · All of the operations are carried out in a .. clean room". sterile as a hospital operating room, \lo'ith super-clean devices to strictly control dust and humidily. One thing lacking at \Vestern Digi tal is a separate process develop- ment laboratory, PffiLLJPS llAS a n unusual attitude a b o u t that. "I know from past experience." he s a y s , "that when a process is developed in an R & D laboratory, it never works in a factory .. ,we do our process development on the manufacturing noor, with manufacturing-type equipment. so that when the process development ls done, it works." Order For Yo urself or a Friend M•y be used on onYe lopes es return address l•.btls. Al5o very handy as identification l•btls for marking persona l items such a1 books, records, photos, etc. l t bels stick on g l•ss •nd m•y be used for merking home cenntd foc.d item1. AU l•bels a re printed with stylish Vogue type on fin • qu1/ity whit .. g ummed paper. OCC Schedufu1g· En1ploye Course ..-----------------------, I f ill Ill ltll1 t•~INll. ell• •nll mill wlf-fl.JS It! I I l'lltt Pr~11119 L•IHI Clv., l'.O. 10~ IUI I I Cttll M .... C•lll, ,,.,, I I I I I I I I I I L ____ P~L_<?_!_~!N!!~~----J • .. Employe Selection a n d Pla~ment is the Utl4!! of a new business course being offered ,Jn the cYenlng lit Orange Coast College this fall , The three-unit cla.ss will meet TuC'sday evenings from 7-10 p.m. ln Room 6 of the OCC Environ mental Center. The cour:o;e will examine basic r ccptlon techniques, screening, testing, interview techniques. applicant rating. resumt•s. salary and wage . . ... .. .. . . .. . ' " .. Complete New York Stock List I • • • MOP.ell)', August l.3, lCJ1J . Gar Wood SOn Plans Will Test TV IDGHLIGHTS . ' KCET Em 8:00 -Cambridge Debate on Women's Li.b. Conservative spokesman William r'. Buckley Jr. dashes with lemininist Germaine. Greer in a sesaion at the Cambridge Union Debating Society in England. ·· Prom Wlre ·Services KHJ G 11:00 -"Paths of Glory." .~irk Douglas, Ralph Meeker and Adolphe Menjo ·slar in Stanley Tho will o! the late millionaire speedboot klng Gar Wood is being Challenged by his son evep though it contains a eta~ "Saying that any challeng'ec of the document 1..., h\s'jnheritance. Kubrick's dra.ma of responsibility in wai'time from 1957. ABC fJ 11:30 -Wide World of Entertainment "On Location With Howard Cosell Training With the Super Bowl Champs." C0sell visits the training. camp of the Miami Dolphins for ln·deptb inter- The elder Wood ctianged his will 11 days before his . deaUt at age •t In June· 1971. Tbe previous will left eJ°erytbing to Gar Jr.1 SC. • ' Vl(lWS. ' > -- The son contends' his father ~·as men411Jy confused and subjected·to pressure when he signed the second will. .* TV ·DAILY LOG 1'he Internal R e v e n u e Service filed a tax lien charg- ing San Francisco Symptiony cond u<:tor Seljl Ozawa and his ( PEOPLE ) Monday Evening AUGUST 13 Eil) Mlauelito Y11da Show ED Movie Clauitt: (211r) "Ont f• tat Hout" (dr•) '36--Humphrey Bo- aart, Beverly Robtrts. "'ife. Vera, with failure to pay r----------~I 8:30 m Mirr Griffin Show GI!)Nowl1 $14 .,661 in personal income WATERUT£ HEARIW 9:00 IJ 00 Hert's LUCJ (Rl Lucy takes taxes. All P'Otr•11111h11 Is s11bjtd to tUn1t up skydivin1 as a "~obby" to per· The document alleges that lflU!ollt 11otict !or "we111• ol Ult suade Kim to aive up her dangtr· Ozawa owes $1.839 in federal W1te11it1 Htarinp. 011s pastimes. income taxes for 19'4 and (J) Civills1tlo11 $12,821 for 1969. 6'00 IJ 0 fJ €11 m a'l aJ ""' 0 III !!J !BC""'""''"' !Cl · * 00 News (2hr) "Red Tom1ht'ft" (R) (dra) Th e bu i J d j n g th a t 0 lkn11n6 '61 -Howard Keel, Joan Caulffeld, @ Courbhlp ol [ddlt'• father Broderlclt Crawford. The dlsastroui housed Jack Ruby's Carousel 0 Wtntad Dead tr Allvl defeat of General C~ster and lhe Club and' more recently lhe ®) Mijor Luau• laseblU Cont'd 7th cavalry at tile Little Bighorn Blue Front Restaurant tias tmm SPM. leads to mo1e bloodshed In th• been closed in Dallas by city m The flinbt~ts battle against the Sitlux. officia1s on grounds that it is 6) Stir Trtk @)Movie: (C) (2hr) "Wh1fs SI unsafe . EE tos Tmes Bad About Feelin& Sood?" (com) Ruby, the man who shot ac-ED Htdppodp Lodfl '68 -Georgi Peppard, Mtry Tyte, cused presidential assassin EE Tflfll StNpi Moore. Lee Harvey ·Oswa·Jd; operated Q) Dra1net · ht J b · th d 5:30@ Hopn's Heron · fl) Roller G1mu a n1g c u . on . e secon 0 Mowle: (C) (90) "Tiit Desert fE Mysterious Mr, Eliot A BBC por- floor of the building at the Son(' Part 1 (mus) ,53_Ka!hryn trait of lhe Nobel Prlze·winnln1 time President John F. Ken-Grayson, Gordo• MacRat, Steve poet, interweaving films ol T.S. El· nedy was shot and killed in Cochran. fol with eJcerp!s from his poe!fy Dallas. (jJ CBS News Walter Cronkil• and drama. Keir Ou!le1 narrates, * O Hare Cun Will Tra'tel @II Lt Criadl Bien Cdada San Francisco ~IayorJosepb mA!ldJ Griffith M. Alioto filed a $2.5 million @) Sut Yuna Yln1 Yet 9:301J CU Doris Dar Show (R) Henry ·1 · l tbe A · n:-Uvini ~ .. -Jones 2uests as feist1 Sam John· SUI aga1ns mer1can 11:1:.1 ..... , son, a retirement.age employee ol River ccinstruction Co. of tml.leto Gutltrm Show Toda"'s World whom Doris decidn Pl C l m Dtsert Thuttt , acer OUD Y. to save from ratirtment. The suit, alleges the firm El) Uttlt Rascals 0 News conspired:.to deprive Alioto of 7:00IJ CI!Oill'Nfttl Q)Get Smart that amQUPt in legal fees after 0 a.urli for Dollin el) Muth1ch1 lbli1n1 he helped settle a dispute @ Mowie:•(Zllr) "Srut Sinner" f0 Variety , between it and Placer County (dra) '49 -Gre1ory Peck,. Ava 10.-001J ()) Mlttiul Cent!r (R) The di· ·over construction of a dam on Gardner. lemma of how much to tell a P•· the American River in 1963. @ Wlldlflt Thtlbt tient ibout an Illness conl1onts Dr. * 0 Wlllfs Mr Une? Gannon in the cases ol 1 noted The young widow of Delta ! I I.ow Lucy woman pilot and a widowed motlltr. Air Llries Capt. Sidney \V. v.r I Orea~ .r Jeinn~ 0 m &) News Burrill Jr. delivered a fESi•pleMtnft Mint @ Twill2ht lont sti llborn child at Boston's EIDVfhffliJ.IUtu·&Cliy OR11f1 Philbin Talks To •.. Lying-In Hospital. €?'.JMuAtta £1i)Y1r1te "A Fau of Wer'' (R) w .... ,~, Burrill , was the co-pilot of . • • '; "'" 10:30 0 Talll l1cll the oat which crashed in 7:JO fl \1111111 ,M1111 • Stand tip •~ @ On• Step "'°nd heavy fog while attempting to Cfletr (R) Vliictnt Price 1iiisfJ. Ql Tru1 Adwent11rt land July· 31 at Logan lntemll:-(})Hopn's Mertes e!TV Musiul tional Airport. B Tiit JltW Price b Rllht (ID News /SpOfiti Mrs. Susan BWTill, 29, has Q Mtlp Tilr lhl111t1or l!l"" """""'B 11,00 o o u !II m m.-one other child, Scott, 2. CJ Million $ Movit: (t) (Ztlr) @@®J EENtws * . "Mn el tht West" (wes) '58 -D One Step leyold Astronaut James Lovell ~·111 G1ry Cooper, Jutlt London, Lee J. @Perry M1son make an earthly swoop Satur· C<ibb. O Movie: "Piths 11 Clory" (dra) day in orie Of the preliminaries m That Girl '57-l<irk Douglas, Ralph Meeker, to the All-Ainerican Soap Box ID Dr1pet Adolph Men Jou. Derby at Akron . EE Lu Allples Colltctlvt "Ht:ts. m Tn.ith or ConstqlltllctS Lovell )Oins pro basketball Frults & Boob" ID Mowie: "P1urMlerers of P1inte4 star Jerrj · Lucal and com· ml Thi Adftnturer Flab" (wes) '59 -Corinne Cal\ttt, edian Martie AUen in the C!J Ulted J lis Estreltas Skip Homeier. ~ h m Tht Add••s f1milJ' !\1arathon vii Can Race whic 11:301J @ CBS late Movie: (C) .. ,., precedes the 1 p.m. start of 1:00 II CU Gunsinok "This Golden '1011&1 Atf1ir" (com) '64 -Bob the derby champions~ips. Lind" (R) An unusual and moving Hope, Yvonne OeCulo, Ulo Pulver. Champions from Gertnany' story of I Jewish immigrant lam. 0 ®) m Johnn1 Carson Shecky Venezuela and Canada are lly t'O!Tllng to grips with the tu1bu· Greene is 1utst host. anlOng the 139 youngsters who lent ure on the Kansas frontier ol D Movlt: "Fort Vengeance" (adv) f $30 000 · th~ 1870s. '55-Keith Larsen, Rita Moreno. \vill compete or ' in Q m Maior Leagut l1seb11! Cin· 0 (])al Wide World of Efttar· scholarships, including the cinnatl Reds n. Pittsbu1gh Pirates. tainment .. On Location-With How· $7,500 first prize. 0 Movie: (C) (2ht) ''Wher1 Love ard Cosell Trainin1 with the Super ·* Has Gone" (dr1) '64-Sus1n Hay· Bowl Champs" Part I Howard ~ Charles Stackhouse, a Nav)' ward, Bette Davis, Mike Connors, s!ll visits the trainin1 ump ol tht Jietenant commander w h o Joey Heatherton. Miami Dolphins to present the en· spent six years in a Hanoi O @ Cll The Root:ies "A fa1e· tire pre.season scene In in-depth prison, will marry a Dallas well Tree from Marty" (R) A slilhl· interviews with coaches. trainers, airline hostess Aug. 21 at Ir retarded girl Is d1epl1 affected players, players' wives and football after seein1 an old derelict die ol fans. Lemoore, Calif. a heart attack while he is Mina: m Tt Tell the Trutlr Stackhouse, a Cincinnati harnsed b1 a wealthy young man native. nlet Alanna Whelan in on 1 drunken spree, Tyne Daly l2:00 @ M1nf11! Dillon ~lay and proposed to her the guests. m Allred HitchtOCk l'teunts night of a salute to Vietnam ®)News veterans at the Cotton BO\Vl. m Tht Chost and Mn. Muir * (D Thi Untouch1blet The S74.558 estate which an EE la Senora Joven lt;ilian-born reti red San Fran· EID 1 IJICIX~1 C.mbiid1• Deb.ate on WoMt•'• lib Conservative spokes-cisco \•;aiter bequeathed to the man Wm. F. Buckley Jr. claslles United States has b e e n with feminist adYC1C1!f/1uthor Ger· 12:30 m Movie: "Spy In the Sky'" (mys) '58-Steve Brodie, Sandia Franclt. 1:00 (J) 0 0 @ News D Hi&f!W&J Ptttel 1:45 O Movia: ''Tht Jot Louis story" (d11) '53-James Edw•rds, Cote1 Wat!ace, Paul Stew1rt forwarded to the Treasury m1illl' Creer Jn e session held by Deoartment. the tambridge Union Dtb1tin1 So· 3:10 B Movie: "Ttnder Y1111" (drt) The will of John Rosetla, 83, ciety ill En1J1nd. '48 -.lot £. Brown, Josephln1 vrho died Dec. 8, I 9 7 I : el El COll'llndM HutcMnson. specifically on1itted all heirs. including brothers Guy in Los --------------------Angeles and James i n 1:00 m (C) "'Special Co'm1pondtnt" Massermo. Italy, and all other Tuesday (dra) '66-Merl•·Je»e Nat. persons. an attorney said. J:lOfJ"The WronC Ma1t" (dra) '57- J do this in gratitude for the DAYTIME MOVIES Henry Fonda, Vera Miits. care and hf.'lp I have recei ved 3:00 00 ''ThrH Sltkrs" Pirt 1 (du) '65 from the govern ment of the 1:30 0 (CJ "The Duchtss ol ld1ho" K. ~ 1 0 ldl p Unnit ~d Stfl lCS of An*.!rica . .'' (1cm) 'SO-Esther Williams. -im an ey . ''' ne aae. ®) "MklnigPtt lice" Concl. {susp) '60 -Doris D1y, Rex H1rri$Oll, N•mt of !he G1mt Weddi1ig· Vioknt ZERLO, Italy (AP) -A wedding -party develoued Into a ftee.-for-an· involving hWldteds -including !he mayor -,rter youths made some nasty remarks lo the hrlde. The fight moved from a restaurant lo the square, \\'he re opposing factions battJed end on Io o kc rs [rom n e a r by bulldlngs pelted lhem wllh fruit. It took JOO pollcemro lo restore order. JO:OO !IJ "Nl2htmare" (susp) '64-0avid Knight, Maira Redmond O "TollCh ol Oe1tti" (mys) '59- Wllliam Lucas, David Summer. J2:;00 O "YIJilante Terror" (wes) '54- Wild Bill Elliott. "OSS-117, Ml»M ftr I l!Utf" (&dw) '66 -Mylellt Demon1tot. 3:30 a ''Tht Spolltf1" (we1) ''2 - John W1yn1, Marlene Diatricll. •:00 fJ (C) ''ltmbot S.uctr" (SCl·fl) '67-0in Dul}'ta, Loi• Nettleton. 4:JO (J)S.Mt 11 lMM lbtlJll KOCE, CHANNEL 50 Orange County's UJIF television station, KOCE·TV. has sc~:luled the following special programs today. Detailed hsttngs of ChAnnel 50'$ programs are carried. in the Dally PJ/ot's TV Week each Sunday. ):00 TURNING '01NTS IC) "Tiit Hf •t Cdalt: 0 Nlh I/I !ht Mlt1t1" -Ill· •mlt1tl ml111n9 Gl'lf\lllr~ •rid prOOOMI• IOI' !m1>1cvf~l"tl>G ~•1111v, ):JO CARR.ASC llHUAS IC) 8Jlln;U•I comm11111c111 1.11111~ intlrvcfl OI\ for dllk:lr..,. •:OO MISTEI l:OGEI~' HEIClHIOlt• ..000 CCI BOb fllc:I Judy B•ow" 11\0w Mr, ROI!' rt '10w 10 meke Pf,IPQt•t lr!HTI llol.IMhokl lltmt. •:» ILl!CTlttC COM,AHV !Cl A CoObhl\ (()ll<'ly Croakll'IO C0<11 .. 1 11nd ttie 1'cr" "°""""'· •~oo SEl.\MI tTIEl1' IC ) O.e.r "'"°' • boll ol 1nctw 10 nr1 c:ou,111 111 Florld• 160 ml11.) j :(ll) LAW flOll: THE '701 IC) l..IHO'I )!I .. Ct tlfot"I' law" -coll.,. co11r1t IOI' credl1. &:30 ,OCUS OIANGE COUHJY rel Host J fm Cooptr e11ltfn•~ lhot ci1111111y of Of111111e Counlv'• cvl111r111 r1HOLH"ce1. 1:00 l'HE COMINO .1.iuno11t Ofl JIMM1' lltlOHJ IC) A IPKl•I d••rna •tlOl.I' • Youne w.+l,tr• u se""°rklf'. 100 ""'".) •::IO 1001( IEAT !CJ "iJ&d"O Ille Llonl" ii,. """" Wick•• It rt11l.,wtd. 1:00 tNJllltNATIONAL ,,lt,OltM• ANCI (C) "Lt t yllltlh,t" -ftNUlpPt l.;lltt11•1 0.1111, ll.O l'!lln,J • .Jn the Service Marine Wllllrun B. Sidoti, of J.7442 Keledo Lane, Huntington Beactt, has reported for duty at the Marine Co.i:ps Base at /:)"'P J:;ejeune, N.C. Marine Lance· <; o r p o r a I Christopher R. Kilby, ,son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry R. Kilby of -204 Clst St., Newport Beach, ·has repOrted for dUty at tbe Marine Corps "Air Statioil at Cherry Point, N.C. Airman Michael R. Wigley, son of Mr. and Mrs. ~1ichael T. Wigley of 91Cl. Ellsworth, lfuntington B e a c h , has graduated at Sheppard AFB, 'l'ex., from the U.S. Air Force missile mechanic c:ourse corr ducted by the .Mr Training Command. 200 Boats Sail Race Fo1· Cup · ... Some 200 boats tn 15 · clasSe:r groped_ Uteir ~ay t!!rO!l8'! fOi and smog and light airs Satur.: day and Sunday in Newport Harbor Yacht ·Cluh:s SUm.mer Gold Cup Regatta which takes the place or the traditional Race Week. Among the inside classes, Mark Gaudio was the winner in the one-man Laser Class. 1'1le regatta was being used as a tun e-up for the West coast Junior Championships to be held at NHYC next Saturday and Sunday. Following are trophy win· ners in each class: INSIDE CLASSES LI00.14A -(I) Gared Smith, BYC; (2) Rowland Lohman, BYC; (3) Merlin Gayman, ABYC. The airman,: wbo studied maintenance and operation of the Titan missile, is being assigned to Davis-Monthan AFB, Ariz., for duly with a unit of the Strategic Air Com- mand. LIJlO.HB -(!). Rick Crisfield, VYC: (2) Fred Toepel, BYC; (3) Jim Ker- rigan, BCYC. . ' ' IKtMr ,._. KITE _ '(!) Steve Schock, NEWPORT HARBOR YACHT CLUB GOLD CUP REGATTA DRAWS CROWD. Marine Pvt. Michael T. ton· cepcioa, son of Mr. and Mrs. Juan· M. Concepcion of 13451 La Pat Place, Westminster, g:raduated fro.m basic training at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot here. Navy Airman Paul D . Gustafson, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Gustafson of 16672 Irky Lane, Huntington Beach, completed as hononnan of his company, the Aviation lo.fachinists Mate School in J\olillington, Tenn. r..farine Sgt. Michael Y. Shimizu , son of Mr. and Mrs. San1 I. Shimizu of 17697 Bay Circle. Fountain Valley, v.•as promoted to his present rank while serving at the U.S. Marine Corps Base a t Okinawa. Navy Fireman Apprentice LawrenCe D. CtonkrUe of 5082 Flamingo Circle, Huntington Beach, is a crewmember of the multi-purpose aircraft car· rier the USS Kitty Hawk sta~ tioned at the I~unters Point :11aval Shipyard in San Fran· • isco. Navy H u 1 I Maintenance ?'echnician Second C I a s s l'homas N. Clark, son of Mr.· end Mrs. H.N. Clark of 6f1 St: ~ames Road, Newport Beach1 i~ participating in clearin g oiines from North Vietnam's oiajor harbors and coastal waterways as a crewmember aboard the USS Edson. Marine First Lieutenant Robert J. Friend Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Friend of Fir Avenue. Irvine. has qualified as a pilot in the AH- 1J "Sea Cobra" helicopter at the Marine Corps Air Station at New River, N.C. Marine Pvt. David L. Saylor Jr .. son of Mr. and Mrs. David L. Saylor of 1856 Tustin Ave., Nevrport Beach, graduated from basic training at the Mar.ine Corps Recruit Depot here. Marine Second Lieutenant Jeffrey T. Powell, husband of the former Miss Patricia L. Alward of 4151 Blackfin Ave., lrvine, made his first solo flight in a Navy aircraft here. f\1ids bipman Lau·rence E. Erikson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rd\vard M. Erikson of 19312 Bethany Drive , Irvine, is assisting in the training of the U.S. Naval Academy in An· napolis M.D. SANTA ANA -Veterans of· Navy submarine combat in World War It will gather for their 19th Annu al National Convention in San Diego on Wednesday, Aug. 1, for four days, at the Sheraton Airport lnn on picturesque Harbor Island . Chanter members of the l i.S. Submarine Veterans of World War Ir meet mOn thly at a local level but southland members are urged to attend the nationwide convention. Qualified shipmates of the World War II submarine service may contact Uls Angeles Area Chapter Presi· dent Willi•m Hol)and, of 2011:1 Cypress St., Son ta A n. a Heil!hts, 927'11 for ,!U<lher in· formation. He may also be called at 545-3728 directly for aetails and how to register. Navy Pcrsonnelrnan First Class David L. Schoenberger 1 son of Mr. Rnd Mrs. Donald L. Schoenberger of 5842 ·Trophy Drive, Huntineton Beach, has left for an extended deploy· ment with tbe U.S. 7th Fleet 111 the Western Pacific aboard Ute store ship USS Vega. Scheduled port visits lnClude J•pan, Philllpines, Thailand, Hong Kong and Taiwan . NHYC. Olympic Soling Cl1ss Shown in Horse Rice Start LASER -(I) Mark Gaudio,---------'----'------------------ NHYC; (2) Mark Hinshaw, LrYC; (3) Jim Buckingham, NHYC. SABOT A - (1) Wallie Ger- rie. NHYC; (2) Mike Hatch, NHYC; (3) Laura Shelton, LIYC: (4) Brooke Benjamin, (I) Craig (2) Scott (3) Eric (4) Henry NHYC. 1 SABOT B ·· ~' (I I Donna Williams. °ii'YC; (2) Bi 11 Fodor, DPYC; (3) Kathy Tyler, BYC. SABOT C - Fletcher, DPYC; Alleborn, NHYC; Doering, NHYC; Mackel, NHYC; Gien, BCYC. (5) Scott OUTSIDE CLASSES PHRF -(1) Pussycat, Jolm Szalay, BCYC; (2) Linda, Hap Lord, BYC: (31 Uncanny, Hobart Denny, BCYC. RHODES-33 -(I ) Maruja, Bob Kettenbofen, BYC; (2) Folly, Blair Barnette, BYC; (3) Therapy, Gayle Post, BYC. ETCHELLS-2'l - ]I) Ole, John Riddell, NHYC. SOLING -(I) Ut-Ut Aah, Rick Jenness, BYC; ( 2 ) Quicksilver, Tom Jorgenson, LAYC; (3) Wet Drawers, Tom Willson, BYC. STAR -(1) Streaker, Tom Blackaller, NHYC : (2) No name, Dennis Connor, SDYC; (3l Glory. Bill Gerrard, SBYC. SHIELDS -fl ) Charlotfe, Joe O'Hara, NHYC: ( 2 J Prudence, La rry Ba u.m. BYC: (3) Tornina, Bill r.tartin, NHYC. LUDERS-16 -(I) Kildee, Ben Hromadka, LYC. 470 - (1) Calliopsis, Al Smith, ABYC; (2) No name, \Viii Johnson, ABYC; (3) Pipit, Len Jones, SCCYC. New Laser Dinghies Set Regatta Nearly 100 Laser dinghies, the popular new single-handed class, are expected to be on the starting line in the ocean off Balboa Pier next Saturday and Sunday when Newport Harbor Yacht Club sponsors the Western Regional Junior Championship for the class. The regatta is expected to be an annual event for ski~ pers 18 years old or yoWlger who live in California. Oregon. Nevada, Washington an d Arizona. This year's races are being limited to 100 entries, ac- cording to Ge.raid Madigan , chairman. Plans are being made for future races to have elimination to select top skip- pers ·from different areas to come to Newport for the championship. NHYC Commodore Te d 'Monroe has announced that the Joseph A. Beek Gold S award, ,originally dedicated to the SnoWbird Class, has been redeeded to the Laser Junior championships. La Volpe 'Wins Race La Volpe, a 46-foot schooner skippered by Peter Dupuy of Santa Monica Yach\ Club was ·the winner of cauromla.V-acht Club's Pacllic CUp In a 151· mlle race for Schooners and ketches. fi"irst to finish· at 6:08 p.m. SUnday was the 83-foot schooner Serena. The race started ,Prlday al 1,30 p.m. Sereno 's elapsed time was S2 hours and 38 minutes. La Volpe was afs'o the han• die3p winner in the schooner class. Winner ln the ketch class wa1 Peregrlna, a 40.foot Mo<gan designed ketch skip- pered by Roy Disney of camomJa Yacht Club. I Hobie Cats Hold Race For Trophy Hobie Cats some 150 strong in the 14 and 1& f00t classes swarmed over Long Beach Harbor Saturday and Sunday in the f\Division1 JI, Southern ' California Championships. Trophy winners in t h e various divisions : HOB1E·l6A -(1 l Richard Loufek and Eric Barton, Costa Mesa: (2) Di ck and Carol Beauchamp, Corona de! Mar; (3) Bob Seaman and Jana Haynes, Venice; (4) Jerry King and Tony Cabbott, Newport Beach; (5) Wayne Schaefer and Toy Neale, San Juan Capistrano. llOB!E-16B -(I) Richard and Sandy Maxey, L o n g Beach; (2) Jim Cotton and Robyn Ross, Dana Point; (3) Alan. and Don Johnstone, La Canada: ( 4) Steve Trainor and Kris Faulkess. Big Bear Lake; (5) Denny Soden and John Burke, Big aear Lake. HOBIE-160 -(1) Steve Leo and Det>bie Wilkinsin, Newport Beach; (21 Robert and Sandy Howland, Santa Ana: (3) Tom Eckles and Roy Kronk, San Diego ; (4) Norm and Patty Farquhar. Seal Beach. HOBJE-14 -(t) Randy Hatfield, Long Beach; (21 Jo'hn Ross-Duggan, Newport Beach; (3) Craig Barto , Newport Beach: (4) GWlter Hagen, Malibu; (5 ) Bob Johnson, Irvine. HOBIE-HB -(I) Wes Goleman, Oxnard; (2) Burt Sheriff. Lakewocxl.; (3) Jerry Kermode, Laguna: ( 4) Joe Bernhardt, Long Beach ; (5) 1'-lac Wright. Torrance. HOB!E-I4C -(11 Bruce Fields, Lawndale; (2) Milt Rudge, Cerritos, (3) Mark Aumann, Long Beach; (4) Rick Tompkins, Long Beach; (5) Fred Willis, Torrance. Slim Lead Still Held By Skipper Jeff Brauch or Los Angeles Yacht Club clun g to a natr0w lead Sn the ~5 Pacific Coast championshiJlll at Alamitos Bay Sonday at the conclit>lon of four of · tbe schedqlecI six races: ' Brauch had a one point Jead over Dennis Surtess ot Palo Alto Yacht Club In the best five of Six series. The two skippers are tied on the basis of a throwout after four races . The series concludes today with two races. Tuesday will be a lay-day and the 65-boat fleet will start competition Wednesday for lhe North American championships, Third race -(I) Jeff Brauch, LAVC; (2) Dennis Surtees, PAYC ; (3) Alan Johnsont CBYC. Fourth race -(I) Surtees; (2) Brauch; (3) lleney Jolz, PAYC. American · Kille,d COWES, Isle of Wight (AP) ~ A · United States naval of.· fleer waa found shot dead to- day In a cabin aboard the U.S. nav&t Jug Sollnan which was acting as a ·guardship for com· Jl<tlng , yachts dur.lng Royal Regatta Week. Welcome Aboard· By ALMON LOCKABEY . Believe it or not, things are not all sWMtness and light irt the "corinthian" sport of ya~h( racing. Especially in the offshore yachting ·fraternity where there is a continuing battle over a compli· cated bit of computerizing. known as the Interna- tiohal Offshore Rule Mark lll. This is the measurement rule, you will recall, that replaced the old Cruising Club of America' measurement ~e which reputedly had more loo~ holes than a giant sized chunk of Swiss cheese. BUT THE CCA method of "equilizlng" various yachts for long distance racing was solid compared to the gaping boles in the !OR. Talre, for example, the bitter fight going on on the East Coast over a ylcbt called C3$cade. And never iear, you haven't he"ard the Jast of the ULDB (Ultra-Light Displacement Boats), one of which won the rece"?t Transpa~ despite a heavy Ume pena)ty. , A classic example of the East Coast fu~r is chronicled in the August issue. of Yachting Maga- zme which features back-to-back intervieW& with Jerry Milgram, designed of the controversial "'cat. ketch" Cascade, and Olin Stephens 111 chairman of the International Technical committee and One of the authors of JOR. MILGRAM, an MIT professor who cartiei the tit~ "doctor'' (of something) before his name pulls no punches in stating that alter the ITC raised Cas- cade's rating to 27.2 feet (as a result of the boat's performance In the Southern Ocean Racing Circuit) it has killed Cascade and thclt the boat's value has been diminished. In a spirited interview c o n d u c t~e d by Yachting.'s associate editor, Jeff Hammond, Mil· gram sU.ted: "A lot of people and companies have been dam· aged by the unfair competition assoeiated with the making of and the alterations of the JOR. I think the switch from Mark II to Mark m somewhat pre- maturely has damaged some people, and I think the frequent rul~ changes have damaged the sport as a whole." MILGRAM charges that "Up until now the Off- shore Rating Council (the governing body of ocean racing) has been a rubber stamp for the ITC" and "Olin Stephens and Robin Glover conltol the ITC." (He will find a lot of "amens" · ib Newi)ort Beach and other yachting centers on bOtb coasts.) In his first public statement since \he lal'.est flurry of criticism in the American yachUng press over the Cascade issue, pun. stephens says ,thenl was some carelessness mvolved when the controls on two-masted rigs were put Into the !OR. Basically, he ·Asays, these passages were picked up from the CC rule. In the interview, also conducted by Hammon<!, Stephens defends the development aspects of toll.. Said he : . "I don't think anyone wants a mere handicap formula. I think a modified handicap formula Lt, what is wanted. Performance handicapping; even If it was possible,. would be the most retrograde sort of ·step that could be laken in the sport." (That statement alone will get Stephens sOmf Joud guffaws from the ranks of the Performance Handicap Racing Fleet -formerly Pacific Handi· cap Racin~ Fleet -whose membership has sky· rocketed Since the JOR came into being.) IN A surprise sU.tement, Stephens Indicated that a wetted surface factor would probably he. brought in.to the· JOR when there are "sweeping changes" made in 1976. He Indicated the· ll"r wetted surface !actor wnuld probably Ile similar to tho one now l!ein'g u•ed by the Storm TrY•-.U 'dub' in Its modWcation ~f IOR. ' Stephens also said there Is another move afoot which would combine the· rul~ with the Ume allow- ance snlem in •ucb a way that the paratJleters. of meli"llr~ent will be adjusted according.to'.weathe~ conditions. (That last will rekindle still another contl'()- versy.). . Yachting said the two inierviews were pul> \; lished to. "clear the air" and to allow racing yachts· men IQ know exactly where these two individuals stOQd on the Cascade controversy as well as other Issues allecUng the iuture of blu~water yach.t nc- ing. ' • ·• • ' ( 1 v I. s r, ' u u c r ~ d ,. • a 0 fi 6 " " ·' .. a " p ,, )c t c c p o. " l> ti IT t Lago11a .-BeaJeh EDITION . . -- .•. • Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks • . • . VOL. 66, NO. 225, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' t-llONDAY , AUGUST 13, 1973 TEN CENTS Laguna.'s Ruth-Roman Renwmbers Last Moments Aboard Andrea Doria Meat Hunters Slaugliter Deer Intruders who apparently saw helpless animals In an Irvine Park pen as a .temporary solution to the meat shortage cut the throat of a young deer during the weekend and carried off the carcass, Orange County Sheriff's officers said today. Deputies said the intruder! climbed the chain link fence sur- rounding the animal pen at the park near Orange, slaughtered the ..._ Jleer and then dragged it out .. lhrough a hole they cut In the fence. The deer was valued at $250. • Spanish Plane • • Crashes; 85 Feared Dead LA CORUNA, Spain (UP I) -A Caravelle airliner or the Spanish Aviaco Air Company exploded in flight today while the pilot was making his fourth landing approach to La Coruna's cloud· shrouded mountaintop airport and fell in flames on a village below, an airline spokesman reported. The airline said all 85 per90ns aboard the twiri-jet aircraft were feared dead. or the flight itself, the airline said there is 0 no hope of .turvivors." Because of confusion 'al the village crash site and Ille -douils and rains, there were conD.ictlng reports. Police in La Coruna Slid rescue opera· tions . were continuing and il wu not definitely known Whether there were SW'Vivors or any villagers had been kill· ed. A spokesman for La Coruna airport and Spanish news reports said al least one person survived the plane crash. The news agency Europa Press said five inhabitants of the village of Mon· trove also were killed. But later police said the houses on Y.'hich the wreckage fell were abandoned and no villagers were killed. ··1The crash was the eighth in a series or !atal accidents involving S p a n i s h airliners since early 1972. • Iberia bas lost three planes during the period, the chater company Spantax two, plus one plane damaged, and Avjaco, a .subsidiary of Iberia, two, with a total loss or 352 lives. · Spain's worst air crash occurred 1ast December when a Spantax Convair C«onado flipped on takeoff from Santa Crllz airport killing all 155 aboard. Aviaco said the Caravelle jet carried 79 passengers and a crew of six. An alrport spokesman said it crashed on its fourth attempt to land in bad weather. Cifra reported the pilot had been told shortly before by the control tower that visibility dropped below minimum levels. '. 11\e plane, on a scheduled night from Madrid, made three attempt3 to land at La Coruna and had just started to circle the cloud-ehrouded airport once again When it applrently exploded in the air, the spokesman said. Most of ii.I wreckage fell on an aban· (See SPAIN, Page l) Cout Weatlter More gloom Is forecast for the morning Jiiours Tuesday with a slight chance of thundershowers in the . evening honrs. Sunny In the altemoon with highs of 70 at the beaches. Lows in the 60s. INSIDE TODA l' Aa Catabodian re/-ugee1 co1i0 iinue to stream into the capital citJ,' of Phnom P~t1h, &he ei&J,"s airport r t po r t t reaervaUon& ' booked •P through A uglllt for ' people tr¢ng to get out of the country. See atoru and photo1 \on Po.Qt 21 . , I ...,Int 1t L.M, iirrf I ~=:::: tt·~ I C.ntkl II' (--lJ 1 0..111 Nttkfl ll •I.Will_. ... llt~llM'M!ll 1t ( l'lllllKI , 1 .. lt I l'W ltlt •tclff 11, II HtrWCtf\t 14 • 111 ..,YIU 1t Greenbelt Hearings Delayed By TOM BARLEY Of 1tM Oalt, Pllel Jr.fl A reported move by both sides to reach an out--0!