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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1975-06-23 - Orange Coast PilotSouthOBst Asian Opit•m Growers? MONDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 23, 1975 Y0L ... NO, '74, 2 SECTIONS, tt PAGES School Tragedy By ARTHUR R. VINSEL QftlleO.llr Piiot.._,. A double truck and trailer rig s lammed into a Fountain Valley day schoo1 van carrying 14 persons at a rural intersection in Irvine thi.s morning, killing one boy and injuring 13 others. The shattering impact burled the bus in an arc through the intersection, spewing pre-teenage children out doors and windows to the pavement. The dead boy was confirmed dead at the scene beneath a wheel of the giant Sully-Miller Contracting Company tr ue k and trailer rig. Wreckage of the Rough Riders Day Camp van crashed nose down in a watery irrigation ditch at Jef - frey and Barra nca roads, notfar from El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. Names of the dead a nd injured children from the d ay car e facility at 16596 Redwood Circle in Fountain Valley were not r eleased pending notification of their families. Investig ators at U:le sce ne did confirm the bus con- tained youngste rs aged six to 10 years old plus the 14· year-old junior counselor and the female driver iden- tified only a s Carolyn A. Conners. · " Truc k drive r James E. Bartley, 45, of Bell, was be- ing ques tioned at the scene by Irvine police and California Highway Patt·olofficers , (See COLLISION, PageA2) Files on Citizens ~barged by Tunney From Wire Services .. WASHINGTON -Sen. John ~oey (D-CaUf.}, said today dQplicdll of highly classified "'"1'811Rnt computer files on prtvate dlizcns may be stored in upcterground ca ves at a secret vernment complex in the pua mountains. unney said he understood dus>Jicate files ranging from the ¥1blf. cla11lfied Defense Depart· ioent s COINS computer system $0 Illes ke pt by the Internal JWyenue Service and the FBJ are _... at the Mt. Weather in· ..,n.uoa. located about SO miles """°Vt'11bington. ·,, 1'unney made the alle1aUons e.rtnl bis que1Uonln1 ol D. 0. .e•oke , deputy a ss is tant ..cre\ar)' of Defense, durln1 a ~ meettn1 of the Judiciary _.ommtttee on comUtuUonal rijhll and the ComnNrt.. aub- ·••mm l tt e e on eclenee and .aechnotoay. The t.eann1 was fflled &o fftveaUsate 1ovemment 1urvetUance tec:hnolo«Y · CoOke ••Id be ~oulcl cheek to .,. wbetber UMre are dupliclltft of more than 100,000 files on in· dividuals gathered by the Army during the civil disorders ot the late 1960s. Congress has been told ttiese files were destroyed. The system ref erred lo by Tun; ney, COINS, is designed to "ex· change class ified and hl8bly sen~itive foreign lntelliaence data among the Defe•e In· telligence Agency, National Security Agency and the Na· tional Photo Interpretation Center and within the Depart· · ment of Defense," a~cording to Cooke. Mt. Weather is one ol several under1round complexes set up ln the mountains around Wasbinltoo to house key pem· menl officials in case of foreign attack . Tunney 11ld he rears that the duplicate files at Mt. Weather mi1ht be .1ccn1lble to another computer tennlnal, u for exam· pie, one run by the White Houle. Delente Department offtdal• aald today that they have found no ev.ideftce that mllltary ln· telllleQ(• retained eomputerlaed CIM FILBI, P• Al) 0 Militant feminist Susan Saxe ple aded innocent to lint degree murder today in death of Boston police of- ficer kill~ during Brighton bank holdup in 1970. She was on FBI's 'Most· Wanted Lts t' b e fore capture in March. f!E ~LD BOAT IN PIL<Tr 'AD "An ad ln the Daily Pilot realty does pay Qff, I sold' mY. boat ... That•s·the success stoey. told by the Huntington Beach man who placed this classified ad in the Daily Pilot: , 16' GLA$SPAR, wnsHP Evlnrude. No trlr. $715. Pri pty: XXX·XXXX If ~ have a boat to sell, call 842·5878. It c;>nl)' . talu;s a few WOrdl in the ri1bt place to make a' sale. Alona the Oraftce Coast. Ule ript place le the Dalty Pilot. Tuition Bid Upheld WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court today upbeld la•• requlrln& uniYenity atu· denU to have lived ln a at.ate at le•t OM year before qualifylna for ....w.Dt tuition rates. . II.S. Retaining Secret Files On Individuals? 0 s rom --0 water Voted Off Court ·Rolls WASHINGTON (UPI) -The U.S. Supreme Court, ac~ing ·at the former· president's request, today struck the name of Ric ha rd M. Nixon from its roJI of attorneys admitted to practice there. The court's brief order said "the m otion of Richard M. Nixon of San Clemente, Calif., to r esign as a member of the bar of this court is granted and it is or- dered that his n ame be stricken from the r oll of a t- torneys admitted to practice before the bar of this COUit." Justices Willia m 0 . Douglas and Willia m H . Rehn- quist did n ot participate. . In a lette r da ted June 10 to the court cler k from "La Casa Pacifica'' in San Clemente. Nixon said : "Not having practiced law for seve r al years, and not intending to practice law in the future, I desire to and hereby resign from the bar of the Supre me Court of the United States, of which I am currently a member. Sin- cerely yours, Richard M . Nixon.'' During the time he was practicing law in New York following his d efeat fo r governor of Cali fornia, Nixon argued in the high court a major privacy case involv· ing Life m agazine . Newspaper Claim Agents 'Protected Asia Opium Fields' CIUCAGO (UPI> -American authorities pro tect ed hill tribesmen in Southeast Asia and helped them market their opium, some of it destined for the United States as heroin, the Chicago Daily News reported today, quot- ing a veieran na rcotics official. 1be narcoiics official, who was not ldedtitied, said during his last tour in Southeaai Asia he was.told "he was not to interfere with the growing of the poppy nor was he to try and stop the tarmers Crom selling raw opium to narcotics dealers," the News regort.ed in a copyriahted dispatch. The official satd that early in his two--year aaaignment he was summoned to Bangkok . Thailand, and waa briefed on American "field" policy toward the blll tribes by various ot. ftclab, lncludin& representatives o1 the. mm~. other aarcoUcs a1mu, pierobers ol American embauiea la 1 half doles\ coun· tri• and CIA aaenu . The 11ent'1 as1ipment was lo locale UM poppy fielck in the so- caUecl 10lden trianale of Laoe, Tballand and Burma where 10 percent or the world's opium used ln the manufacture of heroin lt 1rown. He 11ld at Use briel\na be w11 ahown a movle of .. aev•ral I • Americans walking through a poppy field, picking the flower that produces opium and smell· in it." ~me or the people at the meet- ing were in the film. "I asked them if they had burned the poppy field, they said. 'Oh we can't do that'." The policy of making friends with the tribesmen so they could be a buffer against Communist expansionism and help in in- telligence gathering then was ex· plained to him, he said. The 'agent said State Depart· ment and intelligence officials told bim his job or enforcement beaan at the "second level," after the farmer had sold bis crop to a narcoUcs dealer. Four Charged With Abuse BUTNER, N.C. (UPI> -Four attendants at the Murdoch ~ter for the Mentally Retarded have been charged with abusing severely relarded patJenu by bunlln& them with a cl1arette Uehter. The cbaraes i tem from the bumina of lf paUenll ranatnc ln ... from 26 to 40. E~ollow.ed _ . . . Illegal Orders? From Wire Services WASHINGTON -Sen. Barry Goldwater said today that the Central Intelligence Agency ''took orders from the top" in carrying out illegal a ctivities. The Arizona Republican. a m embe r o f the Senat e In· telligence Committee, said the panel's investigation will show the CIA did not want to do some of the things it did but fell obliged to follow orders. Goldwat er made the statement in the Senate as the committee arranged to call as a witness John Roselli, a West. Coast un· derworld fi gure and associate of slain Chicago mobster Sam Gian- cana in a r eputed plot against Fidel Castro. Roselli , scheduled to appear Tuesday in response to a sub- poen a. wa s expect ed to be quizzed about reports that he and Giancana were approached on behalf of the CIA to arrange for Mafi a members to assassinate Castro. Sen. Willia m Proxmire told Goldwa t e r it o ug ht to be established who was responsible for CIA misdeeds. Goldwater replied that tbe CIA "has done a highly commendable <SeeCIA; Page AZ) Ora~~; Ml~:··· We•••~r Local d.rizzles TuesdaJ' morning, accordinl to tbe i , weather service. Partial clearing by afternoon in· land areas. Cooler tem- peratures with highs of 62 rising to upper 60s inland. INSl•E TOD" Y T h• M.a r i n Coun ty coentroom •hootowt fiw years . ago thcit lcf t. a judgt!. Oftd thrtt «Mr ~sons dead, raulted from a plan br radicall to tru u .s. •pofilical prUonen,' .ac- cording to . a San Franciloo popff. See l fOf'll P.age A.S. l•tlex ....... Ata ........... _ ~· At or-..c.-e• A4 •• a..MM ...... .... .... c-ka IU ....... ,.,..., o-• •• ........... ,. . ..... NM6< .. •• ,... .... .. ............. ... ,....... ... .... ""'"" ... .. ---A4 ...... ,. . ........... Al ....... .. l 112 OM.VPILOT s Mondar,.Nne!?. 1875 er FOiled Ex-Laguna Aide' Escapes Unhurt · Laguna Beach bullder and former Plannln1 Commissioner Charles Benton was the victim of an attempted armed robbery by · a youthful hitchhiker who turnt!d · u .45 caliber automatic pistol on Be nton and demanded his billfold. Benton was unhurt in the lncl· dent Friday and 1pod away before the hitcbbiker could arab the billfold. Benton had t-06sed It onto the passenger side of the pickup truck after the youth left the vehicle. Benton told police that as he Fakery Needed? Doctors Urge Placebo Usiige CHICAGO CU Pl> -Bring l>ack the placebo. two Boston physi- crnns say in this week's issue of the Journal of the American .Medical Association. Calling the placebo effect "a neglected and berated asset or patient cure,'' the doctors, Herbert Benson and Mark Eps- tein, make their case for an aspect of medical practice that fell somewhat into disrepute dur- ing the 1950s. .. The existence of the placebo effect in the treatment of a varie- t y of disea ses i ~ a wel l- substantiated phenofhenon," the commentary said, "although it is unknown how much of the effect attributed to the placebo is in fact due to sPOntaneous changes in the diseasue process.'' Thev define the placebo as •·;rny ·therapeutic procedure which is given deliberately lo f. Power Plants have an effect, or unknowingly has an effect on a patient. symptom , syndrome or disease. but which is objectively without specific activity for the condition being treated ... " In other words, a placebo is not necessarily a fake drug but also can include any number of pro· cedures, mechanical or otherwise, to convince a patient his condition is improving. "A meaningful doctor-patient interaction is of utmost im- . portance, allowing the transfer of the patient's concerns to an acknowledged scientist and healer, the physician," the arti- cle said. IL said that physicians who have faith in the efficacy of their treatments communicate that enthusiasm and lend to be sue· cessful in producing positive placebo effects. Hazards Reported For Inland Sites SAC RAMENTO CAP> - Coas tal power plants. long a target of environmental groups, are less harmful to water than power plants alongside inland takes a nd s treams, a s tate waler agency says. Only when alternatives are "'environmentally undesirable or economically unsound" should power plants be cooled by inland fre s h wat e r. the W a t e r Resources Control Board said 1''riday. The statement was opp0sed by utilities, which said the board shou ld leave power plant siting to the state's new Energy Com: mission. It was supported by the De partment of Fish und Game and the Sierra Club. Groups like the Sierra Club h ave opposed locating nuclear power plants along the coast, ~aying they would damage of- fshore waters and marine life with dischargesofheated water. The water board conceded it 2Cosmonmus Mark Record MOSCOW <AP) -Two coi.monauts set a new Soviet en- durance record in space today as they circled the earth in the Salyut 4 space laboratory. Lt. Col. Pyotr Klimuk and engineer Vitaly Sevastyanov sur- passed the time mark of 29 days 13 hours and 20 minutes set by Aleksei Gubarev and Georgi Grech ko in January and February aboard the same re- .search station. Their r ecord. however, is far· short of the American record of 84 days set last ·year by Skylab astronauts. ORANGE COAST s DAILY PILOT RGbert N. Wffd Prtticlelll .,,., ""°''- Jack R. Curley Vice l"rKldefll e"" c;...,..., Mo1Wt9fr Thomas Keevll eo1to• Thomas A. Murphlne MoMOlllO l!Oilor Charl.S H. L OO\ R.lcherd P. Na'u .ll\M\t'°"I ~ .... 11\0 l•1an OfflCH ~··Me .. uow .. , .. ,,.~ ,.. .. _, .,.«,, an> .. •--1 le<Mw••• ......,.. •Hell.""~"'"' """'' ......... « .. ,,.,, ............... .. ~ .. ..,., .. ,, 2uo1u.,..,...,. ...... o .... ,,_,., • Te ....... ,. (7,., M2~t CUllllffM A~fl"'e M2-S671 ~,.., .... ., ...... OtffCle H1-6J10 , ..... s.c.-• 4tJ.06H ,,_, ~fll 0U4ttit Cffflt~ ~-· .... 1220 does not know all the hazards of putting power plants on the coast. But it added, "It appears the coastal mariner environment is Jess s u sceptible than inland waters lo the water quality im- pacts associated with power plant cooling." Fro'" Page Al COLLISION The injured were taken by ambulance relays from the dis- aster scene to both Santa Ana Community Hospital and Tustin Community Hospital. Some were treated at the scene and en route by paramedics from Orange County's Red Hill Station and Laguna Hills. The scene at the isolated in· tersection surrounded by tomato fields bore stark testimony lo the force of the 9 a .m. collision and the horror of its afterm ath as hysterical children dragged themselves along the pavement trying to find help. Impact of the broadside crash of the truck, southbound on Barranca Road and the day camp van, heading down Jeffrey Road toward El Toro MCAS flung open the van's rear doors. Chiidr en ·packed elbow-to· elbow on three wooden plank benches running the length of the van were hurled in all directions as the crumpled vehicle swerved off the pavement into the ditch.' One bench was ripped from its moorings and lay in the road nearby. while other items in· dicated how the day had begun for the Rough Rider Day Camp enrollees. Near the blanket-covered corpse beneath the massive truck wheel , lay a banana from somebody's lunch and one lone small blue tennis shoe. The dead boy 's face was covered with a checked jacket. One truck wheel came lo rest on top of a day camp staff mem· ber's printed manual, and the crumpled grill and shattered right front fender of the blf con- struction company truck showed the devastating force ol the ·col- lision. Skid marks from the truck's wheela stretched nearly 100 feet up Barranca Road from the point of impact in the tntenectlon, which is controlled by a f our·way stop sign . PoUce cars, CHP autos, paramedic vans and Oranae County Fire Department tnlckl -well over a dozen emerfency vehicles -clogged the lntersec· lion in which a canvas sheet had ~en unrolled to 1erve H a medical treatment cent« for tbe less seriously injured vktlrna. Police said most vtctlmt are belltved lO be from the Tultin· Sunta Ana area wilb one JOUth poulbly from Irvine. Emereency rooms at both hoepltals began bradni for the tnnux of the c Hualtl• wtMn t.tMy rttelved word of the number at vlctlm1 injured. They Included some vktlma belJeved to be In crttJe1l condition wilh muJtlpJe 1 rtous injuries. accordln1 to police. looked in the rear view mirror, he aaw the hitchhiker take a shooter's stance in the mlddle of the road and aim his gun. Ap· parenlly no shots were fired. On· comina traffic forced the bandit to nee on foot. Police searched for the man but were unable to flnd him. Benton said he had picked up the bltchhilcer at a bus at.op on the comer of El Toro Road and Moulton Parkway in Laguna Hilla. He said tho bandit appeared to be .. just a kid going to the beach." He was dressed in cutoff blue jeans and shirt. The hitchhiker appeared to be 17to19 years old and wore thick-lensed glasses. The hitchhiker asked Benton to stop the pickup truck just north of the Laguna Beach City Limits on El Toro Road. He exited the truck, pulled the .45 caliber pistol from his waist band and de- manded the buUder turn over his wallet. Benton said he tossed the billfold onto the passenger side of the seat, and then gunned the truck before the youth could grab the billfold. Fro•PageAJ CIA .•• job" but unfortunately is losing intelligence contacts in other countries because of what he called unwarranted assaults on the agency by the press and news media. Proxmire replied ,that •'ex- posure of abuses by the press is constructive and useful." He said the CIA has engaged in activities that cannot be justified, but that 80 to 90 percent of its activities h ave been "absolutely essential." ' It would be "foolish and dangerous" to abolish the agen· cy, Proxmire declared. Giancana, who also had been expected to testify, was shot to death in his home in a Chicago suburb last week. Al so expected to testify is William K. Harvey, a former CIA official who reliable sources have said was involved in plots lo kill Castro. Central Intelligence Agency in· volvement In the slaying of Gian- oana bas not been ruled out, ac- cording to Chicago police. Some investigators have said they believed the underworld likely killed Giancana lo keep him from talking to a federal grand jury investigating crime syndicate operations around the world. A Cook County grand jury in- vestigating the slaying of Gian· cana is expected (o subpoena several lop crime syndicate figures this week. Cook County State's Attorney Bernard Carey said his office planned to subpoena crime syn- dicate' leaders who auended a coming home party in suburban Oak Park the night Giancana was slain. Giancana had been mentioned as the mastermind of a CIA plot to kHl Cuban Premier Fidel Castro. Oak Park police deputy chief investigator Harold D. Fitzsimmons said "the possibili· ty that the CIA was involved in his death has not been ruled out." Iowan Leads Campaign for Dirty Muvies BURLlNGTON, Iowa <UPI) - "Mickey Mouse for Kids -Linda Lovelace for adults" says one sign planted in the yard of-a 26· year old Burlington factory worker. Another sign in the same yard says, "Happiness Is Having an X·Rated Movie House!' The algns were erected by Blll Mosher, who la sta1ing a cam- paign lO counter a pet.1Uoo drive by a local church ·youth aroup agalnat the eatabllahment of an adult .. X·rated" movie theater here. The Burlington City Council has be9un work on an obscenity ordinance which would kill plans for the adult theater adjoining a downtown youth center, and Mo.her fear• the ch~h oppoel· lion will prompt the council to pa11 the meHul"e. The 1lrn1 have drawn various reaction• from pel"IOnl pa.ulna Mo1her'1 home and be 11ld. "I've had all klnda ol ~mmenu: people hoot1n1 and ho&Jerinl •nd chffrtn1 me on, others .iftDa me thumbe down and one tidy citove by and called me aick." Bridge Suicide SAN PRAMCISCO <UPI) '-A Unlveralt)' of Nevada atuo.nt baa bffome tb• l49lll known 1ulcJde otl t.be Golden Gate Brtd1e. · RQbett R . Kennedy, JO, jumped tol1I deatb Saturday. • { It's a Bike Tree UPITt~o Marsha Giuterrez prepares to remove her bicycle from "bike tree" in downtown Eugene, Ore. Sunday. The "'tree" is made from hand-bent steel and welded together to provide storage for si~ t~ 10 bikes. The •·tree., is an invention of Tom .Bonflett1 and Ed Segen who cycled to Oregon from their home in Santa Clara. Ladies Decorating Skin With Tattoos PORTLAND, "ore. <AP) - "Death Before Dishonor" on the bulging biceps of sailors is on the wane at Portland's only tattoo shop. Delicate flowers and but· terflies on women are in. Operators of the Portland Tat· too Studio say the number of their women customers has sk~rocketed in J.he last five years, so that women now ac- count for half the studio's bus i· ness. "And they're not the Rosie the Riveter type of gals," said store manager Howie S t e inhart. "They come from all walks of life. They are young busi- nesswomen, secretaries. college students. "We recently had a mother and daughter who wanted the same tattoo on the up~r shoulders of their backs. We even had in a grandmother and grarlddaugfiter for matching tattoos." 5 More Die BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) -Northern Ireland's civil war has taken the lives of five more men, two Protestants and three Roman Catholics. In nearly all cases the women want their tattoos small, colorful and on parts of the body which generally arc covered -inner thighs, breasts, backs and but- tocks. Steinhart's wife, Bernice, and Dec Brown, wife of store owner Duke Brown, handle all the women's art work. A small tattoo costs $10 lo S2S and takes only 15 to 30 minutes to put on. Distaff Pair Conduct Rite OBERLIN, Ohio CAP) -Two women priests celebrated com· munion again despite Episcopal Church action against the male pliest who invited them to lead the worship service. The Revs. Alison rheek and Carter Heyward conducted the Sunday service in Christ's Episcopal Church two days after the Rev. L. Peter Beebe was found guilty by a church court of breaking his priestly vows and church laws by allowing them to conduct a similar service Dec. 8. r ..... r..,Ai FILES ..• ma on civlllans or that tbe IOY· ernment created o vast elec- tronic network contalnlnl In- form all on on millions of Americank. "We in the Depart~ent of Defense are not in and do not intend to get Into the bustnea of surveilling American cltilens who hove no affiliation with the department,'• Cooke said. Cooke was responding to al· legations that military in· · telligence retained civil dis- turbance files ordered destroyed in 1970 and 1971 and that· tbe Defense Department was a kef, participant in a project desl1ned: to interconnett government dat" banks. On June 13, the Defense Department sent a memoran- dum to Congress saying that it had found 9,200 documents in its files on the activities of American citizens more than four years after the records were suppased to have been destroyed. The statem ent said action was being taken to elimi.nate th~ files and indicated their. continued presence had been an oversight. Girl Prevems Lover's· Death PITTSBURGH (UPI) -A IS-year-old girl talked her boyfriend out of jumping from a downtown bridge by yelling: "Do you want it so the kid won't even know its father?'' · Mike Dingus, 16, a runaway from a youth correction center. began to squirrp and then climbed down from the struc- ture. Police later confirmed that Cathy Shiffhauer was pregnant. Dingus climbed the bridge Saturday and threatened to jump into the Monongahela River because he had argued with the girl. He told authorities: "If she ain't here in nine minutes, I'm not coming down the way you want me to." Film Buffs Net Funds SAN DIEGO CAP) Two men sat through the movie, "Jaws," before robbing the theater of $13.000. An usher and a mov- iegoer were forced into a i.toakroom when the Fashion Valley Theater was nearly empty Sunday. Manager Barry Berlin's secretary was taken hostage but released in the building when the robbers fled. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--- ·-·-, ~ .~I ·~.;;·-:--.~ • • Mariners gives you up to " s1,soo tax deduction this year. •• · ... AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND AT MARINERS, WITH "IRA " -THE INDIVIDUAL RE- TIREMENT ACCOUNT. Mariners Individual Retirement Account is a personal tax-sheltered retirement plan. 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With a m11lmum lna1v1f!u1/ contriOul•on of S 1500 •ech y11r. ,.,,,,., how your monev ""/// gro""· WITH TAX WITHOUT EX TA A SHElTEAEO TAX MO HEY IRA SHELTERED FROM TAX AFTER PLAN PLAN OEFEAAAl 5 yrs. s 9,510 8,730 $ 2.780 10 yrs . 23,540 15,750 7,790 20 yra. 74,6-40 65,8'0 30,5e0 30 yra. 185,550 ~.030 90,520 'A~ llgurM •re beted on1U "o Income b<lcll\J. 11.o.t"lf regu1a11ona requlfe tubetan11a1 pena1t1• l0t H rly wltharawal1 rrom airllllate account• 0 le1AA ..... (O--.Mt. "nol Hcnplfol) 1741 lewerlr tlvd. ()13) 657-4141 .. No Takers Yet UPITelepMte Donald Kizzee, 44, a florist who is single, advertises for wife on busy street in San Francisco. He decided to ad- vertise personally when he became lonely on the recent death of a female companion. He thought this personal advertisement was less expensive than a newspaper ad. So far, he admits, there have been no offers. Viet Fishing Town Asked by Refugees By Associated Press A Vietnamese fishing village transplanted to a site on the Southern California coastline. · That's what refugees from the 1ishing village of Phuoc Tinh say :could happen in six months if the United States government is will- )ng to give them home and boat building supplies and living ex- fpenses for the peribd. f Some ep mell\bers of au ~inate<t .s,000 Vietnamese fis- Jlerman and their families made the proposal at a meeting ~nday {in Refugee Camp 4 at ·camp rPendleton. ~ Nguyen Van Nhac , a 6pokesman for the group, said bis group would like to see re- fugees of fishing villages now 'Scattered in camps throughout the United States, Guam and :Wake Island, brought together to live in the proposed village. Lim Thi Than, the wife of a fis· herman, said they could build the * * * boats they would need because one of their fellow refugees was a master boat-builder in South Vietnam. But other refugees think the idea is unfeasible. "The fishermen are not well· educated," said Huynh Kim An, who said he owned two fishing boats in South Vietnam worth a total of $.58, 000. "Th~y would be better of! eccinomlcally U' they split~ Md worked for an and learned from American fishermen," An added. Bat Luong Thanh, who said he worked previously for the Viet- nam Directory of Fishers, felt the transplanted fishing village idea might work in Latin America. He said Vietnamese fishermen were used to fishing in shallow waters and they would have to adjust to machin.ery for deep· water commercial fishing in the United States. * * * 'Smiling, Happy' 164 Ref~gees Set For Asian Return Al the end of a Jong ordeal that jnvolved escaping the Com- munists, traveling to a strange land on crowded boats and planes and being shuCfied from camp to camp, 164 Vietnamese refugees arrived at Camp Pendleton Sunday to reverse the process and return to their Asian homeland. Two military C141s, the sam e pl~nes that brought many of tbe refugqes to the United States, brougbt the refugees from Ft. Chaffee, Ark., to this Southern Canine-saving Captain Free CAMDEN, N.J . (UPI) - Schooner captain Cyril Labrec- que has been released on $5,000 bail after pleading innocent to charges he caused the deaths of two Connecticut men by forcing them out of "9 lifeboat to make room for his dog arter a shipwreck. Labr4'cque , formerly a Connec- ticut resident and now of Santa .Ana, wH indicted for allegedly ignortog the pleas of three men hangtng onto the sides of an 11· toot lifeboat to throw his 80-pound doC overboard lo make room for 'them. · Bradford Blakely, 20, and Paul sa,arino , 19, both of Wethel"atleld,· Conn., died alter spending nine hours in the frigid watert drifting orf Atlantic City, N.J .• alter tbc schooner .. Sadie and Edgar" sank Jan. 28.197•. . The dog, an ll·yeal'·Old Labrador retriever named ... Har- per." aurvlv1'4 lhe voya.ao, but hpaincedled. California Marine base to begin the process or repatriation. A base spokesman said they appeared "smiling, quiet and happy" when they arrived. All were given quarters and meal cards and were integrated with the rest of the refugees here who are waiting to get out. "There h ave been no de- monstrations so far and ever· ything is peaceful," a Pendleton spokesman said. "Since all ofthe refugees have made their ap- plication5 for repatriation through the United Nations, our job is merely as a bousekeeper to provide them with a place to slay." A fight broke out between two Vietnamese refugees who ac· cused each other of being Com· munists early Sunday at the Arkansas refugee center. False Teeth Cause a Rush MANKATO, Minn. (UPl> -A pair or Calle teeth flushed down a toilet has become a Joke to some but a larfe bother to the local aewa1e plant. The dentures were salvaged a~ the 1ewa1e plant and a story ap-• peered ln the Mankato Free Press, on the front page. It lfflDI a lot O( people lose their falae teeth Uda way because the 1ewa1e plant was nooded wiU1 calls. Cars llnfd up at lhe plant at a rate. Tben neighbors around the plant beaan calUng to complaJn about the racket. The nlgb\ operator at lbe plant gave up and went home. Ralph Rader, chief operator of the plant, aald his phone rang all night wltb people lookin& for their teelb.. ~.June23.1975 DAIL v PILOl' A3 ., Work for Weifare ead • Brouin Letting Reagan Progra~ Run Out SACRAMENTO CUPJ) -The Brown admlniatraUon plans to terminate lormer Gov. Ronald Reaaan'a cootroversiaJ work.for. welfare pro;ram one week from tod•Y· A IO·tal.led "crown Jewel". or Rea,an•a 1971 welfare reform, the three-year eitperimental pro. Ject orlglndlly was touted u a potenUal model for the nation. But last year It . became a larget of harsh legislative ' criticism. A bUl repealing the program was passed but Reagan . vetoed it. Now Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. 's aides are allowing the pro- ject to die quietly, it bas been learned. But they are reluctant to issue official judgments on the experiment, at least until final statistics are compiled. The administration has re· quested that the Legislature pro- vide no appropriation to continue the program, which will automatically eitplre Juna 30. Lawmakers obliged, and no fund· ing is contained in the proposed state budcet. "We are terminating the pro- rram because it officially ends then," eaid a .spokesman. "It 'fas design~ to be a three·yea:r pro- aram and we have left lt that way." The concept of the community work experience prog_ram, nicknamed work·for·welfare or workfare, was that able·bodied recipients should be required to tak~ part-time work assignments to keep their wetrare checks -if other avenues had been explored, such as job placement and train· J.ng. If a recipient refused, he or she was to be removed from the welfare rolls. Democratic legislators and poverty ltwrers called it "slave labor." The program, which cost tax· payers more than $400,000, never expanded to the extent origmally expected by the Reagan ad· ministration. There were only 9,565 work assignments during the three years up until last month, and some recipients re· 'Ceived more than one assign- ment.« Fewer than 1,500 recipients were "sanctioned" -told they had no ••good cause" for refusing to accept work assignments. A smaller but unknown number 1>f w.elf are recipients were actually dr<?~ped from the rolls. Officials suspect that some pot.ent~al recipients dropped their bid for a relief check when they learned they might have to accept a menial job to keep their government subsidy. But no statistics to prove this claim are available. ''I would doubt that there is any way to specifically attribute a decline in welfare rolls to· Drive·in Ban Nixed Giant Screen Nudity OK'd bx High Co~ WASHINGTON <UPI> -The U.S. Supreme Court today, on a 6-3 vote, struck down a Jackson- ville, Fla., ordinance banning the showing or bare breasts and but· tocks on drive·in movie screens visible from public places. Richard Erznoznik, manager of the University Drive·in Theater, brought the case to the higbcourt. He was char ged with violating the ordinance after showing the movie "Class or 74." The pro- secution has been delayed pend- ing a ruling by the court on the constitutionality or the or· dinance. The court split 6 to 3 in the case, with Jus tice Lewis F . Powell Jr. speaking for the ma- jority. Dissenters were Chief Justice Warren E . Burger and Justices William H. Rehnquist and Byron R . White. The city's main argument had been that the ordinance protects citizens against unwilling ex- posure to materials that may be offensive. But Powell said "much that we encounter off ends our esthelic, if not our political and moral, sensibilities. ··Nevertheless, the Constitution does not permit the government to decide which types of otherwise protected speech are sufficiently offensive to require protection for the unwilling listener or viewer,•' he said. In all but a very narrow set of circumstances it is up lo the viewer to look the other way, the opinion said. It said Jacksonville is discriminating among movies solely on the basis of content with the effect of preventing drive·in theaters from showing any nudi- ty "however innocent or educa· tional." Powell also rejected argu. ments that the ordinance pro· tects children and acts as a traffic regulation. Powell said the court does not make light of the legitimate in- terests asserted by the city but holds only that the rule in its pre· sent form ''does not satisfy the rigorous constitutional standards that apply when government at· tempts to regulate .expression.· l "When First Amendment freedoms are at stake we have repeatedly emphasized that pre- cision of drafting and clarity of purpose are essential," he con- cluded. . Burger, in an opinion for himself and Rehnquist, accused the majority of adopting a "rigid· ly simplistic approach." He said the huge screen is a "unique vis· ~al medium" and the films pro- Jected on it by "the combination of color and animation against a necessarily dark background" hold the attention of all ob· servers. "I think it not unreasonable for law~akers to. believe that public nudity on a giant screen, visible a ni ght to hundreds of drivers . : . may h~ve a tendency to divert attention from their task and cause accidents." he said. Burger said the owner of a drive·in can show nonobscene films involving nudity if he "ef- fectively shields the screen from public view.'• To Solve ProfJletns CWEP." Bill Hamilton, an Employment Development Department official who over· sees lbe program, said In an ln..,1 terview. •J 'lh Although the rolls did decline ror most of the experiment in tbQ 35 counties where the experimen\f was conducted, they also' dwindled in other California co unti es whi c h did not participate, Hamilton said. Investigators for the U.~ Department of Health, EducL lion and Welfare, which granted the Reagan administration a waiver to conduct the experi- ment, concluded the program had "fallen far short ol the ex· pectations'' announced by., Reagan ai~es. "Most of the assignments are menial, and little training otr supervision is provided," the federal investigators found. .. UPIT ......... Starry-eyed Only a 2nd lieutenant, Terry Moreau might be bucking for star rank, right? Stars in eyes actually are reflect· ed from insignia on hood of jeep. OC, Avco Pact Drafted UPITel .... o Slow Drop Alan Greenspan, chairman of council of economic ad- visers, says that while the recession has bottomed out, unemployment will not decline until the fall -and then slowly. Huntington Child Killed BEAVER, Utah <UPI> -A three·month-old baby was killed Sunday and his parents injured when the Huntington Beach family's car rolled on Interstate 15 in Southern Utah. The Utah Highway Patrol said Michael Anderson, the infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Loren T. An· derson of Huntington Beach, died in the sunrise crash near the North Beaver Interchange. The baby and his mother, Kathryn, 20, were thrown from the vehicle as it rolled. Mrs. An· dcrson was listed in serious con· ditlon at the Milford Hospital and her husband was ln fair condi· lion. Highway patrol troopers said Anderson, 23, af.parently fell uleep at lbe whee . Pope Paul 'Firm' VATICAN ClTY (AP> -Pope . Paul VI t.old lhe College of Cardinals today that abortion, artlfldal birth control and euth anasia 3re assaults perpetrated by modem society ''ln the name of mtJunderst.ood freedom tbal off ~nds God and de· bases man." The county counsel's office has drafted a pact between the Orange County government and Avco .Commynity Developers to solve problems at Niguel Beach Park. The agreement has been sent to Avco oificials for consideration. Supervisor Thom as Riley said their signature will "guarantee completion of the park by spring of next year." The supervisor, whose district incl_udes the beach just north of Dana Point, said if Avco fails to agree to the new pact, legal action may be the county's only re· course. "If Avco doesn't execute the agreement as presented, or in substantially the same form, completion of the beach facility will be further delayed with lengthy legal action being the only possible remedy available," Riley said. A spokesman for Avco said Fri· day the pact has not been re· viewed and no comment would be made until study is completed. The county agreed to buy the beach park, which includes the old Sall Creek Beach area and the strand in front of the exclusive - Dirty &Joks BeingCwsed ST. LOUIS. Ill. (UPI> -Of· Cictals in suburban Vinita Park acted to close the Reading Room, a storefront business where young women in scanty outfits read dirty books to customers paying $24 an hour. City officials, unhappy about the growing papnlarity of the en· terprise, decided at a special meeting or the Board or Aldermen to seek a court lnjunc· • Uon to close the business and also enacted an antl·obscenity or· dinance. Patrons at the Reading Room were entertained by being read passages from such works as "Teen.age Hooker" or "caged Hooker." Opcralor Allen H. Solomon said he beard about sueh busineucs on the West Cout and began hls next door lo his locksmith shop. Chandler-Sherman mobile home park. in 1971 for $1. 7 million. At the time, Avco agreed to con· struct beach park improvements by 1973 at a cost of a bout $884,000. "Problems began on this pro- ject when ~onstruction of the park was tied to residential develop· mentof Avco's adjacent property but the residential project ran in- to problems with the coastal com· mission, 11 Riley said. "The result was that the beach park project today stands only partiaiiy compieted an~ is ex· periencing severe vandalism pro· blems, 11 he said. •·Additionally, the park has not been properly m aintaine d because the county cannot accept it in its present condition." Riley said the coastal com- mission has informed the county: that no special permits are needed by Avco to build restrooms, concession st.ands, landscaping, fencing, lighting and paving in the park area. Those were some of the require- ments laid out in the original deal between the county and Avco. Riley said the new pact requires that work be completed within six months of signature. Court Orders More Death Penalty Talk WASHINGTON <UPI) -The U.S. Supreme Court today or· dered more arguments next term in a North Carolina case testing the constitutionality of capital punishment. · The brief order said only that the case will be restored to the court's calendar for reargument. The action means it could be as long as another year before at least 283 persons on death row in 25 states learn whether they will be put to death. Although the high court has at least 23 capital punishment cases pending on its docket, last fall it selected only one as a vehicle for ruling on whether the death penalty is "cruel and unusual punishment." That case was an appeal by Jesse Thurman Fowler, convict· ed of murder in Raleigh, N.C., alter he fatally shot an acquain- tance following a gambling argu- ment. The justices gave no reason for not ruling on Fowler's case this term. The action could mean the justices are strongly divided on the issue and feel they need more time to consider their decision . Another possibillty is lhe effect of limited participation by Justice William 0 . Douglas, who has been hos pitalized in New York recovering from a stroke. The other eight jusUc:es, it closely divided, could prcler to postpone a ruling until Douglas is fully able lo debate the capltal punishment issue in the court's weekly conf erencc. The Supreme Court nded S lo 4 in 1972 that the death penalty was unconstitutional as then applied. It said there were too many ways for some to escape death while others did not, resulting in a "freakish" or "arbitrary" ap-1 plication of the Jaw. 1 I No one has been legally execut. ed in the United States since Luis , Monge, 48, of Denver was put to' death in Colorado's gas chamber June 2, 1967, for killing his wife and three of his 10 children. Most of the Supreme Court ap-1 peals, including Fowler's, were 1 supported by the Legal Defense• FundoftheNAACP. I His Co-star Steals Show MIAMI BEACH (UP() -tt may have been stage fright or a , hostile audience, but whatever it was, Joe Savage's show business partner didn't seem to like the way things were going on stage. , A 16·foot python, which Savage uses in his "nature play" nightclub act, wrapped itself tighUy around the entertalner·s neck and squeezed him into un- consc lou s n es s in front of a , shocked and surpriu d audience Saturday night. SU>gehands wr~Ued the snake off Savage, wbo wu waled and 1 released al a local~~tal. 1 .., don't undera wbat hap- pened," Sava,e said. 1 -'• - 1 I • f· SCHOOL DAZE: It is now known that while s chool was clos· ing for au the kids and nnal grades were being passed out, the same sort of thing was hap· pening in Orange COWllY govern· mertt. The county's Ch ief Ad· ministrative Officer Bob Thomas was quietly writing up report cards on each of his department chiefs. The grades were to be quietly shuffled over for perusal by the parents -in this case, the • Board of Supervisors. t Alas, the whole thing leaked c out into the public view. • So now everybody knows that 'Thomas gr a ded his top aides on a 'scale of 1 to 5 with a 3.0 assigned ' 4:lS "the st andard." f Most of us understand grades 'better when t hey are calculated t A through F . So if Thomas gave a ' county officer 3.0, we would ) figure he got a C. If he or she got ) below 3.0. that person would be in J a touch of dimcu lty. ' COUNTY PROBATION or. ~ !icer Margaret Grier is ap- = parently in a touch or difficulty : with t eacher. She got a 2.7 - : lowest gr ade handed out by Chief ' Administrator Thomas. ~ I t re·m ains difficult to tell I whether a 2.7 grade is a C-minus I or a D-plus but that probably t isn't too important. It was the : bottom, any way you view it. • In the written part of the report : card, Thomas put the knock on : Miss Grier for, a mong other ~ things, having personnel policies ! where in she harassed people who : •'rock the boat." Long-time observers o r the county scene have noted that Miss Grier has been, in recent times, tilting a lot of vessels herself around the County Seat. She has tangled with the Board of ;-Supervisors and the aforemen- tioned Mr. T homas. f THUS WE HAVE the irony ) here of the county chief saying he ! doesn't like h is boat-rocker • because she doesn't like boat- ; rockers. j You have to suspect that it all f depends on whose boat is getting t rocked. 1 Well, in comp arison with Miss ' Grier's 2.7 grade, we h ave at lite • top of the class county Environ· mental Management Agency • Director George Osborne who , drew a 4.4 grade out of the 5.0 i possible. You guess good old 1 George ~ot an A. ! Osborhe's grade should also be reassuring to the citizens who • now know the environment has to ; the okay because the guy in • barge of it got an A. RIGHT U P THERE with • Osborne is Orange County Airport Director Robert ~ Bresnahan who got a 4.2, which ~ must be roughly an A-minus. ,..Thomas l aud ed Bresnahan for his tight budget controls and out· standing efforts to control noise a t Orange County Airport. That j ust shows how you can get fooled when teacher passes out the grades. All this ti me, residents or Costa Mesa and Newport Beach, who Jive below the jet takeoff pattern, figured that Bresnahan was los· ing th e battle on his noise homework. He was struggling with it. burning midnight oil and I fighting to keep his head above .-an El F1unko. J • I I 1 ' • ' THE ANTl-J ET noise faction figured Bresnah an would be Jucky to escape with a D minus. And Jo, b e comes out aJmost at the head of the class. It just goes to prove you should never try to outguess the teacher . British, Saigon Set Ties J.ONOON CU PI> -Britain and the new Communist government of South Vietnam have agreed to establish diplomatic relations and to open embassies in each other's capital, the foreign office said today. The announcement, released simulta'neous ly in London and Saigon, said they also will ex- cha nge ambassadors "in due course." The announcement said Bri- tain and the Provisional Revolu- tionary Government of South Vietnam "are firmly of the belief that relations between t heir countries will develop favorably." BRITAIN RECOGNIZED the Provisional Revolutionary Gov- ernment of South Vietnam on May 12, little more tha n a week after the April 30 Communist vic- tory. In other developments: -Three hundred military policemen were flown from Vien- tiane to the Commu n is t - controlled northeastern section of Laos today to s tart a lengthy "political seminar" and ob·. servers said the Communist Pathet Lao revolution appeared to be entering a new phase. Patbet Lao g u ards. meanwhile, continued to man their posts inside t he grounds or the American charge d'affaires' home, despite continued protests by the U.S. Embassy. At the same time, the foreign ministry notified the American Embassy that U.S. consular of· ficials would not be allowed to visit Rosemary Conway, 35, of San J ose, and Chicago, who has been detained by police s ince June 5, while interrogation of the former teacher continued. -U.S. ADMINISTRATION sources said the North Viet· .namese a nd Viet Cong have been fighting Cambodian forces in border regions and seem to be preparing for clashes in Laos. where the Communist Pathet Lao now dominates the govern· ment. Stones Open. With a Bang In New York NEW YORK (UPI ) -Amid a rising crescendo of steel drums a nd congas, the Rolling Stones opened the first or six sellout con. certs at Madison Square Garden Sunday night. S und ay night's openin g performance was the 14th of 58 concerts in 31 cities over three months in North a nd South America. The evening began with rock· ing bands of steel drum troubadors and four other West Indian orchestras scattered around the stage, producing more noise than music, but con- tributing to the desired hypnotic effect. After mor e than a hour of percussion, multi-col ored flashing lights a nd deafening noise, the 20,000 mostly young fans grew impatient. Booing, clapping a nd chants of "We Want the Stones" drowned out what re· rnained of the opening act's music. Happy Ending Mr. and Mrs. Pierre Bonnet are reunited with children Ingrid, 3, and Hubert, 6, in Belgium. Youngsters w~re found unharmed in telephone booth 24 hours ~ter k1d- naping from vacation home. No ransom was paid. 'Plot' to Kill Sadat Told In Newsweek NEW YORK (UPI > -Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy of· fered George Habash, leader of the Marxist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, $16 million t o assassinate Egyptian Presiden t Anwar Sad a t , News week magazine reports in its current edition. The magazine, citing Egyptian intelligen ce officials as the source for the story, said Habash had readily accepted the offer. It did not say when the offer was made. "If we can penetrate the heart of Tel Aviv. you can imagine how much easier it will be in Cairo or Alexandria," Habash s aid, ac- cording to Newsweek. In other developments: -I srael h as offered Egypt a land corridor to the Abu Rudeis oil field in the Sinai desert in an al· tempt to e liminate a key obstacle to an interim Middle East peace agreement. ·-Nearly 2,000 more Pales ti- nian guerrillas have entered Lebanon from Syria in recent weeks and P aleslinians trained as pilots a re fl ying with Arab air forces, Israeli military sources said today. The sources said in Tel Aviv that the Palestinians affiliated with guerrilla organizations ha~e brought into Lebanon from Syna Soviet-made 122mm artillery, antitank missiles and the porta· ble surface-to-air -missile. the SAM7. Doily Pilot DetiY«y Is Gvar0tttHCI Monday-Friday: If you do not tlave your paper by 5.30 p m .. call before 7 p m. and your copy will be de- hvered. Saturday and Sunday: II you do not receive your cooy by 9 a.m. Satur· day, or 8 a.m. Sunday. call before 10 a m. and your copy w ill be delivered. Clr~o.T1lepha11 You Stay Home. You have it all planned. Bicycle to the beach. A whole day out-of- doors. Fresh Air. Beautiful scenery. . Plenty of exerme. And a two-penny nail in your bike tire lets the air out of your day. It Can Happen To You. A flat tire can leave you stranded. At home. On a lonely road. On a busy highway. Or six steep hills from the next air pump. Bykfil Prevents Rats. Have your tires "BykF1l'd" and you'll never have a flat (Or a long walk.) BykF1l is a polyurethane com- position. W e inject it into your qike's tires to replace the air. It sets-up overnight. to a soft. resilient rubber. ' RoCkefeller Pianel. Testimony Q-,µ>ted CHICAGO (U Pl) -The Chicago Tribune reported today that testimony aiven to the Rockefeller Commission h•s shown that the National Secur'fty Agency tuned in' on a massive Sov · iet KGB eavesdroppi~g ca.m· paign on Americans, mcludmg congressmen. The newspaper said the dis- closure prompted invesUg~ons ·by both the White House and a congressional committee to ~e­ termine how much informabon was gathered, how it was used and what, if anything, was done by the United Stat~s intellige'!ce agencies t o stop the Soviet monitoring. THE MONITORING, conduct· eel mainly through long-dista nce telephone calls, was detailed in a section of the Rockefeller report which Rockefeller himself wrote, the Tribune s aid. The White House then heavily censored it .. for national security reasons." Solid Comfort. BykFil is formulated to give the same, smooth riding characteristics as air. In fact. you can think of it as "rubber air." And BykFil' adds very little to the weight of the average bike. You don't even notice it's there . Glass, Nail-Proof. You can drive nails through BykFil'd tires. Or ride over glass or sharp metal. And keep going. There's no air to escape. So your tire can't go flat Any Bike. BykFil isn't just for new bikes. Or just for racing bikes. Any tire can be "BykFil'd.•" New or old. ActNow. Just bring your bike into one of th~ authorized BykFil dealers listed below . Some key c'ongressmen, th~ Tribune said, h ave been told some details or the Soviet es· pionage capability and are now privately questioning why they weren 'l told long ago. "Apparently we were beinl spied on by Russia!ls and ou.r own intelligence agencies knew about it and didn't tell us," the 1tory quoted one senator. ONE SOURCE TOLD \be Tribune that an esUmate on the number of calls monitored by the Soviets ranged into the ·•hoo· dreds of thousands, even millions · of telephone conversations:" One source told the Tribune that the Soviets had intercepted, identified a nd recorded over 100 000 calls from the Capitol and oth~r key government offices. An unconfirmed report by the source said that e v e r y m e mber of Congress had been caugh~ by the Soviet system at one ttme or another . You'll have to leave it for 24 hours. But you'll ride away knowing you'll never have a flat. And you'll never have to stay home just be- cause of a two-penny nail. BykFil is a polyurethane c~­ position that takes the place of air in Bykfil . your tires. It ls injected as a fiquid through the air-valve and forms a soft-but-solid core in your tire. •1mpo11arn nolicc: BykFdcamot be used In ti<cll.Jbe, th.it c.innot hold a.r or in t·r~ rt.at have been filled w1tn a seJlant. m Most Orange County Areas 64Z-4JJI Northwest Huntington Beach. and Westminster •••••••• 540-1220 San Clemente, Capistrano Beach, San Juan Capistrano, /.f~ .. v•'ftc~ J;\)itl ~p .. Tu·ir •• C,\L ·---------------------------··--·----------------;---------·-···--·-• Cut out and complete this Win a "Bylcfil'd" 1~. • • I Dana Poinl. South Laguna. Laguna Niguel •••••••••• OS.0630 coupon. Take it into your local. authorized BykF1I dealer. I • Name--------------------------------------------~• • • I ' ' ' J ' I Storm Hits Chicago Every two weeks until Aug· ust 4th, we'll draw names and ~ve away free a 10·speed light· weight racing bike. "BykF11'd," of course. • • ' I f ' ' I ' t f I I ' I • f .. Tho wands at Beaches Taken by Surprise Tft9pn•t•res .... tN~'lfOW ~ ... ~~ttOWfO llOW" '"9M r"110td fl'om " to 10• wt11i. the ~, deMr'tt ,..~.-111-. lfiWll " .... · 11.s. s-••rw Moft NII IOO,OCIO De"4M"S floclledto CNuer• tiitt<ti.• tcw rolfot ''*" IM fW«ef Ult first off I< lot uy of -~y, 11\A lftellY WOf'I CO"lllt 1111' -by•~ ••• ,,,.,. Tllo ttorm llf'M\Ked 111411...if!O'I Mii/i l\tll t...a ~t llofnel domootd MCI .......... , . If .. I Jiii.i O Umplt Of flMI IMIU-.i; '""''"°' foy tllet bro110111 1111111· Winner need not be present Phone--------------------------------------------- 0 CDP 6/23 -------------------------------------------··--·-···-----------------·-···· Bykfil is available exclusively at the followins stores: BALBQA BEACH BICYCLES 806 East Balboa Blvd. Balboa: 675·n82 ISLAND BIKE SHOPPE 505 Park AvenuP Balboa; 675-1389 CQSIAMESA CAMSHA BICYCLE CO. 631 Paularlno Costa Me-sa: m -2no COSTA MESA BIKE SHOP 1511 West Baker Costa Mesa; 540-0211 CYCLE WORKS LTD. 1822 Newport Blvd. Costa Mesa; 5'48·5783 HARrS SPORTING GOOOS 538 C.enter Cosu Mesa; 646·1919 . lWO WHEEL TRANSIT AUTHORITY 1884 Pl1tent.1a Costa ~; 645·8370 El TORO STOKES SPOKES NEWPORT CYCLER'( BICYCLES ETC. 224 5th Street 2116 New~ Blvd. 24844 Muirlands Huntington Beach; 536·6940 Newport ch: 675·1700 El Toro: 581 -4310 IRVINE NEWPORT HEIG~ El TORO CYCLERY SUNDANCE BICYCLES BIKE SHOP 23710 El Toro Road 18092 Culver Dnve 371 North Newport Blvd. El Toro: 581·2030 552 9"\"'"' Newport Beach; 646-6070 lrvm~ • UJ-RECYCLED CYCLES FQUNTAIN VA1 'fY LAGUNA BEACH 6450 West Coast Highway GILL'S BIKE SHOP LAGUNA BEACH CYCLERY Newport Beach; 645~8288 9102 Edinger 240 Thalia ~JU1 ~ Fountain Valley; 842·5008 Laguna~: 494-1522 ~~ _ ~ HUNTINGTON SUNDANCE BICYCLES CAPIS'l'RANO CYClES BEACH 25252 Mdntyre 3~ Camino Capis1'anO BICYCLE BARON Laguna Hills; 581-1710 Sil Juan Caplstnino; 113-0273 15901 Golden West MISSION YIEIO Huntington Beach: 894·7733 MISSION CYCLERY BICYCLE TRAIL 276n Crown Valley Pkwy. 9921 Hamilton Mission V'~; 49S~S771 Huntiogton Beach: 962·nBS NEWPOllT IEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH ----- BIKE SHOP BALBOA BICYCLES 15862 Springd.lk-2122 West Ocean Front Hut1tington B!!ach; 892·5519 Newpori. 8e.lch; 673-SOSt ' • Notes ShOw Sllooiout .. Try Foiled • SAN FRANCISCO <UPI) ...... A shootout at a Marin County court.room five yean ago that left a judge and thrM other pe~ dead resulted from an abo~ P.lan by radical$ to fret: all U.S. • political prisoners," ac· cordin1 to a story in today's edl· tloo of the San Francisco Chroni· ,Cle. Tbe paper said a judge in nearby Contra Costa County has ordered sealed since July 1971 six pages of handwritten notes on yellow lega l paper detailing the plan. THE DOCUMENTS say three guerrilla teams were to hijack a jetliner at San Francisco ln· ternational Airport, storm a wing of the Marin Civic Center to gain .hostages and to take over a courtroom. The Chronicle said the guer· rillas planned to use automatic weapons s tolen from Camp Pendleton in order to hold a sec- tion of the Ci vie Center while they n egotiated with the J,J.S. govern- m ent for the release of revolu· tionarles held in prisons throughout the nation. The group · then planned to fly the hijacked jet to Havana. The shootout on Aug. 7, 1970 re- sulted in the death of Jonathan J ackson, the 17-year-olq brother of Black Panther field marshal and San Quentin convict George J ackson, Judge Harold J. Haley, and San Wuentin inmates James • McClain and William Christmas. McClain and Christmas were to appear before Judge Haley when the shootings occurred. THE NEWSPAPER said Jonathan Jackson decided to go it alone after he learned at the last moment that three heavily· armed Black Panther guerrilla squads abandoned the plan. U~ITe ....... JANE FONDA (LEFT) TALKS WITH MARGO ST. JAMES Pair Addreaaed 2nd Annual Hookers Convention 'DOoker Hop' Bor.del w Ball Fund R aiser SAN FRANCISCO (U PI> -There was glit{er and garters but no bawdy business during a combined prostitutes' strike and $10 per person fund-raising ball at the Second National Hookers Con- vention. '(he 1930s-style taxi-dance, attended by movie director Frances Ford Coppola, wrapped up the convention and coincided with a one-night work stoppage by prostitutes supporting decriminalization of the world's oldest profession. BELLY DANCERS and harem-garbed women entertained and a sextet provided the music at the Saturday evening bash that had tourists and convenlioneers gawking at a plush downtown hotel, where actress Jane Fonda spoke in support of the women's rights earlier in the day. About 200 hookers aUended the dance, which began with an· nouncemeot of a sympathy work stoppage in support of French prostitutes who have been protesting alleged police harassment. FeJDale Motorist Missing COVINA (AP) -The mysteriou1 disap- pearance of a 22·year-old woman who apparenUy abandoned her disabled car on a freeway wos still un so lve d and sheriff's deputies sald they suspected foul play. Mona Jean Gallegoe of Covina was last seen by a friend three hours before her disabled car was found on the San Bernardino Freeway ea rly Thur s day, authorities said. SHERIFF'S deputies said late Sunday they had found no trace of the woman, who apparently left the car and went for help while en route to her Covina home shortly after 1 a.m . Her car w as found about 4 :45 a.m. in El Monte, between h er home and the Alhambra residence where she was last seen, authorities said. There were a number of emergency call boxes near the spot where Miss Gallegos' car was aban· doned, but officials said no call was made about her vehicle. THE WO~IAN'S parents said there was no reason she would dis- appear of her own ac· cord, adding to officials' !ears of Col;l~Play. The incident -which deputies said was a possible kidnaping - was compared to the mysterious di sa p - pearance of Robin JCPenney PiXy DAILY PILOT portraits . are enough to make '.: anyone smile. · Only1.69 · for a 5 x 7 or 4 wallet sizes of same pose in natural color. • No appointment necessary. Come in. • Age l1m1t: children to 12 years old. • Choice of poses from as many as 4 or 5. • Two children together ••• only 2.98. • No hidden charges. • Mail orders: just slightly more. II, you have a second or third favori1c pose, lake them, too. At these special prices, m either size. Your second selection .......................... 