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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-05-14 - Orange Coast Pilotr -' \ • ••• . --- ·-... . ~ . • ( .- • -Dr~g-·~aiders · Hit Mesa: ' ~I":. • • , " · . • MONDAY. ~FTERt«:>ON, . MAY 14, •1973 VOL.;t6.1M0.'1Mr 1'111CT'°"'9 a ...... . , . ~· • , , • Colonia •Di~~ ,_ .. . . . .. . .. -.. . . " . x.lightnfug boit~killeiiiJobn w.:w,aae Jr., 19, ~<!ltback co1-. . lege pitcller ~unday and iiljured seven o!her persons •during ·a sen'li, · pro baseball game at Lake Havasu .Oity, Ariz. . . . , . ,WADE, A FOl!MER Mission Viejo resid~, was ·windlng .up to deliver a pitch. when ·lhe ·!Jig·bolt struck,.knoclrlng,ewry·player in : ·the infield.and outfield off.their feet. · · , · · " -·An ·ambulance · operatnr'said the lightning vaporized the•'youth:s ~- clothing, leaving only shreds. It struck the young man's head. , ' . ' . WADE'S SISTER was watching from the stands and ran scream· ing to his body. . . Wade few up in Oran~e County., He attend~ Miss!!(~ Viej{>'_, High 'Schoo through bis junior year ,an,d played b1ith ·~ · anil'' football there. His parents recently. moved to Lake Havasu. See · : Page 16 for d~tailed story and pictures. . '"· • ,! ,. .... --. 'f ... -..... --: , .. ~t ··· ... i;:v. 9 . !J', Su11P.t•· S~i•ed ... . , .• .: ~ ·' ... ' • • ' ..• . • • • •• ' • • •• ~·.--.. • .. ....... ~.. . ~ Shape • , . r ··-lll . , .... First U.S. Space Station Blasted··lnt:o ·Earth Orbit . , -· Bleeding ·wonia'ii , . ,. In Vehicle Adelaide Luna, dimtor o! Fountain Valley's Colonia Juarez Community Center, remains in critical cooditlon to- day lifter she was -several times in an unexplained' incident Sa~. Mrs. Luna, 44, o! 10371 Calle lndependencia, Is in the inlenslve care unit of Fountain Vplle~ Ci>mmunlty Hospital after undergoing· suraery ior bullet l)'Ol!nds in her ~. ann and back. Mrs.(Wna was fourKt in a car stopped for a traf£ic violation by Officer -t&an Gillman. The 'driver of the car, Rlchud Arechabaca Morones, !I, o! 4906 W. 7lh St., Santa Ana, waa taken.Joto CU119dY. en charges assault with intent to cOmmit murder. "' Investigators said today they have DOI established what started the Incident, but they will be filing chargea against Morones this afternoon. Acoordlng tq police reporu, Gillman allegedly saw Morones make an illepl U-tum near the Intersection of Euclid Street and Warner Avenue at about 12;30 a.m. The o!ficer reported that . when he walked up to the aide of the car, he saw Mrs. Luna who·w'aa bleedlng-pro!uaely. She was taken Immediately to the nearby hospllal and' Morones wu takm Into custody. He alleiedly told o!ficera Ile· waa tulnifber-to the llOlpitaJ. Inve!llgalors said she had been sOOt with a .2z.caliber· 'revolver which they !ound· when they Jook Morones into custi>dy. , ' tiuge .. ... -~-... -··<:Out Weatller "" • 'lbe sun is still on ·vacation along tbe Oi:ange C...t, and ·weather ex· perts don 't expect to see II be!ore W~. r;o,. clou~and fog in the mamtna hours, partly cloudy in the •""'-i: lll8ho in the 60s. INSIDE TODA 'Y Fonner Soddl<back College pitolj<r Johtt Wa<le waa °".Ii.. ' · mound-ot ld:fc:e'Hava.!1' Sunday ' when he waa klUec! by a boll of Lightnlno tDhich bunoed off his hair. cloL!lu ""4 lo}~ '1loo. Hia ' parertU-wlbi<U.ll .a.. ·gmly '""'' from ~ gro..S.t.mdl. See story on Pago 16. ' ' ...... ......... ~J:.: • ' • • II llAILY PILDT s M-y, 11., 14, 1973 ' fJN.TO .... haee Gold Shoots Up ~tocks Plunge , LONDON (UPI) -Gold 1...,00 to the hfcbesl price in history on European free marlteta today, easily p&51ing the 1100- an-ounce. "berrier.'' A major Jlrilllh ckaler linked !he gold stampede to a lack al conf&deooe brouiht on by the Wateriate affair but nthen dilagned. ~ gol.d rush which saw a price of Sl08.70 on the French commercial market ~ the dollar skiddini oo European moneJ' marnta u 11P«"laton and DNIU. national companies unloaded U.S. cur· rency for the precious yellow met.al. Group Seeks New Inquiry In Shootin g By Tl!llRY COVJILE Of .. DellY ....... '!be Orange County Grand Jury will be asked to ...._, Ill inveatlgatlon Into the 1J011ce lhooling death al a 1"""' Meslcon-American April 13 In Fountain Valle)'. -• ,,. re q u e 1 t comes from Orange Counjy'o Human Relalklnl Ccmmlaoioo l--""'a.1net-Safurday In Santa Aila to -the shooting. "Several oommunity represenlat.ives ba" tndlcoled to uo that there la ad- ditional information which has not been presented io the Grand Jury, including the poasibllity of one or more eyewit· nesses," said Jack Turk of Huntington -Beadi,-<hainnan ol-lhe-O<>RUTti88ioo. On the morning o( April l 3 , WestminBter Police Officer Timothy Miller shot Mlguel Angel Ronquillo, 20, in the back. Miller was helping F0W1tain Valley -police eeardl foe Ronquillo 8lld three olher Santa Ana youtlu who bad been otopped eariler. but wbo had fled from two FO\mtain Valley officers. Miller told lnvesUgator1 he had his gun drawn and the youth backed into hlm causing the pistol to fire accidentally. Miller was &<:COlllponled by Fountain Valley Officer Robert Moeely, wbo reportedly also had his p I s t o I unbolstered. Morry Lindros, dlrotor of the Hwnan Relations Commission, to l d com- mi&slooen S.tunla7 that ,!here wi:re di5'l'el)lfldes i.ol1'~ t¥ tes1Do!Jr1 tf the tWd officen, though he cUd not elabo.rate. Lindros also pointed to the lack or communlty Input Into the first Grand Jury hearing. 'Ibe Grand Jury on April 30 declared Officer Miller innocent of any wrong- doing In the death ol RODquillo. '!be District Attorney's officer, which in- vestigated the matter for the Grand Jury, bad recommended such a verdict. Llndroo told the commission that the District Attorney's office gave him full ~ation in looking into the details of the fll"Sl inVestigation. Commission Chalnnan Turk also said the suspension of Officer Miller, or his reaalgnment, would also be recom- rbended pending any f u r t h c r in- vestigation of the shooting. The Human Relations Commission was asked to act on the shooting by Mexican- Americans from Santa Ana who v.·ere friends and relatives of the dead youth. 'Ibey handed the commission a petition signed by 315 people, asking for another Grand Jury investigation. ~lore on Watergate? LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) -Hank Greenspun, publisher of the Las Vegas Sun, said Saturday an unstJCCe!3ful at- tempt was made last year to Jimmy his safe, which held material pertaining to Sen. Edmund Muskie. "Whether it was related to the Watergate thing, we have no way of knowing," Greenwun said after his return from a t~·o-week trip lo the British West Indies. 0 1.ANll COAST " DAILY PILOT 1'llll Or•llfll Cots! DAILY "ILOT, wltfl wllldl \1 tllt'lblflft ttlt H.W.·PrtH. It publtlhtd 'lly 1tw Or•ne• .Co.it hb!llllll!O Comp•~v. S<'P&· ... M tdlllo111 1r1 ll\IDlllllld, Mondty lfll'O\lllfl "rlld.ly, fO!' COili M-, Htwport 6eKl1. Hl#lllngloll Bdct./,._!lln Vtllly, Lat~ IMdl, lrvlM/&ldcllllHdl 91111 S." Ckmen1tl 5'n J1H111 C..plltr1no. A l lftClll ttgHlMI 9fl!M! If (IUlllllMd S.~\'I llld SllftNn, TM IP!'IMINI M tl ... 1111 1M11t 11 11 UI Wn! .. , •tntr, CO.II ~. C.llttn.1-, mM. Io New Ycrt. the stock market took a aharp tumble in moderately active trading and the Dow Jones averages for 30 blue chip lndua1rial stocks fell 14 .177 poinll In the firlt hour and a hall of trading. u.s .. tourilts joined the otampede to buy gold. "People with surplus dollars are getting out of. tb.e currency into gold," said Den· nis Selby, cblef bullloo dealer for the !""*"1 gold brokerage !inn of Johnson Matfbey, Ltd. "Watergate has left the poliUcal situation shaky lo the States and By late afternooo the price of gold shot this baa put pressure on the dollar." up to $10IJ7 Oil the French commercial mafket -up mere than fl from Friday's close ol $98.13. "I think the ......., foe tbe rise In the price ol gold la becouae ol reports in the ~ that there la an Impending financ- ial aiais," Emaruel Bnmoff, a French gold broker, said. Asked il be belleftd the rise in the price or gold could be related to the \\'atergate scandal in the United States, Brunoff said: "In my opinion, I don't think it could be connected." The metal's trice was fixed at $102 .25 an oaace on the big Loodon free market In tho IOCCIDd of the twie&<lally price fix- lnp. Tl!Io WU $2.50 higher than the JllOl1ling price, fS.IO higher than Friday's ~g price and more than double the official U.5._gold price, lDotber gold source said: "Many fore- ign buyers are afraid of a new monetary crisis. Fer this reasoo. they are going in great numbers to buy as much gold as they can afford." Other European brokers and currency de3Jers also linked the gold rush and re· newed pressure on the dollar· to the re- sultruit-ruror--over-atleged White 11ouse involvement iii the bugging of the Demo- cratic Party Waahingtoo. headquarters. Former Ma yor's Son Ass aulted .fly Home Intruder Walter Evans Sr., a retired San Clemente contractor and 110n of a fonner mayor, was assaulted by an intruder over the w .. kend, but escaped with minor injuries, police said today. Ev1D11J1 was struck in the stomach and rue by a young man wbo entered the fainlly home at 131 Avenlda Mateo early SUnday morn!ng. Poltce said the Incident occurred at aOOut 2:40 a.m. when Evans' grand· daughter, Angela Renee, 14, was awaken. ed by a man wbo had grabbed her ankle as she slept in the den . The intruder assertedly a s k e d , ".~·s Jlm" after awakenina the girl. The granddaughter screamed and the, intruder began to run from the house. Evans, -88, tried to inter~e. but was struck. The assailant ran toward El Camino Real, police said. Yorty, Bradley Oash Over Oil LOS ANGELES (AP) -Mayor Sam Yorty and City COuncllman Tom Bradley challenged each other on coastline ·<Ill drilling and development in the Santa Monica Mountains in their Sunday tele- vised debate. The mayo ral candidates avoided the personal attacks whlch occurred during their encounters the previous week. Yorty criticized Bradley for opposing coastline oil drilling during an energy crisis. . "I've turned out to be right on this oil matter." Yorty said. Froin Page J MARIJ UANA • • alien ~fexican checkpoints. He said that the base of opera tions was nloved to the rented Costa Mesa residence. next to the Santa Ana Country Club. se\'eral \\'Ccks ago and that the home \Vas used for the distribution of marijuana. Leads 12·boat .. I Pro seclltors .Identifioo • I• .,, ' ' ' 1 ' ~ . , ·wAS111NGTON (UPI) -,:mot ll. Rld!an!Jon today identilled the /'Ila\" lot .• , 'adectida as s~ 1cover.n~•nt , ··-""'•n.uW~l( , -wa~ r;;-r;;; ~ J~ Only Dome Be Knows The little boy inside this plutlc tent, who is known to the world as David, is now 1 lf.t years old and has been living in side the live-sustaining bubble since five seconds after he was born. The sterile cocoo n protects David who was born without a natural de- f ense system -his body cannot fight germs. The boy is being cared for at-the Baylor University Med· ical Center in Houston, Texas. Guriman Holds~ Hostages Atop-Fuel Tank ~Bomb' PORTLAND, Ore. (UPl l -A man anned with a riae and shotgun today took two hostages, climbed atop a ·storage tai1k containing highly explosive jet fuel and threatene:<t to blow it up. The man, identified as William Howard Abernathy, 2S, fired several shots at passing planes and persons on the ground, but officers did not return the fire for fear ol expl-g the 1.3 mi1Jioo gallons ol fuel In the tank. The 50-foot·hiih tank is located in an open field near Portland Airport, \\'hich was closed for a short time but then ·reopened. Abernathy, an employe ol 1.<Jckheed Air Terminal Services at the airport, sent Last Customer Holds Up Ta:vern In HuntingtOn Huntington Beach police are' looking for the patron of a Huntington Beach bar wbo held up the saloon before leaving it early Sunday morning. Colleen Lane, M, and Joe Galsini, 64, manager and bartender of the Ninth Wave, 16803 Algonquin St. said the bandit was the last customer left in the bar when they began to close up at 1:50 a.m. They told police that the 4-0 to 4,;.year· old man, wearing a dark wig spotted with grey, pulled a small caliber gun on them and ordered them to take the cash tray out of the bar cash register. Escorting them into the bar's office, he also had Miss Lane open and empty the safe before biiiding their hands and feet with tape and forcing them to lie on the Door. About five minutes after the bandit fled the two were freed by o w n e r Allyn Miller who had come to collect the night's receipts. Pol.ice reports show that $800 was l<!ken In the robbery. From Pagel KILLI NGS ... homes last September. Evidence linking the man to the other deaths is circumstantial at this point, said Store. down word with one hostage that il his former wife and children were not bl"Oll8ht to the scene by noon be would explode the tank. - Deputies said the tank, with a capacity ol l,,S million gallons, coul_d be exploded by a shot,. The tK>stage, Steve Dailing, a Lockheed mechanic, returned to the tank after delivering the message but later was released unbanned. The other hostage was identified as Gene Lloyd, manager of the Lockheed terminal. Portland police officer Date A~ said Abernathy was using Lloyd 1o answer questions shouted to him. Lloyd was being sent to the edge of the tank to wave his anns in reply while Abernathy held a gun pointed at him. , John Murpha, a supervisor f of Lockheed, said Abernathy drove to the Lockheed tank farm facility about 4 a,m. and icaptured the ttto rneo. A $0k:esmaa for the Multnomah County 11be111Ps office said shots were fired then, but no one was hurt. Efforts were made to drain the tank through underground booes but they were not succe.ssful. Dailing told Murpha: "He ain't listen· ing to nothlng." Abernathy's ex·wfie, Nancy, and his children live in Bellingham, Wasb., 250 miles north of Portland. Efforts were being made to bring her to Portland, A woman friend of Abernathy's also was being taken to the scene to see if she could talk him into surrendering. The sheriff's office said Abernathy spent four month,, as a patient of the Veterans' Administration Hospital crisis clinic in Portland several months ago during divorce proceedings. The fuel tank where Abernathy was holding hostages is some distance from the airport terminal and is surrounded by open fields . The main street running nearby, Marine Drive, was closed to traf· fie. •••••••• • Townhouse Fire Bl.amed on Kids With Incense • -Childish curiosity aboUt incense today \Vas blamed for a Sunday fire which caused an estimated $17,500 in damage .to a Walnut Square townhouse in Irvine. Orange County fire J~vestigators said the fire was at the home of Mrs. Judy Wagner, 14564 Oval Road , Irvine. 'l'be blaze destroyed a downstairs bedroom and resulted in extensive smoke and water damage to the home. No one was injured. Fire Prevention Capt. Carl Woll said firemen controlJed the blaze within 20 minutes of the 9:56 a.m. call. Units from three Irvine stations· and the Red Hill station ol the county Fire Department resJ)Ol1ded. Woll said there was no struc· tural damage to the condominium struc· ture valued at more than $100,0CXI. Wolf said Mrs. Wagner's children ,ad· mitted to having played with the incense in the downstairs bedroom. The blaze "cooked" for nearly five hours before it was discovered by family members, he said. Newport Officer Discovers Bod y A Newport Beach policeman checking a report of a suspicious person in a car parked at the Fashion Island shopping center Saturday discovered the body of a Santa Ana woman who had apparently taken her life. Patrolman Ron Rodgers noted 14 prescription drug vials were found with Margaret E. Jones, 45, who. lay on the back seat with the car radio still playing. A note explaining despondency over ill health was turned over to Orange County coroner 's deputies by investigating police officers. ........ "There is no question that the pattern i~ the same, the same type or contact, the same type of girls," he said. One of Stone's assistants is working to determine whether the jailed man can be placed in the locales or the other deaths, \rhich police say include slayings in Iowa and West Virginia. FR(EZE FOOD 'RICES Witt! This COMPACT 205 tll. Chn1 FREEZER Stone said he has received calls from those two states, as well as Detroit, Philadelphia, St. Petersburg, Tampa, Palm Beach County and Orlando. ,....,_T_ •t...,' ..... '""~-hi ·~""""'-'""' ... _ 16991 ' ~ Erlcboo of penv~ /;.:;;;; . Judi• '.David w; Peet ol New Tort an;( : Jud(eflarold.R. Tf.ler, Jr., ctlfew, Yf!R:, · RiChardson gave the ~es to reporters during a b~k in Senate hear ... ings on his nomination for attom~ general. . , He said earlier the White House passed MARTHA DENIES HAVING • NE RVOUS BRE AKDOWN-Pago 4 ~~~~~~~~--=--:-~-.,,~( him "two or three names" of posiiblt: choices but they were not among the last rour. is Christopher, 47, a Democrat, . It' Conner deputy attorney genei:al, semnt as· the~No. 2 man in the Justice Deparlt men! from 1967 until 1969. Erickson, 49, is a justice ot the Colorado State Supreme Court. \o>, Peck 7J is a former New York State Appeal~ Division justice and is ~ioj' partner in a leading New York law firm. Taylor, who observed his SOth birthday today has been a member of the U.S. Distrid COO.rt in New York since 1962. Richardsoo Indicated he might ll8lll< , the special prosecutor by Tuesday. He.: has told .senators be will give ~­ virtual veto power over his selection. On the third day of Senate hearings on bis nomination to be attorney general,. Richardson was asked by Sen. John V. Tunney (D-Ollif.), whether he coosulted with President Nlxon or the White Hous1 .. in his search for a special prosecutor. "No " Richardson said. i: The~ he added: "They passed me two ;: or three names which they asked me tQ . consider." · Richardson was not asked nor II.id he say who passed him the names or how it .. ·was done. Richardson was nominated attorneJ: general two weeks ago by Nixon ant given "full authority" over the in-- vestigaUon of the Watergate scandal. ~ response to congressional d e m a n d r Richardson said hE!'would name a special prosecutor and give hhr. "complete authority" over all Watergate matters. C "No names suggested by the White House lasted as long as the final 10 or 12 names -not becau~ they came from . the White House but ~ause I didn't feel~ they met my criteria," Richardson said.., " Probe Continues \ .. Into Mysterioµs Death of Mexican': " Coroner's investigators today are con;., tinuing the chemical analysis t q~ determine the cause of dealh o( a young , man whose body was apparently dumped,. in a field fn San Juan Capistrano lasl. week. And the probers admitted today the likelihood that the male Mexican ln his~ mid 20s may have been an illegal im·. migrant who died from exhaust fumes ill · the trunk of a smuggler's car. · Traces of carbon monoxide have been- noted in the remains, coroner's spokesmen said. But a d~ath certificate has yet to .ht completed and until the lengthy toil lcological examinations are complete, • official cause w1t: not be released. ·ff So rar. investigation has failed to yie1'11 an identity to the body. ~ • 29995 Tl1 110!' A1 .. 1rt N, W1t4 ~1tlM!!l 11111 Pllbllllltr .l11k I. Cwrl1v Vic. ~ .. Wlfrt tNI Gen.ti ~ Tliom11 K11•il Etlltor TllOfltaf A. Murp'-i111 Mana1Jrog l!dltot Cfl1,.H H. loot lllth1r4 P, Nill /.ttltlll\I Ml ... lno Edlton "'""' r.to """91 ill W.tt .. .,. S1ret1 H..,,oi1 ttitcflt mi i'll'WJ)Orl hulHtrW ~ INdl: m ,..,., "'""'"' ....,..... . ._Ill 11115 1-'i lloulevtrd 1111 ~I J0S ~ II C.ll'llllt 1 .. 1 O'Brien .1. • .-.......es Spirited Dash in Guadalupe Race ··~ ·=--·--hhC-• T-• ., C'/dl ... , ......... ............. , -16tH '. • ,- . · r111,•••• · •n•1 '4J-4Ja1 Q .,..,. MMrtt I 1"42"'6 71 PIWll IOlllMi..,.... .... • LlfMI ._,. . ,,.....,. l'f'lllll ,..,. ~ c..ty Clee ..... .... ,Uf &':'.::l:': 10"-J':r' ... f:" .:=:::: ........................... """'".'" ....... M9Y .. '*'..... """"' .... .. .... -~-­.................. "c ....... ~ .............. ., ""'*' .... ~ w _. a .11 """'8JJi """"'" ................ Bob O'Brien's 56-foot yawl Spirit from California Yacht Club was standing orr Guadalupe Island at 8 a.m. today and was leading the 12-boat race neet on both elapsed and corrected times. Word from th• escort vc88el La Fiesta was that Spirit would round the bland this mominc and head for home on the &QO.mile race. Weather in the vicinity of the tsland was overcast with light winds. Secood on elapsed time behind Spirit was Jim Seal'a Columbia 50 sloop Loco Vltnte JI and behind Loco Viente was Jack Blbb's Columbia 50 Yawl Intermez- zo. Corrected time positions are : I. Spirit, 2. Loco Vlente, 3. lntermmo . Class A: t. Spirit, 2. Loco Vlente, 3. Jntermw.o. <lass JI: t. Decisloo, Pa u I Jlurger, DRYC 2. Swift, Jack Mallinckrodl BYC 3." I Talisman, !lob Wiiliams, BYC. PllRF: I. Leprechaun, W h It n e y Colllna, LBYC 2. Matangl, Ed CarJ*!ter, I BYC 3. Kismet JI 0 b Willa CYC. (For eartler story ace Boating Page 21.l • OH AlllPttOVCO Cll'COIT WI DELIVER ·WI SIRVIQ FREE DRAWING ~ :l;.~~~AVE OVEN JCT' ,. >Pl!IDl'IA: DltAWtNG'f-,lllll.l'1iyiR"'•.----·I ·"'OIJ NCCO NOT •C Pltlllfft' TO WIN, WI INSTALL , • •••••••••••••••••••• , A II" million I Ol)i;y $10.1 will COD Scbool Q 'Ille ad fast.grow crease cl Ctllmlt I Assista Sam Chi the docw by the hi in a IX'! ~~ cq;i~·li• And it1 sgarkM Chica!' the budg "We a Hi WASH Supreme women i entitled same ba '!be "" moverne winning the S81Ili and aliei broad Is Gover fylng Ia1 iii "sus~ 1Never. Frontier J~stice ' lns1 Pre On 'MON'! shown televisic speatin five-mil: Dr. ! charges desorlbi t!m ant ried WO The d and she tilt SO< beard b owoo. that yo ~ .... 