-eourt settlement today led an Orange County Superior Court judge to order a three-week delay of a pretrial hearing into the action filed by Laguna Greenbelt Inc. and the city of Laguna Beach against Rossmoor Corporation. Judge Charles Bauer set Sept. 4 as the new hearin'g date after learning that the action sparked by the plaintif(s' move to impose stricter environmental standards on a 17S.acre housing development In Laguna Hills may be resolved outside the courtroom. · Both plaintiffs allege that Rossmoor should not have been granted a grading permit on the site at Laguna Canyon and El Toro roads, because the company did not submit an adequate environmental impact statement. Judge Bauer was told at an earlier ap.. pearance that tbe plaintiffs did not op.. pose grading on the site but felt that Rossmoor should be ordered to go before the county's Board of Grading Appeals for that agency's views of the dispute. Grading on the site is reported to be almost complete. More than one milUon cubic yards of earth have been moved in plans calling !or U.. l'l""tructlon ol more than 1;500 bomer"ln ·111e tl!tsare World tract. · lloth pla~~ion again.st Roasmoor on the grounds that continued constructiOn on the site could result in heavy \\'inter Oooding due to the strip. ping of natur8J vegetation from the area. Youth Suffers Broken Neck In Laguna Surf A Burbank youth sufferd a broken neck-Sunday when a wave threw him on· to the ocean .floor oU Crescmt Bay in Laguna Beach . Dan Rutherford, 17, was pulled from the surf by Lifeguard Earl Wellsfry who applied mouth-~mouth resuscitation to restore the victim's breathing. After receiving emergency first aid treatment for a possible spinal injury by other guards at the scene, Rutherford was taken to South Coast Commoolty Hospital, South Laguna. A spokesman at the hospital said the youth is in satisfactory condition today with a fractured spinal vertebra. Lifeguard Capt. Bruce Baird noted Rutherford was one or many body surfers who went "over the falls," a description for falling under a breaking wave. ' Two Men Studied Fo1· Laguna Post Laguna Beach' Unified School District trustees will interview candidates for business manager during a special secret s~ion at noon TUesday. Supt. Donald D. Woodington said he has two candidates for the board to review during the 11pOCiai'meetlng. Followlng the execuUve session, the board Is expected ·· to a.u tho r i z e Woodington to hire one of the iwo men. The business manager poslllon has been vacant since the departure of Dr. Charles Hess for the Palm Springs Unified School District In June. Skunk Triggers Furor iii Kansas SALINA, Kan. (UPI) -A skunk IOI its head stuck In a can ol chocolatt syrup In a north Salina neighborhood, leading to these evenll : A deg came by and atlscked the skunk. The skunk sprayed the dog, The angered dog crossed Into the yard ol the Jobn R. Fagans and killed their cat. The skuttk wandered across the street where It holed up In a vacant lot, sun wearing !Is lln can hat. • ri ' 'I f { , /' -• UPI T•"'*°'• ll'fioitEA"'Di)ilA SALVAGER DISPLAYS FIRST PIECE DF LINER Hunt'GWI on For $2 Milllon hi T .. uuro Aboard Ship Slrarks Deter Doria Salvage NANTUCKET, Mass. (AP) -Ef. forts by two San Diego divers to salvage an estimated $4 million worth of valuables ftom the sunken ocean liner Andrea Doria pro-- ceeded today after being hampered by sharks and minor mechanical troubles Sunday. A spokesman aboard the support vessel NarraganesU ·said crewmen killed one shark with a dartgun and chased others away from the salvage area Sunday afternoon. Minor motor trooble in the tl· foot underwater chamber fastened to the Andrea Doria has been cor· rected, the spokesman said. Nixon's Villa Improvements Called 'Ripoff' Rep. Jerome Waldie {D-Al'itioch), the marathon walking gubernatorial can- didate, made it through gates of the Western White H~ today but never had a chance to see the controversial im· provements to President Nixon 's seaside villa -installations which he termed "a giant ripoff ." Security aides at the nearly deserted pre!:idential compound said lhey were ac- tlng on orders from Washington when they confined the candidate's tour to the presidential office complex on the San Diego side of the county tine. "I was told that all the items that l wanted to see are on private property and ate not for piJbllc inspection," Waldie said. . "lf a congressman represents the peo- ple, I should be able to &ee what lhe tax· payers are paying for.'' Waldle entered the compound carrying a de!Alkld Us\ issued recenliy by Ille O.neral Services Adminlalrallon showing ~very expenditure made at !he compound for tecurlly reaaons. • The CU?T<nt total !or •uclt expenditure.• at San Clemtnte II '111" J>Olled at 13 million. '11 "!uid bavp been shown structure& that would not Jia .. ·endangered the privacy of ihe l't<lsidept, who wasn't even there," Wald~ sugge1ted. "I c:ouldn't soe them because I wu, told ~y are too dilficult to ••plain i"!f this lceds me to believe that the purchUts mad• In the fSee WAU>IE, ~ltle !) 2 Developments Get Plartners' Study in Lagima Lagllna Beacp planning commissioners will be asked tonight to initiate specific plans for the development of Machu Pie· chu on Parle Avenue and The Shoals on Sot;J.lh Coast Highway. Machu Picchu is a proposed adult com- munity on hillside land between Top of the World and Mystic Hills. The Shoals development envisions a commercial-residential complex at the beach end of Bluebird Canyon Drive. Under the specific plan procedure, the planning commission fonnuJates the final development plan, based on input from comm issioners, the public and the developer. Both Machu Picchu . and The Shoals plans have been reviewed by the com· mission in the past and denied. Cooler Weather Holds Dow1i Mob Cool, hazy weather kept beach at· tendance light over the weekend in Hun· tington Beach· as the sun peeked out of the clouds only occasionally during the afternoon hours. Water temperature was 64 degrees with air temperiatures in the low 70s. Rescues on all beaches were light, with no serious Injuries. Biggest crowds turned up at the city beach . with 82,000 visitors over .the two da)'J. Hontin'gton State Beactl ba'd 38,000 beach goers , with 27.000 at Bolsa Chica State Beach. At seal Beach, ciooe 'to 23.000 turned out. Better Get Out Tlie Umbrellas It rain~ today. In Laguna Beach. lt thundered, too . "Yes, J saw them," said weather watcher Bill Shiel/IS. "Thero 1w~ two drops. I 5aw both of them." Shields quipped. The sprinkle hit the Art Colony aboul a ~ai>· a.m. • 'Most Valuable Saved-My Son' By JACK CHAPPELL Oii lllf Oail'I' l'llot Sl•ff IT WAS THE LAST NIGHT of a gala Europe-to.America cruise as the graceful Italian ocean liner Andrea Doria knifed through leaden.waters on her way to disaster. ln the main ballroom, the orchestra played "Arrivederci Roma" and the lights o( the glittering ship !ell dead into a shroud o! fog . ACTRESS RUTH ROMAN, a Laguna Beach resident, was return· ing to the states aboard the Andrea Doria that July 25, 1956. News today of the daring attempts to salvage the $2 .5 million of jewels and valuables in the ship's safe brings back memories for Miss Roman. "I think I got the most valuable thing. That is my son. Welt, you know, the material things you can regain," Miss Roman said to- day. Miss Roman has performed in numerous motion pictures and television productions. Her more than 80 motion pictures include "The Champion," "The Window," and two horror pictures about to be released now. Television pro- ductions i n c J u de "Ironside," "Gun.smoke," and "Mod Squad" guest star appearanCes. AS FDR MATERIAL valua· bles, Miss Roman doesn't expect to get any of her jewelry back from the hulk o! the Andrea Do ·;;t;~ it ~,~~!_l!ftll}!ll~ ,...... • . es li-'1hil·liiild Lrom the purser's safe and were pacl\•d in a sult<ase stowed aV1i.'f. in her state room .. 1 She bad been returning frolri Europe where she had intended to live permanenUy but changed 'her mind. Most of her valuables were on board, she said. LAGUNA'S RUTH ROMAN JEWELRY INCLUDED a diamond ring, a diamond braCJ>let, ear· rings, and a pearl qecklace. Valuable furs are lost forever, she said. "! just thank God for that ltalian sailor who took Richard over the side, strapped to his back," she said. \Vhile her son and his nurse were rescued by the "Stockholm, 11 ?i,1iss Roman remained aboard the stricken luxury liner to be picked up by a French passenger liner. ''l just sat there. I was on. the grand stairway. You could hear the ship moan. It was a pretty sad sound," she said. MISS ROMAN WAS one of the last to leave the Italian ship. Fifty-one persons died in the collision between Andrea Doria and the Stockholm. Most o! those victims died in the initial ramming o! the Andrea Doria. The ship was struck on the starboard side just back from the bow. "SHE WENT OVER almost immediately alter she was hit. Now. they claim that if the Stockholm had stuck in her and not pulled out they could have towed them both back. I guess it's like a knife wound, when you pull out that's the end of it," Miss Roman said. The collision occurred at about 11 p.m. and the boat sank the (see MOMENTS, Page !) Fire Inspection Today At Love Animals Tempw By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllLo ot 11M Dllt, Pllel It.ff Laguna Beach city officials were ex,- pected to· inspect Love. Animals Don't Eat Them late today to see if action has been taken by occupants of the temple to reduce fire hazards. A similar rnspectlon staged Friday was cut short when Orange County Marshals appeared at Lovf: Animals and arrtsted followers Curtis Reed and James Roberts on warrants totalllng $163. "We figured with the arrest 1ituation that we would wait until today to go back .'' explained City Manager Ai 'Jbeal. Today's inllpection will be made by Thea!. along With Wayne Moody, director of plaMin8 ·and deve.lopment and Jim Winter, !l<lllor building oll)ctal. Inspection o{ Love Anlma.la has been hanging !ir.e .slnce last Wedoe9day, when a 24-hour grace pariod to remove the fire hazard1 expired. According to Reed and Roberts , now free on ball, the folks at Love .Animals have removed several of the fire hazards, Including flammable materlals on the roof ,a portion of a bamboo fence and extension .cord type wiring. Thea! said today's Inspection would confirm whether the action taken by followers of the temple Is 11uificleot to meet lht city's demallds. If hazards still exist, the city could have the building vacated and the utilities shut off. Both Reed and Roberts said Friday they have been reJuctant to do any work on the buiJding, since t.Ove Animals Don't Eat Them Is leavtng Lagtma Beach sept. 22. the lifSt day of fall. "We keep telling them. 'Look, we're (See INSPECT, Page !) ADVERTISING HAS 'DRA WING POWER' Daily Pilot classified want ads have charisma. Look at this channer: '61 GALAXIE. Good lraJl!. portalion, 66,000 mHes. $'15 or make offer. (Phone No.) This advertJser called to· s a y • "Congratulations on the wonder£u1 draw· Ing power of your adsl" Dial the dl1'Ct line -642-6678 -and let our cl\lrmtns ad·vlsor help you !ind 'some "dr.,.,,,. power." -DAILY PILOT LB Police Find 25th Body In Texas HOUSTON (UPI) -Sheriff's deputies today dug up from shallow graves on a Texas beach the 24th and ZSth bodies kill- ~ during a three-year spree of sex and sadism by lwo teen-agers and a homosexual friend. The victims were wrapped in black plastic bags and sprinkled with lime, like most of the others found during the past week at three locations. Officers, digging with a back hoe and a giant .road-grader, said they expected to find at least one more body at the beachfront site at High Island. "I th.ink we got another one down there," said Chambers County Sheriff Louis Otfer. With the recovery of the 25th body, the mass murder equaled the worst such PARENTS CRITICIZE HOUSTON POLICE ACTION-Page 4 . tragedy in U.S. history. Juan V. Corona, 39, was convicted last January of killing 25 fann hands in California. Officers on the Texas beach drove trucks and cars around the search site to guard it from onlookers. The bodies discovered today were pull- ed from the sand in an area covered by salt grass about a quarter mile from where two bodies were located Friday. The spot is about 35 miles east of Ga1veston. Elmer Wayne Henley, 17, and David Brooks, 18, have been charged with murder and admitted taking part in the homosexual slayings with Dean Corll, 33. Officers last week dug· up 17 bodies in- side a Houston boat shed and recovered four at a wooded site near Broaddus in East Texas. Two more were unearthed on the beach east of Galveston. Sheriff's deputies used lbe road grader to cut a quarter-mile through a line of salt grass strewn with driftwood and li~ ter. Otter and a deputy rode behind lbe grader, examining the broken ground for traces of graves described by Henley and Brooks. Meanwhile, in Houston, Police Oli.ef Herman B. Short defended his depart- ment today against charges from some parents ol the victims that officers were lax in investigating missing persons reports. "Although some ol the parents in the Heights area may have felt we have not been doing all we could have, we never would have enough ·people to cheek out every runaway youth," Short said at a news conference. Meanwhile police Sunday said they identified two more of the bodies. The two were Donald Edward Waldrop, 15, and bis brother, Jerry Lynn Waldrop, 13, both of Atlanta, Ga. The identification by their lather, Everett Waldrop, brought to five the number of bodies definitely identified. The two youths had been strangled. Others identified are: Charles C. Cobble, 17, Houston. Martin Ray Jones, 18, Houston. Billy Lawrence, 15, Houston. Henley, charged with six counts of murder, has admitted he killed Corll at the bachelor electrician's home Wednes- day. Pi11g Pong Mark Set in Anaheim ANAHEIM (UPI) -Hotel manager Terry Geer, 32, claimed a new ping pong endurance record Sunday after a game that lasted 49 hours. 12 minutes and 40 seconds. The old record was 48 hours. The current edition of the Guinness Book of World Records fails to list any category for marathon table tennis for less than four persons, but Geer said he had been in contact with the editors of the record book and he said he was confi· dent his record would be sanctioned. Geer won more than 80 percent of the 400 matches played during the exhibition, which started Friday. It was held to benefits the Easter Seat Campaign. l OlANCil COAST u DAILY PILOT Tl>e 0••-COl>tl DAILY "llOl, wlltt wllkfl It cotr>blned !tie ....._PrtM, It ll!illlll"*I by Wle Or1nooo Coo.t l"vb!WtlnO ~)", s.p.. ..... Mlltlona ••• PlllWllhtd, ~y """""'" Frld•r, 1'>r Collt Mne, H...,_rt IMcfl, H11111t,,...10n • 8NCfl/Jtountflll Vfll.,., L .. 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'"""' " CllfY•ltfll -· i4alW CUlit -llOI Hid 11 Co111 Mc .. , C.r"-"11. illtlt<.Ykofloo\ llY u rti.r » '5 _,,,.,, "' """ "'' rMnllliVt f'ft!tlf1ry ._. • ._,. UM INll!M-f, Mond1Y, i°llg&lrt ll, 197.3 Pro1•P .. eJ LAST MOMENTS ... following momlng at about 7 a.m .. Miss Roman recalled. 111 watched it go down. • "THE THING THAT I always think about the Andiea Doria, you know, when I think of it lying down there, was Iba!, the¥ had a great, ob, a lar~e statue of Andrea Dorta. It must lave ;weighed Iona and tons, I don t know whether It was marble or granite or what it was. · "But. it must be a pretty eerie sight down there. I have the feel- ing lhat it would be intact. • "There'd be a few barnacles and everything on it. I think those divers, if they get any shots of that you know, it should be pretty eerie silently standing there." Israel, Egypt Clash In Naval Encounter By United Press lnLernatlonal Israeli arid Egyptian vessels clashed in the Gulf of Suez today in the first reported naval encounter between the countries in almost six years. The Israeli military command said in 'tel Aviv that two of its ships \\'ere at- tacked by a pair of Egyptian vessels in the eastern part of the gulf. It said an Egyptian patrol boat was fired on and that crew members were seen jumping overboard. Two Israelis \!."ere slightly wounded, the command said. The incident occurred northwest of Ras Sudar in the eastern part of the gulf. at about S p.m., according to the Israeli command, which said, "Our boats didn't go over the line in the middle of the gulf." Israel said it filed a complaint with U.N. truce supervisory officials. The Egyptian boat that was hit was towed away, the command said. Cairo's semi-official Middle East News Capo Beach Tot To Retm·n Home From Hospital Unless the condition of Jason Rea, 3. gets worse, all indic3tions point to a return to home ror the comatose Capistrano Beach boy, but spokesman for the Denver hospital said today that ad· vance notice of bis trip will not be given. The boy is still listed in serious con- dition, and, the spokesman for the University of Colorado Medical Center said, she had "no idea" when the youngster will be reutrning. She added that doctors are cautious about releasing infonnation about..Jhe..l:)oy's flight home for fear of a "rash of publicity." Jason was fiown to the Denver hospital Aug. 2 to donate his kidneys and liver after injuries from a pool accident on Ju- ly 14 appeared to be fatal. The blond-haired tot had suffered brain damage from the near-drowning, and when death seemed imminenl, bis mother, Mrs. Linda Rea, arranged for her only child to be flown to Denver to die "so that others may live." But following his arrival in Denver, the boy's condition improved and, t\'tO days later, Jason was taken off the respirator that had been keeping him alive. From Page J INSPECT ... leaving, just leave us alone,'" said Reed. Both insisted that even if the building is shut down by the city, the Love Animals followers would stay on the prop- erlf and live in a vegetabl.e garden in the back yard. Agency said that the Egyptian navy In- tercepted lsraeli boats trying to a~ proach the Egyptian coastline on the v.'estern side of the gulf. Quoting a military spokesman, lbe agency said the Israeli boats made their approach in the Adabiya area south of Suez city at about 5:20 p.m., and "were intercepted by our naval unit and shore defense units and forced to retreat to the east." "The enemy covered its withdrawal with its air force. The Egyptian forces suffered no casualties," the Egyptian repart said. Israel denied using air support. Jn the last naval clash, the lsraeli destroyer Eilat was su'nk by an Egyptian missile boat in October, 1967. Egyptian Foreign Minister Mohammed Hassan El Zayyat, reacting to Israel's interception of an Arab airliner, had said today that the Arab world "mu&'t reply to Israeli arrogance with a decisive, deterrent and suitable action." Zayyat said failure by the Arabs to reply to Israel could lead to similar ac- tions by it in the future. Zayyat spoke after meeting i n Damascus with Syrian Foreign Minister and Deputy Premir Abdel Halim Kbad- dam to coordinate strategy, Israeli jets intercepted a chartered ~tiddle East Airways plane over Beirut Friday night and forced it to land at a military field inside Israel in the belief it carried Palestinian guerrilla leader George Habash and several colleagues. But the guerrillas bad canceled plans to board the craft. Quarantine Set For Rabies In Cliico Area CIDCO (AP) - A rabies quarantine was impased today on a 16-block section of Olico in the wake of an epidemic of the dreaded disease, a Butte County health official reported. The quarantine was de<:Jared after discovery Saturday that an unvaccinated six-month-old puppy had died of rabies after biting two children. Although six other cases of rabies have been reparted in the Oiico area since May, Nino Calarco, a spokesman for the county health department, said this was the. first case of a pet being infe<:ted in a residential section. Calarco said seven rabid animal cases had been confirmed in the county the past two weeks and 12 this year. That is twice the nwnber reparted last year, be said. Asked if it were an epidemic, Calarco replied, "Yes." 'By Own Personal Choice' Cox Clainis President Withholding Evidence WASHINGTON (UPI) -Special pros· ecutor Archibald Cox charged t o d a y that President Nixon is withholding vital criminal evidence about the Watergate scandal "by his personal choice" without any legal or con.stitutiona1 right to do so. "Unlike a monarch," Cox said, "the President ls not the sovereign." In a 67·page legal brief filed in U.S. District Court, Cox urged Judge John J. Sirica to order the President to ptoduce for a grand jury tape recordings of nine conversations with aides. Cox said the tapes could prove or disprove ''criminal coMplracy and other UlcgaJ conduct" in the White House. Such an order, Cox said . would reaf- firm the American constitutional prin· ciple that "no man is above the law. "The President has an enforceable legal duty not to withhold material evidence from a grand jury," Cox. said. " ... There is no exception fOr the Presi- dent from the guiding principle that the public, in the pursuit of justice, ha.s a right to every man's evidence ... "The grand jury ls seeking evidence of criminal conduct that the respondent Nixon happens to have in his custody - largely by his penonal choice." Coir subpoenaed the tape recordings on July 23, one week after It was disclosed at the Senate Watcrpte hearings that Nixon 's convers~tions in two Whil e House offices and on four of his telephones had b e e n automalically recorded since the spring of J971. Ni:rcon refused to comply with the sub- poena. Jlis lawyers argued in a lengthy \ brief Tuesday that it would be "simply impossible for any president of the United States to function" if he were forced to dlsclose confidential com· munications with aides. Cox contended that \Vatergate·related conversations were not conducted as part of the President's official duties and therefore could not be withheld legally. Cox argued further that Nixon waived any claim to keep the tapes secret because (1) some persons involved in the conversations already testified about them publicly and (2) Nixon permitted his former chief of staff, H. R. Haldeman, to listen to two of the tapes after leaving the White House April 30. "Not even a President can be allowed to select some accounts of a conversation for public disclosure and then to frustrate further grand jury inquiries by wllhholding the best evidence of what ac- tually took place," Cox said. Sirlca has scheduled oral arguments for Aug. 22 on the tapes dispute. Meanwhile, a special grand jury wu convened today at the request of Cox to Investigate a wide range of activities In the 1972 presidential campaJgn as well u the rrr antitrust settlement. Judge Slrica called the panel into session to inquire into matters separate from those being lnvestlgaled by a grand Jury that has been concen trating on the Watergate. burglary and it.a aftennath. The new pnncl, however, will have as one area of its investigation possible per· jury committed durlng the Senate Watergate hearings, BEEF ON HOOF LIKE MONEY IN BANK AS SHORTAGE IN U.S. :;ROWS .~ND !:;ROWS This Colorado He rd, Others Await Court Ruling on Price Freeze ~~~~~~~~~~~ From Pag!! l WALDIE ... name of the President's security are not justifiable." One such installation which stirred the campaigner's interest is an $8,000 system in.staJled along the Santa Fe tracks in the President's front yard to alert the Presi- dent when a train is coming. Waldle said the rationale for that system was that it was needed because the noise of the surf makes it impossible to bear an approaching train. Waldie termed that "a foolish expenditure.'' The candidate, who is on a walking tour of Southern California, said that two other U.S. representatives are assertedly arriving "pretty soon" but he does not know what sort of treatment they will receive nor the reason for their arrival. "If they are friends of the President I lbink that they will be treated differently than I was," be said. Waldie alleged that the GSA "is playing games with us and somebody is trying lo bide something." 'Jbe next stop on Waldie's 36-day trek stretching 240 miles through Southern California is at Dana Point on Tuesday, followed by a stopover the following day in Corona del Mar and yet another on Thursday in Costa Mesa. Waldie said thet..he is in ''excellent :ihape down to my ankles.·• His feet , he added, are killing him . Full Moon Hikes Rate of Murder ATLANTA (UPI) -Police say alcohol, handguns and the full moon may have had more than a little to do with the 10 killings reported in Atlanta over the weeke nd. Maj. M.E. Moon, head of the police de- partment's criminal investigation di- vision, said Sunday a large number ?f the homicides were tbe result of domestic quarrels. "When there's a run moon, the homi· tide rate always go up," detective S.C. Dorsey added. j<Alcohol is definitely a big motivator ..• if people didn't h~ve these weapons and could walk out of the room and cool off for just a minute, then the person he kil~ ed would probably still be alive ," he said. Price Freeze Lifted; - Consumers Await Brunt By United Press IJ1ternaUonal The price freeze was lifted today on everything except gasoline and beef. A number of major companies inunediately said they would ask for price increases. Consumers will not feel the full brunt of the price jump for some time because under Phase JV companies with annual sales of $100 million or more must give the Cost of Living Council 30 days notice of such increases. Chrysler Corp. immediately asked the council to allow an average $71 hike on 1974-model cars and trucks. Unless its application is turned down, the increase automatically Will go into effect before the vehicles go on public sale in late September. American Motors ls seeking an average $55 price increase while General Motors and Ford have yet to file ap- plications. Spakes.men for the two largest auto companies said they expected a~ plicatiom would soon be filed . Armco Steel Corp. in Middletown, Ohio From Pflfle J SPAIN ... doned farm house in the village of Mon- trove, four miles from the airport. The airport spokesman said radio con- tact with the plane broke off without any indication of anything being wrong \\'ilh the plane, apart from Captain Lopez Pascual's apparent difficultie! of landing the craft under the prevailing conditions. ~1ost passengers aboard the plane ap- peared to be vacationers. La Coruna is one of three airports serving the northwestern Galician prov· inces and its seaside resorts. The ill fated !light, AV-118, is a special vacation flight nm daily by Avico during the sum- mer season. The plane left Madrid at 9: 14 a.m. (4:14 a.m. PDT), more than an hour late for the 60-minute flight. The crash oc- curred an hour later. Cifra said members of a Barcelooa s\11imming club (Clu b Nat a c ion Barcelona) were aboard the plane fiylng to a swimming meet in La Coruna. said it was reinstating price increases or · sheet steel products which had been scheduled but were not allowed under the ireeze. The increase is scheduled for \ Sept. 12. Reports from supennarkets Indicated ' food prices remained reasonably stable r toda y. Prices had been out from under 1 the freeze for nearly a month. Under Phase IV, sellers can raise their prices, but only as muc.h as costs in- crease. Gasoline and other petroleum prices \\'ill remain frozen for another week. Beef will continue under price controls the longest, until Sept. 12. It is the freeze on beef that has brought the most criticism on Phase JV_ lt remained frozen when other food prices were decontrolled June 13. While beef prices cannot be raised the supply has dwindled. A federal judge In Lincoln, Neb. turned down a request for an injunction seeking , an end to the freeze on ~f prices. A ' judge in Seattle, Wash., promised a rul- ing today-on· a similar case. ,, The rufmg by U.S. District Court Judge , Warren Urbotn in Llncoln \(.'as issued Saturday night and made public t~ay. · At the same time, he refused the request for the temporary injunction, Urbom denied a government plea for dismissal of the suit. The judge gave no reason for his decision to deny the request by Minden· Beef, Co. of Minden, Ne b,, a processor. ' and the Greater New York Association of Meat and Poultry Dealers, a wholesale l group. ' The plaintiffs claimed the freeze is un-1 productive and is causing shortages. The 1 government claimed it is necessary to · hold down rising meat prices. ' $28 Million Lawsuit CHICAGO (AP) -United States Gypsum Co. said Sunday it agreed lo a $28 million settlement of a price-fixing suit filed by a home builders' group in 1970. U. S. Gypsum was sued by the Home Builders Association of Greater Chicago and 24 members for allegEid col- lusion to fix prices of gypsum wallboard , keeping prices artificially high. NOW AT 95 + ,_ l!ldusl>e A Year Partl Guannfee Tf'tli motor. Pllmp, lifl'llf, 11111t• 111•11 .. d!