1.69 Your third selection ..................... -....... 1.65 Your fourth selection ............................ 1.55 Your hflh selection ............................ 1.40 The paper saiyotes concern- ing the conspiracy were found in a trash can by a cook at the coun- ty jail after attorney Margaret Burnham met in the prison mess hall with Angela Davis, Proceeds from the dance, attended by 500 persons, go to a de- fense fund for Kilty Desmond's Golden Gate Foundation, which Ms. Desmond calls a "sex therapy clinic" but which police claim ' is a plush bordello. . Hookers chose "the shortest night or the year" for their strike, said Margo St. James, self-styled "chairmadam" of the convention's sponsoring group, COYOTE <Call Off Your Old Tired Ethics ). Graham,18,whohasnot '------------------------------------------------------' been seen since her Pixy hours: Tuesday through Thursday 10 AM to 1 PM and Cy c l ists F i ght Two Wounded In Bar Brawl·- TEMECULA CAP> -Two persons were shot and wounded in a brawl involving at least lS motorcyclis~ at the Long Branch Club in this com- munity, about 40 miles north of San Diego authorities said. _ ' Riverside Sheriff's Del. Fred Popa!)da said the brawl started when two motorcyclists whom he identified as m embers of the "Hell's Angels " challenged the others to a fight Sunday. ' ( ) "Our investigation is Stale continuing and we still have not mad~ any ar- --------rests," Popanda said. · Mb• California SANTA CRUZ (AP> -Janet Jay Carr newly crowned Miss California, says her motto in lire is "I can -the last four letters in the word American." The 21-year-old brunette Crom San Gabriel also told a news conference Sunday that her favorite time of day is "sunrise, I love to watch the sun rise," and her favorite Cood is "Polynesian chicken but I don't know how t9 make it.•• ' Girl Electf"fH!uted FONTANA CAP> -A 7-year-old girl was elec- trocuted when she touched an improperly installed electric fence, police reported. Erreca Freetage of Fontana was reaching ,.throUfti a pi~ket Cence ln tier back yard Sunday when sh tou~ed the electric fence, installed by a neigh bot toward otf stray dogs. Klder Go red ' PORTERVILLE (AP> -A participant in the Tule Indian Reservation Rodeo died of injuries suf· ; fered when he was gored in the steer-wrestling • event, authorities said. Kenneth Chee, 31, of Redwood City, died follow· • ing surgery Sunday night at the Sierra View Dis- : lrict Hospital here. Hospital supervisor Madalyn · Newenschwander said Chee was operated on for in- ternal injuries. · H efn e r llftent• LOS ANGELES CAP> -Playboy publisher Hugh Hefner bas rescinded some of the strict rules he. established for women who work in Playboy clubs across tb~ country because he says he wants to make "bunny lib a reality rat.her than Just a slogan." In a statement issued from his California mansion on Sunday, Hefner said be may have been "just a wee bit overprotective" in setting up rules that Corbid bunnies Crom dating customers, giving' out their true names or visiting clubs outside of working hours. Rape Saupeet K iiied LOS ANGELES <UPI) -Raymond Charles, 3S, who alle1edty trled to ra"pe a 60-year-old woman, wu killed late Sunday by relatives ol the womao, r. police .. ad today. The caH wa1 lllted u JusUfiable homlclde pendlns further lnveatJiaUon. Police sald the IUI· .,.ct aUefedl)' knocked at the door of the woman's retldence and acalned entry because he had been ac· quainted wlth the woman previously. (Ann DAILY PILOT abandoned car was 2 PM to 6 PM. Friday 10 AM to 1 PM. 2 PM to 5 PM. and found on the Hollywood 6 PM to 8 PM. Saturday 10 AM to 1 PM and 2 PM to 5 PM. Freeway five years ago. June 24 through 28 in NEWPOR T BEACH and COSTA MESA Q-lliqg around Orange ~~unly gets ·easier an July 4th. Riding the bus has never made more sense than it does today. Orange County Transit District will take you more places in Orange County than e ver before. There are more buses-all modern, comfortable and air conditioned. More bus routes. R edesigned schedules. New services. Everything is changed and improved. The price, however, is still only 25¢. There are new ideas. Park-N-Ride Express has introduced a series of nine new commuter routes to get you to and from work in peace and comfort. The cities of Orange and La Habra offer door·to-door Dial-A-Ride motorcoach service for 50¢. Brea begins Dial-A-Ride soon and other Orange County cities will follow. Chances are there've been changes made in your own neighborhood. Right around the corner from where you live or work. Every day, riding the bus gets easier and more enjoyable. The time has come for you to give your bus system a try. You may be surprised. Forildonnation call: 547-3311 Toll &ee, call the operator ancl ask for: ZENITH 7-3311 r•••••••••••••·----·-~-------------~·-··-·----------------. . ~ I I WANT TO GET THERE. ; Please send me 5chedules and information on: 0 New routes serving my area : _____ _ 0 Park·N·Ride Express commuter service. 0 General Orange County Transit Information. • Name'----------------------- \ Address,_ ________ City ______ Z ..... ip ___ _ ()4•0 thi. coupon to Ora no• Coun\)' 1\ans1t O\atric:t, 1200 North M••n St1"t, S.ftta An.a, C.WomMI 92702 ) ------------·-------------------------------------------~ • '· ' \ I I ••• -PAILY PILOT EQITORl .:\L P . .\GE • . \ • • I I ·Ai1port · Altenia,tives ' The furor generated over Orange County gover:n- ~nt plans to "conv~1t" jet noise-impacted resJden- tlb.l land in Santa Ana Heights may enter a new phase ~th the revelation lha\ condemnation, estimated to c~st county taxpayers $4.5 to $10 million, is not the oPIY •lternalive. · • County Airport Director Robert Bresnahan sciid ht! would prefer buying· air easements over the homes rather tha1\ dispossessing some 128 to 270 families t& meet tough requirements of a state-approved aJrport noise variance. Two state Division of Aeronautics officials said 1· ·t week it may also be possible for the county to ad-· n}it it was overly optimistic in its prediction that state-mandated 1986 zero noise impact levels could be achieved in this decade. That timet able was written into the variance the ~ county is now struggling to live up to. The s tate o((icials said it is possible the county's variance r equire ments could be made less stringent next year if the county can prove only a dras tic step such as land conversion could meet the current ' vuti<J ncc require ments. So it would appear the re arc other aven ues that must be explored in earnest. Lesson f r om Por tugal The c urre nt uproar in Portugal ove r control of that country 's last s urviving non-Communis t ne ws p<i11er . Republica, is a lesson in the role of a free press. Dictators h ips of both right and left regard a n un. fettered n e ¥i Spape r as a dagger pointed a t their hearts. Hepu b lica \vas closed in May after Communist· It'll' printers .~ltemptcd lo t ake it over. T he new Portugcse governm e nt te rmed the t<t keover '"il legal" but permitted 'the printers: lo move Into the plant again last week-without the eilllors lhey had ousted. Hours later, faced wi\h potlng,.the confwsed gov- ernment ordered lfieprirltersodl agbin. ' Here is a last.gasp etr0rt on ihe one hand to preserve some semblane~ o( a free p,ress and on·t,he. other to stifle It. The final chapter m.ay tell the story of Portugal's future. And ii is a lesson to be well note<l by those who complain -sometimes with Justlflca· tion -about the state of journalism In the U.S. IJ'he occasiorial stumblings of a free press...are a lot easier to live with than a government.operateQ press. or no press a t all. A G ift of Time The Bible t e lls us no man has great~r love than he who would Jay down his JifeJor another. Such a m a n was Dr. David J . Zubatsky, in one way. The Fairview State Hospital staff physician and UC Irvine pediatrics instructor devote d the last few dwindling years of his life to minis te ring to un· fortunate Fairview children. There are hundreds there, victims of mental TetardiJ.tion a nd crippling physical handicaps. Cancer curtailed Dr. Zuba tsky's career 10 years ago. Arter surgery, he was able to join the Fairview staff, but his illness was' recurrent. He knew he was truly living o n borrowed time. He chose to devote that time to he4ping the less fortunate al Fairview. A David J . Zubatsky Me mo1ia l Fund h as been cr eated jointly by hospit al officials and the UCJ College of M edicine, to financi a lly aid outsta nding medical students in developmenta l disabilities, the field to which Dr. Zubatsky devoted his career. He would be more pleased that his work is going on than proud at the simple honoring of his n ame. • J • • I I I ' l I \ I I J Viewing The Gif ts Of Youth New Attit11des 'J'oward Corr11ptio11 ( A RT HOP PE ) Skarewe liniversity "As you go rorth rrom these cloistered h<.11ls into a shrinking job market," said Or. Homer T. Pettibone in his much·heralded commencement address here, ··from your fa iling hands you fl. ing the tore h. · , "The road ahead for you may be 'f'O(\y," he sa.id, '"bul keep in mind that the endeavor s or your •gener <.1 · tion hav e <.1 lr eady achieved a i,:re<.1 t dea l of h<.1ppine!is for ge n e r<.1ti ons yet .to go - namely mine. ··1 can't tell you how much we older people have benefited rrom your de· dicated s t ruggles for sexual freedom, long hair, women's liberation, m<.irijuana, four-letter \11ords and a life style that rejects materiall ~t possessions. "AT FI RST. Jct me frankl y ad· mit, we fell twinges of guilt wh en you denounced our system of values. 'Were we really right,' we asked ourselves uneasily. ··But as you matured. so did "'e. And a ft er ye<.1 rs of observing you living eight to a room in a cold-water flat, we have come to realize l\1;0 great truths : man does not live by food stamps alone and, more important, po v· erty c<.1 nnot buy h<.1ppiness. "We who were J!r ov;ing bald to our cmbarra!ism ent c<.1mc to see that a lot or l}uir on a man was, more often than not, ugly. ··And how gr ateful we are· for your sexu<.11 revolution. We "'ere, unfortunately, too old to serve in the ranks. Bot think of the nobili· ty that warned the hearts of "''e D ear Gloomy G us Today's vers ion Qf Omar Kh ayyam: A joint, a vun , long hair and thou , with a rock band coming through on an amplifier in the background. J .C.V. G ...... y G<n c-•RlS a r• s..-tt.ti ~y ,_.,, a....r M ... 1 ltfftsurlly rtflKI llW "!awl .. IM MWS,.llff. 5.-.d ~ "I --. .. G-yGn,DallyPlltol. husbands who, through no fa ult of our own, r emained true· blue to our wives, when you younger peopl.e were sleepina amok! "UNTIL you came along, no one felt · t:allant in refraining from using four.Jetter "'ords in mixed company, as no one did. You have made us feel gall a nt. "Until you ca me along a nd popularized m<.1rijuana, \11e felt uncqmfortable in gesting our traditional mind-bending drug. But at least m artinis are legal. "I think. ho"•evcr, that your battle \o liberate \l.'omen has brought us middle·aged married couples the g reatest content· ment. \Ve "'ere too set in our ways, thank God , to join your move ment. "'NOW young men will share in the household drudgery while young women will s hare in the of. fi ce drudger y. An d we old husbands, in the heat of a nger, can employ the ultimate threat to our wives : "Shut up or I'll liberate you!'' . ''Thus your generation has more than r epaid us for the pains of raising you by giving us truth, self-confide nce, nobility, pride and guiltless contentment. We can only pray that your children will do the same for you when yo u grow up." Dr. Pettibone received a stand· ing ovation from the aging facul· ty members a nd guests present at the co mmencementl"x'ercises. Unfortun<.1tely, no stude nts 1.1.•er e in the audience. They 1.1.•erc all out hunting jobs. A Watergate Echo • m WASHINGTON -The convic· tion of India's Prime Minister In· dira Gandhi for corrupt election practices, which will probably lead to her ignominious resigna· lion. is a phenom enon that ought to prove s omethin g to Americans. For it suggests that the 1.1.·orkings of our constitu· tional system i n t h e Wa t e rg a t e scandal have h a d a f a r deepe r and m o r e benefi c ial influence on the world than oar dis· mal att empt ,_, lo win "hearts and minds" in Vietnam with guns. This indicates, in my estima· tion, that the United States can play a truly effective interna· tional role by serving as a model of rectitude than by striving to act as a global policeman. ( STAN L EY J ~-K_A_R_N_o_w_·_ the sake of expediency. Years ago, when I lived in In· dia, it would have been incredi· blc to imagin e that a figure of l\.1rs. Gandhi's stature could be brought down by judicial· means. For she is not only a Brahmin, the highest ra nk in the caste sys te m, but she is also the da ughter of the late Prime Minister ~ehru, who has virtual· ly been de°ified for bis part in~ln· dia's str.uggle tor independence. Thus he r present ~a se is significant to the extent that it underlines the degree to which a country steeped in traditioti can evolve toward real democracy. The charge against her was that she used government of- fi cials and police in her cam· paign for re·eleclion to parlia· ment during the 1971 geneNll election. The charge was r aised by her opponent, Raj Narain, who is an untouchable, the lov.•est order in the Hindu caste system. THE CASE dragged through the courts for four years until it finally reached th e high tribunal in Allahabad, l\1rs. Gandhi 's con· slituency. Nobody in India expected that the decision v.·ould go a"gainst her. In fa cl. Indian com men· tators complained openly in r e· ference lo Richard Nixon's fate that the ir own country's political structure would·Uever permit a powerful person to face similar · humiliation. But, after reviewing the evidence, Justice J ag Mohan Sinha bravely rured against l\1rs. Gandhi. Like Judge Silica. he has emer ged a hero. Now Mrs. Gandhi has a choice or appealing to the s upreme court or quitting. Whatever she does, India her reputation is tarnished and her autho1;ty has been severely \Veakened. It would be risky to predict that v.·e a re goi ng to see a wave of comparable cases inspired by Watergate popping ,UP in every other corner of the earth. But it is interesting to note, I think , that th e Watergate aff<.1ir has stimulated a concern for the rule of la1.1.• in numbers of countries. JN.THE Philippines, for exam· pie, an imprisoned 'poli tical prisoner by lh.e f\ame of Benigno i\~ino_.:h ~~~~ii.Y · _a popular ~ator,-is fighttng for .. freedom agains t ·hls'-c.irptOl"/ ·Presidenl Fer~igao.d.K...,-t.os , by~l.l.Sing the coorts ; -· ,., .-· . Ai ~j;. eriter rile bicentennial, ther~rlfe, ii.. is fi(ting t\Jal our origJ.i1'81"values s hould' be having a worldwide impact -as they did 200 years ago, "·hen the Unit · ed . States sym tiolized a set ol moral values that are unique. · IT ALSO indicates that people in many countries still look to the United States to provide them with an exampl e of democrati c conduct even though, in too many .instances, our government backs totalitarian· regimes abroad for Nixon's Dual Personality WirkH 1 BR EAC H OF FAI T H , By Titeodore H. White. (Atheaeam, $19.95) ·The master of fast·breaking history has writte n an intelligent, absorbing account of the Watergate disaster that captures the shattering of a presidency in all Its sweep and drama. Some or the chapters, such as the one on the firing of special prosecutor Archibald C.Ox·, stand by themselves as morality tales presenting fu ll·blown examples of venality and arrogance in the Nixon administration. But White, in an apparent at- tempt at even.handedness, stops the action every now and then for effusive compliments on Nixon's acco mplis hme nts in foreign policy or on hiS plans for re: orga·nizalion of the federal bureaucracy. The kudos o ften appear ( THE BOOKMAN ) awkward and oddly out of place. While tries to solve the difficulty by splitting Nixon into two personalities . Then, he concludes with this explanation or the Nix · on contradictions : "UNLESS ONE is sati sfied lhat Nixon is a total hypocrite, a man or unrelieved brutishness, one m ust ask how he could stomach what he authorized and lea rned about his· administration and its underground. And the answer can come only by imagin· ing that here was a man who could not, in his waking mo· ments, acknowledge the man he recognized in his nightmares - the outsider: the loner , the loser.'' Nixon. White says. vie~·ed his overwhe lming 1972 e lection sweep from the viewpoint of the lifelong loner , as a personal vie· tory . ··1t was not si mply an elec· lion he won ; he had conquered a land ; its citizens were the OC · cupied and he could toy wilh the Jaw as hf wished , however mu ch a hosti le Congress. the news system or the intellectuals pro· tested." The book ·s strength comes from White's talents as a di gging reporter who can supply the tell- ing detail or the view of a partici- pant which illuminates an event and gives it a coherence it lacked ·in.newspaper stories. Easily, this is the finest book on Watergate so far. By Joan Hanauer United Press International • Revival of Food Co-ops May Change U.S. Habits ; BOSTON -Eggs S4 cents a dozen ! America n rhcese 8J cents a lb. !-f ceberg lettuce 16 cents a head ~ Romaine 34 cenL" a head ! A J2.oz. bottle or l-lc inz catsup 86 cents~ These aren't prices taken from <.1 10·year·old ne w~paper ad · vertlsem e nt. A person can actually buy lhe5e com · rnodities a t these prices today at the . Botton food Co-op. There is .a catch, though. You must be a member, and to be a member yOu mutt conlribuTe two hours a month ol work. Th·t'y 're not fool· 1Q1 about lhal, either. Before YO!J can Mt.er the...Co-op's store area )'Of.l.. tau.Al •how your lD ta a volunteer at the desk who then &ook• yOI! up in lhe card file to see if you're ta errear1 Qf1 your work. Tbe Co-op claimi 3,000 mem- berS ta the moce.pr·leo active c11teaory. but to there are ptoblem1 • ol the algru on the walls attest : "We have $1,500 in outstanding· bounced checks." Nevertheless, the Boston Food Co·op is one of the pleasantest places you'll ever shop. You'll get a chance to clap eyes on your butcher. Outside of those TV ads for things like Shake 'N' Bake, when was the last time you saw a butcher culling up a piece of meat? Not a n assembly line butcher behind plate glass slap· ping the Jamb chops onto,plastlc trays and aealtng them with tran sp~r e nt DuPont, but a butcher you can touch? Granted the Co-op'1 butc~ ls a vo lunteer. but (t)he is real toough to swap g0$llp and re· c1pes ~ith. And the .,Uddle·aged ~·oman at the checkbut counter apol ogizes fo r be ln1 •low because she 's never operated 1 cash register before, Lord, what a pleasure to give your'mon~y to ...someone 1.1.•ho doefin't hate you, hate the rood. hate the job and hate the C'ompany. TlflS JS NOT the rirst ti me thllt co-ops hive enjoyed a vo1u-e. They were big l n the 1-9308 ror much the same reasons they are ( VON HOFFMAN ) now: recession. revulsion al the marketin g practices or the Giants, Sarewa ys, and A&Ps, a nd d es pair ov~r the de· personaliied commerce which leaves you no one to Identify with but tha t icky, white-faced Pillsbury dough boy. The wars. McCarthyis m Cthe J oe kind J, and the Jong period when we were willing to let real estate developers and corporate managers organize our social lives for us seem to have turned people away rrom co.op en· terprises. The most successful ro-oJ)! took on at least some of the tone though not the greed or their competitors. The ne"' co-ops, started in the • l11st five }'cars or so , have a bou nce that the older. institu· tionalized ones lack. Co·ops are comlng up like beansprout.s all over the ~unlr')I . You~ve goc. the Wild Bill :s Walk o n Wa t er Bakery Co-op in Kalamazoo and the Wolf Moon • \ Bakery in Lansing, Michigan, Brea4 a n d · Jus tice in Min· neapolts , and, don't you like it, The Safer Wa·y Co.op in El Ay. AJsc:i in California are lo be found the Rose Hips Buying Club, Loaves· a nd Di s h es, M r:. Natural's and Ma Revolution's co-ops. (For as complete a dlrec· tory as this chaotic movement js capable of and oth-e r kinds ofinro on food co-ops, you can subscribe lo Food Co-op Nooz., food Co-op Project, Loop College, 64-.E. Lake St., Chicago, Ill. 6060lfor $3.) . l.N T HE Boston Co-Op they say they areue over wttefe. the soda pop di1pla)' should be put. One meinber says' that he has noted iL!I sl~w march to the rear and off to one side. /\. small matter but very satisfying for those of Us who resent everyth1ng being i.tuk~d o ut and pluc~ In ac· ~rdonce ~·ith values we don 't share. The rood c:o·op may afford us the only road leadin& back t9ward the real tomato. Th~ de- eemeration of the qu.aJl ty ol our rood has been •low enough to al· Jo:"" the chaJn 1tores and the manufacturers and extruders of near.food to educate our palates and our stomaeha t.O, want or. at least not re gurgitate industrial substitutes, but the. tomato is a different stors. It left us so quick· Iy. Jt's just in the laSt few years that they've changed a once no· ble, tasty and nutritious vegeta· ble ipto a color additive iil our salads. o•ANoa COAST DA ILY PILOT Thoma• KtelrlJ, IJditor Barbara Krtiblch ltdllorlal Page Edilor • 1\1onday, Junc23, 1975 The CO ·op movement may give us the purchas1ng pov.'er to buy ~Hck th!? tomato. That may not~ fil l us with the.expansive sense of accomplishment that World,.,, peace. or pure'air Would, but il certa1!1IY beats 'sitting around watching J erry Ford teur arr the calenda r leaves while he re ads us lla r ry Truman's old -speeches. ' !he editorial Pa&f: or the Daily P i lot seeks to i nform and 1tlmu~ate readers by presenUn1 .,. on this page diverse commen- tary on topics of inttrest by syn~ dlcattd columnlstr and car· toonlsts. by providing a forum for readers' views and by pre-~enting this, newspapc.r'• opin- ions ond id eas on current toplc1. The editorial opinions ot · the D:;1ily Pilot appear only Jn the editoria l column at the tap of the page. Opinions ell:prftSHtl by the columnists a nd tartoonlsU! and let.tcr writers ar, their own and no endorsf'ment of their vlcw1 by the Daily Piiot shoUld be Inferred. ' . 'I . . ;:i • . ·~ d ~ . ·- ~ !J : h; . ·~ .. sa WI SU Bi re er Is .. , thought my wile didn't understand me, but my divOl'Ce lawyer and-the ·manager of my swinging a1J18)el condomlniwn REALLY mils the boat." · Cnistaceans ~Found Unsafe LOS ANGELES (UPI> -For years, scientists : have said that all crustaceans -lobsters, crabs and · shrimps -were edible. They were wrong. Eating some crabs will cause death. "Pmple who live off reefs -food gatherers, sailors, even servicemen from crashed aircraft or wrecked ships -must be aware of this hitherto un·. suspected danger," Dr. J ohn Garth of the USC Biology Department warns. He said scientists working with him under a federal grant have discovered several species of crabs around the Philippines and South Pacific Islands whose flesh is poisonous to man. PUBUC NOTICE CG.UT Lt lie • eOIOteM.. PUBLIC N011CE AMYOMI AalUTU IY OMC• .. DIM UAYllS OCCUflATIOltA'-f"•001tAM .................. _c. c:.tl ...... CA.,""' NOTICI lllVITlll8 at~ ... le;. Is .. ,...., """'" '"'' .,. Oe¥> ~ ... ,."Vie CM•tllM -.-i OitnljM..,.., ft'nltr•"' .. ar-.. °"""" ff, c.MltOt•I .. lllW111 recelft llil4lll • " 11:• o't"O Oii the lsttl 4111'1'" JIA'f, "15, •• ttw -... ofllce, at wtlkll ti-~bids wlll be pVblkl'f °""""Md,.. M lot u.e tur11lllll119 w tM c;.MtllM ~I Oct""911oMI Pr09l'MI Of • chi~~ •c<011nll11t ,.,, .. m Oii • llW<httt or IH,./Pllr<llese beM•ln«· Qltc!Mc• with the "'4t<lllclltlofla and CGfldll'-Oii .... In 111• bllslMIS oHke, UO) H.,bor Blvd., Cost• MeH, C..lfornla, ,..., PubllShed Oran91 Cotst Dally Piiot, Jl#\ .. 114,2l,J0, 1t1S ..._U 1'11 lllctt 'hell be submitted on a lorn\ 19 tit obC•lned et 'IM b11slnnt offkt ot 0DHtllN Rt9lonel OtC11t>tllilnal Pfo- tr...,., All blcts INll "-....... lifld t.Nll .,. cleat1., mllf1c.c1 on tti. out"-111 "" PUBLIC NOTICE envelope; "BIO-ACCOUNTING ~Tl'M." eac.h bidder musl furnllh• --""li""iCf=iT""t:o:o~u-:-1":"a::":"u='-si~11:-=•=u=---· 11 '9'1Jllef meclc oi' bidder's baM lft IN NMQITATIMINT .,._. ..... ta s-., of Itta total bid. The to1lowl11t '*'"°"' ,,. .... bull· 'TM Go""mlllt loard ol Ille C.otitl~ MU os : "'9ieMI Oc"1'11thlnal Pr90'tm WI' 8EACH CITY FA8RICATORS, ~====~~~~~~~:!! lie .. ~ JMte of Iha me<lti and ,._, .._ H ,._ __.. i;: ciuallti<atlons ol tM equlpmelltolie<td. ''91 .-ttineu ...... 1111~.,,.on -.. Tiie Governl11t &oord reMrws Ille CA.,.. flglll to reJe<t a11y or all bWls M'll to Thomu W. ean-. tStl caltllMM Wal""' ..,., lnlotmoJl1y In '"' w. ,_ Or .. Hwltlfl9tOl\ .. o<h, CA. 92'oM blCldw m•'f wllhdrew his bid within • Patrkla Jllfle 8annoto, 9St1 Gii._ -lod ot slxtr 160) Clays eller ""dale -Dr., HYnll~on .. 11<11, CA.~ atlor the openlnt of the 114d. Tiiis 1111Sl11ess Is <Oftdlleled 1ty .., ~ G<1V£"RNING 80ARO OF dlv\dl;aL THE COASTLINE REGIONAL PatrklaJ. BonftOfl OCCUPATIONAL PROGRAM ThOmasW. Bennon OFORAHGECOUNTY,CA. This sl•tement WIS filed with lhe JAMES G. WEST·· County Clerk ot Ortn91 Covntyon ,,_ THE SYMBOlS OF SATISFACTION )luls1ant Suoerlntendent 11• ltJS. ....., P\lbll$fled Or111oe Coast O.lly PllOC. Publlstled .or11191 C<>Ht 0.lly Pilot, J~ ,,, JO, 191S m 7-7s .NM 23, JO, •nd July 7, 1~. 197S ns..n l'UBLIC NOTICE e SUITIACT ••• T"' _,.., or ccwn1no up w olll a b•ll d o wn ~"' PICTIT~OUS •USINIU NAMl!STATIMl!NT The foltowl119 pertOllS .,. doll111 busl· ~sas: ' WHITEY'S MIC, 2110 Hubor PUBUC N011CE Uhtl PICTITIOUI aUSINIUS NAMI! STATEMENT The foll-Int person Is doh>g bu$1· II~ .. 04\a Me5a, CA. t2'27 'Ge~•ld'E. McGuire, lits Glllr•ll.,, Costa Mesa, CA. 92626 Ldlfe J. MCCiulre, 31'4 Glt1r11tar, O>sto Mesa, CA. 92'2' ""'": REWARD ENTERPRISES, 270 Newpo(f Center ~Ive, HewPort aeacn. CA.~ 8 DtYIOI .•• Lau down to lflcrea" _...~ .... Johll Vfl1w, No, S Hirt>« l$11nd, NeWPOt't Be.ch, Callfornla 92660 ·This business Is conducted by • Qlntral perlllanlllp. t.HlleJ. McGuire Ger•ld E. llMGulre This s111em4nt -• flied with the Counly Clerk of Or1n119 County on May 21, 197S. This bllslness Is conducted b'f illl ln- divldUal. JoMVlrtue This "•l•m.,,I WU filed with Ille County Clerk ot Or•nge Covnty on,.,. ... 30, lt7S. 0.19UALS ••• The tea1on1 why you 1 1101110 I•••• Ille CONNEL.LEASE ••YI ~1 F4Uff Publlst>ecl Or•nve Coast Dtll'f Pilot, Pllbllslled Oranve Cont 01Uy Pltot, J..,. 2, t, 1'. 23, 191S 197).75 .Nle 23, l0, and July 7. 14, 1t15 2*-1S Freed om o f Worshi p An A mer.ican Choice 546-1200 The shap1rol summer starts todaJ It's Spring. It's time for America's annual attempt to lose enough to loo.k g?od in a . swimsuit. And most of us can twin for losing. Because most of us try to starve ourselves into shape. and diet alone isn't enough. If the weight goes at all ... it all seems to go wrong. You need to shape up while you trim d~'."n with a properly plan':led progra_m <?f _nutrition, body-shaping exercise and rev1tahzing relaxation. And you can start today. Let our physical conditioning professionals help you decide which of our five different programs• is best for y~>lJ,}>rogfl\ms tt''t start as low as =:' · ·si o and are ~ased on the most 'recent concept in comprehensive conditioning; flerobic/ a'naerobic circuit-training,, Pcqgrams that inolude complete di.et plans. steam. and sauna. Programs that help.you shape your b<?dy, tone your muscles and fine-tune your card10-. vascular system while you trim away fat with the most advanced exercise facilities available. Call today. Changing the shape of your body can change the shape of your summer. •uen• P•rtl 51 O South Beach Boulevard South of Lincoln Avenue (71 4) 826-0381 Co•t•M••• 2300 Harbor Boulevard Harbor Center ,.,(714) 549-3368 Encino 17031 Ventura Boulevard West ol Balboa (213) 986-6330 HWtu...ton .. Kii 18585 Main Street Main St. at Beach Blvd. (714) 842-1451 Lonti .. •ch 4101 Atlantic Boulevard Corner of Carson (213) 426-.8874 0r ..... 622 East Katella Avenue West of Tustin Ave. (714) 639-2441 We•tmln•t•r 6757 Westminster Avenue Westminster Center (714) 894-3387 ...... c ... Ow Newfft Loceffow HOLLYWOOD 70IO Helfrwood ll•cl c__.L..,._ a.Ml!lrMMlcel C..tw (213) 469-6307 Holiday Spa Hea11J1 _Clubs For Men And Women We suggest you try our special introductory two week• program for only •1 0 "Maximum-14 visits ~.June 23. 1975 OAJLVPILOT u HURRY! SALE ENDS SATURDAY! GE No Frost Refrigerator BIG 15.6 cu. ft. with 4.l cu. ft. FREEZER FREE ICE MAKER · •Yoo Pay Only Small Installation Charge GIANT . I I PPDIPlll8d WASHER 5 Programmed f abt'ic'Selec:tions-the push of a button gives proper ~mbinations of wash and spin speeds, with Ind rinse temperatures Energy Swing CQfd Wat• Option SwitCh Exclusive Mini·Bask.r- • BIMch Oitpenter • Filter·F~Systtm 5268 -, Automatic Sensor DRYER •Automatic Stnsor Ter.;,inates Cycle when clothes are dry • 3 Cycles: Normal, Permanent Press /P°'y Knit and Timed to 60 Minutes • 3 Temperature Selections: Nonna!, Permanent Press/ Pofy Knit, Delicate, plus Air Fluff •••••••••••••••• .. •Extra Care No Heat Tumbling --n-=Lr -:::., ------::::::. BUILT-IN DISHWASHER SAVE '20 s199•s • 2·LM Withing Action • Built·ln Soft Food Oitposer • Tuff T utl Mt nttrior • Fun ExtllNion Cuth~Coated.Rid(s • Duel °'*91nt DitPll11tt , Al O.U.VlltLOT J The Copout Game: Twilight of Honor By TOM BAJlLEY Of ... O.lly ..... ,.... SANTA ANA -Every day ot the working weelt, pro- se.cutons and detense attorneys play the plea bar1ainlng game in our Orange Comity courtrooms. You may know it better as "copout." But whatever you call it, it adds up to lhe same thing: "Look, you're guilty ot a crime that could send you t.o state prison. Cop out to a lesser charge and we'JI give you six months in the county jaU. Okay?" It's usually okay. And a system some believe has con· ... MltL.llY tributed far more than any other factor to our spiraling crime rate continues to flourish, fostered by prosecutors copping out from a long trial, defense lawyers cop- ping in for a fat fee for far less work and judges who couldn't care less either way. A favorite argument by copout ad· vocates is that the taxpayers will ~nefit from abandonment or a possibly long and costly t rial. ANOTHER ARGUMENT is the favorite ploy of the pro· secut.or. "Hey now, we'd need a 50-story building and a staff 10 times big~er if we had t.o try every case we now settle ... " Copout bas s parked many a bitter debate, but ad· vocates for both s ides immediately agree that it is an un· savory business made doubly so by the pretenses indulged in by both judge and lawyers. Take the recent Superior Court case where a group of defenda nts ·'copped out" in return for the prosecution's pro· mise that each defendant would get a probation term and, possibly, a fine for a plea of guilty to a lesser oCf ense. EACH DEFENDANT vowed solemnly, of course. before the judge that he had not been promised anything by the prosecutor in return for his decision to plead. Nay, perish the thought A defendant who discussed the case with this writer re· vealed the deal in return for the promise that his name iwoul<'.n 't be divulged if this newspaper made use oC the information. It wasn't and won't be. But we have now had the sickening spectacle of him and his co-defendants being dragged back to the courtroom to assure an alarmed prosecution and the judge that indeed no deal was ever discussed before those pleas were filed. ''I JUST have to do this in the interests of my codefen· dants," he told m e. "But we all know -the defendants, the lawyers and the judge -that we're indulging in a lot of play acting that is a poor reflection on our system o( justice." Prosecutors wheel and deal, defe nse attorneys arc a lmost always delighted that they do and judges know darned well what went on before that guilty plea was filed. But they seem to think that law and the public will be best served if they all assure each other with straight faces and sober mien that no one was ever promised anything in re· turn for something e lse. -: UTTLE WONDER that we are witnessing the Tapid decline of our s ystem of law and the erosion of standards of honor tbat should be immune from this type of trickery. IALn-tHGHOM A.IHHAL HOMt Corona del Mar 6 73·9450 Costa Mesa 646·2424 llUlltOADWA.Y MO ITU AU 110 Broadway. Costa Mesa 642-9150 McCOIMfCK MOalVAIY Laguna Beach 494-9415 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 ,ACIAC YllW MIMOllAL,AH Cemetery Mortuaiy Chapel 3500 Paci he View O"w Newpart Beach. Cahtornla 6 44-2700 ..... , .... , COlOMtAL M•At. HOMI 7801 Botsa Avo Weslm11'11t•f 8i3·35Z& IMITHI' MOJTVAIY CS27 Main St. Hunfm9ton Be.eh \. &3&-6539 I GLEN COVE, N .Y. CAP> -Wllllam II. aa.I, 62, former pJ"eSI· dnt or United States UtMS, died Friday. He helped prepare the entry Into .. rvlc~ or the llntt United States, which tJnJte 1pe~d records for ..-...AtlanUc cr~lnp tall& ORANGE COUNTY Supervisors To 'Go Dark' This Week SANTA ANA -Canada's wild woods and Hawaii's sparkling surf have lured a quorum of the Orange County Board of Supervisors away from the coun • ty seat and they will not meet this week. The ''dark week" has been on the board's schedule for several months in anticipation of a trip to the National Association of Coun· ties convention in Honolulu. As il turned o ut , only Supervisors Laurence Schmit and Robert Battirt chose to go t.o Hawaii. Board Chairman Ralph Diedrich will take advantage of lhe scheduled dark period for a vacation in Canada. The exodus of supervisors leaves only Supervisor Thomas Riley to guard the fort. A s pokes man for the Newport Beach supervisor said he plans lo work al I week. Supervisor Ralph Clark may or may not be in. according to a spokesman in his office. He has some family vacation plans, but .may not be gone the entire work week. ~ ~bllWd OrMI~ Cont O•llY Piiot. Jun41t, 16,2J,l0, 19/S 20e/·7S PUBLIC NOTICE .. , • PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOftCE .. .. .. .. ', . .. , .. ... . . ·' •I ··' .. , .. t I I •. ··~ .. .-.. , ,, .,I J \ .. , •. ~ • .. . .. .. ... ... ... . I ""'"' .. f•1 "' I• . ; . ... '. ' . • 1 I • . .. .. . ,,, f . -',. . .. . ..... 'I , .. t • \ I .,., i ~ ....... • 'I'" I ., .. "'I' ' ,.. ' • . If you have an item lijke this ... If your family is like most families your garage is a goldmine of stashed usables you'll never use again. Now is the time to convert those valuables to cash. Do it the easy way with a low cost .Daily '. Wr:ite -an · ad like this ... Underwood portable typewriter. Pica type. Carrying case. Sturdy. Wide carriage, full keyboard. Perfect for ·students. $75. Call 000-0000 after 5 . Minolta SRT 101 , single lens reflex camera. Precision F/1 .2 lens. Self- timer, built-in light meter. Case plus four filters. $200. Call 000-0000 . Wilson clubs, matched set, four woods, eight irons. Lightweight steel shafts. like-new condition. $160 for clubs and bag. o~. Rockwell 7-%" power saw. Heavy duty. Cuts to 2-3/8 at 90°, 1-7 /8 at 45°. Excellent condition. Only $40. Call 000-oooo . Suzuki X-6 Hustler with 6 speeds. Bright red. 250 CC dual stroke engine . A real goer in like-new condition. Only $200. Call 000-0000. Pilot classified ad. Whatever the item -or items -don't hesitate to advertise them just because you've never used a Want Ad. Give us a call at 642-5678. One of our friendly ad-visers will answer and help ' . • And get results like this! "Sold the typewriter the second day my ad appeared! Cou Id have sold half a dozen if we'd had them." "Received several calls on my Minolta. Sold it on the first call." "Two people are happier today ••• the young man who bought my golf clubs ••• and me ••• I'm $160 riche~.,. "Never knew so many people were in the market for saws. Selling mine was easy." "Your Want Ads are "real goers" too. They sold my Suzuki." you word your ad for maximum response. And, your credit Is good with us. We'll bill you or charge the ad to your Master Charge or BankAmericard ac- count. To see your advertising message in print, just call us. DAILY PILOT \ . . ' . - ' . ' ' ' ' \ By By GLENN WIDTE OfU1eO.lly ,_.letSl.tll LONG BEACH-Valerie Lee and Shirley Ba bashofr each col· lected an American record Sun- day night at Belmont Plaza pool to close out their fantastic efforts in the U.S. team trials (or the world swimming championships to be staged in Colombia next month. Lee clipped a hundredth of a second o(( her U.S. standard in the 200 butterfly with a 2 : 15.12 and Babashoff reduced the 100 freestyle mark from 57.90 to 57.74. Babashoff, a Fountain Valley resident. came back later for a lifetime best 8:46.77 for second place in the 800 free. Heather Greenwood, the 800 winner, picked up a USA record withan8:46.51. Babasboffmadea det ermined bid to overhaul Greenwood the final 100, posting a nifty 1:03.4 . But there was too much distance to make up and Greenwood had too much left. Babashoff, qualifying for five events in the world cham· pionships, said s he swam the middle part of the race too slow· ly. Her Mission Viejo Nadadores coach. Mark Schubert, s aid Babashoff he ld back loo much. "She was OK at the 400 but didn't pick it up from there Lil the 700," he stated. "She's cnpable of going under 8 :40. Once s h e get s more familiar with swimming this r ace, r think she'll be the best in the world." Babashoff was fourth for the first 200, moved to third after that and then s lipped into second place with a little over 100 to go. She was two seconds behind Greenwood at the gun lap and eve n h e r p a t e nted "Flyin g Russian" finis h couldn't make up that much. ''This was the best meet 1 ever had." Babashoff said. She won the 100, 200 and 400 freestyles; Twirls 2-hitte r • Monday.June 2', 1975 ·Girls • was second in the 200 individual medley and 800 free. She got two American records and a world record ( 400 >. Babasbolf's powerful finish did turn the trick tor her in the 100 as she caught Kathy Heddy with 20 meters to go and won by .33 of a second. .. Shirley was out too slow (28.2) at the so,•• Schubert said. "We were hoping she'd go about seven-tenths faster. She'll have lobe in lhe 56s toevengetabronzc medal in Colom bi a.'· Lee, appearing strong and fluid, swam her own race and won comfortably in the 200 fl y while Nadadores t e ammate Peggy Tosdal of Dana Point was fourth in2: 19.20. Lee took the lead from Camille Wright at 125 meters and by the time they were at the 150, she had extended that .advantage to three·quarters or a body length. She won by 2.28 seconds. The orange.haired MV whiz was second in the 200 and 400 freestylE:s and Schubert feels she is a solid threat for t he gold medal in Colombia, despite the presence of 200 fly world record holder Ros em ari e Kothar of East Germany. "She'll be right there with the East Germans," said Schubert. "She was about 1.5 seconds slower today than we hoped for but she wasn't pressed." Lee said she had hoped to be in the 2: 14s Sunday but admitted s he was pacing herself, swim· ming her own r ace. Wo-n's 100 Frttstyle -1. Sl'11r1ey Bablsholf, SU•; 2. K•thy Heddy, S8.07; J. Kelly RoMll, 51.'4; •.Keren Re-r, S8.86. Women's 100 Butterfly -I. V•lerle Lee 7 IS.12; 2. Camille WrlQht, 2: 17.<IO; 3. wmo., Wein· ber9, 2: 11.01; '·Peggy To!od•I, 2 19 20. Women 's 800 Freestyle -I. Healher C<eenwood, 8:.U..SI; 1. Shirley B<lbash01t,e ·•1.11; 3 Jo HarshtMrger, 8: Sl. U; '·Kathy Heckly, 8: S2. "· Men's 100 Bullerlly -1. Cire9 Jagcnburg, .SS.79; 2. Bill Forrester. SS.SJ, 3. Slev;: Batter. .SS.90, '·Mike Bollom, .S6.11. Men's 200 lnd1v1dual Medley -1. f-rl'd Tylrr, 1 04.93; 2. Steve FurniH, 7 07.bl : 3 Bruto Furniss. 2.07.6S, 4. Dave H.innula, 7.08 &S. Figueroa Becomes Newest Stopper Ed Figueroa, affectionately known al'ound Anaheim as Senor Stopper. is a man of his word. "After my first win of the year against Oakla nd (a fi ve-hitter on April 27> I told myself that I can pitch better than this." the California Angels righthander said Sunday. He has. Since that start. Figueroa has authored a pair of lhree·hitlers, A nge bSlate All c; .. mH on KMPC 1710) JUll" 23 T UclS at Catlfornl• J~2• '<ans•s C1ly al Cahforn•" .J~ 1S K•nsas Clly 111 Calltorn1.i 1 2Sp in. 7 1Sp.m. 7 .1SP m. another fi ve-hitter and a six· hitter. Sunday. he held the visiting Texas Rangers to two singles and made an unearned fourth inning run stand up for a l·OviclofY.. Figueroa. who began the season in Lhc minors when manager Dick Williams con- sidered his s pring attitude too lackadaisical. h as rebounded in astonishing fashion since his re· call. He wormed hi s way into the starting rotation -once referred to by Williams :.is the "best in baseba ll " -a nd has compiled a 6·3 record with each victory com· ing on the heels of an Angels loss. Hence the nicknaml'. Senor Stop· per. ··J'vc got confidence now, especially in my curveball," Figueroa said in explaining his success. "l didn 't have that con- fidence last year . I'm not afraid lo throw it in any s1tual1on." However, in has most ticklish dilemma of the day Sunday, Figueroa went to hi s fastball, which he describes as ··good .•• but nothing like Nolan Ryan's." It came on a 3·2 pitch to J eff 'Burroughs with the bases loaded and two out in the ninth. Bur- roughs drilled it in the ~ap m left· cente r but fl eet Angel ccn· terfielder Morris Nettles raced O\'er and made the c<.1lch, just in front of the fence. "I was kinda cxpectinj! c.1n ul - ]('y s hot." Nettles said. "I got a ~ood jump and I knew jl was mine all the time.'' The lengthy five.game series "~nds up tonight with Bill Singer 6-8 going agaiott the Rangers' Steve Hargan 4·3. sm,er was driven to cover in the lint inning of Friday's game wttb Texas which California came back to Rigney to Padr. win 12·11in11 innings. Figueroa fanned s ix a nd walked only two -both in the ninth. He yielded a two-out single to Lenny Randle in the second c.tnd then r e tired the next 19 Rangers in a row before Roy Smalley opened the ninth with a single off the glove of Bruce Boehle al first. Smalley's two.base throwing error led to the unearned Angels run in the fourth and cost Texas s tarter Fergie J enkins his sevent,h loss a gainst eight vie· tori es. TEXAS Harrah lb ~21> H41r9rove lf BurrOUC)h~ rf 5'>eftur lb ~nclltcl Grl•Y•dn Stnall•y~~ ~r9c HO~llpn J en1t1nsp Totals Teu~ C..ltlorn.• ab r II bi 4 0 0 0 J 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 ,000 3 0 0 0 3 0 I 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0000 29 0 2 0 J«nlttns (L. 8-7 Ftguero. (W, 6·l) T-l :S'1. A-8,9S8. CALIFOltNIA •b' "bl R~myll> 'O O O Colllnslf 4 O 2 o Boehle II> • I 3 0 Uh0udr1 1 0 2 1 0..lklb •OO O ~r1ydh 3 0 0 0 El. Rodroguei c 3 0 o· 0 Meohu 3070 M. Nelll•H I 3 0 0 0 F19<1eroa p o o o o Tolats 30 I 9 I 000 000 000~ 000 100 OOll 1 IP H It Elt 88 $0 8 910 )• 9 2 00 26 Dally Piie! """° by 1t1c.11.tn1 Dr•u FOUNTAIN VALLEY'S SHIRLEY BABASHOFF (FOREGROUND) TOUCHES OUT KATHY HEDDY IN THE 100-METER FREESTYLE. U.S. Open Play Final SurVivors Most Su1prised MEDINAH, Ill. (AP) -A pair or longshots, Lou Graham a nd John Mahaffey, met in an 18- hole playoff today for the $40,000 prize in the 75th U.S. Open golf championship -the "chokers" or "snake-bit" open. It has been a wild one. And none is more surprised at the windup pe rhaps than the playoff contenders themselves. Graham, a drawling, string. bean tour veteran of 35, was the only person among the 25,145 on the Medinah Club premises who didn 'l know he had a chance to win outright by parring the final hole. He dumped his approach shot into a trap and took a bogey. Mahaffey, a young lion of 'l:7 out of Hous ton, had finis hed 45 minutes earlie r and had rushed lo the clubhouse to buy a candy bar and check on the airline re· servations out of town'. He had to be searched out and informed that his 287 score, three over par, h ad lied the late. finishing Graham for firs t place and that he should be on the fi rst tee today promptly at1:30p.m. ~ win I've ever seen," lh~ bespec- tacled 1974 Open winner said. "Everybody was just throwing it a way. It's unbelievable." F11wi1 scores end money winnings In Sunday's round ot the 7Sth U.S. Open Goll ~mplonshlpon tne 7,0J2.yard, p11r-11 Medineh Country Club course l•-Oenotts 1matturl: Lou Cr •tw'" John.M9Mffe, Frenll 8eerel. SI0,17S BenCtensh•w, '10,a7S Hale lrwln, SI0,87S Bob Murphy, SI0,97S Peter Oosterhuis, 57,SOO Jacll Nlckl•u1, v.soo Pat Fitzsimons, h .000 TomW•tson, $5,000 Atnold P•lmer, U,000 ~Y Floyd. u.eoo Andy North, $2,IOO Eddie ,,..,<•. u .02s Joe lnmtn, '2,0U ltlk M9Hengale, S2,02S Jim Wle<hers, U ,02S Terry 0 111, $1,650 0.1• Douglau. S1,6SO V.ryGroti, $1,650 Cider Jones, Sl,6SO A·Jerry Pate A.Jay Haas Miller Barber, Sl,'27 Forrest Feiler, '1,'21 Kermll Zerley, Sl,'27 Bud Allln, Sl,'27 Tom WelsllOPf. $1,JO<l Don January, s1.:io. David Ciol\am • .!,11304 LHTreYlno.Sl,""4 Sl~Ye Melnyk, Sl,304 EdSne.cs. s•.~ UPITe..-e It's the first Open playoff since Lee Trevino beat Jack Nicklaus al Merion in Ardmore. Pa., in 1971. Nale Slults, $1,304 Jerry He.rd, SI.~ Tommy ~ron, $1,304 AJ GeibelQer, Sl,IMO Julius Boros. Sl.040 ..Jonnny Mlll9f'. $1,IMO John Schiff, $1,040 Unny Wadi< Ins, $1,G40 V.ry Player. SMS O.ve Stockton, stas 7"72-68-73-287 n.11-11.11-m 74-69-67-78-211 7~76-7'-211 74·71-73-70-281 74-73-72-69-298 6f.73-7HS-2t'I n·11HS.12-te9 67·73·73-11-190 61·68-7 .. 77-190 •t.lS.73-73-290 76-71·7'·78-291 7S.72·72·72-291 7S.71·70.76-292 n .12.11-n-m 11·14-71·76-292 68-73-76-7S-292 74-7:Ha-78-m 11.11.n.13-m 73-7'·73-73-293 6t.73-7t.n-m 1t.10.12.n-m 7H>"72·78-293 1•·11·11·18-?'M 1HH1-1 s-m 7J.7"7S·7S-2'M 76-70.73-7S-2'M 7S.71·7'·7S-29S n ·7S.73-7S-29S n ·76-7'·7'-29S 72-6t.7S.79-29S 7S 7J.74·7l-29S 7s.74·73-73-29S 7~7Hfr12-29S 11-61·1 .. n -39S 73·11-87-69-29S 11-71·1•·11-2'16 7'·77·72·1S-2'6 7>7Hfr73-296 7S.73·12·76-296 69-11·77·73-296 7S.73-72·77-297 73-73-77·7'-297 LOU GRAHAM CHIPS DURING SUNDAY'S U.S. OPEN ACTION. Whatever became of that fellow, Nicklaus. anyhow? And Trevino? And Hale Irwin, who won las t year ? And J ohnny Miller, th e Pacific Co~st hotshot? And lon g Tom Weiskopf, Arnold Palmer and South Africa's Gary Player? Som e people, including the golfers themselves, called it a horror story and jested that the winner should have been Boris Karloff. Dazed spectators went around asking if there was some kind of penalty against a guy who won. Everybody, including the in· comparable Nicklaus, blew it - that is, all except Graham and Mahaffey. They a lmost did. They backed into their tie for the top, Mahaffey shooting a final round 71 that he thought might get him about 10th money and Graham a 73. All of them were wondering how they managed to let this Open slip from their hands. Irwin acknowledged that the tournament left him completely dumbfounded. "This was the easiest open to Padres Play Tough Could Have Lost All Four-Alston SAN DIEGO <AP) -"We could have lost all four instead or win· ning three," Dodgers manager Walter Alston said Sunday after Los Angeles beat San Diego 3·2 to move witflin two games of first- place Cincinnati in the National League West. "With the kind of pitching we got in the series, we could have won at least three games and maybe a ll four -certainly more than one," said San Diego manager J ohn McNamara, who watched hi s club hold the Dodgers to 12 runs in the four games After a 4·1 loss and a 2·1 vic- tory. the Padres dropped the final two ga m es or the series, 4.3 and 3-2, but remain within l1h games of third.place San Fran- cisco. The Dodgers, who had been un- able to hold 1-0 and 2·1 leads, won in the eighth inning Sunday after Bill Buckner g r eeted reliever Danny Frisella, 1-3, with a leadoff double. Buckner was at second with one away when Willie Crawford bounced a tie- breaking double past 37-year-0ld ·Dodgers Slate AH .. 19Het11CAaC OWi Jurw 23 Los Anoelentt Houston J-24 LOS A"QelH •t Houston S:JOp m. S:30p.m. S:30p.m . June U Los Angeles •t Houston first baseman Willie McCovey, who was first charged with an er- ror before the decision was re- versed. Though not involved in the de. cision, hard·luck San Diego right·bander Dave Freisleben, 3·8, was frustrated not to end his personal five-game losing streak ... He has pitched well enough, we just don't get him many runs," said P adres pitching coach Tom Morgan . Freisleben was lifted for a pinch hitter in the seventh when Fred Kendall singled off winner Mike Marshall, 3·5, to make it· 2·2. Marshall pitched the last three innings in relief or' Al Downing, who gave up a run- scoring single to John Grubb in the filth. LOS ANGEL.ES L.opestb Buc.lMrlf Geney lb Cr~dff C.ylll Crwcl Ye991rc ~N<Jtss DD-lngp lffpfl INrshallp .. , ..... 3 000 • 1 1 0 4 1 1 0 •OOO 3 1 1 I 4 0 1 0 • 0 1 1 4 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0000 SANOl&GO .., .... Gr.-cf • o 1 1 f;. HerNlfldeuH o o o l.Ocltlffrlf .. 0 1 0 MUil 3 0 1 0 Mc(.ovey 111 4 O O O FUl'fttes 2tl 4 1 1 0 TOlanrf 4 1 1 O Hundle.,c 4 0 0 0 Frelslttien p 1 o o O ICel'llMll pfl 1 0 f I Wlnfi.ICI pr 0 0 0 0 Frhellep o o 0 O Tot•la 3l 3 I 2 T0411S al 2 1 2 LosAngelH 010 OC!l 010-3 SM 0'990 000 010 100-2 E-+Mldley, C.y, Mcco~,. OP ...... n °'• I. loe~ A11991es 7, sen DletO 6. Hl--Oarvey. 811clu1er. S8-A11erb acft, 5-l•,.•· IYle, .... I. ~-C.y. fft H R •• ea IO °"""",. • $ 1 1 1 1 M9'1NllCW,W> a 2 1 o o 1 ~,...... , 61712 ,,, .... I&.. 1·)) 1 2 1 0 0 1 WP~relSleCIM. T-3:11.A~11 .. Pele Hurt A.fter Fans Flood Field NEW YORK (AP) -While Pele is recuperating, the North American Soccer League will be doing some inves tigating. The 34·year -old starofthe New York Cos mos is spending the next three days resting in his home in Santos, Brazil alter re- ceiving minor injuries and a good scare when a mob of fans s warmed over him during a weekend New York·Boston NASLgame. . Meanwhile, Bob Ehlinger, as· s1stant to NASL commissioner Bill Woosnam, announced the league is conducting "a complete investigation of circumstances leading lo the injury of Pele. The "Black Pearl," as he is known throughout the world, s uf• fered a pulled muscle behind his right knee, and a twisted ankltf Friday night in Bos to.t University's Nickerson Fietc! during the first ha lf of a gam against the Boston Minuteman. The fans stormed the fi eld ant overwhelmed him after h scored a disallowed goal. Th Cosmos later los t the contest 2· in overtime. Pele was carried from the fi elf by security guards hired b» Warner Communications, ownet of the Cosmos, but it was later n• ported that his injuries we~ minor. . "I was shaken and scared " h• said before boarding a plan~ f Of Brazil. Cosmos vice president Clive Toye at first ordered th- New York team to leave the fielcl after the disturbance and told th• referee the players would not rel turn. · Toye said .. the game watl played in conditions unsafe cwt pl ayers, officials 11nd s perJ tators." '"'- l{e said he ~ounted only 14 • Boston policemen and eight B. u • security guards on duty at th stad ium, expl ain Ing he ha~ earlier been assured a many 200 policemen would be on hand. Sun Camp at U CI The Southern CalifomJa SUn opened camp Sunday wllh 7.C pl1>:ers al the Unlvcrslt:y of CalJfomla Irvine. Workouts aro open to the pubUc. Fealured events were the time lrlal1 and coach Tom Fear~· 1pecia1 l2·mioute run. Defensive back Eric Johnson uJ runnlng buck (i ary Dixori eaca ran 2'~ miles in 12 minutes. Fear& said be felt early ae~ 1 tr en gt h s s ho u 1 d be •• ·quarterback and receiver. SAN DIEGO <AP> -Former AngeJs skipper 81!1 Rlgn y, who manaied the Minnefi-Ol» Twin to the American League West.ern Division bascb ll Utle in 1970. bas been sifned as coach and ad· vance acout for the San .Dieao 1'adre1. u~~ nio FUENTES OF THE PADREI II KNOCKED OUT OF A DOU9LE.PLA y av ITEVI YEAG!R. Flan ker Keith Benson won the to~yard run ln 4.4 aecond1. Quarterbacks in camp wer19 Daryle Lamonica, Pal Had n Mike Ernst and Fountal' Valley'• Gary Valbuet:Mt. • I •I ,.. ___ .. Hunt Caps Dutch Prix IANDVOORT Tbe Netherlancta (AP) -J...,; .. ffunt ol Britain a11umed the lead i.n a mad scramble a. drivers pitted to 1bed rain tlrea, and he ~wered b1J Hesketh to a narrow victory In the rain-delayed Dutch Grand Prlx Sunday. The start of the race marking the hallway Point in the lS·race world cbampion1hlp series, was delayed fpr .co minutes by sboworis that forced drlvert1 to in. .rtJlt raJ~ tires on their racers. But with tbe circuit drying out around the 10th hap, there was a wholesale abundonment of the course as drtvets chanaed equip- ment. In the confusion, Hunt as· sumed the lead from Austrian veteran Niki Laude, whose Italian Ferrari had started from the pole position. Lauda, the ourrent world points leader, finished second in the 197-mile race, followed by Ferrari teammate Clay JWgazzoni of Switzerland. . Carlos Reutemann of Argen· lma was fourth in his Brabham nd Tom Pryce of Britain, driv: ing a Shadow, was fifth. OCC Duo lst lnTournament Burry Wallace and Bob Wetzel of Orange Coast College won the open m en 's doubles cham- pionship in the second annual na· tional outdoor three-wall rac- quetball tburnament at OCC Sun· day. Wallace and Wetzel defeated Charlie Brumfield and Dr. Bud Muehleisen in the finals, 21·14, 21·14. OPENSINCl.ES S.mlflHll 8f'umlleld def. Charlson, 21·1', 21·7; Wallace Ott. Strendermo, 21-IS, 21 ... f'IMll etumfi.lddef. Well11ee, 21-15, 21-11. Cottuleli.tl CS.mlt11111ls> Lund dtf. Sctlonerl, 21-6, 21·19; K«hdef. Crown 21·17,21·19. l"lltlllS Kochdtf. l.und..l 11·21, 21-11,21-16. uPENDOU8L.H f'IAels W•ll•u·Wetrel def. Brumlleld·Muehelsen, 21·14,21·14. • COllMletlH (l"llleh) Rolden-8roo9s def. Slerkmen·M<COy, 21·16• 14-21, 21-13. 8SINGl.H S.mltlNll Ke-def. Gross, 21·t, 21·10; Rossn11n def. Dtl-y, 2U, 21-S. f'INll RourNndef. Kune, 21-13, 21-S. C..MlellOll CS.mlflMll) Pool def. Crewford, 21-16, 21-14; Malone def. 8ef99vln, 21·12, 7·21, 21·17. 800U81.ES $elftltlNll s.wye,.L~ def. Rolden·Bf'ldlJH, 21-10, ,1.19; ~onmen-Hlcln def. McGovern·D'Amic:o, 21·9, 21·1S. FINll Roumen·Hk k1 def. S.wyor·\.ono, 21·20, 12-11, 21-7. Celt•lettoll CS.l'lllflMfs) 8100!n-Slar~ ••· Merua.u.a 2"14, 211'3; Ma._:Ademttdef. IClllem-Osbom, 21·7, 21-S. CSINOl.IS Semlflul1 ._,,,..eter d«f. Burtllell, 21-9. 2041, 2Ml; Orglll ... ,Hlll, li.J, 21·7. """'' Of(llll def. Her~nreter, 21·3, 21·9. ~11solatlo11 IFIMIS) uwlsdtl. R. Allen. 21-14, 21-20. SENIORS SINGLES Fl1tals MuehlelMndet. Killam, 21-1, 21 4. CMIM .. tlOll CFIMll) • Bible def. S.lettl, 21-ll.t 21-12. WOMl!N'~ SINGf.ES HelmscMf. Weed, 21·6, 21·7. COllMlltlOll lf'IMls) I'. S<llmldtdllf. Brown, 21-9, 21-8. SPORTS McMichael Named Top 4-A Player Glendale Hoover Higb's Chuck Mc'Michael was named CIF 4·A baseball player of the year today on a team that saw no Orange Coast area athletes being selected. McMlcbael, who helped bring Hoover it.s first ever CIF baseball title, had a 16·2 record with an era of 0.69. He struck out 148 batters in 117 innings and hit .444. Cl' .. A 8a5eMll T-Flrst THm PlilL Name Kllool • OF-8111 McOoneld, Santa Moni(a OF-Don Young, Dos Pueblos OF-Gteo Erke, Hoover 1B -Mllct Carpenter. Los Al•m1U115 18 -Mike Lane, H~nem41 28 -Tim MeJle, l!lsenhower 38 ~renk Penne,hlo, Plus X SS-JoNI Flenriery, l.ake-Od Utll-Aober1 StHI Foothl 11 C -RendyWhistler, L.illewooel p -<llUCk Mcl\1\1(1\HI, Hoover P -Sten Wiiiiams, Lakewood P -f(evln JondltL St. Jolln Botco MCOft" THm OF-Fred Smllll, Rt dlend1 OF-Scotl Relttry, Arudle 01'-ArnoldM(Crery, Muir 1B -Jolln Gtetell'le", North Torr1nte 28 -Rene MarJlnu, Hueneme 3B -TlmMo51Ch, Rollll\g Hiiis SS-()enMlller, Hert Ulll-t>on CarflnCIPSl.JoM Bosco C -Gofdy Cereslno, Noire Dame P -David RuOer. Eisenhower P -Lenee Go,., Ketella P -Roel 8oxberoer+ Foothill lllrdTH"' OF-8obSllube, Simi Velley OF-Bob Pfested, Glendale OF-Art Mory Ketella I B -Ml ke Goflnl, St. John Bosco '2B -Mere Berl>ee, Cres.c:enta Veller 38 -Antnory Muno!, Cll1lley ·ss-Ron Rldlno, Hoover Ulll-M.uk On9ll"to, Rolllno Hiiis C -6111 Conti, ThO<.IUnd Oek~ P -JlmJ1cques. Glenoate P -0.vld 'Mlldoie, Santa Barbara P ...;,R1y Rodrlouu, Plus x YHf' AV9. Sr ...... Sr. .'403 Sr. .4'4 Sr. .'463 5' .• 404 5'. .3118 Sf •• 428 Sr •. 383 SI'. .:151 Jr •• m Sr. 12·2 Jr. 9·1 J r. 12-1 Sr. ·"°° Sr .• SSS Sr •• 4'2 Sr. .390 Jr •• 423 Sr •• m Jr. .435 Jr, .420 Sr •. <MO Sr. a.c Sr. 16-1 Sr. 1·• Sr. .412 Jr. .3S4 Sr. .420 Sr •• 403 Sr. .SS6 Jr. .350 Sr. .3A9 Sr •. m Sr •• 310 Sr. II-• Sr. 13 ... Jr. 7--0 Collegiate Stars Top Japan, 3-2 LOS ANGELES (AP> Arizona State leftfieldet-Kim Phelps slugged the sole homerun Sunday to give the U.S. collegiate All-Stars a 3·2 win in 13 innings over the Japanese All·Stars at the University of Southern California campus. , Phelps' homer to right field gave the U.S. team a 2·0 edge in the seven.game fourth annual Japan-USA collegiate baseball series. Oil City Nine Falls LONG BEACH -The Hunt· ington Beach A 's summer , baseball team dropped a 3·2 de· cision to the Long Beach Jets Sunday afternoon in a Joe DiMaggio League game at Wilson High School. The A's fell behind in the fourth Inning and could never quite catch up to the winning Jets. M1111tl11tt011 8HCll A 'i (I) " ,_. 