11'1 bee --"Tialthy more." ~· <l!lt ol l she tok band hi duding llffllll 3.1 Afl Wi bn or de • , chool Budget Jumps ' CUSD Official,s Pr~sent Deficit Program A propoeed budget ahcnftng f!J.5 Ulion In anilclpoted .. pendlt..,... ud flO.a mllllon In anilclpaled ......,.. come before Capistrano Unified District trustees tonight. The administration'• propoaa1a !or the •st-growing district represent an In- .,. of more than .fZ million over the rrent budget. Assistant superintendent for business Chicas said that be has oreoared · document accordtn1rlo guldeuMs oet y the boanl recently and he has figured a proposed five-percent , across-tbe-!Jlcrease ~r,4istrlct empioyes. lfe Cbaracter~ed 'the increase u a ~-of·li'{ing raise. . , . And it Is that expenditure which has parked the Increase In .._. Chicas said the most iteVere 'tactor in he budget is the lack of reserves. "We all kn.ow that a district can not run without reserves, and that will he the prime area of coiice.ro.'' be said. The only way for trustees to come up witb reset"Ye! will be for them to find tile funds 10mewbere In the budget. '41\e board asked us to give them an optimum document," OUCes said. T!lat heln( the case, It will he the trustees who Will do the cutting in subse- quent study &eaiona. From this phase of_ p-elimlnary budgeting, the board will ;i'adually work up to a tentative budget early· nut month. Further refinement will be required before trustees settle on a rtnal document which ls approved' inill\e rti-s:t 'meeting. of August. The budget is one (If two -major items facing the ·~·at the session at 7:30 p.m. in Serra School euc.11totium. • High Court Rules Women Get Dependents' Benefits • WAS!ilNGTON (UPI) -""'• U.S. upreme Court ruled 8 t.o 1 t~y that omen members of the armed forces are titledi.: ::r::.01s· benefits 00 the opinion brought the women's rights ment nearer than ever before to g a high court ruling that sex is in he same "suspect" classlfltatlon·a.s race d alienage. The vote was 4 to 4 oi:i this road ·issue. Governments have a harder time justi· lying laws which deny benefit.< to persona iri "suspect" classifications. tNeVertheless, Air Force Lt. Sharron Frontiero won her point, with only Jil!tice William H. Rehnquist dissenting, Instant Abortion Procedure Shown • On Canadian TV MONTREAL (AP) -An abortion was shown in its entirety oo Canadian television Sunday night with the woman speaking with the doctor throughout the five-minute procedure. Dr. Henry Morgenthaler, (acing charges oft performing Ulegal 1ljol;tio08, described bis method as vat:umn aspira- tion and porfonned It oo a yOWlg mar- ried woman identlfted as Mrs. Hart. • The doctor lave her a local aneithetic, and she gave no indication of pain. After the sound of a suction machine was llOard briefly, he'~ld up a plastic bag. "Would you believe me if I told you that you are not pregnant any ~?" De" asked the woman. "It's all finished. lfS beautiful. You're not bleeding, you're thy and you're not pregnant any n\ore." ,Mrs. Hart"'Lt up, smiled and walked ~t of the room. 11.e mother of ooe child, ~ told MorgenthaJer she and her hus· 1-nd had made "all kinds ol plans," il>- duding building a house, and did not VjjUll another child at that point. becaUse other justices voted in her favor on the basis of past decisions. She sued to obtain benefits for her stu- dent husband, Joseph Trontiero, then at- tending Huntington C o II e g e In Montgomery, Ala. A man in the armed services has been getting housing and medical allowances automatically for -Jlis wife, whether be actually suPJX)rts her or not, while the 6,CMM) married women must prove they cmtribute more than hall their husbands' support. I The Administration argued that the dif- ference in treatment between the sexes was justified by the need for efficiency in a<lministratlon. A . ..special three-judge federal court uphe[d the statute. Justice William J. Brennan Jr. an- nounced the court's judgment in an opi- nion which said America "bas had a long and unfortunate history of s e x discrimination. "Our statute books graduaUy became laden with gross, stereotypic.al distinc- tions between the sexes and, indeed, throughout much of the 19th Cen tury the position of women in our society, was, in many respects, comparable to that of blacks under the pre -avil War slave codes," ,Brennan said. The opinion mentioned 1 the Equa,l Rights Amenljment, up for ratiliCJl!ion by state legislatures, as evti!eoce ())ogress ltsell coocluded that cluslficatio.S biist!d upon aez are "inherently•invidious." Under the stricter standard of review required by the "suspect classification" test, Brennan fmnd unconsti tutional the law attacked by Lt. Frontiero. He was joined by Justices William 0 . Douglas, Byroo R. White and lburgood Marshall . Those voting for Lt. Frontiero but on narrower constitutional grounds were Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and Justices Potter Stewart, Lewis F. Powell Jr. and Harry A. ·Bliickmun. Twenty..nine states have ratified the amendment, one or both houses of the legiJlatures in 14 states have turned it down, and one state -Nebraska - adopted it and then reversed itsell. Ap- proval Cll 38 states is needed to give the amendment the force of law. Apem'• Son Weds With rooe petals and confetti in his hair, RAndy Ag.oew ieads hi! new bride Comella down the •lei"' of Baltimore's Greek' Orthodox Churth ot the Annunciation. It was the second marriage fer the vice presi- dent'• son. • • Anolbtr ls.sue deals with the fuel crWs and its effect on tbe district diesel and gasoline purehases. Chicas will recommend the advertising for bids for the fumi_shing of fUel because the current contract with a supplier ex· pltts May SI. "We have been assured of enougll, fuel, to last the school year," Chicas said. And he added that sufficient fuel might be available next school year. but the coat -because of the fuel crisis -will be higher. Chicas added in a me.mo to trustees that if the problem worsens that modifications might have to come about iD the district's use of fuel. J-Ie said that an mcrease in .the walking range of pupils, emphasis on con- servation of fuel and other measures might be needed to cope with the dwindl- ing supply of fuel. Muckamuck Called Bad Porno Writer PARIS (AP) -Oh, the shame of being called a mediocre pornographer after pledging as minister of culture to be a guardian of morality in literature. Maurice Druon, appointed to the culture-watching job about two months ago1 was called a failed pornographer in · the satirical newspaper "Le Canard Enchaine.'' The newspaper printed extracts of a 1951 novel by Duron -"Rendez..vous aux Enfers," or "Rendezvous in Hell." One extract was : "He spent a quarter of an hour un- dressing himself with perverse_slQwness, stopping to trace along the back or' the old woman with a trained hand, dealing out his caresses, stopping them with sly and evil subtlety, then letting himself be caressed only to break away, to the point where Lydia was reduoo:I kl a state of total frenzy ." other extracts were more explicit. Druon drew attention to himself in a recent interview when be said his min- istry would show no sympathy for •·apologies ror the degradation of the human person" -in other words, pornography. He is silent regarding his own past writings. 18 Pups Enouglr, For St. Bernard PHILADELPHIA (AP) -L a dy Samantha's owners· don't know if it's a record. but they want to make sure she doesn't top her perlormance of giving birth to 18 puppies in a 20-hour period. All but two survived. "That was just too man.y," owner Donald Huscher sa id Saturday of the 1~ pound St. Bernard's activity. "She's tired, and she comes first. We'll probably fix her." In the meantime, it seems doubtful that Sam will be meeting with Luke der Luclerhund -Luke for short -·the 200- pound proud pedigreed father. Huscher, a self-employed paperhanger, said in about six weeks he and his wife Christine will sell the puppies and give a few kl friends. Rattlesnake Big Hit at Services KERNERSVILLE, N.C. (UPI) -'We have a rattlesnake in that box. Amen," declared the visiting minister from Ten· nessee before be took the rattler in bis hands and prayed at the Chapel of Jesus church. When the box containing the rat· tlesnake was opened dur~ the service In the little frame church, children sit4 ting In the front pews scurried to the back. Danny Smith of Morristown, Tenn., picked up the snake, held it by its middle and banded it to the Rev. Liston Pack pf Newport, Tenn. Pack told the congregation. "If a m~n became anointed .,tlh the spirit of God" he could pick up the sna.ke without fear or danger. While Pack displayed the snake, Smith rooe and walked around the chapel, his head swaying. He/She Crowned As Gay Royalty NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -Lady 8af9nessa, ·a Chicago female im· personator who is hoping to eventually undergo sex change surgery, bas assum- ed the crown Cll Misa Gay America with 1 pledge to work !<>ward uniting gay peo- ple and 0 straights.'1 'nle II-year-old Puerfo Rico native, born Carmelo Santiago, succee d ed Norma Kriatle Cll Hot Springs, Ark .. follow!na three nigbta of competition In- volving fl contestanta ll'om acro111 the na- tion. -· It W8' the secmd Mist Gay pageant sponoored by the Watch Your Hat and Coat, a Nashville club catering to the gay crvwd. ' , Moocloy, Ml\' 14, 197l • UPITttwMi. JEAN ELIZABETH HUTCHESON SHOWS OFF NUDE SCULPTURES Houston School Art Show B•nned Hor Work 11 'Too S.x( ; Sexy Artwork? Student's Sculptures X' d Out HOUSTON (UPI) -Jean Elizabeth Hutcheson is a 17·year-old high school senior who is a little confused today. "The teachers told me my work is on a college level and is not acceptable on a high school level, whatever that " she 'd means, .~ . . .. Jean did a pair of scultpures for a high school art show. One of the glazed statues depicts 8"nude ·embrece between a male and a female. The other showed a nude man, woman and child. Jean worked for 70 bour'5 -on school nights and weekends -to finish the works. She admits to being influenced by Mlchelangeio. She said she took preliminary drawings of the sculptures to art teachers three months agO and they approved them. "One art teacher said the reproductive organs of.the males were too detailed," said Jean's mother, Hedy. "Another said the statues were too sexy." Jean took bier statues to the art show Saturday but w'p • itopped from putting thein on display by ochool officials. "They 'are not appropriate becau.se they are a bit'advanced !qt this tpye of show,"1 assistant prlnclpol .Cblrfea Vann said.1 "But they are vli'y fine jilecea of art work." Jean's father was oulraged. He parked his car across the street from the "art festival and displayed the statues all day on the car hood for ev~ryooe to see. FOR THAT TAILORED LOOK! s DAILY PILOT 3 FDA Probe 1 Of Cereal Space Set WASIUNGTON <AP) -'lbe Food and Drug Administration ._,,_ tndaY, that It plans to Investigate why there Is so much empty space at the top of your cereal box. The agency said that an 11-state survey l\vo years ago showed that slack fill or en1pty space occupied 47 percent of dry de~ mix packages. Mint candies, vennlcelll products and spaghetti product.< had 29 pettent alact fill ; ftlled or Iced cookies, 28 pe.rcent ; cake and cookie mixes, 18 percent; com breakfast foods , 12 percent, and oat breakfast fonds, seven pen:onl 1•tt is impossible to tell from thls early inronnation how much of the slack nu is useful and necessary and how much. tr any, is nonfunctional," said acting com- missioner Sherwin Gardner. A study scheduled to begin In July will attempt to determlne bow much settling is unavoidable an4 Jx;rw much protective packaging is needed, he said. The survey Indicated that IOITle samples may have contained leu food than tbe label indicated, Ganlner said. States chosen for the survey are Alabama, Florida, ldah:>, Maryland, Min· nes ot'a . Ml!lsourl, Oklahoma , Pennsylvania, Tens. Wilcoosln and Washington. '32 Duesen.berg Fetches $87,500 At Auto Auction A Florida man topped all bidden at Saturday's glamour car auctlm in Buena Part when be agreed to pay f8'1,llOO for a 1932 Duesenberg Model J Dual Cowl Phaeton. , . Ray Luggart, a CODtractor, won over two other clasalc car bidders to tU<i the vehicle that ooe aale officltl said brought the foorth hlghest price ever paid al a car auction. · The Duesenberg Phaeton Is just one el 250 cars -which" may have a iota.I value of 13 mlllioo, aeeortflng to their owners -that are up for bid at the auctkln that began Saturday ud ooaU.U.. toda7 1 beginning at 10 1.m. · The event Is helni held at the MoYlo , World cars of the Stara ud P111m <ti Fame In Buena Part, · MC;m~ B · ... 1.ina-Hit · • +'•· tr~ SAN FRANCISOO (UPI) -~ Robert Spitzer displayed a Mother'• Day mesaage to President Nlloo !jundloy In five-foot high letters for all to aee. "Dick Don't Bomb cambodian Mothers" read the sign towed by a helicopter ..... san Francisco. • G•tECO'S Trop lc1l Weight, Two.B1i1t~11 Sult f11 l•i9 • or Gr..., -$111.00. Decron ~nd C.t+o11 Shlrh. ~ E•9I• Shfrhn•k•n -Sl l.OO. • N ...... -.. Wi/1t.ir1, St.1'"''" 01 .. 1, '•••tle11•, L1~1wood, Wnt Co,1111 • I 4 DAILY PILOT wida Te• ltine Back to The • Drawing Board DOUBLE TAXES DEPT • ....: Sometimes evmts ol the day leave yoo with the feel- ing thal everything Is suppooed to be going -dlrection and it ends up the op- posite. It even happens on Mother's Day, for goodnesl sake. You know, ell you w&nt to do is take the Molhon In your family out for a little Sunday bttaklast and keep them out ol the kltdm for a few hours. Tblntlllg ahead with your usual inctmn, ,.., call up the ....tauranl the day before to assure a reservation. No, they don' lab reaerntiom for feftr than six pel'IDllS. No, IO:J:I a.m. would be a very poor time for Mothe!-'1 Day breakfast. Gets you in with all the crowd. Everybody nots to eat Mother'• Day brealdut at 10 :30. WHY Nar TRY 9 a.m.? Helpful mg- gesllm from the ...tauranl bead man. Don't worry about a reservation. AH will be well at t a.m. ' ·· So you antve with two Mothers and assorted family members at 9 a.m. It that's not a crowd you'd bate to see -t the place looU like when Ii really get> jammed. ApoloSetie mt.iurant operator suggeall there W'ill be a slight· wait for a table. You eat Moother~• Day bmlkfaat s IO:SO a.m JuJt the time you selected tn the Ont plaee, right! Happy Mother's Day. * ANOt'BER TYPE OF Mom's celebra- tion all 111!1 down at Ramona where they are DOI having the lamed pageant but rather, a famed temls match. Women's titlist and mother Margaret Court is 3Cboduled to tear lritcbes from aging former tennis great Bobby Riggs of Newport Beach, the big mouth of the net world. Riggs hllled to folloW -· Day script. Wlpe5 up coort with Mrs. Court. Happy Mother's Day. * EVEN THE ROADS to placea fall to follow logic these days, as this dad can attest. Time to take daughter downooast San Juan Capistrano way to locate yet- unideoUfied bone stable. Ooly known fact Is that sllll>le II oo "the same road as the Mission .'' Aha , clues &re narrowed. Mission Is on two main roads, ooe called Ortega Highway and the other, Camino Capistrano. Carefuliy check phone book. Ali listed bone atables are on Ortega Highway. Isn't that simple? AD you have to do is drive out the old Ortega and ,.. 're sure to find proper borne for bo-. Righi? Wrong. LONG DRIVE our Ortega turns up many sanctuaries for hay-burners but all the wrong """"· Frustrated. you frnally stop to inquire of three very authentic- looldng Capistrano cowboya. Tb e y gesture a lot toward old Mission.. That's right. CorTect hone boonlfng house is later located on the wrong road which turned out to be the right rood. * SO THAT BRINGS you back to Blue Mooday, folks. Just look at that eerly morning weathet". Surely It's golne to rain buckets. But wait. I know OOw U:BJgs baveo't been following the script. Things just aren 't what they seem. Break out the raincoat and a little later, you may wish you'd gooe to the beach. -' ' -· llar 14, 1973 Probe of U.S. Bombing OK'd. • Reds Crying Foul; Control Vnit ro Study Charges SAIGON (UPI) -The Inlematlonal commlsaloo for COOtnll and ~ I ICCS) 1greed today to Investigate Vlei Cong cbargea that the United States baa been bombing In Sooth Vietnam but ooly U the Commwlista widen ICCS air cor- ridon to a safe degree. forces battling Communists for nearly eight wieb in and near Takeo. a besieg· ed provlncia1 capital 55 miles south of Phnom Penh. il<avy fighting and lnt<Nive U.S. bomb- ing were reported In other part. of the coc.mtry, the only Indochina country with no fonnal. cease-fire agreement Spokesmen for the Cambodlao high military command said ~ troops killed 6% Communtit day In fighttog 11> miles southwest o Takeo. Their 'Own loaes, the spokesmen said, were two dead and two wounde<l Informed sources said the United States welcom<d the ICCS probe of the Viet Coot charge that American war planea have bombed. strafed and made rocket au.cu oo larl!els Inside South Vietnam in violation of the Jan. rr Paris cease-fire agreement. Jt was the fU"St Commuoist charge of dir<ct U.S. milltary Involvement alnce lhe Jan. 28 ~ Watergate W eh Spreading Treasury Official 'on Leave' in Wake of Charges lndor"8iao Ambassado< H. R • Dbarsooo told UPI corre>pondent Tracy Wood, "Our teams are going to in- vestigate It, provided they get a security guarantee." Ilhanoono Bald the ICCS will ioalst on air safety corridors five miles wide to reach the site of the alleged bombing about !!Kt miles north of. Saigon along Highway 13. Ho aald the 31>-mile safety corridcr proposed by the Viet COOg "is just too narrow. U they can't fulfill the requirements, we can't fUlfill the in- vestigation." A Canadian l~ source told UPl's Nguyeo Anh Tuyet that the Indonesians pwpooed the lnveatigatlm, .. r<quested by the ProvislorJaJ Revolutionary Govern- ment 1 and other JCCS memben con- curred. A Q:mmuolst cooce..ioo on width ol air oorridon In the bombing ln- v<stigaUoo a>Uld break the deadlock whid! baa blocked the release of the re- maining 252 government civilian war prisonen the PRG says it holds. Release of the civilians has been stalled for two weeks as a result of the disagreement over' the width of air safety corridors. ln other SoutheMt Asia developments: Lt. Col. Le Trung Hien, spokestnan for the South Vietnamese c o m m a n d , reported that lhiee . Jlt5 mm artillery shells struck ao ICCS lleld office 'Z1 miles north of Saigon shortly before midnight Sunday night. Although both sides use 105 mm artillery, Hien said no government guns in the area were fifing at the time. ICCS sources said the building Is used on1y in the daytime and there was no ICCS personnel on hand at the time. South Vietnamese military sources also said that nearly 40 of about 100 govern· ment defenders were missing in the wake * * * WASHINGTON (UPI) -A Treasury Departmeot olflciaI ..W.tarily weot m "a.dmlnlstrative leave" Sunday following a publl!hed report be offerocl a Watergate conspirator executive clemen· cy In retum for silence. A Treasury apoltesman said John J. Caulfield, 44, asked fir the leave oo his own lnJallve and It waa granted "through nmnal channels," He is at least the 14th govenuneot ol.- ficial to step aside after being publicly linked to the Watergate scandal. The Los Angelea 'limes reported earlier Sunday that Caulfield, a former White House aide, held two aecr!:t meetings last Jaouary v.ith James W. McCord Jr., wbo was theo m biaI for conspiracy, burglary and bugging In tho Watergate case. 1be Times, citing "a &00reeinvolved in the matter," said Caulfield "repeatedly told McCord at these meetings ..• that McCord could expect ~ecutive clemency in 10 or 11 month,, if be remained. silent INSULT ADDED TO BIG INJ URY PATCHOGUE, N.Y. (AP) -Just across the road from the boyhood home · of fonner Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell there's a new apartment compl:ex. The name? ''Watergate Apartments." Cambodia Units St1·aggle 'Into Cit y,, Guns Blazing ' .. PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP ) - About 500 cambodian troops, hungry and uopaid. marched into Phnom Peoh today, firing their gwis Into the air. As they straggled past the capital 's principal hotel at lunch time, guests div· ed. for cover under restaurant tables and ducked behind trees around the swim- ming pool. Soldien complaining they bad received no pay for a month and oo food for three daya marched In from Pboom Baaelh. 14 rnilea tO the nortbweat. They Bald they bad left their officen behind and threatened to move on Manha! Lon Nol's prealdeotlal palace U the government failed to pay their wages. They entered the city, in a thunder of gunfire blazing into the air with automatic rifles and machine guns. Downtown crowlb scattered into shop doorways but the troops showed no hostility to civili&Il.5, and newsmen saw no looting although a number of soldiers carried full bottles of liquor. Tbe troops wore blue regimental scarves and bendanrw with their tattered camouflage mtifonns. Many soldiers who re=Uy transfeJTed to the elite 7th Di.vi.son were in their early teens, car- rying weapoos almost as big as tbemselves. A convoy of trucks accompanied the column, but the troops said they marcll- ed In to dramatize their plight. They converged on the anny pay or. fice , where they were met by the division commander, Brig. Gell . Um Khauv, who promised all would be paid U they assembled at a huge city sports stadium a mile away. Waving blue and red Cambodian fl ags tied to the barrels oC their weapons and whooping. the troops moved orf in a pouring rain to stadium parking lot. The army paymatter hastily produced a sack of money and the troops formed up to c:ollect the equivalent of about $17 each -one month's pay for an enlisted man. Out of. this he bas to buy his own food. DAILY PILOT . DELIVERY SERVICE Deliomy of the Daily Pilol is guarantttd M•Mtr·l'rllltrt If .,..., .. PHii 111v1 .,.,, IN"' •Y J:)I ,,111., Clll 111111 )'..,, copy will ti itr••t N .,.., C.•H• '" 1i1en llnf•I 7:11 '·"'- ,.~.)' lml ........,)'! II ~ df nal rt c1lv1 .,._ ClllY It)' t I .I'll, """"''"' •r I '·'"· SllMI)'. Ctl1 IM I (.,., wll Dt l<'""'f It )'Ml. C1t11 1r1 llltlft •II 1• 1.111. Ttltphonts M••I Or111te C-1y Ar111 • , , , , .. "'2·U21 N_..,,11 !Wllflflt1911 ltldl llld WK1111illdtr ••.••• , ..• }.tt..11" I.In c.i.-i., '''"',..._ l1Kfl, .. n J111R c1,r..rr-, o-~;nr, kultl l.f111M, I.I,_ Nlf\111 . 0:1-+llt at the trial and accepted lmprlsoameot." 