$lrib.illon tyltem. llNllt ll!f Pll~ l!lltlOllt 1r1 fjUlflr!!lld lo• & ytlrl Ori moaelt SSft'ft, 8Slfll1 •l'ld 891871, Wt PIJ 1o; rtplt¢t!fllt'll ltDOr \1\lflllQ th•~ .... ,..,. 90 DAY CASH W1lll APHOYID CalDJT Phone 548-7788 HEADQUARTERS . 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown CQsta Mesi ........................................................... ' -r . . Saddlehaek ' EDITION VOL 66, NO. 225, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ·~ • • • • I I 1 f • ' " - Today's Final N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS Viejo llolneowners Blast SACC . . . By JAN WORTH Of "'-INlltr ,lltt lteH Claiming the 5add.1eback A re a Coordinating CouncU "is lzJ'.lQg to railroad one governance alternative on the community" members of the Mission Viejo Homcownen Association have call· ed for a to.\vn meeting to elicit com· munity opinion. Claim Com_~i~tee See king Advisor y Council to get outside the big Cussy city," Mrs. Gagnebin said. "\Ve think the planning in Mission Vie- jo is beautiful. We like our small com· munity and vl'e don 'l '\\·ant to get into big city problems again." JeaMe' Gagnebln or Mission Viejo, a member of the homeowners board and preaident of the Dean Homes Community • l' altcables Lost Actress Association , said "regardless of what the SAOC governance committee members say' they are 'fr'Orkin& . toward one alternative : an ·•J'e4wide. ~i* ad-- visory cooncil (W,C)." · SACC, a coalition of homeowners and citize!!S groups covering Laguna Hills, Recalls Sinking of 'Doria' By JACK CHAPPELL Ott tM D•lly Plltf Sl•ff IT WAS THE LAST NIGHT of a gala Europe-to-America cruise as the graceful Italian ocean liner Andrea Doria knifed through IeaOert waters on her way to disaster. In the main ballroom, the orchestra played "Arrivederci Roma" and the.lights of the glittering ship fell dead into a shroud of log. ACTRESS RUTH ROMAN, a Laguna Beach resident, was return- in·g to ihe states aboard the Andrea Doria that July 251 1956. News today of the daring at,tempts to salvage the $2.5 million ol jewels and valuables in the ship's safe brings back memories for Miss Roman. "l think I got the most valuable thing. That is my son. Well, vou know, the material things you can regain," Miss Roman said to- day. P.1.iss Roman has performed · in numerous motion pictures and t~levjsion prodµ$.tjons. '/!er. more than_'SO ·mott611 plctun!s Include ~a:.Cllampion~" "The Window," and \iG liorror PI~s about to ,be released nOw:. Television pro- ductions inc 1 u de "Ironside," ~ "Gunsmoke," and "P.lod Squad" guest star appearances. AS FOR MATERIA L valua· hies, Miss Roman doesn't e:xpect to get any of her jewelry back from the hulk of the Andrea Doria. Since it was the last night, her valuables had been removed from the purser's safe and were packed in a suitcase stowed away in her state room. ::UGUNA'S RUTH R~ She bad been returning from Europe where she bad intended to live permanently but changed her mind. Most of her valuables were on board, she said. . . ~EWELRY INC LUDED a diamond ring, a diamond bracelet, ear- rings, and a pearl necklace. Valuable fur~ are lost forevt:r, she said. "I just thank God for that Italian sailor who took Richard over the side, strapped to his back," she s&d. ,; · ,, ·While her son and bis nurse were rescued by the Stockholm, Mil;s Roman remained aboard the stricken luxury liner to be picked up by a.French passenger liner. . "I"jtist 'sat there. I w~s on the gran~, stalt'W~Y· You could hear the ship moan. It was a p~tty sad sound, she said. MISS ROMAN WAS one of the ·last to leave. the Italian ship. Fiflf.One persons di6d,Tn .the collision between Andrea Doria and ·th• Stockholm. Most of those victims died in the initial raDimlng of the Andrea Doria. 'd · t b cit f th The ship was struck on the starboard s1 e JUS a · rom e bow. "SHE:WENT OVER almost immediate!~ after she wa_s bit. Now, they claim that if the Stockholm had stuck in her and nr.,lfulled out they couid have towed them:both back. I guess it's like a e wound, when ynu pull out that's.the end of it," Miss Roman aald .. The collision occurred ar about 11 p.m. and the boat sank the following morning al abouf7 a.m., Mi~ Roman recalled. "I watched it go down. "1HE THING THAT I always think about the Andrea Doria, you know, when I tblnk of it.lying down there, was that, Ibey had a areal oh, a large statue of Andrea Doria. It must have weighed tons ' ISee MOMENTS, Page ll Lake Forest,.MissiOn Viejo, El Toro, and' Laguna Npl; is in ,the midst of a study on goVemment alteniatlves for the 100- squafe..mUe ~~ are&. A report isrued last winter bY SACC endorsed the MAC, an elected bcldy-OI up to 12 people legaUy ~ized as an ad· visory body to the Orange County Board ol Supervisors. A battle between SACC leaders and Mj.ssion Viejo homeowners surfaced last week when the homeowners board voted again.st a "big MAC" or arfl.awide council in favor of a "small MAC" for UPI T.._.Of• ANDREA DORIA· SAL VAG ER DISPLAYS FIRST PI ECE OF LI NER Hunt Goes on For $2 Million in Treasure Aboard S~lp S harks Deter Doria Salv age NANTUCKET, Mass. (AP) -El· forts by two San Diego divers to salvage an estimated $4 million worth of valuables from the sunken ocean liner Andrea Dori8 pro- ceeded today after being hampered by sharks and minor mechanical troubles Sunday. A spokesman aboard the support vessel Narraganestt said crewmen killed one shark with a dartgun and chased others away from the salvqe area S:unday afternoon. Minot motor trouble in the 12· foot underwat6-chamber fastened to the Andrea Dona has been cor· rectid, the spok-an said. Percy in Pakistan RAWALPINDI. paklstan (AP).-sen. Charles Percy (R·lll.), says he plans to get involved in the touchy subject 'of' repatriation of Pakistani prisoners of war in India. On a weekend visit to Pattstrui with his wife, the senator told relatives .. of the primers that he would talk to' lrullan officials about the prob- lem\ Irvine District Reservoir Repair Near Completion Repairs to the Irvine Ranch water District's San Joaquin Reservoir in the hi_lls above Corona del Meir are nearly complete. The facility which stores Metropolitan Water District (MWD) supplies for use in Irvine and four other Orange Coast cities is to be refilled by Oct. I, an MWD spokesman said. Cracks in the asphalt lined · reservoir were observed during a routine main- tenance ·cleaning last winter. "To my knowledge -and I'd be the first to hear about it -we've been able to handle our customers by using other lines since Sari JoaqUin has been down," MWD public relations officers Ricb&rd Lesher said. The racility provides ri\ueh of the water used by customers of the ~WD. and the cities of Newport BeB:ch, COsta Mesa and parts of Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley. ' Lesher said actual repalr work, \\ilich has consisted of replacing large sections of the reservoir walls and portions of the floor, should be done by September. Meat Hunters Slaughter Deer Intrudon 11fho apparently saw belploM animola In an Irvine )'ark pon 11 a t.mporll')' IOlullon lo the meat lborlalle CUl the throot ol I young deer durinf the w..-and carr~ off the carcaa, Oranc• County Sheriffs omcers said loclay, Waldie Says Nix on?s Villa Addition s· 'Giant Ripofr Once lnspect\ons and certifications are completed, Lesher said it wOn't •ta Re Jong to re!lll the basin and put it back into service. ADVERTISING HAS 'DRAWING POWER' Daily Pilot classified want ads have cbarisma. Look al this charmer: ' DepuU.. said the Intruders climbed the chain link fence sur• round!lli the,. animal pen at the perk near Orange, slaughtered the deer and thcn dragged ll oul l~ugh a hole they cul In lite fence. The dtcr wa~ valued at $250. • Rep. Jerome Waldie (0-AnUoch), tlJo marathon walking gubernatorial can- didate, made It throucJi gates of the Western Wblte Houae today but never had a Chance lo see tbe cootrovmtal Im· provements to PresSdent Nixon'• aeulde villa -lnstanau..,. which he ttgned 001 ' giant .ripoff." Sooutlly aides at lite nearly deserted presldenual compound said they.wore ac- ting on orders from \Vuhington when they confined the CIDdldak'• tour IP 1bc presldenllll olJlce complex on the San llleao ·illde of the coun!Y Une. "I wu told lbal all the ll'1nl . that I wanted lo see are on prtvat. property and an not . for public lnlpectlon," Waldie said. . • 11Jf1• congrt9!Sman represerJts the pea. pie, I should II<> able to aee wllat the tax· payen are P'IYlni for." ~ Waldle entereil lbc COlllpound carrying 1 detailed llJt illued ncenlly by . the (Set WALDIE, Page II '61 OAt.AXIE. Good trans- portation, 66,000 mlies. $75.or make offer. (Phone No.) This advertlser . called to s a y , "Congratulations on the wonderful draw· Ing pcwer of your ads!" Dial the direct line -94~78 -and let our charming ad.visor help you find some "drawing power." I ?\-lission Viejo alone. The vote was eight for the small MAC and one abstention. The group appointed a committee to petition for a small MAC for Mission Vie· jo alone. "Our primary consideration is this: most people in Mission Viejo moved here Spanish Town Col. Ralph Porter. the homeowners president. said tOOay he is '·still neutral " on the issue, hoping far more study of the small ~1AC. He soid he remains critical or the (See CLASH, Page Z) Jet . Cra·shes; 85 Said Dead LA CORUNA. Spain (UPI) -A Caravelle airliner of the Spanish Aviaco Air Company exploded in flight today while the pilot was making his fourth landing approach to La Coruna's cloud· shrouded moontaintop airport and fell in flames on a village below, an airline spokesman reported. The airline said all 85 persons aboard Burroug hs Plant Impact -Nm,..,K ;,,. eeonomic impitt ii tbl!~nlng of the $9 million Burroughs Corporation plant in Mission VlejO "is anybody's guess.~' Orange County Tax Assessor Jack Vallerga said today. "It won 't be near the impact of the Rockwell International building if its tri:.de to the federal government goes through, because that's a much bigger operation. "But the only thin~ it can do is add to the area's tax base,' Vallerga said. The Burroughs Corporation announced Friday it is moving In a large computer systems operation next spring, bringing about 150 employes to the plant. The plant. on Jeronimo Road between Alicia Parkway and Los A l I s o s Boulevard, ·has been empty since late 1971. It is one of two large industrial buildings that have been vacant in the SJddJeback Valley. The other, the $25 million Roclo\'ell lnternational "ziggurat" in Laguna Niguel, has been proposed for trade to the federal General S e r v i c e s Administration for ·more than a year, though that deal is not yet final. It is called the ziggurat because or its stepped Babylonian design. "A:!. for the Burroughs plant, it all depends on what the corporation does in· side the building. The real property value has not changed since the property has been empty," Vallerga said. Jack Schumaker, associate superin· tendent for business administration in the Saddlebock Valley Unified School ol Districl. said the impact on school fi. nancing would depend oo how many homes are available for resale when new employes begin moving to the area . "People have to live ln a home in the district to have an impact on the schools, since our money comes from property taxes," Schumaker said. "ThJs may mean that people selling their homes may have an easier Ume of it -though l don't know how they could sell any faster," he added. Burglars Sb.'ike Twice at Airport Orange County Sheri£f's officers are in· vestlgatlng two weekend burglaries at the county airport, one of which cost a Lomita Flyer a tw1>-w11y radio valued at 12.000. Deputies said intruders who apparently unscrewed the radiO from lls dashboerd mountlna took the ~uJpment from an aircraft owned by Richard Borges, 35 Borge•' plan was parked In the Uc-down ma. Abo under Investigation (s the then of golf club and equipment valued at $1653 from a car parked at the airport during the weekend. · Deputies said the equipment was taken from a locked car parked at the facility by Robert Raymond Johnson , 57, or 23635 Tarrasa Lane. Mission Viejo. ,. the twin-jet aircraft were feared dead. Of the flight itself, the airline said there is ·~no hope or survivors." Because or confusion at the village crash site and the dense clouds and raios, there were conflicting reports. . Police in La Coruna said rescue opera- tions were continu.ing and it was not definitely known whether there were survivors or any villagers had been kill- ed. A spokesman for La Coruna airport and Spanish news reports said at least one person survived the plane crash. The news agency Europa Press said five inhabitants of the village of Mon.- trove also were kille.d. ~ut later police said the hou.ses on which the wreckage fell were abandoned and no villa'en were killed. 1be crash wa.s the eigbth in a series of fatal accidents_ ·involving Sp a aJ •·h. airliners sloe& early lm. 1berta has 1"'1 thr.e planes during the period, the chater company Spantax two, plus .o~ plane d31?1aged, and Aviaco, a subs1d1ary of Iberia, two, with a total Joss of 352 lives. Spa1n's worst air crash occurred last December when a Spantax Conllalr Co ronado flipped on takeoff from Santa Cruz airport killing all 155 aboard. ·, Aviaco said the Caravelle jet carried 79 passengers and a crew o( six. An airport spokesman said it crashed on its fourth attempt to land in bad weather. Cifra reported the pilot had been told shortly belore by the control (See SPAIN, Page %) I rvine Tnrs tees To Meet Tonight . Irvine Unified School District trustees will hear reports on Summer School and eight sch':Kll building matters when they meet tonight for the first time in the recently completed El Camino Real Elementary School. School board members meet at 7:30 in the bu.ilding which opened for classes on July 9, It is located at 4782 Karen Ann Lane, California Homes, off \Yalnut Aveoue. In addition to reports on construction under way or pl anned, trustees wUl receive for their information an evalua- tion or the district's swnmer school pro- gram which ended Aug. 3. Orange C.u t Weather More gloom is forecast for the morning hours Tuesday with a slight chance of thundershowers in the evening hours. Stmny in the arternoon with highs of 70 at the beaches. Lows in the 6Qs. INSIDE T ODAY As Cambodian rt/UQttl t;an.. tinue to si,.eam. into the capital cit11 of Phnom Penh, the cittf• airport rep or i 1 usen>a«mu booked up through Auguit for people tT11lnp to get out of lh• countrv. See .storv and photos 011 Pag~ 21 . I I 2 D41L'f' PILOT IS Monday, Augu~l 13, 19/J _L _ --. ·- T oll Now 25--and Climb· 1g 2 More Bo • HOUSTON (UPI) -Sheriff's deputi es today dug up Crom shallow graves on a Texa1 beach the 24th and 25th bodies kill· ed during a three-year spree of sex and sadism by two teen-agers and a homosexual friend. The victbns were wrapped in black plastic bags and sprinkled with lime, like most of lhe others found during the past week at three locations. Officers, digging with a back hoe and a giant road-grader, said they expected to find at least one more body at the beachfront site at High Island. •·r thlnk we got another one down there," said Chambers County Sheriff Louis Otter. With the recovery of the 25th body , the mass murder equaled the worst such tragedy in U.S. history. Juan V. Corona, 39, was convicted last January of kllllng 25 farm hands in California . Officers on the Texas beach drove trucks and cars around the search site to guard II from aoJoo!r<>"' The bodles clllc<V.,.ed Ioday wm )11111· ed from lhe und .tn an area covered by salt grars about a quarter mUe from where two bodies were located Friday. The apot LI about 3S miles east of Galveston. Elmer Wayne l1enley, 17, and David Brooks, 11, have been charged with murder and admitted taking part in the bomoseXlijll slaylngs with Dean Corll, 33. Officers last week dug up 17 bodies in- side a Houston boat shed and recovered Ja·son to Return? PARENTS CRITIC IZE HOUSTON POLICE ACTION-Pago 4 Com <itose Bo y May Come Home four at a wQOded site near Broaddus ill East Texas. Two more were unearthed on the beach east of Galveston. Sheriff's depUties used the road grader to cut a quarter-mile through a line of salt grass strewn ,-ith driftwood and Jit. ter. Otter and a deputy rode behind the grader, examining the broken ground for traces of graves described by Henley and Brooks. Unless the oonditlon of Jason Rea, 3, gets worse, all indications point to a return to home for the comatose Capistrano Beach boy, but spokesman for the Denver hospital said today that ad- vance notice or his trip will r.ot be given. The boy is still listed in serious con~ dition, and, the spokesman for the Univers.ity of Colorado Medical Center said. she had "no idea'' ~'hen the youngster will be reutrning. She added that doctors are cautious about releasing information about the boy's Oight home for fear of a "rash or publicity." Price Freeze Ending-Hikes Already Asked By United Press International The price freeze was lifted today on everything except gasoline and beef. A number of. major companies immediately said they would ask for price increases. Consumers will not feel the full brunt of the price jump for some time because under Phase IV companies with annual sales of $100 million or more must give the Cost of Living Council 30 days notice of such increases. Oirysler Corp. immediately asked the council to a¥ow an average $71 bike on 1974-model cilrs and trucks. Unless its application is turned down, the increase automatically will go into effect before the vehicles go oo public sale in late September. American Motors is seeking an average $55 price increase while General Motors and Ford have yet to file ap- plications. Spokesmen for the two largest auto companies said they expected. ap- plications would soon be filed . Armco Steel Corp. in Middletown, Ohio said it was reinstating price increases of sheet steel products which had been scheduled but were not allowed under the freeze. The increase is scheduled for Sept. 12. Reports from supennarkets indicated food prices remained reasonably stable today. Prices had been out from under the freeze fOr nearly a month. Under Phase IV, sellers can raise their prices, but only as much as costs in- crease. Gasoline and other petroleum prices will remain frozen for another week. Beef will continue under price controls the longest, until Sept. 12. · It is the freeze on beef that has brought the most criticism on Phase IV. lt remained frozen when other food prices were decontrolled June 13. Whll.e beef prices cannot be raised the supply has dwindled. A federal judge in Lincoln, Neb. turned down a request for an injunction aeek.ing an end to the freeze on beef prices. A judge on Seattle, Wash., made a _similar niling today in a similar case. The ruling by U.S. District court Judge Warren Urbom in Lincoln was issued Saturday night and made public today. At the same time, he rerused the request for the temporary injunction, Urbom denied a govenunent plea for dismissal of the suit. OU.N•I COAST 11 DAILY PILOT ""-Or•-Co•1t DAILY PILOT, wltll whldl 11 com.bi"«! Me Wt.,....Pr .. s, i. pUblltllfd Irr ,... Of-•119• Co111 Publl•ll'"' CO<'llNnY ...... rate ld!lkwlt ••• l>Ubli."-1, MOMl•Y fl'i.....,. Friday, fDt" to.II M111, HIWOO't ltadl, H,,_,lll'lg'!On 8tM:lllFoun111t1 Vllley, Llf\11\1 I~. ll'YIMl~!~I( •/Wf lff C~•f &.11 Jll#I C1pl1tt1l'O. A 11t!plt r1910n1I ldlllon It po,tbli.llld S.lurd1y1 •nd Sundlya. Tl• P!'llWIPl'I flll'b!llfllnt pllnt 11 11 »O Wflt •• ., Str911, C"la M-. c.~,.,.""· f2'2'. lltoDerl N. WeM Pralffflt llld PW llll!tr J••k R. Curlar Vloe ,.,..,illfl'll and OtM•ll M•n•v" Tho~a1 Keevil 'E<f110r Tho111•1 A. Murph l11a M•l'lffl"8 i:C111W Cft1rfe1 H. La•• Richarcl r. Nell Mttt•nt M• .... 11'19 E<fttor1 -c"" M•r :uo wut lay Sll'fft Htwf.lofrl ... du ~ N..,.,-1 &olilfva,. u,_ 9tttfl: Jt1 """"' A-i.. Hunlll'l91on aH(I\: 17171 lfllodl aout.w1td ~ ("""°"It: ._, Noni! l!'I Cami"" Rttl ftl.,.._ In 4) '41 ... JJl ct .. "'-' A.4ftf1W.1 441.1111 S.. C......_ All hJ•1r.•f1; Te..,.... 491 .... JI Ce!IYf'flll, lt7J, ~l'lfa GMlt f"vbl!th'"' ~,. "' -1torltl, lllWtrtl ....... t1111or111 1Ntt., or toe-'1....-h 11tr1111 _, llt .-.prWUUll WlfhOVI llM(i.I IN!'· Mlulon ot tol..,ltl'll ,...., • s..: .... Cll tf IOll ... Nl4 at C•lt Mtw. Call ... 11la. luhQ-111'1•11 by ~rrirr R.U "'°""')VI lw -II &I.If .-l'Jllyj ~lllm *"1"'1i..• n.u -1111,. , J ason was flown to the Denver hospital Aug. 2 to donate his kidneys and liver after injuries from a pool accident on J u- ly 14 appeared to be fa tal. The blond-haired tot had suffered br~in damage from the neaMlrowning, and when death seemed imminent, his mother, Mrs. Linda Rea, arranged for her only child to be flown to Denver to die "so that others may live." But following his arrival in Denver, the boy's condition improved and, two days later, Jason was taken off the respirator that had been keeping him alive. Fro1n Page J CLASH ... Local Agency Formation Commission (LAFC) a county panel that determines boundary for cities and reviews spheres of influence and annexation requests. "Their directives have been very vague and confusing and that has contributed to what is happening in our area," Porter said. Porter is an active :nember of SACC representing the homeowners. Mrs'. Gagnebin, a leader ol the small MAC push, is a member of the SACC governance committee headed by Grover Frater of Laguna Niguel . The Homeowners' resolution rejecting the area-wide MAC concept also included a clause saying the board will "continue as a member of SACC and to work with it." But the basic allegation is that SACC has not gathered enough input from the commuruty and is proceeding with one notion preferred by the leaders. SACC president Ward Thompson denied the charges. "The report of SACC's Governance Committee was aired to each and all of our communities in nine separate forums last April, May and June," he said. "The response by those who attended these_ annou~ed hearings was nearly unanunous m favor of adopting the report as rendered." The 00-page report rejected the possibility of incorporation, at least for the near future, and pro)Xlsed for the first time a municipal advisory council. Thompson emphasized representation from all Valley communities has been sought throughout the y e a r . o I d ~vemance study process, supported with a grant from the UC Irvine Ex- tension office. The colnmlttee Mpes to air its con- clusions as to the costs. methods of organization, and community attitude on one or more MACs shortly after Christmas. "We can't wait until that committee makes its reports to act," Mrs. Gagnebin said. The reason is a clause in the LAFC pro- cedure for setting up a MAC which states that 10 percent of all voters in an area must sign a petition to get a MAC elec· tion on the ballot. "They could go right out and get the 10 percent they need just from Leisure World ," Mrs. Gagnebin said. "They wouldn't even have to get one signature from us." Border Officers ·Grab 270 Aliens At San Onofre More than 270 illegal aliens were ar· rested near the San Onofre checkpoint over the ·weekend, U.S. Border Patrol spokesman reported today. Agents appr_ehGoded-l. on Saturday and another 170 on Sun ay . Jlawever, only slightly more than hal f those arrested were caught at the dice point, the patrolman said. Five ali ens on Saturday and two more on Slmday were arrested while trying to circumvent the checkpoint on a passenger train. An additional 34 were apprehended during ranch checks around the area, and 21 aliens were 'turned over to the border agenls by city police departments. Meanwhile, in Houston, Police Chie{ Herman B. Short defended his depart- ment today against charges from oome parents of the victims that officers were lax in Investigating missing persons reports. "Although some ol the parents in the Heights area may have felt we have not been doing all we could have, 've never \Vould have enough people to check out every runaway youth," Short said at a news conference. Meanwhile police Sunday said they identified two more of the bodies. The two were Donald Edward Waldrop, 15, and !Ii• brother, Jerry Lynn Waldrop, 13, both of Atlanta, Ga. The identification by their father, Everett Waldrop, brought to five the number of bodies definllely Identified. The two youths had been strangled. Others Identified are: Charles C. Cobble, 17, Houston. Martin Ray Jones, 18, Houston. Billy Lawrence, 15, Houston. Henley, charged with six counts of murder, has admJtted he killed Corll at the ·bachelor electrician's home Wednes- day. /, Thundershowers · On Weather Agenda Tonight ' Thundershowers -that's right -thun- dershowers are forecast for in1and and possibly coastal communities of Orange County tonight. The freak August weather brought rain to portions of Orange and Anaheim early today as thunderclaps rolled in the gray skies above. Commuters using the N e w po r t Freeway are accustomed of late to the misty type of rain gray bummer-summer mornings have produced. Today 's drips from above were big bold drops. The National Weather Service con- firmed their existence. In fact in Riverside this morning, thundershowers drenched the downtown area in 62-degree temperatures. A surge of tropical moisture northward from Mexico ls at fault. As the moisture laden air arrives in tbe drier desert areas of Southern California it condenses, cools and begins falling as rain. A forecaster said this moisture usually drops in in1and mountain ranges and rarely makes it to the coastline. Nevertheless, today's forecast calls !or slight chances of afternoon and evening thundershowers "almost anyplace In the South Coast Basin," the National "\\'eather Se~! forecaster said. The drift moist air from south of the border is ed to continue through \Vednesday. Meanwhile, temperatures along the Orange Coast will dip to 63 tonight. Highs Tuesday will be in the low 70s. Frot11 Pfffle J SPAIN ... tower that visibili ty dropped below minimum levels. 'Mie plane, on a scheduled flight from Madrid, made three attempts to land at La Coruna and had just started to circle the cloud-shrouded 8.ifPort once again when it apparently exploded in the air, the spokesman said. Most of its wreckage fell on an aban- doned fann house in the village of Mon- ve, four miles from the airport. The airport spokesman said radio con- tacl with the plane broke off without any indicaUon or anything being wrong with the plane, apart from captain Lopez Pascual's apparent dilficulties of landing the craft under the prevailing conditions. Most passengers aboard the plane ap- peared to be vacationers. l'romPageJ LAST MOMENTS ... and tons, I don 't know whether It was marble or granite or what it was. "But, it must be a pretty eerie sight down there. I have the feel· ing that it would be Intact. "There'd be a fe w barnacles and everything on ll. I think those divers, if they ge t any shots of that yo u know, It should be pretty eerie sil entl y standing there." ' I .r DallY Piiot Staff PflOI• ,,; ORANGE COUNTY FIREMEN MOP UP AFTER TWO.CAR CRASH SUNDAY IN IRVINE Coll i1ion of Small Cars at Red Hill a nd MacA rthur Sends Five to Ho1pltal 'By Own Personal Choice' Cox Claims President Withhohling Evi,dence WASHING TON (UPI) -Special pros· ecutor Archibald Cox charged t o d a y that President Nixon ls, withholding vital criminal evidence about t.he Watergate scandal "by his personal choice" without any legal or constitutional right to do so. "Unlike a monarch," Cox said, "the President is not the sovereign." In a 67-page legal brief filed in U.S. District Court, Cox urged Judge John J. Sirica to order the President to produce for a grand jury tape recordings of nine conversations with aides. Cox said the tapes could prove or di sprove "criminal conspiracy and other illegal conduct" in the White House. Such an order, Cox said. would reaf- firm the American constitutional pfin.. ciple that "no man is above the law. "The President has an enforceable legal duty · not to withhold material evidence from a grand jury," Cox said. " ... There is no exception for the Presi· dent from the guiding principle that the public, in the pursuit of justice, has a right to every man's evidence ... "'The grand jury is seeking evidence of criminal conduct that the respondent Nixon happens to have in bis custody - largely by bis personal choice." Cox subpoenaed the tape recordings on July 23, one week after it was disclosed at the Senate Watergate hearings that Nixon's conversations in ty,,•o White House offices and on four of his telephones had b e e n aulomalically recorded since the spring of 1971. Nixon refused to comply with the sub- poena . His lawyers argued in a lengthy brief Tuesday that it would be "simply impossible for any president of the United States to function" if he were forced to disclose confidential com· munications with aides. Cox contended that Watergate-related conversations were not conducted as part of the President's official duties and therefore could not be withheld legally. Cox argued further that Nixon waived any claim to keep the tapes secret because (I) some persons involved in the conversations already testified about them publicly and (2) Nixon permitted his former chief of staff, H. R. Haldeman, to listen to two of the tapes after leaving the White House April 30. "Not even a President can be allowed to select some accounts of a conversation for public disclosure and then to frustrate further grand jury inquiries by withholding the best evidence of what a~ tua!Jy took place," C.Ox said. Sirica has scheduled oral argumenb for Aug. 22 on the tapes dispute. Meanwhile. a special grand jury was convened tod ay at the request of Coz to investigate a wide range of activities in the 1972 presidential campaign as well as the ITT antitru!t settlement. Judge Sirica called the panel into session to inquire Into matters separate from those being investigated by a grand jury that has been concentrating on the \Vatergate burglary and its aftermath. The new panel1 however, will have as one area of its investigation possible per- jury committed during the senate \Vatergate hearings. Outhouse Arson Fla.res in Mes(l Outhouse arsonists moved into Costa f\.fesa Saturday and set Ore to a portable toilet on a residential construction site, Costa Mesa police reported. 