0 0 2 0 S..ns.on, 2b Olllf'Ch-11, p Prllll, 3b Gtltlln, !1 Crell, tb BesllOrt, SS Setter,' WllSOll, If Jc>hn$0fl, If Jeckson,d Totals 1.BJel\ HBA's <11> , l 1 • 0 • 0 .. 0 1 1 2 0 , 0 . 2 0 1 0 3 0 2• 2 2 ' 0 0 ' 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 ' 2 Seo" Dy 1111111191 r II e 000 201 0-l .. 0 000 011 0-2 • 3 .For Men Winners in the 27th annulll San· ta Ana Country Club lnvitatiooal ·~Olt tournament were Dave Quisl· inf and Jim Gianuliaa of Big Ca· nyODCountryClub. They replace Wayne Carrico of El Ni~uel and Ed Elko of host Santa Ana CC as overall cham-pions. Another team from Big Canyon OC won the Santa Ana flight. Tom Schreiber and Dick Fyke cap· tured the bracket for first· round losers in the championsbipfiight. Otherflightwinnersincluded: Ben ·Hog an Flight-Dan Mitchell (San Gabriel CC> and C.M.Hannel (LaQuintaCC). Sam Snead Flight-Bob Limacher (Santa Ana CC> and Jude Poynter <Mesa Verde CC). By.ron Nelson Flight-Fred Mott and Don MiUer (Old Ranch CC>. Arnold Palmer F1ight-Dick Woods <Los Coyotes CC> and Phil Cutting (Annandale CC). Jack Nicklaus F1ight-Hugh Hdtn <Los Posas CC) and Lee Mebger, Jr. (Green RiverGC). Billy Casper Flight-Bill Brown (Santa Ana CC> and Jay Hornbeak (LaQuintaOC). Gary Player Flight-Dave Stevens and Elmer Slavik (An· nandale CC). Lloyd Mangrum Flight-Stan Brekhus (Santa Ana CC) and Ray Young (Yorba Linda CC). Paul Runyon Flight-Lorne Froats (Yorba Linda CC) and Jack Lane <Indian Wells CC) Jimmy Demaret Flight-Hank Weeks <Big Canyon CC) and Dave Bligh (Hacienda CC). Bobby Jones Flight-Stan Hickman and Brian McGoldrick (San Gabriel CC). Lawson Little Flight-Dan DeMille (Big Canyon CC> and Pat Healey <Mesa Verde CC ). Walter Hagen Flight-Lou Scott (Santa Ana CC) and Vic Tully (California CC >. Gene Sarazen Flight-Harold Stone and Don Sutton (Hacienda CC>. . Tommy Armour Flight- Calvin Loop (San Gabriel CC> and Charles Blalack (Annandale CC>. Olin Dutra Flight-Bill Price (Green River GC) and Frank Fargo (Big Canyon CC>. · Santa Ana CC will be the scene ·of the annual junior invitational tournament Monday with a full field of UO golfers getting' under way with a shotgun start at 10. The annual Frank Rowley family tourname nt will be staged Sunday with past president's day this past week. Mile Square Dave Sheff, an assistant pro at Fountain Valley Mile Square Golf Course, leaves this week for Chic ago where h e will participate in the PGA long-drive contest. Sheff recently placed hi gh in the Southern California com· petition· to gain a spot in the na· tionaJ event. Mf••ion \liejo Jim Lewter is the defending champion in the men's club golf championshfps to be held later this month at Mission Viejo Country Club. The event will be held June 28-29. FACTORY Demo SALE!· Baseball Standings • TOYOTA IX.AMPLE: 175 TOYOTA COROLLA • IOffd· r.Olo. heller. l4tlt) • 52999 • •75 VOLVO 242 NI, Mo.. llMtto. power tltttiflO. 191") 55999 I I ....... Left At Pr..rwtce ............... • 4 WHEEL DRIVES '74 LAMOCIUISH .tW«OO. • IOMIJ, ••rll l>vOI. fllllo. ...... {""10) 54999 ) AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Pct. GB Boston 37 26 .587 New York 37 29 .561 1 ~ Milwaukee 33 32 .508 S Baltimore 30 34 .469 7'h Detroit 26 36 .419 10'~ Cleveland 25 39 .391 12~ West Division 42 26 .618 38 31 .5.l)t 4 lAt 33 34 .493 8'h 34 36 .486 9 31 33 .48.c 9 28 38 .434 13 Oakland Kansas City Texas Angels Minnesota Chicago S4lfldty 's G1mes OllC.OO .. t. MlllMIOte 5-2, 1Sttofl'W 10IMl1191 Nlw York S, Detroit J .. 111more H . lottOll o.s Cle,_.IMd J, Mllw1111C .. 2, 101Mlf19S C..llf0'1lle 1, Tt•tt 0 Olklencl 7•1, 1<•11111 c"" t-1. 1s1121nn1nos T•w•ao.-OWtl" C!'elch 2-11t IMton (811,,0ll0-0 Nlw York !Medich S.9 > at 8altlmore IGflmll..- W I Ottrtlt !Colemen 3·10) at MllweukH CC:.tro ,.,, TtMt ~'tall 4>3) et Gtlllol'ftla ISlnotr "-11 MlflMIO(I Cl1uo111U·SI 11 ~kland '"-""lot) Ollly .. me• •<MOultCI ) ,.""_., .• oa- Dltr.ittt Mllw•ukeo, 2 .... Yofll et Beltll'llO•t CIOYei.ild 11 Bo.ion Touut C:lllUQO Kinta• C.ll'r el Calllornla Ml-IOI.I 41l 0.1111411110 NATIONAL LEAGUE East Dlvlsioo W L Pct. GB Pittsburgh 39 24 .619 Philadelphia 36 31 .537 S New York 32 30 .516 61h Chicago 33 33 .500 7~ St. Louis 30 33 .476 9 Montreal 28 33 .459 10 West Division Cincinnati 42 27 .609 Dodgers 41 30 .577 2 San Francisco 33 35 .485 81~ SanDiego 31 37 .456 10th Atlanta 29 39 .426 1211'.l Houston 25 47 .347 18112 S11Mey'1 Glime Montr.al '-3, Pllll.0.lphle 0.4 ,t.lllltlto •2. Sen "renclsco t•S PlttAIUrOh t, New York 0 St. I.Miis 7. Chl,aoo 2 Hout.ton I, Cincinnati 4 Los AnoelH 3, S•n Oleoo 2 T1Ny'10..,._ St. Ullllt fR. .. o 1·6 end Oe1111y Ml 111 Ntw Vork ISIOlll 1.0elldW.bbf.21, (;itKl"ntll C.llllllOll•m 7-21et1<11111111 IE.aslulv 0.01 ~ltbburoll (lttoker S·Jl et Phlledelphl• CCarllOft .. SI Ollte .. Clurrls.,SI et MonlrMl IS<llerMtn0.11 .._.. it."ftlel (Hooltn 6·SI Al Houtton IRollerb ,.., s.n fl'rMtltce (MonltlUKO 441 et Sin Ol•OO IMclnMfl .. .JI By DAVE AOMANO Of .. Deity .......... ,, Corona del Mar Hieh'a Dennis Trout has a dll· tlnct advantaee over m06t hJtb school tennis coaches. The coach or the 4·A champion Sea Kings, Trout baa an tmpre11ive tennis backsround and at SO can still beat moet or the players on hi8 team. This gives Trout an ad· vantage because the players listen to him and respect what he says. Most of them know of his background and have seen him play, since he works out with the team almost every day. •·1 feel it's a big advan· tage for me to get out there and practic~ what I preach," says Trout. "Being able to de· monstrate the things I am trying to explain to them is a big advan· tage." Monday, June 23. 1 ~75 State in 1967 when he helped pace the 49ers to a second place finish in the nation tor small colleges. Trout had a per~onal re· cQrd of 25·3 that year. The following year · Long Beach won the team title and 1'rout team ed with Fred Suessman to win the na· tional doubles title for the 49ers. Trout was also a winner of the 'Long Beach Open tournament several times. DENNIS TROUT CdM Coach In 1970 the CdM coach won the U .S. National , .... ~ Parks tournament in Detroit. A late starter, Trout didn't start playing ten· nis seriously until he was 15-only a few yea.rs younger than some of his CIF champs are right now. His competitive career began at Long Beach One of the highlights of Trout's career came in 1972 when he loured Eu rope . .fl e won a tournament in Bournemouth, England and advanced to the quarterfinals a nd semifinals of several other tourneys. Hawaiian Gardens Wins; GW Loses Trout's wife, J eanine, also plays a lot of tennis and the duo teamed to win a tourney on that tour against some tough competition. One of Trout's most memorable matches came when he was still at Long Beach State. He and his partner played Hawaiian Gardens Haw1ll111Gere1e11s <» an exhibition match came up with two runs in Frerna11,u ·~ ~ ~ ~ against Stan Smith and the sixth and one in the ~:t%'f· 2b ~ ri ~ ri Bob Lutz on a wood sur· seventh Sunday after· upton, 1b 3 o 1 1 face. Desrosiers,( 2 0 0 I '•They beat us 10·6 in a noon to defeat visiting Hlbl»llrd.Jt> 2 o ' o pro set and I thought that Johnson Soil, 3·2, in Con· ~~~~~:~.If . ~ g ~ g was pretty good playing nie Mack baseball ac· Funu.rt ' o ' o f lion. ~~:f;.l>h g ~ g g onthattypeo sµrface," Golden West wasn't as Pa1ne,p o o o o says Trout. "I don't re- !ort u n a le in M etro ~1~;:,~ 2~ g ~ ~ member toomanythings League play, dropping a Score11,1 .. 1111111 r 11 e about the match except tor the fact tha t we didn't doubleheader to the JohnsOnSo11 101 000-0-2 .. 1 return many of Smith's Orange Panthers, 8·2 H.lw•llanGaraens ooo oo2 1-3 a 2 serves." and 5·2. ~~<;,~~~ T t l I d Johnson Soil had a 2-0 .11 , h rl>i rou a so P aye lead going into the sixth :,~~~~~. rf ~ g ~ ~ against Pancho Segura · in hi s prime and b e f o r e H a w a i i a n ~~~' ! ~ ~ g managed to stay close to G a rd e n s erupt ed. Ri(h.lrds, 1b 3 o o o hi Singles by Tom Freman ~=:~b ~ g ~ ~ !f'~out 's m ost recent and Vince Bienek-along M<Coy,c i o o o accomplishment came with a walk to Doug ~~:!i.'~h ~ ~ ~ ~ at the Ojai tournament Mansolino-loaded the unos~1e.1>11 1 o o o Rle1her 2b 1 o o o this y e a r w h e n h e bases for Hawaiian To1by.2ii 2 1 o o teamed with Buzzy Gardens. Then, Jack Up· :::;~""· P g g g g Strode to win the doubles ton had an rbi infield hit, To1e1s 21 2 ) 1 title. Trout and his and Scott DesrQsiers hit Scortllr 11111111" r 1t ~ partner beat a t eam with asacrificefly. Orinoe uo 002 0_,,, 7 former w1·mbl edon . . d Golden West 000 001 1-2 s .. Hawauan Gar en s secoNOGAME champion Alex Olmedo scored the winning run in Go10enw;:1121r " rbl on it. Olmedo won the the bottom of the seventh Houle,11 3 o o o Wimbledon singles tiUe -0n Mansol1nb's single =.-:-~, ~ : i i iii 1959 and wna also a ·thv.at bro1~ght home Ed ~=~~Jb ~ ~ ~ g member o f the U.S. 1gnaro 1. Rtcrieras, 111 i o o o Davis Cup t eam. Meanwhile , alp Gohlden :.:::!~:~f j ~ ~ g Trout a nd his wife West, Oranges ant ers Macau1ey,cJ11 1 o o o have a busy summe r had 12 singles in the ~:::;;120 ~ g ! ~ schedule which includes opening game while aor1e,p' o o o o a trip to the La Jolla Golden West could only R~~~~~er.~ 2~ ~ g ~ tournament July 4·6. get five hits. Sc-111 t11nln9s Th ·11 lso be tra cJ Golden West scored a Go1aenw.11 ooo 020 o~ ~ ~ ingefa~1r i~ the sum~c~ run apiece in the s ixth-<>raoo-300 oo2 •-s , o to play in the Pacific on Mike Selwood's rbi Northwest tennis circuit. sin gle-and in the G• } A seventh when J eff Tolby Ir ces DAIL V PILOT ,4 J J. t'IR5T RACI: -lSO yerd1, 2 YMr otcn. c1elmlno. Puru '2!00. Clelmlne prl<t ,5000. Mr.BerCalch (Llpf\eml Fast9rHktr 18ertreml Lulle'tJoker IMylHl l'mASure Thing IGarie) Wln!Uln 0.Plh (HUI I Bleoc.,n IClerl• ... I sw1119ln$llm <Rlch.ln:hl t,.lmll' Hy 11 ITreour• I Scollie's Bar End (Wa lker> You Btt Spu<1 (Cruoerl SIECOND a A( IE -)SO yefdL , ,....,., t oldi. Cl•lmlno. Purse '2000. Clelmlng ptlc;e $3$00. I Se• Ber Cutle !Lipham I "' Sty A Preyer !Adair I tl7 Honkytonk Man !Her II 122 • Or.Hit Marion ITr•uurel 122. ~iH Run Bem !Wiiker) 117 Winsome Led ICardoul ttt Little Above fGer 1.1 I 1n , Mr. T09 Chi(ks <Bertreml 11• HOM'S Sonny Boy ICre1ger I in 5Porl•b0ut !W1honl lU / THIRD RACE-=lso yards. 2 ~!, 01<1 meloens. Purse S1900. Miss Me Honey IAdelrl Orum•lot !Richerds! Cll.troer Oo Ber ICerdo1el Jet ~recs ccreaoer I Limits Regerds ITreuure l Oonlen (Wtrd) Krocklln K•llly IC.lerisse l Tnkmuter (Htrll Dell's Little Doll !Broosl 11• '" Ill 122 ltt 122 119 122 119 FOURTH RACIE -S49yerds.3yoer olds&. uP. Allow1nce. Purs. '2000. Sandy Vonnah !Myles> 11' Mr.Adeq1101e ICarCIOza) tit CCJfNClnlloss IRIChards> 119 ~El Jay <e.rtraml 111 Bold Tornado !Call I 119 PIPtllne Pole IHutl 119 Fl"H RACE -400 y.uds. 3 year Olds. Cl1lmlno. Purse $2800. ClelminQ prl" '6500. EdOrlno !W1twnl 17' Zip's Son <Har II 119 Sir Quel Breaker ILlpnam) 119 Miu Pasllmer (Myles) 111 DlvlO.ck !Treasure I 119 Shelkeu Bar Go (Wiiker) I 17 £jisy Aces (Dreyer I I 19 O..ndy'sGoB1<1 !Richerds) 119 SIXTH RACE -JSO yards. 3 year olds. Allow ante. Purse 7lSOO. Sure Fleet CRl(h.lrdsl I?? Just Jim Dandy !Myles) 119 Gill(ler 'N Jaae !Ward) 117 Think Gol<I (Lipham I • 111 P1ay Susette IWalkod 117 Tt>eAmblssaoor (Hert) 119 Ed Oee !Trusure > II<> ValleySuperstar (Dreyer) 119 Black Tnou11nt ICar<lota I 117 Mr.C...prl 0e(k (Paoel 119 SEVENTH RACE -350 rards. ~ ,..ar olds &. up. Allowance. Purse $0000. The SI anion Lions Club. Smok'nGal !War<I) 111 "'' '~ 111 l.a•to Blr<l 2 (Upham) Little Tiny Go IWalsonl Jel Sel Three (Treasure I Ou!'ll<ale Win !Dreyer I Gold Copy IPalliol Drlvln' Men IRlchudsl Above Rel>el llon (Ad•lrl 122 11~ 119 117 EIGHTH RACE -JSO yards. 3Ytllf olds. Claimino. Purse S2000. c1a1m1no "'lee SJ 500. van's Star 1Crea11erl 'T1mco !Ward I Pltnly Fast (TfeasureJ Mr. Ztno IRichard'I Du~ly Line Bus (Harl) Ouke'sChoice IC.:alll tvte f'1re CClerln• I Speedy Six !Adair I Top Moon Jo I Brooks) 11~ 112 112 122 in 117 11<> 112 122 NINTH RACE -3SO yards. 3 year olds &. up. C.lalmlno. Purse ~100. Clalmonq price S2000. Oraw Play IHaru /WJon Fe&s (Cleriuel Ctlar<ll1'9 Charlie \C.•r~) Fey's.I lloy]Wo IAdolr) SMakYTH!I<., 1wercn Nlte Train (Call) HlgnTidf!s !Treasur~l DopTonto (Creager) Top Gain Uoy {Wal Iler ) Sir Nomad IP•!!<!) Pro Soccer S.turO•''" Games 122 111 \12 'n 1:n 122 177 172 122 122 Poland Nationals 2, Hartford 0, e~· hll>lllon Tor·onto 4, Los Anoeles 3 Tam~ Bay 2. St. Louis 1. OT Por11ena I, San Antonio o. OT ~allle s. San Jose 1 Sunday's Games Dalli more 2, Rochester I, 2 or scored on an error. . Golden West could on-~ue Duffy, playing golf ly score two runs in the w1th ,h er f at h er on, nightcap too. Both came fath~r s day, scored_ a in the fifth when Shawn hole·m·oi:ie on the third Guinn and HaroJdholeatB1gCanyonCoun· Motocross Results R 'th h d · g try Club. _ea er a run-sconn She has been playing singles. golf for six months and Fish Report scored the ace on the 127·yard hole with father Richard watching. LON'G BEACH 1 .. 1mon1 Plet'I -I n a m e d a 1 p 1 a y 14ono1ers: u 11>1,ore. Ucellcobass tournament, Margaret , l08 roo cod. 15JMr111sltlntl -I.lb Bl k h · th A aiioiers: 68 roo coo, :.io mackfJf'el. • an ens •P was e Mt11>u1, 462 a1ue bas~6S3cali(ot»ss. flight winner with a net '":.h~';_;o:;slO.vey•11.ooer1 -m score of 66. Donna Smith anoicrs: .011on1to. u cenco 1>ess, l,lSO was second at 70 with rock cocl, 1 halibut, 13S mackerel. • 1.11rt'• uM11111> -•• •n111ers: 1 Marge DuBois next at 72 ei1>1,ore, 766 roo cod, J2lea1tco 11an. and Deane Helperin at I bonito, 13S mackerel, 201 l>lut' bass. OCEANSIDE -204 enoltrs: 221 73. ~~c:e~~s,6"allbul,SHockeod,1SS In B fli g ht, Judy SAN DIEGO -a~2 anoiers: u1 Favorito was the winner e11>1tore,47yellowte11, 132roCl<tod,2 'th 70 ( ll db Bet twllll<lt.3<1lkobtu. W1 • 0 owe y . DANA WHAltF -1 .. •n111en: 269 ty Smith (71) Dorothy sand blu. »2 roCll cod, S halibut, 21 ' . whltesee1>1u"'u11>1core. Lazier (72) and Anita $£AL. a£AllOH -19S anoters: 1,m E · k (73) rock Cod, 7' sand bHS, 7 UllCO bl$S, nC SOn • • 10 ma'kere1. 4 (ow ,oc:1, ' lino ,oo. A tie resulted for ftrst ::r,;-ti!~11b~~~ler"29oon1to.3set1<1 in C flight between Jan uN 1"101to 1s.-u11111 ... 1 -1s1 Greene Jean Field and engltrs: 2 bonito, t blrrtcuCS., 181 L H ' h t 74 callcoben.soorockcoCI. u ug es a . Perfect Summer Jeans ... from Qfbij ® 100~ cotton chambrlrj and white Sta-Prest hop$1.Ck nuvos ~ §J~o@§J~@\ •• '"'*'" ......,, """""'°'t otl'9 ..... '°'° CARLSBAD -Results ol Sunday's U S. Gr<1nd Prix of Molo·Cro\'o di CdrlSb.l<I Raceway: f irst molo (•0 minutes plus lwo lapSI -1. Ro~r De Cosier, Ek!lolum. Suzuki; 2. Brad Lackey, Pinole, Hu\- Qvarna, l . Gerri ti Wolslnk, Holland, Suzuki. 4, Rex Staten, Fon1ana, CJ., S. Gayton Moster. Garden Grove-. Ma1co, 6. Den91 AberQ fSWt!<lenl, Bultato; 7, J im Weintrt, Laguna BH<ll, Yam•lll; I . Helkkl Mll<kOlil, F111lan<1, H u~qv11rna : 9. Ke111 Howerton, S.n Antonio. T~x . Hu"S~ qvarna: 10. Pltrre Ka nma ken, Mis· t.lon Viejo, Hond•. S.cond moto -1. Wolslnk; 2. ICl"INlkers; l Tony DISlelano, Mor· rlsvillt, Pa., Suzuki; •. Mikkola, 5. Hower1on, 6. Weinert; 7. Boll Grossi, Santa Cruz, Suzuki; 8. Sieve Slack•· Ille, Austin, Tex., ~. Decoster; 10. Stal en, Overall finish -1. Wolsink; '2. DtCoster; 3. Kanmallers; 4. Ml~· kola, s. Wtlnerl; 6. Howerton; 1. Stalen; 8. 01s1e1ano; Q, Gavlon Mo~ter, Garo en Grove4 Malco. Grossi Results ol Che lwo 750 cc SuPPOr1 class races -lir~I he1t 120 min..l~I -1. Merty Smllh, San Dleoo. Honda: 'l. Tommy Croll. San Ol...io, Hon<M; 3, Brute McDougal. Oranoe. Honda. Second heal -I. Smllll; 2. Croft; 3, Tom Hiirl. Torrance, Yamana. O\leratl finosll -t. Smllh; 2. Croft; 3. Wont Boy.,, lrvlne, CZ. CUSTOM WHEEL SPECIAL for most American cars Sizes: 13 x 5,5. 14 x 6 75 • Includes cop •fully polished • fits bolh dl\Jm and disc brd<e wheels •one pece die-cosl oluminurn • oddifiond cosl for Superlug nuts one week only offer ends June 28 1:18" wete the other~ 6 WOY' to chatgct Mos1or ~ BonkArnflncord. neo.QMng Olo!QO. AmerlCOO ~s. Col1o Bloncl'\e °"'°1l Club B.F .Goodrieh 2049 HAllOl IL VD,.. COSTA MllA 1 \ ,• •• • endett.a Scores Again Fresh from her Class C victory in the Pacific Ocean Racing Con- ferenct: in Southern Califo~ia, Vendetta, the 40-foot sloop owned and skippered b.Y Tom Tobin and Art DeFever, San Diego Yacht Club, won t~t\ f 1~t race of the Two Ton world championship on Lake St. Clair, Mi ch. Sunday. Vendetta is being sailed in the Two Ton championship under the burgee of the Club de Yates de Acapulco. Two more 34-mile races will be sailed Tuesday and Wednesday with the yachts moving to Lake Huron for a 203-mile race Thursday. Laurels Won By Sailboats Eleven classes of sailboats showed up on outside and inside start- ing lines Saturday and Sunday for Bahia Corin- thian Yacht Club's Stars and Stripes R egatt a. Weather was light both days. Trophy winners in each class: Outside classes ETCH ELLS-22 -J. Don Edler, NHYC; 2, John Cazier, BYC; J, Le roy S utherland, NHYC. :s-O·:S -1. ATyea ltamlin, NHYC; 2, Allen J ohnson, ABYC; 3, Mike Oclanato, NHYC. RHODES·19 -1, Dan S titz el, CBYC; 2 , Leonard Anabl e, SBYRC; 3, Naylor Jones. SFVSC. SHIELDS -1, Robert Koll, UC ISA; 2, Lee Painter, UCISA; 3, Carl Reinhart and Mickey Deering. NHYC. SOLING -1, Bill Fields. NHYC; 2, Larry Ashier, NHYC; J, Bill C1ispen, NHYC. Inside classes LASER -1, Bret Barnard, NHYC ; 2, J eff Scott, LIYC ; 3 , Bill Clark, NHYC; 4, Kevin Kirk, BYC. SNIPE -1. Gordy Palmer , ABYC;-2, Pat English. PVSA; 3, Chuck Case, KHYC; 4, Carol Sheridan, ABYC. LIDO·l4A -l. Chad Twichell, LIYC; 2, Alan Oleson, BYC ; 3, Tom Unskey, WYC; 4, Marty Loc:kney, LlYC. LID0-14B ·-1, Dean Hope, BYC; 2 , Mary Karyl Thorne. BYC; 3, 1'y Beach, BYC ; 4, Doris Kirst, BYC. SABOT A -I , Bill Buckingham, NHYC; 2, Molly O'Hora, NHYC; 3, Mik e Pinckney, DCYC; 4, Suzanne Spangler, NHYC. SABOT B -1, Jerry No rman , BCYC; 2, David Cefali, BYC; 3, Doug Teulie, BYC· 4 Cha rlie Buckingh~m: NHYC. Linger Doesn't Dawdle Linger Longer, sailed by Richard Winn of Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club, was the-·winner of the Mayor of Avalon Trophy for first to finish in Catalina I sland Yacht Club's annual race from Long Beach to Long Point Saturday. ' The winner of the Com- modore's Trophy for first on handicap lime was Fantasy, sailed by Ray Hopkins ofCBYC. The race la sailed ID two classes by yachts rat e d under the Performance Handicap Racing Fleet rule. CLASS A -1, Stella Maris, Ashl ey Smith, CBYC ; 2, R e bel II, Gordon Gann, LBYC; 3, Interlude, David Steiner, LBYC ; 4 . Linger Longer ; 5, Aurora, Ed Uneerman, LSF. CLASS B -1, Fan- tasy; 2, Manana, Jack He rron . VenYC; 3, Blackjack, Ted Isaacs, LBYC ; 4, Velora, George Harris. LBYC ; 5, Ps- yche. Dave Crandall, LBYC. Jae-Tel Dobies Race ·To San Diego Hobie ca t sailors Coronadel Mar; 4, Hobie Captures •turned out in droves Alter and Nancy Saturday and Sunday for Beauchamp, Capistrano PrI. ll• ken the annual San Diego Beach; 5, St~ve Leo and •· Classic which saw 185 Scott Harman, Balboa boats in eight classes Island. Jac·Tel. skippered by participating on breezy HOBIE-168 -1· Jeff Jack Plessis of the host San Diego bay. M~t~hews and ~arbara Del Rey Yacht Club, won Trophy winners in Wilba ms, San Diego; 2• the Pritiken Trophy pre· each class: · Dave and Joann Moxley, HOBIE·16A -1 Bob Oxnard; 3, Jim Foster dieted log race Sunday and Jana Seaman', Los and Susan Henderson, with the remarkably low N t B h s error of 0.366 percent Ange I es ; 2 , Wayne ewpor eac ; 4• teve over the 37-mile course . Schafer and John and Mary Payne, San . Golden, Cap1·strano Diego; 5, Harry Thaete outofMarinadelRey. The slow cruisers re· Beach · 3 B ob a nd and Steve McGowan, ceived an unexpected Je naly~ s'ea uc h a mp San Diego. thrill off Malibu Pier as a ' HOBIE·l6C -1. Miles Wood and Keith Lindsey, fleet of high speed of· San Di_ego ; 2. Greg fshorepowerboatracers Wa rn e r and Donna sped throug h the fl eet Eastman, Los Angeles; creating gigantic wakes. 3. Wayne a nd April I. Jac ·Tel , Jack 3BYC ~6en P'---Myron. Los Angeles; 4, Plessis, DRYC. o'.366 ; 2, 1ri~ ~ Ken and Barbata Smith, Misty Sea, Tom Collins, . S 0 . S T d Hollywood YC , 0.655; 3, Three Balboa Yacht an ae~o; • om an • J a c a n a • Ch u ck Club Thistle sailors were Jeff Gillman• Costa Hirschm a n . DR YC , ~n:i on g the si~ top MHs~BIE·l4A _ 1 Mik 0.?20; 4, Ship Ma.~es, Bob finishers Sunday m the . · e Wilson , CYC Cl,886; s. "' Southern California dis· Staudt. Fontana' 2• J~ Happy Ours, Mt.It David, •• trict championship re-Cockrell, Van Nuys, 3• DRYC, 1.302. gaua at Alamitos Bay. Warren .w a 1 k er• NOVICE CLASS -l, The first si~ in the dis-Tar z .an a · 4 • R 0 n Mi sty Sea; 2, Happy trict championsh ip Wagnie re , Thousand Ours · 3 The. ·Haven . Oaks. · • · ' qualifies for the na· HOBIE 148 1 De Jordan Weitzman, !ionals at Munroe, Mich. S .th S -D. -g . •2 Mailnt DRYC, 2.S13. an August. nu • an ie o •. • Winner in the district. Rudge, Santa Momca; 3, meet was Will Dave M e rt z, Long Templeton of Balboa Beach. Yacht Club aaUinl War HOBIE·14C -1. Chris and Peace, witb finilbes . Fields, Santa Monic;a: 2, of'l-4-1. Dennis Belli, San Diego; Runner-up WH Skip 3 •. Wayne Walker. San Kemp(( of Coronado Di~f>°BIE·l2 _ 1 g .. n .. Yacht Club with flUlhe:s • ~ ot 2-l·S. Bob van't. Ria, Lantz, San. Pedr~: 2, Balboa Yacht Club 6-3-2, Robert Poitras, Sao wa third; Bob ~m.u. D l \t Io ; 3 , • D e n n i I Ml8tioo Bay YC 3-5--4 H•nsen• San Diego. wat fourth · Bob' Ball HOBIE-IO -Craig BYC 4.-.3 .;, .. ftfth ...i HemandM, Long Beach; Jobri Br.;wn Cabrillo 2, Scott Bubbard , BeKtt Yacht Club, ~H. Newport Beach: 3, Scott. wa mtlt. Danuelos, Long Beach. Dean's List Steven R. Burlingham, _,of Mr. and Mrt. F. G. Burllnfham, 1207 Starboard W •Y, Corona del Mar. and Thomas L. !Wee. son of Mrs. C. L Clemon• or Cherry Street. WeaJmlnste r. have been named to the Dean'• List at Bob Jones University In Greenville, S. C. Both students are j\llllon in the school ol reUrJ<>n. . Ahmansoa Serie P syche .. Ra~i: Wins . Cltiss A . Triumph8 · • Mary Ann Nebrbas, s~ilfbl tbe Columbia Defeoder P1ycbe, was the winner or the second race of Dana Point Yacht Club's Ladles Series Sunday. Jim Linderman'• Bricaon-441 Raider from Balboa Yacht Club was the Class A winner in Ne~ Harbor Yacht Club a West End race, the fourth of the Ahmanson Serles. mile.. 8qb Ba'---· · ~.sssc. Sunday's homeward • bound race w u started CLASS C -1. II-. In IJ•ht fog and Uaht airs rydown, Blll Lapworth, which did not increase St. FYC; 2, Andiamo, materially, making for a Bob Sodaro. BYC: a. alow crossing. Canadian Bobtn. Jlm The yachts sailed from Newport to Arrow Point near the west end of Catalina Island Satur· d~. spent the night at Howland's ~anding and raced bome Sunday. The two races were scored as one f Ol' a total of 58. 7 CLASS A -1, Ral~r; Warmington, NHYC; 4, 2. Drumbeat, Don Ayres Noctura, Wallie Gerrie, Jr.. NHYC; 3, Bandit, NHYC. Runner.up was Joann Malanosky in tbe I CataUn3-27, S'-n.ttlne, "---------Capistrano Bay ~acht Steve Morton, ChJcago CLASS D -1, Chinook, YC. Tom Schoek, NHYC; 2, Don DuBose, VYC ; 2, Die Maggie, Mlk e Harvey , BYC; 3, Chleanel'y, Terry O'Neil. VYC: 4, Seduction, Dave Williams, BYC. Club, and third was Did· less summer. a Ca1·25. skippered by Amy CLASS B -1, Mistress Ill, Bill Leary, Kaneohe YC; 2, Nuance, Geol'ge Austin, SSSC; 3. Libert.v. Welcome Aboard By ALMON LOCKABEY With another busy summer of boating activity ahead in Newport Beach and other boating com- munities, a lot oC tempers will flare, harsh words will be exchanged, and more than a few accidents will occur as sailboats and power·driven vessels mix it up in narrow channels. ~ll of the above will result from a seemingly ambiguous Rule of the Road that both "giveth and taketh away." Th,e rule is Rule 20 of the International Rules of the Road, and what many sailors fail to realize is that it is written in two parts -A and B. Rule 20 states: "(A) WHEN A POWER driven vessel and a sailing vessel are proceeding in such directions as lo involve risk of collision, the power·driven vessel shall keep out of the way of the sailing vessf:l." Seems clear until you read: "(b) This rule s hall not give a sailing vessel the right to hamper, in a narrow channel, the safe passage of a power-driven vessel which can navigate only inside such channel.•• Articfe 20 of the Inland Rules of the Road says much the same thing. So where do we stand? At first glance the rule supports the sailboater's contention that he "always" has right of way over a power~a~. But Section (b) clearly takes it away from him· m many cases when he is in a harbor or channel. SECTION (8) WA.S originally added a few years ago to protect large commercial vessels operating in harbors against the hordes of small pleasure boats -both power and sail -who wer e prone to claim their right of way, regardless or the conditions under which the large vessel might be operating. But it could also be ruled applicable in areas such as Newport and other strictly pleasure boat ~arbors w~ere large power cruisers could be put;,, 1eapardy by small sailboats claiming their rigbt.-of-way. · · Marina del Rey partly solved the proble m by buoying the harbor .-traqce. confiaia& power boats to the extreme rig6t and left sides Of the channel, and prohibiting tacking sailboats from crossing the imaginary line as they tack through the center of the channel. Marina del Rey has a much larger en- trance channel than Newport Harbor_ NEVERTHELESS, THERE are times when the skipper of a s mall sailboat should stay clea·r of a large powerboat threading its way through the channel in a crowded area where a sudden stop or quick tum to the right or left could put the boat aground or cause problems with another nearby boat. In recent months I have seen powerboats stopped by a veritable wall of small sailboats start- ing a race inside the harbor in a narrow channel. If the powerboat comes dead in the water he is berat- ed by screa ms of "can't you see we're racing?" True, there are times when both sailboaters and powerboaters are guilty of gross and dangerous discourtesy. The powerboater who "keeps clear" of a sailboat by speeding up and crossing the sailboat's· bow could easily swamp the smaller vessel. He could more safelt s low down and take the sailboat'sstern. · THE SAILBOAT SKIPPER who tacks back in front or the powerboat which has already yielded right-of-way on one tack is asking for trouble. Large powerboats can't stop on the probcrbial dime - even at the legal five knot speed limit Another thing that is often overlooked is that the Rules or the Road do not give a sailboat special rights because it is racing. The exception is when the race is being sailed in a prescribed, controlled course. In any event, a little common courtesy on the part of both sailboat and powerboat skippers will go a long way toward adding enjoyment to hours on the water. to say nothing or avoiding accidents. And if you are a sailboat skipper, remember Part (b) and stay clear of those big commercial buckets. It takes them miles to stop or even make a sharp right or left turn. By forcing them to do so you could be in for a heap of trouble -if you survive. Clareniont Honors Laguna Area Trio is located next to the six Quadriga, Ed Meserve, NHYC. MORF <Corkett Series) -1. Sail Le Vie, Vallilllll Taken By 14% Thal prescription drug most commonly used now nationwide is said to be the tranquilizer caJled vallium. Approximately 14 percent of the grownups take it, ac- cording to a medical statistician. There are those who claim it re· lieves insomnia and anx- i e ty. And those who claim, too, that sooner or later it fouls up the nervous system in a savage manner. WHAT, YOU can't identify that condition called the post pran- d ial dip? It's what prompts the Latins to take a s iesta in the early afternoon. That after· I u n c h slump. Pretty common, isn't it? Yawn. McMillan, DPYC. Cal HZ-5871. Put a fe!# words to work for ou. Fountain Valley Gets Quick Action By O. C. H\JSTINGS Of .. o.llY flllet S..ff When members of Fountain Valley's unifica· tion committee set out to do something, they don't fool around. Last week, they took alin at special legislation in Sacramento that would allow folks in neighbor- ing towns to vote on Fountain Valley's school re· <Organization plans. The Fountain Valley folks want· -ed those bills killed. ' So they took out a $436 ad in the Sacramento Bee. ''Attention Dennis Carpenter. James Whet· more and Robert Burke," read the ad, which ap- peared last Thursday. "Stop AB 916 and A'B 145." "lt really got our attention," said Matt Weyuker, administrative assistant to As· sembly m an Burke (R-Huntington Beach). Carpenter and Whetmore, of course, are stale senators from Orange County. The ad also pointed out reasons why the bills should be killed. Weyuker admitted the ad was an unusual ap. proach and had sparked comment from other ·legislators. "Anybody and any group that can get that kind of money together and come up with that can't be all wrong," he commented. ••• LAST WEEK, the Orange County Board of Supervisors decided membership in the National Assoc\ation of Counties CNACO> wasn't worth the (1975·16) m embers hip dues ($17,000). CLIENT ASKS if there l. . th Then, 11 d~ys before .the county's membership was any ime in e coun-was due to expire. Supervisor Laurence Schm1·t was try's history when the ff d average fa mily was as 0 an wingingtoHawaii -andaNACOconvention.· small as now. No. never Schmit left for the islands midway through the before. Today, it's 2.97 Board of Supervisors' final budget session without persons. That's down anexplanation. from 3.01 persons a year However, a fellow supervisor noted, "Larry ago. had to leave on Thursday so he could take advan· o s tageo! family plan fares." Th ! OL h Sehlnit's compadre made it clear that the ""'°e" .,;-;is::a•f 5 wa;lt-hll'•••• eupervisor'a f~WM'eting at bis ex· -keep. Lbe water ill ~ peme, not at county expense. outdoor swimming p00ls • ~fwever, Schmit hirmetfilttravetinttt county comfortable even in expense. " freezing weather. Not Su~rvisor Robert Battin is another county wit~. heaters. They float supervisor who is bidding adieu to NACO at its ( L. M. 'BOY~ I ) thousands of little plasuc balls on the s urface. They're so small, they don't get in the way of the swimmers at all. But they completely cover the water. ins ulating it to hold in it s h eat throughout the season. Nifty. ANOTHER significant difference between the boys and the girls is why they ta ke chances. Refer to such activities as tid- ing a motorcycle too fast or s kiing down rough ter- rain or s hootin g dangerous rapids in a canoe. The boy does his thing to show off, prove he's not scared, or just for the fun of it. But the girl needs a practical re· ason, like money or romance. She may climb a cliff for a price, but rarely just because it's there. Or she may race a stock car , but not pro· bably unless that's what most will impress the ob- ject of her affections. Our Love and War man reports these findings came from studies by the National lnstitute of Mental Health. Also learned in th a+ re- search, he says, is the fact that when girls lake chances for \heir re- asons, they take bigger chances than do boys for their r easons. Hawaii convention. Airport Noise' Briefing Set SANTA ANA -The conSUtting firm chosen to prepare an environmental impact report on Orange County Airport will conduct a public briefing on the project Thursday at 7 :30 p.m. on Santa Ana. Th~ sessiQn will take place in the third floor c~f~tena of th<: new county courthouse at 100· 'w. C1v1c Center Drive. The firm oC Daniel, Mann, Johnson and Men- denhall <DMJM ) was selected earlier this year by th.e County Board of Supervisors to draft the EIR \~th a grant from the Federal Aviation Administra· lion. THE STUDY IS DUE to be completed early next year and i.s considered a prelude to proposed t~rmmal, parking and runway expa~sions at the airport. Joseph ~antuso, ':he company's EIR project m~nager, ~aid the sess10!1 will be the first of several to inform tnlerested residents and city officials of the scope of the study. The company will also reveal the results of a passenger survey conducted at the airport two weeks ago. PANTUSO SAID JDS firm is evaluating the im· pacts ~f several. l?roposed airport sites other than the ~x1sUng fa~1hty .and are experimenting with poss1~le reductions m operations to meet noise pollution standards. . "Airport n~ise fro~ traffic and aircraft opera· tions and physical, social and economic? effect wlll • be the major areas or investigation," be sald. Three Laguna area stu- dents have been awarded degrees from the School of Theology at Claremont in recent ceremonies. Address mail to L.M. ·r--~~~~----~-------co 11 e g e Claremont Boyd, P.O. Box 1560, Co8'a BUY 0 .. LEASE l t d 'd Mesa92626 '" c us er an prov'. es Copyright197Sl...M .Boyd •••D They are: Albert L. Wickett, s6n of Mr. and Mrs . Bill Wickett, 631 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach, awarded a doctor of rellgion degree. mu It id e n o m l n a ti on al !iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiii-.•·I • prepa ration for the w , ministry. There were S4 •gig!' it June graduates. More i; IN SA_NT A AN._~ than 70 percent of the " graduates wilr assume D •iLY LU .... CHEON parlsh·related tasks. A " SPECIAL S 1.50 Robert H. Ness, son of ----------11 Mr. and Mrs. Albert Nus. 3200·A Via Van Buran, Laguna Hills, awarded a doctor of re· Uglon dearee. Nancy Nau-Olson, daughter o f Mrs. Katherine A. Nau, 1601 Sunset RldJJe Drive. U,Una Beach. awarded the master o/ religion degree. The sc.hool or thcolofy PUBLIC N011CE ' • J By BEA AND.usoN Of .. 0. .. ,...-...... In spite· of all the 'Bicentennial promotion, designer Bill Blass believes "we won't telW'D to the Colonial look in '76 ... Instead, he predicted, we will see more of the ethnic look and people dffssing to suil their own tastes. On a tour promoting bis new line of sbeets and towels, Blass was tea\ured at a breakfast for the Balboa Yacht Club's Women's Cc;>mmlttee in Bullock's SoUth Coa&t Plaza. . Consuaners are dressing en- tirely for themselves, he said. "We (clesigners) have known for a long time that there is no diet at· ing what people will wear. "Americans have taken an avid interest in clothing. They no longer ~re intimidated by 'Paris or New York labels, and they wear what's right for the locality. USTENING TO CONSUMERS "Tbaf s one of the things we've learned fn>m you in California." Comfort, he said, bas been de· manded by consumers ac1'06s the nation .. Because of temperature controls in buildings we no longer need heavy, bulky fashions in colder climes. Consumers also are terribly aware of quality. They·are more savvy than they've been given credit for. We can't get by with jus~alook. The five-time Coty Award win· ner said he uses lightweight fabrics with body to give a classic line. He prefers working with natural fibers, such as wool ; wbk)I he imports from Italy. "Often I 'm asked why my f asbions cost so much. Well when you figure I pay from $25-40 per yard, you can see why." COUTURE SALES VP However, be said, ''curiously couture sales are up. In New York (he believes the recession is felt ~ore there than here), peo. ple with money are spending more. Theaters and better restaurants are jammed." Blass said one of bis clients, who usually spends between $1,000 and $2,000 per seasqn, just placed a $10,000 order with his salon. When designing a costume, Blass saitJ he starts with the fabric and then creates a line which complements and enhances. It takes about three months to put a collection together, which he does three times a year. Blass said he used to go to . Paris to see what they were showing, but now feels that it no longer is essential to see the "French Collection." He believes be is attuned to wh a t his customers want and that's what he is interested in giving. CAREEJl•PURSUIT Designing is the only career Blass bas ever pursued; the career be knew he wanted since be was a youngster. He said he has found st,imula- tioq in designing in more than one area. His signature is seen on women's fa s hions and sport swear, furs, menswear, rainwear, watches, luggage, r • • scarves, tolletries, and now bed and bath linens which earned him a National Print Council award. The evolution, he said, was a natural one for himself and the market. "As a designer, I have definite ideas of bow I feel a room should look." And, he said, people have their own ideas of s-elf -expression in home·decoraling. "Unens are a logical choice because they offer an opportunity for instant change.'' FORECAST Blass' .fall and spring fashion forecast includes: -A continuing trend toward the softer line. Sheer fabrics that show off the figure. "American women spend a lot of time and money on theii-bodies and they want it lo show . '' -Pantsuits will retain popularity, and the fancier ones. will be a good choice for evening wear. -Skirt length. "It's alwa~s safe to say wtierever it flatters. Unless you have an attractive knee, cover it. Those with fashion savvy can do great things with the mid-calf length." -Shoes. For designers to get women out or pantsuits, shoes have been revamped to a more slender look. You'll see a lot or wedgies and platforms for height. Sling-backs and closed toes are popular, and the classic pump always is good. -Fall colors. Purple, egg plant and violet in various' combina- tions, vivid green, beige, blond and camel. Daily Pilot Plloto "" L..to Payiw ..,. J} •j I . I II II .. .. "· 'What, .me model it?' asks Cathy Masterson, 18, of Huntington Beach. Designer Rudi Gernreich and Sher Ferguson, 18, of Huntington Beach, enjoy joke. (' Cl .r .. ,. . ll By JO OLSON oe;i.0.1.,,......, Rudi Gernrelc:b 's Thong linger.i•fs reectrrortheworld, but istheW'orld r~adyfor"'eTbong? JC the crowd in the ·Broadway, Newport Beach, was Jn indica- tion, Gernrelch'a revolutlooary "ltsy-bitsy, teen7--eeny" bra and undies will take a white to catch on. I A (ew sales were made, but the rest of the people had mainly come to look and wonder. "What'• be 1otn1 to do, auto- craph the thlna (or you!" one wo.t. au a~kH her companion be!ore ... dMlper antved. Perba• \h• trouble ii that the 1boal ii too haturi1t1c. It ls not Jmt a new deslp In underwear, butil MltQtiNly fteW COM~. Cernreich Hid M ii t.akln& ad· vuta1e of new .. &naterlall and new t.echnlque1 to pC'Oduc:e new ldnds or 1ar.,.ftlta. 1be Tboots are made o f'"'exltemely JIChtweilht material MU.di bu -.. _ ... been heat· molded so there are no seams. The Thong, patterned after his Thong swimwea11, will "d1sap· pear under everyth~ng," . Gernreich promised , and eliminate the unsighUy lines un· derwear sometimes leaves under ~ta. Gernreich said he designed the Tbong because he h~ ''fl feel· log" that this type of lingerie would be appreciated by WOl"en. He took his idea to a manµfac· barer, tested it extensively then put it into prockaclion. Tbe garment$ were fitted to "a number ol people of all types," Gem.retch said. Ptrh•PI the Thone would have been met wilb more ra~ld accep- tance tn the eot, which Oernreich &aid w.u a more playful age, Cubton'Wtl'-"Toda)\ we're more serious about Ulln11. We're in a more serious period. Clothes are more toa.ervatlve. People don't want to make 1tai.m-. with their clothes.·• Ge111reich, however, chose to make some sort of a statement about him~elf with his attire. Instead of a traditional business suit, he wore black pants, a black shirt with one black sleeve and one multicolored, striped sleeve, black patent shoes and several items of jewelry (a typical Oernreich outfit). He said he plans to follow th& trend to express personality and lifestyle through the home and its furnishings with designs aimed toward houses and interior sur· roundinp. Gemreich. wbo bas been called "the fashion prophet who rocked the world with bis topless swimsuit and the unisex ap- proach to fashion," admitted while be waited tor people to ask him questions, that department store appearances aren't his favorite means of meeting the public. They take too much time away from bls work. he explained, • looking at the sparse crowd which had dwindled rapidly even . before his 5 p.m . departure time. Several women were asked if they planned to ask the designer any questions about his lingerie. One woman s hook her head adamantly. "I'm a pretty opi- nionated person," she said. Her fri end suggested that the Thong bra probably would look best on those who didn't need it anyway. Gernreich, undaunted by the tack of buyers. commented. "Most people are reluctant to try something new.•• Perhaps the thong for men, to be added to the line shortly, wilt be better received , since men are experiencing a new freedom in fashion <i.e., leisure suits. colots and coordinates>. And now, the information you 've all been waiting ror: What doeis the Thong really feel like? Like it's n ot ther~. As Gemreich sayti, lt "disappears" under everything. Fashion designer, Bill Blass sees fashions trending towards softer lines using sheer fabrics. Monday,Jv11UJ, 1'7S PotteB·I Elongating Golden Rule DEAR ANN LANDERS: A friend sent this to me in the mail and asked if I thought it was good enough to be sent to Ann Landers, I believe it is. Whal do you think? -J .L.C. DEAR J.L.C'.: I agree -a.nd my thanks to both you and your friend. THE TEN COMMANDMENTS OF HOW TOG ET AWNG WITH PEOPLE l. Keep s kid chains on your tongue. Say less than you think . Cultivate a soothing voice. How you say it often means more than what you say. 2. Make promises sparingly and keep them faithfully, no mat- ter what the cost. 3. Never lose an opportunity lo say a kind word to or about somebody. Praise work well done. reJ!ardless or who did it. 4. Be interested in others, their pursuits. their homes and their families. Let everyone you meet, however humble, feel you regard him as important. 5. Be cheerful. .Keep the cor- ners of your mouth turned up. Hide your worries and disap· pointments under a smile . 6. Keep an open mind on all de- batable questions. Discuss, but don't argue. It is a mark or a superior mind lo dis agree and re- main friendly. 7. Let your virtues speak for themselves and refuse to discuss the shortcomings of others. Dis- courage gossip by changing the subject. · . 8. Have respect for the feelings of others. Wit and humor at the expense or a friend is never worth it. 9. Pay no attention lo destruc· tive remarks and pcrso(lal at· tacks on you. Live so that no one will believe them. Remember, a common cause of back-biting is di ~atisfaction with one elf. 10. Don 'l be concerned about your "just due." Do a good turn for the sake or being helpful. DEAR ANN: Here's my entey for "Dummy-of-the-yea r•' award : Married 20 years, fol.11 children, working two jobs to get the kids through school. Wift starts chasing a younger guy who h as money, time, cars arid horses. I keep it all together for the kids, a lthougb my pride b: shot. I couldn 'l afford a girl friend if I wanted one. It's all J can do to keep food on the table, the house up. clothes on ow:z backs, and all the kids in school. Our college daughter is goinfl to Florida "for a little fun" on money saved from last year's job. My wife is going along. I stay home and try to keep it all together. Guess who'll end up driving them to the airport? - KENTUCKY DUMMY DEAR FRIEND: I don't thin you're a dummy. I think you'r4! quite a guy -for the time being, that is. However, if you continue to be 1 workhorse, chauffeur and chum• whlle your wife runs around, 1'4 say you were a sucker. Give he1 two months -if she stlll hasn't ga her bead straight, see a lawyer. Insist on custody of tbe ldds •a• put ID end to tbe charade. . ' •'Sexual freedom" pre5ents a difficult deeision for teenagen and their parents. Ann Landen offers down-to-earth advice in her new booklet, "High School Sa and How to Deal With ll -A Gulde for Teens and Thell Parents.'' For each booklet,sencl 50 cents in coin plus a k>ng1 stamped, self-addressed el\• vetope to Ann Landers, P.O. BDl 1400, Elgin, Ill. 601~. / c. • -al OM. V Pit.OT ScOuts' Goal Challenging At the be1lnnln1 oC their sophomore year in high school, m embera. ot Girl Scout Troop m (Las Camptmeras> sat down and m ade a list of all the places they wonted to go. • Most prominent on the final tally was the East Coa st , with stops in Wasllington, D.C., New.York and Philadelphia. As of June 29. \hat trip can be written off as a "fall accompti," because on that da~ t he scouts will be winglng their way eastward aboa rd a DC·lO. The highlight of the trip, perhaps, will be slaying in the national Girl Scout Center , Rockwood. in Potomac, Md. There, the Costa Mesa contingent will meet scouts from various countries in the world and sit with them at a campfire. "We bad to r eserve our places in Rockwood two years in advance," s ald Kym Patt.er son, president of the troop. A five-m e mbe r committee has been busy the past two years planning the trip and making a c ar eful record of each bit oC cor- respondence. Using their "clout" as Scouts (they plan to wear their uniforms each d ay ), the girls will tour the Supre me Court, National Gallery of Art, Bureau of Engraving and Printing, F BI headquarters <as arranged by Sen. Alan Cr a nston) and the Capitol (courtesy of Rep. Andrew Hinshaw). They will participate in placinf a wre ath '4lt the Tomb or the Unknown Soldier on July 1, then attend a ballet at the Kennedy Center for P erforming Arts that evening. ..... ,o ........ ,., ,.., ,,... •11 poly double knltl ..,.,,., ...... / I yd I I , . Vlluel IO 3 M·UI I./ I ·1 • l .,1 1 , { ll's great for after-five fashions, ;f '· '{ · too. FuM 12 ot 60" wide and care- 11 ). free!FG"s reg LOW prioe3.49yd. ' ~ ,,,.., tlllV W-4, J,,,.. II I chino 10" wld• 2ea f u• bolts, POiy-Rayon blend. Many shades -lncludillO dusty tones. Machine washable. ) ·FG 's reg LOW prlce. Values to 500 )'d. cool coffon pl•• . '>98 PEGGY CANNIFF, KYM PATTERSON, MARY ROYSTON (lefttorlght) Anothe r highlight will be viewing a Marine Corps dress parade, courtesy of Col. E dward Zie linski. The Scouts also have been given Mickey Mouse balloons b~ Disneyland to pre.sent to the foreign Scouts at Rockwood, and a ham- burger chain is providing some of thelr meals . Flocked with red & blue tennis L · yd rlci<et1. Values to 3.98 ~r=bluestilchlng. Values to 89' • 49 rd Date's Golden '.\l r. and Mrs. Thomas Rankin of Huntington Beach celebrated t h e ir gol d en w edding a n - niversary with a reception givt-n at the Rancho dcl Rey Mobile Home clubhouse, Huntington Beach. Hosting the party were their daughter, '.\l rs. J ean llarmon <llld g r andsons, Michael and John Ha r mon, of the same city. The honorees were manied J une 24. 1925 in Colli nsville, Il l., \\here bot h wt•rc active in and past lt'aders of sc,·er<.il Masonic organiz<.it ions. . Rankin ;.i lso w;,Ts a charter member of the Rotary Club and Mrs. Rankin was the first presi- dent of the Republican Woman's Club and executive secretary of the Edwards ville-Collins ville Board of Realtors. The Rankins have li,•ed in the beach city for five years. Gemini: Be Specific T UESDAY, J UNE U By SYDNEY OMARR ARI ES (March 21- April 19): Game-playing is over -the facts are lined up and you can deal from po s ition of strength. TAUR US (April 20- May 201: Finish what you start. Refuse to be sidetracked by "psychic vampire.'' GEMIN I (M ay 21 - J une 201 : Get to heart of m atter s. By pass red tape . Be s p ec i f ic, creative. CANCER (J une 21· July 22): You may be in ••d o ubl e har n ess.'' Means what you do now involves anothe r person. LEO <July 23-Aug. 22): Social activities multi p- ly. You can win a lly who aids in long-range pro- ject . aware of need for secun- ty. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 221: Carerul plans could be over tu rne d . H ave alternatives at hand. SCORPIO <Oct. 23 - Nov. 21 ): Relat ives. domestic areas arc h ig hli g h ted. B e diplomatic. SAGITTARIU 0 S <Nov. 22-Dec. 21J: Accent on selecting, picking and choosing. Your desires change. l~APRi CORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19J: Lunar cycle coincides with time for you to make pos ition crystal-clear . AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Fin is h rather than initiate pro· ject. Look behind the scenes. PISCES (Feb . 19· March 20): You a re due MR. & MRS. THOMAS RANKIN Tota l cost of the 9-day trip is $400 apiece. The Costa Mesa P olice Auxiliary contribut- ed $200 of the tot al needed. and Laurie Leenerts, ope of three winners of an essay contest sponsored by the Bicentennial Com- mittee of Costa Mesa, is putting her $500 prize money towards her ticket. Chaperones will be Gene and Jane Pat- terson, troop leader and assistant. When the scouts return, they plan lo give slide presentations and talks to va rious groups, Miss Patte rson said. The troop has been able to accomplish suc:h a big task as planning a major trip because of the s pecial spirit of Las Cam- paneras, Miss Patterson stated. "We've been together a long time. We get along with each other, and we're very ac- tive.·• \ I ~~~~dy braida30 -:39 pto Mon:& Fd. 1.().9 PM Tues-Wed· Thur.sat 1().6 PM &In Noon SPM •i I_ P1te-4& olr Jufy FABRIC SALE GLORIA MARSHALL MEJHOD OF REDUCING COMES TO SANTA ANITA Celebrating throughout Califomial M C C ALL'S # 4260 SUMMER DRESS FABRICS •ASSORTED PRINTS 8c PLAIDS Many florals, plaids and novelty designs to choose from. 100% cottons plus polyester/ cotton/rayon/silk blends. ·Guaranteed ·ma- chi ne wash, tumble dry. 44"/46" wide. • DAN RIVER CHAMBRETTA A variety of clips and matching coordinates to choose from. Machine wash, t umble dry polyester/cotton blend. 44"/45" wide. • WAFFLE PIQUE Machine washable 100% Texturized poly- ester in -new summer colors. 44"/46" wide. REGU LAR $1.69 YO. to $3.98 YD. Belllg A Woman, OIOfl• Mert h•ll Undtr$1tndi lad181' Figure Problems -Siie II '" Con11an1 Cont1C1 Wll ti HM' SalOlll Acrotl The Country. CASE HISTORY And you•re Invited to help ua celebrate the Orend Openfng of t"9 mott modem end relulng flgurt Nlon ever, with the uttlmate In reducing equipment. We can e11ure you of • pfMNnt ••Y to loH pounda and lnchet. •t ~ _, ,,,., •'"°"""'~I wl>oS# IKJ11rr I could""' lmprow. • HOW THIE OLOIUA MA9'1HALL IY&TEM W09'KI. On your flrat 111111, lor wll~ there 11 no charge or 01>1lgatl0<1. you will r~ .... • comp .. tt Clen\of\atrallon and eampl1 trMtment. You wlll be welglltel Ind rnea1ured (tlllt doee nol require dlaroblng) and • trelnod 1pecl1tlst wlll ana1yie your figure ano prepare a personalized program tor you. • NOT A Sl"A OR A OYM • NO DISROBING • HO IHOTS • NO STRENUOUS EXERCISES • NO PILLS OR STARVA~ION DIETS Program lnclydos nutrllional guidance. Bec:au~ Individual ligure 1>rob1ema dllfllr, yOl.lr ro1u111 may dtller lrom tt>ose achloveo b" M>mtollt elle. ' VIRGO <Aug. 23·Sept. 22): Pull in financial re- ins. Conserve. Become r or s urp r ise -0(1 ... ----------------------------------------------------------1 MOTHER AND DAUGHTER LOSE 100 POUNDS! 1L A u~emon· SPORTSWEAR pleas ant variety. Nabers Cadillac is having its June Sale. Add L ife to Your Fur Garment1 FUR STORAGE lumfMr Aat•• Oft .......,.., R .. lnlno•1 Re9'ytlnt "'" Pfdt.Up a o.1 • ..., Balboa Fur Factory 4 gt'Mf'Olimtl of Fftt~ f'tlr ManufaC'turlng 301 P•lm It. hlbo• '•nln.ul• ,,.., ~ •• ' 100% Textured FORTREL 9 Polyester Beautiful "Stacy" Knit Coordinates in all the newest colors. This great, ligh tweight fabric is just right for your summer sportswear. 62':/64" wide. Machine Wash· Tumble Ory 2 VD • $5 REGU LAR $2.69 YARD • Fortrtl• 11 •trademark of Fiber lndustrl.,, Inc., a subtldlsry of Cel1MM Corooratlon. w ......... , ..... ._ ..... w .. ....._.,,_1111 ........ .................... ._ .... , ... , ......... c.... .... ....... ,.... ............ "'"'"J ,, .......... .,. ......... S....,.._14J.Hll ..... , .. c.-. ......... ...-..... ,. ...... 2 ... JU 1 QI\ hardly bllleW ,,,., , UMd to '"'o" ~ 200 cioundtl My whole llM !*d'lanQtel, no4 to menllon '11Y allll~. 1amf\aOplernow11\an t ~ -been. GIOrla Martllall'e r><09ram Is 11\e .,,,_ to my Pf•~· I ""9 QOM llOl'll • cir-t lze 2210 • lln t 1 lunlot-t*lte llftd I leel 1,..11 Hl>w 1 lnJoY all I he tun tlllngt that I Wed to llllftd 1111 Ille alci.llM9 •nd jutl walchl Tt~ l\tppl-'*' M llOl/ollt •I Gtorla MattNll't l I cat! truly NJ 11\tt my phlOfelll Wllll Olofla Marlflall llta challftd mr "'"'• 111ej NOi on11 did 1 ,_ • ltlt. IM 2t lnelltt, bvl I notlotel e llt'* "*' IOt llltillO, ).tn.~·~, CALL NOW FO" A DIMONIT,.ATION ,.. Whit Olette Marlhltl IMlhod oen de tor Y9" .,,,,...,,~.,. ... ,. "',.. _ .,,,.,. ~(:!f ()pell 4ally t"' I, laturday t to• Call Noao Por A .DeMO ... irailM .......... (i ................. ---~·--,_,-11 ._,. _,..... ,.,....,.,...._.. World 1 lud1n1 lflur• GOfltiOI ~••in NEWNll lliCI SANT.A MW 1U1 IESlCUff a • 142·•31 3151 lllSTat. Cnmt•Sll-47• iMMie ...,,.,o;a;·~IAI Ctll .. wfwet Ft .............. IW ............. _.... ........ ,_ . . IOOMa TUMILEWEEDS / . ,( '( •I • I f ,.J:J . ' "#,_ ( ,' ('I. ;1 /1. FUNKY WINKERIE-AN FIGMENTS NANCY YOU'LL BECOME A FAMOUS BASKETBALL STAR ' by Wnt. F. lroWll _. Mel C~IOll t~~ rr WOCZ"? a1T ~o~tve~ 'fOO.~. I ~ l i I byTOM K. Ry• s . ~ l r· .. 0 ~~----.u..i.a.--i { / . , ......... _., ... ........ ............ _ ........ .. by Tom latiuck PUT OOE ~OREO~ IN A~ EN\JEL.OPE AND DROP IT NEAR 1HE O\Jll ~R 51lmJE. ~1ME ~RK J by Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller YOU BETTER GET U5ED TO HAVINC'J-A VERY TALL BOY FRIEND TODAY'S CIDSSWDBD PVZZLI PEANUTS UNITEO·Feature Syndicate ACROSS 51 Make 1 phone S1tu1day'1 Pua le SotVed: 1 Gnl5sland1 eaU 5 Cat11d1'1 52 An11nna s 1• ' mlil HH P I l A Mt. Seirlt -65 lntlrvil 10 Convoke 59 Drua 14 German riYet 61 Di11>l11se ' ~ PIOlll . ' A y 16 Kind of pie 62 A1111c11v11 • •w-I IT 5 ~IA • • 1• 'r " • I " 5 IO IA ' l A I 0 II ' '" II A 16 Woodwind 63 Muning 17 Hockeyist -64 Ale comb. Delvecchio form I 111 Generous 65 Binds JUDGE PARKER DOOLEY'S WORLD DR. SMOCK GORDO trs JWlO lt> Pt.US£ SOME PEOPU: ... MOON MUWNS l REPReSfNT iHE: c;UNS~IN~ SUNTAN OIL. CoMP>-NY, MIZZES •. Wt:'RE GIVIN' FREE 'S.AMPLes ... 6Ee ! I W15t4 f'NI MD WERE ~RE-~IS IS HIS KIND Of &All.PAR" - ·: by Harold Le Doux 20 Specimens ~Made level • ' .. H ~~~~~~~~~- • l • ' 0 , • I • , • ~ c S £ A l ~ I , u L'i. j H! • J. .! S II [ I -- 22 Corrod11 67 Uttered 23 Historic ti(lllS DOWN 24 CGS unhs 1 V1ult 25 B1ck·t1lk: 2 Sha: Sp. Informal 3 Aid 28 Delight 4 Group of she 32 Wallop: Slang 6 Holda wilh the •• Horse color 33 Stringed 11mt 26 Bird of ~ in11rumont 6 Legal holds prey' a 47 Mo51 tendef 35 Nile valley 7 Lodging claw 49 h tremiata region hou11s 27 Change 61 Stupid 36 Melt liquora 8 Hola·ln·one 28 F11thetlike 52 Reality I 38 Clam chowder 9 Stern object 53 Needle cu e t nd boracht 10 Gigantic 29 Germen sub· 54 Diminutive 40 OHap1lng atetuo marine suffii 41 Lone Renge1'1 11 Llkl·up 30 Wuh lightly 55 The dishn flitlld 12 Solitary 31 Facilitated aerved 43 Vilify 13 Allowt 34 Alto·lln 56 VMY llnlll •s lbMn charact•l9 HNrt, tpr on• 37 lnformera: amount .te Receiver ohn 21 Mr. Sev11eid Sling 57 Opert tlc: esaigned note 24 Merry Inf or· 39 Filled to henW!t .a AdYIMd: mally aatilfaction 58 Alltged fOfce lnformtl 25 Fltle.grained '42 Structure of a t10 Meridiln: SO Perfume rock aocltty 1bbr. WHEN WILLSON ASKS DONNA TO CANCa HER SUPPER DATE · WITH T. T. PACE, ~e IHSIST6 OH KNOWING THE REASON FOR HIS REQUEST! • DICK TRACY M&LTEO Wf'IST WATCM o-- w1J by ChHter Gould •POUC& HQ HAS SMELLID L.1~ MICt<Y'S HAMBUROIA HEAVEN MR SINCE! '/ES ... A FEW DROPS IN TH' P,At.M· • NOW, iURN OVER ,AND l1Lt. SHOW YotJ HOW IT'S P,ATTE:D ON.- ... by lodger lnaclfllld J l(EEP OOWlJ16 AJt.10 l)ON'nH6 8UT' l'MEVtl£ NE~~ SATISfrW SHOOr!'I~ lijT~MOOD FOR~·~ st!SStON. "Now, Mr. Harkness, let me see you try to keep your eye on the ball." .. " .. - DAILYPILOT T6night's TV Highlights · KTLA (5) 8:00 -"Frankenstein." The original 1932 horror classic with Colin Clive as the driven doctor and Boris Karloff as his unea.rthly creation. KCET (28) 10:00 -"Mysterious Lady.'' Greta Garbo stars as a Russian spy in this silent movie from 1928 wi~ Conrad Nagel. · . CBS (2) 11:30 -''The Sandpiper:• Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton are paired up for this 1965 movie drama with Eva ~arie Saint, Charles Bronson and Smilthe h1J song .. The Shadow of Your e. TV DAILY LOG Monday Evening JUNE 23 emb11tered man. W1lli1m Smith auests. m 111e Bold OMS &:oo tJ 0 (I)~ Eil m ED Mews WO!ft~OOCID@> 1ttws 0 00.....,.. O•MWMWtst m I S•WAL I AIH Witts: A Co• ttllllioa Witlt Mysell A SPKlll broaden ! of autllo! I philosopher Alan Watts• last television program in wl11ch he discusses his ideas abolll man's mseparab1hly from the unrvuse. \ EI) Mur AarldKido Q) ,artJldet f••llf lDMtd s.iM ti) Maril T trW Q4 The limdtrs tD OedlJc C-Plllf al R.U,' fne114' • l :JO Oil Mtl'I Criffi• Siio• Q)WJ CnffrUi 9:JO IJ @ (i) ({}Rhoda (R) Some- th1nc between Joe alld Rhoda is cruhn1t problems for Joe. and at Rhoda"s suggtshon he agrees \o talk about it. only the jlfrson he pte~s lo talk lo doesn't thrill Rhoda -he"s thosen his tw1ee divorced bther. (17J (3) I Sn mu. fulllre C~ llJ) Dula's Chtice I Tmd fW111 ~ CtvrlllC't l..ialt bsuls 0 Su World Sp«.ial •·su Bud· d1ts• Lloyd Bridges is host tor this look at symbiosis in the sea, or sll ange aqua toe bedleflows hke the remoia and the sha~ anemones and crabs, and damself1sh and anemones. 7:00 w 0 0 Ill@£?;) ED Nen lrMSidt lnl111 ftf Dollars (6)MM Squad ( •) Trvth or C-.sequences I Wlllt's MJ U11e! 1 LM Lllcf Tiie f11 U Muter Prohlbfda t2" Tiit Bit YalltJ EI;}lfttertace ONews EID Washin(lo11 Straight Tait Eil La f1trr1 10:00 0 @ (1) (i) Mechul Center ··crown ot ll1orns'" (R) Or. Gannon falls rn love with a bcauhful pa· !lent, unaware that she 1> a Eu· ropean Crown PrmctSs and the larger ol political enem1e~. omra"e.n (~(I J) Mlmrs Welby M.D. ~ ClfllU I 6 Perry Muon al T~• S1eotfi 0 (;t9 (8 ) 3 CB Caribf · Mur· I der m Paradise" (R) When ;i con- 7:30 IJ SZS.000 '1u111id ~icr. lrttd alter ser.1ng eight years 0 ,.,a Serzet11 tor the murder ol his lather in· 0 LHt AINrb1 Style ' law, 1s h1msell killed, Ben and 0 1.