1be newspaper said the meetings took place by prearTangement in the woods along the George Washington Memorial Parkway across the Potomac River from W ashiogtoo. McCord later was oonvicted in con. nectioo with the June 17, 1972. bugging of Democratic national headquarters at the Watergate. £or President Nixon's re-election cam- paign. The lA>S Angeles nmes· repart was the second recent reference to executive clemency in the Watergate case . Newsweek magazine earlier quoted Dean as quoting John Ehrlichrn.an as saying President Ni100 would consider clemen- cy for Hunt. * * * Seotehes R umor Former Beat•e Paul McCartney denied widespread rumors the world famous rock group would reunite. He said the group may do things for each other but "there will be no comeback." Caulfield Is a l>year veteran of the New York City Police Department. He spent three years on the White House staff, u an aide to presidential aMistant John D. Ehrlichman and later to \\'hite House counsel John W. Dean Ill, working on law enforcement policy. Maga zine Say s Martha Caulfield moved to the Treasury Department a year ago -after the all"ed meetings with M<:Cord. Since Ju- ly l, he has held the title ol assistant director ror criminal enforcement in the department's Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms Bureau. · Treated for Breakdown Mt<A>rd has testified that he repeatedJy turned down similar offers of clemency relayed to him by co-conspirat'or E. Howard Hunt. In his sworn testimony that has been ~made public~ McCord - never mentioned such an offer from Caulfield. . NEW YORK (UP!) -Time ma1!3zin• said Stmday that Martha Mitchell, wife of. former Attorney General John N. ;. Mitchell has undertone treatment for a nervous breakdown . But Mrs. Mitchell returned to her midtown ®Mtment Slhl· day aNi &ertied it. . - "seemed okay -she was in good spirits." Gamer, who said he personally had rd seen Mrs. Mitchell in a "'eek, sajd she and the friend who drove the car in which they arrived made two trips between the car and the apartment car- rying "flowers, a plant, and some bags.• McCord did say that Caulfield recruited him to become security chief At the Mitchells' midto\m Manhattan apartment, doorman Edward Gamer said Mrs: Mitchell and a-female-friend entered the building about 4:30 p.m. and He said he thought they !~e from the-- country." ' NOW THRU MAY 26, 1973 - WE HAVE FARM FRESH MILK DAILY COUPON OFFER I t I l .............. ~ .. WITH THIS COUPON • HALF GALLON • ORANGE 59¢: : JUICE REG. : • CO UPON GOOD THRU MAY 26, 197). 75t • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• WITH THIS COUPON • • • 6 PPEPSIDZ. 69t i I REG. • • COUPON GOOD THRU MAY 26, 197J. 89t • ••• • •••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••• I I ' • ••••••••••••••••• WITH THIS COUPON 1 2 DOZEN I .,,,. . ICE MILK BARS 99t ! ~ .10ze:-..: REG. m; COUPON l>OOD THRU MAY 2', 1'73. $1.26 ti .................. , ••••••••••••••••• WITH THIS COUPON ft LARGE I i GRADE AA• WHITE 2 112 doz. a E66S $149 : 2 FLATS REG. : COUPON GOOD THRU MAY 2', 1'71. $1 .65 I ••••••••••••••••••• Most of U.S. Cool, Wet • WITH THIS COUPON • 2 - 1 1/2 LB. LOAVES I • BREEAD '2!6tt i • •••••••••••••••• WITH THIS COUPON 1 FARMER JOHN 1 1/2 LB. PKG . I I 2!7et: Thunderswrms Dampe11 Midwest, Oregon~ Califor11ia I, •== 4 • • COUPON GOOD THRU llAY 2', 1'71. '961 VALUE I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• WIT H THIS COUPON • • • 1 LB . 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Santa Ana, Call!, • Em BUJ e~ ~~ r yuigo a: QCean sid hOpefujly A f<rn execuUve roundtrip represent [! backed I and Bu!: already J Diego to .When J ]ll!ltinsula i>lOted la saJd, a 1 covertha •Dar LOSA! tertainer been h!"l! of a bl00t received work, a "nle 36-; peeled tc City Hoot w!eks wt ter Jarge the spoke •Je a : LOSA~ vate hm scheduled wife of di er Gene J a former name wa; to man;'i Tht=lay iCfll Cent ilI)'leSS. •Mel --SAN F A federal a suit by 1 California it claims of Pemlir approval burger n U.S. D Spence< I that McI rant antil coort and in state ( •Be t1 SANTA Acln!M I ues to I serioilsly duodeoal • bulatory, John's He ' .. Ensenada Bus Run ~cl,eduled ~GO (AP) -Direct . will run between San ego and Ensenada oo the an side of Baja Call!ornla, !ujly starting May 20. A lcrmer Florida shipping xeeutlve. Eric Rath, said the trip !are will be $11.50. He resents the bus cunpeny BRIEFS eked by the Tijuana Taxi nd Bus Drivers Union, which !ready .,... buses from San p to Tijuana. .Wheo the 1,0IJO.mile trano- . ar highway is com- late this year, Rath lald, a regular bus nm will kwer that route aa well. ~Darinfil r LOS ANGELES (AP) -En· · Bobby Darin has ~talized !or trestment oOO stream infection be 1 from major dental ork:, a spokesman says. The SS.year.old singer ls·ex- to remain in Century · y Hospital for two or three eeks while doctors adminis- r large doses of antibiotics, spokesman said Friday .. .Jeanne Kelly LOS ANGELES (APJ -Pri· ate funeral services were uled for Jeanne Kelly, · e or director and entertain- Gene Kelly. Mrs. Kelly, 50, former actress whose stage me was Jeanne ())yne prior marrying Kelly in 1960, died rsday at City of Hope Me<l- UPIT~ Pet Priorities State Sets Fight On Berkeley Law tary legislation," Younger's brief said. CALIFORNIA BERKELEY (UPI) -'lbe Stata of calilonda will go to court t b 11 -it oeeldng to strike down a pro,marljuana wte by tbe electqrate of' the city CJt Berloeley that has led to j>ot smoking by epectators at a city council meeting, with no arrests. Besides, he said Berkeley police have "a mandatory duty" to make arresls under marijuana warrants issued un-"'-------~ der stiff state laws . LAST MON'nl t h e voters practically abolished mests for use or possession of mari· juana, State Attorney· Gener a I Evelle Younger responded by getting a court order maintain- ing the laws against the use. ol marijuana. The situAtioo was similar to that of AM Arbor, Mich .. home of 34,000 University of Michigan students, where the city council last year adopted an ordinance with much tba same purpose. Marijuana ..., is still illegal there, but the penalty. hardly makes an arTest worthwhile. Offenders can be given a max- imum fine of $5 to be malled in like a parking ticket. THAT LEFT the Michigan state police, however, with the power to make arrests under state law which carries $11l0 fines and 90-day jail sentences. In Berkeley. site of the Uni- versity of California, the eJec- torate voted 60.8 percent in favcr of an initiative requiring SUPERIOR JUDGE Lionel J. Wilson Issued a temporary order against enforcement of the initiative and set May 17 for further hearing. The city council, advised by the city attorney that the in· itiative is invalid, hired a pri- vate attorney to argue in court for the initiative. Berkeley Police Otiel Bruce Baker long has made mari- juana arrests "low priority . ., Mostly, pot arrests were · made when officers thought they could not avoid them. such as when somebody filed a complaint, or in coonectim with an arrest for another of- fense . WITH PASSAGE of the in- itiative, police officer. Richard Berger said, "We will conUnue to make arrests'if officers trip over the stuff, or if it is dragged across their path." Long Beach Woman,41, Bludgeoned LONG BEACH (AP) -A 41-year-old woman was beaten to death with a large glass ash tray by an intruder as her five-year-old daughter watch- ed in hom:r, police said. Investigators said M.ichlkD Zermeno died of mas.sive bludgeoning sometime Thurs- day, but her body was not dis- covered until Friday because the little girl, Allison, was frightened and hid inside the house until a neighbor came to inquire. Allison w a s also beaten, though not seriously. police said. She was treated for shock and scalp wounds and is reported in fair condi- tion. Tyeoon Miffed -.pprova1 by the city counc11 B Th D . before an arrost can be made a1iner reatens onation M_onU1'-'--~'-W.,...:....1_4~,_19_n~~~~~~~~O_Al_lV~Pl_lO_T_.$~, Ex-cons as Guides? San Francisco Plans Tours of 'The Rock' SAN FRANCISCO !AP) -ailing troops rtturning from Some or the inmates who the l'hlilpplnes. populated Alcatraz d u r i n g "The Rock's" 29 years as a federal maximum security pri- son may return to thelr lsl&Dd "home" late this year to serve IN 1m, Alcatraz became a federal prison . At least 25 prisoners tried to escape the Ude-laahed Island, swept loor as tour guides for the public, ~ says the superintendent of the For those w fa o Gold•n Gate National Recres· believe hi them, lion Area. Aleatra:z tolH o f• WILLIAM WHELAN told a fer a erowd of weekend audience the onoe In-11.,el11 ghosls ••• famous 12 acres of barren _... _ ~ _ _ _ _ rock a mile and a quarter off~~ the San Francisco city front times a day by swift ~nd will be opened for public tours !reacherous currents heading in late fall or early winter. m and oot the Golden Gate The chief of the 34,000.acre 21h ~iles distant. recreation area of federal, Five of them were shot to state, county and city lands death and 12 were recaptured said several of the 1,576 men who did time on Alcatrcu already have applied for guide before they left the island. Most who apparently BO! oll tbe lsland·prisoo drowned, but in December 11163, Joho Paul Scott. 35, got to shore, the lint escapee knowe to make it. One ol the more spectacular uprisings OCCID'red in Moy 1946, when tbe three-day Bat- tle of Alcatraz cost five lives and 15 wounded. Three con- victs died in the battle and three later were executed. 1t1UCH LESS violent but highly publicized was the takeover of Alcatraz in 1969 by a band of 78 Indians who claimed the island belonged to them lUlder an old Sioux trea- ty. The last of the Jndians were removed in June 1971. jobs. and they are being Sa~e $1.96 00 seriously considered. The area, planned as =::::~:7:~:i:ff haJ& gallons of ~~~eB~~~.e~r~~fe:v~: I• ment reserv•li?ns on tbe edge J&B Rare Scotch. of San Francisco Bay, and parts of the San Francisco bay and ocean watqfronts. WHELAN SAID tours of Alcatraz will be tighUy con- trolled and probably llmited to views of the ' main prison block, now a moldering pile of cracked concrete and rusting beams. For those who believe In them, Alcatraz will offer a crowd of lively gbosts, like Chicago prohibition crime king Al Capone; gunman and k.id- Reg518.95 NOW IUILT INl "OUftt:Jt ............. jil Center after a lingering lµess. MeDonalds SAN FRANCJSCX>-(AP) = federal judge has dismissed Killer Suspeet Susan Lee Clay, 21, who with her husband, Frank Clay has been jailed in connection wi1h t h e murder of their two-year..,Jd baby. is escorted into Vallejo polioo s v ti o n, The child, known as ~by Jane Doe,' was -buried a week ago because no one knew·her name. for marijuana use, possession or cultivation. Such a cumbersome proced- W'e fuakes arrests unlik~ly. PASADENA (UPij -Oil tycoon Ross McCol-, naper Al "Creepy" K~rp~.: !um says Ire still plans '\Q.!lonl!l;e_$1~}oughy gang trl&!!erman BaSll T h d nl t to "shak " th b ·"fire~!" Banghart;-and th~ ~16.99 The required approval would have to be voted at Berkeley council meetings often attend- ed by as .many at 200 raucous youths -all sinoking pol. ec , an. o Y m~an ' e ~P e campus Y famed "Birdman of Alcatraz,'' !freatemng . to ~thdraw the giJ:it '~use of an Robert Stroud. suit by Mcllonalds System of---------- 'fornia against local groups claims pressured the Board Permlt Appeals to reverse impeach Nuon banner atop a dorlllltory. Right from the start nobody pproval for three new ham-His Pride Multiplies McCOLLUM, PRESIOENT of National Oil Co. and longtime trustee of the California Institute of Technology, said he was sitting down to morning coffee a week ago when he saw the "impeach Nix- on" banner printed in a Pasadena newspaper. ger restaurants here. I U.S. Dlstrlct Coor! Judge pencet" Williams ruled Friday POUCE B A V E refrained from busting the council meet- irJ<s, "That plcture is going to east l!lem $1 million," the oilman and ardent supporter of President Nix· on said at the time. McilOl!alds did not war· antitrust relief in federal and the action belonged state coorts. Bett11 Grable SANTA MONICA (~) - ctreo8 Btlly Grable oont!J>. to lmpnWe after· beiJii. ioilsly ill with a riP,orted OAKLAND (APJ -JI he keeps up his present pace, by the time General Custer, the lion, make& bis last stand the big cat oouJd father as many as 450 cubs, ·zookeepers say.- . General CUster, onl?• 4~ years old, ·Jives with .:two lloneoses· al · the Knowland Park 7.oo and has already slred '20 cubs, senior zookeeper Val lleLeon said Satunlay. On Mav 2 the council voted to direct ·the police to abide by the newly adopted initiative, and the next day the attorney general went to court. ''The Berkeley Mariiuona Init}ative is...not a_ 1munieiptl .ilalr< but.a aubjecl matter or field d legislation which bas been fully occupied by !lie State and there is no room for supplemental or complemen- Conuicted Friday, McCollum said he wasn't sorry for b1s spontaneous reaction but had cooled down since then and would still contribute the $1 million gift to the famed en!lineering school. t:> ..... , "CAL TECH'S'A !good outfit, the !JOO really,'' said McCollum, "and I never really considered not 'giving them a dime. But the students who pulled this kind of monkey business j u s t dragged the school's name down the gutter. enaJ Ulcer and now Is am- atory, a spokesman for St. ohn's Hospltal said today, Own a Cadillac? ,- ' ' .... Of course you can! Right now, you could be very, very close to the special pleasures of Cadillac ownership. Because right now there exists a very special set of circumstances favoring the person who longs to be a Cadillac owner. It begins with the beautiful new 1973 Cadillacs themselves. These can are the finest ever built by Cadillae- rcflected by the fact that the '73 Sedan de Ville, shown above ltas already established itself as the single m05~ popular luxury car in automotive history. There are nine great '73 Cadillacs from which to choose. And right now, your Cadillac dealer can probably tup~I~ ~ jwt the model you want ••• jwt the way you want 1t. • • If a new Cadillac; is not yet in your plans, consider the pleasure of driving a Cadillac of another year. The great demand for new Cadillacs ha.! made a number of beautiful previously-owned cars available. Like the 1971 Eldorado or 1969 C.OUpc deVille, shown above. It's true. A Cadillac of any recent year will likdy have more luxury, more convenience features, more power equipment than you'll find on many of today's new cars. For a lot of reasonS~ there couldn't be a better time to vis:. your authorized Cadillac dealer than right now. First choose Cadillac ... then choose the year. --.:-.-~ --=--__ ..;_ ~ ,_ -;. • thought much of the cruel.rock swarming with birds. The Spaniards called it "Isla de los Alcatraces" -Pe 11 can Island. And even today many people think it ought to go back to the birds, ALCATRAZ WAS moally ig· nored until lSM when a lighthouse was constructed on its 135-foot apex to ke~p wind· jammers from banging into it. The U.S. Army took <YVer Alcatraz four years later and Save s3_50 on J£B gallons ~ ~-­ Reg.s37.45 Nows33 .95 rortmed it to defend the bay . ._ ________ _ It waa liral used as • mllltary priaO!I during the Clvil War. In 1900, the govermneat used the island as a hospital site for ~-!#~~([!/~ Promises Tu Pay You A Guaranteed Income On Certificate Accounts At Their Highest Interest Rates In 38Years ! Right now, while current high interest rat... prevail, select thecertlllcate account that belt suits your needs! Start making the most of your money at Orange County's largest, first and strongeet independent Federal ••• where your peraonal welcome ia warm, your financial security ia owe, and your earning growth ia l[U&ranteed for the full term of your account. Plasbook Accounts $800 minimum In •n1 amount htld for 90 dlys $2500 minimum 1 toByura * $11,000 minimum 2tol)'Nra·• • Certfftcota r.tnilW O AND OVER-Plld 1nnu1lly on dlposlU tnqufn•bout llDIY-7% of $100,000 ot mON. Act nowt • Numbw of tHM ICCOUnb Umlttid. INTEREST ON ALL ACOOUNTS IS COMPOUNDED DAILY, PAID QUARTERL y 1'90 day interest forfeiture for early withdrawal HOMB OPPICE: 2611 Ooela A-lqwa Beoch. Cali!. 926!1 1-llilloBranch: 2<038 C.U.de llPtata, Latu•• Hni.. Calif. 926ll Laauo• Nipel 8ranc.b: 3 Morwcb Bay Pim, South Ltauna. Calif. 92677 San Cltme1ue Branch: 601 N. IU Camino I.eat. San Clemente. Calif. 92672 LakaEJllnore Branch: """"Graham Ind Liod11y, WATCH FOR GRAND OPENING ' .. . · ... . .. -= • ·- ' • -D4n;y ... pjiiT~mITOBL\L-PAGE.,.. ~i!·" ·-·uiiited Fr61it :" Vil3I .... WWI Ible legal acUon tint aoaJ4 cledde the rate Of. the ~ trc Irvine IMdrlng l>oopital imminent, tbe Orange County Board of SUpervilon has postponed adioo In aipport Of. lbe project. UC! Chancelkr Daniel Aklrldi was ICbeduled to ap. pear betore the board this week lo ask tbe wpervisors lo adopl a resolullon, supporting Ille boopltal and tile university's proposal lo divert $7 mlllion of Its bond money to upgrade the llOdly cle!lrient -Orange County l!edical Center. But the in-ntotlon wu postponed to give the county and tbe univealty time lo refine details of Ibo agreement. With the pootponemen~Su · Ralph Clark nunecl In with a "counler " ~ that tbe university buy the Medi Center and up;:fe It as a teacbinJ !aclli!f. Thill confiids directly witb recommendallon Of. a SI00,000 county health care atud1 prepued for the SU· pervison almoot a year ago, which COlllldered. among other alternatives, selling OCHC to the DDiversity, but dlsmlR<\ fuis as uneconomic for tbe·t411'9yer, The study recommended that the county upgrade the Medical Center and continue to operate it.-Ques- tioned as to the awarent confli~. supervisor Clark's executive assistant ,..d be had not even read tbe study. Clark's maneuver, coming as it does In the lace of the facts or the rounty's own study, bas no vallility. It Is nothing more !ban a ~litical move apparently de- signed lo stall supelVisors consideration <l the problem which hos been before them now far several months. Clark's ''propoal," lll>ol through wKh misleading slallstics and aciually false information, conveniently overlooks the fact that it would cost the unl~­ and Ille taxpayers -more b> produce a l!OOd g boepMal under bis p~ than to start Crom ocratch. with the tacit~ !bat $37 mllllm Of. the bond money would be earmar for UC!. lo enallle the med!· cal 9Cbool to. double its doctor training capacity. '.!be original plan WU to U5e $12 million 10< I medical od- ence classroom building and '25 millioll for a 25().bed On"'3JllpuJ teacbing hospital At tbe same time, tJie univenily planned lo ulillu some 300 teaching beds ·at OCHC where, it was hoped, the county would make a long..,.erdue in""51ment to up. grade the facility as recommended. The plan sounded valid enough, but roadblocks 800D appeared. Some county officials tboogbt they saw an opportunity lo ltlJacl<. tbe bond money for a complete refurbishing or OtMC. Some private docton and ownen and investors in private hospitals were concerned about losing yatien"5 or prerogatives to a UC! hospital and an upgradejl OCMC. By tbe lime the Joint Legislative Committee on Teaching Hospital Siting opened i"5 bearing in Orange County, many dOubls bad been raised, and not much support mustettd for the UC! bo6pital. Now the university bas offered a plan that would reduce the campus bospilal to 200 beds and release $7 million or the bond money for improving OCMC by re- ducing its 515 beds to a good 315-bed central county facility. This combined move would eliminate the argu· ment !bat a new UC! hospital would contribute to over· bedding. The new proposal bas wide county support, tnclud· • ing official resolutions from 12 city councils and from numerous citizen organizations. To this should be added the vQice of the supervisors. Time is of the ~nee. IC tbe county presents a united front with tbe uni· versity, there is a good chance the university's valuable medical school will remain in Orange County. In order 1'l remain, it must bave an on-eampus teaching hospital in addition to teaching beds at the Medical Center. ...... t·· -.,. \•It.,.,,.,, ttrc;rr~ \:t : ii r .1\.v !N'"" i :: • '--'· • • " • ., ,,,,,,,, llfr~ ~ 18 ~ .. :! 00 ,,~ti. .. -_ ~~ -~ -~~L ~.~ =,.. '·L ~ :::: l~( I~ .. ~~ A ~ --""' 1~. 1111111t'll ~ \/' . ~ v ~ ~ ~ Clark's "proposal serves no real purpose other than possibly to ·buy maneuvering lime for those like A>semblyman Kenneth Cory and private doctors in· volved In properietary )l<Js!*al ownerships who would pn!(er to fight their battles in Sacramento. - When voters approved a '155.9 million bond issue for statewide UC health science serviCes last fall, it was IC this is denied, or if tbe funds Cui.ally made avail· able are inadequate for a first-class installation, tbe University regents and the legislature could fmd ample justification for moving the medical school to another, 7t shore is good t.o be in the mainstream of America. _., more receptive area. · _ Parole Policies Getting· Tougher . After seYenl years ol messing around .., the fringes cl !Ociology, the state Adult Aulbortty Is becoming tough« and ~ cmservaUve about paro!illg pris- oners. Joseph Spangler, the Autbortty's ex· eaitive direclqr, puts It this way: "We are taking a closer, more careful loot at tbooe priaon inmates who are le-- gaily ellglble for pa· role. U it's a cue of reservation -not being certain or con· vlnc<d -then the decisioo goes to the >afety o! the citizen on the street, and not so much to the prisoner, as has ~ been the case in the past." Spangler con!irms that the board Is tlghten'mg conditions cl parole that had been broadened in rectnt years . "Some "Ailo might have been paroled a few years ago, the board -based on ex- perience and looking at such cases - now find just not safe to let out." IN THE PAST, be admits, the parole board adopted a less severe posture based on pres.<;ures from the Dept. o! Corrections and others to experiment with new programs. Some of those pro- grams have not worked. They are being dropped. The Authority gets pressures from every direction -left, right, soft, hard. Spangler acknowledges, however, that the concerns of such tough law men as L.A. Police Chief Ed Davis and sacramento sheriff, Duane Lowe, in· fluenced the board's harder posture . Several legislators -namely Senator Bill Richardson (R·Arcadia) and Assemblyman John Briggs (R·Fullerton I have also persistently pressed for lighter parole procedures. ARE THERE some legislators not so concerned about public safety? Even to the point. of taking chances when releas- ing prisoners? Spangler . replies that there 'arc some who do not believe anyone belongs in ( ..... _R_u_s_W,_'.4_r:_ro_N.___.J priloo.