'l"'he fire, which destroyed the wooden toilet valued at $200 but didn't touch sur· rounding property, was similar to four cases of arsori Friday at Irvine con· struction sites. Costa Mesa firemen put out the small blaze at Sunflower Avenue and Acacia Street. Mesa P edestrian K illed in Minnesota A 22-year-old Co.sta Mesa man was kill- ed Saturday when he tried to cross an in· terstate highway on the east edge pf Albert Lea, Minn., the Minne.ota Highway Patrol said. The victim was identified as Harri P . Jaffa. No local address was available. A patrol officer said Jafra was struck by a pickup truck driven by bwrence W. Berg, 42, of Duluth. Berg wasn't injured. -~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~- Five Hospitalized As Two Autos Crash in Irvine A two-car collision a t an Irvine in· tersection SlD'lday sent five people, two \vith major injuries, .to Mercy Hospital in Santa Ana, police reported. Listed in good cond ition today by hospital authorities are Jeff Scott Taylor, 16, and Michael Gray, 12, both of Tustin. They were passengers in a 1970 Pinto driven by Maark Woodolowski, 16, also of Tustin. Taylor suffered a broken elbow. and cuts on his right shoulder and hand in the accident. Gray, who had a broken "'fist and he ad injuries, was unconscious when police of- ficers arrived at Red Hill Avenue and MacArthur Boulevard about noon &.in· day. Costa Mesa police said the car driven by Wondolowslti collided with a 1970 Datsun driven by David Bransky, 18. Santa Ana. The cars were "totaled," polloe reported. Bransky and his Jl8""'ger, DWle Fatrclilld, 17, Orange, and Wondolawski were also taken to Mercy Hospltli lbey were treated for minor cuts and rtlea.s · ed, authorities said. Polloe cited Branaky for falling to yield lo through traffic. Frot11 Page 1 WALDIE ... Gen~ral ~es Administration showing every expenditure made at the compound for securjty reasons. The current total for such expenditures at San Clemente is now pegged at $3 million. "l could have been shown structures that would not have endangered the privacy of the President, who wUD't even there," Waldie suggested. "I coukln't see them because I was told they are too difficult to explain and this leads me to believe that the purcbasel made in the name of the President's !ecurity are not justifiable.'' One such installation which stirred the campaigner's interest is an $8,000 system installed along the Santa Fe tracks in the Pre.aldent's front yard to alert the Presi· dent when a traln is comlng. Waldie said the ra,tionale for that system W83 that it wp 1needed because the noise of the surf r~ im1l9S'ible to bear an a.pproac rain.-Waldie termed that "a foolish iture." • NOW AT ' ' 95 + ,_ ' ' .' 90 'DAY CASH WITH -•on• CllD&f HEADQUARTERS. . Phone 548-7788 , . 1815 NEWPORT BLVD: Dmtown Costa Mesa ............................................................ • I • •• ' I ~ I I "' " ,, • -, - ·JJ.untingtoli Beaeh Fountai11 ·Valley · EDI TI O N VOL 66, NO •. 22,5, 2 SECTIONS, 28-PAGES . .· ·' . Police E y e -· Today's Final N.Y. Stocks ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, AUGUST 13, 1973 TEN CENTS Increases Due Death Links Price Freeze Ends To Houston Similarities between the sex and death ring murQers in Houston and the string of rnutilat.ion murders on the Orange Coast have led tocal investigators to the Houston Police Department Det. Sgt. Monty McKennon of the Hun· tington Beach police department said to- day · -he -is attempting to contact in· vesUgators working on the Houston case. By United Press Internalional The price freeze was lifted today on everything except gasoline il:nd beef. A number of major companies immediately said they woul~ ask for piice increases. Consumers will not !eel the full brunt of the price jump for some time because under Phase JV companies with annual sales of $100 million or more rilust give the Cost of Living Council 30 days notice of SuCh increases. Chrysler Corp. imn1edlalely asked the council to allow an average $71 hike on 1974-model cars and trucks. Unless it s application is turned down, the increase auto1natically 'viii go into effect before the vehicles go on public sale in late September. American Motors is seeking ·an flverage $55 price increase \\'hile General Motors and Ford have yet to file ap- plications. Spokesmen for the two largest auto compani es said they expected ap- plications 111ould soon be filed. 85 Feared Deatl Arn1co Steel Corp. in Middletown, Ohio said it "'as reinstating price increases of sheet steel products which had been scheduled but 'vere not allov.•cd under the !rceze. The increase is scheduled for Sept. 12. Reports from· supennarkets indicated food prices reinained reasonably stable today . Prices had been out from under the fr('eze for nearly a 1nonth. Under Phase IV, sellers can raise their (.See t~REEZE, r age 2) McKennon said there seem to be similarities in the Houston murders and the death5 of five young men whose bodies were discovered in Huntington Beach. Sunset Beach, Seal Beach and Long Beach. McKennon noted that one cf the- witnesses in the Houston cAse bas beert quoted saying the bodies or some of the victims "were suppo6ed to have been sent off somewhere in California ." Weatherman Says Showers Due Tonight Spanish Jet Ex plodes Bot he di8C9U1lted any real likelihood that the dead man who is supposed to have committed the mass sex and torture · s1ayings in Texas could be respoosible for the Orange Coast killings. Thundershowers -that's right -thun- dershowers are forecast for inland and On Landing Approach "But you never know. \Ve'd be foolish if we didn't check everything out," he said. Only two' ol tbe victims of the mutila- tion murders have been identifled. Tbey are Edward 'Daniel Moore, 20, and Ron- nie Gene Wiebe, 21, whose bodies were found in Seal Beach beside tbe San Diego Freeway Dec. 26 and July 30. Huntington Beach lists as John Doe the sexually mutilated body of a young man found in that city Alril 24. McKennon pointed out I.hat John Doe had been sex- . ually molested and tortured prior to his death. Pop Goes the Bubbl,e Tim Acorn1 8, (left) of Newfield, N.H., and Gail Coppins, 9, of \Vin· chester, Mass .. match bubbles and Tim ends up with a nose full of gum as the youngsters pass the time blowing bubbles during a sum- mer rainstorm in Wolfeboro, N.H. . "bl J LA CORUNA, Spain (UPI) -A poss! Y coasta communities of Orange Caravelle airliner of the Spanish Aviaco County tonight. Air Company exploded in flight today The freak August weather brought rain while the pilot was making his fourtb to portions of Orange and Anaheim early landing approach to La Coruna 's cloud- today as thunderclaps rolled in the gray shrouded mountaintop airport and fell in skies above. flames on a village below, an airline spokesman reported. Commuters using the New Port The airline said all 85 persons abo8I'd Freeway are accustomed or late to the the twin-jet aircraft were feared dead. misty type of rain gray bummer-summer or the flight itself, the airline said mornings have produced. Today's drips . there is "no hope of survivors." from above were big bold drops. Because of confusion at the village crash site and the dense clouds and The National Weather Service con-· rains, there were conflicting reports. firmed their existence. In fact in Police in La Coruna said rescue opera· Riverside this morning, thundershowers lions were continuing and it Was not dr bed the d t in .. ..1 definitely known whether there were enc own own area 61rUegree . ill h d bee kill temperatures. :~1vors or any v agers a n . Also listed as John Does are l\\'O more of the victims or the possibly Jinked murders. John Doe No. 16 was found beside the Tenninal Island Freeway Feb. I and John Doe. No. 52 was hacked into pieoes 'whicb were found in green sacks in several locations 1broughout the l)(!l'lhern orange coast and lbe Los Angeles :E~~ls.i n. 9J, H. n!iugt~ ~ . .. A surge of tropical moisture northward A spokesman for La Coruna airport l!:~~~r.? .it; at.fault. M~ moisture ancl Spaajsh. news repQrts said at least \\ -l~ .... ~~ .. fn ~ ~·bntt,~ived•~~·, areas o( Sou.~'-Calif.orola'dt-conderwes, The news agency -EW'Opa Press sajii Hirbor area. · PolJoe believe the five murders may be Jinked because au of the victim• were young men who had beeri sexually assaulted and in some cases mutilated. * * * Deputies Find 2 More Bodie s Jn, Sex Murd ers HOUSTON (UPI) -Sheriff's deputies today dug up from shallow graves on a ·Texas beach the 24th and 25th bodies kil~ ~ during a three:-year spree of sex and 511dism by two teen-agers and a homosexual friend. The victims were wrapped in black plastic bags and sprinkJed with lime, like mos.t of Ute others ,fol.D'ld during the past week at three locaUons. Officers, digging with a back hoe and a giant road-grader, said they expected to PARENTS CRI TICIZE HOUSTON POLICE ACTIO~age 4 find at least one more body at the beachrront site at High Island. "I think we got another one down tbeto," .. Jd Chambers County Sherm Louis Ott<r. Wltti the'recovery of the 25th body, !he mas3. murder equaled the, worst such tragedy io U.S. history. Juan V. corona, 39, was convicted last January or kUling 25 fann liands In C.Ufornia. Olllcen on the r.... beach drove truclcs and ca:rs aroun<t the search site to ,'.'guard ft from onlookers. . The bodies discovered today w~ pull· ed from the sand In an area covered by salt grass about a quarter mile from where two bodies were located Friday. The spot is about S5 miles east of Galveston. Central Park Silggested At least one city parks commissioner thinks HunUngton Beach ought to expand its 207-acre ~ntral park by another 235 acres. In 'a three-page status report to the ci· ty. Parks CommissiQner Lee Moss teller lists three possible eirpansion plans with various additions or 115 acres, 150 acres and 235 acres. He calls the 235-acre plan "The ultimate one," but says there arc "several important factors tliat merit serious consideration." Io his "ultimate" plan, Mossteller lists the main features as: -The total realignment of Ellis A venue southwa~, with an W1derpass at Golden West Street. The new Ellis would stretch from Gothard Slreet to the bluff at Edwards Street. roughly following the deleted route of the old coast freeway proposal. -Talbert Avenue wou14 stop at Golden West Street, forcing less of a southerly swing at Talbert near the new Navy Servants Termed Ille gal IV ASIIlNGTON (UPI) -The N•vy has illegally provided a personal servAJ)t and a priVate secretary .to a retired admiral now serving as U.S.. antba.Wdor to Spain, Sen. William Proxmire·bas charg- ed. I central · library. J\1ossteller says this "'ould cut some costs and might also preserve the Bruce brothers' pit. The two lesser proposals mean tbe city would have to buy Jess land, but MossteUer believes with another 235 acres the central park could not only pro- vide an 18-hole golf course but additional uses, such as a stabJes and equestrian trails. Mossteller's report was submitted to µie parks and recreation commission last week as part of a series or commission reports on future goals for the city. Mosstcller does not talk about costs. but recommends that it will all "come in~ to focus" when an outside consulting finn, Stone and Youngberg, completes its economic feasibility study on further central park land acquisition. The Stone and Youngberg report, which will discuss the cost of various ex- pansion proposals, including a city golf course, is due any day now, according to city officials. . ln his expansion report, Mossteller also suggests the central park will "never truly be beautiful or reach its full poten- tiality until the mushroom farm and the business .properties just north of Ellis become incorporated into the park prop- er." The parks commission took no action on Mossteller 's report. '1t, and other com- missioners' reports on various recreation goals, will be dlscu'ssed at future com- mission meeting~. Some of the other reports involve a central sports complex, the Santa Ana River greenbelt, special interest group needs, the community and neighborhood park philosophy versus economics, and other items. coo&e<aad~gins falling as rain. five inhabitants of the" village of Mon- A forecaster said this moisture usually trove also were killed. drops in inl~ mountain ranges and ~ut later pollce saiH the houses on rarely makes 1t to the coastline. which the wreckage fell were abandoned .Nevertheless, today 's forecast ealls for and oo villagers were killed. slight chances of afternoon and evening The crash was the eighth in a series of thundershowers "almost anyplace in the fatal accidents involving S p a n i s h SOuth Coast Basin," the National airliners since early 1972. Weather Service forecaster said. Iberia has lost three planes during the The drift of moist air from south of the period, the chater company Spantax two, border is expected to continue through Wednesday. Meanwhile, temperatures a1ong the Orange Coast will dip to 63 tonight. Iiighs Tuesday will be in the low 70s. Hunting ton Gas Station Robbed Huntington Beach police are looking for two men who held up a serv~e sta- tion Sunday night. · Police said an undetermined amount or cash was taken from Chuck James' service station, 00 Edinger Ave. after one of the bandits forced the lone at- tendant at gun point to stay in the sta- tiC1n's restroom . The attendant, John 111etros, said one of the men was anned with a small caliber hand gun which he pulled when Metros came to wait on the robbers' car. Metros said he was told to wait in the restroom for a few minutes. When he 'vent back to the station office the two men and the money were gone. Fires Unde1· Cont1·ol SAN 01EGO (AP ) -Firemen have controlled two brush fires which burned 350 acres in east San Diego County rural areas. One fireman suffered burns Sun- day in a 200-acre blaze near Canyon City. 4 P ersons Hurt In T wo Accidents 'Satisfactory' Four people injured in two separate traffic accidents in Huntington Beach over the weekend are all reported in satisfactory condition today. Three Huntington Beach residents were hospitalized Sunday after a crash on Adams A venue between Magnolia Street and Isthmus Lane. Police said Ramon Luna , 24, of 309 Memphis St., lost control of his eastbound car and it swerved into oncoming traffic where it collided with autos driven by Mary Cox, 58, and Susan Mastennan, 19. Mrs. Cox and her passenger, Claud Cox, 72, were taken to Pacifica hospital along with Luna. Another accident, which occurred Sat· urday afternoon on Pacific Coast Highway between Beach Boulevard and Newland Street, sent a bicyclist to the hospital. Police said James Sweeney, 22. Anaheim , was riding bis bike westbound on the highway when be was hit by a car driven by Theodore Patten, 35, 0£ 17127 Roundhill Drive. Sweeney is listed in satisfactory con· dition today at Orange County J\.1edical Center. timer Wayne Henley, 17, an~ David Broolis, II, have been charged with JtJurd.er and admitted taking pan In the homolexuBJ'slaylng• wllh Dean Corl!, 33. .Prox.inire (0-Wis.), said SUnday that two active duty military personnel were assigned last November tb Ambassador Horacio Rivero and that they were "personally provided" by Adm. Elmo ZUmwelt, chief of U.S. naval operations. Riv"<!!, who has served as commander in chief ol Allied forces IQ southern Eµrope, retired frol1\ tHe Navy in June, um,-anll became ambwador 10 Spain laSl Septcmher. Davis Top Beach Surf er Oflkers last week dUi up 17 bodies In- side a Houston bOat ·Shed and recovered tour at a wooded site near Broaddus in ' East Texas. Two more were unearthed on the beach east of Galveston. ~riff's deputies used tbe road grader to cut a, quarter-mile through a line 0£ , sal( grass strewn With driftwood and lll· ' ter. Oiler anil a deputy rode l>ehiJ>d,the gr1der, e11inlnlng "the broken uound for tra ... of sravea de!<flbed by Henley and Jlrooks. Meanwhlle, rn Houston. Police 'aitef I Herman B. Sllolt defended !ill ~ n\enl' today ... fnst. ~ •ftom llOlllC perents ·ot the vlcUm1 that o(f!cers "'"' lax Iii investigating mll8in8 pereoos 1 '.' repol;'l$, " "Allhougb oome of the parepts In the Heights area ll)ay have Celt \ft have not be<n doing all 110 eould have, we never would have enoullb people lo dlcct out • (See BODIES, l'lc• I) ., f I, ADVE,RTISING HAS 'DRAW.ING 'POWER' Pally Pijol classU!cd want ads have charisma. Look at this channer: 161 • GALAXIE. Good , t""1Jo 'portatlon, 66,000 mlin. 175 o~ 1111ke olJer,. !l'liooe No.), This adVertlser c8ned to s a y , "C:Ongi:atulatloos on the wonderf111 draw· iog power of your adll" Illa! the dlrect lint -&42-15673 -and ~t our ebannlng ad-visor he you Jlnd some "'dra11lnc poW!r." Twenty-two year ofd John· Davis of Huntington Beach took top hooors in the citf surfing championship Sunday, cam· . ' Ing the litlc HMost outstanding Surfer" under gray skies a'nd on two to three-root sw•lls. Davis· led 40 surfors In elghl divisions and starred In the Jlnal event of lbe d~y1 • !he superheat, )n• which 411 winN!rs v1e<i. for the outatand1'>8 sutfeMltle. crowds estimated at s;soo lined the ,ci· · ty bel<h,·toU!h of Bolsa Cl!lca Bluff!·"" w•tch the finals of the two-day meet. Cloudy skies' and chllly temperatures dampened the ardor of sllrilng fans oo Saturday. ' · ·Leading the field ol 127' entranls we"' · the following llrlit place wlnneri: Bob Nelshl, bOys under 14; Gary W-r. juniors IS lo 17: Klayne !lrown, mtll'• 18 to 24; Jerry.Sinltb, maslera, 26- 34: Richard Scott. seniors, over 35; Diane Vandrufr. womCn's; John Davis, men's rated, and Robcrl Millcld, masters rated. Jon "Rip" Ribble, city recreation supervisor, directed the contest, the first in recent years to have dropped its U.S. Surfboard affillation . While 1.Wer ten1enid-this yepr, Ribble said, 11thcre' was more~ talent this year, with more hlgh Quality sUrfUS." Without the tie "" the U.S. Sur(board champtonship, "t~r~tec.t aUrfers were allowed "".rtl<)r this local tompetitlon In· the rated dJvislons ," he explaihed. 111t aJso might have aCi:QUnted tor the drop In the number of enlranta. Only 127 surfers competed, compared to 247 last year. But ~use champs in our conic-st had a chance to go to the natioMls before, and can't do that now, maybe they decided not to bolhcr," Ribble speculated. Among the winners were : -Boys Dlv~ion (14 and under); Bob Neishi, first : Bobby Burchell, second : Rick Bauer, third. -Juniors 11~17J: Gary \Vurstcr. first: Dan Rice, second ; Jeff Smith, third. -l\lens (J8·24 ): Klaync Brown . first : David Vandruff, r.econd ; Lonnie Buhn, thlnl. . -Masters (25-Jl): Jerry Smith. llrsl: Bob Bolen, second; a.tarUn Olokany, third . -Seniors (llS and ·older): Richard SOOtt, firSt: Ray Kunce, s1.'COl'ld; George Draper. thin!. -\\le.men (all ages ): Diane Vandruff, first ; l{aren Skinner, second; Kathy Hankins, tbird . -Mens Rated (roted 4A or high 3A by (See SURFING. Page II plus one plane damaged. and Aviaco. a subsidiary of Iberia, two, \Vith a total loss of 352 lives. Spain·s worst air crash occurred last December when a Spantax Convair Coronado flipped on takeoff from Santa Cruz airport killing all 155 aboard. Aviaco said the Caravelle jet carried 79 passengers and a crew of six. An airport spokesman said it crashed on its fourtb attempt to land in bad weather. Cifra reported the pilot had be<'n told shortly before by the control tower that visibiJity dropped belo\\' minimum levels. The plane. on a scheduled flight from Madrid, made three attempts to land at La Coruna and had just started to circle the cloud-shrouded airport once again when it apparently exploded in the air, the spokesman said. Most of its wreckage fell on an aban- doned fann house in the village of Mon- trove, four miles from the airport~ .. -.. The airport spokE!$man sald radio con- tact with the plane broke off without any indication of anything being wrong with the plane, apart from Captain Lopez PascuaJ's apparent difficulties of landing the craft under the prevailing conditions. Most passengers aboard the plane ap- peared to be vacationers. La Coruna is one of three airports serving the northwestern Galician prov- inces and its seaside resorts. The ill fated flight, AV-)18, is a special vacation flight run daily by Avico during the sum- mer season. The plane left Madrid at 9: 14 a.m. (4: 14 a.m. PDT), more than an hour late for the 60-minute flight. The crash oc· curred an hour later. Cifra said members of a Barcelona s1vimming club (Club N a ta c i o n Barcelona) were aboard the plane flying to a swimming meet in La Coruna. Coup le Shot In P arked Car LOS ANGELES (AP) -Police \\'ere searching today for the person who open- ed the back door of a parked car in Grif· fith Park and shot the couple inside, kil!- ing the man and critically wounding the woman. The couple were found Sunday after teenagers reported to a park ranger that shots had heen fired at them, police said. The dead man , Howard A. Dye. 31 , had been shot in the back of the head, they said. Orange Coas t Weather ~lore gloom is rorccast tor the morning hours Tuesday with a slight chance of thundershowers in the evening hours . SuMy in the afternoon with highs of 70 at the beaches. Lows in U1e 60s, L~SlDE TODi\'l' 1\s Ccirnbodian refugees con- tinue to 8treani t11to the Capi tal city of Phnoni Penlt. the city's airport re port s rcservot·ions booked up tllrougli August for people trying to get out of the cuii1~try. See story and photos Oil Page 21. lo.tin• ,. L.M. hYCI t C1llfonll1 J Clt ... flff tWt Ctftl1CI ll C:l'Oll..,,.nl If DHTll Ntlktt II l!dllol1al ,,,, I lllltrlllM'!tnl lt l'lntMI ll·lf l'or Thi ll:9tlnl II , 1t HoroK-1• 111 Sttvltt tt .. , Ann L1.....-1 11 Mtvlff 11 N1tlt111I...... 4 °"'"" (ffllfy ,, S\'1'111 "''""' It IP«tl , .. ,, Sltdf Mlrtlttt 1 .. lf Tft9¥1.iOll • f'~ltn ,, WM~ I w-•t N ..... 1~1 Wtf'ld """" 4 . - ;· ;t_D_Ac:cll Y-'-'Pl(OT " • H . -· M11nd.1J, A119ui t U, 1973 • Ocean View Has Oinics For Basics With today's education emphasis on in- novation, even such a dull old tradition as summer school has taken on a new look with attractive courses designed to Jure kids into the classroom. But ooe elementary school in the Ocean View District of Huntington Beach has taken what seems to be a step backward. The classrooms at College View are filled daily by youngsters busily working on their reading and math problems, not arts and crafts projects. Ul"I TtltPholo DEATH VALLEY HIKERS DISPLAY BLISTERS DURING TREK Anita Perrot (lift} and Jo Ann Claudio-Williams "Most of the things going on here also go on at the normal schools and summer schools," says David H o 1 m e s , coordinator for the math and reading clinics. "But the ,work here is con- centrated and focuses on individual students.'' Hike Co1npleted The classroom materials also are con- centrated. The special clinics haVe five computers for advanced math students. Most schools in Ocean View don't have any computers. First Women Walk Dea.tli Valley "\Ve also offer pre-tests and post-tests and \VC invite each parent in for in- dlvidual conferences on their children," By JOHN ZALLER 01 the D•Uy Piiot 511tt "f could never have done it without my husband. At least, I don't think I could have done it without him." 1bat's how Jo Ann Claudio.Williams; 21. feels after completing her IQ-day walk across Death Valley in the 120-degree heat ol. sununer, -· While she and gir!Criend Anita Perrot, 20, were getting international attention as the first women ever lo hike across Death Valley in the heat of summer, her husband, Chris. was laboring quietly in the background. "You need a backup team if you want to take on that desert," says Mrs. Claudi<rWilliams, who will enroll this fall at Orange Coast C.Ollege. "He made truck runs every day to bring us ice water, he sat out under the tarp with us during the heat of day, He even slept out with us. "It was a natural thing for him to do. because he was concerned that everything go well. "I would have done the same for him," she says. The two young women made the I~ mile walking Uip in 10 days, finishing Aug. 7. They traveled from the southern boundary of Death Valley at Saratoga Springs to the northern boondary near Ebebebe Crater. A ranger at Death Valley Natiorjtl Park said it was the first time he couJd recall any woman or women covering the distance in the beat of summer. Another woman once did it in the spring when temperatures in the valley were considerably lower, he said. , Chris had wanted to hike with hi s bride 1 of. eight months. But the idea for the trip had been Jo Ann's and Anita's. They had 1 a reason for not wanting a man along. : "We knew tha t if he went with us, nobcxly would pay much attention to the 1 fact that it was the first time a woman :had made the trip in the middle of sum- imer," she says. "They would have felt that CbrilJ bad carried me or dragged me or something. At the very least, they would have thought that he carried the heavy backpack while I just walked along. "So we agreed that I should do it with another woman." Among the people who disagreed with this decisioo was Reba Williams, the Newport Beach mother-in-law of Jo Ann. "I told Chris he should forbid her to do jt," says Mrs. WiUiams. "But he said be shouldn't do that, because she had her own life to lead. "Now I'm glad that he went ahead and helped her out," says Mrs. Williams. The 21-year-old Mrs. Claudio-Wi!Liams said her husband was in on the planning every step of the way. He did extensive reading, helped prepare the equipment, and generally tried to be as helpful as be <'OOld. "He did everything we did except the walking," she says. The walking, however, was the diffi cult part. OIANGI COAST •• DAILY PILOT The Or1n111 CO.st OAILY PILOT wll'lo whlcfl ls comblMd Ille HIW$·P re1s, II IM.ICllll'>fo:l by rne Or.,>ge (Olol Pu1Jli1hll"l\'I ComNny. $ei:i-- fl1• ~!lions .,. pi,,1>11111«1, MoncltY ffltOUOh F'rld,,y, tor Co1!1 Meu, N-rt 8t1~. Hvn!lng!on 811c~/Fount•ln Vtlley, l1gv111 8ffth, 1rvln1/S-l11>11ck •nd Sin c~mentel 511'1 Juen C1pl11t1no. A 1ingl1 'fO~I edition II Jll,IDll•Mol S..h/«ll'fl Ind Sundl Yl- ti. prlnclH I PVt1ll1hl119 pllnl 11 11 JlO Wtif tty S""ff, Cl»ll Mn1, Clllfor11l1, flll)f.. Rob•rt N. w,,d Pr•icl ... t alld P11bllol\tr J1ck R. C11rl1y Vlou Pr111d..,t '"" Gtneral M•n.tOv Thotr111 K11¥1I EOll@r Tiio11111 A. Murpltl111 M1n1gln~ Ect1tor Clt1rl1• H. loo1 Ricli1•J P. N11ll Aul1i.11t M1n1tl1'0 EG!lor1 T1rry Cowlll• w ... 1 Or•1199 c°""tr e11to, H•lltlltff .. hoc.• Office 17175 !lt1cli lo1,1/1,..tr4 M.1ili11i Ad•r1J1: P.O. lot 7,0, '2641 -°'"'" l'9-111 .. dl: ttf Fora! AW!llll Cot11 MfN; 1JO Wtll 81y Slt .. r Ntwpotl lllltcfl: lJ:D NtWporl 1110\l'tVlrd ).!" Cltmtnlt; XI$ NOtlll f l C1,,.l11C1 flffl , ........ (114) ,42-4121 C'-HtM An.t-tltl ... '42·5671 ,.,. .... ..,. °'"...,. c-tr c.mm.ni.. 140.IUO C:O,yt!f!ir, 1t11. ~,.. Co-tit Pu!:!lllhlnf C~11r, IQ ,...... 1tot .. 1, Ul1111r1tion., tdflOUll m1f!W Of ~•ttll1-l1 lllrtlfl .... , "' r1~tld wl!NUI •llklel I*· mi..llorl Of <'9'(11t111 -· "Every day \Yas a challenge," she adds Ho~~es. . says. "It seemed like the dese rt was The clinics -.one hour ot ct~s daily, trying to make each step \Ve took as hard --~2...wteks at a lime -are established as as it could posslbly be." separate entities from the normal arts The two women faced heat, a a~d .cr~fts type summer schools at the windstorm that became a sandstorm, an d1str~ct ~ other c~puses. . electrical storm and finally a heavy This ts the third year for a reading rainstorm. ' clinic and second for math. While the "When we stopped walking at night , v.·e idea of such special clinics appears on always knew v,.