-.. Sndlt I Mark are c.illed i/llo tilt Qst to 11 Oil CV Te Ttl tlle Trulli learn the reasoos for his demise. 0 lliliM $ ~ (C) (Zlir) Robert leshe, Ptler Haskell, Ler.Jit "Tiii ... .,.... (sci-Ii) '69 -Cur Ch11tesoo and Wilham Syl~ester Slocbell, ~. Olwer, urry .llUtSI. Storcll. ID Cd S111art l'lol l.tt's Malt A Onl 12<> ;rtt11 Acres Q) ltofM's Ktroes ff) Classic Fb1: "Mysterious udy" (2l (•J W-rld Wtfld tf Arli1111ls (1928) A youna ~t~n ollicer falls I Alltfl in love with a l>eauhlul, sullry Yerctf Ace111p111a111e ~mnger. not reahzmg she is a Rus- Ji111111 Ot111 Show ~·an ~py. Greta Garbo, Conrad Na· Bud Furillo's Stum ROOtl gel and Gustav Von Se&lfert•ll slar littlt Rlsats ' • 10:30 0 Bud rurillo's Stum Room 1:001J Ci.7J (3) (ll Cuns1110kt "Urkin"l @ m News (R) Newly hnds himself in a ~~ Allred Hitchcock stranee alhanct with a professional killer n he tries to eet his pusonelll:OO f) r3l 0 m EE) News to Dodae City l>efOfe they ;11e both 8 <1)(10 23 16, "ews killed by three bounty hunters. Best of G!Pucho 0 1:2) ®Hf;} NB C Monda (6J Set Bilko Ntclll lastlllll N.Y. Yankffs at I TIM llKJ Show Balt1mon OnotH. Missittt: Impossible 0 Movie: (90) "fnnkenstttn" Mo4 Squad (hor) '32 -Boris it.rlott. Cohn (17)@ l'wtef Cun n CJiw. MK 0.k. John Boles.. t26 Tiie UlltotlcMblts ~ WiM WIN Wat C '9· !1)) Y"idDly at Su ! ~s~1e!.a~ (~~kA ll:lO O ~@(j)~ Litt M.ovle: younc d1~d is llU• from hos (Cl "'Tiit Salldpiftf" (dra) 65- lllOlher 111 Ille PfeseGCe of ••I· £111abelb Taylor. Rrchard Burton, llt$StS, but wbell Terry and Mike Cva lolarie Saint. Charlts Bronson. invtstcate the a"'rent hl111ppmc. Q '2J ~ @l £D JohnllJ CarsH the mothtr insists the incident dod Jerry lewis rs autst host. not owrr. Shelley fmres auests. 0 G~ • . I Otlltr's Qea I 6 Mt'tie: '?rtftssronal Soldier" ......, Tlw• fridly (drfl '37 -Victoc Mclaglen Socw fro• lllt.lla 0 ('9 ) (3) W-lft World fllys· 126' Mowie: (C) (Zlw) "Calamity lttJ "'Planet . urth'" (Rl A 20th· JIM" (com) '53 _ Doris OIJ, How century Amencan astJonaut. tllllS· ard Ketl. P!uhp Carey. ported through suspended an1ma· ff) At tlle Top "'lhe M1Y111rd fer· lion mlo the Z2nd century, 1s UP· euson Orchestra.. H1eh·note trum lured and ensli!\led b)' a female pet player Maynard rerauson and dominated society John Sa•on. 01· tus 14 piece band team to brma ana Muldaur. Janel Margohn. Ch11s· tempomy musoc to telev1so0n. topher ~ary and Ted Cassidy star. EI) i..s Poli-ltcts 0 ~fflt: "U_nknown __ World" (sci· a) ~panesc unruace Proc11ms Iii 51 -Victor K1han, Ma11lyn the eac1tcment of 1aa and c.oo Na~h. Bruce KellOlf. ID Yop flf Htlltll 1:30 GJ Men Crifli• Slltw 12:00 O Mtftr. "fl1 IJ Niehr (mys) t:OO IJ (!tJ (3) Maade (R) Arthur '41 -Richard Carlson, Nancy Kel· has put Yrv11n in a Slate ol shock Iv by 1nv1t1nr s11 covples over lor m D .. tu i dinner. but M.wde takes charce ol lD Cet Smart rt with 1 llouosll. only to hnd out J:OO B l~T-row !~~ she alld Waller are not m (3 i l!) ~ ~) Mews (6) Tiit UlltMcMlllts 1:45 O Mcwit: (C) "O• Y•u ~1utrlul 0 c,.i (IJ) (3\ CD S.W.A.r. Ootttt (mus) ·49 -June Ha.er ttllllle Bomb .. (R) Att unemployed Ma1k Stevens. S. z. Sakall. ' movie stuntman pl.Ins to blow upl ~n entire studio, wt11cll he blames 3:00 O Mcwit: (C) •0a11cerous Mis· for lies ptfse>MI ptolllents. Olla r -· (adv) "!>4 -Vrctor Mt turt. J1111 Slrttt. 't'l$d1nc on the sludool Poper Launt. Vu1eent Puce. W1ll~m croullds, IS ta~en p11sooer b1 the 8end11. Tuesday DAYTIME MOVIES JO:OO 0 (C) "Chflts " ltMt" (coml '61 -M11ullo MaslrCHanni, V1t tono Ga!>Slll1n. ~) • ...,_. IM flfnt" (d11) '49 -Bette D"'1s. Joseph Cottrn. 12:00 Cl '1.as Yt111 StlfJ'° (dral ·~1- Vdor Mature, Jane Ru~n. V111 cent Pr1ee. J;tO O "Tiie Wltt11 lt1utti tllf Sn" (ad¥) '62 -Jolin S4/110ft. G1"' Al lletl Db "Tk Dara lusters" (~) •55 -llocllard Todd. M~I Redarave. l:DO 10 "Dr. kQll ' Mr. Hydt" (llor) '42 -Sptncer lracy, lnerld Berc· man. Lani 1 U1nt1. f2J r 'l (C) "Walt Mt Wlltn It's °'1t(' (com) "60 -Crnoe ~IC$. 000 Kl!Otts. Marco Moore. J:JO (3 1 "Su111111er ltWe" (rom) ·~ Jnhn Sa.on, Molly Bee. 0 (CJ '"Cid&tt" (com) '!>'I !>An nra Dee. James Darren. Chll Rob ertson. A<thur O'Connell 4:00 O (C) "Th.at fonpthe Wtrnn .. (dr~) '!>() -Creer Garson. I rrol f lvnn. Walter Pidaeo11, R°'tft Youns. KOCE T elevi ion • i-.-_ _._ ... wor1c1 .. 1:ff Yeee Wltll M U•llH CC) CKOCE) Y ... 191«-w 1:M .. Kn' CWe• .. C.••t' tCI llCOCI) ·~ llt1Qfl1\ In Or-. c-itt" l !H lattr11etlt11et AllM9'1•• .......... CC)fill'BS) I ;• Nt•• ICI IP8SI T~ Mtll.lflO Of e Nllllll' .. Hl•WY 'Jim .. t :• TH W•Y It WH !Cl CPBSl "C..ltlu/LJtllen Cl\•mo•on~111p·· , PACIFIC WALK -IN ~---~ •. ~-"'·,~".u1~ ~ • Jazz &ries The ltrrif 11i111 motiolt pidurt ( l'Olfl Ute ltrrif Jliltl No. I bnt atllw. MESA . . ,.., ...... pa. . . Ends f'onight 1884 Newport c.:ntv Mc-\0 c,4j.1 ~~~ Fly us. Anywhere in the A SUPH SUIFIM4t FILM IY Al.AH llCH -flllt ..... HotSe..-ceoftM MeHo•.i Silet•h•6MJ c11 •• ,i..wp 7:10 A t:lO 1«111 EY ..... .....u .... l • .... F..nyllttert•• :41 DOUG MCCLUH IM IDGAI llCI IUHOUGHS' "LAND THAT TIME FORGOT" PLUS IURT llYMOLDS "W.W ... GEMA IOWLAHDS PLUS HTH FALK f R) A Sheila Levine had to atlend her younger sis ter's wed- ding. .,.. SheilaGfuyine.. is dead and living in New '!Wk Woody Ahti "Lo•~ Altd Dtoffl" CPGt "~M .. btHn" ''Slithe.-" lPGI ()penMon "'"' Fri. 6 30 p m. Sat1Sun/Ho4 12.30 Mon thfu Fro to 7 p m -s1 25 "-ntl LAl6D THAT T-l'Ol60T" l~C.I .....,,,,... fAC:Tor "SUPER VIXENS" ext "VIXENS" CXJ "SHARK'S TREASURE'• "WESTWORLD" IPGt "'IMMAMU&U• IXI "COMNSSIOMS Of A W»IOOW C:UAl6H• "SPACE ODYSSEY" (PG) IARHA STREISAND JAMES CAAH "FUNNY LADY" IPGt "RETUINOF THE PIHK PANTHH" CPGt "W.W. Ii THE DIXIE DAHCllUHGS" ·'"rAll THI MONEY Ii RUH" IPGt w."M•iiill~"irrl ... "UIMCAIHATIOH OF PETE• PIOUD'" CR> "\.MIMD OF ._..Ill HOUSr'CNt "EIGH SANCTION" CRJ "8UG .. IPGt -j.lo()'; POI .. ,-o•,~rs H JOfJE ""uOl.ICr'(..·~ P'1641trC~LlSl-1 JOHE i-.d °"«W :i. WOODY l>J...lfN 'TALES FROM THE TUIE11 s;..ct .... Ody.My! ... -·111&0• ( Pilot Logbook J C.ndld comment•rln, DAILY PILOT exclusively in the P\US Ul TAYLOI "HIGHT WATCH .. l:H,1: ... lllH c.-."'""1"' '"llt4Jt" IGI "TEN LITTLE INOtANS" I.fl, 6.41, ll:U IKI '"" . CHARLES BRONSO~~ .. ~~;,.; GENERAL CINEMA COAPOAATION "May the bluenoses leave it lay for the pleasure of those whose fasfe It lse Jvdirh (,.st. NEW YORI( MAGAZINE JAMES CAAH ill "ROLLER BALL" w~. J'lly 2. flclllM•t E.dw•• Hew,_t Htwp.ta.acll f'AULHEWMAHlll "TME DROWNING POOl" w_...,,.,...25 ...-1 •• H.,._..tWISCMt tlleRETUn of the Plnlr Panttm" · U~1ttHl'l1111 PG] '"THEWIHD AHO THE LION" w ... 14ey • .,._ 25 c-.. C..tw ......... '-. G..Hec--. ..... ..,..._,,_,c....,. "Bllt THE BULLET' w ... 14ey. J... 25 ....... c .... .... C•ll 642-5678. Put• few words lo work for ou. "FUNNY LADY" w ... ..-, ..... zs M1wpcria.- M...,.tlHdl G ... Hec•-111 "FRENCH CONNECTION II" W ... ldey. JIM 25 ...... e ..... .. ........... ,...... c:~ m ,..1~"' wccas 11 -.. .... "EAR'ntOUAKE'' w ... .., . .-.25 c ..... w .. I , .......... w.- .tt41114 C11R1snn "MURDIR O~ 1111 ORll~T llfRISi~~ ..----~MARTIN~ 1H€ LION IN WINTER TONY CURTIS UPKE' HE KM Of MU•R. INC. Jecll HkllolMll _, w..,... .. ...,. "FORTUNE" w.-..,.J.1y2 ..__,Twlli .H-w•A .. t WALT DISNEY 'S "BAMBI" w ... -, . .-.2s c-.. C..tw ....... A ... 644-0760 P\US "Plml" ._II& '' IC& .. ~MITIMSHOW llA'll......n-190117•>1 ,.._.,, waTllOOll c:-.u ·---··~ IJM4tl -.. ~· ... • fteol htato ., .••••• 1000.Z999 Rlfllol1 ........ , • ~99 8ullnt11, lnveatmtnt & flnanclol •.•..•••.• 50(I0.5'/49 Announc1ment5, Ptrtonolt' Lol&f • I ound ...... 5050.5499 Servlc u & Ropoin 6000·6099 Monda , June 23. 1975 _DAILY PILOT Ttie Bluest Marketplace on the 0111nee Colst bnployment& DAILY Pl•Oi CLASSIFIED ADS ::=::·.-.·.·:·.··= You Can S~ll It, find It, [ 642 _5678 ] One Call Service ::=:;~,;;.:.-'°" Trade It With a Want Ad . . . Fast Credit Approval rronspor1o11on •••• 9100.9999 ~.=.=.:o:a:s:::::.=~~=:"":;::O-:;:.:~.~~.·.-S.•~·~· .. •.•.•.• .. • ... ~·~·.•.~.·:.·i:o·.·~·.s· .• • .. •.•.• .. •.•.•.• ... ~·.· ... •;•:,· •. ·i:o·.·~·~·.'!'·.·.·.· .. ·.·.·.·.1·~· ... • .. ·":·~·:·!· •• ·.~·.·s.·~·!·.·.·.· .. ·.·.·......,· .. •.•.•.•.• .. ·i:-r·.·.·~·.~·.·.· .. ·.•.·.· .. -j ~·.·.· .. ·.·.·.,_·.· .. ·.·,.•'!"•.· •• ••••• •• ·.·.-~·.:·!"·:•:S•.·.':'-•.':~.·'!-11o ••• • •• ••••• •• ·.~\·~·.~·'!'·.·:-·.•!.•~·.•.5•.•~·.•.·.· •• '.~ •• lhould ch~ !:~~~~••••••••••!~.~~ ~~~~!'!••••••••••!!~~ ~~••••••• I 002 !:~••••••••• !'!~2 G....,.al . I 002 GtMr.C I 002 Gwral I OOJ G..... I ot2 ~Hy end ,.,.... er-Spanlth Hoc.ltnda Z STORY . • ••••••·•• • •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••·•••••••• rors '"""•diaWy. Th. 3 Dr. rorrn111l dlnlng, sep CHARMER DAILY PILOT ...... r .. m rm W/ trplc. Atw:iwne UllDIN1y for tht first I• 7% VA Joan of$.14,f:IOU. 3 II• POOL corr•ct i•sertion ...ty COltdo P...,wi•a• llACH • 2 Br close to beach. SZt,900 .---------1 Great starter home. Hurry , won't last at <.:lwssicenlr•ncelo large CORON·· DIL M•R CUSTOM DUPLIX Being remodeled ; custom 5 BR . 5 Ba. 6500 sq . fl . hon1e on point, pool , dock . $2.... family sized Uvin• room "' "' P..U1her's ~~-... ' · y · f ' d 1· h f I 't -Y"ll p "fi with arlislic use or shut· 1ew rom owner s e 1g t u uni . All real estate adverti.sod I • C1C1 c Love ly cus tom 3 BR & den, 31 :! ba, on lagoon. Boat slip. $225,000. in. this news ... -,,·. •ub· Several 2"3 BR units in ~~n1 & 1wood1 .. lhroughou.t. Quality·blt near.new 2 story. Spac. 3 ,.. ,.... " thl po I . i·orma 11n1n~ roo1n is BR d 2 bath fl lac ·n ach un Ject to the 1''ederal Fair .8 pu or ~~tnunity, conveniently served by • en, s. rep e 1 c · I B t 'f II d ed BR · o. Housing Act of 1968 pricce"Ltortat.....,,000 large gourmet. kitchen. it. Bet. hwy & ocean. A home+ inc. ! eau 1 u Y ecor<.1t 5 . 4 1:! u:.i ., which mak~ it illegal to A L 96&.4405 22· Stepdown ramily en· 2111 San J~ H1U1 Rood panelin g, 3 frplcs. Boal slip. $2GO,OOO. adverl111e "any pre· Sulespeop.leNeedCd tertainmtJnt center. MEWPORT CEMTER, M.I.. 644-4910 I f".ren_ce, ~imitation, or e e e Stairs sweep to elegant I Custon1 5 BR . 4 ba .. View, 80 ft . on d1 scr1mut1on based on master sui te &children's I B 1· race,~olor,rcli Gion,sex.' GR6YAL quarters . Taki:! over G..-rel I002[G al 1002 agoon. oats lp .S..~S.OOU or national origin. or un ....nPC 7V:.'la loan. No new loan ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••~•••••••••••••••••; intention to nlake any G\JlY--" ""RTJE;s costs . Call 003·6767. S & S I "C •pE COO" I l 'raU i lion a I 4800 fl 5 Br, 4 1 ~ b<.1. such preference, limita· 011I'• 1119 ·" ~ ,.,., 101°1 .,.:,. A air-cond· On l<.t 1ioon · boat slip <::'f:.!5 OOU tion, or dis crimination." ! ; i TRl·LEVB. NEWPORT 1 • "' ' • 'I"" ' Thi• n•w•o•P<' will no< ASS~~~/2"/o :~. ~~ll~!iljj\1 ~~~ !:cer~~~r:~~'fo~~f; Ii HEIG~HTS ~ knowingly ,.ccept uny J !.;.;;:::;;~~,!-~-~-~-~·~·~-~.,~-~-~.J family brings their pro· L:harming 2 slOry Cape i advertising for real $199MO, fuse & incomparable C od un exclu s ive !' estate which is in viola · P"'YS .1..1 1 Sood taste in decoration 11 s ecluded hideawa y '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ii!!!!!!!!!!!~ tionofthelaw. A ~ MESA DEL MAR of a captivating re· stre et . Warmth of l ' Immac ula te 21-!ii year 1>1dence to the ultimate &1 cracklin g fireplace tell BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bny\od .. O""" N B 67S 6161 IN THE ILUFfS FOR $54.500 A Unique buy! 3 bedroom, split level condominium, with view or plenty of green grass, nice open feeling. This is n ew o n t he market in Old Bluffs. O nly ~'54 .500 ! UMUj)UE HOMES, --..,.. -675·6000 2443 E. Coast Hwy., CorOllO dol M• 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ASSUME 71;1°/oLOAM young 3 bdrm, 2 story Charming 3 bedroom, B 1\ N G t h e y ' r e I from entry to rormal din-1GGi<11101..,.rolol , I 002 G1Mrol I 002 Houses for Sat. with unbelievable financ· r1:1mi ly rm home-large transferred out of the ing. L1:1rge livinG room. •I ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••··~··••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ing! Owner leaving area. yard-double carport good old U.S.A. 'fheir l big bedrooms plus den.: This Baycrest 4 BR., family home can be yours for a $35,000 equity purc hase, monthl y paymls. of only $391 P ITJ. Completely. profess. decorated. Full price $73,900 Says bring any offer! for boat-corner lot.Not loss is your g ain . Patio has feelin J: ofl General 1002 Take ad vantage of many left. Must be a11. Features tooextens1velol sec lu sion -just $7 ,750 CAM YOU TOP THIS? ••••••••••••••••••••••• sparkling kitchen, fres h pointment, cull enun1crale. Don't delay. I "claims" and you're in. 3 Bedrooms, family rm. & formal din-as a flower paint and de· See today. \Von't hist. Catl646·7171 . 1 ASSUME$31,000 ep pile t·arpct! A sun· 897'-uJll. , ()l'fn ru q ·u$'""'0•111 ·1· I ing rm. Corner location on CLIFF $275 MONTHLY shine home just for y11u ~ ~ I [\:8 I DR., Newport Heights. !"Jandy to ~::r~P~l~n!l(;;.,!t:ebsr\c~ :~~11~~~15 ~:N~:::11.:1~11 _. j :~'.~ll~ftl11l1 II f~~~~l·1~~~~~~fJ)~ P~~~h~nf;s,s;~e ( [()fl~IN-M1'flflN IMcJ in te rraced yard·IJle en· [ ~ ~l ~~~~~~==~-;; ~!n~:tfn1:u0~t:~::~~fi1~~~®~~·l·~:~~:1~t~~~e~·~'~'~l~i~l~1J 1 .... ~;;:;;;;;;;........ REDUCED I. Newport Menor •••• room tor dining room! -i -THO"s•~Ds lllGll SCllOOL-only a YEAR BAY ANO BEACH 675·3000 '--·--REALTORS-- COROMA DEL MAR y Al"ll few blocks away from ?itammoth inaster and BETTER THAtit MEW 2 STY. POOL this pr('ferred Eastside GftM'rol 1002 GeMt'al 1002 spacious bdrms. bnly Sharp4yroldwithloads 5,DRPOOL hornc. Hi ~ 2 s tory , 3 [ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~<lll 1 Eo COAST MWV CORONA DEL MAF'I '510U down! Or assuinc of upgrades. 1'his 3BR. TEMMIS·ASSUME BEACH bedroom + rormal din·~ GOLF COURSE w A TCH 7 ~'.1 % and $275 1no. pays 2ba Se lect JJroperty has Qwet tree lined street lo ing, breakfast nook and I a ll. Seller bought new ~ a spacious kitch. fain rrn $353 MO. cuormous beach home. im. mens e family rooin. G ... rol 1002 iGftM'f'al 1002 ESTATE THE IOATS Bringanoffer.847·6010. with a wall of nJass lo a i\1assivc 5 IJedrootn. 2400 Formal e ntry Iii sunken }-t ts dra I POLY~ESI....... 579 500 OP1Nr11q ,,rs 1uN •O ~fri'C'I • o . Q . · ca urescarpc , _ pcs ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• " "'" • . sec I u d e d r r 0 n t sq. It., two story. u1ct formal h\•1ng ruom and and IJltns . Bcaut1fully 1 Loc ation . Location . al.,..... t•ourtyard. Priced ri ght euldcsa-.:.Step(lo~·nh v-banquet s 1zt• d i nin g donci11side&out.Heady THEQUIET . 1 PARADISE Location. East Bay on ·,. • 1,A at $45,900. with un a s· in g roorn . For1naldini11:; room . C hefs kitchen. to i:nove into. Otfercd al VILL•GESTYLE SWEEPING Tropit·:.i l atrllOtiphere in the Penins ula. This im-zt.' .·') sum a ble Joan. L:ALL room, Sunshine kitchen. Party size family roorn i67,500 Call5'W·ll51 A . . w uth sea is land setting. maculate 2 bdrm, 2 bath ~-·-·'""' qui ckly,556·2600 FlcstaroomlNCLUI)~ with roarin~ country Callandletusshowyou i Ch IV" l)esirablebeachareaof home could easily be VA/FHA Repl)S in Orange County K eys in ofritt WORLD sia.,SelectPropertics POOL ·r1\ULE!ScchKled style f1rc place.Sceloded one of the fines t _:I · anne leW cus torn h o me sites. converted into a great 1na s t er s uite ! ha s ma ster and childrens I btld_rO?m horncs _al tl~1~I Pine under the stars in Furmal e 1~try. Jiu~~ duplex. lluge sun deck. FLOODED WITH SUNSHINE! 11c rsonal1 zcll f1re1lla ce. suitt>s . I~ow rnaintcnancc price in The Bl~.rs. lncx [ this outstanding custom l bedrooms , includes 20 P.1 us t sec for all the Walk-int·lusels.Laundry r ea r Around s with eel.lent cund1t 1on. ln·J built 5 bedroom hu1ne. mas ter s ui lc. 2 ltt'al possibilitics.S.15·9-191. room. Fully :.prinklcrcd s parkling s wimme r s I ter1or rleco r~tors own 1''ormal dining roo1n has ntarble baths. 1-'a1nily -~ yard.Olympit•size<l1lool pool and relaxin g . J~STLISTED home.Convcrucnltotcn·;clectrically controlled rooin . i\.1assi\·c cnclosed and le nn is 1·uurli; as-Jaeuzzi Call fur ;1ppt to l UL.I( <.:anyon .po11olarl n1s court & pool. Only I movable roor and operis r ctteation or party soc1ated for only $13.00 p rev 1 c.w . ?n~. i64uol l\lo11v co l\1od cl. 3 ~r: 2' ~ ~-~ 2 ;., 5 0 0 · Ca l l n o ~· , to the son or the sta.rs. r.?01n. Sl~nc f1~·eµlacc . Walker& Lee Real Estele REAL ESTATE .Specialists in govern· l ment financed homes! I 55,.1111 myt; ... & crispy clean. Bi g two story. 4 big bedrooms. dining room, 2000 ,sq . rt .. 4 times belier than new from ti1> to toe. Lots of lush rolling yards & i.:reenery. Walk lo Soulh Coast Shopping in Costa Me s a . Own er transferred. $55,950, Call mo. Full price j us t down.L:al19G3·6•G7 ! Ha , wool cr1>t. t1lc patio. 613·~.'>u. . I Cuurty ·ird 11001 with l're~hly p;,unlcd 111&.out. I I . I "1"0'""1 Ol1/Jl'1 11 ·P~IUll !\)l fl•·I' .' . . '·'II . kl· ,, .. $5~,500. 1CSl .IU)'lrltratl. O<~r<li19 •ll \IUNl•li·f r, 1 • ;, .> ""'' [ ._ • jacU7.ZI . 1'hts home LS rU Y Sprtn crCl .IWn:>. Don 't delay. Call 75<!·1700 [r~:;;;t• ;'ojjij~~ ... ~ ... ,~ I a· ~ ideal for cxccuti\'c enter· l•:xtcrior li~hting. Steps today . :·' :1Jil~l1~j!J r . '' ::: t;iining.aS 'A'Cllas famil)'\to. golf course. Only [iif1; fill ,\~~l!j . : I ·~·fit\ J;\ !'''. i . :.J ~~·~~i~::tii~r~. ~1\n~~~~: I ~\7::c~'!~'io~e C~~l'~~:: ..+ Jid 11\11 CATALIHAVIEW I BLUFF~~';,~ATIOM ""'· 640•6161 i·["®~':""'~~'.~:'"1" GOLF COURSE VIEW $74.500 Like a model . 3 Bedrooms, 21<:! baths , rorm<il dining room. All this in 2:100 s11. ft. o( hv· ing on the 8lh green. 'J'o sec call 646· 7171. 11'"--------,i no\v 5<!.lfiZ1f3 J •. I I CLASSIFIED HOURS Advertl~ may place their ads by l.(!le11hone 8:00a.m. toS:30p.m. Monday thru i-'rid11y 8 to noon Saturday ! C.'Cb'TA MESA OFt'ICI'.: ' • J:J.IW. Bay 642·5618 NEWPORT IJEACH 33JJ Newport Blvd . &t2·5678 llUN'TINGTON RF.ACll J787S Be<ich Hlvd. ,....,"" LAGUNA BEACH 1186 Glenneyre La1una Beacll 494·9466 . SADDLE BACK 25201 La Paz Ruad Lagun1 llllls 581-6310 NORTII COUNTY dial free ~0·1220 CLASSIFIED DIADLIMES Deadline for copy & kills is ~:30 p.m. the day tierore publication, ex · cepl for SUnday iAi P.fon· d11y t:ditions wht'n jdeodllne is Saturday, I.~ "°""· Huntington Beach t"rom this elegant &1 End unit Dolores, on cul ' j:l'Ul1j!·!J BE .CH RETRE.e.T s11ae1?US 4 bdrm, 3 b_alhl de s a c s treet ; wi~lc ' 1. ~· nra i{J: "' ~ SPECIAL family home with gl'ccnbclt plus partial . ----••• _ 526,500 J separ:dl(' f<irni!y roorn &I bay view. Beautifully de· 1 • J-lu g e 4 bed roo rn + ()utstanding 4 bellrooin d ining . The beauti(ull cora ted . with lovely J PERFECT HOME&INCOME Olympics1.pool.l\t1nutes Glen l\lar, great family lrees &_ g rcenc~y con-landscaped e ntry & , for Owner/Oi,:cupant. 2 Eastside <.:.i\f JliR, 2ba to beat•h. hide away home neur shoppin~ & trast nicely w1~h. the priva te g ated patio. j llrand new ilea ch home. dbl "ar + IUH mas Lcr, "ourmet kitchen schools i\·lust Sl..'C to ap· thick s h:.ikc roof g1v1ng a ~I.500 FH • REPO . Dun!exes, with 3 HH. 2 • • \)rt:ciate :r;42.50o. · 1· I · A • I apt. Assuine 1'h'iQ VA overlooks patio. }-'i x & rich cozy lee1ng to tus C f C I th I Ba Units ca. Amp c loan. Small down-Owner Save.sacrlf1cc!f-lurry• 546·4141 cxtellenlfamilyhomcon •• 0 eswor IV $35,950 garage & parkini,; "'1th will t·arry 2nd TD. l\1ust FOREST E. OLSON c1uict cul-de·sa~ ~treet.. R~altors 640-0010 I 4BR .. BIEA.CH tst owner 1~eprec1a~1on. sell-Full price $50 ,900. lteahors •&15·0J0.1 S77 .~IO?· Cull 6,16·7111. i Ahandoned! l-turry! $tl5 . .JOO.ca.CallG4•1·721 1 ()O'I ~ Ju 9 • ll ~HIN 10!>1 ··~i [~lj~td1:ll Ol'IN to/ q . ,, s fU"-10 er tJI(/' • [tllRlll\I C ALL JJR l--:s·rtGEJ .... ...,.;~~~~~~~ ..... 1 OpenEvcs "ABANDONED'' !Beach cottage priced ~ l:IOl\tES, ltEALTOllS. -'RTIST CH"'• rr I below market~ Scehxlcd S fi45·66-16 $39,900 I A ~·/hut near schools, shop· ~ CA~I EO SJIOll.F.S: ---MO DOWN $42,900 ! ping ! Aviiil;1hle for a __.:.._.,:___ Ocean View 3 bedroom, 2 STORY Seclude<! drivetowoodcd I limited tintc. Don't wait ~ --------fainily room. spa('ious IRVl~E I I d lawn and patio. Sl27,500. fORMALDIHE " ;;;;;~:~~~~~;;;;!grounds. t:::ntcr a "'°'t?rlrt Jusl S1950tota 1own a1~ fine lr\•111 c location. 13ig" BACHELOR PAD of glass and suni;h1ne. ! low .monthly buys l~1s PARENTS RETREAT 6 75-5511 POOL $32,500 fu mily of 6 w;inL<; out! Spacious I bedroom. new Open Daily l·S ! Spa c io u.s i::ourmet ; sp~c1ous 4 be_droo~t. I-or Separated I i vin g Cole of Newport Winding pathway to tree W i 11 se 11 NO DOWN carpets, paint, 2 coin· JOS I oadway CM "artlen k 1tchcn ser\•esi qwck appl. D1a!Sl1 ·60IU. quarters mMke lhis huge l\E1\LTOl1S cluste red 2 story entry. PAYl\1EN'f lo qualified munity pools, tennis , r ,,, ', l'ruly unique indoor·; O"IN lll9 ·11 ~'!1J ••111 "·" two·s tory ideal for in· 2515E.Coastflwy 1-'ormal dining room. veteran Needs som e courts and lol<; of green c_O.l\IE SEF.. .. · ~rg:e de· outdoor living and dining I[®.,: , ~ ~ laws. 1\lso, game room , ___ c=·o='=o="~•=d='=''="="='-- Gourn1et patio kitchen ,tcndcr c are. Fully ;iir area. Assuinuhle Joan. 1 tac hcd rumpus ~roont areas. Unusoal staircase __ · )1.llJ~·1~·lJ1 wilh upholstered boolh.1· INCLUDES REt-'RIG · 'conditioned . Cathedra l l'erfettfor sin~lcorcoo· w/hath ~ f~lc .. Jlus 31 to hidden artists s uite 1, ·=: Ji(( j;f Family fun backyard in· CORONA.DO ER ,\ T 0 H. ! G i <i nt ~eiling living room. I luge pie. $21,500. Call now to bedroom::. completely : and childrens quarters.I !·::::::!-~-~-!-!•·~-~·!•~"~· eludes boat ~ate, shuf. Larg e s uperbly con· secluded muster s uite. fir e pl ace. All tiled sce,540·11 51. re furbishc~._ l ge; Private studio. Hcautiful fleboarcl , 2 patios, str ucted custo1n home Walk-in closet. I::XTRA gurden kitc hen. Large wardrobe clo!!els, hv rm. [ d · Walk Lo beach waterfall and heated &. w/every possible ameni- L IN EN STORAGE . 1na ster s uit('. i\1irrored dinin.i,: area, top.grade t~1~~ this home yours ! I LOWEST PRICE filtered pool. 562,000. full ty on 2 corner lols, O\'Cr· Overs ized sev.ling &. laun-wardrobe. Large putio. shag ~rpts ;\' drps .. ~at Call !M>J-6767. in Big CCMYOlll µrice . CALL 962·7788 looking park close lo dry room . WAS~IElt &. Fully sprinklered yard. or tra.i.lcr c::.ite on _alley. 0"111 r•oQ •11 ~11J"''~1 1 '·"'' Beautifully landsca1Xld , ~ K€Y Coronado Ya<·ht Club. DllYER INCLUDED! 1'akc ad\';1nrugc ·Call!~~~~~~~~~;;;; Goodlinancingavail. [ ! ·, D )ver 2bedrooms Sl75,000. Xlnt financin g. lluge pr c 1ni um lot. 752.r;ootoday. r Colldayorni<Jh+ ® ~cd~n .1 Uw~cr anx1ous .R€ALTOR51i 979·8342Agent Olympic pool & baskt>t· Ul'f•• '1 ~ · '• n•'• 'Cl· "n ' ;onL from Sun. 6'16·3928,evcs673·•l577 11 • .-:·.; Asking $119,500. 1 --'-~"-'===~-l ."..C'.:'~~~~---- VOGEL & 8A881TI ball court included in as· [ ® ~ A gardeners clclii,:ht. . · I OOZ GeMral I 002 :~~~·~u':iM'tt~N' ~o~CR . . l!~ftiHil1 ~~~.·~~~\~c: :~::~~~Cd ~~~! ..................................... . Tt-.:R~I S? Full price . -~-··-·-~ ~nce,thecornistr TWOFOROHE REALTORS 644·6056 SJ2,500. P rime Irvine tallandlhew<ilcrmclon, 2 2·Udrm. homes. New a r ('a . Ca l I t ocl a y. £'uc umbt>r & cantaloupe ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 11ai nt & carpets. Rt-duccd !~~~~~~~~~~! 752-1700.. OCEAH VIEW \'1nes arc look1ni.: for to S42,500 I' OO'IN 111 Q • ,r \ •uN 10 1<1 •· ~1 ' Two homes on I ~ lots; 2 runn1n,I! room. 11nd the CALL 6 7S-7060 4 BEDROOMS b<l<m, .. 2 ""bo + lµc. 0"""'"" have"·' SPANISH TILE ORTH fumily r1n .; vacant & re· bought a vej::elahle 1n GOV'T OWHIO M ady for occupant·y: 2 1975. Quintard 2 Story, 1926 vintage· · COST A MESA bd 1 bath f pie 642·29'.ltCont'dtocs. s uper livable hon1e on 3liR,2 baths.$31,500 CLASSIFIED llGULA TIOMS ERROltS: Advertisers _should cheek th('ir ad1 dally & report error1 immediately. T H E \DAILY PILOT assumes liability (or the fir.1t in· · l'OfTe<1. insertion only. I j;;;,,;;;iiii lc:s'!:ri'at $3aG pc'r ~ntl;'. 1.:::::.:::.:.:..::==="'---I 65xl68 R·2 zoned Jot. 4 $1500 Down. S675 Costs & $38,000 $135,000 SURFSIDE: Large bcrlrooms. formal impounds, $275 Pl'l'l Quiel street, walk to all 673-3663 W d1nin 11 room, fireplace+ CALL 556-1800 sc hoo ls, new carpel. DRAMATIC DEAUYILLE De corated in soft g reens. -1 bedrooms, office, 3 baths and magnificent master s uite. P rotected patio and lush gal'dens. Solarium, air conditioning. Private. elegant Bi g Canyon. Nig ht a nd day views. $187 ,500. CANCELl.ATIONS: When killing 1n 11d be sure to make 1 record of the KI LL NUMBER given you by your I~ taker as receipt of your cincell1llon. This kill number must be pre1en· tAld by the advertiser In case of a dispute . CANCELLATION OR COR R ECTI ON OF NEW AD BEFORE RUNNING : Every ei'rort l~ madfl to )ill or cocrttl' a new 1d thut has been ·ordered, but we c.11'1not 11u1r1n· tee to do !IO unUI the 1d h•• 1ppe•rc.d In the .... OIME-A·LlNE ADS: 'lhlM ad11 are 1triet1Y e•h lnadvanceby m•ll ~at any one or our o(· nce1. NO phone orden. De1dllne : 3 p .m . P"rict.1. c.o&t1 Mesa of· nee 6 11 noon at ill trJ.nth otncn. · /fHE DAILY P ILOT re1etvl!I th• tltht to daulfy. f!<lit, ctneor or efu1e •::,r edver• ttMmtnt. a to cb1ntt nt• ll ff(ulaUon1 prl« nolticc. cus-MAU .. 1.DGlllS p,O, Bo• 1&80. eo.t.aMtaa - OPPORTUMITY knocks often when you use resuJt.getting Daily Pilot Classified Ads to reac h the Orange Coast m:i.rkel. Phone &12·5673 $©"\l~lA-./Gf-tf'S " That /nlriguing W ora' Game with a Chuckle ------•4h•<i ~, (lA' •. •OtttN 0 11.eorrot>O<r '-"•" of !he '""" .,,.,,,,bled ...... d. be· lo.-to fQIM ,.,.,, IJfftpt. _d .. I THlNKG I I I I I I I I M ASUE I;,. I r I I I' r I' t I I I I I I SCRAMLETS -"'"Ml Classlflcatl°" 1010 --. ' HIDEA AY separate rumpus rm lalboalayProp fres h clean look, great Step~ to the poundinA alongside the sparkling Reatton yard for kids. Yours for s u rf ! Cozy r u st ic pool.Full price 1:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:1just lO'la down.Callnow charmer . Ci rc ular $52 500 640·7171 . stairway to Ion. &infilled • • MN u1 9 · tr s •uN ioti(1 .. ri • s: a 11 e y k i•t ch en . COLLEGE PARK ., •. -,., -~ ~ tlandcr afted wood panel· li6'6.n Newsm· Big bedrooms, best fl~r ~ ,, ,~ ing. Bay window look out plan with large family ·j·· , ~~ o n the shimmerin ~ room. 3 hii,: bedrooms, 2 ··» ,,h;i::.,:; Pacific. Owner anxious. ANYTIME baths, large covered Low, low price. Hurry . patio &. huge. cheer)' 3 BR , FAM RM. Call tor a pr1\'ate show· kitchen . Walk to all WATERFRO....,T THE REA ESTATER 1ng. Call 842·2535. I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;1·5chools, elcnienlary U1ru 1"'111 Ul'I N fi! 9• 11 s '"'N ro ~1 r" I ' I; c>CC. Priced only $44.000 with 11ier &sllJ>. !,~1 IUllll ~.~~::~:r,;:z~~:~ ~.:.~,o~~~\7'~~~.21: ~:;:.:~~:f·~~c:%~~:~r hacienda & round rch1ge " .xlO\.O $149,500. in the heat of day. Air JA.COIS REALTY ~~.l~.~,.P.!l -.-HERITAGE conditioned and k>\'ely In 675·6670 c\'cryway. Si it today! ' • REALTORS $60.000. l ~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.1 A'E~~~ 4 Br, 4 Ba ikGallcry 2 fireplaces, wetbar Deluxe kitchen P ier ror yacht woo· You moy select the "41 C1inpu• N 9 54t ·H 55 rlnishing6L_f5~~~· GREENH.OUSES. 7000 "!!!!!!!!'!!!!'!!!!!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!!!!\ sqrt Rrow1n1& area. 4 ijr, 3 = Ua hou11e . 'h Ac're . OCIE..._.._..___... $115,000. X1ra l't Ac:rt: "'",.."'"1 w1hou11e & more JU'Owinit 1'riplu. Best Location. area 110.000. ltoth U.)' Owner. Prlncipiils SlTS ,000 by Owner only. S.ST·1288. 5~9-4221 or675·'1767 . SELL Idle Items. with a Want Ads Call 642-5678 Dally Pllol CJassllied Ad. I LUFFS TOWNHOME Bea utiful reeenlly re. decorated 3 DR end Unit w~th ncnr·ti)' Pool & Clubhouse, overtlled m11ster bedroom and night li ght vlew. $00,500. C11116<t4·72 lt . rJn "t ll.ll 1\1\ll !Y & tl".i~l ltH\l [~ CORONA DELMAR BEACH HOUSE Delighttul, spotless, two bedroom home in Old Corona on an R·2 lot. l URh beamed «llin"'' rircplace. private yard • for the younc •t heart. Only $61,000, Cal l 673-8'50. Ol'f»ti\'•-. IT"'f'NN fO M'NIC!' ~THE REiil.· ESTllTERS --- ' I 75' LIDO FROMTAGE Spacious 5 bedroom ho1nc with <l in - in g room, office, separate children's wi11 g an(l family room . Larg e seclud ed patio in cc1\ter of this out- standing family ho1nc. Sl69 ,500. NEWPORT COMDOMIMIUM Sharp three bedroom, three bath condo near lfoag 1-lospital. r·utl price just $'1!1.!)00 lcrn1s . IEST INCOME UMIT IUY 4 units on Peninsula. T his has to be Newport 's best buy! $99,750 . FROM COLDWELL 114MKEA. ••• w i th prl<l e. A home o _f ~x ­ traordinary character & d1gn1ty. 120 Feet of watcrfrool. 5 Bedrooms. 41'> Baths. D i n ing room. Den. Pool. Unab as h e d ly deluxe spa with separate men&. women's quarters . J acuzzi. Steam . Sauna. ~.ooo. (lee). HIWPORT IUCM 644-17 66 >. coLOWia.L 14MKIR c;o. ' --H•et ,_ ~ IM1r1 Pre••fff 2000 -·He; DAILY PfLOT Monday, June 23 1175 Hl•H...... H•••• ~.. H1• .. .....-; S. ................................ . E .. _ --tt....a.... -· •••••••••••• , ........................................................ ··········-··········· ............. °'' ..._.._ (H••nFerS. · Hwnfw~ c..t.W... 1114 • ... ., ..... .._.. d 06t 1Hcf1 lt6' *..,...tlHdt I •••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••-•••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ltm II ........ 1040 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• % f&OUI P\DIS ·".ewr.. 1 MJ ._,.. I IOI .... • l"-d I 006 ........ • .............. ....... ................ NIWPOIT SHOllS Cocta Me•• Nr. S. Coast •••••••-•••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• ... ··-·-•••••••••••··-·-••••• MOYllMMOW ,,~ . ~Es'!P~Llff Larae !·•Lory' BR, 3 r1ua.4·3Br,4-28r,au2 HOMl/INCOMI OwD r f alre.awl)' anx· W •~TO '"" 'I ~ baths; 2 aundecJ<s. patio. D•, forced air. bllns, tous. will lease/ lease--w•lk to be•ch. tenru , &bake roof, 1 or both. t I • · BARGAINS!!!· 11J ..,. R1':DUCEO Sl0,000: Lu sk home in Harbor View Hills. 8eaut1ful gardens, 1n vi ew, 4 llH, den or tamaly rm. ~Now only Sl25,000 u R EDUCED $5.500 ; Ea~tbluff home with 35 ft. ga m e rm., view, 2 frplcs .. 4 . BR, 3 Ba. Now onlv ~.soo , ell •• RE~UCED Sl50.000: O\!ea nfront in ,. J r vine Cove ; p restigious home, . pn \'ate beach, 4 BH, maid 's, 7 baths; 7,400sq. ft. of luxury. Call for appt. The Above m otivated sellers lnvitcoffers! ! COMPANY REALTORS 2865 E. Coast Hwy., COf'Ofto det Mar . "Sellin9 Rffll Estate In Newport Harbor Since 1944" 673-4400 3 8odrooto OW111111r'1 wait option/ or u.wne FHA llACH Just 11•stedfl etf'. Needs TLC,18riccd $82,950 ea. Income on Little J land w1tb 1 loan with smaJI down. 01 & t'HA ~crs are • • • riahUl $61,950. Ca I $19,400. Bkr. 174,..,l or b1:<trro apt. ruotcd at u .. 0 ... 90 d N £ h • ed II · n a111••TY ..... 597.r. ...., . mo.• ... en, · • we I com o on t i E 0 ""aut11ul 3 BR, 3 Ba. overs11 vm., CAYWOOD_,_ . _.: ...... ___ . _. -"------$245. mo. Top value at 'd lo ll ..i-~-...a DC u ·- 81 e. apac u.a, we UomKllt"""' room , family room, J.t'ORMAL * 141-1290 • Sffllcll ••••S• $l3!l~.L PINCHIM ~:_::1 &r o:,~~:/1~~~! DINING ROOM W /FIREPLACE, Main st. 1tores. 4-lona REALTOR built·ln kitchen, loads ol luxurious kitchen. Custom decorated Mobile HCHMt Umc tenants. Rent.a are 2727 E. Coa.ll Hwy. diniag de&, massive t.hru-out. Spaciously manicured yard. Fors• 1100 low; Asking Price ls Not! 675·4lt2 llreplace, separate laW1· Ideal for entertainino, ••••••••••••••••••••••• But for a l'"'Uture B~ lbis dry room, and covered ..... 'O VERY NICE Expando laHOT! t'orlnlocallA-1 lolboa Penlallllcl 1007 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OH THIE POINT Nr. Channel 4 br, 3 ba. home has 2400 sq. ft. + 2~2 car gar. ()tly 10 yrs. old & $127,000 value . OWNER MUST SELL. MAKE OFfo'ER! Shown by appt. 2146 Miramar Ur. 673-4224 Eves. & Wknds. paUo. Unbeatable at only A SHOW-OFF HOUSE 20"55. Adults, be11t toe. Realty 21:$/433·0403 5223 !4J~79~~.Call 963-5671 or SOUTH COAST INVESTMENT Mull ~ uc. San Juan E.2ndSt,Long8ch .,.,., ~ Capo. Owner. 493·4088 NPT HG'l'S· 3 BR Home + .Collfomla r..-.. 54t-Ga 11 64M7 I 0 AcNOC)e for sal. 1200 Duplex. $85,000. JJ ea u ti f u l array of ••••• • • •••••••••••••••• Call Owner, 64G-S601 flowers, plants & trees. SACRI FIC 1'; 4.48 Ac flat hi .\love In condition. Entry L..-. letteh I 048 Newport leech I 069 desert, Lucerne Valley. Lots for HM · 2200 hull, 4 bedrooms + Cami· -~-------••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• •••••••••••••••• $4200. Schwaru Realtor. ••••••••••• •••••••••••• ty room. brick fireplace, NE.Aa fl&WAY View ·4 BR,3BaUls PROMOMTORY (714)499-3000 FOR sule • $47,500. Loi wood cabinets. built·ins. & WHtMlnstw Mal Riviera coastline loc: IA y HOMES (714) 640-1127 25x00. R·2 w/oJder home. A sacrifice at $45,950! 3 lledrm, 2 bath. ll"· wood exter, Palos Verdes L at front • • ~ 1,.00 20th St., Newport Penln. •· u x u ry W. er '-'"" r-rwr-• •r , Call ·red Tressen, JPS, 5..0·3666 73.S lohr SltHI Cotto M..lO, Colif-io 92626 bkr. graded carpets &tile. stone.Lg.liv rm,beams, homes priced fro m ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6396700 .,A_._51,7 540·1720 Gas bltns, dishwasher, fplc.; opens to pauo & $211 300 ~·waterfronts · .,.... ., lmmac. Duplex, N'pt. T •RBELL fireplace, 2 car garage. lath hse. Bltn k1Lcn + 607 ' B ~yslde Drive: PRIME OfftCE R..:eol..:..:...~Es-ta_t_e ____ _ Island $93.500 A Pool size yard. VA 6% tlS·I lndry area W/\~Shr & Newport Beach. 673-3900 IUILDtNG w .. ted 2900 Marshall Rily 675-4600 2955 Harbor llvd., sumable loan. $44,950. d r yer. Fam rm One MiJ.hon$$ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Coro1ta del Mer 1022 ____ C_M. ____ , Bkr536·8836. w/beams. Only$W,950 BA YFRONT $172,000·paslyrincome • Mi ssion Realty 494·0731 Excellent lax shelter 5 "~DOWN BEAUTIFUL POOL. 2CuslomHomes GreatNewportLocation 2 Charming houses o n JBDRM,2BATH BALBOA PEN)NSULA Ted Hubert&A.ssoc. • wide lot So. of hwy, CdM . SL'I' 20x20 PLAYRM Reduced to $72,250! 4 BR Excellent locatJon on the 675.8500 Bea t "' d ~n1500 c.. Prancis'cn Flns. Formal B & I 1 bl kt th u . .,ar ens . ..,., , . 15x35 SWIM POOL ay• on Y ,, oc o e ••••••••••••••••••••••• IRVIMECOVE Res pons ible pe rson would like to b~ direct from owner . Home or lot. Please call 831-1400. Owner, 673··HW dining, on cul-de-sac. Ocean Each home has 4 C•-tery L_...../ BBQ-CHINF.sEOVEN · . .. • ._. vn 4 BR Duna .,v CUL-DE·SAC , Lrg fam rm. bdrm s, 4 baths & Crypts I 500 lleatals r-11.f;A z REALTOR Gallery, 2 fireplaces,••••••••••••••••••••••• w1lh 3 OR. 2 Ba Rental. · UNUSUAL wetbar ultra modern F G Lo 335 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S h f B .d D 494·8611 • . . E & rave ts, H Fu. _1.11......~ out o ays1 e r . kitchen & pnvate pier. Bayv iew Terr. secl. ouses r-m- with beautiful natural By Owner/ Agt. ASSUME i Peerless simplicity, ex· Fee land. See at 1200 Pacific View. 494·8285 ••••••••••••••••••••••• wood textures. Only 1 VAor newGl.Nodown3 REALTY INC I quislte, rare 3 bdrm. East Balboa Blvd., or eves. G.,..rol 3102 year new. Call 644-7'211 Ur. $37, 950. 968·7739; 7141 846_ 137·1 : home. Oak floorsl.~~one call 675·8120 for more de· ••••••••••••••••••••••• -- 645·9733. j I rplc, ocean vu. $99,:AAJ tails. Commercial Costa Mesa, 2 Br, $140, • • · , , • .._.EWLY p •fUTl:ft 1 : I Property 1600 util pdN. M 8 H ; 25 alsout.wl pdalk to .P I " "'"' Q# : HARBOR View Home4br, ••••••••••••••••••••••• water , $1 1 ; or •• ~~ ........... !?.~~~~~~~ .......... !?.~~ ~ 3 Br, 2 Ba. dbl gar. ne,~! FANTASTIC ~ SP.ARKUMG 2112 ba , many xtras, COMMERCIAL pro~rty try this oc~an vu •. Lag. carpts. assume 7'"" •01 4 B droo 2'h b ths : 3 Bdrm .• 2 bath Emerald I priced to sell by owner. Newport store & oCCices. Bch, $165 ut1l pd, singles ti Aet4tUeS~~ REALTORs' FANTASTIC OCEAN VIEW IN FANTASTIC Laguna. Looking down on FANTASTIC Di vers Cove. New 2 bedroom. 2 bath, fireplace Con- dominium. F u rnishin gs in cluded. A FANTASTIC b uy for $99 ,000. Also <.1va il able for an11ual or summer ren- tal. CALL-644-72'10 2828. E. Coast Highway, Cor;ria del Mar PROPERTY MANAGEMENT HOMES fOR LIVING N£TWORK 1111 u11 •11• rou tur 1111 01 1u 1r ··"'"" ,. ,,,, #j 110# Beach Retreat FHA, S34,000. $203 mo. N e t ~ t 2 :t ' 1 . Bay home. Architect de· 1 Prin. only. $88,500. Fee. · 7 units. Priced right. Call OK. Agt./ Fee 979-8430. Just two blocks lrom the Owner/A~l. 549-2646. h ewpo~h es t flory signed; professionally Firm. 644 ·4374 afler 6 T e d T r es s e n • C d 1 ...,._ 3122 ocean's surf ! Newly de· 1 · ome .. arp, grea oor decorated. Open beam pm. l714)639·6700or644·5147 Oit"Ofta • ,..._-• co ra Led . Thick p1 le ABANDONED . pla!'· hi~hly upgraded,i ceilings in living &djmngl . • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• earpcts. drapes, used $28 500 1 palio&_darkroom.Seeto, rms. Sunny view deck. HA'RBOR VIEW HOMES COftdomumuns ChinaCove3Br,2Ba,OC bric k fireplace. kinJ! ' ! appreciate.SS7.ooo. j Pool s 1zed yard. r\p· PORTOFIN03BR212ba forsale 1700 Vu. $425 mo. Wntr lse master suite. large ~ame + GUEST HOUSE I IJ • · '•, , · I proved plans for ex-1 .+ sep. lBR l ba guest_hse ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ownr. 544·6130/673·7838 room. walk·tn clo.-.ets 1n Unbeltevable value at I • , pansion. $137,500 j ideal for t eenagers, hve·1---------•I all bedrooms. S92.ooo ~8.~! VAC~·~ENTI 962-4471 ~:)546-8103 ; TURNER ASSOC. i~ help, relatives or of. OPEN EVEHIMGS ~~-~~~~ ••••• ~!~! bkr. fHEN BUY. Prelerred, , 1105 N. Cst Hwy, Lagw1a I f1ce. 2600 ~q. n. Must sec Village Gardens is now . . 540·1720 Mesa lot·ation. Fresh1Yj BYOWNER2yr.old3br.l 494•1177 : lO appreciate rloor plan. open Tues day thru LAGUNA Hilltop Vi ew T.&RBELL patnt«:d board & ballenl 2 ba. Beaut. cond.I · Nr pool,clubhse &green-Thursday evenings til home,wood&glass.July A exter~or DETACHED, thruout. 1915 Alsuna in! PRIMEAREA I belt. S95,000. Fee. 9:oosocomeand see the 27 to Aug. 30. $650. 2955 Harbor Blvd., c_u ES~ C<:>TTAGE . + 1 LaQuesta Tract. $43,950., .. in Monarch Bay Ter." 644·7866 best buy in Orange Coun-494-3278 C .M. fa:3~nt ~h~~~g ?rk~~ For appt. Lo see Ph : race; this lge. & well l"TheBlulfs"Townhouse. ty. ;\t $19,950., for a Newportleadl 3169 re s &o P c1 642·3216 landscaped lot. ocean '! 3 BR 2 BA By Owner beautifu l 2 bedl'm, 2 bath ••••••••••••••••••••••• ence swaying pa ms ' · • · · · h bl h & SEETHE OCEAN entry. Beamed ceiling •SU PERVALUE' views & courtyard en· See Wknds & Eves. wit, Y tns, ~as eat LrglBR,hugelivrm.Din From your front step. living r oom. Comfy Condo 3+ Den. 111'.i. mi trance. e ~hancemthe 644·7814. ~~;Jer~u~~~~~~r~~&J rm_, kit. Swim 'g ~I. ':::~~h ~ft~.~:~:; r~~~~~ ~ kitchen includes refrig! bch. Like nu cond. Love· ~~atrh ~f t~~s~i~r r~ 3 w Sth st Santa Ana or Qwel street. ~/mo in: -=unscL. 'fake an corly Loads of s lora~e & shop ly patio. $40,500. Owner h~me. nood functionai ca.II 839.s32i. c~s gardener. hil'!ple or 2 ~ space Awesome 85' x 962-3786, . • ., . singles. No c aren or morn in g jog on lhc 160 . lot! Quaint & . I des1g~. except1onal .c~n· pets.642.9959 IJcal"h. All this can he curiously refreshing. See Reduced $3,000. Giant ~truct~on, makes this an .._.ORTH L •GU.._.•'· yours when you o"n this to belie\"e. Take ad\·an· pool, 3 Bd. Immediate I ideal investment for the ' n "' ""' 4 Br house 'nr beach. :.pac1ous 3 UH Family Lage-Call fast. is2.1700. possession, $46,000. BKR. large family at SU9,500 Spacious, new two and Bayshores. July & Aug. room home w1lh huge '"""':'"''.1u•11o 111.·u • 968·1805. three bcdroom 'un1 ts. Call 548·6239. master SUllC & low. low I i m· ·. 11.~fi©t'Pel offers a traditional Ocean views. Jo'rom ~P1tk.eh tce'Prm. so. ~~)1'1 ,,SA91~7~~ol ® !~~i•n•~••••••••••••!?~~ ~ II3@©Il~~ 3 bedroom, 3 bath, SS.1.500. 675·7225. Houses Unfurni$hed '"'° .,... I h ••••••••••••••••••••••• General 3202 -------Ba. Cathedral ce1l., Liv. ••••••••••••••••••••••• University Park, 4 llr. 3 1 499·2800 ocean v ew ome t ~ IM y VlEW Rm, fo'am. Rm. Dll;). Rm. for $89,500 FREE FREE 1002 ~ You must see this beauty $63.500. 552-9705 & -•Professional Service• Gennal 1002 General ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• --1n an art'3 ofS87,()(X). new 751-7391 - COUNTRY CUL-DE-SAC Costa Mesa 1024 homes Has 4 .Bd, 2 ba, NEIDSFASTSALE LIDO ISLE •LANDLORDS• PRIVACY ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/v1ew of the back bay. TLC NEB>B> Wa lk to tennis courts, HUNT BCH VIEW Home finder 5 * KITCHEN Priced right iOT.950. Dis· To make this well local· large pool and ocean Vio Mice 3 Br, 2 Ba, fronl & rear 642•9900 !lu ge , wine and $79,500 EASTSIDE coveryRE.64S·SMS edtownhomeintoabeau· from this two·story, 3 Lovely 3 br, 2 ba. patios. Plush carpet & hand:.omc with vau.lk<l New listing. Beautiful. Elegant 3 UR and fam ty. 3 Bdrms., 2 baths, bedrooru, 2 bath home Fi re P 1 a ee. 582.M . d r a .p es . Q. u i ck California 's ~rgesl cc1li nJ.! Loo. an<I areas of ll as c v e r Y thin g. rm .. q u IA.la Ly bu1 l t BY OWNER· atrium. ONLY $48,500. Wltb dining rooro. plus Owner/AgeoL posseuion! Like New. •Rental ~rv1ce!• C'abincls in th1'\ r>t-•oplc Completely redecorated Courtyard entrance, lrg i\1 ESA VERDE Ask fur Lee family room. Localed in 673-6489 No Quali fying. S36·8i21 COM S185. 1 Br kids pet all lund or kilcllen. New floortocciling.3over-yardw/manyfruittrces. Decorators Dream+ IRVIMEHOMES, nice privatecommunily. _____ orEves.968.4190. utilpd2 blkstobclt. s h a g c a r Pct 1 n ~ :-.1zed bdrms. 2 baths. Only $2,650. down. Pool. 4 BR. $72,500. REALTORS $69,500 --..-..--~----.-. G.S. THOMAS RLTRS LAG 3 Hr, 2 Ba, kids & throug hout the house large fa mily room & pool I !>79-5819 552 7000 Harbor View Home, 4 Br, pool Uonus famil y g ame table s ized rumpus --• 1963~0.CoastHwy. 2 Ba Montego. Nr .. park Dupl~xes/ H. Bch 4 Br, 2 Ba, lodi; room. Stone 1 ircpla1:c room. <.:ho1ce Costa Mei.a Huntington Beach I 040 Formerly Pettit flcall~1 Laguna Beach all schools & pool. Well Units sale 1100 pet and t·u rcfrcc rock plan loc:llmn. Call545·!14~1. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... EW LISTl .... G I 494-0749 landscaped. ·833·186Uor ••••••••••••••••••••••• H. Bch $170 1 Br, appli l ers. J bedroom!'> and :! l"""I 1"""1 I appt. $81,500 By Ownr. MEW 4·PLEXES singles. baths with a::.!'>urnalilt· YOUR OWN JUST REDUCl:ft ... near the ocean. Good Fce/Brkr loan. S·IG.750 540-3666 L H 'll I 050 Q# tax shelters apprecia· HOMEFIHOERS l~Quail ·~ liilPlac• .. Properti•• 752-1920 1400 OUAIL ST. NIWl'OllT llACH TUSTIN I 3 9 21 BrownirKJ St 4 br. P~ ba. hardwood llr:.. frplc. Quiet ::.tr<:el!>. nr all Schools. LI!. r ool:.11e l"<Hncr Int. .\tro::.s from l'Orn f1t'lds' l'r1ccd at onlv SW.OW Wm. S,\NOON. Ukr 53 l·ttat.ll Westcliff Beauty Desirable Lincoln Lane, I bed rooms. formal din· in;:! rm, 20x40 pool and rn uch more! Sl22,500. Call to sec. 642-5200 j PETE -BARRETT ~"' REALTY General I 002 Getteral 1002 macnab I Irvine realty THE RIVIERA? Lovely View! Light, cheerful indoor garden atmos phere. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths. Pool & je:icuzzi. 3-car garage. $168.500. Appl. only. r:laine Svedeen 642-8235. <G65) MEW OH MARKET! Thal favorite 3 bedroom. 4 bath h o m e in H arbo r View - meticulous ly d ctorated & main- tained! Van Lu it wal lpaper - finished bonus hideaway w /loft. Ex- ceptional landstaping. Appt. only. Joyce Ed lund 642-8235. (G66 ) CUSTOM DOVBl SHORES A very s pecial home -for very selective people. Spectacular 5000 sq.ft. of s pace -for entertaining & a rt! 3 fire places magnificent m ast e r s uit e -jacuzzi -4 bedrooms. ~89,500. ll<.1rbara Aune 642-8235. ( G 67) FAMILY FUM! Inviting 4 bedroom POOL ho m e w/easy m ainte nance yard. Great kite-hen + m any amenities. Ex- cellently priced at SDB,000. Evan Corke tt 642-82.3.5. (G68) llG CANYON VIEW New Deane home -2 bedrooms + den w /spectacuJ ar szolf l.'Ourse view. Quiet <'Ul-dc·sac. Sl27.500. Donna Godshall 64oi·6200 (Crl>9 > ns 8ohr Stree• JACUZZI aguna 1 s Bay front 3 bdrm., 21.-il ' Co110 M••o,Colifo1n.092626 ••••••••••••••••••••••• baths,own yourownapt. l ion. Sl l 0,000. and •642·9900• LAST OF ITS KIND MEW PORT DUPLEX I Bi~ bedrooms up + 3 In~ bedrooms down. In \"ery ~ood condtL1on through oul w1lh new wood !'.hin,.:le exterior. Ten yards to sunbathing beach & water. Don't tell anyone at· ~120,000. J u::.l call 516 2313. Real Estate Off the m aster bdrm. $53,000. Many extras! OWN8R up.SUNSET BEACH What more could you 6 BR, Newly i.>ainted. w ANT s Ac TI o N ! Beaut. new duplex, steps Ocean Vu, Lag. Bch, $165, by MCJAY want'! Also included in 968·65<16 S99 500 to beach. OPEN Sat/Sun util pd. Singles OK or 2 this $68,900 home in Tur· 12·5: 1680614thSt. Br, Sl55, pets OK, CM. WATERFRONT Lie Rock, are 3 other'Laguna N~uel 1052 I Also, fncd 2 Br, HB, $180, bdrms. 2 Baths, familyj ••••••••• ••••••••••••• i: kids, pets OK. 2 Br, kids, PARADISE , room & a location close * WE KNOW* l pets. s mgles. Lag. Bch. We have 2 water-front to tennis, pools & parks., LAGUNA NIGUEi. Agt/ Fee 979·8430 hsungs on main channel Sec today for summer *BEST* E •STBLUFF I REALTY INC. Balboa Peni1ts.M 3207 lor s ail or power boats. f I I A I Enjoy elegance & com· un. j OCEAN VIEW EVERY · Im mac. 3Br, Den. Beaut 714/846 137 ••••••••••••••••••••••• fo rt. llURRY & CALL RAISQR'S I W 1 N D 0 W · 2 3 2 3 21 decor & lndscp'g. $84.500. I -1 2 BR delightful home on 842·9371 PALAWAN CIRCLE.I Owner 640-8023 2915 luxurious Penin. Point. YOU LIKE IT REALTORS 1 MONARCH BAY TER· I Catalpa St. Income Property 2000 _S4_00_IY_r...;:ly_&1_5_-6822_ ..... A.::..gt_. _ Y u I ltACE. I ••••••••••••••••••••••• • IT LIKES 0 4523<.:a mpusDr., lrvine 1 !HARBOR VI EW HOMES TWO-S unit apt bid ·ust Capistrano Beach 3218 M" 1· We have a 3 bedroom CampusValleyShopCtr.! Exceptional .custom 4i 3 BR. Monaco model, completedfor sale.~fose •••••••··~··••••••••••• ~ home Just for you on a CALL833-8600 ! bdrm home with fam.,&I xtra cle~an . Hy own er. to majo r s hoppin g OCEAN view new 3 br 1,,.111 Ut 9 • II S I UI, ' [® THE REAL ESTllTERS BEAUT. Dl•cor., wallpr. 3 br. 2 ba . Bi~. !»pcC1al bll. on lam. rm. wtfrpl. Musi see 1L ! S42.000. Under hsl price for quick sale. Ownr. 548· 1005 ----ASSUME 7r,; Loan. Sand· poinle lime 2 Sly, 4 81l, 3 Ba, :.cp fam &dm·rm. Nr So. Coas t Shopping & Irvine lndust. Park. Only $57.~5u. Owner. 557-55&1 A SLEEPER 3 BDRM, fam rm. quiet location near South Coast Pia.ca. <.:omer lot, lrg. back )ard.$48,950 ~~CALLNOW {//,A 752. 7315 DONALD M. BIRD Auocloles , lteoltor~ BLUE HAVEN POOL 3 Bedroom. 2 baths. ha rd wood floors. d ble Aara Ac. <1 ui et street, $38,500. Roy McCcrcle Realtor 181 0 M.wport Costa MesaMS-7729 NO DOWN TO VETS Up to i70.000. Call ; Dill o r St<'ve, A gts . 546 8640/548 9871 E1S1de ·8eaut ldscpd 3BR l"11hll, fplc. pvt paUo Ir fis hpond. A.sk'I $41.MX>. A1111ume Sl-1,00U. VA 7<' • Pr1nl·l pal~ o nly-By ·OWnC'r 645· l Wl/ G33 0485 cul·de·::.ac, huge lot·close din rm, wet bar, 2 frplc s, 1 $69,500. Fee. 644·2774 center . l st yr write·off. Cf:>ndo, 21 -z ba. Pool, tcn- lo park. Lg. camper ac· 1----------3 car gar, much more. . $l4M 536 2579. 5!12 5010 ms ct, clubhouse. $400. cess. with double door Invest A Little... Reduced to sell. $129,500. 3 Br, H~rbor View Home 2 . . . . Call after 6 pm. 493-3541 entry· 842-!1371 gain a lot in tax wrile-0ff L09una Nicjuet Rltrs. Ba, bnck frplc, foro s~ DELUXE 4-PLEX C d 1 3 and appreciation. This is 83.0-5050 ,.9L4040 $75,000, By ownr. 64 . G a r d e n G r o v e . orona e Mer 222 , v-••••••••••••••••••••••• Real Estate byMCJAY THINK llG A home for growing kids. Bi g bac kyard·Shady lrees. Largest laundry r m fo r Mom: 2-·stry: 4 a 3 bdrm .. 2 baLh condo OPEN HOUSE Sal & Sun Jo'ireplaces, pool, l·l, 2·2, that 's beautifully de· 4 BEDROOM. 2 BATH, 10·5, By Owner. 4 BR, 3 1·3 bedrooms. encl. corated, has redwood large Jiving rm. lrg. fam Ba, 3 Car Gar. Land garages. Xlnt apprec1a- decking, desirable te· rm w/wet bar, jacuzzi in Included. $87,500. 247 lion area. Only 10%down nant and a small price of your own front yard, Walnut St. 645-EO payment. Call 833·3544. $32,500 close t o Dana Poinlliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Spa r ling Inves tment MariQa. $92,500. VIEW HOMES Corp. BOND REAL TY INC. 27812 Ji'orbes Road * OCEAN Eastsidc Duplex. Lrg cor- v,51.N Laguna Niguel. 831-9411 • N E W p O R T ner lot. Garden. $38,000. H "'RIOR Agt.. Sll8-8642. RIAlTY "' 552-7500 * BACK IA Y H.V. Hornes 4 Br. 2 Ba + 1". R. Spect. view w/pool & tennis cts avail. $.550. mo. lse. 644·2877 EXCLUSIVE Shorccliff Rd . 3 br. 2 ba. pvt. acce!lti lo beaches. Beaut. yd., yrly. lse. $595. 842-2026 or 6i5-4869 5 Br, View, pool & Lennis. bdrm·bonusrm.968-4456 1 .. ________ .. From $165,000 to $220,000. Up to 4000 Sq. Ft. SALE; LEASE : or OPTION. Terms to Suit. Local trades OK 2 A PLEXES $600 mo. will' consider ~ mo. lo mo. 644-7783. SPLISH-SPLASH Sparkling pool with this Spanish Hacienda. Wet bar, custom cabinetry. Ceramic tile. 968-44S6 DISTRESS!! Sin a little & sleaJ this one! £xec giant. Huge mas t er suite w/con· ve rsalion , sto urme t kitchen + coffee corner. dine, family, :.parkling cu&tom POOL. Ins pect & submit your down pymnt to l a ke over .owner's loan. $307. ·PlTI pays all. llkr 962·S511 WALK TO RACH $25.0000I Laguna leach I 048 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OCEAN VIEW 2 Decks & 2 frplc's arE only part of the charm ol this tastefully decorated 3 BR, 2ba, 2·story home. Unbelievable price. $69,SOO. 540·3666 ns lo .. , St'"' Coato M••o, Colifornlo 92626 PORTAAMA LAGlMA invites you lo inspeel their panoramtc view building sites overlook· fna bea ut.iful Laguna Beach . Also finlabed homes. BK R 494~9388. • BEA UTJ PUL Wood$ ~!J.'0-INIJ Cove Duplex. Ocon view. frplc ~uoo. 1001 ARTHOFER REAL TY 645-6177 MUST SEE TO 1-PPRECIATE SJ4,SOO compare " choose rrom 2 entlcioa Scotchman specials in two "prime" llunltn11ton &ach loca· Lions. Both sellers have compelling bonafide re· uoclS to selt Heaven sUJI protects the working m•n. but you"ll have to hurry, timt' is runntn5: short, spPculators alr;o 1----------f w.:h:o1ne. Pvn't hesitate. So. Coast llwy. BK R. •199-2277 For <.:luio.Mfil'd Ad A<:'flON Call a Daily Pilot AD·Vl!i()ft 642·5678 ' Terms fle1xible. 8!17-0321. Walker r. I ee Reel f state Want acts • EXCl-:PTIONAL v•lue. 3000 ft. charmer on"3 tou (C3n be legal duplex). Guo1l hou e, hi.Ille pool. bea.atiruJ views. Priced to sell al Sl39,~ uKR. 499·2277 \ C~~·~:!.~.!~~--!!:~:!.~=:~~~~ .... ~~~ . .'.~' '-11••~ Al laa .. 1...... t,a lmal1 aw... Su•1111t ..... 4200 .... ~--l .. J .. lnl c -----·· ·-········--.. •••· ••••••••• • ~ ... r..-. 2" 1-5 ---• ,. .. J• Ir ......._. a.....c..:.::.. -•••• ••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -~---:'"':''-"'~~~~ .... ..._•;..;..;:';...--------=:::::.::..:;..=~~~E, •••••••••••••·•-•• .441•1-._. .,u C....M -z ..._ ,,...,.,.._"_ . \ lJJ ' ... ....................... ....................... ... -,......,...._ ll6t MODJ::RN 3 br rea r_.._...._. 4400 ~••c:•-•/ I va uly JSJ ceoa. Pk '' I er 1 JSl ' t ••••••••• ···--···-· ••••• •• • .......... ..... ho Co I ....................... v ,.,....... I br, 2 ba, Ira 1amrm&din Bt:AUT. new 2 br, 2~ ba, b.;.. Av~t~~uo.~ •T,.,...,_.* •AU M1WPOU ru:=bC:::S ,~ ~. :f.i SllR. fully fum'd. ofc. Lott & ,.!..t ~~Shown by appt Ol)ly. Rancho San .loaq~da 5'7 09NJ G&-!981 · ,. Br ... .t--..... __ AP•a--Newport 646-7971 '°'re· Telu elcc. ty ..... wrtr., In· ••••••••••••••••••••••• -·~ ~r mo. S.U·9't31 Twohome. Ov•rlooJ&• ---· .. • cp...,. --· wUAlt, "' ,_..,,. ..----coll cr110 a. lake sooo lse Coste MHe 3724 spiral ata1rcaat, real Bachelor lor2 1>1:rvauon. upe.nsive. comlQrUbl . lolt fr Fe.ct SJOO 3 Hr, 2 ba, "XC ..... 1onallu Cit'> .fV>'-"'/""l 7""'~ . frplc, -n;· ~a ... •-Bod__,._· __ .. n-h 2212 Dupont Or, Irv .••••••••••••••••••••••• "' ~Y' " ....u.·.,.._ "" · .,... ••••••••••it••••••••• ·"" ' .-• T • ---;::.':"'_~ .,.,ac front, Neunvi.rt 7:., 8181 ... kdy Pu -"' E lra duplex. Downtown LOW .... -.. water pd~ 68 own.lllUUlM.'a 3 Br, 2 8", x•-t'7.r'ae~. -.· -. LOST/FOUNOA Pl:."T? roi;..aase any uropcan ~.M .,Newly decor. 2 2er.2ba,Condo.Avall Ju· -·~ Fr $229~0pen9& • "'· -9G02900Ad ... , Lo Ca r ror delivery lo hplc .OlshwU$ber.dl . ly 12. Pool(Pitrk . ., . ..,5 •Studlo&lBRApts t;l Mesa'sF\nell~. · J) I · Slps9.Ava11July. 300 SQ FT, crpt.1/drp.t1, · 0~00• w t;uropeldelusplanyour dbl -· •Wat 8ed Only kind in the area s p ~air. 642·525lor548..C757 m. per mo CaJl646-2130 Cost Spoy/Neutertoro. lndlviduul lOUt. l>'rom J)OS, aar, loWKl areu mo. To inquire Pb · er 3 Qul"l·'*arde"'·llk.•.adwt' pa· 001.D·l'enoia o 679 3709 · &lrayd. No~. Lease 833·0618. • •TV&MaldServAvall ., • .. ... Acro.u rrom f'Hhlon Vee..._ I .... 4150 r · · LOS1'; amMll rernolc take-offtohomeJ.andloJt. $375 mo. uJI nobb' 11Phone$erv, Hldpoot hvma. ~e l ,2,3, lk, 1.2 J•land at J ...._._ Sl"' me., e C"l Vic you'll be in lbe hands CJl .. n L .. --L c l n w }' 8MVU1'11'U 00 ........................ 2 Mo·s ,. • ...,. .. .. .. • . wkdys 540"8833.. 1 9'U•• -.. J248 • h ld~n Soctioo a. c rpta. drps. San J oaquin Hills Road. CABIN, Big Bear, alee-1200 sq. It office sw·•-Nr. Bl.llhard & Adam:s, H.B. exren.s. AliO lease" rcn---';_._-...;;.;;.:..:..; ____ ,....................... 2376NewportBlvd CM paLJo, bltns, JOme wood (714• 644-1900 12. Col TV, pooltbl, 2 tp.,...l, OC A1'rpo .... 4 ..1n!:. "-Jleward. 962·7660 l a cars. E\JRAUTO, -.-.a I y..u-. l OCEANFRONT LaJuna ~·91S3or~ burning rrpl. Beaut.------.:.....:....-•• "' ........ • Lido Village. N .D: ~• • --r 234 Roy ale Condo. 3 be:. 2 ba landacpd, heated pool & LIVE Near The Beach! sundk. Day/wk. 494-8611 reception area fully Lost: Sm. ma le blk & brn 673·4550 •••••• • • ••• • ••••••••••• 2000 11q. ft Bar frpJ Sec' HOLIDAY Pl.AU AttracUve rent. Ceso cW Sol Lag Bch. carpele~ & draped. $450 Dachshund mix. "'J'uJ " ---------- CONDO, 3 Oil, 2~ BA. g uard. s'195 mo. 'Lse: DELUXESpaoioua 18r,' MartW.-Apts. BeautllulAdultAota MAM MOTH Lakes ::~.'.f;2~~tuUlexcept lostMon,Ballsl.675-0189 Schools & Lge bonu111 rm. t.:r\Cl gar.1 Adults only. 714-499-2711 I urn . apt . Pool. Ample 1777 Santa Ana Ave, CM Fro.$ aao D e I u x e C o n d o . LOST: 9 mo old Chocolate Instruction 7005 pool, tennis "' f 'lay· uM pnrk1n~. Adults, no pets. Mgr Apl 113 646..s5-l2 21-1 s-~ ....... .-. •IB ~very th lng furn 'd. lusiMH leMCll 4450 Lab. IUvr, m"'le, "r\S to ••••••••••••••••••••••• g round . $325 mo .~Cl\LL house, Laguna l~PomonaAve.,CM $3 -•vuou•-·-. s .... 536·1602 a n yon. No children. 1,. 3 Br, 2 Ba, patio, 962-4651 125/135 per wk. 846·5456 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ''Coco''. Also rem I Art Lessons: Pa1nt, dr3w. ----------1 S17S.mo.Ph.:497·1155 gar .• nearnew,nopets. eves. Chihuahu:i, 11 yrs old, ce rami cs, craft :t. 2 un, 2 BA. l:lrand New. 1 Br unrurn $165: l Br 642·1603 NEW P O S THE COLONY grey & blk, ans LO "Cht· Adults/Children.643·~7 Swim pool, teonls. '1! L.11•1N..... 3252 furn $185. Lots ol bltns · MISAVllDI beachm~:1'2&·!~~~$l~ 30RETAILSHOPS qu.ita". Lost nr. Harbor TENNISOAYCAl\"P ndult.$290mo.646-9l32 •••••••••••••••• .. , •• _ Poot. Walk toshopplng.1 DR garden apts, frpJ, 2~rms.~l~balhcondo to$4SOwk.G42·M90 V.iew Homes. Heward. '1 --------...,;.,..-I BEAUT. Nort.bview 38R, ~Mi. beach. 931 W. l9lh D/ ~, pvl pallo.s. Nr. with pool. $335 Mo. Prime reasonable space Days 646·9716 or Eves fo'or Juniors. 2 Weeks. H•l-...A •--L 32 2~ ba, tam. rm. $500 St.548-0492 Irvine lnd. area. $175. STEPSTOllACH RHtalstoshare 4300 available la rge &small. 644·5272 TPrivate Club. Top ~"'9'0tl --40 lease inc. pool privil's mo. 557·2841 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Old world charm wi th eachang Pr9fess1ooab. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 495·116'4 2 BR,lba.unt,$285 French windows, gables LOST: Ho ney & while Transp avail. $7S. Braodnew$70,000home2 Laree 1 Bd furn apt 2 BR, 2 Ba, Sunken Liv· HEWPOITcalST WANTED: Roommate, & trees. Adjacent to Colhe, male,5yrsold, l 545-5893 mi from Bolsa Chica Spacious 2 Br, l 'Aa Ba, $150. mo. $60. dep. N~ rm, Frplc, B/J, patio, 2BR,2 8aoondo$S25 Straight,maturemalet.o Fest ival of A rt s earbentdown.Answers --.--.------ Stale Beach. $495. mo. home. Frplc, swuoom. Child or pets 642-75.S? A/C, gar , adults. $'225. WE HAVE share luxurious 3 br COO· Grounds. to "Barney", Vic Dover Unav!?~StlY or So~ Calit. f'ormal living "dining Coastal & Mtn views. . . 549·8225 SUMMER RENTALS do, beaut . furn. Jacuzzi, 580 liROADWAY Shores • Reward ! cert1f1ed tutor w11l tutot rm, spac. f3m rm w/wet $365. D..a Point 3726 La pool in lrvine. Sl75. mo. LAGUNA BEACH M<:·3089. all grade l~vels " m~t rge 2 Br 2 &a bl•-547·6791 a c ad e m 1 c are "'~ . bar. l bdrm. bath do, U"· 640.1G44or548-2873 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' • wa ..... v 8 range & oven. VW. LOST: Sm. Teacup Poo-645·9721. ~~;rsga~. bd• :.~;,.2mb¥~tahu~o M•wport leodt 3269 iTmo. 646-3487 or 548-6173 Christian woman to share 4 9 4. 7915 die, rem ale, dark grey. ---------...,..., , •••• your •Pt. in C.M. with 1'aps of ear· blk. v1·c 16U1 Office 963·4581, ome ••••••••••••••••••• 496--0195 &96().1142 EASTSIOE 3 br duple", 540 37"" ... Job ltA'>c 3 BR 2 Ba "' same. . "" PL., btwo Senta Ana Av 5 Wanted. 7075 751-6461 _.... • . • Frplc, H l:pl drfs enc gar ..,"" TOP LOC T O ----------1 room t<?r camper, boat ..tllM)tOllleoc:h 3740 642:129 a'ft.6PMwicd;;' LUXURYLldolsle home. . A I N &OrangemCM.Reward ••••••••••••••••••••••• Avail. Now.4 BR, 2 BA. 2826 Irvine. 646-8883 ••••••••••••••••••••••• · Bayfront w/boat moor'g. MESA VHDE 646·9839 or6734447 EXCELLENT TY PING $375 per mo. As k tor NO INCREASE Ln sum· New 2ar over ,encl gar. Yrly. r ental, ist, last DRIVE PLAZA I in my home Keith, Bkr.963-1317. PANORAMIC VIEW mer rent. Beaut.lbrtum Easts ide. Bltns, cpts, ctn '«. dep. $210monthly. forstoreoromce Ampl L OST : ~C HNAUZER . Call Pat.57s.