· Some legislators who feel that being locked in prison is damaging and not helpful; that prisons do not rehabilitate. The first purpose of prison, of course, ls to proted the public. Rehabililation comes secOOd to that. "The Dept. o! Correction& has some or the finest r<!ha~ilitalion p~ams In the world," asserts Spangler. "But the in- mate has to take advantage of them. Some do, some don't." THE PAROLE board is also requiring more precise and stringent reports on those prisoners already on parole: re- quiring more oomplete reporting of the parolee's behavior than In the past. "We had eliminated 'tluociation' as a coodltioo or parole. So, wben a parolee associated w:ttb another individual fol" il· licit or illegal purposes, that was not a reportable item. Now it is." One problem the parole board faces is Wlt!ks Practice Bits Poor, Elderly Dear -~~omy ·---1-----E~~€ssi.v~-Dr-ug--Char-ges.- Critics of Jane Fonda forget that the Constitution guarantees· a per- son's right to criticize the govern- ment. ....J.C.L . OloomY Gu• ninm--. .,.. Allml*" llr r11Nrt lllCI Of not _..., nfllct t111 "'-9f ""' .._..... "'"' ,_ "' '11w1 ,_ G'-r Gn. EM"" '""· ' that sbate prisons now contain a tougher popu!atioo. "Ten years ago," recounts Spangler, "16 percent of the prison population was for armed robbery. Now that's between ~o pereent. "You add to that tbe homicides and the assaults with a deadly weapon and rape by force and violence and burglary in the fll'St degree -and that gels you up to 60- 70 percent of the total prison population. "Many of them are repeal, multiple, offenders. The board is having difficulty finding prisoners it can release - because its principle concern is public protection." AS A RESULT of the Authority's tougher stance, there are between 1,000 and 1,200 more prison inmates than the Dept. of COrrections bad anticipated. Recently, a budget augmentation of $6.5 milfjon was requested. Several prisons that were being closed or phased back will probably be revitaliz- ed. The Conservation Center in Susan- ville will be used as a special vocational training institution. San Quentin's south block will be reopened and the planned 1975 closure of that facility probably delayed. So much for one experiment in sociology. Now back to the proper business of peoology: to protect the public. to punish the criminal, and to rehabilitate the convict. Quotes Teodoro 1\1orca, Hollywood -"'nle most wiiversal language of all people is beautiful music, and if our children were taught Utis and were made aware of good music from early childhood, we would have less problems in life." • WASHINGTON -The great, greedy pharmaceutical firms soak the poor, the elderly and other patients up to 30 times too much for live.saving drugs. These staggering overcharges are collected for brand-name drugs which are no more efficacious than gen- eric drugs, with the same Ingredients but no ballyhooed brand names. These are the con· fidential study by the Senate S m a 11 Business Subcom- mittee. Chairman Gaylord Nelson, CD- Wis.), is expected to release the fmdings shortly. There's no use, Nelson discovered, grumbling to the druggists, who are com· peiled to pay proportionately high prices for the big-brand drugs. Why, then, don 't the druggists refuse to handle the costly pfud.ucts and offer the same drugs wider (JACK ANDERSON) non-brand names? Answers the Nelson study : "1llE PURCHASE of prescri ption drugs by 200 mill.ion people in the United States is controlled by 200,000 physicians • • .$5,000 is being ~t each year on each practicing doctor to persuade him to prescribe brand-name products. "Since in most states no other brand of drug can be legally substituted for another, if the doctor prescribes a brand- name drug, competition has been eliminated." In olher words, the drug- gists have no choice. Sometimes, Nelson found, Americans pay almost three times more for their drugs than foreigners pay for the same drug produced by the same companies. Prices are based, according to the study, on what the "traffic will beat." NelsO!l's 40-drug study shows that Bristol-Myers, for example, charges U.S. v.•holesalers $35.16 for the same an- tibiotics that the company IOld for ooly $17 for overseas use. And a 500-pill lot of Travenol's Synthroid costs •'6.28 in the U.S., only $2.44 overseas. EVEN MORE ootrageous Is the way the companies jack up the prices of brand-name drugs. For the d r u g Peritrate, produced by Wanier-Olilcott, aging heart patients must pay 162 !or 1,000 !ablets at many dnig stores. The non-brand equivalent sells at the same drug srores for only $2.9L Ciba's .Serpasil, widely used to reduce hypertension in the aged, sells at $65.113- per-tbousand at the drug stores. Its non- brand competitor, re.se:aHne. costs $2.25. As evidence that Ciba 'Could make a prof- it at the lower price, Nelson reports the company once offered the same drug to the Defen.se Department in mass quan- tities for a mere 60 cents per thousand. ·Museum Dealings Debase the Arts Why would the Museum or Modem Art in New York want to buy an ancient Etruscan vase for $1 million, when it knows perfectly well that most ancient art offered fOr sale here is either smug- gled or stolen? Why do any of these shenanigans have to do with the spirit and express.ion of art and the men wtio created these lovely objects -all the dirty deals and evasioos and hall-truths. And surreptitious flnan. cing through dubious intermediaries"? Nothing at all to do with art. Nothing to do, even, with public appreciation: a skill£ul copy of the Etruscan vase would give ihe average museum-goer just as m~h pleasure (or boredom) as the real thing. Only an expert could teil the dif. ference, anyway. But it has everything to do with greed and vanity and publicity and the whole foolish · and pretentious ' ' c u I t u re establlsliment," which battens off the artists and turns the esthetic pursuit into something as sordid as a pawnshop. ~NEY J.HARRI~ EACH )tUSEUM wants the fmest collection it can get, and will try to get it by any means that permit the directors and curators to close their eyes to the scabrous facts of illegality, piracy, or customs evasion. It is a high-level game, played for prestige in a closed circle of coUectors and museums, and art itself runs a poor last. , Such goings-on debase, rather than elevate, the pursuit of art: they turn art into a mode of merchandising, a capital asset, a form o! equity that hedges agahut inflationary tendencies. And the poor devil who palnted it, or sculpted it, or pottered it, most likely went to bis grave for want of a dish of bean soup and a slice of fresh bread .. 1bls is not "bringing culture to the people"; this is not "evaluating public taste." It is dragging art down to the level of the pander and the pawnbroker, the fat and greasy middlemen who might as well be dealing in lard ftitures as in Goyas or Titians. SUCH EXHIBITS do not penuade the public that art is a lofty and n~ry calling in a civilization -but only that artists are fools to work so bard for so little, while the noncreative vultures gather up the loot. It l'f!inforces our native conviction that art is a toy for the rich, and it is far better to get rich and collect it than stay poor and m,ake It. The whole system ot collecting and storing and emibiting art needs a drastic, and wholesome, overhaul. It.sen- tire approach smells of ll' o s s possessiveness rather than of reverential appreciation; it violates the very "cultural" quality ll pretends to bonori and by its squaUd competiUvenes.s to get • its grubby hands on more and more, it merely testifies to its own spiritual unworthiness. Occasional Beheading Helps Strengthen the Throne WASIUNGTON -1'1e Second A.J. Llebling Counter-Conventloo began here In a happy bath o! boou, amlly and sell· •tisned anti·Nlxon 1' Gn&llners. "The slo- pn ls four more yean with two off for aood behavior/' oae reporter said to ll»tlw, who replied that •he bad html "Truman t'apota • II writing a new - 1 bou I Waterpte. He'& calling It 'In Cold Cash.' " Dick Tuck, the Democrats' merry prankster whom the Republlca111 er- roo<OU&ly but flatteringly blame for Jn. troduclng dirty tricks Into notJooal Po)!Uca, announced that "Charlie MBnlon bu Issued a statement asking U,t we don't Jll'f>lodge the Prosident," while _....., else predlcled that the Nll.oo Memorial Ubrary would be moved to ll'Ol1 lavenwonb. In the game cl Cln YIMI Top Thll! lllOlher put ln t b a I lli1<hell II ., Important tboy'n ooly lalaff to let him make ll<ense plata with ""' .._.., .. to which Tuck .. )oklod that tile Hew Wbllo -, ....... r "Pardon ... me," and everybody laugh-( ingly agreed that "Nixon's the One." Liebl Ing 11 ls sponsored by I MORE) the journalism review based In New Yorlc • which tries to keep us in the oommerclal media rea80Dlbfy honest and·accurale. On other days the younger, lartller lei! and less COD1PfOllllsing, participants would bav.e been counter-<.'Ollvenlloillng against the American Society of Newpaper Editors concurrently meetin'g uptown at another hotel. But not in this year of Watergate. The younger ones were so well pleased by the performance o! their rl<h elders that they Invited to appear oo their program editors !roll\ the Boston Globe, the Chicago Sun·'llmes, the Pll!Iadelphla Inquirer, the New Yort 'limes, and above all, the WuNngtoo Post. VON HOFFMAN J 11IE FIRST CREDIT for breaking the blaest newspaper story any of 111 are ilkely to att goes lo Poot.re~ Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward wtlb their Immediate editor, Barry Sussman; the oecond credit ""' to the -·· mu· lmum editor Ben Bradlee and publisher Kay Gr11bam, who stuclt by the lflO<Y throu&h the monlhl when all Ibey """ geWng WU abuJe from Jlon 1,jecJ<r IDd .. silence from most or their brother media execuUv.,s. But at the (MORE) party all o! us Post Toa!ties were swelling up In the cream of their accomplishment. Even we corn~ Oakes who h a d nothing to do with H know that Inside our cereal box 19 lhe Breakfast of Champions. Wby even the copy boys over at the office are walking around with a little extra swagger. The place l~s more like a. teleVision studio than an iilky newsroom. Jial to work for the Washington Poat is to get Interviewed by an electroolc COi' respondent from Japan or Gennany or Iowa. The oflice joke is that Bernstein and Woodward have two sets of dttks, one where they interview -varloul Federally employed crooks. and ooe where they get Interviewed on bow llMly do It. It Is a unique and high moment In American journalism, and anyone luck)' enough to have any connectloo with it can't help but love it, and snap, cr1ckle, pop with pride . THE BRITl'LE HOSTESSES from New York, the. oot-<>1-town free lancers, the hopeful•young ooes looking for a job, the reporters, the wits, the journalistic groupies. and substantial editors, all wl}o'd come to drink at Liebllne II were trying to guess what's next. The town is alive with one rumor, that they'te even calllng up from the Senate trying to con· !Inn the talk that The Post Is gett1ng ready to bust the ulUmate and last story, the big mega bombola that would pin ever)ithing p e r s o n a 11 y and in- conlrovertibly to Nixon. Whether or not that stucy Is ever to be, some future events are more discernible. One ls that televilioo news, which bas .played sucb o smail part In Watergate till now, Is warming up its cameras for the Ervin hearln411. 'Ibis will 'put the \story ol White House crime In every llv· i1l8 room In Am<rlca, provided the networks don't back ol( 8lld harken to the cries that the media must mw JOln In Ibo cover-up It upoted to save the Presidency. 1be fear Is growing among Wuhlnaton'a monarcbl&Ia that tr the en- llre pulillc ••er !lndl out all the facts the demand !or lmpeedlment and dee- I apitation of the roya l head may prove irresistible. History, OOwever, teaches that an octa<ional beheading oct ooly strengthens the throne but instructs future occupants ln manners and humili- ty. Conceded it didn't work so well with the French Bourbons, but you can argue tbal if Chari., I hadn't had o good chop. ping Elizabeth II would not now be reign- ing. Whatevu the outcome, the Presidency Is In no danger, and least or all from the OU.N•I COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed, PublilJt,r Th°'""' K•evll, Editor -Bar!i0rtr1'iiibi<:h Editorlal Page Editor Monday, May 14, 1973 citizenry knowing wliat the President may have done. In fact, administering the coup de grace to the W"OWlded, baleful bull in the While House n111y further orderly government. ooe ol the reporter> al the party said he'~ just come lrorn covering a. Baltimore bank robbery trial where the defense lawyer soogtx to discredit the testiroony Of an FBI witnes.1 by asking 'the jury, "After what l'C've learned about the FBI rote In Waterpte, can you possibly belieye-fhls man?" The 'fdllori&t, pqo ot··'the Dl.Qy Pllot leeks 10 \ntonn ·w slimultte ,.aden by i>ftE'u;. CD ,thJo - dlvme commentUy oa. io,b ol J• ltrtsl. by 'l)'ndicatf!d cahunnlsts and car10onlats, by Pl'O¥tdtnc a forum tor -.r ........ and by ........... thll llll'NSpl.Jlrtr's opinions and ideu on atmnt topQ. The editorial oplnlcm of tllil Dalb' Pilot ·~ only tn the editorial column at lhe top of the Jilli-:. Opinton. txpreued by IM col· umntsts and ~artoonlltf and letter writm a.rt thtlr own and no .... mtnt ot 1htir views by I.be DUly PUot-bew"""' t I;__ I I I I I • . . • • I• ·: ~. . • "I" •• ~, ! ~ . .. '. .. J• .... , ... , ' :1;.i. ;. t,., ". . .. .. ') '., , .. ••• ! , ... , ..... '·:· ·- ':J!'11•: '"l! ~ '•·!rl,,. \I lei~ ,i•r,r•·, .,, ... '• l QI I I . J - .. • bl IJ I< fl "' el ii n u a g s c p F f s t ( I ~ f ' •, • ~ • .. ·' ' ... ;. ,._ " .. ·• ,, ·' ,, .. , - ,,\ • Mondor, May 14, 1973 DAILY PILOT ·f . -. . ·Neurotic ' Group ,;_lll.ipact .. euidelin'(ts Fa~i.ng~Hassle ' 11I'm afraid he's getting serious. He's beginning to HD.d me steaks.'! -. L. ltl. Boyd - Grand Canyon Formed A neurotic might be anyone suffering from the pain of .loneliness, fear, a n x i e t y , depession or any other emr tion which interferes with his function in llfe. '. Neurotics' AnonymoUs, a na- tional organization w h i c h operates ln the same manner as Alcoholics Anonymous, has formed a branch in Huntington Beach. Meetings, open to any rest: dent, are h e Id weekly at 8 p.m., Friday. at the Faith Lutheran Church, 8200 Ellis Ave. There are no dues or fees. Anyone who feels , he has a problem, and would like to 1'0ive it himself with a little help, is invited to attend. For further information on Neurotics Anonymous phone Claire at 847·2997. Businesses Get .Loa11 ' Of Books Bj. THOMAS D. ·KWS · Q:infuaioo over who mJA file . enviroruneDtal l mp a ~t reports , on new corwtruction projects and where they're to be filed ended last February when the Reagan ad- ministration, i.sllued guidelines for the reports. But a new round of hassles may begin shortly. The lawyers responsible for last fall's "Friends of Mam- moth" decision by t h e SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FOCUS California SUpreme C.OUrt say they're convinced the . guidelines released by state Resources Secretary Norman B. Livermore are illegal. IT WAS THE Friends of Mammoth decision which ex- tended the requlremen~ for Impact rePorls to private developments as well as publicly-financed ones. The·environmental ·attorneys aren't quarreling with· the ex- emptions Livermore's guidelines allow -for motels and apartments with less than four units, all single-family residences when built as lone · Whal they're irguinc'wlth Is the "sweetheart reports" they claim the new guidelines &110\". UNDER PROCEDURES which toot effect April 5, citle.8 and counties review en- vironmental reports prepared by developers. · ~·ni.8t•s invalid under the 1970 . Envil"'llliental Qiiality Act/' attorney carlyle Hall of the West Los Angeles-based Center for J,.aw in the Public Interest claimed in an m. terview. "U\i'ennore is com- pletely off I>a..e." Hall, who argued much of the Friends of Mammoth case before the state Supreme Court, said the law actually requires local governments to prepare the reports ~Ives, not just review them. JOHN C. McCarthy, the Pomona lawyer who represented the con- servation.lat Friends or Mam- moth organization in its Mono County case, agrees. He con- tends · reports prepared by developers on their projects "are not fully informative of the effect the development will have on the community." II that lawsuit were ,,.,_ <esful, It would cause f\ln- damental change In the way the impact studies a re prepared and handl\l(l. CUrrently, lll08I reports are made up by outside consulting firms under contract t o developen. • . MANY Sc>UTHER·N California cities and counties have Created special departmen~ eole1l to evaluate thOle reports, but the local govenvnents have no voice in deciding who will actually prepare them. "'" 11'lbe law says a developer can submit a draft en- vlrorunental impact report to a local government," Jfall said. · ••But It doesn't relieve the agency ol the need to do its own afterward." II the planned suit by the ecotOgists sUcc:eed, m an y rnott local govemments will have to .. t uP lmpoct-report offices. But that doesn't m~a~ they 'll actually have to make the rePQrts. Ofvt N•tuN • chanQ t9 trow '"°" Mir for you. Only'"' 548-9977 PHARMAC.Y WE QUOTE PRICES OVER THE PHONE ••• ANYTIME -CHICI THESE SUPEI SALi SPECIALS-Sll'Jlt. Rtl. , Ollr Ill.", ~kt I COLGATE Toothp11t11 701 .••••••••••••••••••• , $1.tl 19¢ WELLA BALSAM H1ir Col'lditiol'ltt, 16 01 .•••••••• 1.91 1.19 IACTINE A"ti11ptie Spr11y, 41/r 01. , , • , •••••••• , • I.St LZ9 IU9ht Gu1nt"NATUR.A.l SCENT!' Antip1r1pir1rit, I 01. 1.79 . l.49 $.Ill "rk1 75, 1.69 1.09 1.19 2700 E. Coast Hi~wav. at Fernleaf. Corona del Mar • The waiting rooms o f units and at.ores a n d As a resuit, Hall said, "We're considering right now whether we'll bring s u i t against these guidelines." He indicated any action probably would be filed before June. AMPLI PAlllNG IN •IA.I Ho1tn -t :JO • 6:00 D•llY Cl.-d S•IMl4IJI t11M1 HolldCIYI 644-7575 Getting Deeper sever a I business restaurants designed to ac- eslabli$ments In Huntington cooimodate less than 2 O Beach are now filled with persons. books from the city's public ...:...--------------------'-== Three out of every four men who buy boats buy more ~ boats ... That word "insolent" used 4o mean nothing more than "unusual." ... Costs a little less than a penny to make a dollar bill . . . Report is that Grand Canyon gets an inch deeper each year ... More things have been bOught with shells than with any other money. Supermarket managers in West Germany's Stuttgart cQarge a shoplifter the equivalent of about $6 before they 1 · turn said thief over to the lawmen. Money goes to pay the SB;laries of ~ store detectives. On the most practi- . cal theory that such' costs ought not be passed aloog to .the .~ers •. In-_ teresting notion. Did I mention a turtle lays e«gs at the rate of about five a minute? WVE AND WAR -Among 30-year- old men, it's the never -married bachelor who is most difficult to get into matrimonial harness. Or so says our Love and War man. He quotes statistician Edward A. Le\v as reporting the widower of that age is twice as easy to lead to the altar while the divorced fellow is four times as likely to go ... do..wn ·the aisle. . Q •. "Do chickens take.naps?." , A. ·No. They ·rack 'up all the sleep 1tJey need in one long stretch tvery night. Cats take naps. Dogs, too. Likewise, cows: horses, sheep. Not chickens. Q. "People of what country use the most drugs? I mean per capita? ... A.-llenmark. Q. "What couptries have bot lines with the l).S. now?" A. The Sovie:t Union, Great Britain1 \Vest Germany, France and Japan. THE TR.AJNMEN -Anybody who owned a cart with flange<] wheels could use the railroad lines in this country. Such ·was the case for about 20 years filter the first of said tracks were laid out. As a consequence, some of those eafly trains crawled for hours behind slow teams. Got worser and worser, the feuding between the wagon haulers and the trainmen. The cow catcher on the front of the steam epgine originated as a weapon. So snipers found work. MOst dangerous job of all for awhile there was locomotive engineer. Address mall to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, Newport Beach 9%660. Copyright 1973 L. M. Boyd llbrar'y. Books ·dOoated by residents, duplicate oopies of books in the library and other volumes no longer needed at the ~ library or branches are being rotated ·among the business community. •. If a customer likes the book he starts while waiting in an olfice, -be··ea&-tak&-i.1-Jiom<!;f-- finish it, then return it to the nearest branch library . Business establishments · participating are: Terry 's Buick, Wilson Ford, Casa. de · Olnie, Clifford's Be au t y Studio, Magic Mirror and Beach Beauty Salon. Official To Speak .. Dr. Robert F,, ~y. cbail'T!l•n of the ·~ .P>ast Regional Zone C.onservation CQtnmission, will be the guest speaker May 17 at the second annual Water Quality Environ- mental Awards dinner on the Queen Mary. Rooney, a Huntington Beach resident and an economics professor at Cal State, Long Beach, will talk about "The Economics of EColog)L" The banquet is sponsored by the ocean industries advisory council of the Long Beach Area Chamber of Commerce. Sheriff Quits MERCED (AP) -John Latorraca, Merced County sheriff for the last 16 years, ·has announced his retirement, effective July 31. Latorraca, 57, joined the department 35 years ago. If your head's into fashion Learn to sew and be a winner! Girls 10 to 18 ••• you can win in the Singer annual teenage.Styl8maker' CQntest .. ~2,500 super prize$! . Let Singer. the sewing s?eciallst,' teach you how to make creatively original clothes for one--of·a-kind you. Famous Sinqer know-how and show·hOW g1ves you sew·how like you would~'t believe! For only lV.50 you'll -receive 18 enjoyable hours of expert Instruction (that's a te·ensy 98¢ an hour) ... and you make your contest entry right In the class! You can win marvelous , prizes, including an all expense paid trip to New York for two, $3,000 cash awards to winners in Deb, Sub·Deb and Junior Miss cate· gories, with $1,000 to NMe111·up In each division. Plus 72 sewing machines, 2,400 pendant watches. ' (· I I GIT YOUl ·SEWING GOING -VISIT YOUR SINGER SEWING CEN111 • SOON -HURRY! CLASsES BEGIN •• ; JUNI 20, 10 a.m. • 1 p.m • In Vega's first year, 1971, it was the Maier Trend Car of the Year. A singular honor, and the· first oLmc;my. futei-that year, in the Car & Driver Readers' Choice ·poll, Vega was named "best economy sedan." It was the first time in the eight yecirs of the poll that an American car had won in that category. Last year Vega again emerged as the Car & Driver readers' favorite in ·the economy sedan category. . And in a nationwide survey of auto service-. men conducted by Motor Service and Service • ~-----=-..... ----- -~ ~:; .