·e had accomplished the surface to be a return to the old something." .. three R" system_. the .clini cs really Mrs. Claudi<rWilliams says she thinks employ the best of,i~va~1~. . . her walk proved something about the It ~II starts with 1nd1v1dual!zed in- ability of ~'Omen. But she says the main strucuon. Less. ~t~dents and more reason for the walk was not motivated by teachers means md1v1dual problems can this. get more h~lp. . . "I did it because I wanted to get a College View 1s a. school Wlth carpets really good look at Ille desert," she says. and few wal!s. ~spite the ~· the "And I had a desire to prove to myself atmosphere 1~ qwet and _studious. that I could do it." . Holm~ believes the children are adapt- Sports Complex Study Sought For Huntington Huntington Beach Parks and Recrea - tion commissioners may seek a "comprehensive study" to assess the need for a sports complex in their city. They took no action last week when Commissioner Bill Barnes recommended the stu dy, but they will discuss it at a future meeting. In a short report to his fellow com- missioners, Barnes pointed out that a citizens committee suggested in May 1971 the city needs some open air concert facilities and sporting arenas. Parks and Recreation Director Nonn Worthy has also suggested the city could use a complex which might combine foot- ball, swinuning, tennis and some other majar activities. Barnes did not list any specifics as to what a sports complex might contain, or how big it should be, but he did strongly recommend the city conduct a study to determine the need and type, as well as Potential cost. Barnes, an adml.nlstrator in the Foun- tain Valley School District, was one or several commissioners · s u b m j t ti n g reports on separate aspects of the city's goals in parks and recreation. Cooler W eatlier Holds Dow11. Mob Cool, hazy weather kept beach at- tendance Ught over the weekend in Hun- tington Beach as the sun peeked out 0£ the clouds only occasionally during the afternoon hours. \Vater temperahU'e was 64 degrees with air temperatures in the low 70s. Rescues on all beaches were light, with no serious injuries. Biggest cto\vds tumed up at the city beach, with 82,000 visitors over the two days. Huntington State Beach bad 38,000 beach goers, with 27 .000 at Bolsa Chica State Beach. At Seal Beach, close to 23,000 turned out. From Pagel SURFING ... Western Surfing Association): John Davis, first : Nick Evans, second; David Segraves, third. -Masters Rnted: Robert ?\-1ilfeld. first: Chuck Linnen, second ; Roy Crump, lhird. The first five winners in each division received a trophy, f,wo tickets to the Surfer Stomp at the ~r o 11 y wood ?Hlladiwn Aug. 26, and a surfboard rack for their bicycles. Catalina Voyage Contest Launched A two-day trip lo C81alina Island •board a 53-foot &ailing ynchl will be tho priie of the second annual Fountain Valley Boys' Club "Miiiionaire's Auc- tion" Aug. 18. ing to it well because they don't mind coming to school for just one hour a day and really concentrating on their work. ''They don't face the long day and that's a psychological advantage," he says. The dinics are still too new to fully judge their value , but Holmes says the feedback from teachers throughout the past year indicates that youngsters who attended last summer's clinics showed considerable improvement. FromP-.e1 FREEZE ••. prices, but only as much as costs in- crease. Gasoline and other petrotewn prices will remain frozen for another week. Beef will continue under price controls the longest. until Sept. 12. It is the freeze on beef that has brought the most criticism on Phase IV. It remained frozen when other food prices were decontrolled June 13. While beef prices cannot be raised the supply has dwindled. A. federal judge in Lincoln, Neb. turned down a request for an injunction seeking an end to the freeze on beef prices. A judge in Seattle, Wash., made a similar ruling today in a similar case. ' The ruling by U.S. District O>urt Judge Warren Urbotn in Lincoln was issued Saturday night and made public today. At the same time, he refused the request for the temporary injunction, Urbom denied a government plea for dismissal of the suit. The judge gave no reason for his decision to deny the request by Minden Beef Co. of Minden, Neb., a processor, and the Greater New York Association of Meat and Poultry Dealers, a wholesale group. The plaintiffs claimed the freeze is un.- productive and is causing shortages. The government claimed lt Is necessary to hold down rising meat prices. W esbninster Man Iillled by Auto A man was struck by a car and killed late Sunday in Westminster, police reported. Jack Tanner, 25, of 7922 11th St. \Vestminster died instantly, the Orang~ County Coroner's Office reported . He \vas struck by a car near Beach .Boulevard and 14th Street shortly after 11 p.m. The victim, police said was crossing Beach Boulevard when struck by a car d:·iven by Denise E. Hinckley, 24, or Anaheim. Officers said the accident Is still under investigation Works Director Sought for City Jluntington Beach hopes to have a new public works director within two months according to City Administrator David Rowlands. Rowlands has launched a natlonwide recruiting effort to rm tho posl left open by the resignation of Jim Wheeler. While the city searches for a new man Cily Engineer Bill Hartge Will direct ti.; public works department on a temporary basis. • , Times are Tough Naval Clash .. Re.ported Near Egypt . ' By United Pre&s tniematlonel Israeli and Egyptian vessels clashed in the Gulf of Suez today 'in the first. reported naval e"ncounler between thr c04i&ries in almost six years. The Israeli military command said in Tel Aviv that two of its ships were at· tacked by a pair of Egyptian vessels in the eastern part of \he gulf. It said an Egyptian patrol boat was fired on and that crew members were seen jumping overboard. Two Israelis were slightly 'vounded, the command said . The incident occurred nortbwest of Ras Sudar in the eastern part of the gulf at about 5 p.m., according to the Israeli command, which said. "OOr boats didn't go over the line in the middle of th1! gulf." Israel said it filed a complaint with U.N. truce supervisory officials. The Egyptian boat that was hit wa~ towed away, the command said. Cairo's semi~fficial Middle East New~ Agency said that the Egyptian navy in- tercepted Israeli boats trying to ap- proach the Egyptian coastline on the western side of the gulf. The cost of living seems to be catching up with John T. Dunlop di- rector of the Cost of Llving Council, as he appears for a news coider· e.nce with holes in his shoes. Dunlop briefed newsmen on new regula- tions for Phase IV of the administration's economic program. Quoting a mljitary spokesman, the agency said the Israeli boat!! made their approach in the Adabiya afea south of Suez city at about 5:20 p.m., and "'were intercepted by our naval unit and shore defense units and forced tO retreat to the east" "The enen:iy covered its withdrawal with its aJr force. The Egyptian forces suffered no ca!lualties," the-Egyptian report said. Israel denied using air suppoft. Waldie Says Nixon's Villa Additions 'Giant Ripofr In the last naval clash, the Israeli destroyer Eilat \Vas sunk by an Egyptian mi.ssile boat in October, 1967. Egyptian Foreign Minister Mohammed Hassan El Zayyat, reacting lo Israel's intercepUoo of an Arab airliner, bad said today that the Arab world "must reply to Israeli arrogance with a decisive, deterrent and suitable action ... Rep. Jerome Waldie ( 0.Antioch ), the marathon walking gubernatorial can· didate, made it through gates of the \Vestern White House today but never had a chance to see the controversial im- provements to President Nixon's seaside villa -installations which he termed "a giant ripoff." Security aides at the nearly deserted presidential compound said they were ac- ting on orders from Washington when they confined the candjdate's tour to the presidential office complex on the San Diego side of the county line. "I wa~ told that all the items that I wanted to see are on private property and are not for public inspection," Waldie saitl. "If a congressman represents the peo- ple, I should be able to see what the tax- payers are paying for." Waldie entered the compound carrying a detailed list issued recently by the General Services ~dministration showing every expenditure made at the compound for security reasons. The current total for such expenditures at San Clemente is now pegged at $3 million. "I could have been shown structures that would not have endangered the privacy of the President, who wasn't even there," Waldie suggested. ''l couldn't see them because J was told they are too difficult to explain and this leads me to believe that the purchases made in the name of the President's security are nat •ustifiable." One such installation which stirred the campaigner's interest is an $8,000 system installed along the Santa Fe tracks in the President's front yard to alert the Presi- dent when a train is coming. Waldie said the rationale for that system was that it was needed because the noise of the surf makes it impossible to hear an approaching train, Waldie termed that ''a foolish expenditure." The candidate, who Is on a walking tour of Southern Califomla , said that two other U.S. representatives are asserted.Jy arriving "pretty soon" but he does not know what sort of treatment they will receive nor the reason for their arrival. "Jf they are friends of the President I think that they will be treated dillerently than I was," he said. Waldie alleged that the GSA "is playing games with us and somebody is trying lo hide something." The next stop on Waldie's 36-day trek slretcbing 240 miles through Southern California is at Dana Point on Tuesday, followed by a stopover the fo!Jowing day in Corona del Mar and yet another on T~ in Costa Mesa. Waldie said thet he i in "excellent ~hape down to my ankles." His feet, he added, are killing him. Gainesville Skit Trouble for Two ' Ping Pong Mark Set in Anaheim ANAHEIM (UPI) -Hole! mru\ager Terry Geer, 32, claimed a new ping pong endurance record Sunday after a game that lasted 49 hours, 12 minutes and 40 seconds. 1be old recon! was 48 hours. 1be CUl'TI!llt edition of the Guinness Book of World Records !alls to fist any category for marathon table tennis for less than lour persons, but Geer said be had been in contact with the editors of the recon! book and he said he was. ooofi. dent bis record would be sanctioned. Geer won more than 80 percent of the 400 matches played during the eihibltioil, which started Friday. It was held Jo benefits the Easter Seo! CampaliJI. FrmnPageJ BODIES •.. every runaway yootb ," Short said at a news conference. GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) -Two men Meanwhlle police SWJday said they were taken into custody today while identified two more of the bodies. perfonning a "guerrilla theater" skit The two were Donald Edward Waldrop, outside the courthouse where the 15. and his brother, Jerry Lym Waldrop, Gainesville Eight trial is belng held , 13. both of Atlanta, Ga . The two were questioned briefly by The identification by their father, Everett Waldrop, brought to five the federal officers and released before the number of bodies definitely identified. trial resumed. Eight members of the 11le two youths had been strangled, Vietnam Veterans Against the War are Others identified are: being tried on conspiracy charges. Charles C. Cobble, 17, Houston. Martin Ray Jones, 18, Houston. Sean McCarthy, 24, of Ilhaca, N.Y., Billy Lawrence, 15, Houston. said he and Lee Ho Chang, 34, from Henley, charged With six counts of Korea, were depicting a mllitary police murder, ha s admitted he killed Corll at interrogation of a Viet Cong prisoner the bachelor electrician's home Wednes- when the officers took them into custody. day. -~~~--'-~-'-~~~~~~~~~~ NOW AT 95 ·-...... H/m Erdusl.e 5 Year ·v.r11 Guann1ee 1'h<I motor, pu,.,,, timer. •1111re w1ttr d1:tlrobvt!Orl l'f'ltm. hftttr •fld PU.tl- bvllon• ''' gv11r11111ffd IOt I ,..,,. on 1110dt1• ss1trt. H /911 •!"Id ss1•1•. Wt pay for replK-1 labor durl,\g IM !itl! t"'· 90 DAY CASH Wint Al'PIOYID CllDlf Phone 548-7788 HEADQUARTERS . 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mm '-'Ill Clt l• _, ... Mid fl COSll Mtw. Cllfllonlll Subtt'l'll'llon ~ Cl(l'ltr U.4J -lflt•I bt" frWlll lllJ ,_1111•1 f'!IHll'I,.., •Wlnellofl• IJ • ., -llUY. Persons Interested In wiMing the voyage for six persons aboard "The Ramfl"gC," may call the club al 968-5252 or contact any board rnember. Rowlands said he expecl• Hartge to be one ol the top candidates for the permanent post. · ........................................................... , ' '} I r, • I ' ' • • . Monday, AW9USl 13, l 97.) OAllY PILOT :J Laguna's Ruth Roman R emembers Last Moments Aboard Andrea Doria Valuable Saved-My Son' By JACK CHAPPELL Oh It>• O.lly ,.Utt $1•ft IT WAS THE LAST NIGHT of a gala Europe-to-America cruise as the graceful Italian ocean liner· Andrea Doria knifed through leaden waters on her way to disaster. In the main ballroom, the orchestra played uArrivederci Roma" and the lights of the glittering ship fell dead into a shroud of fog. ACTRESS RUTH ROMAN, a Laguna Beach resident, was return- ing to the states aboard the Andrea Doria that July 25, 1956. News today of the daring attempts to salvage the $2.5 million of jewels and valuables in the ship's safe brings back memories for Miss Roman. "I think I got the most valuable thing, That is my son. Well, LAGUNA'S RUTH ROMAN · you know, the material things you can regain," Mi ss Roman said to- day, Miss Roman has perfonned in numerous motion pictures and television productions. Her more than 80 motion pictures include "The Champion," "The Window," and two horror pictures about to be released now. Television pro- ductions i n c 1 u d e "Ironside," , "Gunsmoke," and 11Mod Squad" guest star appearances. AS FOR MATERIAL valua- bles, Miss Roman doesn't expect to get any of her jewelry back from the hulk of the Andrea Doria. Since it was the last night, her valu ables had been removed from the purser's safe and were packed in a suitcase stowed away in her state room. She had been returning from Europe where she had intended to live permanently but changed her mind. Most of her valuables were on board·, she said. JEWELRY INCLUDED a dia1nond ring, a diamond bracelet, ear- rings , and a pearl necklace. Valuable furs are lost forever, she said. "I just thank God for that Italian sailor who took Ri chard over the side, strapped to his back," she said. While her son and his nurse were rescued by the "Stockholm," Miss Roman remained aboard the stricken luxury liner to be picked up by a French passenger liner. "I just sat there. I wa s on the gi-and stairway. You could hear the ship moan . It was a pretty sad sound," she said. MISS ROMAN WAS one of !he last to leave the Italian ship. Fifty-one persons died in the collisio n betwe.en Andrea Doria and the Stockholm. ~1ost of those victims-died in the initial ramming of the Andrea Doria. The shi p was struck on the starboard side just back from the how. "SHE WENT OVER almost immediately after she was bit. Now, they claim that if the Slockholm had stuck in her and not pulled out they collld have towed tlietn both back. I guess it's like a knife wound, wh en you pull out that's the end of it," ~tiss Roman said. The collision occurred at about 11 p.m. and the boat sank the following morning at about 7 a.m., Miss Romaµ recalled. "I watched it go down. "THE THING THAT I always think about the Andrea Doria, you know, when I think of it lying down there, was that, they had a great, oh, a large statue of Andrea Doria. It must have weighed tons and tons, I don't know wh ether it was marble or granite or what it was. "But, it must be a pretty eerie sight down there. I have the feel- ing that it would be intact. "There'd be a few barnacles and everything on it. I think those divers, iC they get any shots of that you know, it should be pretty eerie silently standing there." Chico Area Rabies Quarantine Set CHICO (AP) -A rabies quarantine was imposed today on a IS.block section of Ollco in the wake o( an epidemic of the dreaded disease, a Butte County health official reported . The quaranUne was declared after discovery Saturday that an unvaccinated six.month-old puppy had died of rabies after biting two children. Although six other cases or rabies have been reported in the Chico area Since ~1ay. Nino Calarco, a spokesman for the coun ty health department, said this was the fir st case of a pet being infected in a residential section. Calarco said seven rabid animal cases had been confirmed in the county the past two \VCCks and 12 this year. That is twice the number reported last year, he said . ' Asked if it \Yere an epideinic, Calarco replied , "Yes." '-: ! I , ., . __ ',, -,- ,J ,,.r' ' ANDREA DORIA SALVAGER DISPLAYS FIRST PIECE OF LINER Hunt Goes on For $2:5 Million in Treasure Aboard Ship Corporation Involvement Denied by Wh,ite House By GAYLORD SHAW Ahoclated P.ress Writer then used the terms "holding company" The White House announced today that no corporation was involved in the purchase of President Nixon's San Clemente estate. and "joint venture" in describing what he had previously called "an investment company." But presidential spokesman Gerald L. .\ Warren wouJd not give further details on the transaction which transferred ownership of a portion of the San Clemente property to industrialist Robert Abplanalp, saying a complete accounting was being prepared .and would be releas.. ed within a month. In May, the White House said Abplanalp formed an investment com-1 ' pany to purchase in December 1970 23 acres of the 29-acre estate. But in an in- terview with the Washington Star-News published Sunday, A,bplanalp said no company was involved. \Varren said he talked by telephone to Abplanalp tOOay and said the conllict resulted from "a semantical problem." In the interview, Warren s aid, Abplanalp "was trying to make clear that no corporation was involved." He Meat Hu1iters Slauglit,er Deer Intruders who apparenUy saw helpless animals in an Irvine .Park pen as a temp:iracy solution to the meat shortage cut the throat of a young deer during the weekend and carried off the carcass, Orange County Sheriff's officers said today. Deputies said the· intruders climbed the, chain link fence sur- rounding the animal pen at the park near Orange, slaughtered the tieer and then dragged it out through a hole they cut in the fence. The deer was valued at $250. . ' County lmpaet Unknown Sliarks Deter Doria Salvage NANTUCKET, Mass. I AP) -Ef- forts by two San Diego div ers to salvage an estimated $2.5 million worth of valuables from the sunken ocean liner Andrea Doria pro- ceeded today after being hampered by sharks and minor mechanical troubles Sunday. A spokesman aboard the support vessel Narrangansett said cre\vmcn killed one shark with a dartgun and chased others away from the salvage area Sunday afternoon. Minor motor trouble in the 12- foot under~'ater chamber fastened to the Andrea Doria has been cor- rected, the spokesman said. Border Officers Grab 270 Aliens At San Onofre More than 270 illegal aliens were ar- rested near the San Onofre checkjXlint over the weekend, U.S. Border Patrol spokesman reported today. Agents apprehended 101 persons on Saturday and another 170 on Suniay. However, only slightly more than half or those arrested were caught at the check- point, the patrolman said. Five aliens on Saturday and two more on Sunday were arrested while trying to circumvent the checkpoint on a passenger train. An additional 34 were apprehended during ranch checks around the area, and 21 aliens were turned over to the border agents by city police departments. The remainder of the arrested persons were apprehended by other agencies, the patrolman said. The number of arrestes were slightly higher this weekend than it has been in recent weekends, the agent noted. Blaze Hits YMCA RICHMOND <AP) -A fire ro.ared through the YMCA here Sunday, cauSing an estimated $100,000 damage ,to tbe two- story building. The fire raged out or con- trol for more than three hours before being controlled. Cox Urging Nixo11 Tape Release \VASlllNGTON (UPl l -Special pros· cc utor Archibald Cox charged t o d a y that President Nixon is withhold ing vital criminal evidence about the Watergate scandal "by his personal choice'' without any legal or constitutional right to do so. "Unlike a monarch." Cox said, "the President is not the sovereign." In a 67-page leg al brief filed in U.S. District Court, Cox urged Jud ge John J. Sirica to order the President to produce for a grand jury tape recordings of nine conversations with aides. Cox said the tapes could prove or disprove "criminal conspiracy and other illegal conduct" in the \Vhite House. Such an order, Cox said , would reaf- firm the American constitutional prin- ciple that "no man is above the law. "The President has an enforceable legal duty not to withhold material evidence from a grand jury," Cox said. •· ... There is no exception for the Presi- dent from the guiding principle that the public, in the pursuit of justice, has a right to every man 's evidence .•. "The grand jury is seeking evidence or criminal coaduct that the respondent Nixon happens to have in bis custody - largely by his personal choice." Cox subpoenaed the tape recordiags on July 23, one week after it was disclosed at the Senate Watergate bearings. that Nixon's conversations in two White House offices and on four of his telephones had been automatically recorded since the spring of 1971. Nixon refused to comply with the sub- poena. 1-lis lawyers argued in a lengthy brief Tuesday that it would be "simply impossible for any president of the United States to function" if he were forced to disclose confidential com- munications with aides. Cox contended that Watergat~related conversations were not conducted as part or the President's official · duties and therefore could not be withheld legally. ·Burrouglis Plant Reoperiing Adds to Area Tax Base Tbe economic impact of the re-opening of the $9 million Burroughs Corporntion plant in Mission Viejo '1i.s anybody's guess," Orange County Tax, Assessor Jack Vallorga .. 1d IOOay. 0 1L won't be near the Impact or the Rockwell International building II Its tr$ to t)le federal government goes through, because that's a much bigger operation. "But the oncy thin~ it can do is add to the are~·s tax base,' .Vallerga said. The Burrougbt Co;poratlotl announced Friday It Is moving In a large computer systems operation next spring. bringing about 750 employes to the plont. The plant, on JerofJ.lmo Rood between Alicia Parkway and Los A l is o s .Boulevard, has been empty since late II 1971. It is one of two large industrial buildings that have been vacant in the S:lddlcbnck Volley. The other, the 125 million Rockwell International "ziggurat" in Laguna Niguel , has been proposed for trade to the f~eral Genera l S e rvices Adminislratlon for more than a year, though that deal is not· yet final. It is calJed the ziggurat beCa°"e of its slepped BabylonlM design. "As for the Burroughs plant, It all depends on what the c»rporaUon does in- side the building, The real property value has not changed since the property has been enlpty,'' Vallcrga said. Jac k Schumaker, associate superin- tendent for business admini stration in the Saddleback Valley Unitied School ol District. said the impact on school fi. nancing would depend on how many homes are avallable for resale when new err.ployes begin moving to the 1lrea. "People have to llve ln a home in I.be district to have an impact on the schools, since our money comes from propcny taxes," Schumaker said, "This may mean that people selling their homes m·ay have an easier time of 11 -though I don't know how they collid sell any faster.'' he added. , Burroughs authorlUes said Friday employes at the company's plant in the city .of Industry would be given first choice ror the Mission Viejo jobs, The plant has a capacity of about l.500 employe$. I LIKE ROBERT TAL BOTT TIES , TOOi All Silk Reppl, Grenadines & All Wool Ch•llis From $8.50 to $11 .50. r ..., PHELPS MEAGER ~ Ol'ER!iOYEARSlHf.AW11RHIA .... ~ NEWPORT BEACH Wil,hire , Sherman Q,,ks, Pe 1e dena, Lak ewood , West Co vin& • ' ...... 1 Pit.OT ' • Reds Await Deadline U.S. Bombing Continues Despit,e Clouds The Walking Man Arrives PHNOM PENH (UPI) -Low-lying monsoon clouds and rain closed in today on Phnom Penh, hampering but not baiting intensified American air strikes against Khmer Rouge insurgents beUev· eel biding their time for an eventual assaul t on the city. Communist force,, reported 20,000 strong have had Phnom Penh Wlder siege for weeks but began pulling back several days ago apparently to await the end of the Am<!rlcan bombing campaign on Wednesday. Military llOUrces oald they bad suffered enormous looses from the air atrikes. ' GOVERNMENT TROOPS took ad- vantage of the lull In ground fighting to consolldale and expand the capital's delenso perimeter in anticipatim ol the bombing bait while the govemmeflt brought In convoys m Hig!lway 4 from POLITIX AFOOT D E P T, Gallup Poll Update_ Somewhere along our Orange Coast to- day is Congressman Jerome R. Waldie, twdging aloog 00 ru. earth pads in atarch of the gubernatorial nomination U.S. Citizens Liberal r all of California. That's right, Mr. Waldie is walking tpo>ast. If all goes according to schedule, passed through San Onofre with the · ts of the moming and a bit later d have been sniffing around the -As Far as Sex Goes estern White House in San Clemente. He is due to loot.j>addle through Dana and l..aglma Beach tomonmv, for votes in Corona del Mar ednesday, bathe ms tired feet in good Mesa water on Thursday and wanper inland to the County seat by Fri- day. From Santa Ana, he is scheduled to wander on back down coastward over the weekend through places like Westminster and Seal Beach. ,JN A LE'l"l'ER to our paper back a bit, he explajnt'd, "I'm planning this 24().mile walk through Southern caJifomia to meet. as many cltizens as p>sstble. •1J've been looking forward to the walk, which will be held during oor House ~. for many months. I believe it will be invaluable in determining the scope of ismes facing our state in the coming yean." Well, all of this is a bit curious on our -political scene. All that walking may do a lot for the scope of issue:1 but I doubt ir it's going to help Congresmtan Waldie's corns very much. REP. WAIDIE uaed to be in our ~ly where he was noted as an ostute politician whereby he elevated himseU into the COOgress. He is from Antioch, in Oolllra Costa County, near the'SF Bay Area. He is aiso a Democrat. Being a Ilemo<rat, you can understand why he is walking up the Orange Coast. He probably can't find anybody who'd give him a ride. Regard! ... of your politics, yoo have to have certain sympathy for the gubernatorial hopeful. You just hope he doesn\ bum blisters on hi! feet and wear out all ms socks without meeting a single Democrat in our midsl I mean, I have grave doubts that Rep. Waldie will be met by a brass band in San Clemente. Or even Newport Beach. for that matter. ONE REASON HE'S walking through here in seeking the big chair wherein Gov. Reagan MW reposes is because Waldie is from up north and he wanis to get to know Southern California better. NJ he trudges J.hrough our heavy fog aod Chilled August weather, he may .end up figuring that everything he ever heard about our region before was pure fan- tasy. Actually, however, with this 240 miles of walking, Congressman Waldie may just be a whole Jot smarter than some folks figure. WITH OUR TRAFFIC congestion, smog, prices on gasoline and beef and a sagging general economy, we may all be walking pretty soon. And at least Congressman Waldie will be in shape for it. PRINCETON, N.J. (AP) -A recent survey indicates American attitudes toward premarital sex and some nudity have become much more liberal than they were four years ago, says the Gallup Poll. Jn the July 6-9 survey, 43 per· cent of the 1,544 perscns questioned said they thought premarital sex is wrong. In a 1969 survey, 68 percent held that opin· ion. FORTY·'111.REE percent said it was not wrong when asked : "Do you think it is wrong for people to have sex relations before malTiage or not?" The remainder had no opinion. In July SS percent of those surveyed said they would be offended by nude pic- tures in magazines, and 59 percent thought topless \vaitresses would offend them. The 1969 survey showed 73 percent would be offended by magazine nudes; 76 percent by topless waitresses. Those who would object to nudity on She's Running Isabel Peron, 40, former caba- ret dancer and wife of Argen· tine strongman Juan Peron, will run as vice president to her husband in Sept. 23 elec- tio ns. I the stage have declined from 81 percent in 1969 to 65 percent. The poll also Indicated that American attitudes on premarital sex vary not only according to age and educaticn but region and religion. Fifty-three percent of Protestants found premarital sex wrong, while 45 percent of Roman Catholics expressed that view. In the 1969 -poll, a greater percentage ol RAlman Catbolics, 72 per- cent, held that view than did Protestants, 10 percent. TIIE POU. showed most tolera.nce toward premarltal sex in tile Eest, "1lere 38 percent of. those interviewed foond it wrong. Percentages elsewhere With that view were 41 in the West, 51 in the Midwest and 58 in the South. Percentages on that questioo from the 1969 poll were: 65 in the East, 55 in the \Vest, 68 ·in the Midwest aDd 78 in the South. By age, the smallest percentage of those viewing premarital sex as wrong were those under 30, with 29 percent. Other percentages and age groups were 44 percent of those 30 to 49 and M per- cent of those over 50. Four years ago, the percentages holding that view were: under 30, 49 per- cent; ~9, 67 percent; over 50, 80 per- cent. FORTY-ONE percent of those with col- lege background viewed premarital sex as wrong, compared with 56 percent four years ago. The comparable percentages were 45 and 69 for those with high school education and 60 and 77 for those with gra<\e school educatioo. . Nixon SigH-$ Transit Bill WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -Presi- dent Nixon today signed into law a $23 billion extension of the highway act which permits highway trust fund money to be spent for the first time on mass transit. 