-tm ----------1 B 0 • • e m ale, salver /grey. Vac. S ay & Irvine Hills. En· apt.s $165 & $175. Spanish drps, adul ts/no pets. $260 Male or Female. Home: parking. Town &eoWllry Capo Beach Shop'g. ~tr. Ma~e Nurse Available uper 3 bedrm, 2 ba + t ertaine r 's delight style bldg, pvt encl gar, mo.673·6041 1 673·3280 Wrk: 545· atmosphere. 4U3·5450REWAHD• Private duly, 1~ yrs exp. den. Crpts, drps, R/0, w/pool & game room. pooJ,sauna,lndry,adlts. •-shld•T...-L~--llrS.Zot Ask for Don or Lv. 152S Mesa VerdeDr.E. · References.675·00.11 $350. mo. 963·45tlJ ask for 1'"'antaslic new 4 br, 3 ba, 17301 Keelson Ln, 1 blk !IOU .... -·J Ir $240 Message. Costa Mesa. 545-41.2.1 FOUND; female Aust. --------- Bev or J oe 4000 sq ft custom· home, W. or Beach off Slater. Luxurious 1600sq. ft. . . Shep puppy . vi c. Help Wonted 7100 New carpet , drapes & wood ceilings, 3 frplcs, 842·7848 $280 Per month .Qwet person to share my DELUXE office, romm'I Edwards & Slater, H.n. ••••••••••••••••••••••• many xtras. $1250 mo. Eastside <-ious Refrigerator. Security. Turtle Rock house $1 & industrial spaces. Also 847·8352 paint.4Bedrm,2bawilb 645.71020r 64s.6177. WEEKLYRATES .....-Pool.J acu:ui!Rec.Bldg mo.752·0116 .. · mini warehouses in ---------1 ACCOUNTINli OW. $365. mo. 963·4569 1 Br Duplex·$215 Mo. w I e x e r c 1 s e rm . Laguna Nig uel & Mission FOUND: mix Germ . BevorJoe 2STORY3br,2inba.con· ExecutiveS..itK 645·8964 &646·4848 Billiards.Color'fV. ,House inCM.Responsible Viejo areas. Handy to Shep. It tan/blk, male. 3 8 e d rm , 1 ., 2 b 3 , do. Frpl, bltns. pool. $3S8 727 Yorktowtt levd Sunny & cheery 2 BR., 1 IRVINE AT MESA DR. I' male,. 25·30. Rent $125 San Diego Fwy. 200 to Vic. Costa Mesa area. washr/dryer/refrig. •D· mo. Lse. 834·1416 Beach Blvd at Yorktown ba. upper apt. Freshlv 545·4855 . mo. 548·3762 2000 sq ft. As low as Jo-548··H45 SR.COST ACCOUNTANT cld. Vacant. $300. per lRVINETERRPvt home 536-0411 pai~led. Carp., drapeS, WESTCLIFF2br,l~ba,i sBrHomeCdM.Roomfor persqft.831·1400 L-O--S'T_:_P_o_m_c_•r_a_n-1a_n_._r_ed_·, mo. Ask for KeiUJ, Dkr, for Lse. 1/2 blk. to.bay 3 STUDIOS & I IRs g~j:~~t :if~~ Mo. townhouse. Adults, nol 3 people ~ver 27. $170 mo 2 SHOPS. ideal location dash brwn w/ wht chest & Our marine engineenng 968·1317 br, 2 ba, dbl. gar., yd.' & •Full Kitchen pets. 1728 Bedfe>f'.d Lane.I ea. 673·3121 &675-1519. for bookstore, candle mrkg 's .• feml. Ans to co. is relocallng to lrv111e patio. 675·3354 :~=~~~~.;F°;ciliues . Spacious 2 Br, 1in Ba ~.;53f 0· Avail 7/15.llStraighl male to share lrg s ho.p or . a rt gallery. ··t:>uffy" has rtea collar. complex by early Seµ· NICE HOUSES CH EERY Hbr. View •Free Utilities I townhouse. Nr.So.Coasl·--new apt in H.B.Sl21 per Located I!' the Mall at Vic Ford Hd, C.M. lember. We are present· 3 •·4 Bdrms,2balhs, H •FreeL1'nens : Plaza.$175.637·2943. SanClem•nte 3876 mo. Must be neal. Grev The Factory, N.B. Heward.540·39-tl. ly located near L.\ ... ome. 3 br, 2 ba, bltns, I 0 673·9606 Airnnrt fireplaces, big yards. self·cln 'g. oven, fncd. yd, •TV & Maid serv.ava1l E SIDE · •••• ••••••••••••••••••• 2131685·52l7 x333 LOST: Black Min. feml .... ~ · No fee 846-1311 att. dbl. gar. Comm. •Bar ·B·Que Adults ~nl~:· n101'\!~'. 2 BR, 2 ba\ bltns, 2 car Roommate wanted, NB. 800 SQ. FT., ample pr~g. Poodle, name "Fancy"! This immediate position TOBIN REALTY pool. $550 mo. 640.1289 •Phone Service End gar., patio, nu g~ra ge. ~olf co~rse j Hay & Beach Area, $250 mo. No lease req d. has red <:Ollar, fl!B h~.i1 req's min 5 yrs exper. Ill Eves. •lMiletoocean crpls,drps&paint.$225 ;i:.i~~j9 $2J5. & $.50. 675.66418fl 5PM 814·~6E.Balboa.Balboa 02851. Vac Mariners Cost Accountin g 2 B 8 POOL & T . ....•wport•---L 3769 mo.548·7692or644·af78. . . I Pemn.Agt.673-5410 , Park . 548 ·5748 or w/complete knowledge r, l a, covered patio enrus w/Back n... _ _... M 1 F 642 8-·2 drive thru car. 19142 Bay Vu. 2100 sq. rt, 3 br ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 BR, 2 Ba Apt. North Apartments.Funlished a e or em. 23·30 to! . i;,. or Burden & G&A Carp C r . HB. $265. or2 brw/den.Frpl.$595. $29.95 WK UP.1Bdr,2 Ba 1 Costa Mesa.Avail.now. orUnfunusMd 3900 s hare .a p art. in r~· lndustrialRental 4500 LOST: Female Siamese forecasti~g. We are in· ~·3389 or 968-&'726. 644·0634 & Bach. Color TV. maid I $200. 545·7645 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~O~~.~ 1 ~ 9 6 2 · 6 1 2 6 ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1-~ront paws declawed. tereste_d 1.n a seU starter I THL• MES -P NEW BUILDINGS at Rt!d collar. Vic. Mesa ~ho will Joan an expa.nd· N 1 d Lo l Bluff serv. poo . "" A, ~-~'\~n~ g c J ooct be 1 t ew y ecoratcd3Br, H2 vey sgreenbelt,3 415 N. Newport Bl, NB, $140. l .Bd, upper, bllins, ~ RESP. f'emale (40·50) to 0.C. Airport.2400to8000 Verdellcward !545·7884. 10 . 0 -. w g . ne 1 s, Ba, 'fwnhse, encl. patio, BR, 2'h ba. Walled entry. 646-9681 carpeting, 730 James St. -s hr 2 br & de l sq fl. ample parking gi eat JOb potential & a bike lo bch. Avail 7/1, Steps to pool. $500 mo. 642·9772. lXCITINC NEWCGIClrT! ·Bc~ut. fu~n 'd. W~~l~~ff SOME UN ITS 1-'0ril S:!5. REWAR_D Lost. s m. salary. of $16K to Sl8K S255 lse. Children Singles Agent. 644 -1133. Waterfront, 1Br,1 Ba. DCMG Point ~a26 Ii ~1ulA,!~ss!c~!~:~c NB, area. area. Pool &• SALE AT 10% DOWN. ~Y~l. f.om.eraan, ans. t per yearto start. OK .ALSOlge4Br,2 0a, $275. ~ 1 . J acuzzi $157.50 mo.I Koll/lrvinc Center. Call! Coco .V1c.llam.1lt-0n · house avail. 8/ 1, $325. ~ UR, 3 Ba, 3 Car Garage, 536·0717 •••••• ••••••••••••••••• •Bachelors I 6112·3317 aft 6PM , Uan Curtis. (714) 9W·9205 Bush a rd ' H ll. 968·28137 Please send resume & 968·6215 2 blks lo ocean. Comm. OCEANVJEW • 1 BR , 2 BR Keep calhn~ salary requa1'ement:. lo: Pool & Tennis Cts. $595. A~rtments 2 hr. for qual'd. people. • 2 BR & Oen I RESP, Female M0/50) tol MISSION VIEJO ,---1 5350 PERSOHHEL MGR. VILLAPACIFIC1\ mo.645·3370aft.5 Unfunlished 545-439l.Afl.6Pi\l From$17S·$•SS j shr. 2 br & den apt.I HandyloSanDiego Fwy. ersonas P.O.IOX90492 2Condos·2&38fts Duplex, Xlra Lge 3 BR. laJ•••bo•••a•·,::,.•n:~::••3•8••0•7• EIToro 3832 Ileaut. lurn 'd . Non·, 200 to 2000 sq.It. Call ••••••P•R••E•G•N••;,NT•••;••••• LA.CALJF.90009 Call 968·2297 0 .... -M.saV.rde East& Adams • s mo k e r pre r • d ·I owner831·1400 I . ...u. • • E F'rplc,. /W, 1 bl~ to best ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 540·1800 Westchff/ NB area. Pool Cara n ~ c onf1dent1al qual Oppor. Employ<'r beach to So. <fabf. Yrly PLUSH L g 2 8 2 Ba 3 BR & DEN condo, dbll &jacuzii$157.50 fH2.331712soo· M·l CM /17th &I counseling & referral.---------4 Bdrm, p ool, nicely c rpt 'd and drp'd . Chjldren and pets O.K. ~50 per mo. Locatetl In W.H.B. 546·2313. lease. $390. mo. 870.9203 011 the ,:~i~· ba/' Pool, gar, pat io, bllns, $330. aft 6 • I' P I a c e n t i a . 2 2 0·1 A bort1on, adoption & EXECUTIVEHOME Security Bldg.2 parking m o. Dys: 833·1710,· _, pwr/prkg/exhst air. 12' keeprng. To ~C:i~Y&C~~~d in· spaces. $450 lse. Ask for e v e s I w k n d s . ..._v Office R•ntal 4400 ft. 646-l252/6t4·2228 APCAREM7-2563 4 br, 2 ba, cpl, drps, frpl, Al 833.9300 or 673.5431 581·5175/!162·2826 r.9' •••••••••••••••••••••••I voices, bal & reeoncihng lg. Country kitch, alt. eves. ,,,, J.t~~!""C--~· PROFESS'LCLASSA 12500sq ftshop in0range Dranking problem? purchas. journals . FOR Particular ~pie. dbl.. gar, rocd. )'d. H..tinc)towleadl 3840 /,,.,-~~~-·~-Bid 2790 H bo lil d w/ofc & fncd stor age CallAlcohol Helpltne led,er , etc. w/good lYP· Cln. 3 b'r, l~ ba, D/W, Im med. occ'y. $595. 2 BR nr b h &ba . ••••••••••••••••••••••• g, . ar r v · yrd. Wired for machine __ i4_h_r_s_a_d_ay~~--_·3830 __ ·_1 ing skills. 5 ~·rs expcr. · : elec. kitch. Cpl & drps. 646-1289eves d . deaclnd y.kre llKET011:.•cH CORONA DELMAR C.M. Ai r cood., wood shop.545·0760 req'd. Cls. to schls. Children ecorate •. ry, pr g. '""" panel walls, drapes, SPIHITUAL READER Xlnl oppor1un111es wel co me. $325 mo 3 UR 2 BA den. Tennis Adults. lease $300 mo. NEAR SH°"9NG 2 Br Townhouse, frplc, carpel, elec.' music , 2000SQ. FT. w/3orc·s Open 10 AM to lOPM W1Lh fast growing co 842.1634 · pooi. 2 blks t~~ch~ Agt.673·6210 Bea~tiCu l new 2 BR from$275.1Brfrom$205. janitor, parking. M.R.. Org.CLy.Airport Ad viceon allmallers. Sendresumcc,o ltefrig. Summer oFYfly. Corona del Mer 3822 stud to. apt s. Fr pies, Pool, te nnis, continental Stever, Mgr. 5.57-0136 o1 963·7878. 312 N. El Camjno Heal lr•ine 3244 548·8423. ••••••••••••••••••••••• bltns. dishwashers, 2 car break.fast .. Some ocean & 646·8396 San Clemente, For appt. Personnel Departmenl ••••••••••••••••••••••• garage. Sundecks. From! Catalina views. Separate New 1600 sq ft 2 of cs, heat Call :492·903-1 4112-9136 Newp~~tOUe~c~i~ 92&i0 •RENTALS* SanCle.m"'te 3276 NEW~UPUX $260.536·2579 I famity section. Clooe lo 1501 WestdiffDr. &hotwater,220pwr.Topl UNIV. PARK Deluxe spltt-level; 1300 -~ , . 1 shopping & fi ne beach., Newport Financial Ctr I CM loc. 673·Nl7. , ........................ -......... .- ••••••••••••••••••••••• sq ft, 2 bdrm w/lofl·den, •Nl::WTRIPLEXES • I 644·2611 L · Offi c--. ~ 2 BR, I ba ........... $315 BEAUT. Ocean View, frplc, plush crptg, home· J,2.& 3 BR. $195 .. $295.,'I · ea51n9 . ce ~ !Lease lOOO sq. ft. w/off'ice.j 3 BR, 2'h ba ..... $375/42.5 brand new. upgraded. 2 like storage, walk· in SJ75. Pat ios, 1-~1P, 2002 1 Call on Sate Manage~ ll0·220 voltage. lleal, holj 3BR,2 Bn ........... $425 S t y, 3 UH, 2 Ba , closets bath & guest Huntington St.539·Elli9 THEEXCrTING ! (714)642·311lext.2-lti 'water. New bklg. Good• TURTLEROCK Townhome. $350. mo. bath, bitn gas range & . PALM MESA APTS. I Joe. 645·224'1. I 3 8~·0itaE.GEi;;A'RK$42S t?i~!~: ~~ ~~{ja Costa oven, patio deck, 2 car 2w~~·c~l ~~Ps d;:t'fo~h~; MINtJTESTONPT . 1 1200 Sq. ·Ft. M·l w/front' 4 BR, ram. rm. +bonus 5.57·6069 owner. enclosed ga~age w/laun· i balconie;. En~I. gar. lh BCH. , • office, lge rear door. 220! ;~~~~~ ~~";'~~c AMO 211J b $540 d~y room. Pay only elec· i mi from ocean. No pets. Bach, 1&2 Bit from ~165.: 3·Phase. Unil 16, ~185. 62'.Ji GAL OH THE co. 3rmBI·~. den,a2. b.a ... ·.·.·•·•·. f>J()(} Santa Ana 3280 tnc. Adults. So. o( Coast I $200/ 0 w & Bol Adults, No Pets , ·~ ........ ... . Terminal Way Costa' .... IN.I~.:.. ----==-llll!!llll•llM~ ~ ~ Hwy, 5 b(ks from beach. . m · a~er sa 1561 Mesa Or. ",......... ; · · -.-••••••••••••••••••••••• $425. 435 Goldenrod, Chica . 4662 Malo, apt. A.i (5 Blks East of Newport i ~=-,.._.... I M.esa. D~ys 540·57 lO,I For an Ad in WOMttt'5 Wortd 1$155, 1 Br singles pet au c 0 d I M'a 846·5847 I u 1 d ) ;/u .. -I e'lieS. 646·0681 I Cal~-·· 642-5678, Ext. 330 ~ n pd 0 r n a e r . I D v -I ;; , .. --I . -... ~1;5 2·8 r ki4spets (714 )675·9337 ,.SPACIOUS 2 br's. $159 &I 546·9800 · ./.,._. _.. Rntab Want.ct 46001 /. VISleH 1 · , '8 1: k'ds · S169. Children OK. 173911 ./' $eCy -· ..,..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ab I t I E · I A· Fl D RIALTY 1 urry. 2 r, appu. I NR. OCEAN Umque de· "A" Keelson, 1 blk. w. of Roofft5 40001 ./,.,..,.. ......... iNeed small home or Apt. so a e y asres 1ry are ress 552-7500 pct pool BBQ$22S. luxe. new 2 br, ~ ba, loft. I Beach Bl off Slaterj •••••••••••••••••••••··· I Ocean front or Peniru.uJa Fee/Brk:r fp, beam cell g. Pvt.I · ROO'IS s20 k th! · · HOMEFlNDERS · $450 I 409 I . , 8'l2·0389 " · W up WI j I Point. Yrly. 636·781 2. RENT A.LS * 642•9900* ~:i.'~248 :.e. n s j • _ • kitchen $30. wk up apt.. ! Jodi Aug 1, wall ronsader 2 BR 2 8 $300/350/360 1 BR. Unrurn. $165. Bltns,j 5-18-9755or 645-3967 . Sepl. l • a.. W "-I t 3298 Ch · p 2 B 21 crpts,drps. No Pets. ,. . 55' PER SQFT 1---------1 .3 BR., 2 BA ........ S38S H•m ftl er oice area. nv. r, I •Call 847-6061 * Dix, a cross from OCC.: l6l7 w ESTCUFF-i'iB j Needed. House. 3 Bd. 1 yr. 4 Br 2'h Ba bonus .. $525 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ba, all bllns. Pvt htWldry I I Neat male student Cook,. I s·oo l S600 l ·4BR.FunJfshed Sharp, 4 BR, 2 BA, fplc, rm, pvl. patio, garage.12 BR, cpts, drps, n~wl privgs.S25.wk.55G:0637. AGT.S4l-503'l I :!~fly.;,Ca·ll ~lma 0Ari:i; SUMMER RENT Al.S bltns. $295. per mo. Call N e w I Y d e coral e d · paint, near fwy & major . I $140 up store-offices cpts Agent. 4944t39. RAISOR'S 892·2127 Ad ults. no pels. 675·2051 shopping. $175. No pets. R<?O~ For rent w/katch d rps a 1 r bath. 17301 Houses Furnished or Costa Mesa 3824 545·0760or847-0070. pravl gs . ::~.~k. Beach Bl 11.B. 842·2834 Bus~":~~~n•nt/ REALTORS Unfurnished 3300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LARGE 2 br studio, enc. NICE Bd b h NEW plush office bldg. 21••••••••••••••••••••••• • 4523 Campus Dr., Irvine ••••••••••••••••••••••• Off leatettPath gar, palio & fncd. Infant rm. w/pvt. al . to 6 rm s uites. Con·j lusiMH Campus Valley Shop Ctr. 2~:e~n~uf:;5,ni~:i11~!i. ~l~. *s~w~~s. :~:;~P~~ ~~. & Yl~r:::S·&$1:Cic~ J~:i~~ce~~s. ~93~~t~:~~1~ ~~;.:~ c ~ ... r ~ ~i~~~1 •• ~~r.!':*.~~i!! •••• ~?.~~ CALL833-8600 n e fs. Steady emp. closed garage, frplc. area.847·4440Avl.Julyl uan apo.4 ""'°° 833·3640 'Iv d' en 111g TURTLEROCK3br,2ba, Uabies OK, No pets, ~!,~·Gas & water pd. Irvine 3844 SummerRHtals 4200 WATERFRONT CANDY ROUTE wet bar, atrium. Lease singles. 536.~114 LA MANCHA APTS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport Beach Excellent r oute of candy ,.$425. mo. 833·1927 Condominiums 778 Scotl Place, CM LOVELY 2 br Condo BALBOA Pcnin. 2 br apt, Executive offices & snacks available 111 Unfurftished 3425 642 _5073 w/lerr. $325 mo, incl's. 1 blk to bay & ocean. $151).S225 Month your area. Ideal way to T::~~. ~~~~. 3lr~~h 2coB.!: ••••••••••••••••••••••• wlt., rec. fac's. l.St.&last $120. wk. July only. Viewofboats&water suppleme nt salary or ,pactor dshwasher. wet Monticello Townchouse 2 BH, 2 1~ BA Studio apl. r cq 'd. + $100 damage 962·8680 BILL GRUNDY p e n sion . Locations, b a r . C I o s e t o 38drm, 2BA. Carpets, Bit•~· D/W' cptg & drps. d~p·a'·11&6 $23 5. cleanup fee. LIDO Lux. 2br. 2ba apt. Re"llor 675 6161 Installations & Training d $265 7,,.. 7041 P t $265 768 A· I 0 " · furn1'shed. F'1nanc1ng ·schools.shopping, park & rapes · w.· a 10 • mo. 552.0138·1213-330-39'79 Frpl, patio. 30' deck, W\r. pool. Avail lmmcd. No Townh 0 ..... Joann. Agt. 838~1 view. 675·6359 OFFICE or Store Re_atal available. Cao be ex· ,...... 3848 700 rt o panded to full time in pets. $425. 833-8447 Unfurni1hed 3525 2· 1 IR LOFT OHL Y Blk to beach·New Condo. llll s~. El · ea~~~·~~ come. For mformalion "LG. 3 DR. 21ft ba + bonus ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. 1-2 IR W /LOFT OCEAN FRONT Deluxe Jacuzzi/volleyball. Sips Clemente ph. 714·879· 12&1 I rm & frpl. Univ. Prk. nr. a Ur, air cond Townhouse, Pvt Patio, ftpl. 1 yr lse br, 2 ba, bltns. adults on· 6. Sl25·Wk . 968-5700. Rec. Ctr. $475 lse. Allached gar, wslv/d.ry. AvailableJw1eLst ly. 497.3262/"'ll-.....,. .,..,<17 * BEAC" TOWNHOuES FULL SERVICE ONn S~le Liquor Nl_jce,nse. 1652·0055547·7044 EIToro.$275.8»3199 H·YLOFTAPTS .. 1......Vf n ... EXEC. sums 0 inventory. 0 oca· "' I N SUNSET BEACll. tion. $35,000. Contact 283 Avoclldo.CM Newport Beach 3869 CALL (714) 840·1641J/ FROM SllO Carol or Roland Sams, ... ... •• '11 SEEK & FIND rsP I NNE RMI NNEO R ODMR ~RON I OPSCUU RA BDNASO A Y F I S It D R N P D II G E RLl.l'.0 ;W LTAP RTMTRM NF. GOA •' N ll AOf.:NP I ORtr .W AF. I llMWN ONN \'ERA\\C.'l'\O L£ED:"101 _),,,.,-.,~~~'"!"!""= PP ,, AN UR M VRC:~t AllMAHf.AWI tARM E R UNDA R SR8 1 CU8T MI AV R OEEr"C~NINGOOLO F.IL ANODOH"ilflMARCkMCl"RDO R F..ll C'GS IN . l:RM IDtMER C \1 0 10 645·0143 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 838·5013 842·1310. --------'--$355. 3 Br, 2 ba. blk to bch. Airport Area 833-3640 _M_r __ P_l_l_l_"'_"""'_M ___ 1 Near Co= No pets/children. Yrly • N E W P 0 It T . f 00• h g. a e ~ merge C •D.a.R OOOS W·Newport.642·1603 WATERFRONT <July & 800 0 c + 4 ware ouse, Mfg/SalesGolciJewelry ti: "' Aug.> 28 R 2 ba, fully carpel, lited ceil'g/prkg. V. W. Auto Hepair $13000. 329 University Or, near llG CANYON EAST furn'd., s leeps a. Free M · L zone $225 mo. Pizza take·outezlcrms Back Bay. l br, 2 br & 646·1252 s 1 t $SOM Spacl·ous 3 Br, apart. on boat. dock. $300. wk. ec u r Y mo. den. F r o m $185 . Easts ide. 548.1437 or gol( course. 2 car gar 675·6169 or 774·4384 .,, l MO fo'REF. RENT• merge 646·1164 w/auto door opener, air NWPT. BCll. Atlracl. 2 1·2·3 Rm. offices Croan Mobil Sta nct SlOOOwk cond., frpl, wet bar. dbl BR Be h A 11 $13 5 pe r mo. Near HOLLAND IUSINESS CASAVICTORIA . Ro lf·cloa nlng oven. •near . ac · va · airporl.Noleasereq. 64$·4170SAL~M0.0608 1.2&31:lr, Unfum/t\lrn Washer/dryer connec· ~1u;y0~ Sept. Weeki)'. 833·322391'1l n\IOn M~-s.T-t tr .$168.50gas/W\.r.pd. t lon. E tc, J::tc, Etc! ---------~·~'7-·-Adalta·No Pets Sec. gale 64.4.0SOO BALBOA PENfN. PT Beaut. pri vale Newport Dffds 5035 Pool, Rec. Rm. Elevator De · bl d 1 exec. oCfice in s uite . ••••••••••••••••••••••• c-. .. Vl"'l"'"ria, ...... -o LXY Twnhse. nl" Hoag. 2 sara e up ex, upper. Reasonable 645-3700 .,Ml """ '"".._' b 2 b •I .,.,40 i;pacious, lHe. crpt, . LOANS l 80% r, a, pa. o. ... . h h I ' I up 0 t20ALBERTPLAC£ Quiet adlta. G42·0S96/ '1 s w r, <1 isposa • tACECUTlVE swtesover· Deluxe 3 br, l ba, adulll, 642·1278 thermo. heal. ~unmet looking Newport. Harbor. I st TD Lo-.11h011~ no pcls. SUIS. Call: • or longer. 673·2039 400 to 2200 sq ft. 642~ 2ttd TO ..._. ,._ ... 72 "-·978l $195 Bachelor w/ pnv. Fu Lo~esl r"t-0r"'"neCo _,..,., o.w yard & view. Nu stove & Completely rmshed. tl44 N. NEWPORT BLVD. -.. """ .... ,,. . S.215. NEW 2 br. Patio. ref rig. Etcc. pct Okter 1 BR, slC<'r>S 4• Sl50 wk. Unll • C" ~ S.ttt.r Mt.J. Co. I ..... 527 W s in .. l e person only. 2DR, sleep~ 5, S200 wk . Uul. Pd 875·8457 ~2·2171 ~500tl Adu ts, 00 --· · g13.6 .. 778 One short blk to 4Slh St Serving Harbor area 24 1_W_l_lii_o_n ... :_64_2_·_1_603____ _ _ ___ beac h. A I bO ye a r I y $100 mo. l"urn. or Uofum. years 3 Ur, lower, encl. pal.lo., 2 BR Ou(llex. undeck, nr. lca:.es . 61lll·tl3G2 d"yll, A 1 r . c rp L, parktnJ!. -,---------• crpl~. d,ips. Nr. OCC. Re h . No pets. Sen. 642·4348 eves. We s l c llfC Dr .. NU. 2ND TD. L?nns wa~ted $220.Mter6,657-03:i0 Citm.>ns only.~ yrly. --6424097. We httve clients wo1\mS: 75OI15 BALBOA Penn Oct'On· - -to buy 2nd T O's. I.Mn on N£WUREED..\PTS. b . Crnt Cott. or a pt.CdM Sgl. lo 17SO~q. ll. 2nd1'0's.Mnkcn•w2nd AllSOLUTEC.Y lhf' caaleal d ntH -DO walAI IH'dM, no alp~r! Olldt>a OVH )'OUr 11.-acl. With wldt> alf'f'VH PHY Jlllh· f'ra 1>~11'""" " bow bvll. Prllll<'d Pa ll<'I n O It 0: M IHet' l:ll¥et ¥. )ti, J:. H. JS. 18, to. s••• u (bu•t 10 1.111 .. , 2~ >'•rd• 4fH11ch fabric. StM SI 00 fM Htb palltrn •Add ~ rents '°' u ch petlern '"" n,.t·clus mail and special htl'dlln11; otherwise third· class dfhvery """ l•llt three -ic1°'mott.8end to Mart111 Manin. 442. lilt Dilly Pilot, Pattem Dept • m WfSt 1Mh Si., Ntw Votll, N.V. ttoll Pnnt NAMF:, ADORf".SS. 1.IP. SlZP. end l\TYLg NUMl\ER ONE FREE PAnt:RNof7oor ~to u lld fOf', -ff~ pat· ltnl ln•ldt i"it:w !l'PRll"G· S ll M M f: R r A T T •: R N CATALOG I t.l>lff. allllaes, fl"H PlJUtrn C'~ Mnd 7~ llOW s~w 1 KN rt 8o<llc ... 11h baJolttll\~p:1tttr11 ~I U IMl.olll ~·11•hk>l'I Roolc $1 00 lni.t•M Sllwlj\Jl ~ • 'I \JO Makf' a litlll' Ith I fttl &O fohloaablf' ID lllht clreu• F'.Aaleat <'h>~h~I alll<"hf'" clTalf' lRC>' ""'" dr<'•~. ld~•I for p~rtie$ 1tncl vlJlt• to Onandma. Cro..hct o( :t-pty fto· 1111rlng r•rn. l'atl~ni 1:s:: ChllCl'a Slu•a I-HI IO<"l. Send $I 00 for eaC"h pall em Add is• for ucll pat'ffft fM ftrSl·dHS mall and •oetl•I handling. Send 10 Alltt Broolls. IOS. lht Dally P\l«, NHdl~ran ~ .. Box 1'3. Old Chtlua Stalion, Nl'w Vorlc. N. v. IOOH. Pri11t Name. Addrut, Zip. Peta.tn Number. Save tlollau! Crute ~•1141ful lhlllfJ ~ for N- 191$ Nttdl~rel\ c.lalotl Ualps pritlltd tMlde , 1~ Ntw• Nlf\y nl\y Qullta tUO Ntwl f'1pple Crot'tMt .... ti.to ~ + K11\l ._ ...... 11.2.1 N~kt*11l lock ..... St<» f\owtr Crwhet ~ .... 11 00 1~1rpl• Croc-~ ftollll. . . St oo ln.st111t Crochft ~ 11 • l!Uil..at Mur1me> llDc* • 11 00 1.-l•l't MMt'Y Rook ... $1 00 Cm1ple1e CHI ~ ... SI f<O Com1>l~f' Al1th 1U 1114 SI lit tat•ritf Af~lllil'IJ • 12 .. .. w IJo<* of 1~ Qullb •I ....... !JO' Mus um Qlrill &.it* •i . , W I) Q\l11tt rur Tud•Y •3 ... ~ BoM of 1um1 n.,.., ...... w Lr# bach. w/lof\, pool, 1 BR Condo in Lux. l.,.amlly·sl1e, ~h Gf 8 Hwy, drp:., A/cond'd , -ro·,.. C~ll 1'.:qulty lnvc~l jacuul, e ncl .iar. uUl's lla )'lront l\dull Uldg. on $200p/wk. Mr.Connelly: E lev, c:1a . pkg. 40t. menl Di v. Uarne~l pd,Adult.aonJy.$:lOS.3ro Peninauln. Pool, many ~~'7·5770 days, 673·2405 Mutcrs Ownr/Rllr. MortgageCo.S.U.2l!M(2U .................................... . HamU1ou.G4:i-44U xtras.$275.mo.S48·96!f5 eves. 673-4120 VtsfoOrangeCo> \ .. DMt.. Y PLOT ·~ ~.N't 2't 1t7S • !lo '"'Add lt ... Bulld lt ... Olaper it...Hemmer lt ... ·carpet SERV-I-·c··-·~~'D'· I a· I ~,..,~R·" Plumb n'. .. :atch ::-·:ft,'fft 1 \;.i~tsft 0~~1~·:: IJ ... Cement ft, .• Wire it ... Hoe lt. •• Clean lt...Move · _ . . 1 ... ~I ·•~· ,, ~· ~:,', '?t::.Lttnrt ~~~lant It... Aiter u .... Learn 11: ...• t 1t...P~ss lt. •. Palnt lt...Nafl IL.Plaster it ••• Fhc lt... .. _ . _ .. - \ "'" .. ,.. I041 MllM••11• aoao w ••••••••••••••••••••••• •1.'11u·~··...........•~/ ....._ W..W tsto ...... 1.,orted ..,..., l•p•rted ·~"· BeaYllf\&l ltil\enl. 1 UR NDP'ATHl!Rcaock. Sc • 9150 •••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..;MOf,;.;;,...n.;;.d;;..i.:,·,=.Ju~n-r•~2::3~ . .:..:19:.:TS~------:---1:~~~2!..:.... wllh .tall, l w~ taU. 3 Bar.Caln If -.,,c>, ' •••• ••••••••••••••••••• Plat .._.. U d wllh boblalll. Mol1\ la ~ 'l0.2l0 °"• Sllietto. Kept TOP DOLLAll 9725 TriMMph 97'7 •• H Allto1, Used AMtoe. UM4 Manx. 111•1$t1 Mi........ ~. ~F~= • fut. PAID -~~~;~·~·;:;· 0 7i?·a··1·u··M···,··H···· i;.i;;;············;;·io ;;,:.:;·············;;~·; ··············---· Kt'M·ENS W..tf.d 1011 -IMMEDIATB. y M£Wl!ST & LARGIST •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• rty~ Weaned •Ttalned ....................... ,. Hondll 36() ca. w/5,000 FOR ALL lMMl-JDINrt-; TR-6 '00 R1_vrn1t.\ . t)IJ 1-'ALCON, u t•yl, 4 dr, ••••••••••••••••••• ~-4615 SSCASHSSPOI ml, cln, w/xtra.s. i77~. FQlll•MCAIS DELIVl-:ny 1''rench blue w/ blue in LOAD~~·:'IAKI-. lowm1lcJge.SIW ATLAS ••• Decompoud borao O,ooduaedf\lm/refri1a 8ob 4~·2 163· AllModeh~&Colora lerior,fullfu.·loryequlp Of.fi:;R ·~·7"82urti46-2W2 • manure, lood terUU&er. fnrs/stoves.~es. '71Laverda."1SO. CAl.l.ORCOMllM Dick Miller Moton ment. utremoly fl&aw· Mtstl4i8J '72 Cou11tr;-Squ1 re Chryaler/Plr-~ Call751·8957 Wanted, uaed ortaet C~~·~~~~orlrado TOSHUS .-a.gr,;w5i# le 11!Mu11tbueenat Cadllla~ 991 5 Wal,lon, 10 paas .. foll Oven 01uly &SUn. 't.il.J.O ADOl\ABLE. playful, prcsses -ruonlna or . IS~ rQ.. ••u••••••••••••••••••• power, lug. ru<'k. $2000. P~t ~ blk.l Cock·a·poo Pl.IPPHta n:,.L. W 11 l pay cub. Sportaler 11·rume, nicetr, 120 w. W;.irncr CA or beat otft-r. 6"4·°"81 2929 Harbot Olvd., Cur y & Smart. 8 wka: " ·6773 U0·2Pm) calmed. 10" lmt end, 16 ' ul so. Main DILi.AC '73 Torino Wia¥on. p ·11·-Costa Me.a :.>. Jo'reo to ed. home. OfflcehnNhreA rear, l?ta chrome. '350. SanlllAna MH1:J2 Over 70 to choose trom. cond new radials tt11lC<J 546·1934 ··' 493·0789 , .. _"' 8015 847·1543. l'·rom $1905. <:MAC a1u11s.S27oo.64S.2i16 --------- '' r---3 00 "---Flnancin & Lcasm " _ Fw.ihtre 1050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '14 Honda XL350, like llOOW.Coasthy.IU. · FOR THE BE.ST 1 W.wnthy.ltB. c • .. Por Sale 1972 Pord LTO ....................... IBM Model "l>" Ex· new.$850. 642·1405 Ol::Al.ANYWH!':ftE 142·9405 -1-.11111 Wagon, xlnt cond. ~ GreatSavingaon Used eDocutlve, reconditioned, Call 673-~ '1'HIMK Hiii" .. lluk......,.. Ph: !179·42:.!2or586·'889. 1973 F'urn AppUlkMi ric type. $1'!0. Selec· mumu \'olkawagen .~ p WU ~ Ba aln sc. tries & Standards from Husky 250 CR 173. An ex· WE BUY ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• C.... _. ... ,... L YMOUTH ~ S4~o~\Dth°~c~ook $295. Beach Stationers cellent bikel Oreatcond. ltlPAIRS·SIRVICE . , Maverick 9947 FURY Ill • . . ~-2912 • !:ip8::~~1~:;/'~!:~. IMPORTS 100 Exchanu&Rcbuilds 71 CAD Fleetwood ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sofa,LoveseallUgh ~-eoodt 1094 Lowered lrame, looks Top Dollar For Any gals. Cree ga' with this BROOKLYN BUG CO B~ougham, lo males . '71 Maverick J02 VS :J HARDTOP quality. Beaut, never -r-.. _"111 b k ad & purchase or any E l · mmt, xtna~. Make otr. ·pd 1·· 11' ' used. Moving...,...,,,. .. , ••••••••••• •••••••••••• rand new. $650. 646·0430 Ma e or Model. ne ... "'lAT sum a cs 541MH-tl (213 )592-52:.H s . .xcc ent l'Wlmni; 4 door eqwpped with~ _____ :;_~_,__..:...:..:.=-1C I t s JIM p s .. .. . conrlitlon. AM, tape deck l'lcl, 2 bbl. V-8, enu ln", KINOSIZ.E Bed~ w/dbl :err;r nea~e ~~~~~•Pl, '70 Y:imaha 2;>0 Enduro. AMO "HERi" VW Rep:urs. Engines, ·72 El Dorado c:omcrt Sl275. 8~8-1547 u n d to r <I u e r'i"t1",. dressers & mlrr. Xlnl WO.Pete536·19'3 · Good cond.b.dlrt or MAZDA FRIEDLANDiR ~r~~s.~ts siocfs1'Rebwlt loaded . l\l usl :-.cii ---Lra11 sm1~~ion Factf>c~ cond.17400ra.nteAvo. Store lest~ :tp:~~~ tofr.All 200lS.Manchester 137SOBeac.hBlvd. r:urn~r:."~:a~efo1~~: ~19108681e1s1ale 0~:?w47. DiAY Mercwry 9950 air cond1L1on1n j!, CM . 5'8·1168 • -· • '· Aoahthn 636~ Westminster Reasonable. 9/ork Guar ""' · eve.....,.. 32 ~··•••••••••••••••••••• AM/ FM radio, tilt steer- .. , 1095 '74 Honda MT ISO $1SO 537-6824 Steve "8·U306. 73 CP WAG, loaded. Must mg wheel. liroWf\ fulb{l} Gar099S• 105 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Exe II t d·l .l · FRIE •ppliJS '71 ELDO CONVERT. wholesale now. day with Oyster be1gti viP1). •••••••••••••••••••••• FlSHPER 4x8 Slate, Coln· 645-~ ~~yti::' t on. We bu; used c~ & JtM)UClr . 9730 6 9 VW BUS All white ext.,red leather M9·8681 /eve 846-4732 roor .•. so.100 miles. 1'\Iµ~ ·WE'VE GOT EVERY· op. ool tbl. Best offer. lrucks. Call GROTH ••••••••••••••••••••••• int. Cleanest in N.B. reconditioned. . ~ THING! sos Marauerite, 642·2156 .,, HONDA 750, Wind· CHEVROLET tor a f~ 71 J A.GU A.R 7 paSHIMJll" Owned by ret,ired G.M. '73 MERCURY Montego $2 I 9S .-.. CdM Today-fuly l .TV ltldl jammel' Falr'g. Immac: appraisal. A A Outstanding.condition. Dealer . Movin g t o Slflt1on wagon . !.I 673-7459 • O, cond.SOOO m l.GoldCoast GROTHCHEVROLET XKEV-12 Tan with tun interior. 1 Europe.$3995.645·2094 passenger, tan and lnquireto: HIPi, Stereo 8091 Serv. 551·6275 o brown w 1th saddle Ill· Business Otf1c1: Horses 8060 •••••••••••-.,•••••••••• 18211 Beach Blvd. While w/ black interior, wner, must Seil lo ap '71 El Dorado, Big Ca· terior, air conditioning, Orange Coost ••••••••••••••••••••••• TEAC 7010 GSL Tape Motor Ho111e" Huntington Beach 1 owner, only 16,860, fac· preclate. . nyon Car64~.~ell ! au~omat.ic transmission. Dally Pilot ,, Ueaul Arab Colts. Fillies, Deck, auto reverse, Sale/Rettt 9160 347-$087 549·3331 lory original. More new I Drives ltke a luxury car, . 3 • SLaJllon & £nduranc forehead, 10'1 reel. ••••••o••••••••••••••• J BUY than used ; this out.sland· 1~1~'~ ~I~~ ·10 Cad De Ville, good !1auls like a wagon. 011ly __ 3 ~ W. Bay St. CM~ Gelding. Torms. ~714) 673-0622 Rent: '74Shast~20'Mlnl, J UNKCARSI! lngcar does nolhavcany , shape.S1500 35,000 mlle1>. S330S '69 VALIANT Air Pt~. ~87·6459. lo•&Mari Cab & roof nar, stereo 347.7243 chipsorscrutches! I' a I t Calls46.5257 <.836~M R> Johnson & P/B. 4 dr. Xlnt.' cottlr.' J lry I M ~a . Sips 7 sep s hwr l l :Son Lt n coin Merc ury Sl.375. or trade for V<Jtf~f ewe 1070 -.a,---·48"°ev"'s.' · •ut 1 rt.ct 63 Cad XI i 2626 1~ bo Bl d ~ ..-"""'• ~ "' "' . nt eng. t res & ~:ir r v .. c .M. sm. pk up. 642·J9.SS •••••••••••••••••••u•• ••••••••••••••••••••••• oa, mpo 3100 W.Coast Hwy. N.8. red leather int. Needs 540·5630 ---. WANTED lo .. 1. MainfetMmca/ •••-.••••••••••••••••••• paint. $350. 642-7552. M t '74 GOLD DUSTER ;\ir. • Service 9020AutoaforSale Gtt1eral 9701 ,. 642·9405 u1anCJ 9952 P /S, P /B, Auto. t'olJi rOP CASH DOLLAR ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••! '69 s ••••••••••••••••••••••• dwn. rear seat. Im1nal-. PA ID F 0 R Y 0 UR . •••••••••••••• LA Q . , . quareback. Re bl Chevrolet 9920 '65 M . Electric l Wood .. , ... _.., / MB RGH NI 3100 W "-~t H .... e g d t ~ soo • ustang II\ good run· cond. Gold Coast &n•, JEWELRY WATCHES a -worlUng _, q.,.a ·-• WJ.n.D. n · an rans. "'1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ning cond. New trans. "' ART OBJ ECTS GOLD' Plumbl!'g-Installatlon Cla11lc1 9520 AJ\; • ...iouNCING 642·9405 Klter6pm. 673·6612 CONNELL S800 _55 __ 1·_6_27_5 ___ _ S ILVER SERVICE' & Repair. Inboard Eng. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,. or bstorr.644·2886 Pontiac 996~ F I NE FURN & AN'. Repair(inboat>.Scorpio '36FORDCoupe,partlal· AUTO CLASSICS ~:~:t\~~aPxfn~~~~~. SA~~sE!=~~CE '6SMustanJ.!,p/s,a/cond. •••••••••••••••••••• • TIQUES. 645-2200 Marine. 548·971W Jy restored. $1,950. L Merc•dH len 97 40 SlSOO. Ph : 962·5i67 2828 Ha..a........-Blvd. Good transp. s,ioo. Call lo.. 536 8531 rg ....•...........•...... ~ 846 2219 I " •• Marifte . . COSTA i\•"""A . . M see Clfteous IOIO E • nt 9030 0 rang c o u n l y 's •7 Q MERCEDES "69 BUG reblt. 1600 eng. , ,,...., ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... pm• lecreatloftol newest, mosl modern Auto, new bau ... cJ. tir".:.a. 546-1200 · 5 5 ~lUSTANG 289, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Vehicles 9530 6 ., "' r S25u. 1401 w. St. An· r'MV"' 546·80 I 7 NO CASH NEEDED MATTRESS leMettTri•Tabs ••••••••••••••••••••••• au~;~cru~z}~J IN : 00 ~3~~oes. Xllll. cond.1·14 MALIBU Clasi.1c. fully drcws, SA. 545·0782 36".0rigcartoo.$225 '69 Toyota Landcruiser, Sales • Service Low mileage, buy or ----loaded. Xlnt. cond. *MADNESS* Call 673~ xlnl cond. :Many xtras. Leasing lease. lOOl 529> ~~1:~•••• ••••••••!?!.~! s3 • 550536.()<J!)? Eves . 1:~~u;~~~~· :,~1•0~ 5b~t *A.LL SIZES• MAST & Rigging for 20• 548$2~52690.3 or best offer. THE f\Ew Jim Slemons 1 ofr. P\·t Pty. 1-i50·2653 T~r.JWlc (Nl~ 1t;E~ A boat. Aluminum in gd. 1075 LAMBORGHINl I SPECIAL Chevy '66 Impala, auto, all1. Example: OCK Priced to Move! cond. Dacron sails in S~rb, lace, URRACO mports air. full pwr. :;ood cond.o --ld_s_m_o_b-il-e ----1 Brand Mew 1975 833-9625&646-8686 xlnt. cond. Trlr. in gd. Roda 9540 NOW ON DISPLAY 833-9300 VOLVO SAL£1. ,_Mustsee!S545.673·3693. ••••••••••••••••••!!~~ Grand Prix 847 1338 • OVER 100 Beal price increas e. 14 onte arlo, Lnnc_lau, Sales and Service (165875) WANTED cond. Xtra fillings . ••••••••••••••••••••••• M c · '74 Jensen-Healy. Must Taking Orders On HEW & USEO Super stock, All models i,3790. _ Xlr~l cond1l1011 . OLDSMOBILE NO $1417 C TOP CASH DOLLAR FIBERG' ... SS Sell! Conv. Rdstr. 7800 The New EsRada's' PncecJ to Sell. Overseas call 64;»7:i ia GMC TRUCKS CASH Ji PA l D F 0 R YOU ~R I.A mi. AM /FM/8 track: Bx. MERCEDES Oclivery Specialists DOWN-MO · J E W EL RY, WA TCll ES. M alerl als & Supplies cond. Sll 11 Under War-ARRIVING OON OM DI Sl'LA y HOMD A CARS I mmedlate Deli•«""' ~RT OBJECTS. GOL AtLowPrices! ranty.$18SO&lakeover Open Mon-Sal. 9 to 6 H eJ l1111~1· '71 CHEVROLET lm· Universityotds 48mos. S4979full prin· s,ILVER SERVlCB Boal repair, boat.build· payments. 835·4941 aft. ClosedSun. OUSeoflmDOl'ts e4J\ WHO pala 4Door hardtop. 2850 1larborBl\'d. incl. T&L . S680l HN E FU RN & AN Ing, boat design. 6pm AUTO CLASSICS. LTD. AUTHORizto GoocJ r u1111111g, clean cur. Costa Me::.a .>l0-9&1 de ferred pmt. price TIQUES. 645·2200 C RYSTALINERCORP. 10591 Bechler ltiver. · MERCEDES DEALER VOLVO Vinyl interior. landau ----incl. T&L & all carry in):! 1626 Pl t' A CM ' .fountain Valley, Cu. 6862 Manchester, I top, power windows , 'iOCullass Supreme. 2 Dr, charges on approvl·!I **I BUY** 548 . 0292 acenia ~.s62:J Trucks 9560 714/557-3345. lluenaPark I power do o r loc k s, 111'. VT. AC, 49.300 mi. r redil.A.P.R.lG.24'. ---------' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 714/963·8381 523-7250 ~9N> Hmho1 CM M b Y10~I AM I F:\I ::.te rco, dark Xlnl. su;n. l:l:J3·3-ll0 01 G~ used furniture loafs, Power 9040 TOYOTA SALE On the Santa Ana Fwy. ORANGE COUNTY I brown w1ll1 tan inlcnor. 552-8361 appliances, or 1 will Sci ••••••••••••••••••••••• VOLVO $1695 (447DUA> Johnson ----for You. lS IL. f. b l Alfa RomH 9705 1973 :\I ERCEDES model & Son Lrncoln :\lercun Pinto 9957 M ... STERS •UCTI"".... ,.... n e w a erg ass N '74 Pi k L' 'CL . DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 2480 HARBO R Bl VD C o•t a Mf'•O A A "'" walkthru, new SS HP, ew c uris ~················~·~··· ~-Excellent cond1t1on. c.X USIVELYVOL\'O 2626 Harbor Bl\'d., C.:\1. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646-1616 & 133-9625 Mere. & trailer. $4795. STILL •y•n ... 1 E 74 GTV, 5 sp~, fuel anJect· Call 830-1548 Largest Volvo Dealer 511).5630 'ii Pinto. like new, 8500 OrsuNDAY .. ..,,/VY14 Mk r 642'"""0 A""-ed 15000 M1 lslowner tnOrangeCounty1. .. mtl"S • s pcl 0 ac11al o.>J"V'1• a e 0 r. .._. plus ss3so S73·sGOO · 280S L. air, leathe r . BUY or LEASE &I Chc\'y Impala, 327, tire:. 'ta~e · dc~k.''"brighl '72 PO:-.iTIAC Grand Y•lk: ---------1&atsneeded, List&store HUGE STOCK 0~ . . AM/FM tape: Classic & Dli<EC'f P /s , P /b, A<.:. good vellow.962 .. H~I. ·1Door harcltol?. Lig ht GOIMG F&SHIMG? w/y.a at no coat. We have 75• 5 '74 Spider. Now have Co. flawless S8,900.G44-4S79 ·"[ • cond. $400. 645-0684. · he1ge, fully eqwppcd..,.. buyers, BC y B ~, car Musl sell S6250 ~'~;;; ~ ,,~·~ '72 RUNABOUT Auto eluding split tronl scats I 'S WORM FARM 7141848 . 1304 . 1.-y or .Lease NOW! 549.5434 or l2l3)S9S·6131 . M.B. '75 ¥80 Sedan. Im· '63 CORVAIR Very cln. i\/C. xlnl. cot1d. Orig: lilt wheel, AMFM steref OpenDaily7Amto6Pm ---------l(fj l mac. Beige w/ mahog. • • $300orbestorfer. owne r. $1 !>50-0frer. landau roor. All th1:-. l \)I' Nile c rawlers, Mea 55• CHRIS CRAFT 111111 An~ 1 •LF .._ R-int. Stereo. & Sunroof. I 847 ·5~0 536·32IB ' s:N~5 (876FBS> .Johni..111 Worms, African Nig h• Twin Catapillar 1W' Ulll.O A A vw•.,..-$2000 under ne w car 2025 S Manchester & Son Lrncol11 l\l('rt·urv Crawlers&RcdWorms. diesels TOYOTA Demo price. Pr iv. Party. Anaheim 750-2011 '72HUNABOUT ,\1r,new 2t>2ti HarborHtvd.,C.t\·L 17362 Gothard. HB. Flush deck motor yacht $ALE 714/993-1400. I . . Continental 9930 tires. Sl ,986. 5-I0·5630 ____ _ Call 347·5l4l Sleepsl0!Teakdeck1 'G7 "1 I B 11 •••••••••'•••••••••••••• ___ GiJ·io.>o . "' · 19~ Harbor. c M. 646. 9303 Priced from " <.'rce< cs l'nz. x n , ·-, ·;5 Ponltac Aslrc. 4 !-!(")11. OMLY $75,000 56799 cond. Air ~ond, FM/AM,I OPPORTU ..... I 13 "Town ~oupc' · 'J'ruc Plymouth 9960 radio. Tinted ~lass. l1iH1. Willard Yachts 71 FORD power Windows . S5500 "'TY !uxury ! Bvery extra. ••••••••••••••••••••••• show pru:c. ~Ji5/oll<1'·. 3336Via Lido673·2780 (lt7502 , firm. Call btwntl&8pm, knocks often when you rake O\'cr leasc·30 mos. '71 WAGON A1C, P /S, 830-89·16 · RA ...... CHERO 979·8902. use resull·getting Daily al Sl37.65 or will sell for P!B. 3 :-.cots. New Sll· -" Beach Imports Pilot Classified Ads to S·l,9ll5. 636·00721\ft s PM helled rads. AM / F:\t, Ye9a 997~ Automatic transmission, 848 Dove MG 9742 reach the Orange Coast --- -Sl 570 !lti8·1148 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SPECIAL!!. Artificial Grass 21' Fbgls Cabin Cruiser. Only $3.95 c.... Yd Sips 4. Xlnl fishing & -.., Catalina boat. $3900. ~~C~a~l~l6~7~3-l~~t6~2~~I Days 554.5350 or night power steering, maJ,l at MacArthur •••••••••••••••••••••••market. Dod9e 9935 -·-· 19il llall·hbuck, xlt1L wheels,very lowmiles& &Jamboree,N.B. '66 MG Midget. Good Phonc642·5678 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '68PLY.4 0r.,air, MPG. in garage i.ept condition. 752-0900 cond. Good tires. Needs 1974 Dodge Monaco. tlcan. $800. SlOSO . l"orthe raslicJious buyer! ' paint. $750. 839·7518 I BEST OFi''l::H. 548·!1571 • j l8·7482or!Hti·202:!. 6-t0-1644 or548·~7:~ •' AYdi 9707 , ---•••••• •• •• ••••••••••••• 73 MIDGET 18000 mi.I Autos, Mew 9800 Autos, Hew 9800 Auto1, Mew 9800 Autos, Hew 98'cfl> .:.: 83.5·1333. 25" ZENITH Color. TV, loots, Sail 9060 SllO. 2·26 gal Aquanums •••••••••••••••••••--•• .w/stand & 1-lS gal. All 27' ERICSON 1 yr. old. Access. & f1~h. Must see Beautlrully furn. & ~.:a~f r ec1ale. Sl40 rigged. 494.3503 NI .UJP[ H\T lf'H'l JI\ rs 70 Audi 100 LS, xlnt cond. New paint, sharp cond. ••••••••• •••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••. ••••••••••••• ••••••••• ••••••••••••t• 4 cir, 4 spd,·atc. rm & $2 ,800.552·1493aft.GPM Sailboat Herres ho« American 3100 W.Coaltllwy.M.l ,::e1ins .s97.7535 9712 !'!~~ ..••......•.. !?.~~ tiOW ARD Chevrolet invites you to see and drive ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1974 MGB, am/fm radio., ORAMCiE COUMTY'S radial tires, l~e:iu cov· OLDEST er. 11.000 m1. S4.300. Full Forse. Knee board. S4S. Gd. Cond. (l ding). 640·0356 Eagle, 22 ft. WLW, 26 ft . 642·9405 & 559·4221 btwn 8·5 orl 49-'-2080 art 6 pm. . ---------1 overall. Built by Nowak Jrvinc C.C. Membership. & Wllllams. 714/546·7172; '62 F urd :Y.. T. P. U. Good SlOOO. Call evenings, Art S PM & Wknds running cond. $600. 2100 548·4038. 714/675·2644. Colle~e. JSO. CM. Optl 9746 H ' SILVERLINE SOHP LIDO 14 ror Sale. #2612 '67 ECON06 Pick Up. Sales-Service-Leasing ••••••••••••••••••••••• Evin rude. w/trlr. Sl.495. w/trlr & cover. Gd. cond. Very clean, low mileaf.{c. Roy Carver, Inc. '68 Opel Rullyc KudcLL, Schwinn Tandem bike $1300. 675·4621. $1200. 646·2022 or 548·7482 Rolls 'Royce BMW ~BOO. $95. M oplc console stereo 234 E. 17th St. 675·4368 C\'cS. ~35. Blue 8' couch $30. '74 Samtann 21, by owner . 'S6 Ford ll-4 Ton. Fleet Cosla Mesa 546·4444 Rolls Roye• 9756 673·7963 afl. 5PM Head, sink, 12 volt, live s ides bed. Off road tires& aboard. $5125. 673-8669 wht spoke rims. s100. ••#·~1•0·•E•A•L•E•R••1·N··u·.·s·.·A·.·· 1 .frig, Cedar chsl, tabls. 847-2458. wicker & vinyl chrs. Santana 21. 2 mos ~Id. --------- pols, pans, diJlhes, brio-Cost $6 ,000, asking Vaftl 9170 ~ ROY a·brac. Ph: 842.4341 aft SS,000. 991·3184Anaholm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• o· S1' • lllOAOWAY CARVER 5pm. lues/wed/thurs 22 • S h k F 'be 1 1966 Ford Econolinc Von. SAMTA AHA ROLLS·ROYCE c oc · 1 rg ass Utility tool boxes & lad· "ul 17 s CHEAP: Guinea plgsl slooJ?.$1200. derrack.$600.557-!HOO. 835·3171 .COSTA~~s~ Siamese cal, aquar, p \..811 (714)875·4048 THIVLTIMAfaOlllVINOMACHtNI \'---... so-•u• pen, hair dryer, healer. Ch 11 32• S1 5 '71 Chevy Va11 20. :'~ Ton. ---------1 ctOHD SUNDAYS 646·4964 a enger oop, ~ eng. paneled & cpt'd , '75 BMW2002 ---------mos, fully equlpt, sip 6, du a I ex h s t . mags . s d Saab 9740 ANTIQUE 3 dr china delux cruz. $44,000 PP. $2695/bstoCfer .548·7402. 4 P Call642·147S ••••••••••••••••••••••• cabinet i\luple chest of 832-1092&556·7483 draw e'r s $20 Maple 20• GAFF RIG Cabin Corvair '62. Good running Capri 9715 SAAB bedsldeatand&cha\rSlO SI St . I k d cond. Mags, cuslor1lzed •••••••••••••••••••••• DIMO 't' S7. Mahoaanv Duncan· M:~!,: huif.1~e~d~nK:el int . 5650. 642·1272 '73 CAPRI V-6. A/C,4spd l hbyte style dhroip ';!' wk & rudder If you Uke Allfo1 w ... ted 95'0 xlnL cond. $3950 SALE la le w I 4 c ll rs _.,, _:~. bo . 675-tiOU 1' I d f Vinyl couch, alr·foam "'uvuen ots, muke oC· .. ••••••••••••••••••••• r ce rom c:ushlons$~.CalJ1lAM for.642·4178 WEPAVTOPDOLLAR '71 Capri silver. m ini $4190 to 4 PM. 673-273<& or Kile l200; l2 n., Uke new. FOR TOP USED CARS cond. $2100. Pr1 pty. (!!s.I02) 648-8139. Unsinkable I Plea1ure FOREIGN, DOMESTIC •6'4·8107 * leach Im..,....._ I h C • or CLASSICS ,...-na SCRAM •ETS )ac ng c amp. oat Hyourcarlsextraclcan Dataun 9720 848Dovc _"I. 1300.~ell '800. 675·8161 see us first. ••••••••••••••••••••••• al MacArthur SW RS L·12, lr~r. cover, good 'IAUIRIUICK WlLLBUYYOUR &Jamborcc.N.O. AN E thfpe. 2 Sails. $475. 2u2GHarborlilvd. DATSU~J TOYOTA 75Z·OtOO XnlJht -Amute 645·$789 Costa Men 970·2500 OJl VOLKSWAGEN p f 4 Bolled PAID 1''0tl OR NOT. '73 SonneU <Blue) 13,000 y 08uNK International 1' Xlnt SILLIM• YOUR CAR7· W 1 L L p A y To p ml, with FM. lsl Own. J)ou1hnul bakeries aro c o n d • w / tr o l l er • TOP PRIC:U rAID DOl..LA R. CAl.L KENT $3l00. 673·B6&l. makln« douaihnu\I In all S700/trade. ~. l"or Import• ALLEN, M0·<»42 T t 9761 flavora. The newdl It a lo•, Sit,./ Paid for or Not '74 260Z. Aul<>, am/fm, .~.~~•~•••••••••••••••• champagne doughnut. Doca.1 9070 Dffft Lewis IM9ortl AC 18 ooo I I • r. c:!.M. ' mal(s, ' m . TQYQT1~ Can you malln• lo1&J5l· •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• 198G Harbor, .M. $5,860. 663J RE. 686·4285 fti> lnl the New Year With SLIPS Ne~.Beach 648·9303 aft. 6. L h • DUNK of 1 SallorPower ---------1 douthnuU 979.5253 645-8508 TOP CASHI '11 240Z. Low ml, now ,,. ... ca Mew '741 OMLY 10&.IFT Also I 4 DtMos ---------• For clean used cars & lranJ, new Ures. $4100. RMtra studio bed. Xlnl Tr • .,.,...... l r u c k 11 I Ho w a r d Call &44.,.T59. al ~d. black" white. Sac. H•••••••••••o•••••••• Chtvrolet P"Y" .... Quall S175,&4&-4M5 Cl""9tl, I•/ Streett, r{r. M;cArthur. '"fl Oat.sun 510. Mechanic catmSll•ColonGaJoni leM 9120 Jamboree and Br\atol, Ownr. A/c9ndd, am/Cm TREM ENOOUS SAVINGS Example & 1• .&. IUel ...... ••••• .... •••••••• Newporl Beach. &:13-0SM, ~~r.·Jirlco mi bluo bk. ,._ _,.. CAB HlOH Cmpr. 1bell, w It b or w Io c: o Io r no wlndowa. 175, o,_.. C...ty~1 '75COROlJ..A 4!1poed, racllo, hcatl'r ,... 97JI (4618) coordinated hand · 531.1591 Hl ... tl.._ kn9tl.ed frlnl•· -r•• Buy Dirocl Crom Manut. 9"'' DREAMER Camper, H IM,...+a Ttomendo1A18ninp! I Cully selt·cont. 6' relrtt. llU M .. tyTevefe • • 649..aai •• $2800. &31·"61 Call 1\01 ror bill MT Colt n\cmbcrshlp, lrvlna 10llt ' Champion, .tlMn.1--------- CouL Coun.LrY Club, ult-cont. 19'Cabin HaveaJunkCOr?<.:01111.~. Newport Beach, fTOO. Cruiser w /Bulck V-8 Top $S paid. 339·2819 644·1013 or 4S»·1Zll. 0 /0 . 842·5850 24hrt. I . ••••••••••••••••••••••• $2999 1973 AAT <d l · . 124 S rt C.Oupc Mlnl conr 646-8202 M. UDtA '69 FloL 850 Sp1dl·rO ne m TOYOTA owner. r t h· runs i(oOO $1000 call 67S·()J65 1966 Ho1bo1. c M Mli 9303 So. CaliforniaS little sweetheartl NEWIVIONZA TOVVNE COUPE. IT'S DRESSY. IT'S FUN TO DRIVE! BIG STOCK OF MONZAS ON SPECIAL SALE NOW! Excelltnt Stlectlon of Colors and Optlon1! •LL THESE P:EATURES ARE STANDARD: • Formal vlnyl roof • Large opera windows • Cl1sslc·grld grllle e Deep front bucket Hals e eucket·atyled rear suts • Choice of vlnyl or cloth upholstery • Cul-pile carpeting • Map pockets In doore e 3·apeed manual transmission • uo-1 4-cyllnde t engine . Come aee how much tun. It I• fo drive 1 new Monza at ···HOWARD CHEVROLET Dove end Quall 8tt. NEWPORT BEACH NMt MICArUIW, .a-llMNM Miii lfttlol Ha"·lftJIO 8cMIU1 Of Onanee County Alf1*t JU po "' "" Ir;&. ¥• 1 { • • •Jfo.uLYN.OT ,• .. .. • '. • FEA ·Sees No· Shortage in S11mmer . . \ . llyTlle"'-!otedl'HN American• are being warned of another guoline abort.are this summer, but the Federal Energy Administration says "there is absolut ely no way" the 1overnment ls going to let it bappen. · Analysts tn private industry aren't so :;ure that supplies will be adequate ·to meet demand. They note that stockpiles of gasoline have been declining and say spot shortages could develop if· production doesn 'l increase. Some experts say that if-a shortage does occur, it will be due to government controls. I& THERE R EAILY a problem? Or are' the oil companies simply trying to create a shortage to boost prices! A spokesman for the Arneric;µi Petroleum Institute said he didn't know whether there would • .. • be a •borta1e. Asked about alle1ations. that the companies might deliberately create one, be replied: ''Good God no. It would be politically dis- astrous for u.s to do that." ' Every,one ogrees th~re is plenty of• crude oil to make enough gasoline. The FEA says crude oil sup. plies are 5 to 10 percent above last year's levels, when lhe situation had returned lo nQrIQ,al after lhe Arab embar·go. The problem arises over how much of lhe oil ia being converted lo fuel for automobiles and how much the demand for' gasoline has in· ~re as ed. · STOCKPILES OF gasoline are about 12 percent below last year's levels and have been dCclining re- ceotly, according to the American Petroleum1• Institute. For the week ended June 6, stockpiles were? little less than half a percent lower than they ,' , ' were In the comparablewe*ot.19'73. Production ot auoline aJao' bu been deClinina. In the week ended Juae 13 it was aim~ 2 ~rcent lea thin in the aamew..ar:ot lf14 1and alm01t8per· cent less than in .the cotn'par1ble period of 1973. Federal Ener1y Ad~tratOr Frank Zarb said in Wastiinaton, "I don't ~_pect·a big shortage" this summer.. · · AN .FEA SPOIUi:s~ said llie' ~&ency had been contac~~nj_,, m~or oU' .companies .Jn re~en~ days to check: on supplies. lte said the-oil refineries currently were operatin1 at a~ut 80 to BS percent of . capacity and added that if the FEA rmds suPRlies are too low, it will '~xerclseits authorjty to oi'der \}le oil compan~es to rerme more gasoline and less of other products. . '. -• " ; I " ' I ,, . ' . ~ ' ' • • ' Startinif July 1; Cr~~~<will .pay ,a lull 5% interest on regular passbook savings. And it's Well, we got the message, ~'you're getting 5%, To be compounded daily and paid quarterly. ·If yo u deposit by the tenth of July, you'll earn from ¢e first. And since your money stans eamingi.tom the day of deposit, that means you'll And to make it as&aSY as possible for ~ou, -. in response, in part, to your letters. · A couple of monlhs ago, we asked for your ideas about changing banking. Time and time again, people wrote back asking for higher in- terest on savings. "' . ' ~ actually earn 5.13% annually. , " No California bank pays more_. • ' • j ust bring in your old, underpaicl,passbook and we'll .save you a trip to your old bank. ' " • Crocker's changing banking. If your l5ailk is still paying just 411%... ' · maybe you should chang~ banks. , ' ~-~nging~ • • + • • .. ' ·' - • • •I .. • - 1 c I I ' I I i I r l I ] 4 • ~ g. in lt Pl p •• c Cl " lll •• Pl le ·Pl .. •• T h; lll n; OI "' •I w in Ir ol p; al A u: Pl p; in je pi Cf d g1 ( al sl 10 ,& ,th \ lh "f,' ' u ... • l I l I I l I I I I • 1J ' ' ' ' ' I I ' ' I I ' ,, I I l I I l - ·~ ! • ·~ a I ' '~ "I ·~ I -, , l t ..... ·• r .·•..fu -,•'..,.t .;,;.1"; • " . . . ... ,, • -' •• r,,_ ,t..t .~"' ... •.:..-µ."' , .-• ., ... r •.• , •• ... • • • .......... . • ·-"'<-..-.-·-·-... ·--·-• .Ia1••a/South «A»ast , -'" VOL. @.·NO • .174, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES •• " . " ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA. MONDAY, JUNE 23, 1975 TEN CEN'l'S • Citizen· .. Do$siem. Caves--Tunney ~·1~: • Ill Pn•WlreServket 'WASl!INGTON -Sen. John Tunney CD·eaUf. l, said today dupUcatea of hlghly cJassl(led goverament computer files on priv.ate CiliEens mar be Stored in under1round, caves at a secret aovernment-complex in the Virtinia mountains. Tunne·y .saJd b.e understood dupUcate files ranging from the higlitr. classi!led Defense Depart. merits COINS~computer system le> fi.les ..... kept.-by the Internal Reveaue·Ser-vJce and·the FBI are • eto~ at the Mt. Weather \n. stallaUon , locat~ about so miles from W .. bincton. ' TUnney m.ade t,he allegations durinc bis questioning of D. 0 . Cooke, dei>uty assistant secreta_ry of Defense, during a joint meeting of the Judiciary subcommlUee on constitutional dghts al)d the Commerce sub- committee o·n 5Cience and technology. THe hearing was called'to i'nveStigate government survei.llanc8 tecli.nology. Cooke said he would (beck to -· •• , -~ ,.w)\,iher ~bere -.re 4upllcates o( ~e than 100,000 files on in· dj.yiau.ats ra'tbered by P>e Army during the 'ol.vil disorders of the late 1980s. Congress bas been told these flies were destroyed. Tht;: system.referred to by Tun· ney, COINS, is designed to "ex· cf'!anre classified and highly a.e nsi.tive fore.Igo ~intelligence 'data amoilg the Defense ·In· telligence Agency, National Security Agency and the Na· tional Pho.to lnterpretatipn Center ~and within "the Depart· . . ' ' ' • ment of °'tense,•• according to no evidence that milltfry in· te11icence retained civ11:·~\§· Cooke. telUgence retained computerized turbance files ordered destroye<I M't. Weather is one ot several nles on civilians or that the gov· in ~970 and 1911 and tha~. Yte lmderCround complexes set up in ernment ~reated a vast eltt· Defense Department was ~ .... ~~f, the m..o u"n ta ins ·around tronic network containing in· participant In a project des1g:~ Washington· to hoUse key govern· form a lion on millions of tq interconnect government ~P\a ment officials In case of foreign Americans. banks. , , • attack. ·•we in the Department of On June 13 , the Defen~_e Tunney said ~e fears that the Defense are not in and do not Department sent a :memor.al).· duplicate files at Mt. Weather intend to get into the business of dum to Con1ress saying ~j\\,..i;t micht be accessible to another surveilling American citizens had found 9,200 documents nr its computerterminal,asforexam· whohavenoaffiliationwiththe files .on the activities: of pie, one run by the White House. department,'' Cooke said. American citizens more than Defense Department officials Cooke was responding to al· four years after the records were said today that tbey have found legations that military in· supposedtohavebe~~destroyed. I I ov ·Ies m us ~ras ., ·puc Eyes Santa Fe Crossi.ng San Clemente's long bat.tie lo get an at-grade pedestrian cross· ing oVer th~ Santa Fe .tracks at the city pier will be renewed at a public hearing by the slate Public-Utilities Commssion at 10 a.m. next Monday in the San Clemente Community Clubhouse. The hearing, which the railroad opposed, was called at the city's urging. The city con· tends· an at· grade crossing would· provide more convenient access to the pier· for elderly and -·physically handicapped persons. Present 'access i& by stairways and a tunneJ...UDder.Jhe tracks. 11le -PUC denied a similar re· quest by t.he city tn June 1969. The city contends that conditions have substantially changed since then. The Santa Fe, however, filed a motion to dismiss the application on April 21 claiming the city's position does not "present ariy new, r:e levant evidence that would warrant reopening hear· ings." The PUC hearing could last from one to three days. Presiding officer will be Norman B. Haley. The city has spent $8,900 lo pre· pare for the session and has hired attorney Wyman KnaPp of Los Angeles lo present its case. New arguments are based on the needs of the handicap~ ar:id provisions of the Cal1forn1a paraplegic law. The area involved is included in the city's redevelopment pro· ject and any new entrance to the pier must make provision for ac· cess by the handicapped. The city proposes: a pedestrian crossing equipped with safety gates and flashing red lights. Opium Pipe Taken An antique opium pipe valued at $20 was shopUfted from the store ''Great Expectations," 1025 S. Coast Highway, Laguna ,Beach, by a man Sunday. The ,thief who had been browsing \through the store bad told the l'proprietor ''I 'm meditating,'' 1 just before tie grabbed the pipe 1 and ran. er.~~·; a c-.. , ......... ' 'j I I I I I I I I I I Local drltzles Taeaday momin1, according to the weather 1ervice. 'Partial , clearii'!g by ·anernoon. ln· land areas. 'Coolet tern· peralu..,. wllh fiifhs of 62 riab:t.g tO upper_eos inland. INSIDE TO•A Y ' . 'the M.ot;-in ·C-ount11 eowlroont lhootmd fitlC ~· • Ol/O '"""kif·. jwlg• ..... tltrff "'"" ,.,._ dead, .....Ucd f'Ofll• '*"' 1>11 radic.Ulof,.. u.ri 'polltk:of ""'°""".'. oc· «<dfnOlo.oSan ,.......,._ paJ14tT. Su 1larw P.op AS. I •' I • I ,_ I eanr .,. l:'=-1"=. I ~....=.;. "" 9 1 t I l l- 1' -1 :-~--- ·~ - •••• All ........ ._ M .. =-.. ..... ., .. U.... A•tt .. ...,..... ~· M °'*A"'9 M --.. M....... Al •• .......... M .. . ' ,DM•r f'tlet Matt ....... Ir lll~N .:.-... COLLISION WITH TRUCK-'IJIAIL'EA AIG KIU:S.ONE, AES 11 IN IAVINE o.,c.mp.y..,•1 Dtlftr Ginn ~50 Chence for SUrYlvel Benton Flees Gunman Former Laguna Plamier Fofls Hitchhiker Laguna Beach builder and former Planning Commissioner Charles Benton was the victim of an attempted armed robbery by a youthful hitchhiker who tumed a .45 caliber automatic pistol on Benton and de·manded his billfold. ' • . Saddlehaek Board ~ Trustees of the. Saddleback College District tonight wUI fight the second round of battle on two controversial fuilding proposals : establishment of a day care center and the hiring ol a basket· ball coach. . Both \\;ere rejected by a split vote olthe board in May. ~ackers of the two proposals, however,· succeeded in placing the iten:is on/tonight's 7:30 p.m. agenda for a second vote .. Plans for the day care. center are gJv~n a fightinc· chance because two of the seven trustees were missing when the vote was take·n May 28. , . The $165,000 facility, which would provide student. mothers : with a place to ~~: 9Jf , their children w hil~ attending classes, was rejected' t>ecou_se it wOuld,in· crease local taxes. Al presently envision'ed, lhe day care center would be aper&t· ed by the ,co.unty J?epa~ment of Education and starfed , by, -four Fire Wrecks . I . Vintage Auto ' Fire of un~xplairJed orich\;Nr· ly today destroyed a vintare automobile p•rked ln a San Clemente •lley. The car, i a 19419 Mercury, valued at tll>O was deecrtbed u • total I011 . Flttmen, called to the blue al 4:13 a.m., are operallnt:'under ~ auumptton lbat lhe nre was l!IU<hed off by •• ·-· Th• car had been parlMd ne.ar a top shop behllld 203 S.·-· ,_ full-time teachers and four in· structional aides. Plans are to locate it on the southwest corner of the lower campus parking lot and to open it wilh the beginning of the fall quarter in September. The proposal was turned down because it would have required a l .S.cent increase in the college district's tax· rate, At that ttme a majorily or the board member& (ell a further tax increase was imprudent because the distric~:~ taxpayers faced a 30-cenl increase to meet a pro- jected $16.1 million budget. As a result or recent budget sesstops by bOard members the budget has been trimmed·to $15 million with a consequent reduc· tion of the ,projected tax rate from $1.03 to SM·cents. . Trustees bounced lbe basket· ball coach J>OSilion m ,a·4·3 vote foi' several re~'ooS, among them (See DAYC~~ • .f'age.4.2) • QE. SOW BOAT IN. Pl'iJJI: AD , 11An aCI ht the Dafly ~lot really dOet peyoff. I sold my boat.'' Thal'• the.1ucceu story told by lhe·Hunt.incton Beech man who placed this clu1ilied. ed in the Dally Pi lot : l&'GLASSPAR.wnsHP Evtnrude. No tJ;lr. f77S. Pri pt.y. XXX•XXXX ' U you have a bolt to sell, call "2·5f1~ It only take• a few -In tho rlthl olace to make • aale. Alone tbe .O.qe Cout, ~ rl1ht ol•ce 11 the Daill' 1'IJct. t Benton was unhurt in the inci· dent Friday and sped away before the hitchhiker could grab the billfold. Benton had tossed it onto the passenger side of the pi~truck after the youth left lhev icle. Ben o told police that as he looked in the rear view mirror, he saw the hitchhiker take a shooter's stance in the midd1e of the road and aim his gun. Ap· pareptly no shots were fired. On- comi'ng traffic rorced the bandit to flee on foot. Police searched for the man but were unable to rind him. Benton said he had picked up the hitchhiker at a bus stop on the corner or El Toro Road and Moulton Parkway in Laguna Hills. I-le said the bandit appeared to be ''just a kid going to the beach." He was dressed in cutoff blue jeans and shirt. The hitchhiker appeared to be 17to19 years old and wore thick-lensed glasses. The hitchhiker asked Benton to slop the pickup truck just north or lhe Laguna Beach City Limits on El Toro Road. He exited lhe truCk, pulled the .45 caliber pistol from his. waist band and de· manded the bui Ider tum over his wallet. Benton said he tossed the billfold onto the passenger side of the seal. and then gunned the truck before the youth could grab the billfold. Wiring Sparks Clemente Fire I A mltwlred electrical con.nee· lion touched orf a blau in a San Clement e home over the weekend and caused S50 in dama1(e be(ore being tXl· inguished by firemen. Firemen said the home at 231 Avenida Valencia was being re· modeled and when the lights were turned on for the nnt lime, t.be w•ll heater went 1.