-.· ~· .... --. .•. .-,:. .. • ''• '• :':'· ~:c •"'•' :;i:: .l .. • ,. -=-~· .... flf~ ' -Station Management magazin~s ·Vega was con;. sidered to be the easiest.subcompact· to service:.: · · Now,in.1973, two.~ore big pne5 for 01<1f littl~­. one: Motor T.rend named our Vega GT the t.oon:.-· omy Car of the Year.· · ' · :: · And Car & Driv,er readers, for the third yeai< in a row, voted Vega, the "best economy sedan.'!~· We appreciate all the honors, but we'r~:: ·really much more interested in your .stamp:of approval. Please, stop by your local Chevy dealer's ford test drive. See why we're so proud. ' ' ... . . : :- ~-. .-. ., ·-·-. ' . '. ,· • SINGER SIEWHAT IT'S LICE'IO DRIVE A W'IN>8. Sewing Cantara tot• o Meond ta buc:klt up. h ccllld -a 1U11im.. ; • I • /'. ' I HANGING OUT THE WELCOME SIGN AT UC IRVINE Harry LI Grando, Anne Morr h11y, Roy Comer (from loft) ~~~~~~~~~ Agriculture Adviser UC Irvine Open House Set May 20 Urged by Supervisors SANTA ANA -The assign- ment of a University of California farm adviser to Orange c.ounty has been urged by tho Orange county Boan! . o( SUpervisors. Deatli Notice• SUPERVISORS voted to Trams circling the camws write to the proper parties at ring will carry visitors from the univer~ty and on tbe UC building to bufldmg during UC Board of Regents urging that Irvine's open house from noon the existing rann adviltt's to I p.m. SUnday. pooitlon be filled. Special e x b i b i t lo n s , In pushing for the mov1" perforrrwlctt, films, tours board Chairman Ronald w. and other acUvltles are plan· cHu1tcH1LL Caspers of Ne-rt Beach ned to give the p u b I i c CllllrlH L. (llurthhl. Age 10, of 920 tr.1lnt "l"' ... mn~. acadenu·c pr-Av1., NIWport B••ch. D•" of dHtl'I, May --·or .,-12, 1973. Survived bY lwo d1UOhllr1, pointed OUt that agriculture is grains fiDe ...... to i-Vlrolnla and Patrlcl• Churcnll!. Str.1icH, ll bi • .. -•·-· In Or ~ ~ •r wtonff<i•Y· 12:30 PM, Pnk F11nnv sti g ~ ange formation and computer scien· Coloni•• FUl!O!tal Hom•' COunt JOHl!S Y · ce, from biological a n d M•r'O•tel E. Jones. R11ldlnt of 1214 P1rk · Ranch U Lani, S•ni. An1. 011e ol ~111, May 12, "lrvllle opera ODS physical aciences lO physical 197J. Survlvff by h""lwmd, OlnVef' J-51 t ·-.II " b ·c1, edu lion d1ua h11r, Patricia; "°"• Mlthlel Jonei; are 8S (JJJN og, e SAi C8 • • mother, RubY Mllldrum; brOther, Carl · 1;..,,. ou! that the ty' Op tun•t al will be MHldrum; 111ter, Sh!rl•l Mllldrum. JlOU1""6 COUD 8 por 1 Y SO pnr services, Thur1o<1a1. Mav 1 , 11 :JO AM. •"tat agriculture crops '--... '-t vided for visits •-student Re>se H!ll1 Memorial Chai>el. 1nt1rm1n!, ..., ..... uuy• w 11-H1111-Mea'lOJLaLP..ar.ll.....lWl_t:.llwi!!"""'--;,,1·n -1-i···•1oe~-""on -lasi-residence halls,, ~J.Kleot .he.al Funel'ai H1;1m1, CoroN dtl Mar, D!i'ii· -.Uu1"" "" llDUI tors. LINCOLN year. center and Gateway Commons Rov Llnco!n. 1723 Pllll d• Sur, Balboa. where Student activiUes are 01" o1 de.111, May 11, 19n. survlvtd by "IRVINE S8IP8 ~ all centered. wife, Mary; two i.on1, David, of Loi ..... ...,.... :.r:i.:l~\1<1r.':.~ser!'i~:.'·w.,.~'1=1 todt;':; over the world," Caspers ad-Families are invited to pic-Motld•v. al 12 Noon. Pec111c view Chap1l. ded, "and last year there were nic in Campus Park. Enter· lnurnment, Pacific View Memorial P1rk. Pacific View MOflUlr\I, Olrec:lorl. 14 crops grown ifl the county tainment Will be provided by McALLISTl!R f th VCI p Band M1c1>1e1 PhllllP MCA.Ill•!••· Ar. !1 ot 20.t which had a sales value o e ep . Lovol,. Rl'l"<'I. Coata Mesa. Oa I Of dfall'I, mo-~--11 nu·won eacb." MIY 12. 1f11 Svrvlv..:1 ~fl rlt'lll, !'!.~· •<> iUIUI and Mrs. CMrlls McA 1ter1 .,...r brotn.rt Mlrk, Mft,_, k• n •!Id Jo11n1 Charles Salvemn, county ~~,s~r,D~1~,~~~te;.U.~· :,r::, agricultural extension direc--Teen Mom Faces Trinl As Adult Ann• 8rlnkm1n, AriJnia. lloaary, tonight, •-r, sai·d the pr--' adv1·-r Motldav, 7:30 l'M1 RIQUl•m Ml•• ... TUii-w ~ .,., "lr.J' AM~ •1 st. John ~ .. ~ .. •P','" would deal with 340 growers of Ca k c . co.ta Mftll .. ,1n r. CM lfOPMI' ohnton ottic111 no. lnl&r· cltnlS, avocados, strawbe.rries, menl, A.nnslon c-1ery, El Toro, Oll'"ldtd bY llckl'I~ ChllPll, T111trn. asparagus and other CfopS Eva IC. McCutl~~'-ir~H ~.&SO CNllN which 8CCOUDt for 26,f percent Orlvl, Cost• Mesa. 0111 of dHlh, MaY of the county's t 0 t a 1 13, 197). Survived bY ton. Cl-nu McCulloc:h. s..-Ylcn •rid lnterrMnl will bl agricultural income, held In Birmingham, Alablm1. on Wtdl'IHCllY, May 16. Bell 8l'OM!WIY Mortuary, FGrwardlng Ol~ton.. MILLl!'llt MlrtM S. Miii..-. AOI 70, of 'l900t Glen A!bvn Lall'!, OranM. tl.t• of f:IN!tl, M1Y 12, 1973. Survlve-d bY da119hlerl Merpr•t fa!r, Orancie; thr" 11rarllldl1 drlfll two 1l1le!'$, Mara1rsr E. R.ittrl. Hkkorv, l"l'!ln1'11v,.nlaJ "°"rv JaM ,.twe0mtr. Oraroe. s..-Y1en, T1.Jftd•v1 2 PM. Bl'OWl'I rn1nnl1I ('haOll, Sanl• ,..na. wlltl O_r1 Richard lrom of tne Ftnl Unll9'11 Pr......,vte...l•n r'tiurch of Santa An•. of· tlcl•tr1111. lnlen'!'llnt wlll follow In FalrflaYe"n Mern.,rl1I P1rt;. arown Colonl•I Mort..,arv, Dlrtc':i'.t'itoDIE Roll• MH Shrod1. 2'l\e Oll1war1 SI., Hunt1110ton 8Nch . 0111 of dll!h. MIV 12. 1973 SurvlVtcl by t1u1~nd, 01vld E. Shrode: d•\lllhters. Pamtle Outf, of Arlron11 ClndV Corml1r and T1rtw Badami. both ol Lon11 Be.te~; oartnls. Mr. 1nd Ml'$. Rolla Rooker, LOI Alamitos; brolheri, Paul R o o k e r , Monrov1a1 R1lph Rooker, Rlvtr,lde ; 1IS11r, Jol!n1 R1na11... Lnml Lindi. Servlcn, Tuesday, 3 PM, Pac1nc View ChaPll with Rt'Y Brute A. Kurrie, of· 11e1111nii. Enoombment, Pacific View fkl1tlng . Entombment, P1clflc View Directors. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIW MORTUARY 427 E. 17th SI., Costa Mesa 64H883 BALTZ-B,RGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 67!-9450 Costa Mesa · 64f.%Uf • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa Mesa IJ 11-3133 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1705 Laguna Canyon HAI. fH.1111 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary Cbapel SIOO PocHlc View Drive Newport Beach, Ca1Uornl1 MW'IOI • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL ROME 'l!et Bolio A ... WKtm1D11or~ SMITRS' rloRTUARY 111 Mo1n St Ruatlnrton Beacb S3M5St La• c .. 1 YOl'I ftH .... ,..... IMyt hi .. c'-HIM .... ,..._ .... .... ,.. . ....., "" THE SUPERVISORS' re- , qu.st to 11!91 unlvorslty bas been endcned by tile Irvine Company and the Orange County Fann Bureau. The position bas been vacant for several months. Professional Associations Hear Talk ORANGE -Dr. Edwanl R. Annis of New York, a fonner president of the American Medical Association, will be th'e featured speaker Tuesday at the annual joint meeting of the Orange County medical and bar associations. Or. Annis' topic at the 7 p.m. dinner meeting scheduled for the OCMA building, 300 S. Flower St., Orange, will be "Professional Corporations - Progress and Prospects.'' Organizers of the doctor· lawyer meeting said a pre-din· ner social session is set for 6:30 p.m. SANTA ANA - A 17-year· old girl charged wllh being an accessory to .the murder of her 3-year-old son bas been transferred from Juvenile Hall to special quarters in the Orange County Jail. DISTRICT ATTORNEY'S- officers ordered the transfer or Sandy Rockw<><,>d after a juvenile COW't judge Thursday ruled that she must be tried as an adult on charges stemming from the death April Jl or her son, T<Xld Rockwood. "l don't think we will seek an indictment from the Grand Jury in her case1" Chief Depu· ty District Attorney James Enright said. "She has already appeared before them to offer testimony in the related case." 11IE RELATED case is that or Larry Wayne Cobb, 23, who ia being held on charges of first degree murder filed alter he allegedly led lawmen IQ the body of the little boy. It is alleged that a beating administered by Cobb caused the child's death and that CObb carried the body to the Anahelm Hills area and buried it in a shallow grave. PIOYtllONALLY ACCllOITIO IY' ntl COMMITTll Of IAl IXAMINRI OP THI STAn IAl Of CAUfOINIA FULL-TIME LAW STUDY PROGRAM I NOW AVAILABLE • If ,..u 1r1 9"' 11 ..tlh .,. A.A. dll'"• or • U y111 are '"' 21 ft hw• •"al....t '" ,,,....,.. lnt11!1ch11I altlllty ttt. .,.111,,1..,t •f .a..v,. ft. H tl1t.nnlnlfi lty telf), e Thi J,D, •r LLI ... ,.. CM II• ulMCI h!. 3 ,,.,.,. "Wn •f full-ti-l1w 1Wy llS·16 cl11.,...'" Mun pit' -..Ill, •r I" 4 y..,. If 1"t •f 11art-tlm• atten9..iw tJ chtMI ,.. ...tJ S-4 Mvn ,.., tlaul ""d p• Mc,_ • llt™• .. tiff tk C1llf1ml• lw blMln•ti•n, WlfTI Ol llHONI •ct INfotMATIOM 01 CATA~OGUt: 800 South Brookhurst An•halm 92804 17141 635-3453 Ora4Mtff -.a1tw. t. t•k• I~ C•llt.ml• St• a.r l11•111l11•tt.ft. ......... , .. ,.. ... . APPlY NOW FOR SEPTEMBER 6th DAY, EVENING OR WEEKEND CWSES And !hell r•ad Boner'• Ark In tho DAILY PILOT Sundau comfca. ' I .,_"" IUOllll POI ROllAUY -flVDtNT UW9 AmOYID IOI-~ -~. ' MWD~ Disputes Water Cost Claim LOS ANGELES -'Ibo f]JJ mUllcll 1 ,_ !Gr 1111ter IOlfa>IDg pWil al an IJllllal 1DC1 lnmr• tepl!r IDCI Ille material In tbe county Meffopolllon water DlslriJ sofl<nerl and addltk\oll clean--fOr tile entlrio C011Dty of replacemeol O)lls. ll'lter dJstricl reporl. Ing produets becaUIO Imported only fl mlllloo. ClJnlnn lald lbe MWD bad hal cbalJ..,..i tile accuracy Colorado River water I s made 11' own study of p!plug THE MWD STUDY obowecl a "hiJhly-publiclzed" survey banter than water from other BE Al.SO TOOK •'•-issue and plum"•• flxlurel al G<ne IU lndl .. "•• t•-• lbe use of ~-v .._ that the average e of -. ~ "'"""''· with lbe aurvey's conclUBion VWage, the dlltflcl'• field --•-• al -•--• llOll p1 Colorado River water coua Cllnton said that Ibis ig-that Colorado River water beadquarters on lbe Colorado .......... d g vanucu P' lbe average Orange Cou6ty nored tbe altemaUve o I aborlens lbe IUe o! piping and River. He said lbe study wu Ing using Colorado River llouseboid en extra 1227 a building a centrll w a t e r plumbing fixtures In homes in comple.te d1Jagr<t111enl with water waa 25 years year. •p;;i;;;;;i;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;i;;;;i;;;;ii;;;;i;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;ii;;;.i;;;;;;;;;i;iiiiiii;ii;;;;ii;iii;;;;iiiiiii;iOiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;9j Frank M. Cllnoon, MWDll r;a1 .... m::i~:!i ,::du!: .tire ,-..U, """*' cl!wl: &•'*I •1VI 7 too high. Do so ••• Rapidly & -1y under doctor's lllfM"lslon THE $227-A-YEAR penalty Pounds and lnc:hn GO F A ST I cost estimate was the result of a !Urvey made last year by WEIGHT c LI NIC, INC. the Orange COUnty Water Di!trict. It was based on the 2345 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar auwnption that a family of tn••r M•cArtftur llwf.) five uses tw&-thlrds of an acre tool of water annually. (An 23861 El Toro Rd., Suite 202, El Toro acres foot is 325,00> gallons). HMni t .,. 1: 2 to I -......,. ..,,. ,,..., The survey estimated that c.a 61'1.uJ1 I• C..... -•-llMl40 fl II ,.,. county boineowners s P e n t Ctlllk •• ........ • •••DI• oaov• -,..,, c111""""" """ 4 -~ -~·-... Wina7day Caribbean Cruise ~ for two at our new Huntington Beach Office 6100 Warner Avenue in the Warner-Dale Shopping Center May 14 thru May 19 To celebrate our opening In Huntington Beaoh, Golden Slale Bank • , will send two luckypeopleonaglorlous7 day trip to the Carlbhean, ln!'ludlpg l!>und lripVet lllghl to Miami I Visit · San Juan, Puerto Rico; St. ThOnias, U.S. lrgln'fslands; Nassau, Bahamas, come In and register anytime during our Open House. No transacUon noceeaary. Drawl11g on May 19. Winner .-cl not he present.• Open this Trea1Ure Chest and win one of 250 Valuable Prizes! Drop lnlo our new office any day during Open House. We'll give you a key to try your luck-If you open the Treasure Chosl you will receive your prize right on the spot. No business transaction necessary.• Speclal Drive-up Banking Prize Portable Color TV Sal We want you to discover the convenience and efficiency of our modem, remote control drlve--up banking system. As a specl~I inducement to try It, we are going to give some lucky person a beautiful, portable, color TV set. No business transaction necessary. Just drive up and register. Drawing on May 19. Winner need not be presant. • Charter Accounts pay no monthly service charge All personal checking accounls opened during our first 30 days In business In Huntington Beach will be classified as Charter Accounts. On such ac- counts there will never be a monthly service charge, provided the account stays active. A Souvenir For Everyonal We want you to remember your good ff me at the Bank during our Open House so we have prepared colorful, useful "Remembrances" for all who visit us at any time from May 14 lhru May 19. Refreshments for all! Come In for a friendly visit and Join us In some tasty ralreahmenta. Served every day ·during our Open House. Golden State Offers One. Stop Banking Golden Stale Bank brings lo Huntlnglon Baach compltle per.ional and commercial banking services, utilizing every available modem lechnlque to make your banking transactions efficient and pleasant ••• Ultra Modem Building; Latnst Drive-up Banking Syslam; Convenient Walk-11p Window; 24 Hour Deposilory. More lmportanl, you will enjoy lhe efficient &ervice provided by our courteous, professional slall. Extended Banking Hours In addllion to proVidlng every. 111~m banking facjllty, we ·81'8 offering greatly extended hours In order to eerve yoij bettor. Open House Weak, May 14 thru ~•Y 19 (Lobby, DriYe-up and Walk-11pwlndowl) Monday lhru Saturday 9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.t.1. Untll 6:00 P.M. on Friday After Open Houae week the above IChecluie wft1 b9 allered tomewhal, but extended hours end Saturday banking will be c:onUnued. GOLDEN STATE BANK Other offices In: Bell Gardens, Covina, Downey, Los Nletos No. Whittier, Pico Rivera, South Gate, West Covina. ' Slnot 1941 Member F.D.l.C. ·--llflol 191.,. not 1Uglbte lot p<la d!Nliifo Of l.Alcq «11- l • -· I r J I ' I I • • I ... I ( E ofq spe ten wa: o(' me guE the ten in I 1 ol Sat loo try !in figl -~ clu civ In . • ~ Se< R<> da~ the bet Un die 1 c sal wa l a CO\ "j1 wh de1 die ·re! rOI h~ • I Aii re1 Ch en Kc P1! • di1 ro "v sa'. W: eH In an • Tl th Pl th RI ,, P1 Al w 1D' m ar ... I! c st hi R F I c t • I I I ' I • DAIL~ PIU)T f Wh'ere Does U.S. Waste Defense Funds? "We were ALMOST good. Do we still get a surprise?"' Lebanon Reported Quiet on Sunday "At all tlfttt1'" mltlf be '°"'ciotu of U.. -lltat ,.. are !p<lldltlQ mid gtt the absolute ma % i m ti m ..i.. for .,,..,, dollar '°" st>tM," D<puty D<Jem• Secr<tary Wlllia!ll P. C~ <11ls has said. HOfD toeU th• Defense D<partmettt II do- tng that jo~ Is esploMI m this firit of • five-parl ,.,.. fer from 'rM AP Special As.rigmntttt Team. ' BJ JEAN HEIJRR. W ASllINGTON (AP) -'!be Defeose DeparlmeDI bas aU.· ed C.O.-. for -1l' $35 billloo to buy and bullil lhlnCS next year. II next year Is like last year and most years before thl1, -I blJlloo of. -dollan .,.m be Wasted: Ou weapc1111 that woo, _.t. On planeJ that won't Oy. On ships that never sail. Quire likely, those fiscal flasool will be accompanied by -overmtitS. produc.lloo undemml and delivery deJays that poar sevenl bWIOns mOl'e of the lalplyh'_dollars down the defeme drain. . blda got them Into llllanc!al li'ouble, the Defense Depart· men! -1d ball them ouL -The ll<feose Department bu becun • new pollcy called ~you.buy, aimed at cutttnr cools and Improving the end product. The PenlagM thlnb II will wort. Congress thlnb II will work. The con- tracton think H will w0<t. But ooboclY uses It. !bat system and then pro-comples. vert' well ducing tt. ln ues, the Ann} and IN 1111, Ille Air r .... ,..,. Somewhere bet...,. the Idea lA<kheed Corp. beg an pooed tbe B7tl -· to- and the reality, somebody's developing the Cb e ye• n e laided tQ ~ the Im . been messing up. helicopter, deslined to be an Ologms wllllod the )llano Mo.ii vlslble aJllOlll the antitank wtapon wblcb could and, In 1911, tried to speed up meose& are -fl blllloo double as a meano of pro-Ill de•eiopmenl by North wortb oJ. fll'OlflmS I h e vldlng close air support of American l!octwell. Defense De!eose Deparlmenl b a s ground combot tn>opo. Alter Secretory Robert McNamara , abandoned In the put decade. six years and $400 mUlloo. feeling the plane wasn't lm· They Included projecll where that. project was abondoned medlalely needed, tried to the milltory flnally coocluded because the Oleyenne, packed slow devel-ent. The com· it couldn't gtt what tt wanted. with el~t.ronlc gadgetry, an· promise was to build two p'Oo or couldn't make what il tltank missiles. machine guns totypes. wanted. wort right, or couldn't and armor, was too complex, NEXT: 0 v err an• aml I• .U, dlere .. _ arront the lblng aflor II was ._too_e_xpe:__ns_iv_e_a_nd_d_ldn_'l_w_o_rk_Ou_tra_ges_. _____ _ at leat 39 major developed. -&me procurement .,... "'11>e most certain way to dah of ...,..1 years resulted proeal'f!tllfttt pro-waste resoun:oa Is to spend from what 1'I oow generally juu fdlletll fa t1'e iunln>d9 of millions of dollars conceded to~ a faulty buying wt 10 94!0&r•. on a development and then coooepl lnlttatea during the conclude that we will not need V'....-Att adminDlltration. The ~ d el .. .u;:i..-., what we are . ev oping, coooepl, called Iola! packqe Many ofncials ol the IJll1l<'t Packard saJd last year just procurement, was aimed at defenre-aenicautlcs industrial before leaving office. saving money. But it forced empires say they feel their in-=a~ tbeto = ::.: dmy ls due foc a shakeout. "IF A DECISION i; made to It.ms were being c1e .. Joped. '11>ey aay there is not "1ou8h develop either something that The . .-II was assembly-line bttsi..,. to sustain the dooen should not be developed or ro fpulupo the likes ol which . or so lar..,.i. defense-aero-develop IQJlll!thlng that cannot •-~ ,....,,.._ -•~ space compmues and lbel be developed, the pr'Ol!rllm has ~~ ~--, ~ b bankru"'-· a buill·in disaster." ..,..; , tlwuug merger or .,.., or a cotnblnatioo thereof, There was, for example, the -1be number of new some are going to have to go. Anny's ~·weapon of the defeme and space prvjeda future," the Main Batue Tank, BEmtrr (UPI) -Members Ntxon appoinrees and the of Parliament today shunned a President blmself. special session called to ex- bas fallen off drastically in the THE BASIC problem in the conceived in 1964 to be on one past few years, slashing the defense pro.curement process hand, sim ple and reliable, """"""~...,........._..... bats!Ma hue of the nation's is that It doesn't operate very while, on the other hand, doing t gtantdefeme-aerospace in-efficientJy doing what sounds everything, everywhere, bet- IT'S BEEN like' that for I Jong Ume, almool since man abandoned bis horse and musket f0< airplanes and • tend a state of emergency that e B'-lldat was proclaimed al the height .., 6-ver•-tie-dustry. Some contractors have like a relatively simple job: ter than anything else of Its coendants C!O•· been 90 eager for business identlfying .and defining a kind. After spending $234.8 llAMADA MIW 1800 Chatsworth SI. ~-OllANCI Sepslvtda .1fll\ Kni!Mnle of -clashes between govern· NEW YORK (AP) -"It ment troop! end Palestinian wa.s like a movie," Mrs. guerrillas. Beirut Radio said Edwanl Nager rocalled after their absence meant an ex-two well-dressed gunmen com- tension anyway, despite a halt mandeered a chauffared In fighting. limoosfne In wblclt she and her Pleeed -...,,, of that they deliberately bid low defet'se need and a We8'QOJ\S million, the anny abandoned WOODLANDMILLS21500 Yictory 81~~ LAllWOOD C910ll St 3nd P.nl!IGDllBtvt ••"' to ' · th "' to th I ---• the G e r n e r a I Moto--bulll llVllSIOI 3520 Tylet St. IUINA PAii Btacb W 1)1111ie!ho1Je .,, .. -for -apalU on projects J.._ wm e SV;s~em cover a Ql:.:\l"l1 : ·~ ~. ~-~-contractl. 'Ibey knew from amassing the technology the MBT last year because it had SANTA ANA 3900South Bdstl)I St. IANGI G1nleA Gro~• Bl~d. »d lllMCMSW -wstenua1M1CT9'C• preceden~====l~tha==l~when==~tbe==rr~low~....:.:_sys~re~m~-req~u_1res_:_de_v_elopln...:_~g-beco_m_e_too_expens...:__iv_e _an_d_too _____ ~_ .. _._"_'_''_''_'_:so_•_••_.:3_•_-_1_"_''_'_'1_'_''_'·-----1o,.._i .... __ . found ee•t er>e.-. rum of f31.5 bU. Hon. There have been no reports husband were riding with ol clashes In Lebanon since anotbe< couple and escaped Saturday night and the armed ·with $267 ,000 in cash and forces hav e reported the COUil· jewels. try quiet since then. It was the "I mean they didn't say ~~ finit sustained peace since the ,anything at all practically and missiles, and weapons systemB fighting broke out May 2. were so smooth," she coo-began their dizzying climb In --Mortrllton-!OO··pe!'90llll,-!ft..--ttnaed:-''Mrey..-were-just--complenty .,. -.... 1. -And - eluding soldiers, guerrilhfs and riveted at that gun!• .. someUmes outright waste. civilians were reported killed For instance, in the pest In the 11 dilys of flghtlng. e Prb-Dectla decade, the value o1 weapons programs simply abandooed, without any usable. hardware at all to !!Mw for the tlJne and effort, tolllled f1 blllloo. • llfezleo Aeeord? MEXICO CITY (UPI ) -II Secre!2-y of stare William P. Rogers obtained approval Sun· day for a plan to ease one of the main points of ill feeling between Pi.fexico and the United States, he did not in· dicate it. The issue is the amount of (IN SHORT ... ) salt In the Colotado Rlver waters. Rogers said that be outlined a series of proposals that could permanently and "justly" resolve the problem when he conferred with Presi· dent Luis Echevenia. Bui be did not indicate Echeverria · responded during a farewe11 round ol talks that lasred l~• hours. • Peklng Envoy HO NG KONG (AP) America's first diplomaUc representative to Communist China, David K. E. Bruce, crossed the border from Hong Kong today and beaded for Peking. 1 The v e t e r a n 75-year-old diplomat told newsmen he comidered his new assignment "very intriguing." He also said be did not expect the Watergllle scandal DI' the In- effectiveness of the "'"'"'>.fire In Vlel111JD to affect bis job In any way. MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -Bal· Ues 8Ill<lll coovicts at two major Florida pisom resulred In the staliblng death of ooe prisoner and Injuries to 47 other inmates and a guard over the weekend. Jimmy Fr .... 