'I1le President said in a statement that be was "particularly pleased to sign this legislation." He said it represents "a significant extension and reform of the federal highway program" and called it "an im· portent step forward " in providing better, more balanced transporta· tion. Rain, Hail Pound Midwest Su11.1iy Skies Promised for Rest of Country .. ,. "' .. .,,.. fO'OCASf • bl.II ~ '"'' of the r-olon wllt tonf1111,19 to tKp&rlenc:• !fie ui utl ptttw11 Oii l'!IOhl tlld rnor11lrtt low tlol.M1s giving w1y Ill' mldmon1l1'19 flo M1y MMJll!M. 11-N111on.I We1ff'l9r S.r"l'lct .. Id ll>e hlgl'I 111 dOwlllOW" lOt A~lff rNClllod 13 suno1r but It wn1 dl'<IP fo to tllrOUOf'I rrddWHll.: Et...,.,., •• hlOM .. in bt from llHr 70 Iii•"'" lr!!MJNow ~ ..._ All ~aHOwttl ~•tow ' llll!al'ed aver the contlnen!, T,,. two principal t>an<h ol •ttlvlty -• Ill 111'1 1r1a Iron Colorado lo M!11-M$0fl Ind from Kaous 1011 Ark1nus to tM At11n1k eoes1. However, other Loc.lh l!<!avy ral11s burst o~r th• Ml-I Su"CllY night. Windl OUli.d to 51 m!les per hour at Sidney, Net.. Clll•· 1111 • 11eVere thunderstorm. Hall Z1S lllCl'I thl<;k POUncled Medrld, N.t>. Eva11tvll\1, Ind, was wesri.d wlll'I 2.3 lnchn Of r•ln. , Olttlfd• thf tf'llll'ldtrsh>rm lrN, rT'IMt tllltt were !air to p1rtly clOl.ICIY. Low CIOUClt and log cr.,,t o~ ,,,. PllClllc CO<ISI during the tarry m«nlr19 t>our~ Ttm11tr11urts btkire tUwr> ranqtd from S' at S1wv1r Air Force Ba11 n11r Mir~, Mich to 100 at Mttd111. Cocutal Wt>athPr P'1rtl111y wn11y today. Varl1bl1 wlfllls nloht and rnomlng houri bf. coml"'G' wnl to southwest I to '' kllllft 111 atterllOOrlt today 111e1 TU.1· d1y. High toc11y Jn tile 60s. Coe1t1I t11nPW1tUf'ff ••"ii* trom 6' to 69. 1n-l11'1d ._Mperaturr1 ra11ge lrotn 61 to IO. WllH t""""ralure 70. S11n, /tloo11, Tides MONDAY Stcotld high . . ... 9:301.m. •.O Second low 3:27 p.m. II TUESDAY' First hloh .,, .. , ..... 10:371.m. ''' Fl"t low .............. ':I' 1.m. ..0.1 SICOflCI hlon .•........ J9:03 p.M. s.• S«Olld low . •:02 p.m. 1.r ~ t1tn •:«I 1.m . Sitt 7:42 p,m. MoOft r1-7:24 p.m. Sttt S:SI 1.m. the port of Kompoog -road and oo the Mekong River with as much supplies aa poosible before the expected Olmmunist onslaught. • The coocussloDI ol the American bombs reverberated thrGul(h the capital all throuib the nlglx. Pilots reportocl, however. that moosooo rains were hampering the Americso air strikes. The lull in ground fi"1ting' &nlUlld Phnom Penh was in sharp oontr..t to the lighting' at Sltoun, a highway junclure ci- ty so miles to the north. Cambodian troops evacuated the town Sunday afltl: a furious rebel assault, mllttary ..,..,,.. said today. THE SOl!RCES. aald that ofter the govemmeht troops evacuated stoun. located at the Junction ot IDsllways s and 7, Cambodian aircraft began bombing the rebel-held town which bas been reported jammed wilb refugees fleeing there along the highways. A U.S. pllot taking part in the ral<b said "the situation is grim and untenable." In Phncm Penh, a ranking government official said infonnal contacts were con- tinuing with the Khmer Rouge but so long as North Vi•tnam cootinued to in- tervene in Cambodia the war would con· tinue. President Lon Nol Saturday nigh! oald In a rallying radio speecb be baa uo in- tentioo ot teaving Cambodia. There have been recurring reports that be woold Jeilve in order to pave trhe way for a peace setUement in Cambodia. Lon Nol spoke the same day ousted Cambodian chief of state NorociJtn Sihanouk said he would <ttl:Sider a negotiated oettlement ii Lon Nol and other top members of the government would go into eiile. Search for Bov " Comes to End In New Mexico ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (UPI) -The ground-air search for a small boy believ- ed lost in the mountains ol Central New Mexico has been called off. Officials say they were never certain the radioed "distress" calls were legitimate. "We have oot come up with any iJ\. fonnation that is definite enough to say ( NEWS BRIEF,'S ) that there actually is someone oot there and where this person might be." State Poli<e Chief Martin Vigil said Smday, Just in case, he said, four directional finding stations were established in the area to listen for any further signal and pinpoint its location. • Sk11lab Forecast SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) Miss.ion Oontrot is becoming more coo- lldent that the Skylab 2 astronauts will be able to return to earth Sept. 25 in their own ferry ship and that a rescue flight won't be necessary. Asked by newsmen SWlday lf it now appeared the astronauts will make a nonnal trip home, flight director Charles Lewis $aid : "At this Point, yoo're prob- ably correct ... e Hope Apology SEATTLE, Wash. (UPI) -The Boy Scouts of American organization has apologized to the Japanese-American Citil.ens League for a joke comedian Bob Hope told at the scouts Jamboree-West gathering in ldaOO. Hope allegedly used the word 11Jap" in a joke at the jubilee's opening session. e .'itrlkeEnds DETROIT (UPI) -A six-<lay wildcat strike by United Auto Workers at Chrysler's Detroit forge plant ended to- day in tµne to allow the company to begin production of 1974 model cars. The unauthorized walkout over health and safety conditions in .the massive facility disrupted national contract talks between Olrysler and the UAW. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE DtllvtrY of the Dally Piiot. Is guarantttd MeMllY·~rlfl'I': II l'9l,t ft lltl lltW t"l¥f' """' ey 11• ,.m... c:lll inti .,..,,. ""° '!Jill -.....,..., .. ""· , ..... ,. ...... ...t11 ,,. '""" l1tw11y •t1tl ktlll•vr U '/'ff .. Mt rec""- '"" C:.~ lly ' 1.M, SllW'tlly. tr I t ,m, SIHMltY, c:11t llltl I c:...., Wiii 1111 """""' 19 '/'ff. Clllt 11'1 !Ml ... llflfll It 1.M. Ttlepholles MISI Or~. c ... 111y ....... • ..•••• MJ<-011 H•rltlwtJI H1111tlftti.n 8•k ll ""' '#ttl1"lfl'"' • • . • •• • ' ...... , .. Ja11 C"-'-• c1,i11r111t •Hell, a .. JNn (l thlr.tfl9, Dl111 l'tlnf. ,._. LltVH, Ll•Wlt Mltlvtl , ••• #Mal , THEY TRllD TD FIND LOST SON WITH REWARD POSTERS Mr. and Mrs. Fred Holllgoist Fur Their Boy May Bo Victim Fa1nilies Irate Houston Police Action Criticized HOUSTON (AP) -The police are resented bitterly by some parents whose sons have been missing for as lmg as thr.ea Y"J'S and may be amoog the grim remains of Houstoo 's mass sex murders. "We're highly disgusted with the Houston police department," said Walter Scott, His IS..year-0ld son Mark left home 'vith parental permission for a trip to Mexico in April 1972 and never returned. "THEY COULD have helped and they didn't. .. Scott said a .U.Ce had told him that she had read Mark's name In the newspo.per as possibly being one of the 24 murder victims found in mass graves in the Houstoo. area. ' Only five of the 24 bodies have been identified positively. Mark was not one oC the five. • Medical examiners ront.irwed to v.·ork throughout the weekend with dental records and X·rays in an attempt to iden· tify the badly decomposed bodies. Police are. said to be irritated by criticism ol !hell' handling of missing· person cases, 8Dd Police Chief Merman Sbori was ~ 11> answer Ille critldsm during a news cmferenoe to- day. However. Houston police have said they haven't the resources to fol low up every nmaway report as thoroughly as parents would like. There are over 5,000 runaway reports in Houstoo each year. THE LAST word from Mark SCott was .a [JOSIX>ll'd sent from Auatln, T... -t 1 said Iha~ an ... Mark fall..i to n1on1, be wnite Austin police twioe but 1'IOtll9td no reply. Houstoo police said that Malit""' 18 and, even If found, could not be mode to come home. · After the niece telephoned him, s.ott said he called police and told them: "My son is dead. You bad news of it. You should have called ... I've got to led: to a newl!paper for the -ot 'llff oon." Dorothy Hilllgiest, whooe 10D David never returned !rem going swimmlac at a local pool in May 1117~ aald she felt police could have dooe tnO<e to ...ii for her son. ' "I KNEW MY boy wasn't a runaway," Mrs. Hllligiest mtid. "But they dam the very your.i; and adults . as millUlg persons. Teenagers are runaways." The Hilligiests spent several thousand dollars posting a reward, printing wanted posters and pictures and hiring a private detective. When Fred Hilligiest tried to pass oo some informallnn from Ille -.. ro a police Inspector, he aays tile ~ told him, "Private investi;f& are for rich people." Theo Hilligiesl aays the turned to his secretary and · , ''Oleclt him and see if he's licenaed. • The private detective was not lJceMed, and HiUigiest said: "I was shocked that they would go to the expense to proeecute him, but they couldn 't afford to p ..a and look for our boy." Maryl.and Contracwrs Say They Paid Agnew IVASIUNGTON (UPI) -Vice Pnlei- dent Spiro Agnew returns from a golfin8 '"eekerxi late today, confronted with allegations that as many as four lifaryland contractors have claimed they made cash payments to him when be was governor. Tbe Washington Sta r.News s aid reliable sources reported the four con- tractors had told federal prosecutors in Baltimore they did so in the hope of get· ting favored lreatment in the awarding of government consulting cootracts. TIME l\IAGAZINE said tv.·o con· struction consultants bad accused Agnew of soliciting campaign conbibutions from them. Agnew, fonnally notified Aug. 2 that he is under federal inve!tigation , denied any wrongdoing and predicted at a news con· lerence that he would nol be indicted. A federal grand jury is expected to start studying sme materials in the case Wedneoday In Baltimore. The Slal'-News aaid allegations ol payoffs were made by Jerome B. Wolff, and aide to Agnew when he was governor, and Lester Matz and two other unidentified contracting officials. Time Magazine also said Wolff and Matz had given information against the vice presiderit. . AS AGNEW WOIDld up his stay at the Palm SprinaJ estate ol Frank Sinatra, in- vest!Ptora on the sta!I ol U.S. Attorney George Beall began examining 130 -cartons of re<'Ol'da pertaining to A#Mw'• tenure as Maryland govm:nor belort becoming vice president In 1969. The Star-News said it was not known whether the four contracton claimed in the form of Apw campalan con- sideration I? the awarding ol cOntracts nor whelher the alleged payments ,..re ln the fonn t>I Agnew comapign con- lrtbutions. -The Star-News quoted what ii callod a highly placed aource " aaylng~ ecuton feel ''11lere js • Jong way between the claiming, the showing that the money was received." D CO CERT TO IGHT ·- 9:15 P. • AT FASHIO· ISLAND l 'I ' • • . . Today's Flnal N.Y. Stocks VOL 66, NO. 225, 2 SECTIONS, 28 P~GES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFO!INIA MONDAY, AUGUST 13, 1973 N TEN CENTS Waldie Calls President~s Villa ·nipoll~ Rep. Jerome \Valdle (0-Antioch), the marathon walking gubernatorial can- didate, made it through gates of the \Vestem White House today but never had a chance to see the cOntroversial im- provement:! to Pre!ident Nixon's seaside villa -installations which he termed "a giant ripoff." (Related story, Page 3.) Security aides at the nearly deserted presidential compound said they were ac- tlng on orders from Washington when they confined the candidate's tour to the Freeze Off, presidential 9f!ice complei: on the San Diego slde of the county line. "I was told that all the Items that I wanted to see are on private property and are not · for public inspection," Waldie said. 11U a congressman represents the peo- ple, J sbould·be able to see what the tax· payers are paying for.11 Waldie enterea the compound carrying a detailed list Issued ...,..,tly by l~e General Services Administration. ab.owing every expenditure made at the compound., for security reasons. . The CWTent total for such expenditures al San Clemente Is now pegged at 13 milJioo. "I could have been shown structures that would not have endangered the privacy of the ~ident, who . wasn't even there," Waklie ~ted~ "I couldn't s~ them because I was told they are too difficult to explain and this leads me to believe that the purchases made in the name of the President's security are not justifiable." One such installation which stirred the campaigner's interest is an $8,000 system installed along the Santa Fe tracks In the President's front yard to alert the Presi· dent when a train is coming. Waldie said the rationale for that system was that it was needed because the noise of the surf makes it impossible to hear an approaching train. \\'aldie termed that .. a foolish expenditure." The candidate, who ls on a walking tour of Southern California, said that two other U.S. reptesentatives are as.sertedly arriving "pretty soon" but he does not know what sort of treatment they will receive nor the reason for their arrival. "lf they are friends of the President t th.ink that they will be treated differently than I was ," he said. Spanish Plane Explodes \Valdie alleged that the GSA "i! playing gan1es with u.s and somebody is trying to hide something." The next stop on Waldi e's 36-day trek stretching 240 miles through Southern California is at Dana Point on Tuesday, followed by a stopover the following day in Corona del Mar and yet another on Thursday in Cos ta ~1esa. \Valdie said thet he is in "excellent l)hape down to my ankles." His Jcet, he added, arc kill ing him. '• Consumers Await Hike 85 Die in Jet Crash By United Press Internat1011.al The price freeze was lifted today on everything except gasoline and beef. A number of major companies immediately said they would ask for price increases. Consumers will not feel the full brunt of the price jump for some time because under Phase IV companies with annual sales of $100 million or more must give the Cost of Living Council 30 days notice or such increases. Chrysler Corp. immediately asked lhe council to allow an average '71 bike on t97+model cars and trucks. Unless its appUcatlon is turned down, the increase automatically will go into etrect be!ore the vehicles go on public SJle in late September. American· Motors is seeking an {l.verage $55 price increase while General Moton and Ford have yet to file ap- plications. Spokesmen for the two largest auto· companies sakt they expected ap- plications would soon be flHld. Armco Steel Corp. in Middletown, Ohio said it was reimtaling price increases or sbee~ steel products which hid been scheduled but were not allowed under the freeze. The increase is 9Cbeduled for Sept. 12. Reports from supermarketl· indicated food prices remained reasonably stable today. Prices had l>een out from under tbe freeie for nearly a month. Under Phase IV, sellers can raise their prices, but only as much as costs in~ crease. Gasoline and other petroleum prices will remain frozen for another week. Beef will continue under price controls the longest, until Sept. U. It ls the freeze on beef that has brought the most criticlsm on Phase IV. It remained frozen when other food prices were decontrolled June 13. While beef prices cannot be raised the supply has dwindled. A federal judge In Lincoln, Neb. turned down a request for an bljunction seeking (See FREEZE, Page I) ·Vl"IT ......... DEATH VALLEY HIKERS DISPLAY BLISTERS DURING TREK Anita Perrot (left) and Jo Ann Claudio-Wiiiiams LA CORU1'1A, Spain (UPI) -·A Caravelle airliner of the Spanish Aviaco Air Company exploded in fiigbt today while the pilot was making his fourth landing approach to La Coruna's cloud· shrouded mountaintop airport and fell in flames on a village below, an airline spokesman reported. The airline .said all 85 peiSOD5 aboard the twin-jet aircraft were feared dead. Of the flight itself, the airline said there is "no hope of survivors." Because of confusion at tbe village crash site and the dense clouds and rains, there were conflicting reports. Police in La Cionma said rescue opera- tions were continuing and it was not definitely kjnown whether there were survivors or aey villagers bad been kill- ed. A spokesman for La Coruna airport and Spanish news reports said at least one person survived the plane crash. Hike Co111pleted e:J£F~~Zf.ur::~:M~ . , . , But ia''"tii! .. td Iii!\."""-_,911 •. . . ·;.,.\ ,. • • ti<f>.· ,,-Mldo'•Ai ·r.n~l('i~>,·~- • •• ••• :.: .. --"' " "· 1 -t._111·1 ' 16d-.~'Yill8 . ,._ .. ' -First Jf.:0me{t W alk "Deciitf alley···"··· n!'cras118:..-=-~1b in-. serie;•f • • fatal · a·cckfenli mvolvmg Sp an is b • ' airliners since earJy 1972. . By J.ORN ZAU.ER "He made truck runs every day to Iberia bas lost three p1anes during the Of .. Dall'( Plitt lt•ff b . . t h .... the nng us ice wa er, e sat out wJUer .... Mod, the .cbater company •pantax two, ''I could never have done it without my ~· v. husband. At least. I don't think I cou1d tarp with us during .tbe 'he.at of day. He plus ·one plant damaged, and Aviaco, a have done it without-him ." even slept out with us. -subsidiary of Iberia, two, with a total That's 00w· Jo Ann Claudio-WUliams, "It was a natural thing for him to do, loss of 352 lives. 21, feels after completing her llklay walk because be was ~med that Sp'ain's worst air crash occurred last across Death Valley in the 120-degree everything go well. December when a Spantu Convair beat cX. summer. "I would have dooe same for him,'' Coronado flipped oo takeoff from Santa While sftit and girlfriend Anita Perrot, she says. Cruz airport tilling all 155 aboard. 20, were c~ting international attention The two young women made the I~ Aviaco said tbe Caravelle jet carried 79 as the first women ever to bike across mHe walking trip in 10 days, finishing passengers and a crew of siL Death Valley in the heat of summer, her Aug. 7. Ttiey traveled from the southern An airport spok,esman said it crashed husband, Chris, was laboring quieUy in boundary of Death Valley at Saratoga on its fourth attempt to .land in bad the background Springs to the northern boundary near weather. Cifra reported the pilot had ".You need a backup team if you want Eb;ebebe Crater. been told shortly before by the control to take on that desert ,'' says Mrs. A ranger at Death Valley National tower that visibility dropped below Oaudio-Williams, who will enroll this fall Park said it was the first time he could minimum levels. at Orange Coast College. recall any woman or women covering the 1be plane, on a scheduled flight from distance in the heat of summer. Afadrid, made three attempts to land at when it apparently exploded in the air, tt.e spokesman said h1ost of its wreckage fell on an aban- doned farm house in the village of Mon- trove, four miles from the airport. The airport spokesman said radio con- tact with the plane broke off without any indication of anything being wrOog wilh the plane, apart from Captain. Lopez Pascual's apparent difficulties of landing the craft under the prevailing conditions. Most passengers aboard the plane ap. peered to be vacationers. , La Carma is one of three airports DEAD AT 69 Newport Clothier Bidwell Thunderstorms Predicted Another woman once did it in the spring La Coruna and had just started to circle when temperatures in the valley were the cloud·sbrouded airport once again considerably lower, be said. Chris had wanted to bike with his bride Harbor Clothier 'Jack' Bidwell Succ11mhs at 69 For Orange Coast Cities of eight months. But the idea for the trip had been Jo Ann's and Anita's. They bad a reason for not wanting a man along. "We knew that if he went with us, nobody would pay much attention to the !act that it was the first time a woman had made the trip in the middle of sum- mer," she says. Oran,ge Ba11d Retains Crow11 Thundershowers -that's right -thun- dershowers are forecast for inland and pooslbly coastal commwiltleJ of Orange Coullty tonight. The M August weather brought rain to porllons of Or111ge and Anaheim early today as thunderclaps rolled in the gray skies above. COmmuters uaing the N e w p o r t ~ay .are aC<WJtomed of late to tbe mJlty type of rain gray bummer-summer mornings have produced. Today's drlps fl'Ol!I ~hove were big bold drops. 'll'e National Weather Service con-finiJ,ed tbolr existence. In fact In Riverside this momtng, thundeflhowers dr~hed the downtown are~ ln 62-degree tell)peratures. ~~urge of troplc,1 moisture northward· froJll Mexico Is at fault. As the moisture la.den air an1ves In the drier desert areas of Southern C8lifomla It condenses, c..wi and begins falllng as rain. ,\iforeca.ster sald this molature usually ADYERTlSlNG HAS . '· 'DRAWING POWER' DtQy Piiot clHsUled want ads have chetfama. Look at this charmer: ' ' 'll GALAXIE. Good trans· ' potlallOl!J 141,111111 ]1111 ... f'7S Cit mate oner. (Pbooe No.) 'n)I• advert!ler called to •• r. "C..Cratulatlam' oo the wonder!w draw· Ing power of your 1d1!" Dial Ute. direct line -142-$78 ~ and let our e!imlng ad-visor help yoo find aomo 'drawing power." ' drops in inland mountain ran&es and rarely mak., It lo the coastline. Nm!rtheless, today's forecast calls for slight ~ of afternoon and evening thwxlerilhowers "almolt·anyplace In the South Coast Basir4" the National Weather Service forecaster said. The drill of moist air from aouth of the border Is expected to continue through Wedneoday. h-feanwhile, temperatures along the Orange Coast will dip to 113 tonight. Highs Tuesday will be In the low 70s. "They ""'1ld have feh that Chris had carried me or dragged me or somelhlftg. At the very least, they woold have !bought that he oanied the heavy backpoct while I just walked along. "So we agreed that I should do it with another woman." . ADioog tbO people who disagreed with this declsioo was Reba , Williams, the Newport Beach molher-ln<law of Jo Ann, 1'1 told Chris be aboold forbid ber to dO it," says Mrs. Williams. "But he said he (See HIKERS, Page I) MARION, Ohio CAP) -Defen- ding champions The Kingsmen of Orange. Calif., held on to their U.S. Open Drum and Bugle Corps crown Sunday in finals competition. The 108 boys and girls from the coast, average age 15, received a standing ovation from their march- ing to the "Sabre Dance," Benny Goodman's "Sing·Sing..Sing" and the theme from ''El Cid.'' The Kingsmen received an eo.30 rating and $3,000 for first place. City Details ' Coast Policy . Co1i11cil Seeks to Avert Trouble Witli Commission A Newport Beach commltte< has drafted a pollcy statemjlllt aimed at heading-ofl IJ«tble with lhO South Coast Reglooal Z<>ne Conservatloo Com· mission. The doeument, prepared by the city's Pending Leglslolioo Committee, b an llemoby·ltem critique of a aet of proPoSed devoiopment standards now before the commlseion. The report will be presented t• the city council f<r !trmal 1doptioll,at 111 meelli>I tonight. .. _ tllan react 19 commission deci-after they are made," aald City Manger Robert ,L. Wynn,. "we went to act ln •advance I<> In~ the poJlcleo that gulcIO 1ho1e: tleclsions. Wynn said be hoped this approoclt would help cool down ti.: city's running batUo w1th the commls81pn. , Tbe report tonight could serve as the official . Newport Beacll poolUon on the commilsion's propo1e•d deve)opment standards for the-coastal zono 1,000 yards inllind frlJln the OCUli. The report opposes sevml of the pn>. pooed polldes, Including one thal coold requlre that ·, all , future h o u s I n I developments lnclude 50 percent open gl'OISld space. wY6n .. 1a Iha\ 11 this requirement w.,.. enforced on the-Balbol PminoCdo, w1Jen gi'o(8ld covotlip nms up to IO -t In -caseo, It could have lhe ~ltct of eOillng practically all redeveloi>- ment. "ft It important that the commission hove OU!'· feelinp Oil matters llkc lhi• u toer1 •• possible,'' Wynn II.Id. 1'For 01, a requlrement like this would not be at all appropriate." In the case of the SO percent re- quiremml, the city's Input may not be critical to the coastal commission'• decision. Melvln Carpenter, executive officer to the coostal commission, said today that "we've already bad a lot of input In this q11<1tloli aod It docs not appear that It will ·apply ln'all orcas. nThe Whole set of proppsed guldeitnes ii u~ review and I'm glad to hear that we'll get lnput ·(rom Newport Beach on them." The Newport Beach repiort covers each of (bo commlislon's proposed policies tn- dlv~ually, ootlng cases or agreement or dlsagrtemenl. John E. "Jack" Bidwell, a Harbor Area clothier for 26 years, is dead at the age of 69. Mr. Bidwell died Friday. Funeral servl.ces were private. A Corona del ~far resident, Mr. Bidwell wu born in Sacramento. He operated clothing stores for the past 10 years at their present k>catioo, 3467 Via Lido. Survivors include his widow, Helen; a daughter, Mrs. Jackie Warren of Costa Mesa; a sl.>ter, Mrs. Ralph Robb of Walnut Cteek, and a granddaughter. The family has suggested memorial contributions to the Orange Cotmty Crip- pled Children's League. Couple Shot In Parked Car LOS ANGELES (AP) -l'olice were searching today for the peraon who open- ed the hack door of a parlced car In Grif· flth Park and shot the couplt. Inside, kill· Ing the man and crlllcally wounding the woman. The couple were found SUnday after teenagers reported to a park ranger that shots had been fired at them, police .. id. The' de.ad man, Howard A. Dye, SI, had been shot In the back of the head, they said. Dies Under Train • BARSTOW' (AP) -Rooold Lee Lesse- ly, 31, of Hlnl<ley was killed .here SU'nday when a Santa Fe freight train hit him, the San Bernardino County corener's o(. flee said. A coroner's 11pokesman 11ald Le~,.ly apparently had fallen asleep between the tracks. serving the north...restern Galician prov· inces and its seaside resorts. The ill fated flight, AV-118, is a special vacation flight run daily by AVico during the sum- mer season. The plane left Madrid at 9:14 a.m. .{4 :14 a.m. PDT}, more than an hour late for the 60-minute flight. The crash oc- curred an hour later. Cifra said members o[ a 'Barcelona swimming club (Club Nat a c i on Barcelona) were aboard the plane flying to a swimming meet in La Coruna. Body Count Reaches 25 In Houston HOUSTON (UPI) -Sherifr1 "'1>uu .. toda.y dug . up from shallow graves on a Texu beach the 24th and 25th ·bodlel kill· ed. during a tbre&year spree of ~ and sadism by two teen-agers and a homosexual friend. The victims were wrapped in black plastic bags and sprinkled with lime, like most of the others found during the past week at three locations. Officers, digging with a hick hoe and a giant road-grader, said they expected to PARENTS CRITICIZE HOUSTON POLICE ACTION-Pogo 4 find at least one more body at the beachfront site at High island. "I think we got another one down there," said Chambers Counly Sberlif Louis Otter. With the recovery of the 25th body, the mass murder equaled the wont 1ucb tragedy in U.S. history. Juan V. corona, 39, was convicted last January of kllllng 25 farm hands in California. Officers on the Texas beach drove trucks and cars around the search site to guard it from onlookers. The bodies discovered today were pull- (See BODIES, Page Z) $28 Million Lawsuit ClllCAGO (AP ) -United States Gypsum Co. said Sunday it agreed to a $28 million settlement of a price-fixing suit filed by a home builders' group in 1970. U. S. Gypsum was sued by U. Home Builders Association of Greate? Chicago and 24 members fGr" alleged col- lusion to fix prices of gypsum wallboard, keeping priw artillcially high. Oruge Cout Weather More gloom Is forecast for the morning hours Tu.esday with a slight chance of thundersbowers in the evening hours. Sunqy · in the afternoon with highs of 70 at the beaches. Lows in the 60s. INSIDE TODA\' As Car'1bodiat1 re fugees ·con- tinue to stream hato the capttaL citt1 of Pluwm Penh, the city's airport r e p o r t s reservations booked up thr ouoh Augiu& f or people trtfi11g to get ou' of &he countru. See story ond photoa o" Page 21 . • .. ,111, tt -.,...,. L•llftrt It l..M. ••w• ' M9"'" 1t C•llltnll1 s Mll._I ,._, 4 CIMIHltll U·• Of'_,. c_,-, 11 C-kt IJ 1¥1¥t9 ......... If C~t_.i II S..,... 1 .. 11 o.ttli Hiik " II lttcll Miit."' 1•1• ICllt.1'111 ""' ' T11ttt,._ • l!!ttorfalllmtftl ,, , ... ,.... '' l'INMe \ .. lt W••fllW 4 ,., ffll lecm 11, 11 .,_ .. ,. '""" 1s.