(1) tn smoke. The Saturday night blaie nlled the a'tlc with smoke but the damaae was confined to the wir· ins. tiremel\stid. • Coast Accident Injures 11 By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OIU.0.11' l'ii.t$l.atl A double truck and trailer rig slammed into a Fountain Valley day school van carrying 12 persons at a rural intersection in Irvine this morning, killing one OOy and injuring llothers. The shattering impact hurled the bus in an arc throi.Jgh the intersection, spewing pre-teenage .children outdoors and windows to the pavement. The dead boy was confirmed dead at the scene beneath a whee l of the giant Sully·Miller Contracting Company true k and trailer rig. Wieckage of the Rough Riders Day Camp van crashed nose down in a watery irrigation ditch at Jef· frey and Barranca roads, not far from El Toro Marine Corps Air St~tion. · Names of the dead and injured children from the day care facility at 16596 Redwood Ciz:cle in Fountain Valley were no( ·rele¥ed pen'din&. notific~tion of their fariiili'es. ' k • Investigators at the scene did ~i.l'ltl the bus con- tained youngsters aged six to 10 years old plus the 14· year-old junior counselor and the female driver iden· tified only as Carolyn A. Conners. · Truck driver James E. Bartley,45, of Bell, was be- ing questioned at the scene by Irvine police and California Highway Patrol officers. (See COLLISION, Page .4.2) 2 Ousted Planners Miffed by Action Two San Clemente city com- missioners bounced by the City Council from their posts plainly are miffed with the action and now one says he may run for City Council. William Walker, planning commissioner, whose term was not renewed by the council, said he is "definitely thinking" about running for the council during the March 1976 ele ction. Walker, also president of the San Clemente Chamber of Com· merce, declined to comment directly on his removal from the planning commission because he said he fell an obligation as a ~ CUSDBoard To Weigh Budget Plan Approval of a tentative school budget of $19.5 million will be weighed by the Capistrano Unified School District board of trustees meeting at 7::.l tonight in San Juan Elementary School. . The budget propoaes an 82-cent tax rate increase for district pro- perty owners and 1reflects a 20 percent increase over this fiscal year's budget. The meeting, a continuation of on.e begun last week. will also see the school board deliberating on changes in policy allowing midjiear salary increases for teachers and other employes. Some teachers of the district have picketed the schoi;I board in anger ov~r stalled pa.y negoli•· lions. A midyear salary adjust· ment Policy is favored by the Caplstrano Unified FederaUan or Teachers, one .of two teacher un- ions . It passed , the change wouk! permit empl~yes to be 1lven a <SMBUDGET,P ... A2l chamber officer to limit any criticism of the council. Howard Mushett, a member of the city Parks and Recreation Commission, and Walker were left out as the council reshuffled various city commissions last week. Mushett, a long lime critic oC some city activities, has restated his views and said the city needs a "good housecleneaning." Mushett has criticized th·e manner in which the City Council uses the city commis sion system; has disagreed with operations involving the city gotf course: criticized the way the ci- ty spends park funds levied on developers; and has complain~ that the city has not responded to his request for a consolidated r.e· cord of what properties it owns .. Walker' has wrangled with t~e council over the city's bicenten· nial prOject. At the time Walker wa1 a cochairman of the city1s bicentennial commission, a post he resigned following a healed council session when his sugges- tion for construction of • bandstand received a chilly re· ception from the cou~il. Walker then began a petition and letter writing campaign to boost the bandstand. The .council ignored the fuss and approved development of BOlilla Canyon Park as the city's commemorative project. Squad Car Left Flat, L•suna Beach police were left nat-footed, nat- Ured and red·faced SUnday when all .four tJres lo a squad ~•r we.re punctured witb a k.U• and netted. TM mlaehid occurred behind the po11 .. -rullan. Loli .... .,. ...... ~ ., .. ....,._m.,.tof Ille~· . .. .. -... -... ,-ai OAI Y PtLOT L/SC . Mllt'•&'m CU\ Jobs F~m Top-Goldwater From Wire Services WASHINGTON -Sen. Barry Goldwater auld today that the Central Jntellitence Agenc:y .. took orders from the lop" in carrying out Illegal activities. The Arizona Republlcan, a m e mber of the Senate Jn, telligence Committee, said the Ro.net's investigation will s~ow the CIA did not want lo do some c¥ the things it did but felt obliged t o follow orders. Goldwater made the statement in the Senate as the committee ~rranged to call as a witness John Roselli, a West Coast un- derworld fi gure and associate of slain Chicaao mobster Sam Gian- cena in a reputed plot against Fidel Castro. Roselli, scheduled to appear Tuesday in response to a sub- poe na. was expected to be· quizzed about reports that he and Giancana were approached on behalf of the CIA lo arrange for Mafia members to assassinate Castro. Sen. William Proxmire told Go ldwa ter it ought lo be establis hed who was responsible for CIA misdeeds . Goldwater replied that the CIA ''has done a highly commendable job" but unfortunately is losing intelligence contacts in other ~ountries because of what he called unwarranted assaults on the agency by the press and news media, P rox m ire replied that .. ex- Vic t im Foils Rape Try A 28-yea r-oJd man Crom Mon- tebello, a lleged to be an illegal a li en. faces charges or assault with intent to commit rape today, following a weekend incident in Balboa involving a victim who swings a mean whiskey bottle. Patrolm e n c ruis ing the Peninsula before dawn Saturday said they h eard a woman screaming in an alley near the 800 block or East Balboa Boulevard. When they investigat- ed. they found the victim had fainted and the alleged suspect being subdued by witnesses. Later, they learned ijlat the \•ictim had been leaving a male friend's house at about 1:30 a.m. a nd w as assertedly grabbed from behind by Manuel Mendez Garcia, 28. She was carrying a full quart of whiskey and mixer in a paper sack and used the items to fend off her alleged attacker. Mendez was treated for a minor face cut suffered in the in- cident and then booked. Cle menteans' Purse Taken Leaving the door slightly open to catch the cool ocean breeze while they slept proved to be a cos tly mistake for a San Clemente couple today. Police said a thief sneaked out of the darkness and into the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Schultz, 1533 N. El Camino Real, and stole a purse containing $659 in valuables. The loss included $484 in cash. a $175 payroll check, car keys, a department s tore credit card, and a checkbook. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed Prttl<1t111 •ncl ,..,.,,,.,.., Jae k R. Curley Yiu• l'retldenl •ncl C..~••1 M.IMQltr Thom as Ktevll Eollor Thomas A . Murphlne Mt~t•nt t.i.tor 1./SC Charles H . Loos Richard P. Nall ,11>$l'1•nt ~t1•9jn9 (OHOO ueuM 8Hch Offlc• 11 .. O..-yr• !it"W't ~••N ...... , ... o &o• .... m)I OtfMr Offlcft co•t• IN.. Uo .,.. .. ""' Sl•M .... ..,_1 .. eel! llU ..... _, !lovle¥Mll ................. ~ ... "''t ..... ~ .. .. s.«111-• v., .. , Uttt i..t ,_., .... .. .c~o .... "'- TelepMM (714) M2-4l21 ClaPlfl .. Advertltl"f Ml·M71 u1una ... 1<Jt All DeNf1ments: Te .. attone4t4.f466 "•-s..-~1 ......... 4H·OtJO C .. rr1911t. '"' O.a110t CHtl l'vl'""'"" c;..,..._y ........................................... . MAll•r •• ••••t1IM-111t 11t••111 ,.,., oe t•ttr•411v<•• •lt~t t-IWC.faf ,.,,..,, .. ,,I\ ot ,.,,,.,.,_ ... T, kc-cl CIHI NII ....... •t Get•• !Wit\• t.••110•11•• l<*tc•...,...,(.,., ... u ·-··· .,,,_,..., ·-"''· ..,.111.,,-.-11-\l O. ......,11,,. , posure or abuses by the press is constructive and use!UJ." He said the CIA has eng-aed ln activities that cannot be JusUried, but that 80 to 90 percent of its activities have b een "absolutely essential." It would be "foolish and dangerous" to abolish the a1en· cy. Proxmire declared. Giancana, who also had been expected to testUy, was shot to death in his home in a Chlc110 suburb last week. Also expected to testify is William K. Harvey, afonnerClA official who reliable sources have said was involved in plots to kill Castro. Central Intelligence Agency in- volvement in the slaying of Gian- cana has not been ruled out, ac· cording to Chicago police. Some investigators have said they belie ved the underworld likely killed G iancana to keep him from talking to a federal grand jury investigating crime syndicate operations around the world. A Cook County grand jury in· vestigating the slaying of Gian- cana is expect ed (o subpoena several t op crime syndica te figures this week. Cook County State's Attorney Bernard Carey said his office. planned to subpoena crime syn- dicate leaders who attended a coming home party in suburban Oak Park the night Giancana was slain. · Giancana had been mentioned as the mastermind of a CIA plot to kill Cuban Premier Fidel Castro. Oak Park police deputy chief inves tigator Harold 0 . Fitzsimmons said "the possibili- ty that the CIA was involved in his death has not been ruled out.'' E'ro• Page AJ COLLISION The injured were taken by ambulance relays from the dis- aster scene to both Santa Ana Community Hospital and Tustin Community Hospital. Some were treated at the scene and en route by paramedics from Orange County's Red Hill Station and Laguna Hills. The scene at the isolated in- tersection surrounded by tomato fields bore stark testimony lo the force of the 9 a .m . collision and the horror of its aftermath as h ysterical children dragged themselves along the pavement trying to find help. Impact of the broads id e crash of the truck, southbound on Barra nca Road and the day camp van, heading down Jeffrey Road toward El Toro MCAS flung openlhevan's rear doors. Children · packed elbow-to- elbow on three wooden plank benches running the length of the van were hurled in all directions as the crumpled vehicle swerved off the pavement into the ditch. One benc-h was ripped from its moorings and lay in the road nearby, while other items in - dicated how the day had begun for the Rough Rider Day Camp enrollees. Near the blanket-covered corpse beneath the massive truck wheel, lay a b a nana from somebody's lunch and one lone small blue tennis shoe. The dead boy 's face was covered with a checked j acket. One truck wheel came to rest on top of a day camp staff mem· ber's printed manual, and the crumpled grill and shattered right front fender or the big con- struction company truck showed the devast ating force of the col- lision. Skid m arks from the truck's wheels stretched nearly 100 feet up Barranca Road from the point of impact in the intersection. which is controll ed by a two-way s top sign. Police cars, CHP autos, paramedic vans and Orange County Fire Department trucks -well over a dozen emergency vehicles -clogged the intersec- tion in which a canvas s heet had been unrolled to serve as a medical treatment center. for the less seriously injured victims. Police said most victims are believed to be from the TusUn- Santa Ana area with one youth possibly from Irvine. Emergency rooms at both hospitals began bracing for the tnnux of the casualties when they received word of the number or victims Injured. They included some victims believed to be ln critical condition with multiple serious injuries, accordlnc to police. l're•P.,.eAJ BUDGET ••• percenta1e inc~e••e now, and another lat•r In the 1chool year If addlUonal fund• become avalla· bJe to the district. The Capistrano District 1pr1wl1 from San Cl•mente to South La1un1 and lnclude1 Dana Point, Lasuna M1ueJ and a por- lion or Mission VJejo. . . . . . . . UPI TeM11M4e Cites I 1111oce1ece Militant feminis t Susan Saxe pleaded innocent to ·first degree murder today in death of Boston police of- fi cer killed during Brighton bank holdup in 1970. She was on FBI's 'Most Wanted Lis t ' before capture in March. Two Feminine Courses Set For Summer Saddleback College will offer two courses in its Women's Studies program this summer. One course will be scheduled for · each of two five-week sessions. Susan Koester will teach a course t h e first session on feminist communication. Participants will examine the words of contemporary women, as well as women from the past, to determine patterns of com- munication used by women. A comparison will then be made with male patterns. The communication class will meet from 8 to 11 : 10 a.m. Mon- days and Wednes days, beginning today. Jane Shobe will assess the changing image of American women the second session in a course designed to ease the transition from home to college to career. Students will discuss role s tereotypes and sex dis- crimination. This second session class will meet from 8 a .m . lo 12:15 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays, beginning July 28. Registration is open for both sessions al the college through Wednesday. Additional information is available by calling 831-9700 or 495-4950. Laguna Men's Club Slates Singer, Talk The Laguna Men's Club will f e ature singer Mary Ann Mccampbell during a meeting at 7 : 30 p . m . Tuesday in the Neighborhood Congregational Church, 340 St. Ann's Drive, Laguna Be ach. Mi ss Mccampbell ha s performed in night clubs and on radio with such entertainers as Danny Thomas, Joey Bishop and Morey Amsterdam. The Men's Club will also hear Gilbert Gilbert, manager of the San Clemente office of the California Department of Motor Vehicles. Gilbert will discuss some problems that senior citizens have obtaining drivers' licenses and the proposed year around registration plan. The meeting is public. Laguna Panel Recruiting The Laguna Beach City Coun- cil i1 seekin1 applications from people Interested in serving on an advisory committee on social mat~ra, Formation of the »member rommlttee was approved by the council recently. It ls char1ed wtlh 1ocial problem IOlvina and the co.t Hpecll of solutlons. Application• 1hould be dJ~. ed to Jackie Washburn, council aJde, at City Hall. Bridge Suicide SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A Unlventty ol Nevada Rudent hu ~come the S.Clth known 1uldde off the Oolden Oate Brldf•· Robert R, Kennedy, m, Jumped to his death Saturday • }DAY CARE ~ cott and tht fact that UM eel· ._, cloa not yet bne a l)'m• .... 1um. However members or the col· lete administration are prepared to offer somt) new arsuments to •UJ>port the blrlnf of a basketball coach. Saddleback has been without a coach since early May when Roy Stevens reslfned as coach to con· tlnue tull·Ume tt1chlna. Board members have been at odds over the coach's job because the administration has requested the addiUon of a full- tJme person rather than shifting coaching duties to an already· employed physical education in- struct.or. Aged to Ge t Property T ax Assis tance ·Senior citizens may receive aict in filing claims for benefits under the Senior Citizens Property Tax Assistance Law when a state representative visits Laguna Beach from 9 a .m. to 4 p.m. Fri·· day ut the Laguna Beach Library. The specia I a ssistance ls available to senior citizens with limited income. To be eligible for partial reim- bursement of their 1974-75 pro- perty lax, pers ons must be 62 years of age or older, own and oc- cupy their own home and have a total income of less than Sl0,000. Almost 310,000 clal01S were paid last year. The average was $161. Payments can range from 4 percent to 96 percent depending on the amount of tax paid and the income of the claimant. Large Laguna Agenda Due The L~guna Beach Planning Commission will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in city hall cham· hers and consider a long but largely routlne agenda. Included in the business are r e- quests for subdivision of lots at 775 Kendall Ori ve, 595 Nyes Place, 1199 Summit Drive, and 1175Summit Drive. The commiss ion also will de- termine if storage of records and bookkeeping is allowed in the light manufacturing zon~. Dr u g Suspect H e ld HOLLYWOOD <U PI> -A SUS· pected drug dealer was arrested and numerous bottles of illegal li- quid drugs and nearly 9,00 pills were confiscated in a raid Sun- day by police narcotics officers. Richard Street, 24, was arrested following an alleged shooting in- cident at his apa rtment. N ,bon Q1ilt8 Jloted Off Coun ROl& WASHINGTON <UPI> -The U.S. Supreme Court, acting at the former president's request, today struck the name of Richard M. Nixon from Its roll of attorneys admitted to practice there. . ,.,. The court's brief order said "the motion or Rlchar"' M. Nlxoll of San Clemenfe, Calif., to resign as a member of the bar of this court is granted and it ls or- dered that his name be stricken from the roll or a~­ tol'neys admitted to practice before the bar or this coJ~t~~es William o. Douglas a nd William H. Rehn· QuiJtdldnotparticlpate. .. In a letter dated June 10 to the court clerk from La Cusa Pacifica'' in San Clemente. Nixon said: "Not having practiced law for several years, and not intending to practice law in the future, I desire to and hereby resign from the bar of the Supreme Court ol the United States of which I am currently a member. Sin· cerely yours, Richard M. Nixon.~·. . During the time he was practicmg la~ in New York following his defeat for gove~or of. Cahfornla, Nixon a1·gued in the high court a maJor pnvacy case involv· ing Life magazine. News paper Claim A.gents 'ProtectetJ, ' A.Sia .Opium Fielm' CHJCAGO (UPI) -American authorities 'protected hil I tribesmen in Southeast Asia and helped them market their opium, some of it destined for the United States as heroin, the Chicago Daily News reported today, quot- Uig a veteran narcotics official. The narcotics official, who was not identified, said during his last tour in Southeast Asia he was told "he was not to interfere with the ·growing of the poppy nor was he to try and stop the farmers from selling raw opium lo narcotics dealers," the News reported in a copyrighted dispatch. The official said that early in hls two-year assignment he was s u m m oned to Bangkok , Thailand, and was briefed on American "field" poli~y toward the hill tribes by various of- ficials, including representatives of the military, other narcotics agents, members of American embassies in a half dozen coun- tries and CIA agents. The agent's assignment was to locate the poppy fields in the so- cJlled golden triangle of Laos. Thailand and Burma where 70 percent or the world's opium used in the m anufacture of heroin is grown. He said at the briefing he was shown a movie ot "several Americans walking through a poppy field , pi cking the flower that produces opium and s mell - ing it.'' Some of the people at the meet· ing were in the film. "I asked them if they had burned the poppy field, they said, 'Oh, we can't do that'." The policy of makinc friends with the tribesmen S-O they could be a buffer against Communist expansionism and help in in- telligence ga.thering then waa ex- plained to him, he said. The agent said State Depart- ment and intelligence officials told him his job of enforcement began at the "second level," after the farmer had sold hia crop to a narcotics dealer. Thief Makes Machine Pay A burglar who used a prying device made a stamp vending machine In the Son Clemente Post Office pay off early today. Police said he took the contents of the coin box I estimated at nso. but left the stamps and envelopes behind. The vending machine was one of several in \he open lobby of the office of 105 A venida Del Mar. A-blast Planned PAHUTE MESA, Nev. (UPI) -Anothe r megaton-range nuclear device -the second in less than a week -will be de- tonated Tuesday at the Nevada test site by scientllts racing a possible treaty with Russia ban· ning such tests in the future. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---~~~- :~. ~· • • Mariners gives you up to a s1,soo tax deduction this year. •• ... AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU CAN BUI LD A TAX SHELTE~ED RETIREMENT FUND AT MARl NERS, VVITH "IRA " -THE INDIVI DUA L RE- TIREMENT ACCOUNT. Mariners I "d lvldual Ret irement Account Is a personal tax-sheltered retirement plan. "IRA" was devel- oped by Congress to give you an effective way to build your owrr retire- ment fund. HERE 'S HOW FAST YOUR MONEY GROWS IN A MARINEl4S "IRA " ACCOUNT lfld1"1du•I Retirement Accou/111 .,. prtstnlly t•m lflg 7.\\ % per v-•r whefl placed "' e 6,y,., otrtll/u,., Your .,,,,ue/ y1tld Is tncrNstd toe big 8 06"4 vrhtn lfltt,..t I• Hd«J to 1/Nt .ceoufll belen« 1nd compounded d••ly. Wit" • marlmulft 1nolvldu11 r:ontributlon of S 1500 each yelf, ,..,,., flow your money w/11 grow ., You can save as much as $1500 or 15% of your wages, whichever Is less, and your savings wlll be a tax deduc- tion during your working years. If your spouse works, your combined tax-sheltered savings can be as much as $3000 per year. Come In to Mariners and start your own lndlvldual Retirement Account. You'll be saving tax dollars now and building a much brighter future. For more Information, come In or call any one oJ our convenient locaUona . ' WITH TAX WITHOUT l!lCTRA IHELTEREO TAX MONIY lfllA llill. TliRIO "'OM TA)( Afl'TI" PLAN PLAN OiFl""AI. 5 yrs. s 9,510 6 ,130 $ 2,780 10 yrs. 23,540 .,, 1!5,750 7,790 2Q yrs. 7•.640 &S,8"40 30,seo 30yn. 18!5,550 OS,030 90,!520 . • AbOVt llgur• are baHO on 2S~ Income btlellet. F~t rtgultllon1 reQ11lr• 1ube1ent1e1 penalll• IOf Mtl~ wlthoreNle lrom certltic.te eooounta .1 .. •t .. '· ... ' .. ~ .. < ... .. I l ,. •. ... " . ·' • Dana Polbt resident O..,lu F. Crall bu been appoint.ed exec:uUve Vt~ president ot Speetra-Strlp CorporatiGa, a developer of ribbon cable lnterconnec· lion systems. • OUUttTIOT Carol South has been named new business develop- ment representativ.e f'or Cannell and Cbaffta Commercial laterton, Inc. in Newport Beach. She lives in Newport Beach. • -Paul J. Sbaplro, formerly director of field marketing for Electronic Memories and Magnetics, bas joined General AlrtomaUoa, be. ln Anaheim as national salesmanager. He resides In Newgort Beach. * · Des Volpe bas been elected a member of' the board of •. directors of the Orange County Lile Underwriters Assoc:ia· ti on. . He bas been brokerage manager for M1Duf aduren · · Ute lmraace Compaa.y in Santa Ana tor six years. Voigne, hia wife and three daughters live in Mission Viejo. • Huntington Beach resident .Jack W. StUJwell bas been appointed vice pr~si· •1 ·dent of quality a nd reliability assurance for Douglas Aircraft Company division ·' of McDonnell Douglas. He has been director of manuf actur-·~ ing for the DC-10 program for the past seven years. 'llOIGHE , . John Manos has been named senior assistant manager . ·-for the new South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa, accord- ,. ing to hotel manager Kim Chappell. Mavros was formerly with the sister hotel of the Western International Hotels. the Century Plaza in I..os Angeles. He Jives in Santa Ana with bis wife and two children. • Burton F. Parker has been named manager of the new ' · Huntington Beach office of Great Western Savings and Loan ~. Auoclatlon which opened this morning at 16141 Beach Boulevard. , Parker, an 11-year financial ex- ' · ecutive was most recently home office manager and director of communica· •· lions for another savings and loan as· soc:iation in Orange County. .. Marion Hamm, assistant secretary ol Pomona First Federal Savings and Loan Association. has been named . branch manager of the assoc:iatiOO:S w.ew "· lrvine office which will open soon. ·, * f'ARK Ell Corona del Mar resident Ronald W. Rohrer has been ap- pomted regional vice president of Glendale Federal Savings and Loan Association. He is branch manager of the firm's Newport. Beach of· flee. * · Daniel C. Butler has been promoted to regional con- troller, southwestern region, for the Business Centers ' " Division of Kaiser Aetna. ... I• ... The Costa Mesa man was formerly senior auditor with Arthur Adnersen and Co. * Joan T. Camey h as been named manager of the escrow department of Wells Fargo Bank's Newport Center office. She was previously senior escrow officer and manager ;1t the bank's Santa Ana office. S1.1rv~y Updated Tight Job Market For N eui Graduates CHICAGO (AP) -The estimated 950,000 college graduates of 1975 are facing a much tighter job mark et than expected, but most will find some kind of work, a national survey predicts. The report indicated that the nation's 1 argest busi· nesses are seeking one-third fewer graduates than they were six months ago. ••A greater number of firms seriously underestimated the force of the ecoaomic decline," said Frank S. En- dicott, retired director of placement at Northwestern University. FOR H YEARS Endicott has reviewed, usually around the first of the year, U,e job picture for college graduates. This year , he updated the figures with a aecood survey in late May and early June. severe employment cutbacks were among the big firms. RE SAID THE companies surveyed plan to hire 43 per- cent fewer bachelor·level engineering students than ex· peeled in December; 20 per· cent fewer accounting and business s tudents; and 40 per· cent fewer liberal arts ma· jors. •'These statistics are dis- turbing, but they do not mean that today's college graduate will be tomorrow's unemploy- ment compensation reci- pient," he said. Whal it does mean is that business can be more selec· live and graduates wm have to persevere and be more flexible in the kinds of jobs they accept, Endicott said. He said some may have lo settle temporarily for work for which they would have qualified wllb 3 high school education. "I can't rem~IJlber when there was such a large cul-Endicott sat d a 1975 back in so short a pttlod," be engineering graduate with a sald. "By the middle of bachelor 's degree will January or cerla.lnly after average, within a wide range, the ftrst quarter's earning re· about $1,125 a month; a~· ports many c-ompanles re-counting majors, $1,000; bus•· iillzed thin~• were wone than ness administration, $850; expected and they bad to cut • and Uber al art.a, ~50 to $800 •. bllCk on costs. fflrint new With a master s degree, graduates was one ot t.bos.e en1lneers would ave.rate COit.i " $1,250 ; accountants, $1,200 ; · . bu1iness administrators, Endicott 11.ld that desp1le '1+200 to $1.2SO; and liberal tbe touab Job market, artamajon,$800lo$850 .. 1alarle1 •l>pear to be holding up and there wJU be wot'tc f<1r • ENDICOTT'SAlD his sur· molt of the graduates lf they vey showed th al 63 pe-rce.nt of look long enough. the flrma saw no Improve-- The survey lncluded 110 menl for thelr business for the Jarfe buslneues, and En· remainder of thi1 year. but 11 dicott sald there are lndic•· per~t predict better limes uom that the naUon'a mo.t In 1876. . 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CAP) - Congress is making the nation more vulnerable to another Arab oil em· bargo by failing to act on develop. mcnt of offshore oil reserves, the pre- sident of the American petroleum lnst.itute said Monday. Frank N. Ikard said domestic petroleum reservH are dwindling at an alarming rate and U.S. reliance on Arab oil is increas1ng every day. Jobless Total DETROIT, Mich. (AP) -Even thouCh one in rive U.S. auto workers nm.alns on layoff this w~k. lhe in- dustry's jobless toll will be lower to- ct.ythan at any Umethis year. Industry furloqbs now ldlc more than 154,000 blue-collar workers from a total industry workforce of 7.U.,000, t down from 159,'32 last week. .. . 8yGLENNWIDTE oe-.De1rv,.. ... ,.... LONG BEACH-Valerie Lee and Shirley Babasholf each col- lected an American record Sun- dicy night at Belmont Plua pool to cloae out their fantastic efforts in the U.S. team trials for the world swimming championships to be staged in Colombia next month. . Lee clipped a hundredth of a seeond off her U.S. standard in the 200 butterfly with a 2:15.12 and Ba bashoff reduced the 100 freestyle mark from 57.90 to 57.74. Babashoff, a Fountain Valley resident, came back later for a lifetime best 8:46.77 for second place in the 800 free. Heather Greenwood, the 800 winner, picked up a USA record wilhan8:46.51. Babashoffmadea determined bid to overhaul Greenwood the final 100, posting a nifty 1 :03.4. But there was loo much distance lo make up and Greenwood had too much left. Babashoff, qualifying for five events in the world cham- pionships, s aid she swam the middle part of the race too slow- ly. Her Mission Viejo Nadadores coach, Ma rk Schubert, said Babashoff held back loo much. "She was OK at the 400 but didn't pick it up from there til the 700," be stated. "She's capable of going under 8:40. Once s he gets more farniliar with swimming this race, I think s he'll be the best in the world." Ba bashoH was fourth for the first 200, moved to third after that and then slipped into second place with a little over 100 to go. She was two seconds behind Greenwood al the gun lap a nd even her patented "Flying Russian" finish couldn 'l make up that much. "This was the best meet I ever had," BabashoH said. She won the 100, 200 and 400 freestyles; Twirls 2-hitter Mondar.Junu; 1875 ~ was second in the 200 individual medley and 800 free. Sbe got two American recordsrand a world record (400). Babashotf's powerful fulish did turn the trick for her in the 100 as she caught Kathy Heddy witb 20 meters to go and won by .33 of a seeond. ''Shirley was OlJl too slow (28.2) at the 50," Schubert sald. .. We were hoping she'd go about seven-tenths faster. She'll have to be in the 56s to even get a bronze medal in Colombia." Lee, appearing strong and Quid, swam her own race and won comfortably in the 200 fly while Nadadores teammate Peggy Tosdal of Dana Point was fourth in 2: 19.20. Lee took the lead from Camille Wright at 125 meters and by the time they were at the 150, she had extended that advantage lo three-quarters of a body length. She won by 2.28 seconds. The orange.haired MV whiz was second in the 200 and 400 freestyh:s and Schubert feels she is a solid threat for the gold medal in Colombia, despite the presence of 200 fly world record holder Rosemarie Kothatof East Germany. "She'll be right there with the East Germans," said Schubert. "She was about 1.5 seconds s lower today than we hoped for but she w asn 't pressed.'• Lee said she had hoped to be in the 2: 14s Sunday but admitted she was pacing herself, swim· ming her own race. Women•s 100 Frttstyle -1. Sl>lrlo S.b.uN>ll, S7.14; L Kathy Heddy, Sl.07; 3. Kelly Rowell, SI 14; 4. IYrenReeser. S8 ei. Women·s 100 Butterfly -t . Valerie Lee 2. IS.12; 2. ~mollt Wro9ht. 7 17.40, J. WtnOyWe111- be<9, 2: 11.01; 4. Pe99y ToSO•I, 2: 19.20. Women's 800 Freestyle -1. Heather G<een-od, 8:46.SI; 7. s 111rley B<llb1nl'IOll, 8:47.77; J.JoHarshbar~r.8:S7. 1'; 4. K•lhy Ht<ldy.l:S2. "-~n·s 100 Butterfly -I. Greg Jllg4"1bur9, .SS.79; 7. B11t Forrester .. S5.83; J. Steve Bauer, .55.90; 4. Mike Bottom, .S..11. Mtn°s 200 Individual Medley -1. Frl!d Tyler, 7:06.93; 2. Steve Furniss, 2:07.61; 3. Brucv Furniss, 2:07.65; 4, Dave Hannura.2:08.BS. Figueroa Becomes Newest Stopper Ed Figueroa, aHectionately known around Anaheim as Senor Stopper, is am an of his word. "After my first win of the year against Oakland (a five-hitter on April 27) I told myself that I can pitch better than this," the California Angels righthander said Sunday. He has. Since that start, Figueroa has authored a pair of three-hitters, A ngeb Slate All G•mnon KMPC (7101 J .-2l Tun at Callfornla June 2~ K•nsas City at Ca1tforn1• June ?S Kansas City It California 7?Sprn. 1 2SP m, 7·U p.m. another five·hitter and a six- hitter. Sunday, he held the visiting Texas Rangers to two singles and made an unearned fourth inning run stand up for a l ·O victorx- Figuero a, who began the season in the m inors when manager Dick Williams con· sidered his spring attitude too lackadaisical, has rebounded in astonishing fashion since his re- call. He wormed his way into the starting rotation -once referred to by WilHams as the "best in baseball" -and has compiled a 6-3 record with each victory com· ing on the heels of an Angels loss. Hence the nickname, Senor Stop. per. "I've got confidence now, especially in' my curve ball," Figueroa said in explaining his success. "I didn't have that con- fidence last year. I'm not afraid to throw it in any s ituation." However, in his most ticklish dilemma of the day Sunday, Figueroa went to his fastball, which he describes as "good •.• but nothing like Nolan Ryan's." It came on a 3-2 pitch to J eff ·Burroughs with the bases loaded and two out in the ninth. Bur- roughs drilled it in the gap in left. center but fl eet Angel cen· t erlielder Morris Nettles raced over and made the catch, just in front of the fence. "I was kinda expecting an al- ley shot," Nettles said. "I got a good jump and I knew it was Jnine all the time." The lengthy five.game series winds up tonight with Bill Singer 6-8 going against the Rangers' Steve Hargan 4·3. Singer was driven to cover ln the first inning of Friday's ga,me with Texas which CaUforoti came back to gney to Padres win 12-11in11 innings. Figueroa fanned s ix and walked only two -both in the ninth. He yielded a two-out sin gle lo Lenny Randle in the second and then retired lhe next 19 Rangers in a row before Roy Smalley opened the ninth with a single off the glove of Bruce Boehle at first. Smalley's two-base throwing error led to the un earned Angels run in the fourth and cost Texas s tarter F e r gie J enkins his seventh loss against eight vie· tori es. TEXAS Hatrllhll> Cui>t»ge 71> .,..,111ovell Burroughs rf 5'lencer II>• Randl~cf Griewdll Smalleyss Sundbu9c HOwelt"" Jenklnsp Tolotls Tun C.ltfornl• •b r II bl • 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 J 0 0 0 J 0 l 0 J 0 0 0 J 0 I 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0000 29 0 2 0 Jenkins IL.8·7 Fl9ueroa CW,6·31 T-1:S9.A-.,9sa. CALI FOii Hf A <lbrllbl Remy2b 4 o o o Colllns ll 4 o 1 o Boehle lb 4 1 3 o Lahoudrl 2 0 2 I Qwlklb • 0 0 0 Dohertydh 3 0 0 0 El Rodrt91>11 lC J 0 0 0 MeOllU 3020 M. Netti.sci 3 o o o Flguer~p 0 0 0 0 Tot.is 30 1 ' 1 000 000 000-4 000 100 00• , IP H II ER 88 SO 8 9102• 9 20026 .. --"'·--... - -o.lfy Pl"4 ...... 11Y ltl<Nnl Oreu FOUNTAIN VALLEY'S SHIRLEY BABASHOFF (FOREGROUND) TOUCHES OUT KATHY HEDDY IN THE 100.MEJER FREESTYLE. U.S. Open Play Final Survivors Most S11rprised MEDINAH, Ill. (AP) -A pair of longshots, Lou Graham and John Mahaffey, met in an 18· hole playoff today for the $40,000 prize in the 75lh U.S. Open golf championship -the "chokers" or "snake-bit" open. It has been a wild one. And none is more surprised at the windup perhaps than the playoff contenders themselves. Graham, a drawling, string. bean tour veteran or 35, was the only person among the 25,145 on the Medinah Club premises who didn't know he had a chance to win outright by parring the final hole. He dumped his approach shot into a trap and look a bogey. Mahaffey, a young lion or 27 out of Houston, had finished 45 minutes earlier and had rushed lo the clubhouse to buy a candy bar and check on the airline re· servalions out of town. He had to be searched out and informed that his 287 score, three over par. had tied the late- finishing Graham for first place a nd that he s hould be on the first tee today promptly atl:30p.m. ~ win I've ever seen," the bespec- t acled 1974 Open winner said. "Everybody was just throwing it away. It's unbelievable." Final scores and money w1Mlnljl1 In Sunday's round of the 7Sth U.S. Open Golf Chaft'C>lonshlp on the 7,o:n -yerd, P•r·71 Medlneh country Out> course la-<lenotH am•teur): LouGra"8m JohnMahalley Fr•nk 8e•rd, SI0,815 Ben Crenshaw, $10,17S Hale Irwin, $10.17S 8ob Murpny, S 10,175 ,,_ttrOosterhuls, S7,SOO Jack NIOl•us, $7,SOO Pat Flt.islmons. ss.ooo Tom Watson. $5,000 Arnold Palmer, ss,ooo R•y Floyd, $2,IOO IWJot North, U ,IOO Eddie Pltar<•. u .025 Joe lnmt11, $2,025 ... Rik Massengale, S2,02S JimWlechers. U,02S Terry 0111, Sl,6SO 0.le Oo\llllHS, Sl,6S0 G.,y Groh, S l,6SO Grier Jones, S 1,6SO A-Jerry Pate A-JavHHS Miller Barber, $1,427 Forrut Fezler, Sl,07 Kermit Z•rley, Sl,A27 BudAllln,Sl,417 Tom Weiskopf, Sl,J0.4 Don J•nuary, $1,J0.4 David Grahem,_S.11304 Lee Trevino, S l,;w.o Steve Melnyk, $1,304 Ed Sneed, Sl.304 UPITe_....e It's the first Open playoff since Lee Trevino beat Jack Nicklatls at Merion in Ardmore, Pa., in 1971. Nate Starks. s 1 ,304 Jerry Hurd, Sl,J0.4 Tommy Aaron, Sl,J0.4 Al Ge1belger, \1,040 Jultus Boros, $1,040 .JolWlyMlller, $1.CMO John S<r11ee.. Sl,040 LamyW•dklns, Sl,CMO Gary Pl•yer, S91S Oa"' Stockton, UtS 7'·72-68-73-287 73-11-72·71-287 7 ... t-67-71-288 TIM.&-76-7 4 -288 74-71·73-70-288 74-73-71 .. 9~ 69-73-71-7S-289 n-10-1s-n-m 67-73-73-77-290 1>7·61-n.77-2'10 69-7 5-7 J-73-290 76-7l-7J.7B-291 75-72-72-72-291 7S-11-71H6-292 n-72-71-77-292 71-74-71-76-292 61-73-76-75-292 74·7).61.78-293 11-11-n .13-m 73-74-73-73-293 69-73-79-71-293 79-71>-72-72-293 74"69-n.11-293 14-11-11-1&-m 7J-7S-71-7S-2'M 7J.71-7S-7S-2'U 76-70.7J-7S-294 7S-7t·74-75-29S n -7S-7J-7S-29S n -76-74·74-29S n"69-7S-79-29S 75-73-74-73-295 75-74-73-73-295 75-72-76-72-295 77"67·71-71-3'1S 73-7Hl'H>9-29S 11·72-74-78-296 n.n-n.JS-296 75-72-76-73-296 75-73·72-76-296 69-77-]].73-296 75-73-n-77-297 73-73-77-74-297 LOU GRAHAM CHIPS DURING SUNDAY'S U.S. OPEN ACTION. Whatever became of that fellow, Nicklaus, anyhow? And Trevino? And Hale Irwin, who won last year ? And J ohnny Miller , th e Pacific Coast hots h o t ? And long Tom Weiskopf, Arnold Palmer and South Africa's Gary Player? Some people, including the golfers themselves, called it a horror story and jested that the winner should have been Boris Karloff. Dazed spectators went around asking if there was some kind of penalty against a guy who won. Everybody, including the in- comparable Nicklaus, blew it - that is, all except Graham and Mahaffey. They almost djd. They backed into t.heir tie for the top, Mahaffey shooting a final round 71 that he thought might get him about 10th m oney and Graham a 73. All of them were wondering how they managed lo let this Open s lip from their hands. Irwin acknowledged that the tournament left him completely dumbfounded. "This was the easiest open to Padres Play Tough COuld Have Lost All Four-Alston SAN DIEGO (AP) -"We could have lost all four instead of win- ning three," Dodgers manager Walter Alston said Sunday after Los Angeles beat San Diego 3·2 to move within two games of first- place Cincinnati in the National League West. "With the kind of pitching we got in the series, we could have won at least three games and maybe a ll four -certainly more than one,'' said San Diego manager J ohn McNamara, who watched his club hold the Dodgers to 12 runs in the four games After a 4·1 loss and a 2-1 vie· Lory, the Padres dropped the final two games of the series, 4·3 and 3-2, but remain within 1 lh games of third-place San Fran- cisco. The Dodgers, who had been un- able to hold l·O and 2·1 leads, won in the eighth inning Sunday after Bill Byckner greeted reliever Danny Frisella, 1·3, with a leadoff double. Buckner was at second with one away when 'Willie Crawford bounced a tie- breaking double past 37·year·old Dodgers Slate All ,.meu11 ICA8C (710) Jun. 23 Los AnQetes •t Houston J une 24 Los An~les at Houston S.lOp.m. S:lOp.m. 5.30p,m. June 2S Los Angeles •t Houston first baseman Willie McCovey, who was first charged with an er- ror before the decision was re- versed. Though not involved in the de- cision, hard-luck San Diego right-hander Dave FTeisleben, 3·8, was frustrated not to end his personal five -game losing streak. "He has pitched well enough, we just don't get him many runs," said Padres pitching coach Tom Morgan. Freisleben was llfted for a pinch hitter in the seventh when Fred Kendall singled off winner Mike Marshall, 3-5, to make it- 2-2. Marshall pitched the last three innings in relief o( Al Downing, who gave up a run- scoring single to John Grubb in the fifth. LOS ANGELES ~21> a.cktl¥ff co.tvwylb <JawlorOrl C::.yJb Ouzcf Ytaoerc AuerN<flss Do-ingp Lff Pfl MlnNlll p Mlrlllll J 0 0 0 4 I 1 0 4 1 1 0 4 0 0 0 J 1 ' 1 4 0 1 0 4 0 ' ' 4 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 I 0 0000 SANOl•OO •• , 11111 GrubOcf 4 o 1 1 e. tttrftMdeuu o o o loclllHr ff 4 0 1 0 lvl•Jb 3010 McCoW'I' It. 4 0 0 0 f'-IH:Z. 4 1 1 0 Tolafln 4 1 1 o Hllfldfey c 4 0 0 0 FrelSlelleft • 1 0 0 0 Kendall Pfl 1 0 I I Wlllflekf Pf' 0 0 0 0 Frhell11> 0 0 0 0 To111s U 3 ~ t T•ll l.1 t 1 2 LosA1199lu 010 001 010-J Set\ Oleoo ooo 010 100-2 E-+iuncllty, Cey, McCovey. OP~n Olteo 1. L08~os A"991H 7, s.., 0 1900 •. 28-Gel'W\', Bu<llnu. $8-Auerb•Cll, S -&.opu, h ie, Mmr'ifllll. SF -<:ey. I~ H It Elt al IO ~lllO 6 S 1 I 1 1 Mlnhell <W, .. SI a 2 1 0 0 1 Frtltleben 7 6 t 2 t 2 FrlMlll IL, Ml 2 2 1 O 0 t WP-f'rtlstttien, T-2:17.A-4i,17 ... Pele Hurt After Fans Flood Field NEW YORK CA P) -While Pele is recuperating, the North American Soccer League will be doing some investigating. The 34-year-old star of the New York Cosmos is spending the next three days resting in his home in Santos, Braz.it after re- ceiving minor injuries and a good scare when a mob or fans swarmed over him during a weekend New York-Boston NASLgame. Meanwhile, Bob Ehlinger, as- sistant to NASL commissioner Bill Woos nam, ·announced the league is conducting "a complete investigation or circumstances leading lo the injury of Pele. The "Black Pearl," as he is known throughout the world, suf- fered a pulled muscle behind his right knee, and a twisted ankle Friday ni ght in Boston Unive'rsit y's Nickerson Field during the first half of a game against the Boston Minuteman. The fans stormed the field and overwhelmed him after he scored a disallowed goal. The Cosmos later lost the contest 2·1 in overtime. Pele was carried from the field by security guards hired by Warner Communications, owner of the Cosmos, but it was later re- ported that his injuries were minor. "I was shaken and scared "he said before boarding a plan~ for Brazil. Cosmos vice president Clive Toye at firs t ordered the New York team to leave the field aft~r the disturbance and told the referee the players would no\ re-turn. Toye said ••the game was played tn conditions unsafe for players, officials and spec- tators." · He said be counted only 14 • Boston policemen and eight B.U. security guards on duty at the sta~lum , explaining he had earlier been assured as rnany as 200 pollcemen would be on hand. Sun Camp at UCI The Southern Calif omla SUn opened camp Sunday wtt.& 74 a>layers at the University of CaUlornfa Irvine. Workouts are open to lbe pubUc. Featured ev~nts w«e the Ume trials and coach Tom Feara' special 12-mlnute run. Defensive back Erk Johnson and running back Gary Dixon eacn ran 21.4 mtlu in 12 minutes. Fears said be felt early aeaaon s trenstbs sbould be •l quarterback and rec:etver. SAN DIEGO (AP) -Former Angels skipper Bill Rigney. who managed the Minnesota Twins lo the American League Western Divblon bas~b11J UUe in J970, hu been aigned u coach and ad- vance 1cout for the San Dleao Pfdre•. ""~ TITO FUENTES OF THE PADRES IS KNOCKED-OUT OF A DOUBLE.PLAY BY STEVE YEAGER. ~anker Keith Ben.son WOh the •O~yard run in 4.4 seconda. Quarterbacks in camp were Daryle Lamonka, Pat Haden Mllcc Ernat and Fountain Valle)''s Gary Valbuena. .J f -... ..... J ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 23, 1975 Teilay' CI081.. - ·N.Y. Steeb TEN CENTS Citizen DossieN • ·ID Caves--Tunri.ey Ji'rom Wire Services WASHINGTON --Sen. John Tun~ey <D·Calir.), said today duphcates ot highly classified government computer files on i>riv.ate citizens may be stored in tanderground caves at a secret government complex in the Virginia mbuntains. Tunney said he understood duplicate files ranging from the highlf classified Defense Depart- ment s COINS computer system to files kept by tJ»e Internal Revenue Service and the FB1 are ( Agency Orders Cited From Wire Services WASHINGTON -Sen. Barry Goldwater said today that the Central Inte lligence Age n$!Y "took orders from the top" in carrying out illegal activities. The Arizona Republican, a member of the Senate In- telligence Com miltee, said the panel's investigation will show the CIA did not want to do some of the things it did but fell obliged to follow orders. Goldwate r m ade the statement _in the Senate as the committee arranged to call at; a witness John Roselli, a West Coast un- derworld figure and associate of slain Chicago mobster'Sam Gian· cana in n reputed plot. against Fidel Castro. Roselli, scheduled to appear Tuesday in response to a sub- poena. was expected lo be quizzed about reports that he and Giancana were approached on behalf of the CIA to arrange for .. <See CIA, Page A2) Band Members Raise Funds For D.C. Trip Members of the Mission Viejo High School Di ablos Marching Band are selling tickets to a Sept. 22 An gels baseball game against the Chicago While Sox to help f inance the b a nd 's trip to Washington D.C. in 1976. The band will perlorm at the Angels game in Ana heim during the pre-game warmup and in the s tands, according lo T e rry Newman, Diablos band director. The money will Cund the band's trip to participate in the California Cavalcade of Bands, omcial West Coast represen- tatives to the U.S. bicentennial celebration. Tickets are available through cavalcade booster members by calling 581·3806 or 837-7699. Fred McGuire and Jim Audet are co- chairmen of the Diablos' Booster chapter or the ca v a Icade. ·:~;a :·· Weatller Local drizzles Tuesday morning, according to the weather service. Partial clearing by afternoon in- · land areas. Cooler tem- peratures with highs or 62 rising to upper 60s inland. 1~81DE TODAY The Morin County courtroom ihootout ftvej/ears • Of10 that t.f t a jvd(lt. and three othn' ~rwn• <had, nsulted from a pion bu rocUcall to frtt U.S. 'poUtical pri1oner1,' .ac- COf'ding to . a San FroncUco ~· Se~ 110'11 Pogt AS. ..... ....... All Al ........... A4 M ~ or-.. C*llltT ~ ..... ..... aM ClllNc• •• :: ........ ""'" omaa:• aa At ......... :: ........... M ............ ,_...,. M ...... ' .. ...... •• ...... At ........... •• ..... M • \ I,. stored at the Mt. Weather in- stallation, located about 50 miles frorn Washington. Tunney made the allegations during his questioning of D. 0 . C.ooke, deputy assistant secretary or Defense, during a joint meeting of the Judiciary subcommittee on consUtutional rights and the Commerce sub- committee 011 science and technology. The hearing was called to investigate government surveillance technology. Cooke said he would check to see whether there are duplicates ol more than 100,000 mes on in· dlvidual1 cathered by the Army during the civil disorders of the late 1980s. Congress hu been told these Cites were destroyed. The s~tem referred to by Tun- ney, COINS, is de'siCned to "ex· change classified and highly sensitive foreign intelligence data among the Defense In- telligence Agency, National Security Agency and the Na- tional Photo Interpretation Center and within the Depart- • ment of Defense," acC<'J'ding to Cooke. Mt. Weather is one oC several under1round complexes set up in the mountains around Waahiniton to house key govern- ment o(flclal1 in case of foreign attaek. Tunney said he rears that the duplicate files at Mt. Weather miiht be accessible to another C!Omputer terminal, as for exam- ple, one run by the White House. Delense Departrpent officials said today ihat they have found no evidence that military in· teUigence retained computeriied files on civilians or that the gov- ernment cr eated a vast elec- tronic network containing in- Corm at ion on millions of Americans. "We in the Department of Delense are not in and do not intend to get into the business of s urveilling American citizens who have no affiliation with the department,•' Coo~e said. Cooke was .responding to al· legations that military in - lellige nce re tained civil di~ turbance files.ordered destroyed in 1970 and 1971 and that the Defense Department was a key participant in a project designed to interconnect government data banks. . On June 13, the De fens e Department sent a memoran- dum to Congress saying that it had round 9,200 documents in its files on the activities of American citizens more than four years after the records were i;upposed to have been destroyed. ID us ~ras · ~ --' ....., ,.... 148" ~••Rieu" ttMMff COLLISION WITH TIUJCK· L.aR RIG KIU.S ONE, INJUREl 11 IN IRVINE Day C.mp Yen'• Drtver Otv•n 50-50 C,hance for SurNlval Choosing an Architect S. Laguna Hills High School Pick Slated Selection of an architect to de- sign a high school planned for South Laguna Hills tops tonight's agenda of the Saddleback Valley Unified School District. The meeting is set for 8 p.m. at Los Alisos Intermediate School, 25171 Moor Avenue, Mi ssion Viejo. Trustees decided to build the next high school in South Laguna Hills in May, after a six-month Saddlehack Board Mulls 2 Proposals Trustees of the Saddleback College District tonight will fight the second round of battle on two controversial funding proposals: establishment of a day care center and the hiring of a baskel- baJl coach. Both were r eje cted by a split vote of the board in May. Backers of the two proposals, however, succeeded ,in placing the items on tonight's .7;30 p.m . agenda for a second vote. Plans fo r the day care center ar e given a fighting chance because two of the seven trustees were missing when the vote was taken May 28. The $165,000 facility, which would provide .student mothers with a place to drop o(f their children while attending classes, was rejected because it would in- crease local taxes. As presently envisioned. the day care center would be operat- ed by the county Department of Education and starred by four full-time teachers and four in· structional aides. Plans are to locate it on the southwest corner or the lower campus par..klna lolamd to open It with the beginning ol the fall quarter ln September. The proposal was turned down ' ijecause it would have required a 1.S.cent increase in lhe college diltrict's tax rate. At that time a majority ol the board memben fell a fUrther tu lncreaae WH imprudent •auM the dbtrkt 11 tax pa yen faced a 30·cent increase to meet a pro- Jerted $18.1 million budget. As a reaull of recent budtet sessions by board members the budget h as been trimmed to $15 million with a consequent reduc- tion of the projectW tax rate Crom $1.03 to 94-cents. Trustees bounced the basket- ball coach position on a 4-3 vote for several reasons, among them the cost and the fact that the col- lege does not yet have a gym- nasium. However, m embers or the col· <See DAY CARE, Page A2} Vi~jo Finn Seeking OK On Project Mission Viejo Company of- ficials Tuesday will seek county approval of a major new housing development on 230 acres near the eastern extension of La Paz Road. . Members of 't.be county Plan- nina Commi.aslon will rule on the firm's request for the 471-single family tract at 1:30 p.m . in com· miuton chambers at 400 Civic Center Drive. Santa Ana. Tbe proposed development, scheduled lO be under construe· lion la late fall, includes one 1thool site. the exlstint equatriu f aelUty. one park site ind 11 common ownership Iota-. Plan1da1 department staff members bave reviewed the ap· pUeaUon aOd have reeommended approval of the project. - controver sy a mon g neighborhoods now affected by school overcrowding. No site has been selected for the school. School district of- ficials said evaluating potential sites would be one of the jobs of the architect hired. The school is scheduled to be built in two increments. The first phase, for about 1,200 students, is to be open by September, 1977. The second phase would be built as the population requires it. Other items on tonight's agen- da include : -Discussion of corporal punishment. Mission Viejo High School students asked the board to abolish physical discipline at a recent m eeting. but tonight trustees will announce their in- tent to re-affirm the present policy allowing it. -Consideration of aulhoriza- ·tion to file for stat e aid to build a district administrative office to include an instructional resource center, c e ntral kitchen ind furniture and equipment depot. -Assignment or an architect for a building addition to Esperanza School. the district's trainable mentally r etarded facility. Bridge Suicide SAN FRANCISCO <UPI> -A University of Nevada student has become the 549lb known suicide off the Golden Gale Bridge. HE SOW BOAT IN PILaT AD "An ad in the Daily Pilot really does pay off. I sold my boat." That's the success story told by the Huntington Beach man who placed thls classified ad in lbe Daity Pilot: 16' GLASSPAR. w/75HP Evlnrude. No t.rlr. $775. Prt ply. XXX·~XXX If you have a boat to sen. call &U-5e78. ll only takeS a few word• in the right place to make a sale. Alona th~ Orange Coast, the ri1ht -pl•~ ls the Daily Pilot • Irvine Lad, 6, Dead at Scene By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of Ill• Dally PllolS«afl A double truck and trailer ri g sla mmed into a Fountain Valley day school van carrying 12 persons at a rural intersection in Irvine this mornirig, killing one boy and injuring 11 others. The shuttering impact hurled the bus in an arc through the intersection. s pewing pre-t eenage children out of doors a nd windows to the paverr.ient. Coroner·s deputies identified the dead child short- ly afterlhis family was notified as John Ramming, 6, of of 3801 Park view Lane, Irvine. Investigators s aid the boy was hur led bodily through a s hattering side window of the van at the mo- ment of impact and under the wheels of the truck as it skidded through the intersection. The Ramming boy was confirmed dead at the scene beneath a wheel o( the massive Sully-Miller Cont.racling Company gravel truck and trailer rig. Wreckage of the Rough Riders Day Camp van crashed nose down in a watery irrigation ditch at J ef · frey and Barranca roads, not far from El Toro Marin~ Corps Air Sla ti on. Names of the injured children from the day care facility at 16596 Redwood Circle in Fountain Valley were not r eleased pending notification of their families. Investigators at lhe scene did confirm the bus con- tained youngsters c.1ged s ix to 10 years old plus the 14- year-old junior counselor a nd the female driver iden- tified only as Carolyn A. Conners. · Truck driver James E . Bartley. 45, of Bell , was be· ing questioned e1 t the scene by Irvine police a nd California Highway Patrol officers. <See COLLISION, Page A2 ) 01111, ........... EMERGENCY CREWMEN AID TAGGED VICTIM OF CRAB Big Truck Rig Smaehed Bro.-.... Into School Yaft 41 <WLVPR.OT SB Gift lte1nS &1i00l Shopping List A ,vrestllng mat, spelhng materials. r~cord players and filmstrip~ are Uems which will be bought for Saddleb~ck Valley s chools with money donated In :&ifliy. A total of -.,,600 wos given ln 10 gifts to seven schools. They included: -A $SOO Freedom Shrine for El Toro High School given by the Saddleback Valley Exchange Clob. -$200 a s senior class gift to im- prove the senior student area on the El Toro High School campus. -A 960-square foot wrestling mat plus installation, a girt worth $850, from Mission Viejo High School athletic booster club; also a cash gift of $247 for WTesWng' jtems. -$500 to be u sed for additional F r o• P age Al C OLLIS ION The injured were taken by umbulance relays from the dis- aster scene to both Santa Ana Community Hospital and Tustin Community Hospital. Some were treated at the scene and en route by paramedics from Orange County's Red Hill Station and Laguna Hills. The scene at the isolated in- tersection surrounded by tomato fields bore stark testimony to the force of the 9 a.m. collisiou and the horror of its aftermath as hyst~rica l chHdren dragged themselves along the pavement lrying to find help. Impact of the broadside crash of the truck, southbound on Barranca Roa d and the day camp van, heading down Jeffrey .Road toward El Toro MCAS flung ,open th~van 's_re~rdoors. • Children packed elbow-to· \:lbow on three wooden plank benches running the length of the van were hurled in all directions as the crumpled vehicle swerved off the pavement into the ditch. One bench was ripped from its moorings a nd lay in the road nearby, while other items in- dicated how the day had begun ff!ll" the Rough Rider Day Camp enrollees. Near the blanket-covered corpse beneath the massive truck wheel, Jay a banana from somebody's lunch and one lone s mall blue tennis shoe. The dead boy"s face was covered wilb a checked jacket. • One truck wheelcame torest on top of a day camp staff mem- ber's printed manual, and the crumpled grill and shattered right front fender of the big con- struction company truck s howed j.he devastating force of the col- lision. Skid marks from the truck's wheels stretched nearly 100 feet up Barranca Road from the point -0f impact in the intersection. which is controlled by a two-way stop sign. Police cars, CHP autos, paramedic vans and Orange County Fire Department trucks -well over a dozen e mergency vehicles -clogged the intersec- tion in which a canvas sheet had been unrolled to serve as a medical treatment center for the less seriously injured victims. Police said most victims are believed to be from the Tustin- Santa Ana area with one youth possibly from Irvine. Emergency rooms at both hospitals began bracing for the influx of the casualties when they received word or the number or victims injured. They included some victims believed to be in critical condition with multiple serious injuries, according lo police. ORANGE COAST se DAILY PILOT n,. o.,.... Cool Delly PllOI. ,..,,. wN<I\ I\ com· ....., ....... __ p, .... ,, publl-by .... 0.•nqoP ~ _,.,.,,,. eomo ... , ~··•• "°'""'" ••• pUll4itllM -tlCl•Y 11\•DUQI\ f'•..._y tor Co.I• ~ . ..__t h..:11, HunllntlOfl Sn..:l\IFO.-> 1.1 .. V•ll••· ......... $aCICll•bolO Vallty .,.., ~-8ee<lllSo11tll CM•I A ""Oi. rtQlOft•I ecllllof> I\ pull41-$•tu<Oar• -S-.¥\ T,_. p•'11Cl-4 ow11tltl\ln9 ~.,., •• •• lOO W.\I IUy S4r"1, c.i. Meoa, C.llfo•n•• _,.. Robert N. Weed P••llclent •1111 l'vbll.,.., Jack R. Curley Vl<e l"r"°'cleftf -c;.,,...., Mol ... OH Thomas Keevil Ed Hor Thomas A. Murphine ,_...,..,,,..Editor Charles H . Loos Richard P. Nall AJ .. "'°"' Mot~ EOtl.,, '-"••Me .. JJO•" ... strfff ... w_t 9e«I\' 1UJ Ht -<1 -·••t H\lftllnvtOft eHcl\ 11•H BNcll ......... , .. Leo-8e..:11, 11 .. G--..reMr .. 1 TelepfMtN f1t4) 641"'221 Ct.HUI .. A41¥ttt.111nt .. t~WI a..11•-~ 'Ullo .... WSOf!~ ,., .. ,10 f,...., .... c. •• -.... 4tM630 ~• .. llt. ltll OfM .. ( .. \I ,..,.11,lllttt ~,.,..,. •• ,.. .... "'*'"'._ ...... 1<14 f!l41 .. , ., .................... , •• " .... , '" ,..,,,..,ue1 .... ,...,, ...... , !'•""'''"," 01 ,..,,,,..,.._"''· SH~ Clot 00~1 ... "''" "' Ce-611 Nit••· ~<l•tA•• l-(llJ4 .. lly ... f'f~.JJt0..