23, serving 32 years f~rioting, was stabbed to death In the gym. nasiwn at Florida S t a t e Prisoo at Railord Sunady evening, said state cxrrections oflcial Rn Newman. • Britbla Blast LONDON (AP) -Britain Is planning a n unde!'groond nuclear explosion In Nevada to help keep Its submlrine-bome missile deterrent effective, the defenae ~I ol the Daily ~reported today. Correspondent Cb a pm an Plnche< said there will be no offlcial 81Ulouncemenl ol the test 1U1til after II Is held. He said the United States is ~ vidlng the test sire under the British-American a t om l c agreement and there will be oo radioactive fallout. W emthy Son Smuggling Link Denied Al current budget levels, that's eoougj> money lo nm the city of Atlanta for 19 years, elgbl monllls, 24 days. Or Denver for 58 years, three months, seven days. G o v enunent accountant! recently completed an audit of 45 major weapons systems un- so-eet&trGCt- or• ... _ been so eafle." for,, .... _~ that tllletJ llelflter· ately Mtl lotr> - projects J • • t ta tclntlae~· der development and fouDd cost ovemms of 131.5 bllllon- 39 pertenl -over original estimates. When overrum oo spare parts and support equip- ment for those systems are m- cluded, the ~ Is closer to 135 billloo. ( . AND THAT'S ellOU(!h lo run the city ol Indianapolis for 430 years, six months. Some defense experts warily suggest there may be a light at the end of the tunnel. Othen say they 've heard that line be.fore. "Our biggest problem I• that we play games," says Gordon Rule, one of the Navy's top civilian procurement NEW YORK (UPI) -Parts speciali!ls and a frequent of a story carried In the Daily critic o1 procurement prac- Pilot April 16 cancernlng il· U • B ,__ p be legal -traffic In Mulcan c;;., -p I a y ..,,.,..., ro laborers ha .. been challenged games with the De f ~·n 1 e W!cHrrA, Kan. (UPI ) -by Dominic J. Aleato, aon of Department. The De le n_ •• The N8ttonal Committee of John Alessio, San D I e g o Department plays games wllfl the American Party bu asked millionaire. Coogress. I have grave doubll President Nixon to withdraw The story, which originated that anybody can stop It." the nomination ol E 11 1 o I with the N"" York Tirne:i, ruchardlon as at I or n e y said that Join Alessto played IN TID!i ~ few years, In general' and appoint Ameri<an a role In the illegal traffic and an allenll>I to stop the games party chiarman 'lbomas J. further ldenilfied him aa a or at least to mate them less Anderson lo lnvestlgare the bu!lneM assoclale ol Annando horrible, the De!enae Depart· Waterglte scandal Verdugo, a 'njuana vending ment bes Ulldenaken a major In ai • resolution pa 11 e d machine owner. overhaul cl procurement p-o- unanimously Sunday, the com-Dominic ~has denied cedures. Nobody, not even the mlllee asked Nixon to appoint that either statement Is true. 'authOl's of the changes, II an impartial investigator .suchl-------------------1 as Anderson to Investigate all Cotmty Gets State Funds Orange County bas ...,.lved $87,000, the a ta le of CallfonJfa's share fOr the In· stallation of signals a n d highway llgbtblf on El Toro Road near the San Diego Freeway. llT'S BE FRIENl.Y U you have new nclghbon Oft knoW of anyone mOYlnc to our •re•, pleue t~U ua so that v.•e may f!Xtend a frlmdb' W<lc:ome and help thtm to btcomC! acqualnltd ln their MW IUrTOUndlnp. Se. Cllst Ylslts 4M451' ..,.,,.. ..... Yfsb MM114 WhO You? A lot ol people need -. Jv.4.. ..... -........ -lltm'• .... -.... •'aP'N' DENTAL TEONClANS. Lam It right! -CallbftJa c..,.. .. -• o....i c-...,...oce:Dcnt courms tor DENJAL Tf.OtNICIANS. Yaa .... ....n ,.ot .,....1Mt1ct1ott .,,._...w-i. Iha cleiOal lleld! Lam It lull 1blt .... •"°1..: ilia/ a:.-. C...,.,...,.d wttt. ~ ..... -v ...... -..,i.i,.--.,.,,, ....... --IMll Lam k """" CAil. 635..:l450 .. is On n to. Every hcMrontlae half llQlr fl°''' 7:JOan1 to IO:JOpm. Extia "4cts at 1SOQamJ Ja00pm,6:00pm. Midnight~ Moliday through Ftofday. Ft 0111 l.os Angeles 1b San Ft .v.dsco 7:00am 7:30arn 8:30am 9:30am 10:30am 3:30pm 4:30pm 5:30pm 6:00pm 6:30pm 11:30 am 7:30 pm 12:30 pm 8:30 pm 1:30 pm 9:30 pm 2:30 pm 10:30 pm 3:00 pm Midnight Flyer Now, more flights at more iimes in both directions wh en you fly north or south with PSA, California's unofficial state bird. Also, added flights between Long Beach-San Francisco; Hollywood-Burbank- San Jose/Oakland; and Los Angeles·San Diego. Time marches on PSA. '· . Ft°"' 5an Ft ariClsco 1b'°5Angllrs 7:00am 8:00am 8:30am 9:00am 10:00am 11:00am 4:00pm 4:30pm 5:00pm 6:00pm 7:00pm 7:30pm 12 Noon 8'.00 pm 1:00 pm -9:00 pm 2:00 pm 10:00 pm 3:00 pm Midnight Flyer • • • • • ' . ' • • I I • i Je O~ILV PILOT OCC Leader \Villian1 P. Le~ris, Hunt· ington Beach, pictured above, has been elected Orange Coast College student body president for 1973-74. He's a po- btioal science major. Dennis Sheehan, Hunt- lnjllon Beach, was elect- ea st"der.~ wmp:rol- ler and Scott Beinfeld, Costa Mesa, was voted student advocate. Hair Style Show Set By Campus MOftd<I, MOY 14, 1973 2 'Falen~t _Beach Girl -Wim :- Ageneies In Suits to be prosecuted jointly by the stale and city agencies under a new state law. The order prohibits the agencies from claiming that they are lobking for models unless they haYe specific job opportunities or interviews ayaiJable and orders them not to charge fees as a prere- qui site for services. r Bof A Top Honors ... • A hair styling show and oom- petitlon by cosmetology students from IO Southern BOYS BUSH JEANS Boy Scouts Complete Long Jaunt Nine Huntington Beach Boy Scouts and their aduU leader recently hiked across the Grand Canyon, becoming the first party to complete the jaunt this year. The group, members or Troop 558, sponsored by the CoUege View PTO, had to trek through five feet of snow dur· ing the five-day, 50-mile hike from the South Rim to the North Rim and back. The hikers included Assi s· tant Scoutmaster G e n e Hartnell and scouts fllike Coley, Morris Coley, Mark Davis, Rod Op.vis, J o h n Gresham, Brian Hall, Randy Holmbeck, Bill Paul and Bob Zoellner. Worker Hailed By Seal Beach Owen Wilcox, a foreman fn charge or vehicle and equip- ment maintenance for the Seal Beach department of public workJ, bas been named city employe of the year by the Ci· ty Council. Wilcox, 56, began \Yorking for the city as a mechani c in 1964. He and his family live in Buena Park. ' e Ho1ne Fires • SACRAMENTO !AP I -~ Mobilehome owners ~·ould be ~ allowed to keep the home fires burning under legi slation pass· ed on a 70-0 vote of the Assembly. I • /: ' -r ··· Cotton-jeans in slim, regul•r f ancLhpsky • .A,,s.orted-Colou. ~ s; ... 8-1~. I QUAIJTY .~~~GYM SET i \29aa ~ Air glide, lawn swing,' Slide and 2 swings. 211 tubing. 816" top bar, four 7' legs. Sove. ' ·~~•""':·~·""» ·~>J,:it.~J.$~~ .... 'L..,.,· . ~oo.•~~~ r---,li~ JW.L•> ......... ,.,,,, ~· :SAVE ON· ~-. , ,• .: .::--:~Iii " ~ ~ ,, , . " • ,,. ·~·~: ! r 3-SPEED · ·, ·· .-;. ' :~~ . ~ ' i fF7 ' .. ~ ~':I FAN ..,, .~· ·~, .;f~ I ~:~, ~ . ' •• Great way to keep your coolt 1 Breeze 20" Ion, with olu· · minum propel1en, features seafoom enameled metal Co\e with carrying handle, plastic guards. Charge ·it. ·~ ~ ~ DISPOSABl.!E .DIAPERS i ·· .. diapers for newborn, todeller, overnite end daytime. . ... ~,.,, WHITE PICKET FENCE --~ ' ~., •• ..,,.)s!:h..,.__,,.,., .. _a;.,<t1Uf""P!l.~w1aasar•:at•u.·w11n•::ei U , UNPAINTED ~ ~ 3/'1 Cape Cod 8-pic:~et wood sec- tion. l5 inc:hes long, 9 inc:hes high. Savel " ~ t.' VANITY • ~ CABINET :teady -to -fnish b•throom cabinet with bowl. Fixtures not included. Charge it! f": ~ ' POLYESTER BLANKET 3'' ' "Ji ;.;ii Ji ~ ) 72x~O" blanket for twin or full size bed, Gold, blue, ;-1 lilac or green. Machine washable. · ~ ., 24" PORTABLE BAR·B-Q GRILL 2 DAYS ONLY 94 The bill by Assemblyman Eugene Otappie, a Republica n 1', - from the mountain community j Adjustable chrome grids, tubular ste•I, trfpod legs ...,,._,..,, ---•"UL":'.:..,.;n.+"'Wll .. -~.~---;;p.m;o-••IE:..Oa""''""•111110l"1Pil>1!#ifln"" ... llili!ililillBI ,._.,,...,1:1 ' fold for storage. Side c•rry- of Cool. would make it legal to · in stall and use fireplaces in mobile homes . The vote sent p 12"* PORTABLE TELEVISION '< ing h•'!dles. S•.vel, ~ d_ ..... ___ ,_ .. .,.,__.. ............ ._~ the measure to the Senate. \, ------~ I See by Today's Want Ads e GARAGE SALES CAN BE f"ASClNATING : Tt1ke in this one at Irvine Te1Tace, Many nice lfe:tni to look at. e CATCH EVERY BREEZE this summer in th i.s In· t~Uonal 12 toot sail boat It'• in good condl· tlon . ' 88 Block·ond·white TV with quality ce:ngin'eered transistorized ct-lossis, front·mounted speaker. Earphone jock. Block wllh Jilvei:y trim. .gio...,.i.r-.,..,. •. • \ SAYE! SHELL 10;,p(sf'STRIP llSECTICIDE 23 Charge It KIIii lllet ond -~ -ond oth« -11 Hying lnt«ll lndoM>. Worb "!' to 3 ..-ho. TE 1 G E Ti wert Banr mun for of fie DI Wes thirc scie1 cate Alat Beal Cf dleb awa tiont ~~J n die< wen Calil Ang! Amf G " s. Si: re~ part w.-1 A111£ girl Go!• Pu e com' P i worl -1 trali tJpil 'l'J!e men re aRt L T. Br Bea< "sup trurr annu Scho Asso UCL Br per fl Scho ting! ~ ~ De s I • TECHNICAL FINAU$T .l · Chri1ti.,.. MOnsen ( ~CO~OGY) ol tnel'8Y 800l'Cel rather ~ impose arbitrary, llmlls of growth""""' ol energy. The report ..... the mwt of a flve-mooth $75,000 study spol1BO!'ed by five Califtrnia power companies. e Fbh Permit SACRAMENTO (AP) Commercial herring IMll\' ,.11,, stoff '""°to fishennen ln Tomales and San 3RD IN SCIENCE Dale E. Mullis Two Coll~ge Gh·Is Earn Francisco bays would need licenses which the Callfc:nia Department ol Fish and G~ could revoke, if it decides there are too few herring, under a bill introduc~ .'in. the Assembly. Pill De&Ws- Amphetamin.e . Letlwl • .. q.HMofBclll Cindy Porcaro of Hun· tlngton Beach has been sele.ted queen of Gal· axy Ball at Cal State Fresno. She is <laugh· ter of Mrs. 'Mary Por- caro a n d attended Golden West College and was graduated from Orange Coast Col· lege. ' . orn11 ·· dei'al st lation's La? I I .--• Moncla1, MOI 14. 197) 'la..it to City' Spokane1 Singing Blues Over Song ,, ·, '"· ' SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) -Expo. '74 Is jUJt around the It's one of those twangy coun-comer and Spokane ha"' s try-Western tunes that you "spent literal))' millions of dollars here in a long-range just can't help tapping your program designed to attract toes to. vis itors to the city," said But the Spokane City Coun· councilman J . l\.1. O'Brien. · cil quickly soured on the And O'Brien says lyrics like, ''Spokane Motel Blues." "The dogs are running down in Memphis. Them nags are COUNCILMEN say the song running in L.A. I'm stuck in -by Tom T. Hall -is an ln· Spokane in a motel roon1. And suit to the image-<::onscious there ain't no '"'ay to get city. away." aren't helping. ------- .. Assembyman Bob Wood (11- qreenfield), said his meuure wou1d give the department, which backs the bill, the need-Bo fA--110DOl'-ed .aY!bll!:il/'. to l!O!i~herring ____ ----fishermen m the small fish's Two Orange Coast coeds were among top finishers in Bank oL America's 1973 Com- munity College Awards finals for Southern Califomla, bank officials have announced. Dale E. Mullis of Golden West College won $500 for a third place finish in the science and engineering category. She lives at 1123 Alabama St., Huntington Beach. Christine F. Monsen or Sad- dleback College won a $250 award-in the technical-voca- tional category for reaching the flllals. She lives· at ~ San Joaquin St., Lagun8: Beach. Their awards were among checks totaling $21,000 that were presented tO-. Southern california ": students in Los Angeles last week, Bank of Amel-lea ojficials said. Girl Scout Workshop Scheduled Six Orange Coast Girl Scoot representatives will participate in a regional wtrkshop on Mexican American • Spanish -""1g girl srouting May 18 -20 at Goieta. favorite West Coast spawning grounds. Emergency legislation puo- ed this year gave the de~­ ment authority for 90 days to curb commercial her r I ng fishing in the two bays if the species became endangered by too large catches. e BART Grote• SAN FRANCISCO (AP) The Bay Ana Rapid Transit District can extend passenger service to Cmcord May 21, the state Public Utlllties1 Com· misS.on bas ruled. But the Concord operation mast not J1Wge Into the present line 'between Fremont and RicbmOOd, the PUC ordered ' .• Cootra C...lll County com- muters using the ne,V line thus will have .to transfer at MacArthur station In !lakland if they wish to cciilinlle on the section opened last September. :t • 1\'ew Guideline ·· SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -':The-Bay Area Pollution Con· trol Board will have to rule on the acoeptabl!lty 6f new, Jarge, traffie<ausing dev.elap. ments under new Environmen- tal Protection A g e n c y guidelines, a board official says. Milton Feldstein, the district's deputy executive board officer, said the EPA is under court · order to see that the new regulations, drawn by EPA last month, are carried out. 'Pwi,>ose ol the workshop is to gain greater' awareness and expertise in developing Girl Under 1970 clean Air Act Scouting in Mexican American provisions, the board will have communities. to discern whether auto traffic 'pa'rticipating in the stemming from highwa y, workshop will be Mary Clark. shopPin~ ·center, air Port . lkmtington Beach, director of residential project and spo~t train'.lng; Baibaia we~, Hun-cent~r develapment causes atr upgton Beach, field staff . quality standards to be ex-SllP.errisor, and field staff ceeded. iqembers Diarta B e c k , ~Wpoct ~&ach; Marge e Ban Opposed °'9reY, 1..0Sta Mesa; ·Neva SACRAMENTO (AP) -A '1119mas, Newport Beach, and Gteutl Barnes, Fullerton. _~ ban against anchovie fishing in l.'. Northern California's Hum· boldt Bay between July 1 and ~---·~ S l. Nov. t would be dropped under .l rwnpet 0 0 a bi~ introduced by a San Diego Democrat. Brad Nelson of Huntington Beach has been awarded a "superior" rating for his solo trumpet performance at the annual Sout.bern California School Band and Orchestra Associaliob regional feailval at UCLA. Brad, 15141 Yorkshire Lane, perfonns in the Marina High School Band and the Hun· tington Be a ch Cornmwlity Band. He is a junior at Marina. · .._ A$semblyman Pet.er Chacon said the measure, prompted by tuna fishermen in his district saying the baJ1 forces them to travel long distances to get the ancbovie they use as bait to catch tuna. ChaCon said he expects en- vironri'\entalists to Gppose the bill on the ground• the an- chovlt supply will be depleted and salmon will be caught up in ~~ts along with the an· chov!eS. ~""'-'' Does More Titan Help Shrink Sw~lling Of Hemorrhoidal . Tissues Due To Infection ) AllO Cives Prompt, Temporary Relief in Many U-from Pain, ltchint1 in Such Ti ....... --" • 1 ALL THESE SERVICES ARE AVAILABLE! FREE Tranlers Cbckl With $1,000 min. balance. Save $10 ggr $1,000. $1 per $1 • FREE San·BJ·ll•ll Ptst- "' S....$1 to'$Sposlage a year. ..a.. CALIFORNIA FEDERAL SAlllNDS ... ~··· 1111111 .. FREE lltlllJ Onleri W'rth $1,000mln.balance. Save 261to50¢ on each money order. FREE fJWqo Cbecb- FREE NollrySemce Wilh $1,000min.balance. Save lee of $1 to $2. FREE SavlnpBub COft• MtM Ntwport H.tior LIONS 21tti ANNUAL FISH FRY• CAINIYAL JUNI 1·2·1 FREE FREE Trust Deed Note Photocopy Service Colloctlon Wilh With $1,000·min. $1,000min.balance. balance. For important legal Save$15to$25 per year. documents. Save 10¢ per page. FREE Parldn1 While in ourolfrces. Com11unitr Rooms for charitable and educational groups. P•Jroll Snln1s Doductlon Pian lnterbr1nch Depos- its and Wtthdriwals at any of our offices. Check Holders for ~ift checks. MonthiJ Money Plan loan CounseUn1 and information on home, mobile home, pool and property 1mprovemenl loans. Dn·llno Eloctronlo lltSlut Senlco COMMUNITY EVENTS ARTIST Of THI MONTH CHAILU "CHUCl" DOISA WI• Mnt a rlilllf 111 tltw Ylll'k City, 1 trMl•.tlf 91 ""' 111•1111111 " Art """' Dftltn olM Uudlttl 11 (OOff!' ~ UJllN •M tlMI Hlllllln•I Ac11C11rny, M°"*" Ill A!MfiU;11 Al'fl" Prfl ... i.ion1I Lllfllf• Tiie N1t111MI Art LMt9t llM MrVM "' tilt 801rd of Dt.-tors Ill ttlt fllvlfllflt Art 1.M911t, Alttr 41 }n. Ill ~I-AVll, lie Nllrff tll St. C11U. " .... Ill Ill 1111 llmt to .. 1"'9. ormon. You can open your account by mall or visit our nearest office. Send coupon to: California Federal Savings Headquarters Office Box 54087, Terminal Annex LosAnge!es,Ca.llfornla 90054 D Enclosed find$ (check, money order, • draft) to open new accountas follows: ' D 5~ Passbook (no minimum) D 5, 75~ _-year certificate ($1,000 or more, 1-10 years) D 6~ _-year certificate ($5,000 or more, 2-5 years) D Up to 7.5~. Call me about details. D Joint D Individual D Trust Name(s) _________ _ Address, __________ _ Clty _______ Stat.,_ __ Zll'-----Phon, _____ _ Costa Mesa Office: 2700 Harbor Boul..,.rd 546-2300 NOW! OPEN ON SATURDAYS 10 TO 2. M011da7, Mai 14, 197J d • • l • -· --s-clioolVacation · Foulup Unf ouled SACRAMENTO (AP I -A move to avoid a foulup of summer vacation at the end of the current school year has w~ 3f.l approval in the California Senate. The measure, which went to Gov. Ronald Reagan's deSk, allows local school districts to collect state aid for 175 days. even though the Jan. 25 day or mourning in the death of former President Lyndon B. Johnson cut the school year to 174 days. Without the bill, school districts would have to tack on (EDUCATION J an extra day at the beginning of summer vaca tion. said Sen. Albert Rodda, (D-Sacramen· to ), who sponsored the bill in the upper house. e Pah1th19 Set SAN FRANCISCO ·(AP ) -A plan to repaint an elementary school with red , white and ' blue stripes ha s been approved by the city Art Commission, despite opposition from one member '"'·ho called i t "garish ." "We want to do it for the bi- centennial," I I -Yea r-old Sharon Lujan told the com- mission of the patriotic new face proposed for the Paul Revere School Annex. College Sets 2 Chicano Courses Two si:t·\veek courses on the history and education or Mex- ican Americans in the United States \rill be ottered June 18 through July 27 al California State University , Long Beach . "History of the Chicano in the Southwest" will explore the Cbicano's role in the set· Uement and development of the Soutb .... ·est and in con· t.emporary U.S. society • Chicano experience as a minority group and emerging civil rights nlovements of the Chicanos. 11le class will be held from 9 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. Monday through Friday . .. Chicano and Education" wUl be an analysil'! or the (allure of school systems to meet the . need s or Chicano aludents. The cl.111 !viii be held from 10:!0 •.m. !<> noon Monday lbrqb Frldly. illcn tnlonmallon on the cl-. Including registration illformollon, IDIY be obtslned b1 1111111 • wrtllll lbe Mn· 1-Amlricln Sladlos lltptrl· -•I Oii -Loni S..ch. r from . Irvine 1.79 53c 2 for 39c 76c doz. 8 for $1 /'49c lb. 4 for $1 lOc lb. PINK TAG SALE ma9. f;fth filth filth $l.H $1.7' "'·" "'·" ' WALSH'S SOLtmON Is to divide the Los Angeles, Ven- tura and Orange County areas into nine wards run by a popularly-elected commission. 'Ibe new district w o u 1 d assume the responsibility for development of a rapid transit Now ..... Plastic Cream Invention For Artificial Teeth •IRcill Ttea ....... Felt th•l.haa rcvolulioa.iud dentmt. SI labnl Wn w~~~ JOU bite harder, chew bet· Now,foetllt:fU'lltime.acleaceolfersa ter, eat more naturally. F1xoo!NT pl;astic tream \hat bolc;lt denture&a!I hwtw for houn. Resista moisture. neverbefore-formsanelasticmcm· Dentures lbat fit are eeemtial to brane that· lfelpi loU I.UM to 1111 health. Set your dentist rtl'!:'Jartr. naturol tissuu of yoflf "'°"'"· Jt'~ a Get eaay-to-ua& FlXODEta DaltW"a unique discoverydllled FtXOOEN19 Adheiive Cream. SDDOflll In Fact We'1·e Dedicated To It! . . Kleenex Facial Tissue Clorox Liquid Bleach Weison Oil I l M Baked Beans in gli111 pot PILLSIURY 200 ct. g•llon 24 ... 22 oz. 4 for Sl 49c 53c 33c Layer Cab-Mixes reguli1r sin 35c DEL MONTE Kosher or Halve Dill Pickles Del Monte Fruit Cocktail Dole Pineapple Juice Nabisco Oatmeal Cookies Peter Pan Peanut Butter caw Valencia Orange · Juice Bird's Eye Peas . 17 01. ,., 01. 16 01. II 01. fro1•" 10 01. 22 ••. •. 01. 43c 29c 29c 45c 59c 29c 5 for $1 ~w.l.. J!.-LI DO CENTER 3-433 Via Lido, Newport lleach OPEN DAILY 9 -7, SUN. 9 - 6 67l-03W • - l I t 1 I th in! Tt In 1' 00 fa al Ill ' fri no dr oµ ar °' 111 do n~ ti r.; to r I .. ' ~ ,r -- , BEA ANDERS , , Elifior" ~ •I~ 1m Pnt 11 • ' • .1... .t ' ' '" Marriage "Threatened , • 1 " • . , Big Problem B_ared DEAR ANN LANDERS : I've written this letter 10 times, but this one is going into the mailbo~. I'm terrified . My husband bas a Doberman Pinscher. The dog is nine months old aOO true to the breed -unpredictable and vicioos. Last week that awful hound scared. me out of my wits. Tony and 1 had an argu- ment. It ended up with him.slapping my face. The dog was right there -lungifl& at me . Luckily, I was able to escape to the bathroom and shut the door. ' , The next day Tony bragged to his !riej>dS. actually laughed about how be now has "prot.ectioo." He is a heavy drinker -in fact, this is what most of oµr fights are about. . Last night Tooy and I were fooling around and wrostling -all in fun. The Doberman came after me again . When her "master" commanded her to lie ' down she obeyed. I keep having nightmares lhat one of these days when 'tDnY is drunk, or mad at me for smne rQoJ thing, he'll order the dQg to tear me • ta pieces. po I have the right to demand thal he get rid or that animal? He says he'll ~er do it. -SCARED STIFF . ·' r PEAR S.S.: lnslst on a ~mpromhe. nu' Tony that 11111eu be -to keep a lil:ouJe on Ille beast wbea sbe b bl yoor ~nee you will see a lawyer about Apa.rate maintenance. U be refutes, I btpe you ·";u go ahead and do It. Tbat'1 .. way to Utt. ,, :,;'nEAR ANN LANDERS: Here's a reply to the couple in F'lorida who tb1nks 861 Is ~ible for •ll the evils of the world. -~'r J. and J.: !fas It ever cxxurred to ~ that sex, like fire, needs to be liJmessed If it ls going IO be used ef. /eetively for tho JlUl1lO'I< for Witlch II was designed ? Fire and sex are two of the most powerful Md lndispMS:able forceai on ~~rth. Sun!ly we would ttol -lire ~use -• -le get bumod by It. Jt is a pity that yw cannot look ~pon sCx•as it was meant. to be ~ a· holy and COll\lllete union with ywr spouae, You ~·A '-----·~'.