-1• MWMC-14 'N"1f "-• 111 IWflCt tt ' ' ~ r=':::o•:l:L:':":IL=O=T=======·==========M:"""::':·:·:'':':'':u:::·:!9:7:l~~~~~~ -. Naval Clash Real Tax Dike Scliool Raw $56 Per $100 Reported Near Egypt TUCSON, Am. (AP) -RJslng tues arc bothering just about everyone, but be glad you don't live In the Indian Oasis School DJs. tr!ct at Sells, Ariz. County officials announced today that the property tu rate for the district, whi ch encompasses part of the Papago Indian Reserva- tion, will be $56 per $100 assessed valuation this fiscal year -a 900 percent increase from last year. The property tax rate, which finances most school di strict ex- penses, averages about $2 per $100 assessed valuatlon in most other areas of Arizona. The reason for the jump at Sells, officials said, was that they do not expect a $200,000 federal education grant to be renewed. It made up a large part of the district budget last year. School officials declined to say if Ibey th ought property owners would pay the tax. By Ualtod Pre11 l•l<matlonal Israeli and Egyptian vessels clashed in the Gui/ of Suez today in the first reported naval encounter between the countries ln almost six years. The lmlell mllllar)' command said In Tel Aviv that two of Its ships were at- tacked by a pair of Egyptian vessels in Ute easlern part of the gull. It said an Egyptian patrol boat WU fired on and that crew members were seen jwnplng Conservative GOP Group Ta.hies Anti-Nixon Move overboard.. Two Israelis were slightly wounded , the command said. The tncldent oocuried llOl'lhweat of Ras Sudar ln the easr.rn part of the gull at about 5 p.m., accordlng to the Israeli command, which said, "Oui' boaU! didn't go over the line in the middle of the . gull." Israel said it filed a complaint with EMERYVILLE (AP) -A resolution urging President Nixon to resign has been tabled b{ the conservative United Republicans o California, but its sponsor says he will reintroduce it, George Brokate, of Newport Beach, a member of the board of governors which Blacks Given Life Sentences In 8 Slayings CHRISf!ANSTED, St. Croix, V.l. (UPI) -Five young black Virgin Islanders were sentenced today to eight · tenns of life imprisonment, to run con- secutively, for the murders of eight persons last fall at a luxurious golf course here. The sentences produced bedlam in the courtroom. The defendants shouted obscenities, spat on the floor and struck at U.S. marshals who subdued them and • led n!':e~:~~~m sentences were pro- nounced by U.S. District Judge Warren 'H. Young after a jury found the five ' defendants, ranging in age from 22 to 26, guilty on all 70 counts, including eight counts apiece of first-degree murder. Young also sentenced the five, who profess to be Black Muslims, to six terms each of 15 years imprisonment on the guilty verdicts for first-degree assault and robbery. Those terms were to run concurrenUy, Court sources said the defendants would be transferred to a federal penitentiary on the U.S. mainland later ' today. · The chief defense counsel, New York civil rights attorney William Kunstler, announced all the verdicts and sentences would be appealed to the 3rd U.S. Court 'of Appeal in Philadelphia . The five were arrested after an armed attack, in which a machine gune was used, Sept. 6 on the outdoor dining ter- race of the Rockefellow"(lwned Fountain Valley Golf Course. Eight perosns, hr eluding Mr. and Mrs. John Meissinger and Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Griffin of Mi- ami. were slain and four others wounded.· The defendants, wilo stood quietly while the verdicts were read, began shouting obscenities ~d, despite their handcuffs, began striking at the 23 marshals guarding the courtroom when they were brought back after a rec;ess to be sentenced. Friends and relatives of the men, oc- cupying two rows of the spectators sec- tion, joined the shouting match, as did Kunstler, who went to the microphone and screamed at Young, uvou can't do this''. The defendants were finaJly removed from the room and led back in one by one, to hear the sentences. Each stood witt his back turned to the judge and on- ly one defendant, Rafael Joseph, 22, bad anything to say, and he could not be understood. Ishmael Labeet, 26, considered the leader of the group, spat three times on the fl oor. OIA.NG! COAST • DAILY PILOT Tllt .Ortno• Co.1! CA.11. .. Y PILOT, wttr> wlllc:h b cornoln~ me NtwJ-Pru.1, •• PllblllMll br I~ 0••"9• C08!1 Publl1hlno Company, s.p... ,.,~ ~"'°"' •r• w1:11i.11e11, Mor.d•r lh•O"'llh FrlOIY, ~. Co1!• MtM. N~rl Stach, H11nll no1°" 811eh/Fount11ot V1!1tv, L•o11,.. 8tecti, lrvln1/S1dd~dr •"4 Sin Cltmenlt/ S.11 J\lln C1pllftll't0 A J!fl!llt •flllcMI e<il!lon 11 l!Ulllltlle<I ~t11rd•Y• •"4 SINlll•n. T~ pr!°"ic>l l P<ibllll!lflll pi.n1 It I! J» Wnl 8•Y ltr"'· COlll M1.w, Clllfornl1, t2'26. Robt rl N. W•ff ,.,,, ....... , 11'111 l'llblltlltr J1d[ R, Curl1v Vlu l'rnlOltfll 1.v:I GtMrtl Ml""'Otr Tholl'11 Ktt'<'ll EOllQt Thon'ltl A. Mvrphin• ~Nglng Edlt11r l . Pettr Kr itt NtweaDr1 l tlldl Clry l:dltot N.,.,.rt IMc.• Offld ll)J Ntwporl loult'<'trJ Mtilin9 Addr111 t P.O. 101 1171, t26•J Otti.r Offk• CMI• Mt••: 1JO Wtt! l1v Slrttt t.1t11N1 8••<": m l'O!'ttl A.v- Hunti1191011 8ff(:ll1 1111S 8Ndl llOultV•l'f ,!Ion Cl-ft: JO! Nortll II C."'lno ltMI , .. .,.... (7141 642-4111 Cl..tflMI AbMt.<t 642·1•7t (OOl'•Jvt<I, 111.J,. Ortl!OI c:.oett """'"""" °"""'nv. Ho """"' •!Oriti, 1!1111tt11......, tcti!wl•I IT'tflfl' Ot ..,,,,,.,litmel'll• 1Mftl1t ..W'f Ill twlM'(ldl/Cld 'll'llf!Out •oec"I Pl" llll••lon of too)'rlffll , __ ~ c.i.u pesl ... HMf •I COtl• MeM, CtOtonllt . l\lbltri.tlon ll'f Ct ,,ltf" l't.U ._,flll'l "' m1U Q 11 l'l'IOl'lllllV1 "'IUlltY Mt!l,..lloftt U.N !Nfllt!IY, . U.N. truce supervisory officials. tabled the motion (12·7) Sunday, said he The EgypUan boat that was hit was would bring i~ up again when the body tO\Ved away, the command said: meets Dec. 1 m Santa Cruz. Cairo's semi"(lfficial Middle East News The vote came after heated debate by Agen_cy said that the Egypt.ian navy in- the governors, who represent the 12,000 lercepted lsraell boats trying to air members of the state's I a r g e s t proach the Egyptian coastline on the Republican volunteer organization. western side of the gulf. 111e resolution called for Nixon to Quoting a military spokesman, the resign immediately, sayi ng "We can no agency said the Israeli boets made their longer afford Watergate and a President apprOacb in the Adabiya area south of whose vice president and most trusted Suez city at about 5:20 p.m.., and "were confidants and assistants have been in· intercepted by our naval unlt:"&lld shore volved in grossly questionable acts, caus· defense units and forced to refreat to the ing an injurious and malignant crisis of east." confidence in our system of govern· "The enemy covered its withdrawal ment." "Should this resolution pass, it with its air force. The Egyptian force s will be a disaster," said UROC State suffered no casualties," the Egyptian Chairman PauJ Magnani. report said. "It would destory lines of communiea· Israel denied using air supporl tion between UROC and Republican legislators on a state and national level." In the last naval clash, the Israeli Brokate, who support ed conservative destroyer Eilat was SW1k by an Egyptian Rep. John Ashbrook (R-Ohio), for the missile boat in October, 1967. presidency last year, said the resolution Egyptian Foreign Minister Mobamaied "failed because of pressure exerted all Hassan El Zayyat, reacting to Israel's night by people from the state Central interception of an Arab airliner, had said Committee." today that the Arab world "mu.st reply to Israeli arrogance with a decisive, deterrent and suitable action." Newport Summer T en1iis Tourney Winners Told Paced by double winners Wandee Mason and Ed Dey, 18 Newport Beach residents won first place trophies in the aMual Parks, Beaches and Recreation Department summer tennis tournament. Miss Mason was a winner in the pre-in- termediate women's aingles competition and in girls' doubles. Dey won firsts in advanced men's singles and mixed doubles. Other winners included John Glennon, pre-intermediate men 's singles, Karen Olson, age nine to 12 girls singles and Craig TOOmas, age nine-12 boys singles. Also, Ellen Frey, age 13-16 girls singles; Jim Rossiter, age 13-16 boys singles; Gloria Moore and Maureen MollDaro, advanced women's doubles: W.T. and Jim Rossiter, advanced men's doubles. Other winners included Candy Mason, girls doubles; Kurt Jaggers and Do;ig Walla~. boys doubles ; Dr. and Mrs. Ralph Anderson, husband-wile doubles ape! Kathy Burns in mll:ed doubles. SF Baseballer Bonas Arrest,ed REDWOOD CITY (AP) -San Fran- cisco Giants outfielder Bobby Bonds, 27, was arrested on drunken driving charges early today after rear~nding another car at high speed, the Highway Patrol said. Both cars were badly damaged. No one was hurt . Bonds' new ear slammed into the rear of a small foreign car driven by Frederick D. Hasset t, 18, of Saratoga, then smashed into the center divider on Whipple Road here, a spokesman said. Bonds was taken to San Mateo County Jail in Redwood City, where he was booked for investigation of drunken driv· ing and driving without a license. He was released on his o w n recognizance about an hour after being booked, a county jail spokesman said. A hearing Is scheduled Sept. 10. Rice Getting Scarce SAN FRANCISCO (A P) -Rice wholesalers in Chinatown say panic buying is emptying shelves and forcing up prices, as some fragile Oriental women are hauling away SO-pound rice sacks through the nnrrow streets. 1.ayyat said failure by the Arabs to reply to Israel could lead to similar ac· lions by it in the future. Zayyat spoke after meeting I n Damascus with S}Tian Foreign Minister and Deputy Premir Abdel Halim Khad- dam to coordinate strategy. Israeli jets intercepted a chartered Middle East Airways plane over Beirut Friday night and forced it to land at a military field inside Israel in the belief it carried Palestinian guerrilla leader George Habash and several colleagues. But the guerrillas had canceled plans to board the craft. Frotn Page I HIKERS ... shouldn't do that, because she had her own life to lead. "Now I'm glad that he went ahead and helped her out," says Mrs. Williams. The 21·year-otd Mrs. Claudio-Williams said her husband was in on the planning every step of the way. He did extensive reading, helped prepare the equipment, and generally tried to he as llelplul as he coold. "He.did everything we did except the walking," she says. The walking, OOwever, was the difficult part. "Every day was a challenge," she says. "It seemed like the desert was trying to make each step we took as bard as it could possibly be." The two women faced beat, a windstorm that became a sandstonn, an electrical storm, and finally a heavy rainstorm. "When we stopped walking at night , we always knew l'."e had accomplished something." Mrs. Cl.audi~Williams says she thinks her walk proved something about the ability or women. But she says the main reason for the walk was not motivated by this. "I did it because I wanted to get a really good look at the desert," she says. "And I had a desire to prove to myse.Jl lhat I could do it." Frot11 Page I FREEZE ... an f'nd to the freeze on beer prices. A judge in Seattle, Wash., made a similar ruling today 1n a similar case. The ruling by U.S. District C.Ourt Judge Warren Urbom in Lincoln was issued Saturday night and made public today. At the same time, he refu sed the request ror the temporary in/"unction, Urbom denied a government p ea for dismissal of the suit. Jason to Return? Comatose Boy May Conie Home Unless the condition of Jason Rea, 3, gets worse, all Indications point to a return to home for the eo1natose Capistrano Beach boy, but spokesman for the Denver hospital said loday lhat ad- vance noti ce or bl!I trip will root be given. The boy is still li sted in serious con· dition, and, the spokesman for the University of Colorado Medical C.enter said, she bad "no idea" when tbe yOU11gster will be reutrnlng. She added that doctors are caulious a6out releasing information •bout the boy's ru~ht home for fear of a "rnsb of publlclly. ' J ason was flown to the Denver ho.!pital Aug. 2 to donate hls kidneys and liver after injuries from a pool accident on Ju- ly lj appeared 10 be fatal. The blon d-haired tot had suffered brain damage from the near-drowning. and when death seemed Imminent, his mother, Mrs. Linda Rea, arranged for her only chHd to be nown to Denver to die "so that others may live." But following hia: arrival In Denver, the boy's condition lmptoved and, two days later~ Jason was taken off the respirator thnt had been keeping him allve. I Times are Tough The cost of living seems to be catching up with John T. Dunlop, di- rector of the Cost of Living Council, as he appears for a news confer- ence with holes in his shoes. Dunlop briefed newsmen on new regula· tions for Phase IV of tbe administration's economic program. From Page I BODIES •.. ed from the sand in an area covered by salt grass about a quartu mile from where two bodies were located FrJday. The spot is about SS miles· east ot Galveston. Elmer Wayne Henley, 17, and David Brooks, 18, have been charged with murder and admitted taking part in the homosexual slaylngs With Dean COrll, 33. 0£fieers last week dug up 17 bodies in- side a Houston boat shed and recovered four at a wooded slle near Broaddu!'i iJt East Texas. Two more Were wiearthed on the beach east of Galveston. SheriU's depuUes used the road grader to cut a quarter-mlle through a line or salt grass strewn with driftwood and lit- ter. Otter and a deputy rode behind the grader, e1aminlng the broken ground for traces of graves described by Henley and Brooks. Meanwhile , In Houston, Police Chief Herman B. Short defended his depart· ment totlay against charges from some parents of the victims that officers were lax in investigating missing persons reports. "Although some of the parents in tho Heights area may bave felt we have not been doing all we could have, we never would have enough people to check out every runaway youth," Short said at a news conference. Meanwhile police Sunday sa id they identified two more or the bodies. The two were Donald Edward Waldrop, 15, and his brother, Jerry Lyn n Waldrop, 13, both of Atlanta, Ga. The identification by their father, Everett Waldrop, brought to five the number of bodies definitely idenUfied. Tile two yoolhs had been strangled. Others identified are : Charles C. Cobble, 17, Houston:. Martin Ray Jones, 18, Houston. Billy Lawrence, 15, Houston. Henley, charged with she ·counts ot murder, has admitted he killed C.Orll at the bachelor electrician's home We<lnes- day, Police Pleading for Clues Photos of Missing San, Juan. W omari Re-issued By JOHN VALTERZA Of "'9 09'1' Pll!Jt Sl•tt Orange County Sheriff's investigators today planned to issue new photographs of missing San Juan Capistrano housewife Rochelle White in an effort to seek new leads oo her disappearance. Thus far the notebook appears blank despite intensive probing by COWity of- ficers as well as detectives in Carlsbad , where the woman's car was found al)a.n- doned at her employer's parking lot nearly two weeks ago. Spokesmen for the local department said the original photo -(a high school senior picture) of the pretty brunette dispensed to all the news. media -yield- ed no tips from the general pubUc. The issuance of newer, more recent photos showing a different hairstyle might yield something new to the case, they added. Teletypes to other Police jurisdictions as well are being sent out this week. Essentially, now that the initial leads have been exhausted, probers have little left to explore. rvtrs. White, 22, vanished late last month on the day before she w2s scheduled to appear in a divorce hearing in Orange County Superior Court. But before she vanished, she phoned her Sharpshooting Thug Sought by Sheriff Orange County Sheriff's officers are searching today for a sharpshooting van· dal who shot out the windows of four parked ears in the Santa Ana Heights area during the weekend. The cars, all parked in the area of Mesa Drive and Santa Ana BouJevard. were damaged by pellets fired from a BB gun, deputies said. AU the vehicles in· volved. had been parked in the area by their owners. parents and assertedly expressed fear s for her safety. Later in the week, when her disap- pearance was reported to investigators by her lawyer, an intense search was launched -including four days of dig· ging at the county dump in San Juan where officers were following up a strong hint that the woman was slain and her body dumped among the refuse. That unpleasant task, however, failed to turn up a single clue. The ne1.t stage, investigators said, was to work the case from the Carlsbad end. Nixon Ordered 'Secret' Marine Raid i1i 1969 NEW YORK (UPI) -President Nixon ordered a •·secret Marine Corps ra1d against Communist installations in Laos just two days after he was inaugurated in 1969, the New York Times has reparted . Quoting "government sources," the Times said Sunday that similar ground assaults against North Vietnamese sup- ply lines and base camps in Laos had been repeatedly proposed and rejected during the Johnson administration. "A1ilit.ary sources said that at least one Marine battalion -about 11500 men - was sent into Laos, where it suffered ex- tremely heavy casualties during pitched battles with North Vietnamese troops," the Times said. The Times reported that "a variety of sources" said the ra id. code-named Dewey Canyon I, began Jan. 22, 1969, and involved "an all~ut, pre-planned assauJt ir:to the border areas of Laos, involving the 2nd Battalion of the 9th Marine Regi· ment." A thorough examination of tbe missing woman's car heightened speculation that the housewile may have been slain. ~lrs. White's purse, billfold cootaining a small amount of cash and the car keys all were found in the car and no fing"'l'imU! were present, leading p- en to believe that someone wiped the entire vehicle clean before leaving it. One other suspicious aspect is the area of the employe parking lot where the car was left, investigators said. Mrs. White regularly used the same space when she brought her car to work each day, but when the auto was discovered after htr disappearance it was in another portion or the Jot. Officers have tried to find witnesses in Carlsbad who may !\ave seen the aban- donment of the car, but reportedly have turned up little or nothing that could help. Their ooly hope now is for new wit- nesses to tum up. Pir-ig Pong Mark Set i1i Anaheim ANAHEIM (UPI ) -Hotel manager Terry Geer, 32, claimed a new ping pong endurance record Sunday after a game that lasted 49 hours, 12 minutes and 40 seconds. The old record was 48 hours. The current edition of the Guinness Book of World Records fails to list any category for marathon table tennis (or less than four persons, but Geer said he had been in contact with the editors of the record book and he said he v.·as confi· dent bis record would be sanctioned. Geer won more than 80 percent or the 400 matches played du ring the exhibition. \\"hich started Friday. Jt was held~() benefits the Easter Seal Campaign, NOW AT .. ,.[P:TT 1 PRICES 1· START FR~ . ,_ M"'4 IS/171 Ellduslft s Year Pllrts Guan1:11ee T~ l'llOIOI". pump, tlrrotf. itn!IN w•t., dlllt(bullott ly118111, h•t!ll Ind puth- ""!10111 111 911t,.n19'd ror e "n 1111 ~ti• SS/97i, SS/SIU •!'Id $Slt7t . We P•V for rtP11oem..,1 ltllOr duri119 !I'll 11111 )'ff'' 90 DAY CASH WITH Al'PROYID C~IDIT HEADQUARTERS . Phone 548· 7788 _ i 1815 Ntwl'ORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesi ............................................................ ' • • . .Orange ~'!!!t Today's Final N.Y. Stocks • VOL 66, N0-225, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA. • MONDl\Y, AUGUST 13, 1973 c TEN CENTS ·Sex Death ·Link Eyed '1Y Police . Similarities between the sex and death rlng murders in Houston ·and the string oJ mutilation murders on the Orange c.oast have led local lnves\igators to the Houston PoUoe Department. !let. Sgl. Monty McKennon of the Hun· t.iugton Beach police ~partment said ~o day he is attempting to contact in- vestigators "'Orking on the Houston case. AfcKennon said there seem to be similarities in the Houston murders and ll»e deaths of five young men whose bodies were discovered in Huntington lleach, Sunset Beach, Seal Beach and Long Beach. , Mcl<eonon noted. that one or the witnesses In the HOUiton case bas been quoted saying the bodles-of some of the ylctlms "wert lllPPoffd to have been aent off !IOlil)ttWbere iri California." Bui be dllcoonled any ttal likelihood that the dead man wbt ls supposed to have committed the maM $eX and t0rture 11ayings in Teus could be responslbl~ tor -the Orange Coast killings. "But you never know. We'd be foolish if we didn't check everything out," he said. Only two of the victima of the mutila- tion murders have been Identified. They are Edward Daniel Moore. %0. and Ron· nie Gene Wlebe, 21, ?.'hose bodies "'e re found in Seal Beach beside the San Diego Fi-eeway Dec. '26 and July 30. Huntington Beach llsts as John Doe the sexually mutilated body ol a young man loUnd in that city Airil %4. McKennon pciinled our that John Doe bad been sex- Ually molested and torlun!d prior to hi• death. A1ao listed as John Does are two more o! the vlctim.s of tbe poo&bly linked murders. Jaiu'a Doe No. 16 was found beside the Terminal Island Freeway Feb. 1 and Johll Doe. No. si was backed into pieces which were found in green sacks in 1everal location. Utrougboul the oorthern Orange Coast and tlio Loi• AIW<le! --. Police believe the nve·murdi!n may be Unked because all of iii< vlctln!$ were young men who had been oonally assaulted and in some cases mutilated. ; * * * Deputies Find 2 More Bodies In Sex Murders HOUSTON (UPI) -Sherill'• deputies today dug up from shallow graves on a 7 .... beach the Z4th and 21th bodiu kll~ ed during a three-year spree o( sei: and sadism by two teen-agers and a }l)mosexual friend. The victims were wrapped in black plastic bags and sprinkled with lime, like most of the others round during the past Week at three locations. Officers, digging with a back hoe and a giant road-grader, said they expected to PARENTS CRITICIZE HOUSTON POLICE ACTION-Page 4 rind at least one more body at the l>each!root site at High Island. "I thlnt we got another me ,down Uiere," 11Jd ·Chambers countY Sheriff l..ou1s Otter, • With the recovery of the 2Sth body, the q,us murder equaled the worst such ~Jlgedy ln U.S. hlst.ory. Juan V. Corona, !~ was convicted last January of killlng ~ rann han<ls in ~1U!ornl~. O(fl.cers «t the Tex:~3 b::::ach drove Ji:wcks and cars around lhe searct\ ·~lte to tfUard it from onlookers. -; 7be bodies discovered today were pull· iP, from the sari'd in an area covered by t;.1t gra'ss About a quarter milt from .;·Jle,re two bodies were )ocated Friday. rtJe spot Is abou t 35 miles east of ~Veston. , 'lj:lmer \Yiyne Henley, 17, aDd David BrQOU, 18, have been charged with myrder and admitted taking port In the """-'<ual slaying• wllll Dean C<>rll, 13. •OUlcm last week dui up 17 bodllt 111- al&! a HOll!too boat shed and recover.cl !Our at a wooded Ille near Broaddus In East Teu.'I. Two more wtfe unearthed on the beach eut of Galveston. · ~herlft'• deputies Uled the road grad<r \9 i:ut a quarteMnll• through, a line of ~ii (t'.&IS Strewn With drJltWood ~ ft~ te(,, Otter and a deputy rode behind the li;fder. ezamlnlng the J)roken lfOlll1d for .-.. or sraves deicMllod by Henley. and rOots. ,~zil•anwlille, in Houston. Police <lilt! ttennan B. Short defended hi• depart· mept today against charge. !rom aome !lll«Dls or the victims Iba! olllcera were 14• m investigstlnlt miJslng peroons i:tports. • "Although S<lllle o! the parents ill the Bolgbts area may have !di we have mt bom doing all we could haft, we nover -d· have enoullh _people to cbeck out • " I.tee JIOOIES, .... ti ,, 'Explosive' Mesa Firms Hazard Probe Set . DEATH VALLEY HIKERS DISPLAY BLISTERS DURING TREK Anita Perrot (loft) encl Jo Ann Cl1udi.Wllllam1 • Dike Completed First W ome1i Walk Death Valley A report identifying 38 Costa Mesa in· dustries as potentially explosive and destructive will be discussed by Costa Mesa city councilmen tonight at 7:30. The study session will be in the first floor conference room at City Hall, 77 Fair Drive. Jn addition to industrial hazards, coun- cilmen will discuss parking restrictions for local gove rnments proposed by the federal Environmental Protection Agen- Redevelopment Plan Eyed In Costa Mesa Adoption ol a preliminary plan for a downtown redevelopment pro)ect will be considered at 6: 30 tonight by Costa Mesa planning commissioners. The meeting ·will take place in council chambers at City Hall, 77 Fair Drive. BJ JOH.~ Zl\LLER A ranger at Death Valley National The preliminary plan includes land use o1 tM Dalty ,1 .. 1 '"" Park said it was the firs t time he could and circulation elements and suggests ''.I oouJd never have done it without my recall any woman or women covering the realignment of Harbor Boulevard and hus,band. A,t least, J don't think I could di,Stance in the beat of summer. abandonment of Portions ol Newport have $ne it .without him." Another, woman once did it in the spring BOOievard for parking. That's' how Jo · Ann Claudio-Williams, when ~peratl:ll'es in · the valley were Commissioners are also scheduled to I conshltrably lower, he said. 21, feels after competing her 11kl1y walk Ollis had wanted to bike with his bride a<k.ipt a project area. Existing plans call ac;ross Death Valley in the 12t'.klegree of eight DlClltm. But the idea for the trip for everything south of 19th Street, and beat of summer. had been Jo Ann's and Anita's. They had north of 17th Street on either side of While she and girlfriend Anita Perrot, a reason for not wanting a man along. Newport Boulevard to be included. 20, were getting international attention "We knew that if he went with us, Orange Avenue would form the eastern nobody would poy much attention to the as the first women ever to hike across fact that it was the first time a woman bowldary, 'Itle Newport Freeway ~t- Death Valley In the beet of summer, ber bad made the trip in· the middle of sum· of-way llOO!d lonn tbe west boundary husband, Cbrlt, wu laboring quletly<iinM 'll' • 'i't>lo'Ji.~'."!lif\l!Oltil;I ~~.:"":-.,.:.,Ji you. want \.mt ~ t Iha · •: A city' nnner sai. , jOd.oy the IO tu. .., ,tJllli.~ •, ll!'ll Mrs. :::....~.t~-.... ry .~!eest',edth'ymweouotdr rcdc+.J!l!"nent area is sun ftexiblc, but Cl ··"·WiiUla ~ ""11 ti I I ""' ·~ • 0 !ht lwU steps set for tonigbi must be ap-•--m.s, w,~ •• enro this a 1 have •'-••"' that '-carried the ••avy the t "--' eoa t ~-u ._...... UllC '~ proved if the city is to proceed with • v•~ .. o s ~ ege. backpoclt whlle [ Ju!t walked along. "He made truck runs every day to "So w_ e 3 ....... ....1 •ha' I shou ld do 1·t with project. 6'~ ' -" Also on tonight's agenda is a public bring us ice water, he sat out under the another woman." hearing on the housing element of the tarp "'ith us during the heat or day. He ~I. f:be people who disagreed with general plan, but city planners said they even slept out with us. this decisi90 was Reba Williams, the will ask for a two-week delay to allow "It was a natural thing for him lo do, Newport~acb mother-in-law,of Jo Ann. more study. because he was concerned that "I told quis-he should forbid her to do Other public hearings scheduled tonight everything go well. ii." says Mrs. Williams. "But 'he said be include : 1'J would have done the same for him " sbouldn't do that, because she had her -Request for wne exception by she says. · l own life to lead . Alliance Developers Inc. to construct a 'i1te two y00ng women made the 135-"Now I'm glad that be went ahead and 26-unlt condominium in an R-2 zone at mile walking trip In 10 days, finishing helped her OU~" saya Mrs. Willialru. 2423-51 Tustin Ave. Aua. 7. They traveJed from the aoutbern 1'1le 11-year-old Mrs. Claudio-Williams -Request for zone exception by Lewis boundary of Death Valley at Saratoga said her husband was in 00 the planning Harney to build a 19-unit apartment Springs to the northern boundary near every step of the way. He did extensive building at 1110 Victoria St. Ebebebe Crater. reading, helped prepare the equipment, -Request for zone exception permit to Nixon Ordered 'Secret' M arin,e Raid iii 1969 NEW YORK (UPI) -Pr.,ident Nixon ordered 1 secret Marine Corps raid agalDst Communist !nstallallon1 in Laos jus! two days after be wu inaugurated in 1161, the,Ncw York Times bas reported. ~·''"Jovmuneol -" the T(l!l<S ~Slln!taY ·that slpillar· irotmd assaulls ailalnsl North · Vietname.. sup- ply l1nu and baJe Clmp8 in Laos bad been repeatedly pr<lpO<ed and rejected during the Johnson admln!JtraUon. "MUl!afY '!OOl'ceS ~~ that at least one Marine baltallon -about l,SOO men - was sent into Laos, where it suffered ex· tremely 'heavy cesuahles dtirin~itched battles With North Vietnamese troops," the Tim.es said. and genera.Uy tried to be as helpful es he build auto supply store at 2946 Bristol St. ~w~ did everything we did except the by Pep Boys. · "'alking," she says. 1iM! walking , however, was the difficult part. "Every day was a challenge." she says_ "It seemed like the desert was trying to make csch step we took as hard as it could possibly be." The two women faced heat, a windstorm that became a sandstorm. an el~ic.al storm, and finally a heavy ramstorm. "When we stopped walking et night, we always kne\v we had accomplished aomething." Mrs. Claudio-Williams aays she thinks ber walk proved llOlllOtblng about the abllily of wnm<n. But she saya the main re&30D for the walk was not motivated by this. "I did it -because J wanted to get a roolly good look at the desert," she says. "And I had a desire to prove to myself thaLI could do ii.'' Nixon ADVERTISING HAS 'D RAWING POWER' Daily Pilot classified want ads have charisma. Look at this charmer: '61 GALAXIE. Good trans- portation, 66,000 mlies. $75 or make offer. (Phone No.) This advertiser caned to s a y , "Congratulations on the wonderful draw- ing power of your eds!" Dial the direct line -642---5678 -and let our charming ad-visor help you find some "drawing power." Ho111e cy (EPA) and an open space fact sheet, part of the city's effort to get taxpayer approval of a $4 million park bood next fall . City fire officials completed· a survey last weck ·of Costa MeM plants. It wa s undertaken following an April 2 blast at the El Monte Chemical Company that killed two persons and left some families homeless. Almost every hazardous instance, fire ofricials said. involves the storage of 85 Feared Dead resins, acetone, methyl ethyl ketone, paints or chemical solvents. Councilmen will discuss pc>ssible steps to reduce possible dangers from the plants, most of which are located in an area south of 19th Street and west of Anaheim Avenue. City planners are \.