-.1111t· ..,. rftAfl .. Ot_w, ,..,,,,.,,. *''"""'°"'" oo ,_,.,.,, r 1'pelling material. from Cordlllera Elementary School PTA. -SSSO to Santiago Elementary School student body Cor purchases of benches and filmstrips, from Santiago PTA. -$171 from Glen Yermo Element~ry School student body donated to the school. -$600 from San Joaquin Elementary School Parent Teacher Organization (or two re· cord players, two gym mats, and four maps. -$138 to La Paz Intermediate School in m emory of Jerry Hoisl who died April 24 after an automobile accident. Donations came frorn Burroughs Company employes, the La Paz student body, and individual students and teachers. Victim Foi ls Rape Try A 28-year-old man Crom Mon- . tebello, alleged to be an illegal ali en, faces charges of assault with intent to commit rape today, following a weekend incident in Balboa involving a victim who swings a mean whiskey bottle. Patrolmen cruising the Peninsula before dawn Saturday ~u id they hea rd a woman S('reuming in an alley near the 800 b lock of Eas t Balboa Boulevard. When they investigat· ed. they found the victim had fainted and the alleged suspect being subdued by witnesses. Later, they le~rned that the victim had bee n leaving a m ale friend 's house at about 1:30 a .m . .and was assertedly grabbed from behind by Manuel Mendez Garcia, 28. She was carrying a run quart of whiskey and mixer in a paper sack and used the items to fend off her alleged a ttacker. Mendez was treated for a minor face cut suffered in the in- cident and then booked. $1,282 Loss In Saddlehack Schools Told A total of $1 ,282 in damages from vandalis m , fire, and theft were reported last month in the Saddleback Valley Unified School District. .Major incide nts included the theft of two flutes worth $900 from Mission Viejo High School, multiple d a mage from van· dalis m at Linda Vista School totalling $23?, and a crashed block wall at La Paz In · termediate School. Vandals broke outside lights at Linda Vista in an incident report· ed April 24. They a lso damaged some projectors, s plit a tree in ·two, and took cas h from a teacher's desk. Au automobile accident caused the $243 in damage to the La Paz block wall April 30. Linda Vista had a similar inci- dent in March, when damage from vandals amounted to $228. The last month's total was up $500 from the previous reporting period, when damages reached $693. The total damages from fire, vandalism and theft in 1975 so far are about $5,800. ·Church Helps Viet Refugees Classes in English as a second language, designed especially for Vietnamese refugees, are be· ing held from 7 to 10 p.m . Tues- day and Thursday al St. Nicholas Church in Laguna Hills. The classes, offered by the Saddleback Valley Unified School District Adult Education Department. are open to all adult Vietnamese in the area. They will strive to provide an introduction to American culture as well as strengthen verbal English skills. Mrs. Nguyen Thi Cam Whey, an experienced Viet· namese teacher of English, wlll lead the classes. More information is available by calling 837-8830. Four Charged With Abuse BUTNER , N.C. (UPI> -Four attendaota at tbe Murdoch Center for the Mentally Retarded have bttn char1ed wtth abulln1 aeverel)' retuded p1tJenll by burning them with a clprette lighter. The charaes 1\em from the bu.mint of 18 patients ranatna In aft' from 28 to 40. UPIT.....-e Cites I nllOC!etl~e Militant feminist Susan Saxe pleaded innocent to first degree murder today in death of Boston police of- ficer killed during Brighton bank holdup in 1970. She was on FBI's 'Most Wanted List ' before capture in March. E'ro• Page A l DAYCARE lege administration are prepared to offer some new arguments to support the hiring or a basketball coach. Saddleback has been without a coach since early May when Roy Stevens resigned as coach to con- tinue full-tirne teaching. Board members have been at odds over the coach's job because the administration has requested the addition of a full - lime person rather than shifting coaching duties to an alrcady- employed physical education in· struclor. F ro• Page A l CIA ... Mafia members to assassinate Castro. Sen. William Proxmire told Goldwater it ought to be established who was responsible for CIA misdeeds. Goldwater replied that the CIA "has done a highly commendable job" but unfortunately is losing intelligence contacts in other countries beca use of what he called unwarranted assaults on the agency by the press and news media. Proxmire replied that "ex- posure or abuses by the press is constructive and useful." He sald the CIA has engaged in activities that cannot be justified, but that 80 to 00 percent or its acli vi lies have been "absolutely essential." It would be "foolish and dangerous" lo abolish the agen- cy, Proxmire declared. Giancana, who also had been expected to testify, was shot to death in his home in a Chicago suburb last week. Also expected to testify is William K. Harvey, aformerCIA official who reliable sources have said was involved in plots to kill Castro. Central Intelligence Agency in- volvement in the slaying of Glan- cana has not been ruled out, ac- cording to Chicago police. Iowan Leads Campaign for Diny Moviee BURLINGTON, Iowa CUPI ) - "Mickey Mouse for Kids -Linda Lovelace for adults" says one sign planted In the yard of a 26- year old Burlington factory worker. Another sign in the same yard says, .. Happiness Is Havlnf an X-Raled Movie House." The signs were erected by Bill Mosher, who la staging a cam· paign to counter a peUUon drive by a l~al church ·youth group against tbe ealabll1hment o( an adult "X·ratH .. movie theater here. The Burllnston City Council has befun work on an obecenity ordinance which would kill plans tor tbe adult theater l<Uoinlng a downtown youth center. and Mosh~r tears the church opJ>OSl· tion will prompt the council to pa11 the meature. The stans have drawn various reaction• from penons pualna Mo1ber•a home atld be 1aJd. "I 've bad all kinda ot comments: people bootin1 and hollerinl and cbeerinJ me 011, otben aJvint me thumJ» down and one lady drove by ond called me sick." · Hite Foiled \_., Ex-Laguna Aide Escapes UTllutrt La1una Beacb builder and former Planning CommissioneT Charles Benton was lhe victim of an auemrted armed robj)ery by a youthCu bltchblkw w~ed a .'5 caliber automatk: on Benton and demo e.d bla bJllfold. bJ~hbJJc•r appeared to be 17 lo 19 years old and wore thick-lensed glasses. The hitchhiker asked Benton to stop tho pickup truck Jusl north · ol lhe Lasuna Beach City' Umlts on El Toro Road~ He exited the tru~k. pulled the .45 caliber pistol from bis waist band and d e· manded the builder tum over his wollet. Benton said ho toaaed the billfold onto the passcn1er side of the seat, and tben gunned the truck beCore the youth could grub the billfold. Benton was unhurt in lhe tncl· dent Frida)' and aped awa)' before the hltcbblker could grab the billfold. Benton had tossed it onto the pas.enter 1Jde of the pickup truck after the youth left thevehkle. Ne w s pape r Clai m Benton told -police that as be looked in the rear view mirror, he saw the hitchhiker take a shooter's stance In the middle or the road and aim his gun. Ap· parenUy no shots were flred. On· coming traffic forced the bandit to flee on foot. Agems 'Protected Asia Opiuin Fielm ' Police searched for the man but were unable to find him. Benton said he had picked up the hitchhiker at a bus stop on the corner of El Toro Road and Moulton Parkway in Laguna Hilla. He said the bandit appeared to be "just a kid going to the beach." He was dressed in cutoff blue jeans and s hirt. The Mission Viejo Girl Given ROTC Award Ellen Rourke of Mission Viejo has been awarded a four-year Army ROTC scholarship. Major Tommy L . Thompson of the UCLA Reserve , Officers Training Corps presented Miss Rourke with the f ull-ride scholarship offer at the high school awards ceremony re- cently. The scholarship provides tui· lion, required fees, textbooks, and a subsistence allowance of $100 per academic month for four years. Miss Rourke, daughter of Ma· jor and Mrs. W. B. Rourke of 24212 Ensenada Lane, Mission Viejo, may use the scholarship at any of 290 colleges nationwide. Copte r Rescues 2 PALOS VERDES CAP) -A Sheriff's Department helicopter crew rescued a seriously injured man and bis wife stranded at the foot of a 250-foot beachside cliff with the incoming tide lapping at them. A sheriff's spokesman said Robert C. Kerr, 37, of Redondo Beach, suffered broken bones and internal injuries when he stumbled and fell Sunday while hiking down to the beach two miles south of Flat Rock Point. CHICAGO CU PI> -American authorities protected bill tribesmen in Southeast Asia and helped them market their opium: some of it destined for the United States as heroin, the Chicago Daily News r eported tod~, quot- ing a veteran narcotics official. The narcotics official, who was not identified, said during his last tour in Southeast Asia he was told .. he was not to lnterf ere with the growing of the poppy nor was he to try and stop the farmers from selling raw opium to narcotics dealers, .. the News reported in a copyrighted dispatch. The ofCicial said that early in his two-year assignment he was summoned to Bangkok , Thailand, and was briefed on American "field" policy toward the hill tribes by various of- ficials, including representatives of the military, other narcotics agents, members of American embassies in a half dozen coun- tries and CIA agents. The a1ent's assignment was to locate the poppy fields in the so- called golden triangle or Laos, Thailand and Burma where 70 percent of the world's opium used in the manufacture of heroin is grown. He said at the briefing he was shown a movie of "several Reagan, Vrges .Open Primary DALLAS (UPI > -Former California Gov. Ronald Reagan says Republicans should en- courage a tough primary battle in 1976 instead of handing the nomination to President Ford. "With the Democrats facing a Cree·wheeling and fist-throwing convention as they are going to, an automatic rubber-stamping . (GO P> convention is not going to excite the biggest group of people in the country right now, the In- dependents," Reagan said dur- ing a weekend news conference. Americans walking through a poppy field, picking the flower that produces opium and smell· ing it." Some of the people at the meet- ing were in the film. "I asked them if they had burned the poppy field, they said, 'Oh, we can't do that'." · The policy of making friends with the tribesmen so they could be a buffer against Communist expansionism and help in in· telllgence gathering then was ex- plained to him, he said. The agent said State Depart· ment and intelligence officials told him his job or enforcement began at lhe "second level,'' after the Carmer had sold his crop to a narcotics dealer. Signups Set For August Swim Classes Signups h ave begun for in· structional swimming to be held at two Laguna Htlls pools in August, sponsored by the SouU1 Laguna Hills summer recreation program. Classes will run mornings and urternoons Aug. 4 through Aug. 29 al the Hilton Inn and Alicia Vi llage Apartments. Registration information is available by calling 581-4120. Lessons for beginners, advanced beginners. intermediates and junior lifesaving will be offered. In addition, the summer pro- gram includes volleyball for adults, scheduled 7 to 8 p.m. Wednesdays at Costeau Park. and a teen center July 1 through August 22 at Valencia Elemen- tary School, 25661 Paseo d e Valencia. The teen center will be open from 1to9 p.m. Tuesday through f<)·iday and 7 to 10 p.m. Saturday. • • Mariners gives you up to a s1,soo tax dedudion this· year. .• ... AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU CAN BUIL.P A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND AT M A RINERS, W ITH ','IRA" -THE INDIVIDUAL RE- T IREMENT ACCOUNT. Mariners Individual Retirement Account is a personal tax-sheltered retirement plan: ''IRA" was devel- oped by Congress to give you an effective way to build your own retire- ment fund. You can save as much as $1500 or 15% of your wages, whichever is less, and your savings will be a tax deduc- tion during your working years. If your spouse works, your combined tax-sheltered savings can be as much as $3000 per year. Come In to Mbrlnera and start your own Individual Retirement Account. Ydu'll be saving tax dollars now and building a much brighter future. For more Information, come In or call any one o.f our convenient locatrons. HERE'S HOW FA.ST YOUR MONEY GROWS IN A MARINERS "IRA·· A CC OUN T lnd1v1dval Rerlrt!menl Accovnts 11re pr11sently earnmg 7'14% per YH' when pieced In 11 6·yHr cortlf1c1re. Yovr or1n1111t <fleld Is lnC•elUd ro a brg 8 06"<. when int11r11st 1s added 10 tit• eccount b11tance and compovnded d111ty W1/h 11 m1111mum inr1/11rdu11I conlrio1111on of Sr500 e11c1t yttlU, ltettt r how yovr money will grow WITH TAX WITHOUT EXTRA SHELTEAfO TAX MONEY l"A SHELTERED FROM TA)( An ER PLAN PLAN OEFE""AL 5 yrs. $ 9,510 6,730 $ 2,780 10 yrs. 23,540 15.750 7.790 20 yrs. 74,640 65,840 30,S60 · 30 yrs. 185,550 95.030 90,520 "Abo¥• fl;urtt tr• baHd Of'I 25' l~Otnt t>racket Federal ~ulatlona ,.quirt 1ublt111t1al ptn1111 .. a IOt Mrly w1tl1dr1wala from certillc:att ~n11. • Mariners Savi~ and Loan A soclatlOn ....,.,, ..... (Me.W. Off k e) I SISW~Dr. (71A) 6A .... ~,,~ fhytlde c.,. •• ,, 1024 toy11• o~ ('71•>M,·•OOO Let••...... ..._ ..... 310 Olenn91r•St. Cl•l•ure World) (71') •'4·'506 1H20 Seal hc;ch lhrd. {OPfNtNO SOON) (213) st1·76'l6 a...rlr t41111 let Att .. I•• 380 So leverly O~ (Opp.Mt. S1not Hot•Uol) (n3) SS3 3000 8741 lov•rly llvd. (213)6'7 ••• , • • \ I I 7 \] · l I ' I I I J I I \ MONDAY, JUNE 23, 1975 TEN CENTS Citizen I From Wire Services • . ID Caves--Tunney ... WASHINGTON -Sen. John Tunney <D·Calir. ), said today duplicates of highly classified government computer mes on private citizens may be stored in underground caves· at a secret government complex in the Vircinia mountains. Tunney said he understood d~Ucate files ranging from the highlf. classified Defense Depart· ment s COINS computer system to files kept by the Internal Revenue Service and the FBI are stored at the Mt. Weather In- stallation, located •~ !O miles from Washington" . Tunney macfe the allecatJons during bis questioning ol D. 0 . Cooke, deputy asslstjlnt secretary of Defense, during a. joint meeting of the Judiciary subcommittee on constitutional rights -and the Commerce sub- committee on science and technology. The hearing was called to ibvestigate government surveillance tee hnology. Cooke said he would check to Me whether there are duplicates of more than 100,000 rues on in- dividuals gathered by the Army during tbe clvQ dtaorden of the late 1980s. Congress has been told these files were destroyed. Tbe system referred to by Tun- ney, ""COINS, is designed to "ex- change clafaified and highly sensitive foreicn intelligence data among the Defense In· telligence Agency, National Security Agency and the Na- tional Photo I n terpretation Center and within the Depart- • ment of Defense,'' accordini to Cooke. . Mt. Weather is one of several undertround complexes iet up in the mountain s arou nd Washington to house key govern- ment officials in case of foreign attack. Tunney said he fears that the duplicate files at Mt. Weather m1tht be accessible to another computer terminal, as for exam- ple, one run by the White House. Defense Department officials said today that they have found no evidence that military in- telligence retained computerized files on civilians or that the gov- ernment created a vast elec· tronic network containing in- form a ti on o n millions of Americans. "We in the De partment of Defense are not in and do not intend to get into the business of surveilling American citizens who have no affiliation with the department," Cooke said. Cooke was responding to al- 1 eg a tion s that military in- telligence retained civil di..., turbance files ordered destro)'M. in 1970 and 1971 and that the De!eoae Department was a key, participant in a project designeil to interconnect government data1 . banks. On June 13, the Defense, Department sent a memor..-. dum to Congress saying that k had found 9,200 documents in ita files on the activities of American citizens more than four years after the records were supposed to have ~!'destroyed. In I I us ~ras Agency Orders Cited From Wire Services WASHINGTON -Sen. Barry Goldwater said today that the Central Jntelligence Agency - ._'took orders from. the top" in ~_.rrying out illegal activities. · The Arizona Republican, a member of th e Senate In - telligence Committee, said the panel's investigation will show the ClA did not want to do some of the things it did but felt obliged to follow orders. Goldwater made the statement in the Senate as the committee arranged to call as a witness John Roselli, a West Coast un· derworld figure and associate of slain Chicago mobster Sam Gian- cana .in a reputed plot against Fidel Castro. Roselli, scheduled lo appear Tuesday in response to a sub- poena, was expected to be quizzed about reports that be and .Giancana were approached on behalf of the CIA to arrange for Mafia members to assassinate Castro. Sen. William Proxmire told Goldwater it ought to be ~tablished who was responsible .(or CIA misdeeds. Goldwater replied that the CIA ~·has done a highly commendable job" but unfortunately is losing intelligence contacts in other countries because of what he ealled unwarranted assaults on the agency by the press and news media. • Proxmire replied that ·'ex- posure of abuses by the press is constructive and useful." He said the CIA has engaged in <See CIA, Page A2) i ... Dally ,. ... ~ .._.. ay ltlcu.-K.-. COLLISION WITH TRUCK-TRAILER RIG KILLS ONE, INJURES 11 IN IAVINE · 0., C.111p Yan'• Drtvw Given S0.90 Chance for Survtv•I ·sign~t11res · ~ounting Nortlwxx>d 'Zone Re/erendllm Demlline Ne ar By DOUG FRITZSCHE OftlM D•llr Pl• -.ef North Irvine homeowner s, nearing the 30·day deadline on gathering signatures for a re· ferendum on the zoning for the Village of Northwood, report that they have more than 80-percent of the necessary names. To get a ref erendwn on the ballot next fall, the group peeds signatures of 10 percent of the number of voters who cast ballots in the last city election. They need 1,027 signatures, ac- cording to the county registrar of voters. More than 1,000 signatures have been gathered, said Rae· quet Club resident Chuck Winslow~ but after comparing the names to those of registered voters on precinct walk sheets the total narrowed to 825 verified signatures. Winslow said several residents ·would be out tonight circulating petitions in an attempt to meet the quota by Friday's deadline. A number of Racquet Club re- sidents protested plans for North Irvine during the months of con- sideration by the planning com· mission and city council. * * * Irvine De111alition OK'd . · ""' * * The 1,426-acre Village of Northwood is bounded by lrvine Boulevard, Culver Drive, Jeffrey Road a nd the Santa Ana Freeway. The Racquet Club is the only residential development in the area, which is now planted in citrus groves. Packing House Doomed The Orarige County Environ- mental Management Agency has issued a demolition permit for a 1920's·vintage lemon packing l)ouse at Yale A venue and the Santa Fe tracks in North Irvine. :•r:~6eal :·· ~ Weatller 1'l Local drizzles Tuesday ' morning, according to the weather service. Partial ~ clearing by afternoon in· land areH. Cooler tem· • peratures with highs of 62 rising to upper 60s inland. :; INSIDE TODAY The M.arfn County courtroom thootout /fw JlfO'• • ago that le/ta judge. and thru otMr ~'°"' dead, n.ulted from a plan by rodkolt to /rte U.S. 'poUtkal pri1oner1,' .oc·. cordhtQ to . a San Fi'Cll'ldlco JJCJI*'. SH 1tory Page AS. . 1 ....... ~ Cll• .... QMllct o-"' .... *'k .. ............. ........... ........ ........ ~I 't it I I l•tlex All .............. M •• =c.-J ,.. ..... .... .. ..... ... ,. .. ........... At .. ~ ....... .. M ,....,. ... .. ....., M •• .......... M ... The Irvine Company-owned structure was part of a special protection provision of the city zoning for the area, with city ap· proval required before the struc· lure could be demolished. . However, the zoning or- . dinance, passed by the c_it.y coun- . cil May 27, does not go into effect until Thursday, after the end of a JO.day waiting period. The packing plant has not been used for several years, said Jrvine Company spokesman Jerry Collins, who described the aging structure as "a dJsaster area." The site, he said, has been a safety hazard and is plagued by vandals. Due to the condition or the building, be said, "it isn't worthwhile to guard it." The plant had been eyed by the city and North Irvine homeowners as a possible teen center or ·community recreation f ac:illty. But after obtaining Girl Arre8ted In Kidnaping ST. LOUIS CUPI) -Police ar- rated a 16-year-oW tlrl Sundl)' mpt In UM buneled ..,,_, U• tartloa·lddnapln1 of Mn. a.orso HeWn Jr., Wife ot a ._. ,...1. dent. The Cirl, who WU not klen· t!fled, waa placed IJl the c-..tody of juvenile a"thorltl• . esUmatn on the cost of bringing the bujlding up to safely codes, the idea was abandoned. The zoning ordinance, in part, includes this provision: "In ap· provine this plan, the city council recognizes the potentially signifi. cant historical values of the packing house facillUes and the two 80-year-old redwood trees in thevicinityofYaleandlrvine. '' However, the packing house bas not been designated a "his- torical $ite" in the city's gen~ral plan, according to Planning Director Claudette Donat~a. Demolition of the buildina. she said, should be ·complete by the endofSeptember. . HE SOLD BOA.T IN PILOT AD "An ad in the Daily Pilot really· does pay off. I eold my boat.•' Tbet '• the •w:Feu story told by the HunUnstoo Beach man who placed thla clu&lned ad in the l>all)t Pl lot: 18' GLASSPAR, wnsHP Evin.rude. No trlr. $7'15. PrlfC,1. XX1'•XXXX Jl you laav• a boat to sell, call "2·Sf11· It oaty t•kes a few 'watds in °" n1bt ~make a Hie. Aklftc u.e COelt. the rtcbt place ls the ~ U1tlike the rest of Irvine, which is under the control of the Irvine Company, the North Irvine area is held by a number of lan· (See ZONING, Page A2). Irvine Plans A Look a t Coastal Land The Irvine City Council will be looking toward the coast Tues- day night in a pair of actions that indicate city interest in the Irvine Company's 10.000 acres of unincorporated coastat land. The. council meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. in city ball, 4201 Campus Drive. The council plans to appoint a five-member citizen's committee which will review coastal com- mission plans for the Irvine Com- pany coast. Although not within the clty limits, the Irvine general plan takH in the coastal area . The Irvine Company coast is in the unincorporated area between Irvine, Newport Beach and Laguna .Beach. The committee wUl undertake a six-week study of the coastaJ commission plans and bow they dilfer from the Irvine eeneral plan. The review could become pert of an q(ftclat ell>' posit.ion on the ~tal comml11fon plans. 'Jbe eouncll also will vote on <See COASTAL, P ... AJ) JI Irvine Lad, 6, c Dead at ·Site By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Ott ... D•lly PlletSl.liff A double truck and trailer rig slammed into a Fountain Valley day school van carrying 12 persons at a rural intersection in Irvine this morning, killing one boy and injuring 11 others. · The shattering impact hurled the bus .in an arc through the intersection, s pewing pre-teenage child1~en ~utof doors and windows tot.he pave~ent. Coroner's deputies identified the dead child short- ly after his family was notified as John Ramming, 6, of of 3801 Parkview Lane, Irvine. Investigators said the boy was hurled bodily through a sh attering side window of the van at the mo- ment of impact and under the wheels of the truck as it s kidded through the intersection. The Ramming boy was confirmed dead at the scene beneath a wheel of the massive Sully-Miller Contracting Company gravel truck and trailer rig. Wreckage of the Rough Riders Day Camp van crashed nose down in a watery irrigation ditch at Jef- frey and Barranca roads, not far from El Toro Marin~ Corps Air Station. Names of the injured children from the day care facility at 16596 Redwood Circle in Fountain Valley were not releas.ed pending notification of their families. Investigators at the scene did coqfirm the bus con- tained youngsters aged six to 10 years old plus the 14- year-old junior counselor and the female driver iden- tified only as Carolyn A. Conners. · Truck driver J ames E. Bartley, 45, of Bell, was be- ing questioned at the scene by Irvine p<)lice and California Highway Patrol officers. <See COLLISION, Page A%) - I ( ...., ............... F~ding Plans: Face Trustees Trultff• of the Saddleb1ck Coilele Dlatrict tonight will ftlbt th• aecond round of battle on two cont.roveralal funding proposals: eatabllsbment of a day care center and tbe.hlrtn1 ol a basket· bell coach • Unue ruu.u me teachinf. THIS WAS SCENE THIS MORNING AT SITE OF FATAL CRASH -JEffRl!Y AND BARRANCA ROADI IN IRVINE Van Canylng Day Campen (left In ditch) Struck br Gravel Truck at Rural rntersedlon Both were rejected by a split vote ol the board ln May. Backen of the two propotals, however,· succeeded ln placing the items on tonl•ht'• 7:30 p,~- Board members have been at odds over the coach's Job because the administration ha$ requested the addition of a full~ Ume person rather than sbitling coacblna duties to an already· employed physical educaUon in· BU-uctor. Newsp aper Clai ... Fr•• Pflfle AJ A gents 'Protect e d A s ia Opi um Fields' CO L LISIO N :rhe injured were taken by ambulance relays from the dis· aster scene to both Santa Ana Community Hospital and Tustin Community Hospital. Some were · treated at the scene and en r oute by paramedics from Orange County's Red Hill Station and Laguna Hills. CHICAGO (UPI) -American authorities protected bill tribesmen in Southeast Asia and helped them market their opium, some of it destined for the United States as heroin, the Chicago Daily News reported today, quot- ing a veteran narcotics official. The narcotics official, who was not identified. said during his last 2 Physicia ns Say Placebo Still Need ed CHICAGO (UPI) -Bring back the placebo, two Boston physi- cians say in this week's issue of the Journal of the American , Medical Association. Calling the placebo effect "a neglected and berated asset of patient care ," the doctors, Herbert Benson and Mark Eps- tein, make their case for an aspect of medical practice that fell somewha t into disrepute dur- ing the 1950s. "The existence of the placebo effect in the treatment of a varie- t y of diseases is a well- subst antiated phe nomenon," the commentary said, "although it is unknown how much of the effect attributed to the placebo is in fact due to spontaneous changes in the diseasue process." They define the placebo as "any therape utic procedure ... which is given deliberately to have an effect. or unknowingly. has an effect on a patient, symptom, syndrome or disease, but which is objectively without specific activity for the condition being treated ... '• · In other words, a placebo is not necessarily a fake drug but also can include any number or pro- ced ur es, m ec h a ni cal or otherwise, to convince a patient his condition is improving. '~A meaningful doctor-patient interaction i s of ut most im- portance. allowing the transfer of the patient's concerns to an acknowledged scientist and healer, the physician," the arti- cle said. It said that physician&' who have faith in the efficacy of their treatments communicate that enthusiasm and tend to be suc- cessful in producing positive placebo ef(ects. Tuitio n Bid Upheld WASHINGTON <UPI) -The Supreme Court today upheld Jaws requiring university stu- dents to have lived in a state at least one year before qualifying for resident tuition rates. , ORANGE CX>AST DAILY PILOT Jack R. Curlev Vl<t Pl'nl•M eflf Gt-al IN- Thom 85 keevil ~Cllt ... n->mas A. Murphioe ........... .., Charlff H. Loos Rlch.1rd P. N•ll ~MMll IN,.......··-· Tele ..... (714) M2-41l1 Oeuttt• A4'vertlM"I .. 1·"71 ,..._. Velln-Olfke 511""11 ,,.,,,. a.. Cl•-4tJ.IUO (#\>r ... I , ttrt Or.., .. C-•t l'•t•IM"f ~ He _,.,...,.,.,, ollw r•-.. ,...,.,,.,., m•ll•' '' •fvert•~"""" ,..,.,., m•y .,. ft•rNM .... ,Miii -••I P•'"''•••tfl •' c~11111-r. k<.,.41 ci.u _,.,. ,..td .. GMt• INw, (.oll-Ul ~f',.....,by(.,r<Tt U ·-"IY ..,_11 ..... -"'''·"""''"''*'''"•'""'"*· ,,_,,.,, ~r in Southeast Asia he was told "he was not to interfere with the growing of the poppy nor was he to try and stop the farmers from selling r aw opium to narcotics dealers," the News reported in a copyrighted dispatch. The official said that early in his two-year assignment he was summone d t o Bangkok, Thailand, and was briefed on American "field" policy toward the hill tribes by various of- ficials, including representatives of the military, other natt0tics agents, members of American embassies in a ball dozen coun- tries and CIA agents. The agent's assignment was to locate the poppy fields in the lo- called golden triangle of Laos, Thailand and Burma where 70 percent of the world's opium used in the· m anulacture of heroin is grown. He said at the briefing he was shown a movie of "sever al Americans walking through a poppy field, picking the flower that produces-opium and smell· ing it ... Some of the people at the meet- ing were in the film. "I asked them if they had burned the poppy fi eld, they said, 'Oh, we can't do that'." The policy of making friends with the tribesmen so they could be a buffer against Communist expans ionis m and help in in - telligence gathering then was ex- plained to him, be said. The agent said State Depart- ment and intelligence officials told him his job of enforcement began at the "second level," after the farmer had sold his crop to a narcotics dealer. ZONING •.. downers. In an attempt to impose the degree of iand use planning t ypical of Irvine Company lands on the· separately held parcels, the city sponsored two land use plans for Northwood. Residents protested several parts of the plan and zone change which was approved by the city council last month. High on the list of residents' complaints was the plan for the intersection of Bryan and Yale Avenues. The two apartment de- velopments, ~ity park and com- mercial area planned for the four corners or that intersection, said the protester s, would lead to severe traffic congestion and possible safety hazards. The city council made several changes in an attempt to mollify the protesters. Among them was a change in the road s)'5tem de- signed to route traffic around, rather than through, the area. Feeling that the modifications made by the council were insuffi· cient, the r esid ents began circulating a petition to put the matter before voters. The scene at the isolated in· tersection surrounded by tomato fields bore stark testimony to the force of the 9 a.m. collision and the horror o( its aftermath as hysterical children dragged themselves, along the pavement trying to find help. Impact of the broadside crash of the tr uck, southbound on Barranca Roa d and the day camp van, heading down Jeffrey Road toward El Toro MCAS flung oe>en the van's rear doors. Children · packed elbow-to· elbow on three wooden pl8J'lk benches running the length of the van were hurled in all directions as the crumpled vehicle swerved off the pavement into the ditch. ' One bench was ripped from its moorings and lay in the road nearby, while other items in- dicated how the day had begun for the Rough Rider Day Camp enrollees. Near t he blanket-covered corpse beneath the massive truck wheel, lay a banana from somebody's lunch and one lone small blue tennis shoe. The dead boy's face was covered with a checked jacket. One truck wheel came to rest on top of a day camp staff mem- ber's printed manual, and the crumpled grill and s hattered right front fender of the big con- struction company truck showed the devastating force of the col- lision. Skid marks from the truck's wheels stretched nearly 100 feet up Barranca Road from the point of impact in the intersection. which is controlled by a two-way stop sign. Police cars, CHP autos, paramedic vans and Orange County Fire Department trucks -well over a dozen emergency vehicles -clogged the intersec- tion in which a canvas sheet had been unrolled to serve as a medical treatment center for the less serious ly injured victims. Police said most victims are believed to be Crom the Tustin- Santa Ana area with one youth possibly from Irvine. Emergency rooms at both hospitals began bracing for the infiux of the casualties when they received word of the number or victims injured. They included some victims believed to be in critical condition with multiple serious injuries, according to police. Fro ra P ageAI COASTAL ••. whether to take part in the $6,000 Laguna Greenbelt study. Irvine would contribute $1,000, Laguna Beach $1,000 and Orange County the rest. The s tudy team would de- termine the boundaries of the proposed greenbelt, how it would be acquired and maintained and what kinds of development could occur there. Nixon ·Quits Vote d Off Court Rolls WASHINGTON (UPI) -The U.S. Supreme Court, acting at the former president's request, today struck the name of ~ichard M. Nixon Crom its roll of attorneys admitted to practice there. The court's brief order said .. the motion of Richard M. Nixon of San Clemenfe, Calif., to resign as a member of the bar of t.b1s court is granted and it is or· dered that his name be stricken from the roll of at- torneys admitted to ptactice before the bar of this court.'' Justices William 0. Douglas and William H. Rehn· quist did not partJclpatt. In a letter dated June 10 to the court clerk from "La Casa Pacl!lca., in San CJemertte. Nixon said : "Not having pradlced law ror severalleara, and not intencllna to practice law ln the future, desire to and hereby resign from the bar of the Supreme Court of the United States, of which I am currently a member. Sin· cerely yours. Richard M. Nixon." During the time he was practicing law ln New York following hts def eat for governor of Calllornia, Nixon argued m the high court a major privacy case lnvolv· ing Life magazine . (. , Film Buffs Net Fwuls SAN DIEGO CAP> Two men sat through the movie, "Jaws," before robbing the theater or $13,000. An usher and a mov- iegoer were forced into a stockroom when the Fa~hion Valley Theater was nearly empty Sunday. Manager Ba rry Berlin's secr etary w as taken hostage but released in the building when the robbers fled . Tattoo Trend To Flowers On F e males "PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) "Death Before Dishonor" on the bulging bleeps or sailors is on the wane at Portland's only tattoo shop. Delicate nowers and but- terflies on women are in. Operators of the Portland Tat- too Studio say the number or their women customers has skyrocketed in the last five years, so that women now ac- count for half the studio's busi· ness. "Arld they're not the Rosie the Riveter type of gals," said store manager Howie Steinhart. •'They come from all walks of life. They a re young busi- nesswomen, secretaries, college students. "We recently had a mother and daughter who wanted the same tattoo on the upper shoulders of their backs. We even had in a grandmother and granddaughter for matching tattoos." In nearly all cases the women want their tattoos small, colorful and on parts of the body which generally are covered -inner thighs, breasts, backs and but- tocks. agenda for a second vote. ..._ Plana for the day care center are aiven " fighting chance because two of the seven trustees were mi11in1 when the vote was taken May 28. The $165,000 facility, which would provide student mothers . with a place to drop off their children while attending classes, was rejected because it would in- crease local taxes. Aa presently envisioned, the day care center would be operat- ed by the county Department of Education and staffed by four full-time teachers and four in- structional aides. Plans are to locate it on the southwest corner of the lower campus parkine lot and to open it with the beginning of the fall quarter in September. The proposal was turned down because it would have required a • 1.5-cent increaae in the college district's tax rate. At that time a majority or the board members felt a further tax increase was imprudent because the district's taxpayers faced a 30-cent increase to meet a pro- jected $16.1 million budget. As a result of recent budget sessions by board members the budget has been trimmed to $15 million with a consequent reduc- tion ol the projected tax rate from $1.03 to 94-cents. Trustees bounced the basket- ball coath pQSition on a 4.3 vote for several reasons, among them the cost and the fact that the col- lege does not yet have a gym- nasium. However, members or the col- lege administration are prepared to off er some new arguments to support the hiring or a basketball coach. Saddleback has been without a coach since early May when Roy Stevens resigned as coach to con- Yugoslav Blast NEW YORK (AP) -A bomb exploded early today outside the Yugoslav mission to the United Nations on Fifth Avenue, damag- ing the mission and two nearby apartment houses, police said. There were no reports of injuries. Victini Foi ls Rape Try A 28-year-old man from Mon- tebello, alleged to be an illegal alien, faces charges of assault with intent to commit rape today, follow~nJ a weekend incident in Balboa involving a victim who swings a mean whiskey bottle. Patrolm e n cruis ing the Peninsula before dawn Saturday said they heard a woman screaming in an alley near the 800 block of East Balboa Boulevard . When they Investigat- ed, they found the victim had fainted and th'e alleged suspect being subdued by witnesses. Later, they learned that the victim had been leaving a male friend's house at about 1:30 a.m. and was assertedly grabbed from behind by Manuel Mendez; Garcia, 28. She was carrying a full quart or whiskey and mixer in a paper sack and used the items to fend off her alleged attacker. Mendez w as treated for a minor face cut s uffered in the in- cident and then booked. F ro• Page AJ CIA .•. acti viti es th at cannot be justified, but that 80 to 90 percent of its activities have been •·absolutely essential." H would be "foolish and dangerous'' to abolish the agen- cy, Proxmire declared. Giancana, who also bad been expected to testify, was &hot to death in his home in a Chkago s uburb last week. Also expected to testily is William K. Harvey, a former CIA official who r eliable sources have said was involved in plots to kill Castro. Central Intelli gence Agency in· volvement in the slaying of Gian- cana has not been ruled out, ac- cording to Chicago police. • • Manners.gives you up to a s1,soo tax deduction this year. •• ... AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND AT MARINERS , W ITH "IRA" -THE INDIVIDUAL RE- TIREMENT ACCOUNT. Mariners lndlvldual Ret i rement Account la a personal tax-sheltered retirement plan. ''IRA" was devel· oped by Congress to give you an effective way to build your own retire- ment fund. You can save aa much as $1500 or 15% of your wages, whichever is less, and your savings will be a tax deduc- tion during your working years. If your spouse works, your combined tax-sheltered savings can be as much as $3000 per year .. Come In to Mariners and start your own Individual Retirement Account. You'll be -.evlng tax dollars now and bulldfng a much brighter future. For more Information, come In or call any one oJ our convenient loeatlons. HERE"S HOW FAST YOUR MONEY GROWS IN A MARINERS '"IRA•• ACCOUN r. lt1d1v1dva/ RtliremfHtl Accovt1ts •r• pr•Mnlly Nrnitlfl 7~% P•r yHr when placed 1n a 6·year ur11/1~t• Yovr a1111ve1 yield'' 1ncrH••d to a big 8 06"1. when interest 11 addH to tfltt •~111 b•lance and comoovnd~ d111ty W1t11 • muimvm lnolvldvel contribution ol Sl500 •ech yHr. here·s how your mo11t1y 1111111 grow· WITH TAX WITHOUT !)(T"A SHELTERED TAX 'MONIY IRA SHliL TEAED FROM TAX AFTE" PLAN PLAN DEFERRAL. 5 yrs. $ 9,510 6,730 $ 2,780 10 yrs. 23,540 15,750 7,190 20 yrs. 74,640 65,840 30,seo 30yrs. 185,550 95,030 90,520 "AboW flour .. .rt beMd on 25% lnco~ bracket. 'td•rel rtQulellOne rtQv•f9 111blt•nt1al pena111 .. lor Nrly wlllldrewalt from w111ic.1e toCOU11ta, .....,.,,. ai.ectl .... ,........ lepft• ...... IMll .... le••rty Hlll1 lee Ait .. '91 { CM.In Offk e) (hyt• ~enter) 310 Ole"neyre SL (Leltu,. World) tStS Weatcllff Or. 10,~ hya~Or. (714) •9•·7S06 lw.IOS.Olleochllvd. 310'o. leverly D~ (Opp.Mt. Slflol Ho'fHtoQ (213) 553.3000 8747 leverl~ llvd. • (714) 642·4000 (714) 642·4000 (OPENING $00N) (213) 591-76)6 (213)6S7-0 .. J I ' I l ) I ' ' · .• 7 I r I I I - t f I l . r VOL. 68, NO. 174, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A MONDAY, JUNE 23, 1975 'f.Et'4 CENTS Citizen . Ca.ves--Tunney • Ill !J From Wire Services WASHINGTON -Sen. John Tunney <D·Calll. ), said today duplicates of highly classified government computer files on priv.ate citizens may be stored in Ullilerground caves at a secret government complex in the Virginia mountains. Tunney said be understood duplicate files ranging from the ~ghlf. classified Defense Depart- ment s COINS computer system to files kept' by the Internal Revenue Service and the FBI are Agency Orders Cited From Wire Services WASHINGTON -Sen. Barry Goldwater said today that the Central Intelligence Agency "took orders from the top" in carrying out illegal activities. The Arizona Republican, a m e mber of the Senate In· telligence Committee, said the panel's investigation will show the CIA did not want to do some of the things it did but felt obliged to follow orders. Goldwater made the statement in the Senate as the committee arranged to call as a witness .. John Jtoselli, a West Coast un- derworld figure and associate of slain Chicago mobster Sam Gian- cana. in a reputed plot against Fidel Castro. Roselli, scheduled to appear Tuesday in response to a sub· poena, was expected to be quizzed about reports that he and Giancana were approached on behalf of the CIA to arrange for Mafia members to assassinate Castro. Sen. William Proxmire told Gold·w ate r it ought to be established who was responsible for CIA misdeeds. Goldwater replied that the CIA "has done a highly commendable job" but unfortunately is losing intelligence contacts in other countries because of what he called unwarranted assaults on the agency by the press and news media. Proxmire replied that "ex· posure of abuses by the press is constructive and useful." He said the CIA has engaged in activities that cannot be justified, but that 80 to 90 percent of its activities have been "absolutely essential." It would be "foolish and dangerous" to abolish the agen· cy, Proxmire declared. Giancana, who also bad been expected lo testify, was shot to de~th in his home in a Chicago suburb last week. Also expected to testify is William K . Harvey, a former CIA official who reliable sources have said was involved in plots to kill Castro. Central Intelligence Agency in· volvement in the slaying of Gian· cana has not been ruled out, ac· cording to Chic"ago police. ·:~~:a:··· We •tller Local drizzles Tuesday morning, according to the weather service. Partial clearing by afternoon in- land areas. Cooler tem- peratures with highs of 62 rising to upper 60s inland. INSIDE T ODA W · Tht M.ar i n County courtroom 1hootout five 1110r• • ago thal left. a Judge. and Ulru othn' ptrton.t dead, reftllted from o plan bJI radicolf to fret U.S. 'poUtlcol prltonnt, •. OC·. corchg to . o Son FranciM:o JJOPIT. ~' 1t0f'JI P.og1 AS. •••• stored at the Mt. Weather in- stallation, lO(ated about so miles from Washincton. Tunney made the allegations during his questioning of D. O. Cooke, deputy assistant secretary of Defense, during a joint meeting of the Judiciary subcommittee on constitutional rights and tbe Commerce sub- committee on science and technology. The hearing was called to investigate governmettt tiUrveillance technology. Cooke said he would check to • see whether there are duplicates of more than 100,000 files on in- dividuals gathered by the Army during the civil disorders of the late 1960s. Con.aress has been told these fUes were destroyed. 'Jbe system referred to by Tun· ney, COINS, ts designed to "ex-change classified and highly sensitive foreign intelligence data among the Defense In- telligence Agency,· National Secunty Agency and the Na- tional Photo Interpretation Center and within the Depart- • • ment of Defense," according to Cooke. . Mt. Weather is one of several underground complexes set up in the mounta ins around Washington to house key goverri· ment officials in case of foreign attack. Tunney said he fears that the duplicate files at Mt. Weather might be accessible to another computer terminal, as for exam- ple, one ~n by the White House. Defense Department officials said today that they have found no evidence that military in·· telllgence retained computerized files on civilians or that the gov· ernment created a vast elec· tronic network containing in· formation on millions of Americans. "We in the Department of Defense are not in and do not intend to get into the business of surveilling American citizens who have no affiliation with the department,'' Cooke said. Cooke was responding to al· legation s that military in· .. .. telligence retained civil cl#s· turbance rues ordered desp-oy~ in 1970 and 1971 and that the Defense Department was a key participant in a project desigaed lo interconnect government data .banks. ~ On June 13, the De'fenae Department sent a memoran- . dum to Congress saytna t.1\1(.it had found 9,200 docwneota in <iu files on the activities· of American citizens more thim four years after the records were supposed to have been destroyed. 1es m us I • P • O.lty P'llet $UH P!Mto ly lllctwu"4 KMlllff COLLISION WITH TRUCK· TRAILER RIG KILLS ONE, INJURES 11 IN IRVINE er.ah Occurred at Jeffrey and Barranca Roads In Irvine . New s paper Claim Agents 'Protected As~a OP.ium Fields ' ' CHICAGO (UPI) -America.n authorities protected hill tribesmen in Southeast. Asia and helped them market their opium, some of it destined for the United States as heroin, the Chicago Daily News r eported today, quot- ing a veteran narcotics official The narcotics official, who was O cea n View Volu n t eer Top Citizen Betty Nishikawa, an active parent volunteer in the Ocean View School District, was named Citizen of the Year by the Hunt· ington Beach HOME Council Saturday. But s he doesn't know it yet. School officials explained Mrs. Nishikawa was called out of town by the serious illness of her . mother· in-law in Lodi, and no one has been able to reach her. She was nominated for the award by the staff and Parent· Teacher Organization at Nueva View School, Ocean View's facill· ty for handicapped youngsters. Mrs. Nishikawa has been ac· tive at that school, where her daughter, Lauralee, 14, is a stu· dent, as well as at Golden View School, where her son, Stanton, is a student. Rose Ludwig, Nueva View principal, 1atd today Mrs. Nishikawa has been acti've in the schools since r;oon aft.er the f ami· \f moved to Huntington Beach five years aeo. Her husband, Ed· die, is an enaineer with McDon· neU Douglas. In their letter to the HOME Council, the PTO and starr descrilx \Mrs. Nishikawa as "a very special parent." A registered nurse, Mrs. not identified, said during his last tour in Southeast Asia he was told· "be was not to interfere with the growing of the poppy nor was he to try and stop the farmers from selling raw opium to narcotics dealers," the News reported in a copyrighted dispatch. The official said that early in his two-year assignment he was summoned to Bangkok , Thailand, and was briefed on American "field" policy toward the hill tribes by various of- ficials, including representatives of the military, other narcotics agents, members of American embassies in a half dozen coun- tries and CJA agents. The agent's assignment was to locate the poppy fields in the so- called golden triangle of Laos, Thailand and Burma where 70 percent of the world's opium used in the manufacture of heroin is grown. He said at the briefmg he was shown a movie of "several Americans wal~ing through a poppy field, picking the flower that produces opiµm and smell· ing1t." Some of the people at the meet· ing were in the film. "I asked them if they had burned the poppy field, they said, 'Oh. we can't do that·.'' (SeeOPIUM, Page.\%} HE SOl.D BOA.T IN P ILOT AD "An ad in the Daily Pilot really does pay ofC. I sold my boat." That's the su~cess story told by the Huntington Beach man who placed this classified ad ln the Dally Pilot: 16' GLASSPAR, wnsHP Evinrude. No trlr. $775. Prl pty. XJUMfXXX Be ach Council T ackles Fo ur Budget Items The Huntington Beach city Council will meet at 7 o'clock tonight to con~ider four matters dealing with next year 's $34 million budget. Council members will consider a resolution to increase weekend beach parking fees from $1 to $2 a day, as well as an ordinance hik· ing water rates by 22 percent - about 87 cents a month al a "typical" home. They also are expected to ap· prove formally the $16,000·a·year .. Man in Washington" lobbyist contract a nd a new gas station ordil)ance requiring m ore landscaping. The gas station ordinance was held up until council mem bers decided if they could hire sum- cient staff to enforce it. The budget was formally adopted last week .. A-blast Planned PAHUTE MESA. Nev. <UPI) -Anoth e r megaton.range nuclear device -the second in less than a week -will be de· tonaled Tuesday at the Nevada test site by scientists facing a possible treaty with Russia ban· ning such tests in the future. Irvine Lad, 6, Dead at Site By ARTIWR R. VINSEL Ot lM D~lly Pllet SUtf A double truck and trailer rig slammed into a Fountain Valley day school van carrying 12 persons at a rural intersection in Irvine this morning, killing one boy and injuring llothers. The shattering impact hurled the .bus in an arc through the intersection, s pewing pre-teenage chil~ren ~ut of doors and win~ows to t~e pa vell).ent. Coroner's deputies identified the dead child short- ly after his family was notified as John Ramming, 6, of of 3801 Parkview Lane, Irvine. Investigators said the boy was hurled bodily through a shattering side window of the van at the mo- ment of impact and under the wheels of the truck as it skidded through the intersection. The Ramming boy was confirmed dead at the scene beneath a wheel of the massive Slllty~Miller Contracting Company gravel truck and trailer rig. Wreckage of the Rough Riders Day Camp van crashed nose down in a watery irrigation ditch at Jef- frey and Barranca roads, not far from El Toro Marin~ Corps Air Station . Names of the injw·ed children from the day care facility at 16596 Redwood Circle in Fountain Valley were not r eleased pending notification of their families. Investigators at the scene did confirm the bus con- tained youngsters aged six to 10 years old plus the 14- year-old junior counselor and the female driver iden- tified only as Carolyn A. Conners. · · Truck driver J ames E. Bartley, 45,of Bell, was be· ing questioned at the scene by Irvine police and California Highway Patrol officers. The injured were taken by ambulance relays from the dis- aster scene to both Santa Ana Community Hospital and Tustin Community Hospital. Some we re treated at the scene artd en route. by paramedics from Orange County's Red Hill Station and Laguna Hills. Water Agency Favon Cocut PmverPlams The scene at the isolated in- tersection surrounded by tomato fields bore stark testimony to the force of the 9 a . m. collision and the horror of its aftermath as hysterical children dragged themselves along the pavement trying to find help. Impact of the broadside crash of the truck, southbound on Barranca Road and the day camp van, heading down J effrey Road toward El Toro MCAS flung open the van's rear doors. SACRA ME NTO CAP ) - Coastal power plants, long a target of environmental groups, are less harmful to water than power plants alongside inland lakes and streams, a state water agency says. Children -packed elbow·lo· elbow on three wooden plank benches running the length of the van were hurled in all directions as the crumpled vehicle swerved ·of! the pavement into the ditch. One bench was ripped from its moorings and Jay in the roa4 (See COLLISION, Page A%) Only when alternatives are "environmentally undesirable or economically unsound" sbo1.dd power plants be cooled by inland fr es h water, the Water Resources Control Board said Friday. The statement was opposed by utilities, which said the board should leave power plant siting to the state's new Energy Com- mission. It was supported by the Department of Fish and Game and the Sierra Club. ' ,. ................. Nllhlkawa hH been •ct.lve ln the PTO and helped llart tho 1cbool'1 BroWftles, Girl Scoutl, Cub Scout.a and Boy Scouts. (SeeCITIZEN, P .. eAl) If you have a boat to aell, call 6'2-5878. Jt only takC!S a few 'wo'tdl tn the rlgbt8lace to make a sale. Alont the rango Coast, the rl*hl place ls the Daily Pilot. COVERED BODY OF BOY WHO DIED IN CRASH UIS NEAR WHeELS OF TMJCI( ColNalon et Irvine lntenectlon Le•vn One DHd 81 lceM, Meny ,.,..._. 1 , .. • H/F Film IJU/I.• Net Fund. SAN DIEGO CAP) Two men sat through the movie, "Jaws," before robbine the theater of $13,000. An usher and a mov- iegoer were forced into a s tockroom wh e n the Fashion Valley Theater. was nearly empty Sunday. Manager Barry Berlin's. secr e tary was taken hostage but released in the- buildiog when the robbers fled. Vic ti~ ·Foils Rape Try A 28-year-old man from Mon- tebello, alleged to be an illegal alien, faces charges of assault with intent to com mil rape today. following a weekend incident in Balboa involving a victim who swings a mean whiskey bottle. Patrolm e n cruising the Peninsula before d3\\1l Saturday said they heard a woman screaming in an alley near the 800 block o f E as t Balboa Boulevard. When they in vestigat- ed, they found the victim had fainted and the alleged suspect being subdued by witnesses. Later, they learned that the victim had been leaving a male friend's house at about 1:30 a.m." 'and was assertedly grabbed kom behind by Manuel Mendez -Carcia, 28. · She was c;:irrying a full quart of whiskey and mixer in a paper sack and used the items to fend off her alleged attacker. Mendez was treated for a minor face cut suffered in the in- .:cident and then booked. U.S. Comrol Of Inlet Told WASHINGTON CUPI J -The Supreme Court ruled 6 to 2 today that the United Stat es, n ot Alaska, has full riithts to Lower Cook Inlet, including sale of oil leases which could bring over $1 billion in royalties. Alaska had claimed the inlet as a "historical inland bay," which is an exception to the general rule that the United States, under federal law, has claims to waters. beyond the three-mile limit. District Judge James A. Van Der Heydt ruled that Alaska could lay claim lo the lower inlet, which was the area in dispute, since it is s urrounded by Alaskan land. Fro•PageAJ OPIUM ••• The policy of making friends with the tribesmen so they could be a buffer against Communist expansionism and help in in- telligence gathering then was ex- plained to him. he said. The agent said State Depart- ment and intelligence officials told him his job of enforcement began at the "second level." after the farmer had sold his crop to a narcotics dealer. 5 Jore Die BELFAST, Northern Ireland CAP) -Northern Ireland's civil war has taken the lives of five more men, two Protestants and three Roman Catholics. ORANGE COAST HtF DAILY PILOT Robert N We('(1 Prf''\•~nt AM P\lbt•~,. Jack R. Curley Viet Pr .. ra11t eN! 0.n•,,•I Mf,..Ot, Thomas Keevil ldllOf' Thomas A. Murphlne ,,,_.MOl~ldHor Charles H. Loos Rk hard P. Nall 11•~1•-llMNt1"91"'10<• Terry Covllle Wlf•• Or ..... C-y IOI tor HIMU...._ .. ach 6tttce t"1J .. 8Cll hvl<l•M• Mlttt,.. ~·· ~ o .... "'".,.... TeffffteM (7 14l '42 .. S2t · Onlffled Advertltlftt ... 2-5611 ,,,_ Nwtll Of•-C•vMY ~ti.t $40.1220 C..,,rltllt, t'7J Oran,. (H •I ~11•ll•lllftt ~· NOMWS-~ 111.ntr~-. H 1l.,-lll "'•"" ., ·····"""'""" ,,.,.," .... ., '"' r~H~•• •""""' rr• er ,,.,,.,, .. ,.., or _.,.,._,, $9COM < 1 .. ~ "'' ... O••• •t Cett• M•W, • (All-ftlt> ~ .. -, ..... .,.,,.,,lffU•-M.,; by N II ... 00 "'°""""; """\.frrd!Mllll•t._ ~l 00 • -"'· ' \ D•ll• Pllol PMt• ltY LH ,..,,,.. llp, llp and •••• Huntington Beach Mayor Norma Gibbs (waving>. and hi~h school board President Ron Shenkman take off m hot air ba lloon as part of promotion for opening of a new savings and loan office in the city. They took off with pilot Portis Wooley at 8:30 this morning, landing an hour later in a bean field. Ladies Decorating Skin With Tattoos PORTLAND. Ore. (AP J "Death Before Dishonor'' on the bulging biceps of sailors is on the wane at Portland's onl y tattoo shop. Delicate flowers and but- ter;flies on women ar e in .. Operators of the Portland Tal· too Studio say the number of their wome:n customers h as skyrocketed in the last five years, so that women now ac- count for half the studio's bu~1 - ness. "And they're not the Rosie the Riveter lYP': of gals," said store Fro• Page Al CITIZEN ... She also h as served as a kader. ··when others were lc;:idcrs and couldn't take a meeting, Bet- ty was on the spot and took over ·for them," the letter read. Sh~ also purchases and cooks lunch each Friday for the 40 to GO .