--' have my heartfelt symPltbY..: -HAP~ PILY MARRIED AND CLOSE TO GOD IN LORAIN, OHIO DEAR HAPPY AND CLOSE IN OHIO i Your letter contains sound logic and ~n excellent analogy. Aly tbaDb to you for writing and my warm regardt to the peo- ple In Sweet Lorain. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I'm .27, have never been manied, but have been through a lot. A year ago I met Jack, age 35, divorced and the fatllel' of five children. The last two years Of their marriage Jack's wife was sleeping with her ~-When she asked for a divorce, Jack asswned the lioss was going to leave his family and many her, so he agreed. He felt he had no choice. I was sure that when Jack.was free he would marry me, but I was wrong. Four months after the divorce Jack's wµe called him .to say things didn't work out and she wants him to come home. So now he tells me Ibey are gomg to be remarried beca""" he misses bis kids and be wants to be back In the good graces cl bis church. What kind of church will let a rat like that bock In? What do [ do next? -DAl\INED PHOOL JN PENSACOLA DEAR D.P.: Probably CatboHc - wblcb does not rtcoplte divorce. ID lbe eyeo of tbe ~ Jack aod blJ wl!e ,.... ..,.. 111111M1a.bat mam..I. Al for wbat• yoa do not: For opeaen, take a pledie 1111 lo &" mind up wltb any more msrled men. ' " Is pot a drug? C.n LSD and pills open' new worlds for you! Stop gueJtSing, Get · Ille facts In Ann Landers' new boolclet, "Sll'alg!lt ·Jlope bl> ·Drugs.'' F..-cacit' booklet ordered send a dollar bill, plus a long, sell.liddrtssecl. B181!1ped envelope • (16 cents pootage to /vJa l.attdtrs. Box 3346. Ollcop. rn, 60654. • .< ,. ' Her Fi e' · ; By JO OUON , ot .. o.llY ,.... ~ Rlta "'~"""" , a credenllal<'I family ', coun.Wor) has designed I test DO one CIA fail . a counselor at El Modelo Hlp School and from talking lo 1111"3 eouples, both happy and Wlbappy. "Just tat~ with parenta In the courae of my job gave me lots of Ideas,". she llild. lie< Ftunily Index, a 35 -q"""'°"- eopyrighted multiple choice "exam" ls designed to help !amllles In trouble find the ....... of their cooructs and speclllc ways to resolve them. Mn. Thompson also became Interested In why dillerent kinds of counsellfltl dick\1t work. "When you're asking why, you're looking for ideas,'' she em- pbasited. ~. No one can fail because there are no right or wrong answers. Every_ answer Js diffennt for different people llltlng the test. The bolder of three counseling certificates, Mrs. Thompson beUevts counseling often misses the 90Urce ol stress which may be Wldtln the living en- vironment, a relalive or friend. Her in· dex alms at "~ broader than generally is Wied.'' 'J'1plcal queotlons ask how a person pio- tureli his fami1y!1 reacUon \o different situations such as fighting or_ having fun together. From an analysis or the answers. Mrs. Her specialty at El Modena High School , where she has worked for six years. is helpjng students get financial aid for "any kind of education beyond high school." Thompson offers help to individuals or the whole family if they wish it. Couples al!O may take the test and rective couosellng. Mrs. '11lompson. a Ne,vport Beach resi~ dent and graduate of the State Univetsity of New York, formulated the index as a tool to help famili es recognize ·stress points . FROM EAST It was 'In opportunity to work with outstanding people in the counseling field that brooght her to Callfomia from her home state ot New York. where she herself had a very happy childhood and home life. The questions came from her work as. ·Living near the Back Bay is advantageous for Rita Thompson and her daughters Margaret (left) and Mary because they like to explore together. Their • dog, John-John, often accom- them. , ·· 1 was interested in families and their problems as a child," she said. "l was very happy and was very much involved in the school and conununity , I knew everyone. My parents were not overly rich -both \l.Wked -but we always en- joyed life." ,_ Re[ore entmng college, she already was acting as 1a counselor by being a good listener. Though her marriage was annulled, and she now Is single, Mrs. 11Jompson is concerned with providing a high quality family llfe for her two daughters, Mary, 13, and Ma·rgaret, 12. "We do a lot together." she explained .. ··we bicycle, walk on the trails al'OW'ld · here, and there are so many activities around Soutl)em caurornia ." PLAY-GAMEs • ---· -- They enjoy musk together, !orming a 9001bo with piano, organ and gultar, and play games such as "Infuriation" together. Mrs. Thompson also has invented two games ror which ahe has submitted pa- tent applicaUona, and she enjoys baking and cooking. The family likes to sail but their boat is still in New York. "'The idea of doing something together means a lot." she empha!.lzed, 11even in nian-woman relationships ." There is no such thing u a perfect mart'ifge or family, abe beUevee, so ahe won't be tied to labels. "Each relaUOMhip ii dillenool. Tbe secret is in learning to aruiwer the need of another person, learnin& how and when and then doing ii. "One of the areas where humans make mistakes is in selecting a marria&e partner. People who haven't had a good man-woman relaUonshl.p have mbsed something very beautiful." . The same beauty is poaslble in a cbild- parent relationsh.ip, she believes. If there · is stress, the key is to get immediate relief by setting up positive steps for solving the problem. The index is her way of helping people rnjoy life by "learning better ways of n..1ating and understanding each other." Debutantes Introduced Debutantes for 1973 were introduced by the National Charity League, Newport Chapter during a tea in t he NeY')'Ort Beach home of Mrs. Cecil Henry Shirar. The 13 young women who will be pre- sented Nov. 24 in the Newporter Inn re- ceived long45temmed yellow roses from Mrs. Brian Ewald, 1972 ball director, anil their NCL gold medallions from their mothers. Tbey were welcomed by Mrs. Melvin Kilmer Ill, chapter rresident; .Mrs. Earl Olrich, president o the national council of NCL; Mrs. Lisoo Mims, presi- dent-elect of the chapter, and Mrs. Frank Titus, 1973 ball director. The debutantes, .who all have participated in volunteer activities through the six-year 'Ilcktock· er program, are the Misses Holly Jeanne Anderson, Kathryn Anne Coleswortlly, Patricia .h!an Crooke, Deborah Ann Dal>- ney, Lynn Katharine Dowty, Anne Vic. toria Grace, Debra Jeanne Kilmer, Lynn Arlene McNelley, Kim Elizabeth Miner, Melanie Marie Salata, Shelley Samuels. Susan Lynn Scott and Nancy Marguerite Smith. Working et the John Tracy tlini.c Demonstration Home are . Nancy Marguerite Smith (left) end Lynn Katharine Dowty, 1973 National Charity League debutentes, while Gary Payen enjoys the attention. • • f • I I •. • 1 • • ii I j ! • 14 DAILY PILOT 1 '. I '74 lown Hall Se.ries Prestigiousl: I. 1., > ~ Be"! Furne5s To avoid disappointment. prospective brides ~ reminded to have their v.•edding llories with Incle and white glossy photo· graphs to the ·DAILY .PILOT Wom)!n's De· panment one week before the wedding. Pictures received airer that time •oil not be used. -~ For engagement announcements it is imperative that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy pict ure, be sub- mitted six. weeks or more before the weddi ng date. If deadline is not met, onl y a story \\'i ll Or. Mu rr1y Binks KAREN KETTLER be used. s ud To help fill requirements on both wed· t eritS din8._ and engagement stories, fo rms are available in all .the DAILY PILOT offices. T M F er ..J1l!WiOJ1S._\\!i!L..1>e.._answ.ei:ed_by_ -+---_Q ___ ~arry~ 'fomen's Section staff members at 642-43~!. You~ Horoscope Virgo: Accent ' - -Short Journeys "I TUESDAY ·see m nOWjlO perceive what is MAY 15 happenin~ before it occurs. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): By SYDNEY OAiARR Cycle is ·high and you can be ARIES (March 21-Apri\ 191: more ijlependent. Your Emphasis is on the hidden, the personalitf attracts and you obscure, even the occult. Key wi n youf' way. Strive for is to be analytical. If yo u don't originality. Don't be pushed, know, ask. You might be cajoled, dictated to or coerc- surprised at ho\v o l h e r s ed. Be your own person and cooperate. Gemini and Virgo let others find their own ways. are particularly involved. SAGI'ITARIUS (Nov. 22· 1'AURUS (April 20-May 20): Dee. 21):. Make discreet in- Lie low. Stress fa mi I Y clutries. H .,... approach is alliances, partnershlps, the thorough, you are more likely coming to terms with male, to succeed. Aquarlan is likely partner. Some of your natural to be in picture. Check ap. abilities a r e spotlighted, parent lrilnor matters. What especiaTiy those ba"ing to do appeai-s to· be an unimportant with voice and salesmanship. c\etnil could require special at· GEMINI (May 21-June 201 : tl·nlion, Health . work and associations CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. with those you admire are 19J: Accent is on how to featured. Be sure you know transfo rnt d es i res into what it is that ·ha s been pro1n· realities. Be r~dy for roman- ised. Don't build up ex-tic inte rlude. You'll enjoy it! pectations un til you have Answers are obtained in areas doubJ~ecked. Pisces is lik~ previously "out of reach." You ly to be in picture. are goin g to gain salisfaction. CANCER (June 21-July 221: AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. Good lunar aspec t now coin-18); Spotli ght is on achievc- cides " with love. romance, ment, p ro f ess iona l ad- creative e nd ea v o r-s. rela-vance ment You will have ad· tionships involving children. ditlonal responsibility. But You may be es Pe c i a I ly re"·ard s coufd multiply. \\that fortunate in mat ters o f appears an obstacle should be specula tion. Capricorn could viewed as hea lthy cha llenge. be featured. Whittier College studenls, Karen Marie Kettler and Donald James Herrema will marry Aug. 11 in a garden ceremony at the Greenbrier Inn, Garden Grove. Miss Kettler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William E. Ket- tler of Huntington Beach, is a graduate of Huntington Beach High School. Her fiance is the son o( Mr. and Mrs . Russell Herrema of Fountain Valley and is a graduate of Saddleback High School Betrothal Revealed Mr. and Mrs. Daniel D. Huston of LaguIJa Beach have announced the engagement of their daughter, Hilary Robin Huston to ~ Jeffre y Louis Strandstra , son of the Bernard Strandstras of J)ana Point. Miss Huston is a graduate of Laguna Beach High School and Saddleback CoUege. She will receive a BA in English in June from California State University, Long Beach. Her fiance is a graduate of San Clemente High School and Saddleback and also will graduate in June from CSULB where he is majoring in public administration. He is a member of Pi Sigma Alpha honor society. The betrothed are planning to marry June 30 in the C.Om- munity Presbyterian Church, Lag una Beach. Wine-tasting On MOD Menu LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You PISCES (f"eb. 19-March 20): complete n1i ssion. This is the )'our way of looking at situa--ri.1ay Wine Festiva!, an an- time to finish project. Build tions and people is em· nua l ti.larch of Dimes fund- for security. Look lo future. phasized. You are able to raiser, will take place from 6 Stop brooding about "whnt discern truth. You also get to 8 p.m. Wednesday, May 16, might have been." Aries is what you ask for -don't req-in the Newporter Inn. likely to be in pictur e. One uest more than you can Am ong the distinguished who confides problem really handle ! Another P i s c e a n Ca I if or n i a wineri es seeks your approval. fi gures prominently· participating are Almaden. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl.-22!: IF TODAY IS VO U R Inglenook, Charles Krug, Simi Accent on short journeys. BffiTHDAY you may be and Sonoma , and cheese- close relatives an d neighbors. musical because you have a tasting is by courtesy of You make new starts in new distinct sense of ha rmony, an •lickory Farms. directions. Creative j u i ces unusual voice and m u ch Chairman is Mrs. Norman flow. Leo helps show the way. creative abili ty. In October. \Valson who also is chairman Avoid scattering r o r c es. significant changes occur and of the CaliComia VolWlteer lJBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): you will be happier. You dra\v Advisors for the National Y,ou may be recipient of pro-to you many persons born Foundation is a member of the verbial wind.ta ll. One you under Taurus and Libra . You county chapter's executive taught and aided in past love luxury and good food . board. makes reappearance a n d'lr ===-=--=--=-=-=-.....;=-'-'-=-==='--·=--=======;;;;; t'Ould return favors. Your in· tuition is sharply honed. You emon·s SPORTSWEAR Wcttclllt' Platt, 17th and frvlne. ~ lle1ch,Calif,omla9l~ ' ~$. OVERWEIGHT? t ~If 56 LB. LOSS IN 40 DAYS ~ Under Medi~al Supervltion at the Omega Clini~ HOURS: 9:00 • 7:00 CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT II COST A MESA AH AHllM SAHTA AHA ,.., ......... " .... . .... N '~ w uwv l>tt!fUlllllAvt , .. w. L•N•W• ,, .. . · .. ,... nMa.. · (714) m9347 646-1633 l S47.m9 {213) 697-1791 I ) A<l.llt Davis Pttor Lind Hayn ' Five outstarwtlng ttltbrtties giving IWo lectures ucb and a cbqe "' location blJhl!cjll the -1 "' the ll'lt Town Hall Serles. sponlOl'fld by tquna Beach A.!SlJlance Le.:£'" mies will be moved to the Niguel Theater ID South IAguoa's Monareb Plua. Lec- tures will be offered al 10:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. eaabllng patroos cl both performances lo atlead the traditional "°'"' celebrily hmcbcon ID the Niguel c.mtry Club. Engaged !or the coming year will be """"""" esperl, Deity Furness who Willlaunch the ....... Jan. 28. On Feb., 25, Loni Montagu will delight audiences with anecdotes about bl! spec- tacular estate, vintage car col· ledloo and co lorful ex- periences, followed by Dr. Mlnay ~ on llfardl 25 who will llv.,. bl! famous Whal to UnUI I he Psychiatrist Comes. Best ·telling author I D d Dlllrillonlsl, Adelle Davis Is scheduled f..-Aj>ril ZI, and oo May 20, Peter Lind Hayes, rencwned stage, screen, TV and radio per3008lity will ccn- clude the season. Mrs. Daniel A. Schryver, series chairman, announced tickets now are available for the c:omplete .. r1es only al $20 and may be obtained by send- ing a check to Town Hall, P. 0 . Bo>: 856, Laguna Beach 926$2. 'Ibose sending checks im~ mediately may speedy !heir I • choice of morning or al~ performances. Seating f o ~ later aullocriber• will be made' aocordlng to availability. Check$ arriving after the! series bas been sold out wlll1 be reluroed proinpily, ac.l cording to Mrs. Robert B. Malone, Ucket chairman. Tickets, with I u n ch e oil reservation and price l~ formation, Will be mailed to subscribers Jsn. 10. Proe<eds are returned to the commWlily through • league. sponsored projects, including a program of aid a n d rehabilitation ,for me n ta I health patients, an emergency welfare fund, a senior clt.izen.1 Jnl!?'llD, lhe William IWnes Memorial Scholarsh\p and a homt-makers' service. Coast Clubs Circle Convention Dates FY Friends A classic film on Gertrude Stein will be screened at the Friday, May 18, installation hmcbeon of the Friends d. lhe Fountain Valley Llbrary, in the Fisherman restaurant, Huntington Beach. Installed at the 11 a.m. meeting . wiJl, be the Mmes. Cay Mooring, president; Ronald Murphy, vice presi- dent; Lorin Lammers and Chris Schneider, secretaries: Harry Colwell, treasurer; Al Krukenberg, historian. and Chester Veruting, auditor Others allendlng will be lhe Mmes. Joy Maynard, Louise Spivey, L. Joelene Mack. Carol Myers, Lois Murray, V. Gene Drake, Jeanne Wett~ stein, Madge Clark, Dorothy Reed, Dorothy Demetry, Bernice Han.son, B e r t a Stelsorl, Eve I y n Gloistein, Susanne Dyer and Bobbie Valdez and Ms. Joyce Dell. CARIH Members o f Pacesetter Chapter of CARDI will offer a clothing and craft boutique Saturday, May 19, in the Grand Salon of the Queen District . Mary. Loog Beach, beginning at 10:30 a.in. After a.luncheon, Members of the Orange an auction will be held for District, califomja Federa-special items. lion.. of~W~'s. Cl!!~· will __ _ Farris, vice president; Vance Gritton, treasurer: Clinton Westervelt and W i 11 i a m Carpenter, secretaries. Night Owls Prince of Peace Lutheran Choiresters will entertain at the Sunday, May 20, meeting of the Newport Beach Night Owls al 2 p.m. In Bethel Towers social center, Coot.a Mesa. Reunion Fonner residents of Puxico, Mo., now residing in California will gather Sunday, May 20, in Jastro Park, Bakersfield for their annual picnic. Further information i s available through Mrs. Beulah Hartz, 300! S. Ey e St., Bakersfield, 93304. B'n ai B'rith Home economist Mrs. Gerry Gerken will present a slide show on '1be Money Game at the Mooday; May 21, meeting of the Anagrove Chapter of B'nal B'rith Women at 8 p.m. in the Southern Ca1ifomia Gas C.O., auditorium, Anaheim. • LB Gardeners was the setting for the ifl..: stallation of officers for thel Laguna Beach Garden Clu,b. l Jnstalled as president wti! Mrs. Phillip·B. Norman. : Serving on her board were· the Mmes. J, Wil l iam; Devaney, Watson Jmrle,j Florence Redman and Frank; Simpson, vice presidents; Neil: Lewis and Cylde Phelps,! secretaries; Lawrence Lantz,: treasurer, and I rving: Westwood, financial secretary. Irvine Coast c.Ounlry Club . LOSE WEIGHT : THIS WEEK gather Friday, May 18, at 11 a.m. in the Woman's Club of Santa Ana. Catholics . Stylists - Golden West "College will ~A"'!!: host the hairstyling show and "B• C1ml•rl1bl1 i n t erCoJJegiate competition •~ ,v ... r cv,1'' among students, from 1 0 fo J}A ~,ff -··-FOR __ _ PRESCRIP.TION PRICES Call ••• -The .• Odli~-Plan...can...llelp.-you­ become the slim t1lm person that YoW •would like to be. Odrinex has been used s11ccessfully by lhous.ulds all ovtr th• country for 14 years. Get rid of excess. lat al)(f live longer. Odrinex ls • liny tablet and etsily:i swallowed.Contains nodange1ous drugs. No sta rvi11j. No special exercises. Odrinex Pltn costs $3.25 and the lar1e economy size $5.25. mun1ty co JI e g es Saturday, ? t~. May 19, in the college center. 111 ;,~. Graduate 642-4104 .. Orange County C a t h o I i c Alunlni Club, wOOse rnem~ bers are s i n g I e Catholic college graduates or registered nurses, will sponsor a membership dance, Friday, May 18;in·the Airporter'.Jnn. Donations will aid a n orphanage in Tecate, Mexico. SoulhemCa l ilorniacom-i · IJ ,J' VENUS Students will be judged in -···-·· Cursct icrC's quick service styles as well as \ o r11rv FF CvPS da y evening and artistic 17• E. 171~ s1. coit1 Mn1 (., 390 1. 17th St. at Tu1th1 Aft!. ' l"IJI 11 ll1lph'1 Mkl.l ,. ~ styles beginning with comb .. z.suo I!!\"~ Nm to bl,.. Mb. - You must lose ugly fat or your money wiU bl refunded. No questions ' 1sked. Accepl no substitutes, Sold will! lllis auarantee by: Secretaries outs at 1 p.m. Local dance and ,,.,,.,.~ Costa Mesa 642-4104 singing groups will perform in.I-==========~=-==""='::::"::::·::::'•:= .... ::::'::::"::::"::::":='~~========~ the community theater from 211 THRI FTVoos~'!i~';.~~~o•rs Har b or Area Legal Secretaries will install officers Friday, May 18, at a 7 p.m. dinner meeting iri the Sheraton Beach lrul. To be installed are Lois McKeon, president; Marilyn GrogSI). and Marlene Wallgren, vice presidents; Chris Edick, secretary, and No r m a Eversmeyer, treasurer. The Midshipman from H a r b o r High will provide dance music. Assistants The American Association of Medical Assistants, State . of CaliCornia, Inc. will meet for its annual convention Friday to Sunday, May 18 to 20, in Redding. Convention Mrs. Nonna Schnacken- berg. pr esi d e nt of the Orange E mpire Chapter, to 3 p.m. prior to awards presentations. BSP ... Bowting and pizza are on the menu for Husbands' Night planned for Saturday, May 19, at 8 p.m. by the Xi Rho Omicron Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi. A busine ss meeting i s scheduled for Monday, May 21, in the Yorba Linda home of Mrs. Ronald Broschinsky, at 7:45 p.m. ' Faculty Wives Or. and Mrs. Donald Reckner will host the tradl· tional May Tea of the Faculty Wives Club of Chapman College Saturday, May '19, beginning al 2 p.m. To be illlltalled as officers are the Mmes. D o nald Douglas, presiden t; Peter and Mrs. Helen Hargrave will ---------- represent the chapter Friday through Sunday, May 18 to 20, at the division meeting or California Division, National Secretaries Association in Sao Diego. Lyle's is NOW ----COASTLINE--... HEAL TH FOODS SPECIALS-FOR MAY 14 TO 19 MILK & EGG PROftlN POWDER With Lecithin and Pineapple llllJllltl. Tht lntant Suppl1nttot A wonderful way to •dd protein to your diet. Mix• readlly with mllk or fruit Julen. , 1b. <" •L> S ecial REGULAR SJ.75 ......... P $1.49 ~:~'u~!i "U.7s .......... Special $2.79 ~~~u~!'. 0$it,s . Special $4.95 WHILE THE SUPPLY LASTS! Check .., other w.-ty apecloh whllt y.U ar1 l1 -din. Coastline Health Foods ··-- roL YESTER & COTION THICK 'N THIN DENIM SEERSUCKER STRIPES & SOLIDS Huge assortment of colors, combos. PRINTS Great Designs and colors. Mac:h. wash. 45'' wide VALUES TO $1.4 9 YD. Mech. Wash Cotton 45" .. Wide SLINKY KNIT PRINTS A fabulous collection of "zingy" new multi-dots, florals, nauticals' and many designs. Acetate/Nylon 44"/45" Wide MACHINE WASH -BRIDAL & GRADUATION FABR·ICS • 44/45" 100% Nyto" 98' CHIFFON & ORGANDIES . . . . -yd. 41" ... waslloble NYLON DOmD SWISS 44/45" , ........ /C- SHEER VOILE PRINTS . . . . . . . . 44/45" WH Nylo•washobS. SPARKLE ORGANZA ....... . 41" MOClll• .,..,_10.0% Cotto" SWISSAIR LENO WEAVES 4S" ,,..,.....;cotton EMBROIDERED EYELm ..... . 44/41" Cott--'elf91filf-NJIH 1" LACE, LACE, LACE . . . . to 139 yd. 149 yd • 179 yd. 269 yd. 291 yd. 598 yd. dots, other ~·;i;, HOUSE oF · F•BRICS • always first quality fabrics Huntlntton Centet -Edinger at Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach -lt7401l .. Souttl Coa•t Pl•u -&tl1IOI et h " 01'90 ~wy. COlta MtM -J4S.1SN °'9Metalr Mlill !.-lutM Park Center - Ofengt'JtiorS-Ind Mll'bor U P1lrt11 1t St111totl 'vlltr,t• -.