\'Orking on an amendment to the industrial ordinance to for~id hazardous manufacturing Ol)era- tions next to residen tial areas. Spanish Jet Explotks • On Landing Approach LA COljUNA, Spain (UPI) -A Caravelle airliner of the Spanish Aviaco Air Company exploded in flight today \Yhile the pilot was mnking his fourth landing approach to La Coruna's cloud· shrouded mountaintop airport and fell in flames on a village below, an airline spokesman reported. The airline said all 85 persons aboard the twin-jel aircraft were feared dead. Of the flight itself, the airline said there is "no hope of survivors." Because of confusioo at the village crash site and the dense clouds and rains, there were conflicting reports. Police in La Coruna said rescue opera· lions were continuing and' it was not definitely known whether there were survivors or any villagers had been ldll· ed. llflilili!'.. !01 loe-; · -11• re at least ·one pe!raan ~"'! 1'le news agency Euro'Pa Press said five inhabitants of the village of Mdl). trove also were killed. But · later police said the houses on which the wreckage fell were abandoned and no villagers were kJlled. The crash was the eighth in a series or fatal accidents involving S p a n i s h airliner~ since early 1972. Mesa Officers Seek Four Men In Beating Costa ~1esa police today are seeking four men who allegedly attacked a fellow member of the Korean Presbyterian Church with a table leg in his Costa ~1esa apartment Sunday. Soo Veal Park, 30, or 354 Avocado St., told police through an interpreter that two men he thought were friends came fo his home Sunday and began an argu· ment. The two suspects pulled an iron leg off a nearby table and began hitting him, Park claimed. He said lhey then drove him to another apartment where two other suspects held him down while the beating continued. Because Park doesn't speak fluent English, police said, they had to can in Anaheim interpreter Hong K. Mun to take the victim's statement. Police said the left side of Park's face was S\\'ollen and that he complained of pain in his chest. Ripoff~ Iberia has lost three planes during the period, the charter company Spantaz t"WO, plus one plane damaged, and Aviaco, a subsidiary of Iberia , two, with a total loss of 352 lives. :Spain 's worst air crash occurred last December when a Spa ntax Convair Coronado flipped on takeoff from Santa Cruz airport tilling all 155 aboard. Aviaco said the Caravelle jet carried 79 passengers and a crew or six. An airport spokesman said it crashed on its fourth attempt to land in bad weather. Clfra reported ' the pilot bad been told sborUy before by the coatrnl tower that vlslbllity dropped below minimum levels. · The plane, on a scheduled flight from Madrid, made three attempl5 1o land at La Co<Una and bad.juot,llart<cl to circle the cloud-shrouded a!rpoit· -opla when 11 appanntiy uploded In the .air, I.he spokesman said. hii>sl or its wreckage fell on ,an aban· doned farm house in the village of Mon- trove, four miles from the airport. The airport spokesman said radio con· tact with the plane broke off without any indication of anything being wrong with the plane, apart from Captain Lopei Pascual's apparent difficulties of landing the craft under the prevailing conditions. Most passengers aboard the plane ap- peared to be vacaUooers. La Corona is one of three airports serving the northwestern Ga lician prov- inces and its seaside resorts. The Ill fated flight, AV-118, Is a special vacation flight run dally by Avico during the sum· 1ner seasoo. The plane tert Madrid at 9:14 a.m. f4:14 a.m. PDT). more than an hour late for the 60-minute flight. The crash OC· curred an hour later. Cifra said members of a Barcelona S\\imming club (Club Na t a c i on_ Barcelona) were aboard the plane flying to a swimming meet in La Coruna. $28 Million Lawsuit CfUCAGO (AP) -United States Gypsum Co. said Sunday it agreed to a $23 million settlement of a price-fixing suit filed by a home builders' group in 1970. U. S. Gypsum was sued by ~ Home Builders Association of Greater Chicago and 24 meq:ibers for alleged col- lusion to fix prices of gypsum wallboard , keeping prices artificially high. Orange Weather The Times reported th at "a variety or soureesu said the raid, code-named Dewey Crutyon I, began Jan, 22, 1969, and involved "an-all~. pre-planned assault into the border areas of _ Latm1 lnvolving the Zl1d Battalion o! the Ith Marine Rtgi- mcnt." Solon Waldie Attacks Clemente Expe1ises Pi.tore gloom Is forecast for the morning hours Tuesday with a slight chance of thundershowers in the evening hours. SUnny in the afternoon with highs of 70 at the beaches. Lows in the 60s. Retired ·Dentist ' ' ) . Guy Beem Dead Funeral aervlces will !a.Jto. · ]>lace Wednesday Jn eosta' Mesa for retired denti st Guy 0 . Beem. ari Olange Coast retident for 17 yeart, whO died saturday. He WBI 93.) Dr. Beem reelded with h!J wl!o, Jessie, at 910 Ol\k SL , Coota Mea. Mi IO-year resldent.o! California, he grodwlled· as a physlofan and 1urgeon from the College of San Franci.co~lnd becatpe tlie !irst dentist In Hun Parl Rev. L. V. . of 'the Quist · Lutheran Churd! o!!lctate al 10 a.m. .... 1ce1 at Btll way Qiapel. Burial will be at In&l.-Momorial Pork. ~n addllloo to hll ill!•, Dr. Beem ls suNlved by three nieces and one nephew. Rep. Jerome Waldie (J>.Antloch), the marathon walking gubernaterlsl can- didate, made It tllrOugb gates .. of the Western White !lou.oe today but never had a chance to see Uitf controverslaJ irn- provemtnta to President Nixon 's seaside villa -Installations which he -termed :1a giant rlllOI!.'' (Relaled story, Page 3.) Securfty aid .. at the nearly d ... rted presidtnUal compound sakl they wc.r:e 1e- Ung on ordera from Washington when they confined the candJdRte's tour to the ptH\dentlaJ o(flce complex on the San Diego side Or the county line. "I was told tha( all the llcins that I wanted to see are on private property aod art not for public inspection," lvaldle ... Iii. "JI a congressman represents the peo- ple, I sbou14 be able.to oee what the ~ payers are paytng for." : Waldie entered the comJ10Wl<I ca'lYlng a detaUed list luued recently by the General Services Administration showing every upendltl.ire made at the compound for security reasons. The current total for such expenditures at San Clemente Is now pegged at $3 million. "I couJd have been shown structurts that would not have endangered the privacy or the President, who wasn't evm there/' Waldie suggested. "I couldn't sec ttsm because t waa told they are too dlfflcoft. to explnln end this leads me to bc~e thnt the purchases made in lhe name of the President's securlty arc not justifiable.". One 'iich installallon which stirred the campaigner's intettst Is an $8.000 system installed along the Santa Fe tracks in the Pr<sldcnl'• rront yard to alert the Pres!· dent when 1 train 1s coming. Waldie aald the rationale ror that system w•s that It was needed because the noise o! the surf makes 11 lmposslble to hear an approaching train. Waldie termed thal ~•a foolish expenditure." 'Ibe candidate, who Is on a walking tour of Southern California, said that two other U.S. representatives are assertedly arriving "pretty soon" but he does not know what 90rt of treatment they will receive nor the reason for their arrival "If lhcy are friends of the President 1 think thnt they will be treated differenlly than I was," he said . Waldlc alleged that the GSA 1'ls playing games with us and somebody is trying to hide something." The next stop on Wafdle's 36-day trek strotchlng 240 miles through Southem callfornia is at Dana Point on Tuesday. followed by a stopover the following day in Corona de.I Mar and yet another on Thursday in Costa Mesa.. Waldie 8'id thet he is In °e:xcellent lthapc down to my ankles." Ills leet, he added , are killing him. INSmE TODAY A1 Co.mbodian rtf11gee1 con. tinut to 1trtam In to till! capital city of Ph11om Penh, tile cit1,1°1 airport r c ports. re6ervatiom booked up through Augu.st for people trying to get ont of the co1t11try. See alory and ' photos 011 Paae 21 . •••llllt ,. Aft!! l•lldtrt " L.M, l•wf • Mlwltt .. Ctlli.rtll• • NlllOl!tl Ntwi • Cl..alllt<f tJ·M OtM!t• (-1f " c-k1 " """ ...... " (""'-"' " ...... , .. ,, OMltt Ntllc,. " Sl'tek M«ttrt , .. ,. r.rfff'IAI l'Nt • Ttltritltll • '~-· .. --.. ··-, .. ,, WN-• ,. ,... ....... 11. 1t W-..rt ....... II-If -.. WttM """ • 111 Slfrice M f L 1 Freeze Off; MOnoar, A119ust J.>, t.,,~ ·Consumers Await Hike TONIGHT -11y United Prt11 lnttrnatlooal The price freeze was lifted today on everything except gasoline and ~f. A number of major compan ies immediately said they would ask for price increases. COSTA 'MESA PLANNING COM- ~1JSSION -Regular meeUng, City Hall 6:30 p.n1. Photog1·aph Of Missing Woman: Set Bv JOlf,'J VALTERZA • 01 1111 Dilly ,Utt Sltll TUESDAY, AUG. II SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB -Com. Or<1nge County Sheriff's investigators today planned to issue new photographs of. miMing San Juan Capistran o housewife Rochelle White in an effort to seek new leads on her disappearance. Consumers will not feel the full brunt of the price jump for some time because under Phase IV companies with annual sales of $100 million or more must give the Cost of Living COuncil 30 days notice of such increues. Jnunity Rescreallon Center, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Chrysler Corp. immediately asked the council to allow an average $71 bike on 1974-model cars and trucks. Unless itJ application is turned down, the increase automatically will go into effect before the vehicles go on public sale in late September. Weatherman Says Showers Due Tonight American Motors is seeking an average $55 price increase while General Motors and Ford have yet to file aJ> plications. Spokesmen for the IYr'O largest auto companies said they expected ap- plications would soon be filed. Armco Steel C.Orp. in Middletown, Ohio said it was reinstating price increases or sheet steel products wh.ich had been scheduled but were not allowed under the freeze. The increase is scheduled for Sept. 12. Reports from supennarkets indicated food prices remained reasonably stable today. Prices had been out from under the freeze for nearly a month. Under Phase IV, sellers can raise their ·prices, but only as much as costs in- crease. ·Gasoline and other petroleum prices will remain frozen for another week. Beef will continue under price controls the longest, until Sept. 12. It Is the freeze on beef that has brought the most criticism on Phase IV. It remained frozen when other food prices were decontrolled June 13. While .beef prices cannot be raised the supply ltas dwindled. " A federal judge in Lincoln, Neb. tumed down a request for an injunction seeking •an end to the freeze on beef prices. A ·judge in Seattle, Wash., made a similar ruling today tn a similar case. The ruling by U.S. District Court Judge .Warren Urbom In IJncoin was Issued ,l>atunlay night and made public today. ,At the same time, be refused the request Jor the temporary inj'unctlon, Urbom denied a government pea for dismissal 'or lhe suit. TI1undersho~·ers -that's right -thun- dershowers are forecast for inland and possibly coastal communities of Orange County tonight. The freak August weather brought rain to portions or Orange and Anaheim early today as thWlderclaps rolled in the gray skies above. 'Commuters using the Newport Freeway are accustomed of late to the misty type of rain gray bwnmer-summer mornings have produced. Today's drips from above were big bold drops. The National Weather Service con- firmed their existence. In fact in Riverside this morning, thundershowers drenched the downtown area m 62-degree temperatures. A surge of tropical moisture northward from Mexico is at fault. As the moisture laden air arrives in the drier desert areas of Southern California it condenses, cools and begiru: falling as rain. A forecaster said this moisture usually drop:1 in inland mountain r8.nges and rarely makes it to the coastline. Nevertheless, today's forecast calls for slight chances of afternoon and evening thundershowers "almost anyplace in the South Coast Basin," the National Weather Service forecaster said. Tre drift or moist air from south of the border ls expected lo continue through Wedneoday. Meanwhile, temperatures along the Orange Coast will dip lo 63 lonight. Highs Tueoday will be In the low 70s. Fire lnspectwn Today _At Love Animals Temple By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of lllt O.Sly l'llot Steff ! Laguna Beach city officials were ex- pected to inspect Love Animals, Doo't Jj:at Them late today to see U action has JJeen taken by occupants of the temple to feduce fire hazards. : A simlla!tnspecuon staged Friday was tut short when Orange County Marsba1s •ppeared at Love Animals and ai-rested followers Curlis Reed and James Roberts qn warrants totalling $163. ••we figured with the arrest situation that we would wait until today to ·go· . back." explained City Manager Al Tbeal. Today 's inspection will be made by Thea!. along with Wayne J\.foody, director of planning and development and Jim Winter, senior building official. Inspection of Love Animals has been hanging fire since last Wednesday, when a 24-bour grace period to remove the fire hazards expired. According to Reed and Roberts, now free on bail , the folks at Love Animal.s have removed several of the fire hazards, including flammable materials on the roof ,a portion of a bamboo fence and extension cord type wiring. Theal said today's inspection would confirm whether the actioQ taken by followers of the temple is sufficient to meet the city1s demands. If hazards still exist. the city could have the building vacated and the OIANal COAST w utilities shut off. Both Reed and Roberts said Friday they have been reluctant to do any work on the building, since Love Animals Don't Eat Them Ls leaving Laguna Beach Sept. 22, the first day of fall. "We keep telling them, 'Look, we're leaving, just leave us alone,'" said Reed. Doth !misted that even it the building is shut doWn by the city, the !Ave Animals foUoWers would stay on the prop- erty and live in a vegetable garden in the back yar<I. Minister Raps Cliurcli Control ANAHEIM (AP) -Freedom is the moot important tene t or religion and no church should try to force its members lo obey the standanis it sets for Itself, says the associate minister of the An>belm United Methodist Cliurch. uNo church has the prerogative of tell- ing you wbal lo believe," the Rev. Glen- don E. Ham. !old two coogregatioos Sunday. "Churcl!es employ creeds, but creeds are guidelines, not enforced dogmas: they are human products, presenting the best understandings when they were written, but not inunune to change," he said • Thus far the notebook appears blank despite intensive probing by county of. ficers as well as detectives in C&rlsbad, where the woman's car was found aban- dooed at her employer's parking lot nearly two weeks ago. Spokesmen for the local department sa id the original photo -(a high school senior picture) oC the pretty brunette dispensed to all the news media -yield- ed no tips from the general public. The issuance of newer, more recent photos showing a di.fferent hairstyle might yield something new to the case, they added. Teletypes to other police jo/isdiclions as V.'ell are being sent out this week . Es sentially, now that the initial leads have been exhausted, probers have little left to explore . Mrs. Whlte, 22, vanished late last month on the day before she was scheduled to appear in a divorce hearing in Orange County Superior C:Ourt •. But before she vanished, she phoned her parents and assertedly expressed fears for her safety. Later in the week, when her disat>- pearance was reported to investigators by her lawyer, an intense search was launched -including four days of dig- ging at the county dump in SM Juan where officers were following up a strong h.int tha t the woman was slain and her body dumped among the refuse. That unpleasant task, however, failed to turn up a single clue. The next stage, investigators said, was to work the case from the Carlsbad end. A thorough examination of the missing woman's car heightened speculation that the housewife may have been slain. Mrs. White's purse, billfold cootaining a small amount of cash and the car keys all were found in the car and no fingerpimts were present, leading prob- crs to believe that someone wiped the entire vehicle clean before leaving it. One other suspicious aspect is the area Of the employe parking lot where the car was left, investigators said. Mrs. White regularly used the same space when she brought her car to work each day, but when the auto was discovered after her disappearance it was in another portion of the Jot. Officers have tried to find witnesses in Carlsbad who may have seen the aban· dorunent of the car, but re tedly have turned up little or no h' that could help. Their only hope n nesses to turn up. From Pagel BODIES ... every nmaway youth," Short said at a news conference. ~1eanwbl1e police Sunday said they idenLi.fied tu·o more or the bodies. The two were Donald Edward Waldrop, 15, <1nd his brother, Jerry Lynn Waldrop, 13. both of Atlanta, Ga . The identification by their' father, Everett Waldrop, brought to five the number of bodies definitely identified. The two youths had been strangled. Others identified are: Charles C. Cobble, 17, Houston. Martin Ray Jones. 18, Houston. Billy Lawrence, 15, Houston. Times are Tough The cost of living seems lo be catching up with John T. Dunlop, di- rector of the Cost of Living Counci11 as he appears for a news· confer- ence with holes in bis shoes. Dunlop briefed newsmen on new regula- tions for Phase IV of the administration's economic program. Israeli, Egypt Ships Clash in Gulf of Suez By United Pross Inlematlonal Israeli and Egyptian vessels clashed in the Gulf of. Suez today Jn the fU'St reported naval encounter between the countries in almost six years. The Israe~ military command said in Tel Aviv that two of its ships were at- tacked by a pair of Egyptian vessels in the eastern part ot. the gulf. It said an Egyptian patrol boat was fired on and that crew members were seen jumping overboard. Two Israelis were slightly wounded, the command said. The incident occurred northwest of Ras Sudar in the eastern part of the gu~f at about 5 p.m.1 according to the Israeli command, wblch said, "Our boats didn't go over the line in the middle of the gulf." Israel said it filed a complaint with U.N. truce supervisory officials. The Egyptian boat that was hil w.., towed away, the command said. Cairo's semi-official Middle F.ast News Agency said that the Egyptian navy in· tercepted Israeli boats trying to ap- proach the Egyptian coastilne on the western side of ihe gulf. Quoting a military spokesman, the Sharpshooting Thug Sought hy Sheriff Orange County Sheriff's officers are searching today for a sharpshooting van- dal who shot out the windows of four patked cars in the Santa Ana Heights area during the weekend. agency said the Israeli boats made their appt'08Cb in the Adabiya area south of Suez city at about 5:2.0 p.m., and 'twere intercepted by our naval unit and shore defense units and forced to retreat to the east." "The enemy covered its withdrawal \vith its air force . The Egyptian forces suffered no casualties," the Egyptian report said. Israel denied using air support. In the last naval clash, the Israeli destroyer Eilat was sunk by an Egyptian missile boat in October, 1967. Egyptian Foreign Minister Mohammed Ha>Rn El Zayyat, reacting lo Israel's interception of an Arab ~liner, had said today that the Arab Y10Tld '"must reply to Israeli arrogance with a decisive, deterrent and suitable action." Zayyat said failure by the Arabo lo reply to Israel could lead to similar ac-- tions by it in the future . Zayyat spoke after meeting l n Damascus with Syrian Foreign Minl!ter and Deputy Premir Abdel Halim Khad- dam lo coordinate strategy. Israeli jets Intercepted a chartered Middle East Airways plane over Belrut Friday night and forced it to land at a military field inside Israel in the belief lt carried Pa'lestinian guerrilla leader , George Habash and several colleagues. But the guerrillas had canceled plans to board the craft. CHART Talk Sl ated Henley, charged with six counts of murder, has admitted he killed Corll at the bachelor electrician's borne Wednes- day. SF Baseballer Bon,ds Arrested The cars, all parked In the area of Mesa Drive and Santa Ana Boulevard, were damaged by pellets ftred from a BB gun, deputies said. AU tho vehicles In- volved had been parked in the area by their owners. Curren t economic conditions will be discussed by Security Pacific Bank of- ficial Bafry Morton at a breakfast meeting of Citizens Harl>o< Area Re- search Team (CHART) at 7:30 a.m. Thursday. The meeting will be at the Mesa Verde Country Club, 3000 Country Club Road, Costa Mesa. Injw·ed Boy May Retm·n To Coast Unless the condition of Jason Rea. ~. gets worse. all indications point to 11 return to hon1e for the co1111.1to.<;(' Capistrano Dc:ich boy, but .'iJXlkesman for the Denver hospital said roday tha~ ad· vance noUce of his trip wi ll r.ot be J.tiven The boy is still listed in serious con· dition , and, the spokesman for !ht' University of Colorado Medical Ccntl'r said, she had "no idea" when !ht• youngster will be reutrning. She ad~e11 that doctors are cautious about releasing information about the boy's flight hon11• for fear of a "rash of publicity ... Jason was nown to the Den\'er hospita l Aug. 2 to donate his kidnl!YS and Hvrr after injuries from a pool accident on Ju· ly 14 appeared to be fatal. The blond-haired tot had suffered br<1i11 damage from the near-droy.•ning, ;in.cl when dealh seemed in1m inent. his mother, Mrs. Linda Rea , arrnngNI for her only child to be flown to Denver 111 die 1'so that others may Jive." But following his arrival in Denver. t~r boy's condition improved and, l\vO day~ later, Jason was taken off the respirator that had been keeping him alive. Mesa Burglars Get $2,100 Loot At Two. Homes Afore than $2,100 ~'Orth of Items y.•crc stolen in t'vo residential burglaries Sun· day, Costa r.tesa police reported today. Roon.le Gene Ranslem of 2141 Orange Ave. told police be came home Sunday to find a tape deck and an amplifier miss- ing. H~ valued the property at $1,100. A second burglary took place at 3138 Kerry Lane while the tour residents were in Newport Beach, police said. C!atherine Hoadley said she and her roommates returned to find a bole in their fnrit door. Polloe said burglars apparentty kicked Jn the doer and made away with a lamp, a black-end-white television set, a stereo. · throe dock radios, phooograph ,._.,,,, ' jewelry and a bedspr~d. . Total value of the items was given as more than $1 ,000. Ping Pong Mark Set in Ana1ieini ANAHEIM (UPI) -Holcl manager Terry Geer, 32, claimed a new ping pong endurance record SWlday after a game that lasted 49 hours, 12 minutes and 40 seconds. The old record was 48 hours. The current edition of the Guinness Book of World Records fails to list any category for marathon table tennis for less than four persons, but Geer said be had beerl in coo.tact with the editors of the record book and he said he was confJ. dent his record would be sanctioned. Geer woo more than IK> percent or the 400 matches played during the exhibition, which started Friday. It was held to benefits the Easter Seal Campaign. Mesa Pedestrian KiUecl in Miunesola A 22-year-old Costa Mesa man was kill· eel Saturday when he tried to cross an in· terstate highway on lhe east edge of Albert Lea, Minn., the Minnesota Highway Patrol said. The victim was identified as Harri P. Jaf[a, No locaJ address W8' available. A patrol olflcer said Ja!!a was struck by a pickup truck driven by Lawrence w. Berg, 42, of Du luth. Berg v;asn't injured. DAILY PILOT lfarris also told his listeners that the church "should encourage responsible decision and ethical action. and ii it loses sight of these, it v.·i\l result in hypocrisy." REDWOOD CITY (APl -San Fran- cisco Giants outfielder Bobby Bonds, 27, was arrested on drunken driving charges early today after rear-ending another car at high speed, the ~ligh"•ay Patrol said . Both cars were badly da111aged . No one was hurt. NOW AT Tllot ~#"'9 C111111 DAILY #'ILOT, wllrl Wflldl II (Omblf'l4d !ht l<leWl•,rEU, I• lllltllfllltd .., rh• Or•no• Co••' P..tilltl'ltno Com~nr. kiM· ,., • ..i1110r11 ••• Pllt>l!Jhld, MOlld•r throuo11 Frld•'f• tor Costa M-, HIWllOft B..ch, Hvnllngton 811C11fFoun!1ln V11f1y, ~ •Nd'I. 1rv1n1/SH11jltCIKtl and ~ c11meni.1 "" J,,..n Clplltr•no.. A •lnole .._klMI lldllliDfl b .... lllhlcl S.lllrcll}"I .,.., $111'1111VL TM prtroc:l"°'I f'll&IW\lnf pl111t II It .AO W.,t l1y Slr•I, (0.!1 M.... Clll""""-nf*'- ltob1rt N. W.M ''"ldtn' •lld '"'°llllltr J 1ck R. C11rl1y Vice ''"ldent Ind O-r1t.M6Nfw l hem11 K11vi! Editor lhom11 A. M11r,W-i111 M1111fl110 l!Crtfof Ch1rl11 H, Looi l;icli1"' P. Nill Anll11M M1nqlnf Edltw1 c ......... OMc. llO W11t l1v Str11t M1i!in9 Acldr1u!'P.O. 101 1160, 92616 .,_ Offkft "'"''"'' etad'I: JJJJ H""'*1 touleYlrjl ' Lit...,... 8t<0<t1: m llor"' ... _ M""ll"f!°" 9HcJI• 11'Tt lllCll llvl .... 11' ~11 Cl9m1n11; )OJ Hl)ttrt El C.mlnll ltNI T .. .,.... 17141 641""4J21 cs...JfW M......W., 642·1671 (tJIV'lfrit, 1'7l. Or-1.... (Ntf f'l,11111"'"" ~y. Ho """" 1-S.., U11111r1NoM. 111111..Wlel """" ., MV<trl'f_,. "'""' .... .,. •· .... lie... ..,.._. tO«lll ,,... mi»lln ol (~ .... ...,...., Jailed Suspect Gets 15 Years BROWNSVILLE. Tex. (UPI) OlarlN V. Harrelson, a 35-ycar-<>ld wanderer who spent more than 41h years in jail without beiog convicted of a crime, has been sentenced Jn his third murder trial to 15 years for killing a grain dealer for a $2,000 fee. The smartly dressed llarrelson, iln- prisoned without a conviction lonser than any man in Texas history, shciwed no emotion Saturday but turned syrTI. pathetically to a niece who broke into tear! . ··1 ·m not going to help to cry,'' he said. "That's (the prison sentenc.-e) not so bad." Rice Getting Scarce Bonds' new car slan1med into the rear of a small foreign car driven by Frederick D. Hasse tt, 18, ol Saratoga, then smashed into the center divider on Whipple Road here, a spokesman said. Bonds was taken to San Mateo County Jail In Redwood City, where he was booked for investigation of drunken driv- ing and driving without a license. He was released on his o w n · recognizance about an hour after being booked, a county jail spokesman said. A hearing ls scheduled Scpl. JO. Outliouse Arson, Fla.res i1i Mesa Outhouse arsonists moved into Costa Me:ii:a Saturday and set fire to a portable toilet on a residential construction site, C..1s1a Mesa police reported. 95 ··- Erdulllw & l'ear Parts Guarantee T"-PtOIO•. pUmp, h.,..t, tt1!1rt wJ!llt 011tt11N1>on 1v1i.m, 11 .. t., '"" ~1111- butto>'ll •'• 011•fl>'llNd !or ~ ~1r1 on l'llOdti. SSlt1f. ss1•11 ll'ld SS/371. Wt o•v lo• •IOl1oetmtnt i.Dot Ouor'>O ll'lt llrai ~., 90 DAY CASH WITH ...,,IOYID CllDtT < Phone 548-7788 -@l l'UDl·IN SAU $35. ' HEADQUARTERS. II " ~ dill ~··" .... If Cot•• -.., c-.11,.,,. .. , ~,.... .,., ~ .,, .. """'1tlllr1 W ...... Q.U ,._.,."'' 1'!lt"""' llMJINlllMll .,,,., "'9fllflly. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Rice wholesalers in Chinatown say panic l)uying Is emptying 1'helves and forcing up prices, as some fragile Oriental wcincn arc hauling away SO.pound rice sacks through the narrow streets. The fi re, whi ch destroyed the wooden toilet valued at $200 but didn't touch sur- roundlng property, WIL1 shnlta.r to roar _case11 . .Dr arson Friday at Irvin~ con- stniction sites. Costa Mesa flremcn put out the small blaze at Sun!lowor A venue and Acacia Street. 1815 NEWPORT 'Bl VD. Down!Dwn COS.ta Mesi .............................................. $ ••••••••••••. r. f , \ \ ' ( ( I ' i I I I f