~tudents and works at the fad li ly almost daily. .. It is hard to estimate the number of ho urs Betty has spent at our schools," the letter con- tinued. "She has done more than any 10 people put together to improve the quality of life for our children ." Her name will be engraved on the council 's perpetual trophy, on display at the Huntington Beach Central Library. It's a Bfke Tree manager Howie Steinhart. "They come from all walks of life. They arc young busi- nesswomen, secretaries, college students. "We recently had a mother and daughter who wanted the same tattoo on the upper shoulders of their backs. We even had in a grandmother and granddaughter fo rm atching tattoos." loivan Leads Campaign for Dirty Movies BURLINGTON, Iowa <UPI> - ''Mickey Mouse for Kids -Linda Lovelace for Adults" says one sign planted in the yard of a 26· year old Burlington factory worker. Another sign in the same yard says, "Happiness Is Having an X-Rated Movie House." The signs were erected by Bill Mosher, who is staging a cam- paign to counter a petition drive by a local church ·youth group against the establishment of an adult "X-r ated" movie theater here. The Burlington City Council has begun work on an obscenity ordinance which would kill plans • for the adult theater adjoining a downtown youth center, and Mosher fears the church opposi- tion will prompt the council to pass the measure. Ma rsha Gluterrez prepares to remove her bicycle from "bike tree" in downtown Eugene, Ore. Sunday. The "tree" is made from hand-bent steel and welded together to provide storage !or six to 10 bikes. The. "tree" is an invenUon· of Tom Bonfietti and Ed Segcn who cycled to Oregon from their home in Santa Cl.ata. COL;LISION nuny, Willie Otber items l.n: dlc9&.td bOw the day bad bepD for the Roufb Rider Day Camp enrollee.. Near the blanket-covered ~rp .. beneath th• muaivetruck wheel, lay a bJtnana from 10mebody's lunch and one lone small blue tenn!a shoe. Tbe dead boy's lace was covered with a checked Jacket. One truck wheel came to rest on top of a day camp staff mem- ber's printed manual, and the crumpled trill and 1hattered right front lender o! the bit con- struction company truck showed the devastating force of the col- lision. Skid marks from the truck's wheels 1tretched nearly 100 feet up Barranca Road from the point of impact in the lnt~on. which ia controlled by a two-way stopslfn. Police cars, CHP autos, paramedic val)S and Orange County Fire Department trucks -well over a dozen emertency vehicles -clogged the intersec- tion in which a canvas sheet had been unrolled lo serve as a medical treatment center for the Jess seriously injured victims. Police said most victims are believed to be from the Tustin- Santa Ana area with one youth possibly from Irvine. Emergency rooms at both hospitals began bracin'g for the influx of the casualties when they received word of the number of victims injured. They included some victims believed to be in critical condition with multiple serious injuries, according to police. Police Trame Bureau Sgt. Cliff McBride aald later that eight vic- tims, all children, had been taken to Santa Ana Community Hospital; the remainder to Tustin. Examination of injuries, X· rays and other procedures were continuine throughout the day but Sgt. McBride said at least three children bad been admitted to the Santa Ana facility in fair condition. Confusion surrounded efforts to determine exactly how many youngsters were involved and who they were. Investigators found a series of day camp identification cards on a loose-leaf binder ring inside the shattered van which lay at a 45- degree angle in the watery ditch. Checking of the listed names, however, revealed that some belonged to children who ap- parently badn 't been picked up at their homes yet when the acci- dent occurred. Drug Suspect Reid HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -A sus- pected drug dealer was arrested and numerous bottles o! illegal ll· quid drugs and n~arly 9,~ pills were confiscated m a raid Sun- day by police ·narcotics officers. Richard Street , 24, was arrested following an alleged shooting in· cident at his apartment. HONORED FOR SERVICE New City Ptenner She• Golden Deed Award Given To Prim Shea Prim Shea has been awarded the Book of Golden Deeds award by the Huntington Beach Ex- change Club. She was honored for her service lo the community,· particularly volunteer efforts in forming Neighborhood Watch, a crime prevention protram pro· moted by the Exchange Club and the Huntineton Beach Police Department. She was appointed last week lo the city Planning Commiuion. Now the owner of a business in downtown Huntington Beach, the native of Australip formerly was a model, singer, stage performer and journalist. She also served in Australia as protocol o!ficer in the embassy of Uruguay before coming to this country. Mrs. Shea has been on the steering committee for city goals and objectives, vice president of the Seacliff-Homeowners As- sociation, vice chairman of Rotary Anns, and board member for the Huntington Beach Free ,Clinic and Downtown Merchants Guild. She is married to Jerry Shea, attorney for the Huntington Beach Company. They have five children. 'Open Convention' BURLlNGAME CUPI) - Directors of the California Republican Assembly have called for an open national con· vention and neuttality on the part of state party officials. The quarterly meeting of the CRA leaders Sunday said GOP s uc- cess "demands that we be re· cognized as an open party, responsive to the will and de- mands o f a ll registered Republicans." I J CIUCAGO CUPU -Bring back the pJaoebo, two Boston physl· clans HY in this week'• issue or the Journal of tho American Medical A11oclation. Calling the placebo ertect "a neglected and berated asset of patient care," the doctors, Herbert Benson and Mark Eps- tein make their case for an. as~ct o! medical practice that fell somewhat. into disrepute dur- ine the 1950s. "The existence of the placebo efrect. in the treatment of a varie- l Y of di seases is a well· substantiated phendmenon,., ~e commentary said, "although it 1s unknown bow much of the effect attributed to the placebo is in la~ due to spontaneous changes m thediseasu·e process." They define the placebo as "any therapeutic p~ocedure ..• which is given deliberately lo have an effect, 'Of unknowingly. has an effect on a patient, symptom, syndrome or disease, but which is objectively without specific activity for the condition being treated ... " In other words, a placebo is not necessarily a Cake drug but also can include any number of pro- cedures, mechanical or otherwise, to convince a patient his condition is improving. "A meaningful doctor-patient interaction is of utmost im· portance, allowing the transfer of the patient's concerns to an acknowledged scientist and healer, the physician," the arti- cle said. It said that physicians who have faith in the efficacy of their treatments communicate that enthusiasm and tend to be suc- cessful in producing positive placebo effects. Trustees Call Budget Meets Special budget study sessions have been called this week by two elementary school boards. The Huntington Beach City School Bo ard will meet at 7 o'clock tonight· at Dwyer School to discuss next year's rinances. Fountain Valley trustees will meet at 7:30 Thursday night at district offices to hear public sug ~ gestions about their budget fo~ next year. .Tuition Bid Upheld WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court today upheld laws requiring university stu- dents lo have lived in a state at least one year before qualifying for resident tuition rates. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-- • • Mariners g ves you up to a s1,so tax deduction thiS year. •• ... AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND AT MARINERS, WITH "IRA" -THE INDIVIDUAL RE- TIREMENT ACCOUNT. Mari ners Ind lvldual Retirement Account Is a personal tax-sheltered retirement plan. "IRA" was devel- oped by Congress to give you an effective way to build your own retire- ment fund. You can save as much as $1500 or 15 % of your wages, whichever is less, and your savings will be a tax deduc- tion during your working years. If your spouse works, your combined tax-sheltered savings can be as much as $3000 per year. Come In to Mariners and start your own Individual Retirement Account. You'll be saving tax dollars now and building A much brighter future. For more Information, come In or call any one of our convenient locations. HERE'S HOW FAST VOUR MONEY GROWS IN A MARINERS "IRA " ,t.CCOUNT. l1tdlvldu1I Retirement Accounts ere presently H rning 1~ % per ~' wfle11 pieced in e 6·yHr e91tlllc.te. Vour enrtutl yield is lncrHsed to a big 8 05•,. whM Interest is tdd«J to th• occou111 b1/1nc. end compoundttd dtily. With 1 m11tlmum 111olvldu.I COlllrlbutlon of $t500 each y11r, here's liow your "'oner will grow: WITH TAX WITHQUT EXT"A IHELTERED TAX MONEY IRA IHl!LTUED F"OMTAX Al'n" '\.AN ,LAN Dl"~""AL. 6 yra. s 9,510 e,730 $ 2,780 10yra. 23.540 1!5,7SO 7,790 20 yra. 74,640 65,840 30,660 30 yrs. 165,560 95,030 90,520 •Abc>Y* llgur" are t>aHd on 2'% '"'°"'• bfKllet. Feaoral r90ulatlollt ,.quirt tubltentltt f*ll ltt" IOf Nrly wlthd••walt from ctr11fleatt .ecoun11 I• " , ll ....,.,. ... " (Moln Offk•) • UIS W•ttcllff o,. (114) .. 24000. ' l9'A...-i.o (Opp.Mt. $inol Hotpltol) 1141 leverly llvd. 12·~~ .. , ... ,, ' J I I l I { I ' J r f ' I , I 'I I • • •• • l 'I d c )l '\I ' id Ji n t4 ]:; G c ,, Ci rr lE p; tl: of t<l in aJ Jc de sl c; F T1 P• qc G be .M ·c: G es f o "I jo in cc c~ th m pc co 84 ju of .. , c da ~y ex de SU W: ol. )la ~J t VO ca co • .. . O~a•ge CO.St EDITION VOL. 68, NO. 174, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A MONDAY, JUNE 23, 1975 . . T..aay'•C:l .. hiC .Y.Steeks N/C TEN CENTS Citizen I I f • j Frem Wll'eServlces Dossiers • ID. Caves--Tunney WASHINGTON -Sen. John Tunney <D·Calif. >, said today duplicates of highly classified covernment computer mes on priv.ate citizens maf be stored in Underground caves at a secret government complex in the Virginia mountains. Tunney said he understood dUplicate files ranging from tbe hilhlr. classified Defense Depart-ment s COINS computer system to files kept by the Internal Revenue Service and the FBI are stored at the Mt. Weather in· staliation. located about so rnJJes from Washingtott. Tunney made the allegations during bis questioning of D. 0 . Cooke , deputy assistant secretary of Defense. during a joint meeting of the Judiciary subcommittee on constitutional rights and the Commerce sub- comm it tee on scien ce and technology. The hearing was called t-0 investigate government surveillance technology.· Cooke said be would check to • see whether there are duplicates or more than 100,000 rues on in· divlduals gathered by the Army during the civil 'disorders or the late 1960s. Congress has been told these files were destroyed. The system ref erred to by Tun· ney, COINS, is designed to "ex- change classified and highly sensitive foreign intelligence data among the Defense In- telligence Agency, National Security Agency and the Na- tional Photo Interpretation Center and within the Depart- • ment of Defense," according to Cooke. . Mt. Weather is one of several underground complexes set up in ·t be mount ains around Washington to house key govern- ment officials in case of foreign attack. Tunn.ey said he fears that the duplicate files at Mt. Weather might be accessible to another computer terminal, as for exam- ple, one run by the White House. Defense Department officials said today that they have found no evidence that military in- telligence retained computerized files on civilians or that the gov- ernment created a vast elec- tronic network containing in· formation on millions of Americans. "We in the Department of Defense are not in and do not intend to get into the business of surveilling American citizens who have no affiliation with the department,'' Cooke said. Cooke was responding to al- legations that military in· telligence retained civil dis· turbance files ordered destroyed in 1970 and 1971 and th~l the Defense Department was a key participant in a project designed to interconnect government data banks. · On June 13, t h'e Defense Department sent a memoran· dum to Congress saying that it had found 9,200 documents in its fil es on the activities of American citizens more than four years arter the records were supposed to have bee~ destroyed. Ies m us __ ras Agency Orders Cited From Wire Services WASHINGTON -Sen. Barry Goldwater said today that the Central Intelligence Agency "took orders from the top" in carrying out illegal activities. The Arizona Republican, a member or the Senate In- telligence Committee, said the panel's investigation will show the CIA did not want to do some of the things it did but felt obliged to follow orders. Goldwater made the statement in the Senate as the committee arranged to call as a witness John Roselli, a West Coast un- derworld figure and associate of slain Chicago mobster Sam Gian- cana in a reputed plot against Fidel Castro. Roselli, scheduled to appear Tuesday in response to a sub- poena, was expected to be quizzed about reports that he and Giancana were approached on behalf of the CIA to arrange for ·Malia members to assassinate ·Castro. Sen. William Proxmire told. Goldwater it ought to be established who was responsible !or CIA misdeeds. Goldwater replied that the CIA "has done a highly commendable job" but unfortunately is losing intelligence contacts in other countries because of what he called unwarranted assaults on the agency by the press and news media. Proxmire replied that "ex- posure of abuses by the press is constructive and useful." He said the CIA has engaged in activities that cannot be justified, but that 80 to 90 percent or its activities have been "absolutely essential." It would be "foolis h and dangerous" to abolish the agen- ~y. Proxmire declared. Giancana, who also had been expected to testify, was shot to death in his home in a Chicago suburb last week. Also expected to testify is William K . Harvey, a former CIA official who reliable sources )lave said was involved in plots to ~ill Castro. Central Intelligence Agency in- volvement in the slaying or Gian- cana has not been ruled out, ac· cording to Chicago police. Or:•.·(:a:••C Weatiaer Local drizzles Tuesday morning, according to the weather service. Partial clearing by afternoon in· land areas. Cooler tem· peratures witb highs of 62 risirir to upper 60s inland. INS.DE TODAY Thi Marin Countt1 courtroom ahootout /fw ~rs . • thot I.ft. a j1'dge and three other pnton• dead, rerultal f rt1m a pion bt1 rodicall to free U.S. 'poUtical prlaonn-1,'.oc·. cordin(I to . a Son FranciM:o ~· Sec 1tof11 Page AS. ..... Atl•...... .. All...._.. .. .,.. .... A1~ Al Or-..~Y -t ..... ..... .,.t aa...,.. ",."· N .......... At M ,._,..... M M ,_....,. M IM-•• At........... A• • D.ily "ltil SUH ...... ly !tic.MN 1e.-1er COLLISION·WITH TRUCK·TRAILER RIG KILLS ONE, INJURES 11 IN IRVINE Crash Occurred at Jeffrey aod Barranca Roads This Morning COVERED BODY OF BOY WHO DIED IN CRASH LIES NEAR WHEELS OF TRUCK Collfslon at lrvlne Intersection Leaves One Dead at Scene, Many Injured ... .., .......... ,...... TRUCK DRIVER JAIRI E. BARTLEY INTERYllWID BY MIGHWAY PATROL Ol'l'ICER Ht• Ng Colkled With Van FUii of Chlldren Ill l...,...Jon In lrvlne • Irvine Lad, 6, Dead at Site By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of Ille D;ally Pllol 5'MI A double truck and trailer rig slammed into a Fountain \Talley day school van carrying 12 persons at a rural intersection in Irvine this morning, killing one boy and injuring llothers. ' The s hattering impe1ct hurled the bus in an arc through the intersection. spewing pre-teenage children out of doors and windows to the pavement. Coroner's deputies identified the dead child short- ly after his family was notified as John Ramming, 6, of of 3801 Parkview La ne, Irvine. Investige1tors said the boy was hurled bodily through a shatteti ng side window of the van at the mo- ment of impact and under the wh eels of the truck as it • skidded through the intersection. · The Ramming boy was confirmed dead at the scene beneath a wheel of the massive Sully-Miller Contracting Company gravel truck and trailer rig. Wreckage of the Rough Riders Day Camp van crashed nose down in a watery irrigation ditch at Jef· frey and Barrance1 roads, not far from El Toro Matin~ Corps Air Station. Names of the injured children from the day care facility at 16596 Redwood Circle in Fountain Valley were not released pending notification of their families. Investigators at the scene did confirm the bus con- tained youngsters aged six to 10 year s old plus the 14· year-old junior counselor and the female 41iver iden· tified only as Carolyn A. Conners. · · Truck drive r James E. Bartley. 45, of Bell, was be· ·ing questioned at the scene by Irvine police and California Highway Patrol officers. \ <See COLLISION, Page A2} . Newspaper Claim Agents 'Protected Asia Opium Fields' CHICAGO (UPI) -American authorities protected hill tribesmen in Southeast Asia and helped them market their opium, some or it destined for the United States as heroin, the Chicago Daily News reported today, quot- ing a veteran narcotics official. The natcotics official, who was not identified, said .during his last tour in Southeast Asia he was told ''he was not to interfere with the growing or the poppy nor was he to try and stop the farmers from selling raw opium to narcotics dealers," the News reported in a copyrighted dispatch. The official said that early in his two.year assignment he was s ummoned to Bangkok , Thailand, and was briefed on American "field" policy toward the bill tribes by various of· ficials, including representatives of the military, other narcotics agents, members of American embassies in a half dozen coun- tries and CIA agents. The agent's assignment was to locate the poppy fields in the so- called golden triangle ol Laos, Thailand and Burma where 70 ' percent of the world's opium used in the ·manufacture of heroin is grown. Tuition Bid Upheld WASHINGTON (UPU -The Supreme Court today upheld law1 requiring university stu· den.ts to have lived in a state at least one year before qualifying tor resident tuition rates. He said at the briefing be· was s hown a movie of "several Americans walking through a poppy field, picking the flower that produces opium and smell- ing it." Some of the people at the m~t­ ing were in the film . "I asked them if they had • burned the poppy field, they said, 'Oh, we can't do that'." The policy of making friends with the tribesmen so they could be a buffer against Communist expansionism and help in in- telligence gathering then was ex- plained to him, he said. The agent said State Depart- ment and intelligence officials told him his job of enforcement began at the "second level," after the farmer had sold his crop to a narcotics dealer. SI'OCKS MOVE AHEAD AGAIN NEW YORK (UPI) Overcoming earlier coocerns tbe Federal Reserve Board would force interest rates higher, the stock market pushed higher to- day inf airly active trading on the. New York Stock Exc~e. Tbe Dow Jones inCJustriat average, off more than four points at the outset. gained 9.39 potnts to 864.83. Il galned 10.09 points Friday. Advances led declines, 3·2, (tables, A9). Prices were higher ln moderate trading on tbe American Stock Exchange. JI OM. V PILOT N /C It's a Bike Tree COLLISION Tbe lftjved were taken by ambWuee Nla)'a from the clii· utw acne to both Sula Ana Community Hotpital and Tultln Community Hospital. Somo were ·treated at the scene and en route by paramedics from Oranco County's Red Hill Station And . Laguna Hills. The scene at the isolated in- tersection surrounded by tomato fields bore stark testimony lo tile force of the 9 a .m. collision and the horror ot its' aftermath as hysterical children dragged themselves along the pavement trying lo find belp. Impact of the brQadside craah of the truck, southbound on Barranca Road and tb·e day camp van, heading down Jeffrey Road toward El Toro MCAS flung openthevao'sreardoors. Children· picked elbow-to· elbow on three wooden plank benches running the length of the· van were hurled in all directions as the ~mpled vehicle-swerved ·off the pavement into the ditch. One bench was ripped from its moorings and lay in the road nearby, while other items in- dicated how the day had begun for the Rough Rider Day Camp enrollees. Marsha Giuterrez prepares to remove her bicycle from .. bike tree" in downtown Eugene, Ore: Sunday. The ··tree" is m ade from hand-bent steel and welded together to provide storage for six to 10 bikes. The ··tree" is an invention of Tom .Bonfietti and Ed Segen who cycled to Oregon from their home in Santa Clara. Near the blanket-covered corpse beneath the massive truck wheel, lay a banana from somebody's lunch and one lone . small blue tennis shoe. The dead boy's face was covered with a checked jacket. One truck wheel came to rest on top of a day camp staff mem· ber's printed manual, and the crumpled grill and shattered right front fender of the big con- struction company truck showed the devastating force of the col· llsion. Cigarette Blamed 'P or 3-car Crash Skid marks from the truck's wheels stretched nearly 100 feet up Barranca Road from the point of impact in the intersection, which is-controlled by a two-way stop sign. A Santa Ana Heights woman destroyed her car, one parked auto and damaged a third vehicle ,Sunday when she reached to ext· lnguish a cigarette while driving, ,Costa Mesa police reported. Officers said the driver was 'Judy R . Buffin, 30, of 20432 Santa Ana Ave. Investigators indicated she accidentally veered off Mesa Drive at Oranf!e Avenue as a re· s uit or turnin_g the s teering wheel while reaching for the ash tray in her car. Her late model sedan and one parked car involved in the 1 a.m. chain·reaction collision were destroyed while the third parked car sustained moderate damage, police said. She also suffered facial lacera- tions in the crash which sent her car spinning in a 180 degree arc and coming to rest facing in the opposite direction from which she was driving. Water Agency .i Favors Coast PowerPlams SACRA MENTO (AP) - Coastal power plants, long a target of environmental groups, are less h armful lo water than power plants alongside inland .. lakes and streams, a state water &1gency says. Only when alternatives are "environmentally undesirable or economically unsound'' should power plants be cooled by inland. fresh water, th e Waler Resources Control Board said Friday. ';l'he statement was opposed by u~ties, which said the board should leave power plant siting to the s tate's new Energy Com: mission. It was supported by the Department of Fish and Game .1Uld the Sierra Club. ' ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed ,., .. 1oem end ""''".,,.. Jack R. Curley Vi<e l'Pnl•11t •nd G4-•l INM91f Thomas Keevll IJOltOt Thomas A. Murptilne IMMtlnta4HW s Charles H. Loos Richard P. Nell Jnth tent -n•OlflO l:Oit•,. OffiCH c..i. AMw. llO-•I a.\'Mnfl Ht--1 .. «111 >llH••-1-"ef11 ~8 ... <ll,ll .. ~,..14'"1 HvMlnofM k<Kll 11t1S le«lt ......... ,. ~""-<' Vell•f: 2~1 I.I ""I,__ el S.11 o...-,,_.., "' TelepMM (7'4)642 ... J21 • C&nllf .... AdvertlM .. M2·5'71 ,,._.._,v.1 .. ,.....,,oinc.e . 511-6310 f-S-C••--49J.06ll Doctors treated Mrs. Buffin at Hoag Memorial Hospital and r e· leased her following emergency care. Woman Foils Would-he Rape Suspect A 28-year-old man from Mon· tebello, alleged to be an illegal alien, faces charges or assault with intent to com mil rape today, following a weekend incident in Balboa involving a victim who swings a mean whiskey bottle. Patrolmen cruising the Peninsula before dawn Saturday s aid they heard a woman screaming in an alley near the 800 block of Eas t Balboa Boulevard. When they investigat· ed, they found the victim had fainted and the alleged suspect being subdued by witnesses. Later. they learned that the victim had been leaving a male friend's house at about 1:30 a.m. and was assertedly grabbed from behind by Manuel Mendez Garcia, 28. · She was carrying a full quart or whiskey and mixer in a paper sack and used the items to fend off her alleged attacker. Mendez was treated for a minor face cut suffered in the in· cident and then booked. Guard Held On Arson Rap A 19-year-old security guard from Costa Mesa alleged to be miffed at being rejected by a. Newport Beach woman was ar· rested on suspicion of arson Sun· day after be assertedly set fire t.o a fence and trees at her home. Police arrested Peter Hugh Brown, 249 Sherwood St. not long after firemen extinguished the $600 blaze at the home at 1638 Anita Lane at about 1:40 a.m. The house is owned by Charles B. Montgomery. Police cars, CHP autos, paramedic vans and Orange County Fire Department trucks -well over a dozen emergency vehicles -clogged the intersec· lion in which a canvas sheet had been unrolled to serve as a medical treatment center for the less seriously injured victims. Police said most victims are believed to be from the Tustin· Santa Ana area with one youth possibly from Irvine. Emergency rooms at both hospitals began bracing for the influx of the casualties when they received word of tbe number of victims injured. They included so~ victims believed lo be in critical condition with multiple serious injuries, according to police. Police Traffic Bureau Sgt. Cliff McBride said later that eight vie· ti ms. all childr en, had been taken to Santa Ana Community Hospital; the remainder to Tustin. Examination of injuries, X · rays and other procedures were continuing throughout the day but Sgt .. McBride said at least three children had been admitted to the Santa Ana facility in fair condition. Confusion surrounded efforts lo determine exactly how many youngsters were involved-and who they were. Investigators found a series or day camp identification cards on a loose-leaf binder ring inside the shattered van which lay at a 45- degree angle in the watery ditch. Checking of the listed names, however, revealed that some belonged to children who ap. parenUy hadn't been picked up at their homes yet when the acci· dent occurred. 'Open Convention' BURLINGAME (UPI ) - . Directors of the California Republican Assembly have called for an open national con- vention add neutrality on the part of state party officials. The quarterly meeting of the CRA leaders Sunday said GOP suc- cess "demands that we be re· cognized as an open party, responsive to the will and de- mands of all registered Republicans." Nixon Quits Voted Off Court Rolls WASHINGTON (UPI) -.The U.S. Supreme Court, acting at the former president's request, today struck the name of Richard M. Nixon from its roll of attorneys admitted to r.racticethere. The court s brief order said ••the motion of Richard M. Nixon of San Clemente, Calif., to resip as a · member of the bar of this court ls grllf\ted and it is or- dered that his name be stricken from the roll of at- torneys admitted to practice before the bar ot this court." ' . Justices William 0. Douglas and William H. Rehn~ qui st did not participate. In a Jetter dated June 10 to the court clerk from .. La Casa Pacifica•• in San Clemente, Nixon said: "Not having practiced law for several years, and not intending to practice law in the future, I desire to and hereby resl•n from the baroftheSupremeCourtoftbe United States of which Jam c~Uy a member. Sin· cereJy yours, Richard M. Nlmn.' · During the time be was pracUclnS law in New York following bls defeat for governor of California •. Nixon argued in the hifh court a major privacy case involv· ing Life magazine. OlltoS~ Corona del Mar High School junior Kathy Schweitzer, 16, leaves Wednesday for a 10-week stay in Sweden as a representative of the Youth for Understanding- Americans A broad pro- gram. She is · the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Schweitzer of Newport. Beach. Kantaeng Mistrial Declared NORWALK (AP) -A mistrial was declared today in the rape. revenge murder trial of Deborah Joy Kantaeng. Norwalk Superior Court Judge Beach Vasey declared the mis· trial because of the publicity sur· rounding the s uicide last week of the defendant's father, Robert Boyd, 45, of Bellflower. Boyd wns to have been a key witness at the Superior Court trial. . Jury selection was to have started today in tbe trial of Mrs. Kantaen~. a 19·year-old divorcee charged with the October 1974r shotgun murder of a man she said raped her the night _before the murder. Boyd was found dead of an ap- parent drug overdose in a Long Beach motel room Tuesday. Vasey had postponed jury selection after the suicide because of the distraught condi- tion of the def end ant. The judge ordered a new trial to begin July 23 and excused jurors already selected for the first trial. : Mrs. Kantaeng is accused of murdering Danny C. Allen, 21, of Santa Ana, at her family home in Long Beach. ~ · She contends that Al n raped her at an Orange Coun park after picking her up at a shopping center where she worked. 2Doctors Advise ' Placebo CJUCAGO (UPU -Brin• back the placebo, two Boston phyal· clanB say in thit week's lasue of the Journal of tbe American M.cllcal Au~laUon. Calling the placebo effect ... neglected and berated asset of patient care," the doctors, Herbert Benson and Mark Eps- tein, make their cue for an aspect of medical practice that tell somewhat into disrepute dur· ingthe 19501. "The existence of the placebo etf ect in the treatment ol a varie· t y of d la e as es is a we 11 - substantiated phenomenon," the commentary said, "althouah It ls unknown bow much of tbe effect attributed to the placeboil ln fact due lo sJ>Onlaneous chaniea in thediseasue proce11." They deline the placebo as "any therapeutic procedure ... which is given deliberately lo have an effed, or unknowingly. ·has an effect on a patient, symptom, syndrome or disease, but w))ich is objectively without specific activity for the condition being treated ... " In other words, a placebo is not necessarily a fake drug but also can include any number of pro· cedures. mechanical or otherwise, to convince a patient his condition is improving. "A meaningful doctor-patient interaction is of utmost im· portance, allowing the trans! er of the patient's concerns to an acknowledged scientist and healer, the physician," the arti- clesaid. · Mo tor cycle Hits Sign;. P air Inj ured Two Anaheim men driving a three.wheeled motorcycle sur- f ered serious injuries Sunday af- ternoon when they missed a curve and the vehicle slammed into a welcome sign to Newport. Center. Police traffic investigator Steve Van Horn said that the most seriously injured was Ter- rence Gayle Butterfield, 21, who suffered severe face and scalp cuts and other injuries in the 3: 30 p.m. mishap. The passenger on the cycle, Robert George Molina, also of Anaheim, suffered a broken wrist and other hurts. Both were taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital for treatment. Van Horn said the cvcle and the sign at 'the corner of Coast Highway and Newport Center Drive all were heavily damaged in the collision. - U"IT•...._.• Cites lnlloe!ftlee Militant feminist Susan· Saxe pleaded innocent to first degree murder today in death of Boston police of· ficer killed during Brighton bank holdup in 1970. Iowan Leads Camptiign for Dirty Movies BURLINGTON, Iowa (UPI) -· ''Mickey Mouse for Kids -Linda Lovelace for Adults" says one sign planted in the yard of a 26- ye ar-o ld. Burlington factory worker. Another sign in the same yard says, "Happiness ls Having an X·Rated Movie House." The signs were erected by Bill Mosher, who is staging a cam- paign to counter a petition drive by .a local church ·youth group against the establishment of an adult "X-rated" movie theater here. The Burlington City Council has begun work on an obscenity ordinance which would kill plans for the adult theater adjoining a ·downtown youth center, and .Mosher fears the church opposi- tion will prompt the council to pass the measure. The signs have drawn various reactions from persons passing Mosher's home and he said, "I 've had all kinds of comments: people hooting and hollering and· cheering me on, others giving m e thumbs down and one lady drove by and called me sick." · • • .Manners gives you up to a s1,soo tax deduction this year. •• ... AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND AT MARINEAS, WITH "IRA" -THE INDIVIDUAL RE- TIREMENT ACCOUNT. Mariners Individual Retirement Account is a personal tax-sheltered retirement plan. "IRA" was devel- oped by Congress to give yot1 an effective way to build your own retire- ment fund. You can save as much as $1500 or 15% of. your wages, whichever Is less, and your sav~ngs will be a tax deduc- tion during ,your working years. If your spouse works, your combined tax-sheltered savings can be aa much as $3000 per year. Come In to Marlnere and start your own Individual Retlre~t Account. You'll be saving tax dolla~ and bulldlng a much brighter future. For more Information, come tn or call any one o.f our convenient locatlons. HERE'S HOW FAST YOUR MONEY GROWS IHA MARINERS "IRA" ACCOUNT. lndlllldusl Rt11lr1m1n1 Accounts trtl prHently Hrnln~ 1.\41 % ptr )'Hr wh•n placed in a 6·r••r otrtlflcat•. Your •nnua yl•ld It lncrHltld to a big. 8 De% when Int,,.., Is •d<Jtld to th• account N IM<» end oompoundtld dilly. With 1 m111lmum lndlvldull C011tribut1on of $1500 e1cn year. llMe'a how your money will grow: WITH TA)( WITHOUT !XTlllA IHlt.TElllEO TA)( MONEY '"" I HIL TllllEO • flllOMTAX Anl" 'LAN PLAN OE'l~lllAL 6yrs. $ 9,510 6,730 $ 2,780 10 yrt. 23,540 15,750 7.780 20y,.. 7'.&40 65,8-40 30,560 30yra. 1'5,MO 9&,030 90,520 'AbOYe llgur• .,. b...o on 26"-Income tlrldltt. ftcfwel rtguletlont NQulN tull9t~1i.1 ~ltlee lor ..,,Y wlthdr•w•I• from Geftlflc.etl IOCOlll'tt. ' I ---------~~----~ -·-------------.-~ , ' I I ; ~ l ; ; ..... _ 0..1_,,,'t_?I Deu1tedt bu beefl named bt"~b manafer ot """' uu.ie office ot Home F'ederal Sa ........ IAu At-... .odaU.. ol San Diqo. , . ' •• •• ... , .. ••-~e wu previously braoch ma.n-.er for lb• usoda- ._ 1 Arcadia office. Mn. 0-... nstedt_ .... wu enrolled in lhe COIDJMID.Y'• maaaae-ment tratnlnc proiram and la lbe fint · 1f'Oman to be named a m•n-.er . She and ber husband Uvein Tustin. • Dana Polnt reaideal Doulu F. tr.U bq been •PPointed executlve vice $N"Mfdent of Spedra·Strtp CorperatloD, a developer ol ribbon cable toterconnec-tion ayatems. * C•rol Soatb has been named new business develop· ¥"' ment representative for Caaell ucl Cltaffla Commerclal . 11Uerior1, Inc. in Newport Beach. Site lives in Newport ·Beach. * Palll J. Sltapln, formerl,y director of field marketing fOI' Electroa.lc Memories and 11.apeties, bu joined 6-eral Aatemadoa. Jae. in Anabeim u nalicnal salesmanaaer. He resides in Newport Beach. • Des Voigae bas been elected a member ot tbe boa.rd of directors of lhe Orange County Ufe Underwriters Associa· tion. . He has been brokerage manager for Muuf acturers ~ • • Ufe Insurance Company in Santa Ana for s ix years. · · Voigne. bis wjfe and three daughters live lD Mission ,,, · VieJ·o ,.. . Huntington Beach resident Jack W. StlllweU bas been appointed vice presi- dent of quality and reliability assurance r•,. lor Douglas Aircraft Company division .,. ol McDouell Doaglu. He bas been director of manuf actur· ;:. ing for the DC-10 program for the past .... •even years. VOIGMll .... .. ... .. , .... . ... •• 1 .. ~' ;:,. .. , .. .. J, . .. .. ' .. ..... . , 1 ... ... \o •• . .. ... ,, .. .. - .. .. • Jou Mavro• bas been named senior assistant manager. for the new South Coast Pina Hotel in Costa Mesa, accord- ing to hotel manager Kim Chappell. Mavros was formerly with the sister hotel of the Western International Hotels, the Century Plaza in Los Angeles. He lives in Santa Ana with his wife and two children. • Burton F. Parker bas been named manager or the new Huntington Beach office of Great Western Savings and Loan AJSsoclatlon which opened this morning at 1614.1 Beach .Boulevard . Parker, an 11-year financial ex- ecutive was most recently home office manager and director of communica· tions for another savings and_ loan as· aoeialion in Orange County. * Marlon Hamm, assfstant secretary of Pomona First Federal Savlags ancl Loan Association, bas been named branch manager of the association's new Irvine office which will open soon. • Corona del Mar resident Ronald W. Rohrer has been ap· pointed regional vice president or Glendale Federal Savings and Loan Association. He is branch manager or the firm 's Newport Be ach of· fice. * Dan1el C. Butler has been promoted to regional con· troller. southwestern region, for the Business Centers Division of Kaiser Aetna. The Costa .Mesa man was formerly senior auditor with Arthur Adnersen and Co . * Joan T. Caruey has been named manager of the escrow department of Wells Fargo Bank's Newport Center office. She was previously senior escrow officer and manager attbe bank's Santa Ana office. ' MARKET HIGHLIGHTS NYSE Index ASE Index Dow-Jones Ind S&P 500 Stock s INDEXES 49.94 91.44 864.83 93.62 up up up up 0.55 0.36 9.39 1.01 Gfli llt" rs fl 11 d ~,,,,,. r11 f\'pav \lf»rk 15 Most Artiv~ U MOST ACTtV• STO(KS NEW YORK !UPI) -TM 1S 1<Uw sloch lr•ded o" t• New Stock Exchange Mond•Y· S.1•1 R\'dff Sys ..... ·Ol,.00 5outMni Go ••• 211,jl)O "·O ~~ .... xtS7,IOO "2 .. h 2n,aoo 14;, Mof'rls • • • 145,700 13.1 • ~ • • 160.700 U 7 Am T•l.6T•I ••• 1SS,e ' ~ "411 Mlt •.•• IS3, most York U1 MY eorr ....... 147, IU GWf OI ........ 147,000 12'2 CnMtt l'.dsn . • • l~_,oOO ~· . \.) .. ... . , AMllJl IA.LU u ·e 'CA <Mp l;w,700 11•6 ,,,_xf.VM ..... 125,jl)O 11·s GeNrti Min .... 11u,~ 11:3 Get\ Ttl El . . • 109,llUU 11.t ------10.91-____ __; ________ _ 10.0 10.0 10.0 t .9 •.I A ,,.,.,...,.0 II IOMttst .it.-tlv.- NEW YORK CU,.1 l Tiit 10 acli11t 9'Kllt lrllOtd Oii 111t Al'Mrlc.n $10<1& EllcNnclt Monday. 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A F~ pf Wt •• 1100 13 e 4 Cl.C Am .2A 4 '3 6 + "" • OA8d .tell . . 29 2340+ \Ii CNOlf ,_ ... 11 17 ts +m AGenk 1.32 • • •11 t1V• .. ~ Cley El 2 ... I n 2114+ WI "Gn Ins .&o ' .. ·~· v. d.YEJ pf 11 •• 13411111 ••• A Gn pf 1.10 •• 41. 22+ •.4 Cle<fEPI 7..40 ., 150 7'Yt+ Vt AmHolst .10 ' t .. lSV.+ I qC'-'t lo Pitt .. l10 IS ... Am Hom .1129 to1t 42V.+t"' c1oroxco.n u 1SJ 1~ v. A Ho~ pl 2 •• 3117 +4 Clyet\IP '.JO,. 11 1 +.,. AmHo:ip .30 2S .. I 32""-'it c 111etCP pf 1 .. 2 ICM!+ .... Am 1nves1m • • 12 ~ • . • CM• ln11 Cp •• 0 11'h-~ A Medici .12 1 29 .~ .. V. CH4 FINCI .. 341 ~+" A edlcorp S 141 Sl't •. , CHA pf 1.1' •• 27 1Mf. .,, 4m MOIOf' • • t30 S-\/\ CHA '" .sllJ •• ll 11\tt ,., AmHG 2.~ 1 IT JS~ . .. CNA ~n.. 1' IV. , •• AM Sea Uno ti I 9 + Vo CNAL.ol 2.10 • • 7 l'h-"" AmSllip8 11c 31 19 14\li-'I• CoutSt O.s 4 403 .tV.-.... Am Stncl .80 • 188 tJ -~ CstSGpt 1. It.. 4 I~ Ye AmSldpf 4'111 . . S SJ'ii .. . CSl$Gtll 1.t3 •• la lfllo+ V. 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CmwEd 2.30 11 U IS ~ f' ~ Amsted 3.llO • 29 '2\lo-v. CwEdpf 2.17 . . I 2' •.• Amt•l In .J2 S 73 I V.+ Yi COMEd pr2 .• 4 22 + V. An.cnda . .O s SOI 1714+11/t CwE.dpf1.,2 •• 17 IM• v. AnchHc 1.20 9 32 m o+ Vt CM pr 1.90 . • :J 22V. .. Vt Angelica .12 a •I 1V.+ " ComwEd wt.. I t•h-V. Ansul Co 4 S .a 20 ComEd Bwt .. 3 ~ .. "41 ApKheC .SO 7 31 mt.+'i~ ComWOll 41t •• llS 1~ •.• Apco 0 11 •I 4 64 11to+ ~ Comm Sat I 9 234 O YI+ ~ Ai:reco Corp .. Jl9 ah .. . Cotnc>utra • ' "' 2' +2 APL Cp 1.20 1 96 U llo+ I~ Computr Set 21 6' ~ •.. A°""C I 01o 2 20 -V. Con A9'• In • • 44 9 + ~ ~... . .. + ConeM 1 20a S IS 22'9+ ,._ !"Pr.:CF:! .. 12:>0 ~!1v. Cof191m :200 .. '2SI M-"'° AffA Sv 1.4' ff 1 ~t¥t ConnNlt UO If 52 l• + ~ ArcataH .3' 1 91 11V..+ lli ConracC • .o I 2 17¥9+ v. ArchrO .UV 1' 100 31'/o+ •lo Con Ed l>Ot> S 527 14'/o+ V. Arcllc Entp . • 7 2\lo-v. 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CnUCp £f2V. •• 4 ... ...._"' Alhton. .40 3 3S I .•. ~I~ l~n ·; el ~ ~ Atlco M . ISi> • . 3S 3 • . . p ... •. • .. AUCtyEI IV. 1 t2 I V.-V. CU Ill Pr .96.b • • -.-,.... ·AURlchf 2V. 13 372 10211>-"'-Cll Ill Riiy •• 14 2~+ Yi ARcll pf 3;y. .. 1300 O V. ... Conll Mtge •• .. l'to+ 1A At Re pf 2.IO •• 204 ~ + V. COntl"UOll 2 9 S6Q 6'~+ •;. AURh pr1 3 .. 21731/1-t Cont.Oii pf 2 .. 2 91'41+2~ AllH Corp .. t7S 3t'a+ v. Cont1n1te1 I ' 201 14 + ~ ATO Inc .20 s as 1~+ v. Con1r 1 oa1a .. 3•• 21v. ••• Aut O.l.10b32 144 St + ~ ConOtpf 4111 .. zlOO 43 -•t. Autaml Inds S 3' 4:\6 + • C.C.wood 2 1 6 2' _.,.. A...:o Corp .. 11S ~ + • CooltU11 .2641 • • 21 JV.+ \o'I Avco Cp wts • • • 1 • • • GotP '" 1.44 10 61 ~ V. AvcoCorp pf .. 2• teVI .. • Cooprl" pl S • • 3 134 ... Aver.,Pr .lD 27 16 lO -t'h Cooper Liii.. 24 SVI ••• Avis ltlCOrp 11 20 74'9 • • • Coop Tire .60 • • 7"' ••• A-unc .40 s 1se •~+ v. Coo9Tpf 1v. .. u 1014 • 14 Avon Pr 1 ... 2S 370 47-+ 't'a Copelnd . .0 10 fS lOl'e + :i. itecOG .20 11 41 211t1+ ~ COPPRg .251> 1 9 l4 •.• --9 a-CopWICI 1.10 3 30 26 +-'h BM>&Wll .IO t 323 26 + 1~ Corelur• Cp • • 4 l!lt+ 'la BKeG .20el 11 33 SQo+ I.Ii Cor/IG 1.12• 27 89 S2 a.Iler In .20 9 •IO 9 + v. Cow's C.30 7 J 1~. . .. BalterOll .4122 IOI S2~+ I~ ColC 8rd .40 12 19 lt.V. .. ,. 8aklwln .41 ' 4 IOV. + Va CPC Int 2.14 10 ,, 4.l!lt+ Vi B•ICors> ·'° • ... ..... -.... Cr•ne 1._.00 4 S2 ... + 1/t BllllGas 1.96 7 20t 221/t • . . Credi! F1 .24 II 17 41/• ••• 811Gs pf 4VJ .. z240 U V>+ 2~. Crocker 1.'6 8 ll 2S ' + •.o BanCll 1.l4 t s llto+ v. O'oml<nl .ao I> 11• 101 v. ~ Inc n 191 :rtVa + ~ Cre>UKH .10 1 21 1111 I 8an9Qf' Pn . . 14 4 + \a crou.s pfJ.JS . . S }ti,•-11'1 Ban9rP pfC .. l 10¥1-'l'o Crown Cork 9 3' ~ ~ 'h &nit HY 2.0 97 JO\/.+ Yi CrownZ 1.10 I 91 l7"1i ••. 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I t7 17~ ••• Btlf -..Wl.til 7 ll 111o'o+ lo'o Ot""-"'7.79 •• rl40 7'l +I Bemls o 19 4 t 1S •.• OMre 1• • :in ,...__"' Bt~ll 1.111 • 4S •~+ V. DtlP6L UO I 1,. 1m+ ~ lltftCHX Pl 3 . , 4 S7 + \'1 Ottl Nini 1.a • • 24141 ••• lletlC#f 2VJ •• 00 1-.. , OtltaAlr .tO 10 200 3S + 1\l't 8tfl(; ""4.10 .. 11 51:i.+ ,.. Dttec '""" .. s 4 + Yt BMCol>l 4\l't • • l40 ....... _, DtltOM Cp • • " ~ + Yt Btil Sid Mlt .. 6 :a~ .. • °"""''°" s 33 1n11-.... a.-8 .17b ' :167 2'41-YI OtMys I .20 14 MS lt'A + lo'o &tri'er Pllo .. IS • ..,. ... Dtmsoly .IO I SI J.4.,..+ 4' 8eM Prodcl 10 11 ,.,. ••• OttMret.12'>20 1' 13'1tt -~ Bttf\Slffl h 4 327 3S4't.,. V• DtSotol" .40 • • IJ t + !Ai &;g 3111d ... 23 27 S9'1! ••• Dt1Eells 1.45 t 30t 13._+ V. 81.c&O .40 12 340 J.4"+ ~ Dt1E t'f 7.6' .• 1200 65 .•• Bl•lr.Jhn .42 24 l 4V>+ YI DtlE Pf ).45 •. rlOO M + 1 BllHLt 1.10 S ' 14 -141 DttE Pl 7.3' .. 1150 U + V. 81qckH"lt .40 10 Jl.4 UV.+ ~ Ott E tJll Sii'> . . 3 SS • 14 Bl11e8tll AO • n 2''1'1 + ""' Otirtr ~ _,, • I 14Y, ..• 8"blt 8rlt\ . . 29 "" • • • OM4 Fl" .S4 • 72 10 + "" &otlng .tO • :its 30\:o+ 1 Dlamdl11U 2 7 .. 3114-~ BooltMolll> 1 I It -i Yt =:'·" 1 211 «~+ ~ Btretn uo • 12 23'h-\lo .40t I 30 1n' ~ V> Bor9 w US I .n 11~ + Yt OIGlenle ~ • • a9 4Yt Yi aormens In 1 10 3• + V. Oilllt.fl:-' 21 17' IM""+ 2 "°'' E4 2.4 • , 20' • . . om-. :• • 10 1~ • 8rMlff .1~ ' 4SO ,..,. • "' Oillllltall ff t .. 3 ""' . 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T-Awt ..... 1"" Yft9$10 r ·'° 5 x1 I~ ••• T Sl't :: J m -'iQ ZClleeOf'P .16 e 12 t7~+ ,_. r:J~1 .40 • 179 1t'h + ~ i..1• . .o • s1 a14'o+ 1~ Teuco ,. 'IOU 271h+ Yo Uy,.. Cot•.. lat ~. II& T .. c as11 .9014 1l ,..,.._ v. z11m 1nc1 .n14 1'S tt\l't+ - <1il Dependence · JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) - Con.gress is making the nation more vulnerable to another Arab oil em· bargo by failing to act. on develop. meat ol otrsbore oil reserves, the pre- sident. of the American Petroleum Institute saJd Monday. Frank N . Ikard said domestic pc&roleum reserves are dwindlln1 at an alarming rate and U.S. relia.nca on Araboll t. increasing every day. Jobless Total DETROIT, Mich. (AP) -~n t..bou.ih one in five U.S. auto workers remalm on layorr this wed<, l.bc In· ctustry•a Jobless toU will be lower lo- day than at any Umetbis yur. ~ lndostry lurloutbs now idle mare tlan 15',toO bJ\l&oCOllar worken rr0m a ~ laduatry wortrfatte ot ru.ooo. down from 159,332 lasl week. l .. "II OAILYPllOT By By GLENN WRITE CM-.0.11,pt ........ LONG BEACH-Valerie Lee and Shirley Babashoff each col· lected an American record Sun· day night at Belmont Plaza pool to close out their Cantastic efforts in the U.S. team trials for the world swimming championships lo be staged in Colombia next month. . Lee clipped a hundredth of a second off her U.S. standard in t.be 200 butterlly with a 2:15.12 and Babashoff reduced the 100 freestyle mark Crom 57.90 to 57.74. Babashofl, a Fountain Valley resident, came back later for a lifetime best 8:46.77 for second place in lbe 800 Cree. Heather Greenwood, the 800 winner, picked up a USA record with an8:46.51. Babasbo!fmadea determined bid to overhaul Greenwood the final 100, posting a nifty 1:03.4. But there was too much distance to make up and Greenwood had too much left. Babasho(f, qualifying for five events in the world cham- pionships, s aid she swam the i;niddle part of the race too slow- ly. Her Mission Viejo Nadadores coach, Mark Schubert, said Babashoff held back too much: .. She was OK at the 400 but didn't pick it up from there til the 700," he stated. "She's capable or going under 8 :40. Once she gets more familiar with swimming this race, I think she'll be the best in the world." Babas hofr was fourth for the first 200, moved to third after that and then s lipped into second place with a little over 100 to go. She was two seconds behind Greenwood at the gun lap and even he r pate nted "Flying Russian " finis h couldn't make up that much. "This was the best meet I ever had," Babashoff said. She won the 100, 200 and 400 freestyles; Twirls 2-hi tter --- Morw!!y, Jun! 23, 1'75 ' Girls ... was sff<>nd io the 200 individual medley and 800 fr~e. She got two American records and a world record (400 >. Babashoff's powerful finish did turn the trick for her in the 100 as she caught Kathy Heddy with 20 meters to go and won by .33 or a second. "Shirley was out too slow (28.2) at the SO,'' Schubert said. "We were hoping she'd go about seven-tenths faster. She'll have lo be in the S6s to even get a bronze medal in Colombia." Lee. appearing strong and fluid, swam her own race and won comfortably in the 200 fly while Nadadores teammate Peggy Tosdal of Dana Point was fourth in 2: 19.20. Lee took the lead from Camille Wright at 125 meters and by the time they were at the 150, she had extended that advantage to three-quarters of a body length. She won by 2.28 seconds. The orange.haired MV whiz was second in the 200 and 400 freestylt:s and Schubert feels she is a solid threat for the gold medal in Colombia, despite the presence of 200 fly world record holder Rosemarie Kothar of East Germany. "She'll be right there with the East Germans," said Schubert. •'She was about 1.5 seconds slower today than we hoped for but she wasn't pressed" Lee said she bad hoped to be in the 2: 14s Sunday but admitted she was pacing herself, swim- ming her own race. Women's 100 Freutvle -1. Shirley O.t»Hoofl. S7 14; 2. K•tlly Heddy, St.01; 3. Kelly Rowell, st.6'; 4. K•ren Reeser. Sl.86. Women's 100 Butte rfly -1. V•terie Lee 2. lS.12; 2. C.•mille WrlQhl, 2: 17.«>; J. WM<Jy w eon- berQ, 2: 18.0t; 4. Peggy Tosoat, 7: 19.20. Wom en's 1 00 Freest yle -I. He•tller' Gnenwood, 8:46.SI; 2. Shirley &l»~ff, 1•41.71; 3. Jo H•r~hbarger,8: S2.14; 4. IC•lhyHeddy,8 : 52.14. Men's 100 Bulle rlly -1. Gte9 J•oent>uru. .SS.7'; 2. B•ll Forre\ttr, .SS.83; J. Steve Bttter, .SS.'IO; 4. Mike Bottom •. S6.17. Men's 200 lndi¥1dual Medley -1. Fred Tvter, ':06,,3; 1. Steve Furnfs\, 2:01.61 ; 3. Bruce Furniu, 2:07.6S; 4. Otve H•ronura, 2:08.M. Figueroa Becomes Newest Stopper Ed Figueroa, affectionately known around Anaheim as Senor Stopper, is a man of his word. .. After my first win of the year agains t Oakland (a five·hitter on April 27) I told myself that I can pitch better than this," the California Angels righthander said Sunday. He has. Since that start, Figueroa has .authored a pair of three·hitters, Aageb S late All GamH Ml ltMP'C 0101 .IWW 23 Tuasa1 c..11tom la 7:2Sp.m. .lune 14 lCa'"u C.lh at Ca llfe><nla 7:Up.m. ,,_ 2S ICansa' City at CalltMnl• 7 .2.S p.m. another five·hitter and a six· hitter. Sunday, he held the visiting Texas Rangers to two singles and made an unearned fourth inning run stand up for a 1·0 victor)'.· Figue r o a . who began the seas on in the minors when manager Dic k Williams con- sidered his sprin g attitude too lackadais ical, h as rebounded in astonishing fashion since his re· C<itll. He wormed his way into the starting rotation -once referred to by Williams as the "best in baseball" -and has compiled a 6-3 record with each victory com- ing OD the heels or an Angels loss. Hence the nickname, Senor Stop- per. .. I've got confidence now, especially in my curveball," Figueroa said in explaining his success. "I didn't have that con- fidence last year. I'm not afraid to throw it in any situation." However , in his most ticklish dilemma of the day Sunday, Figueroa went to his fastball, which he describes as "good ... but nothing like Nolan Ryan's." It came on a 3-2 pitch to Jeff 'Burroughs with the bases loaded and two out in the ninth. Bur- roughs drilled it in the gap in left· center but fleet Angel cen- terfielder Morris Nettles raced over and made the catch, just in front of the fence. .. I was kinda expecti.ng an al· Jey shot," Nettles said ... I got a good Jump and I knew it wu mine all the lime." The lengthy live-game series winds up tonight with Bill Singer 6-8 going against the Rangers' Steve Hargan 4-3. Singer was driven to cover in the flrst inning ol Friday's game with Texas which California came back to Rigney to Padres SAN DIEGO CAP> -Former Angels s kipper Bill Rliney, who man11ed tM M lnnesota Twins Lo thi' American Le•gue Western t>itltloo bueball tJtJe in 1970, bat beta llped u c:oecb and ad- win 12·11in11 innings. Figueroa fanned s ix and walked only two -both in the ninth. He yielded a two-out single to Lenny Randle in the second and then retired the next 19 Rangers in a row before Roy Smalley opened the ninth with a single off the g love of Bruce Boehle atfirst. Smalley's two.base throwing error led to the unearned Angels run in the fourth and cost Texas s tarter Fergie Jenkins his seventh loss against eight vie· tori es. TEXAS HMrall3b ~2tl Ha'llf'Ove If Burroughs rf Spencer lb R41nctlt cl Grieve an StNlloss Sundtleruc .._llpn Jenaon,i,p •II r 11111 f 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 J 0 1 0 J 0 0 0 J 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0000 lot••s 2• O 2 o Te••~ C..l1forn1• Jenkins IL, 8-7 Figueroa cw. 6·3> T-1.S,, A-a,•sa. CA&.I FOttNIA •llrll W Remy2tl 4 o o o Colllns ll 4 o 2 o 8ochte111 4 I 3 0 Ulloud rt 2 0 2 I 0..lklb 4 0 0 0 ~r1ydh 3 0 0 0 El. Rodrl11ue1 c l 0 0 0 #NOllH 3070 M. Nettlu <I 3 0 0 0 FIQUef04' p 0 0 0 0 lo1a1s 30 t ' t 000 000 000~ 000 100 00•-I IP H A ER 88 SO 6 q I 0 2 4 '2 00 2 • --- O.lty ........... ~ llJcUN Drn•· FOUNTAIN VALLEY'S SHIRLEY BABASHOFF (FOREGROUND) TOUCHES OUT KATHY HEDDY IN THE 100-METER FREESTYLE. U.S. Open Play Final. Survivors Most Surprised MEDINAH, Ill. (AP) -A pair of longshots. Lou Graham and John Mahaffey, met in an 18· hole playoff today for the $40,000 prize in the 75tb U.S. Open golf championship -the "chokers" or "snake-bit" open. It bas been a wild one. And none is more surprised at the windup perhaps than the playoff contenders themselves. Graham, a drawling, string· bean tour veteran of 35, was the only person among the 25,145 on the Medinab Club premises who didn't know he had a chance to win outright by parring the final hole. He dumped his approach shot into a trap and took a bogey. Mahaffey, a young lion of 27 out of Houston. had finished 45 minutes earlier and had rushed to the clubhouse to buy a candy bar and check on the airline re- servations out of town. He had to be searched out and informed that his 287 score, three over par, had tied the late- finishing Graham for first place and that be should be on the first tee today promptly at 1:30 p.m. .... win I've ever seen," the bespec- tacled 1974 Open winner said. "Everybody was just throwing it away. It's unbelievable." FINI KOrtS •nd money WIM""1s In Sunday's round of tM 7SU\ U.S. Open Golf O..r11>'-hlp on IM 7,032-yard, pAr·71 MedlNll Country CIUI> coww C.4tnotnam11teur>: Lou~~"' John Mahatfey Frank llHrcl, $10.VS llenc:r-Nw. $10,115 Hale Irwin, SIO,t7S 8ob Murptly. $10,175 P91er Oo.ierhUIS, S7 .soo J«ll Hl<lllaus, S71SOO Pat FltJSlmot1$, S>,000 Tom W•tson, SS,000 Arnold P• lrner. SS,000 A•Y Floyd, $2,IOO Andr.Nonn, $2,IOO Edd Purce, U.025 Joe lnm41n, $2,02S Rik MuMtn941le. S2,02S Jim Wle<lwn, U ,02S Ttrrv 0111, 11.•so Oale 1>ou9tau , Sl,650 C..ryGrofl, $1,•SO Gf'ler Jone~. Sl,•SO A-Jerry P•te A·J•YH•u Miller B41rber, $1,427 Forrut Fezter, $1,427 Kermit Z•rley, St,421 Bud Allin, Sl,427 TomWtl$1topt, Sl,304 Don Janu4'ry, Sl,JCM OavlCI Graham._s_l,304 Lee Trevino, S 1 ...... Ste11e Mtlnyll, Sl,304 EdS11eed,$1,304 ' UP'ITe ....... e It's the first Open playoff since Lee Trevino beat Jack Nicklaus at Merion in Ardmore, Pa., in 1971. Hatt SlarU, SI ,>CM w ry He41rd, $1,304 Tommy MrOll, $1,)(M Al Gelbelger. 11,040 JullllS Boros, Sl.040 .-.nyM1t1er,s1.o.o John 5'h1M, Sl,040 LIMY Wadkins, Sl,040 G4'ry Pia.,,..., SMS O.we Stock Ion, SMS 14-n"'-n-211 ~11.n.11-211 7+4M7·71--~7 .. 74--74-71·~~- 74-7>n..9-281 .... 7J.n.1s-m n.~1s.n-m 67·7J.»-77-290 67"'-7'-77-290 6t-7 S.7 S.7l -290 1'-11-12-111-1'11 1s.12.n.12-1'11 1s.11-10.1•-m n .12-11-11-m 7"74·71-7•-m ... n.1 .. 1s-m 74.1ua.1a-m 71·77·12·73-193 73-74-73-73-2':1 6H l-1t-n-m 1t-10.12.n -m 74-6t-n -1e-m 7"71'71·18-294 7).7lr71·7S-294 7J.7t·7S.7S-294 76-lCHJ.7 5-294 7S.71-7HS-29S 72·7HJ.7S-1'1S n ·76-74-74-1'1S n*7S.79-1'1S 7S.73'74-73-29S 7H H:S-73-29S 7S.72·7'-72-2'S 77-47 • n.n-.19S 7).71-12-69-2'5 n.72·74-7t-1'16 n.71.n .15-196 7S.72·7 .. 73-1'16 1s.7J.n.16-1'16 .... 11.n.n -1'16 7S.7J.72·77-297 n ·7J..7H 4-2'7 LOU GRAHAM CHIPS DURING SUNDAY'S U.S. OPEN ACTION. Whatever be came or that fellow, Nicklaus , anyhow? And Trevino? And Hale Irwin, who won last year? And Johnny Miller, the Pacific Coas t hotshot ? And long Tom Weiskopf, Arnold Palmer and South Afri ca's Gary Player? Some people, including the golfers themselves, called it a horror story and jested that the winner should have been Boris Karloff. Dazed spectators went around asking if there was some kind of penalty against a guy who won. Everybody, including the in· comparable Nicklaus, blew it - that is, all except Graham and Mahaffey. They almost did. They backed into their tie for the top, Mahaffey shooting a final round 71 that he thought might get him about 10th m oney and Graham a 73. All of them were wondering how they managed to let this Open s lip from their bands. Irwin acknowledged that the tournament left him completely dumbfounded. "This was the e asiest open to Padres Play Tough Could Have Lost All Four-Alston SAN DIEGO CAP) -"We could have lost all four instead of win· rung three," Dodgers manager Walter Alston said Sunday after Los Angeles beat San Diego 3·2 to move within two games of first- place Cincinnati in the National Leag~e West. "Wit h the kind of pitching we got in the series, we could have won at least three games and maybe all four -certainly more than one," said San Diego manager John McNamara, who watched his c lub hold the Dodgers to 12 runs in the four games After a 4·1 loss and a 2-1 vie· tory, the Padres dropped the final two games of the series. 4-3 and 3·2, but remain within H~ games or third·place San Fran- cisco. The Dodgers, who had been un· able to bold l·O and 2-1 leads. won in the eighth inning SUnday after Bill Buckner greeted reliever Danny Frisella, 1-3, with a leadoff double. Buckner was at second with one away when Willie Crawford bounced a tie- breaking double past 37-year-old ·Dodgers S late An .. mes .. 1uacme> June 23 Los ""9eleut Hovslon S:30 p.m. ,,_24 LOsAnQ91H•1 Hou"on S:JOp.m. ~-is LAlsAngettut Houston .S:lOp.m. fU"St baseman Willie McCovey, who was first charged with an er- ror before the decision was re- versed. . Though not involved in the de- cision, hard-luck San Diego right-hander Dave Freisleben, 3-8, was frustrated not to end his personal five-game losing streak. "He has pitched well enough, we just don't get him many runs," said Padres pitching coach Tom Morgan. Freisleben was lifted for a pinch hitter in the seventh when Fred Kendall singled off winner Mike Marshall, 3·5, to make it· 2·2. Marshall pitched the last three innings in relief of' Al Downing, who gave up a run. scoring single to John Grubb in the filth. LOSA,.GELIS looes211 81KllMr tr O..wey Ill Crawfordrf Cey 311 Ct1otl<I Ye4'Qlltrc AuerOKhU Downlngp Uepll -1'5Nllp ff r II Ill J 0 0 0 4 1 1 0 4 I 1 0 4 0 0 0 3 1 I 1 4 0 I 0 f 0 I I 4 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 t 0 0000 SA"DtaOO Ill r II Ill Grub«>ct 4 0 I I £. Her~nder u 4 0 0 0 l.oOIHrlf 4 0 I 0 Mell> 3 0 1 0 McCo11ey 111 f 0 0 0 Fuentet2tl f I 1 0 TOllllrf 4 1 1 0 Hundteyc f O O o FrtlSlebtn p 1 0 0 O Ke ..... llpfl , 0 1 ' Wlllfleldtlf' 0 0 0 0 Frllefl•ll 0 O 0 0 Pele Hurt After Fans Flood Field NEW YORK <AP> -While Pele is recuperating, the North American Soccer League will be doing some investigating. The 34·year-old star of the New York Cosmos is spending the next three days resting in his home in Santos, Brazil after re- ceiving minor injuries and a good scare when a mob of fans swarmed over him during a weekend New York-Boston NASLgame. Meanwhile, Bob Ehlinger, as- sistant to NASL commissioner Bill Woosnam, announced the league is conducting "a complete investigation of circumstances leading to the injury of Pele. The "Black Pearl," as he is known throughout the world, suf- fered a pulled muscle behind his right knee, and a twisted ankle Friday night in Bos ton Univ.ersity's Nickerson Field during the first half of a game against the Boston Minuteman. The fans stormed ttle field and overwhelmed him after he scored a disallowed ~oal. The Cosmos later lost the contest 2·1 in overtime . Pele was carried from the field by security guards hired by Warner Communications, owner or the Cosmos, but it was later re- ported that his injuries were minor. ··1 was shaken and scared,'' he said before boarding a plane for Brazil. Cosmos vice president Clive Toye at first ordered the New York team to leave the fi eld after the disturbance and told the referee the players would not re-turn. Toye said "the game was played in conditions unsafe for players, officials and spec· tators.. . He iald he counted only 14 • Boston policemen and eJgbt B.U. security guards on duty at the sta~ium, explaining be had earlier been assured a.g many as 200 policemen would be on hand. Sun Camp at UCI The Southern California Sun _opened camp Sunday with 74 players at the University or Callrornia Irvine. Workout. are open to the public. Featured event.a were tbe Ume trials and ~oacb Tom Fean' apeclal J2.mlnute run. Defensive back Eric Johnson und runnlne back Gary Dixori ucn ran 2v. mtles tn 12 minute3. Feart n1d he telt early season llren Sl>be •bould be at quarterback and receiver. • 1!0~' tor the San Diego .... .,. ...... nio FUINTD OFntE ,~ .. KNOa<ED our"' A DOUILl.PLAY IY ITIVI Yuaa. 11.Uer Keith BeDIOll won the 40·1•rd ruD ha 4.4 aeco.od1. , Quarterbacks in camp Wel'e Daryle Lamonica. Pat Raden MJke Ernst a n d Fountala V.itey'1Gary Val.bu.._ • • .,. -tl • . . . . . .. .. . . ~~~~--~~~----~~~--~~~~~-