$2f..22M ''*"' Park -• ...,,,,, • ... .,...,_" Of9¥t -12181 Brookhunt (next to Von'•) -S»-1542 t , I I ' • ~ /I(, ., • ., 1 l'OI \ • F l - 1' ,t 'I .. I' I I LC s- 7 1. I .,, i;1 .1 i;< ' I "' • A MB LEW TUMBLEWEEDS PONY l'XmSS PAC!Wii: FOR C. a.I«! MUTT & JEFF FIGMENTS NANCY MUST I 1 ~DDAY'S caass1a1n '.:ni1L1 I ACROSS 58 Notary: ( 1 Fastener Archaic , J 5 Pour fonh 62 Trite \ 'I 9 Extortion 1$31\solated'it-~ '11• Fabric 64 'ftdtifthfn ' ~ :,15 S.Am!1f.cltY 'on·:-'W01~·-.t •16 Eagle:snest. 68· T•r , .-, :~1. Agitated 67 ~9!61lng ? 1 'ls--sl'llp aectlon ·~r ) ., '20 Beget 68 )~6l\db°taot · ·, 21 Actors 69 e,i1Jofts ~ -23 Became 70 Trojan War J aware of Sile : fZ5 Deedly pa!e 71 Army VIPs ! ~6 Scarlelt DOWN ' : j O'Hara'• 1 Coni~drl.t_f · home 2 FtfJl.llkllfib:er ;~ E11plodes 3 Kind otnut : ~~ ~=~~o~;;ent• ~ ~:.~~~eld 27 Street urchin 49 Before · 1 Prefix 6 D4ifi.'1 , 1 29--Maleyan boat 62 Unable to . be --se11ion concem • 30 flow move i(9 Trading 7 SAC)iQ. . 31 Unspecified 53 Oiuolve ' centers 8 Prince of·:-·· qullntity 55 E. Indian , 1 Orlg .eqpt. 9 Cigarettes:• 32 NHLorNFL VIP I mfr. · Brit. pltyers1 5e Highway built '42 Unusual 10 VI P's 33 Exclaim with in the '40s I, persons retainers. violence &7 ·Drivers • ~5 Equine parent .11 Field of study 34 Weepon 58 Semiprecious 48 Addison's 12 Granular 35 Go astrily stone partner snow 36 Cease doing 59 Detective's 50 Unadul1erated 13 Card¥ ,. 40 Meal course quest 'sl European 18 Opinlont 43 Complained' 60 Function 1 j capital r 22 Pro?OuriJ · 4't. J1e1d work&rt 61 Contro>Alrtlet /;4 Eye ifltentty: 24 Percussiqnf" 46 Garment· , Custer aide 2 words Instrument" 47 Assembling· 65 Man's name I' PEANUTS ·-' ---- by Doug Wildey by Tom K. Ryan by Al Smith by Dale, Hale by Ernie BushmiUer •IJ//. /,//. •-1'1 ' DOOLEY'S WORLD SALLY BANANAS GORDO 'iOV WA>JT' Me 'JO SIA'{ OJJ 1'0R OOMJ~? WAAT'5 W'10N'1! >JO MOVIE PATE "tlNte>UTf MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS = ~T? ® JUDGE PARKER by Harold Le Doux I -~I:-c:TO-L""'D~.Y-O_U_I .._,..,T .... HE::R"e"'·s .... -...... ""--·~Y-o=u=c"'o=uL=D=AA-=:<E~F=Ro...AN_K_L~-. -,-W-'"5C.., MEANWHILE l ~fff LILA SAHDS' 5UDDEll , APPEARANCE I IH 'TOW,N, /I 6ET6V IK61ST5 THAT SHE. I LEAVE I IMMEDIATELY! ~:....z;i:O&z::> fl/ -;;;_ou~ .F' 5-1-r- WAS PLANNING ON FL.IGMT OUT MAILED THO~E INTEft.ESTED JN TAKING A MORNING IN AN HOUR! CONTRACTS 6EE1NG ~O YOU FLIGHT SACK TO GET THAT TO ME! l'\AO LIHE.D UP AS NEW YORl<o! ONE! HUM5ER FOUR,. DARLING! MISS PEACH F~ANC!Nf, PO VOi.i LOVJ Ma? ~ICK TRACY -l!IAT ! INTEND 1t' l<UP YOio! ON A S~NG, A~ltf, 90 ! CAN PLAY YO!.( 1.IKI! TM!f W-lO :S: TMINK OF 'ltit.( ~ ! ~ 'Tiii: l.OOo:s OF TMOSE olAlucntRS, ID SAV n<ev SMOULD AU.BE PUT OH SMOW-UP. ® by Mell IT coui.o SE WO~E. SM! COULD "fMINIC ~MIAS A l'ADMINTO>ol lllR:P ... by Chester Gould IT ENABlEO US TO CAPTUltl! A VICIOUS KILLER WI A LIFE BEING LOST. • DAILY PILOT J/S by Roter· ltocifield t NOWX f --r ,,. . .,.,....,. "tr'W5N • IT'""' •• """"'D j f 0 f J • by Charles Barsotti by Gus Arriola by Ferd Johnso11 I THOUC1;HT you SAID '>k:>U. WERE AN OMLY C_t'llLD ... THE GIRLS 1 DENNIS THE MENACE • • • I • I I -~ --=---.- ) ' • • ' I f ' • ' I • • • DAllY PILOf U,.I T ........ EX.SADDLEBACK COLLEGE PITCHER JOHN WADE LIES HELPLESS ON THE FIELD •.. Asuniislii1ig Victory Riggs' Psych Joh Helped Top Cou;r~ R.U10NA , Ca.Ji£. (AP) -It was a ''If I won , 1 got to go to the movies. If I masterpiece of psyching an opponent into Jost, I got a belt in the seat of the pants.'' _ ~ ~!.tl of _ ~ete ~~!e~ and ___ The ___preacbe"'c Q/\11 wflo is.,,•ed the · Newport l!eaai's '30f>bY IUggs, lbe . ~ · ~-c--- hustler, could not conceal his pride. $10,000 wmner-take-aU chall~nge, said ,, "It was the greatest Mother's Dey bus-that Mrs. O>urt, holder of 30 national tle Of alJ time," exulted the little, 55-singles titles and leading money winp.er year-old manipulator, one of the last of a on the Virginia Slims tour, was a victim dylng breed of sportsmen for whom the of nerves. world Is just ooe giant gaming table. "She was tight. She choked up. She Riggs had just scored an astooiahing 6-played at 1least 25 percent below her 2, 6-1 victory over Margaret Coort, the regular form," he insisted. "It's easy to world's greatest woman player, in the so-understand. She was carrying the banner called tennis Battle of the 5e:r:e11 -one of for the whole women's lib movement. the most bizarre of sports enterprises. 'Please don 't let that old guy beat you- ''Margmt Court is bigger, better, you 've got to teach him a lesson,' they stronger and faster than I am ," he said, said. Naturally, she panicked.'' gulping lemonade from an empty tennis "I played only about 40 percent of my ball can 1In a corner of the press room at caP41city," he added. "I didn't hit a • Lightning Bolt Kills Saddlehack Pitcher LAKE HAVASU CITY, Ariz. -A boll or lightning, described as a column of fire two feet wide, hit and killed Sad- dleback College pitcher John Wade Sun- day as be was winding up for a pitch dur- ing a semi-pro baseball game. The bolt killed Wade, 19, lnstanUy then forked out, knocking every player In the infield and ootfield off b.ls feet. At least seven persons were injured. Two of them were reported in critical condition ·at Lake Havasu Community Hospital. Llghlpini struck in the top hall of the sixth inning as Wade, of the newly form- ed Lake Havasu City semipro team, was about to deliver a pitch to a batter from the Blythe, Cam., team. The bolt made a lood clap and struck Wade on the head and burned oil his hair, clothes and fell shoe ~illle tt tore through bis body. "It's a shock to me, I just can't believe II,•• S.ddfeback College "'°"b Doug Fritz told !he Dally Pilot. "He wu really an out.tandfng Youtll genUeman and ..,. ol our top pllehtr1. He told me be ..., going to be back next !easOO:" Mission Viejo Hi(b coach Hany Hilke echoed Fritz'o tllougbts. "ll you Nid "' was bit In an auto accident maybe I'd react a little dll!....Uy. But llghlnlng, tt just doesn't seem possible," says Hilke. Wade played baseball and football for Hilke in a ~year span.. He was 9-0 as a freshman pitcher and was a star defensive end on an undefeated freshman football team. Wade spent his senior seasoo at Lake Havasu City lligh where be earned all- conference and an-state honors. His parents moved h> the Mlssloa Viejo area during the sunvner of this year. Then just r<cenUy moved back to Lake Havasu. Wade's slsttt witnessed the tragedy from the blelcltero and raced to the mwnd \\!Jeroe her brolher lay, .cream· ing, "My God, my God, my brother." She allempttd IO. give him moufl>IO-mouth resuscltailoo but be wu already dead. Wade'a fathet was Ille base umpire and was standing near first base when the llgblnlng struck. He was knocked to the ground bul was not Injured. "It was like in ooe of those science fic- tion lilnlS vfiere &001eone from ooter space woold shoot a ray of fight at some- one and he Vt1)Uid disintegrate,'; said Glen Baker, a volunteer fireman who was watc;:hing the game. "A cylinder or fight came down and engulfed the pitcher," he said. "lt looked like his whole body was just one big 'flash." "It just vaporized the kid's clotblng and what was left was in shre~." said an ambulance operatcx". Then, according fu witnesses, the lightning feaplrogged from the mound like a otar shell, rirsl into the infield and then tinto the outfield, knocking everyone off their feet , and sending clouds of dust 100 feet into the air. One of the iinjured , Vern L. Howk, 28, w}f) was playi.rig ng'htfield, spoke from a hospital bed, still in shock. ....'.'.L.saw_Jobn willd.up, then I beard a big boom and I waa oo Uie ~I could barely see people coming out of Ille · stands," Howk said. "Then I saw people crawling on their hands and 'kneea toward the pile her." Wflne,... oald lhere had been a light rain falling at the time and previous llghlnlng had been seen but was more than 15 mlles away. 1be other injured Lake Havasu players \\'ere third baseman Roger Lambert, 37: catcher F'Ted Grover Jr., 19; James 1'.litcbell, 30, and Jotm J. Chagdes, 391 an umpire. the San Diego Country Estates. stroke. I just kept pushing the ball back ''She ii 25 years younger. She 19 the over the net -high shots, change of ••• A VICTIM OF A FREAK LIGHTNING STORM AS MATES SCURRY FOR HELP .•• Hospital officials said no one on the Blythe twn was injured. best woman player in the world , maybe pace, shots not hard enough to break an the best who ever lived. Then why didn't qg -and waited for her to make a she beat me?" mistake. Riggs, hls dyed hair disheveled and bis "She got rattled a couple or times when horn-rim glasses hanging over his nose, 1 passed 'her as she came to the net. She paused to let his wisdom soak in. served three double-faults. She started "I'll tell you," he added . "It wasn 't missing easy overheads. She is a better \\fiat somebody did yesterday. It wasn't player. Her game just went to pieces." what that person's potential may be Bobby intimated that he may have had tomorTOw. It was how you do today -something to do with Margaret 's early the biggest teMis match is a ll history, collapse. the whole world looking on. "I had been •told she could get the "This is the spot £or a clutch player, center court jitters," he said, "'So I kept the money player. That's me. I'm no impressing on her what an lirnportant superman. I'm just a sloppy, municipal match this was -much ,bigger than any park player. But I'm the man for an oc-Wimbledon. 'Then there was the question culon like this." of the balls. Bobby acknowledged that he 'd been a "I pretended I wanted the lighter balls. husUer ever since he was a tyke in short She hadn 't thought about it bot her ad- panta turned into ·a fanatical win-<>r-else visors told her if I wanted the lighter competitor by four older brothers. balls she should insist on the heavy-i:luty "You might say I'm computerized ," he balls. So we fljpped . She won and took sald. "My brothers got me interested in lhe hea vy-du ty balls. games when I was three years old. It "She y,·ould have lhad a much better -started with tops, then marbles, oo to chance with the lighter balls. She could softball, baseball and finally tennis. have uhipped them past me." Messersmith Unhappy Dodgers Take a Rest After Shelling Giants SAN FRA NCISCO I AP) -Th e San Francisco Gian ts may well feel they can do without the virtue of giving. The Giants distributed -31 ,626 caps to fans in Candlestick Park on Sunday - and then absorbed a 15-3 rout at the hands of the Los Angeles Dodgers, who MtY IS ~-,.v 16 Ml~ 17 May 11 Dodgers Slare All G1m11 111 KFI 1 ... 1 LOI Afl!;lr ln t1 Cll'IClnn~t! l0$ AnQf'lrs 11 C!nclnNll LOS AnOelH II (lntin,..tl L.CK Anotlfl 11 Allftnf" I 11.m. ~ o.m. •.71 1.m. i P.m. pounded out two home runs, two doubles and four singles for nine runs in the fourth inning, a National League one-in- ning high this season. It was the 12th win in the last 16 games for the Dodgers, who moved to \li'ithin 41,1 games of the NL West-leacting Gia nts. 'Ibc Dodgers meted out cavalier treat- ment to all foo r San Francisco pitchers. including Dave Kingman . who pitched the last two imings, striking out l\\O bat- ten, walking two. throwing '"'O wlld pttcbes and givtng up a f\\'O-run single to Ron Cey. The Dodgen were idle today but San Francisco traveled to San Diego to open a series with the Padres tonight. to tie Johnny Bench and Bob \Vatson for lhc league lead ; three rum from Davey Lopes, y,·ho hit a home run and a single in the fourth. and.lour runs from captain Willie Davis, \\'ho rapped out two doubles and ty,·o singles. \Villie Cray,tford and Steve Yeager - \Yho was behind the plate for the Dodgers. \\'hile Ferguson plnycd in lhe outfield -each had three hits. Ferguson ·· s~id of the switch. "Playing out there gives me 11 res!, but J find the inactivity boring." Fe rguson. y,·ho \\'as raised in I.he San J':'rancisco Ba y area. said his opposlte- !1eld home run off reliever Don Car- rithers, was a special Mothers 's Day gilt for his •mother and "40 to 50 other relatives" attending the game. lAI AiltMn 1111 Stri ,ttllCftef ()I •ll rllrbl •ltrllcrM Looe1, lb 4 1 1 .l llor<11, rf l I 1 o Svc:~nor. )b 6 1 l 0 HOWl<l!I r1 l 0 0 0 W.O.vi~, cl l 4 4 0 Pl'IUUPS, • 11J ~ 1 0 0 Flf'011Jlon, II 4 1 , • S~!tr, ss 4 I I O W Cr1wford. •I s l J 1 McCowy, lb 4 o 1 I C•y, lb 5 l ' j lnom11on, lb o o o O PY11rU, II $ 0 0 0 Goaclsen lb ~ 0 2 I Y110..-, c •'lo M10c1ox.'u .i o o o M1u1rsm1111. P • 1 1 I Matll'ltw1, 11 f o o o 011.lltldw, c J I 1 0 Sld911,( -0000 ft1rr.11 1000 Ctrrlll'IWJ, p • O I 0 M<ODwtll, 11 2 0 I I Kl~l'N"• p I 0 0 0 Cey, who drove in 226 runs over two seatonS with Albuquerque of the Pacific Cout League, drove In five ~ on four sing! .. Sttndsy, despite coming into Ille game bitUng .2.10. Tot1l1 44 IS lO U Tot•l1 )2 3 6 I l Ol At!Otlts JOO toct 102 -lS S11t1 Frtric:IKO 102 000 000 -J E -Mtooo~. Df' -Lo. At1o16ts I s,.,. Fr- cllco a. LOB -LOI ""9e/ft II, .. " .,.11(,J(:O '· 2& -w. 0.111!; 1, w. Cn""°'11 2, y_,.,., ~. Hit -LOOfl ni. ,.""9VIOll 1n. sa -....._ t. s -MM~fl!I. "'Mlis was Jong overdue, '1 Cey said. "J've driven in sit or eevert runs in a 11!"-league game, but I wouldn 't call lJllt atnordioary. '' 'l1le Dodien also got foor runs from Joe Ferguson, "''ho now has a total or 27 • ) lflMlt llllllO MttW•tn!1t1 (W)..J) ~ • J 2 6 " ltrr (l,•J> ).I/) t r 1 ) t C1rrl1ticr1 t/J J J t • Mc:Dowlll .).1 /J 4 I J I Klfltl'l\ln 2 1 J 2 2 ) Hftl" -b'( M"wMNrti (SflllttJ, wr--Kl"f- """ J. Pl -Y""Ott, TllTll -21•. AlttMfr.« -,.,..,. Smith Claims Better Status For U.S. Stars DALLAS (AP) -The World Champion- ship of Tennis finals proved three things Sunday: Stan Smith is the No. 1 player, Australian dominance in the spart may be taking a nosedive, and Arthur Ashe has to be the Wlluckiest person ever to lose $30,000. Smith claimed the $50,000 first prize 6-3. 6-3, H , 6-4 from good friend Ashe, who had 'to settle for $20,000 and cheer.1 from 8,500 fans in Moody Colisewn, who thought be was robbed in the loth game or the deciding fourth set. Ashe double faulted to make the crucial game deuce after a controversy on his first serve. Smith made it his ad on a ball many thought had bounced twice. Then Ashe clubbed a forehand too tong on the match winner. Slow motion replays of the double- bounce controversy showed the ball up when Smith returned the winner. "I was glad to find out I did hit the bflll on the first bounce," Smith said. "It v.i:iuld have been y .. orse to win the match on an inc(l'rect call than to lose the match for $50,00l>." Ashe ~ly hall-heartedly played t h e point because "I didn't think he hit the .ball on the first bounce. I just hit up a lob and asked Ule umpire Mike Blanchard if it was good. The television replay show- ed. it was." .. On the faul t call, Smith said "I thought the first serve was out. One lineman said he didn't sec it and asked help from the other lines1n11n. who called it out." Once the controversies were irooed out Smith, who played collegiately at Sooth· em Clllifomia aOO has now won $154.100 in his first year on the WCT toor, said .. , feel comfortable in saying I mlgllt be the No. I player in the wwld now." Australians Ken Rosewall, who won the first two WCT tournaments, and Rod Laver, twice the runnerup, were both ousted In the semifinals. "Kenny and Rod are getting along In age,'' said the 26-year-<>ld Smith, who 'i'-'Ofl Wimbledon in 1972. "In a \Vay, this may herald the end of the Australian dominance/' Smith said. • "There are so many good young players In Ille Unli.d StalA!ll. Within 10 yeara, I'd say 1be U.S. may have 20 or Ille top !O players." The 29-yeaMfd Aahe, a former UCLA star, agreed, saying, "We've got more people than Australia pllYinl ltMls who have more free fune:-1 ' Smith's victory aooompllahed lour goals he had set for himself. He raid: "I wani.d to be on a Dllvl1 Otp team thal beat Australia; I wanted to be 1he No. I player in Ille U.S.; I wanted to win Wimbledon ; and I wanted to become 1he besl player in the world.'' . _,,_, ..• BUT IT'S TO NO AVAIL-TEARS, AGONY OF FRIENDS COME TO SURFACE. ,., ' We Could Win It-Pinsod • • ' r ' . May Baffles Wliite Sox 01i Six Hits, 3-0 < .Jim Spencer's !int homer In moro ~ • a yeor made· tt 2-0 In the fifth and ~ ~ Angels added another run in the r round m a single by Rudy Meou,; 1 ucrllke and PiDloo's ntlHCOl'ing 1 Vada Pinson hos been around the ma- jor leagues for IS years -enough to qua1ify him as an expert on the subject or baseball. , Pinson lashed three straight singles Sunday as the California Angels blanked the Chicago White Sox 3--0 al Anaheim Stadium and wu then asked to analyze the Angels. "We are among the best," he replied. "We can stack up favorably .,.,ith any team in the league and with oor pitching staff and mentlll outlook we could win It." The pll<:hlng to w11Ich l'lnson rel.,.. red was Oil· prvmlnent di""•Y becauSe or a genUeman oamed Rudy May. MO)' chol<ed the Sox on slJ: hils -three of them br Dick Allen ~ and poatod his lourtll ahUIOtit In five Nrt4 to give Ille cat~omlanl a spllt fti tbelr fvur.came series with a.icqo and mcm them to within lour pmel of the leaden. "I've ~ on a loier oll "'1 llle aad It's no !Im, ' lllay .~d alter Ille ,... Jo& wbich tncnued hII rtcold to 4-2 and dea"tued h!l .. med run •-IO 1.10. "In ~ yeon, !lie Ang!ls have had • bad atUtud,e and bad attendance. We'~ • ' changing all that this year. Let11 fact it, we've.got to do 10methlng to pert up the fan.< in Orange County and the best way to do it Ls win." May was ~ about Ille pooaiblllly of M1., 1~ Ml., IS ""' " ,l,\ty 11 A•tels Slate winning 20 games. ..I think I can," he repJl.ed. "In fact, I'm counting oo. it." The Angels, now on a mW-win stl'C!ak of two games, wflf be In K.,... City tlt1' evmln( to face the Royals In the !Int ol a brief -.ame series her.rt they return to Analielm Wednosdl)'. BUI sq.,, 5-1, will duel Ille lloyall' Diclt Drqo, J.2, tonight. ClllfGnila 1a.. May !he only nm fie noll1 .-.S In the !Int lnnl"IJ wbell PfNon opell<I with • alnglo .a 1-- Rldl c:i--1 0-2, and San<IY Alomar ~ Both ..,, od'IOl\Cfd on I wffd J>ildumd Plnaoo ......i on Bobby Valen· tine'• lllCl'llfce fly. J "l think we have the ability to win thine," said Plnlon. "We've ahown year that we have the ablfity to I back and there Is a good mental atllitltlt 4 on the club. We feel we'r! nevet out cirl • game untll lt'a ove-r.'' i a.ldll l•I .. , .. ,., Jttll', tf 4 • o j ~lnton, It ~ t_il Mdr-. 411 ) t Alolr!lr, tit ,a r D • .t.11-.. lb .. .J 0 Vlltntln .. cf J t Meli.i, •• 4 •• '·"~ • t • M•"ll llOflo tf i t I DIVIMl'I, "' t I l ltlkhllflff, w t 1 1 it.on..-. ,., a , · LAofl, •• • 1 • '"'""'"· " • • Offa. 2D , t 0 °'""'*" -' • H.Alltfl. llfl t t 0 SPiii<«, lb .1 1 C.lrWI:~ c J • t Mtoll. \i 1 1 '·KIR'r• '" I • • 'fortiort, t j t ' t 00...... I I I I ll.Mly, p I t f---'t l*'lh ii • t lot .. 1 2S ::J' a, ~ oct ---Clt""111e ..... -e -Jlttr. Of" -OlltlOO J, LOI -!. c.11"""'9 4. II 4J 0. All"'. Hit - I -1 orto19, I, -VlllMJ"f, '""lllllll~ ~fL.011) t 1J J4 It.Mey IW-"ll t 6 I I J ~ Wfl -Ott ..... lime -t~ AllllldMC9 -11,15s. l J ~tEJ! Davis return tory 0\ Ameri1 timisti· beat C the pri own q in 21> Erik Mateo won ti aeries Ramtr said 1 Vi A FOR " Wei Ski win a But "[ ci icaL But I win." The' ~~ lnvita) Cram) 72nd c It ' theft, But friend lurnn summ "A holes. them. hole I "'°"" And when do u I Weisk sitting nervo1 behin< Wei $.10,00I finishi 69 fo1 par" rninul show• '"'' In fri:J v:::i. • rr=. l ll.a1J t''/'Ye.t J.!11~ I Hai. It Ktrm!I' J ol'ln Ml "''""' ~" f.l.07J JI,,, WI ~;ft-1:1. f~ GG,! 8ob 011 Ch1rle' G-L.l Phil Re Ktn SU Ra., F~ l ·&•n I ""~ 8 ud Al ",•ld .f ... " ftefl Yj ~;fir. t. Sports la Brief Chile Is Next For U.S. Team MEXICO CITY -The U.S. possibilities of de[eatlng the South American Zone finalist were 0 very good." "We beat them 5--0 last year ln their toontry," Van Dillen said ol the 1172 series against awe. Matter Dei Gets Rams In Playoffs Mater Del Hiah'• Angelus League basebalf champions play host to the Citrus Belt League nmnerup R a mo n a Rams Friday In the first round ol the CIF MM ha<el>all playoffs. • DAILY PILOT Davis Cup tennis team will return home from Its 4-1 vie-. tory over Mexico In the NO(th Ameriean 7-one final ol>- timistie about its c:hances to beat Chile -and happy about the prospect of playing on its own courts for the first time in 21>ii years. The United States won the two singles matches Sunday. Solomon beat Ramirez U , 7.5, 7..S, and Dick Stockton, 22, downed lAlis Baraldi W, 6-1, 6- S, 9-6. In tennis competltlo n Newport llar1lor's perennial Sunset League champions are at Loog Beach Poly in the first round ol the AMA tennb eliminations while J r v 1 n e League kingpin Corooa de! Mar is at ~adia. LAGUNA BEACH HIGH'S VARSITY TRACK AND FIELD CHAMPIONS, UNDEFEATED IN ORANGE LEAGUE DUAL MEET ACTION. Erik Van Dillen, 22, ol San Mateo who with Tom Gorman won the doubles match of the series Saturday against Raul Ramirez and Vlceote Zanzua, said be thought the team's Ma cCall Named NEW YORK -Laguna Beach's George MacCall, a for- mer nonpla}'ilm captain ot the U.S. Davis Cup team, bas been named cornnmsiooer . of the new World Professiooa1 Teonis League, it was reported slm- day night by :the National Broadetisting O>. n et w or k radio show "Monitor." '!be MM baseball situation Is somewhat cloudy with Irvine League runners u p Magnolia and Santa Ana Valley and Sunset League run- nersup Anaheim and Loara fighting for three avallable berths. Western Sprints Next for occ Weiskopf Victory A Gift FORT WORTH, Tex. (AP) "It was," said Tom Weiskopf, "a beck of a way to win a golf tournament." But he wasn't complaining. "l don't want to be bypocrit· ical. You got to [eel happy. But it's a different kind ot. win." The tall, blond 0 b Io stroogman p I u c k e d the $150,000 Colonial National Invitatim title from Bruce Crampton's flip pocket on the 72nd and final hole Sunday. Jt was_ more a gift than. theft, actually. But Weiskopf quoted his old friend and fellow Ohio State ---alumnus, Jack Nick:laus, -in summation: · The pro tennis league, with more than a dozen ciUes ®Ill· peting, Is scheduled to begin operation late this year. Only the Boston and New York franchises have not definitely been settled for the ·tennis league. King Tops . TOKYO -Top-seeded Billie Jean King o[ Long Beach displayed strong net play in the lhird set Sunday to score a 7-fi, 5-7, 6-3 victocy over Nancy Gunter and captm'e the top prize .of $8,400 in the Toray· Sillock Women's Professional tennis tournament. tf.osemary Casals defeated Francoise Durr of France 6-3, 6-1 (or third place in the 16- player tournament. ~I{are.ll Signs "A golf tournament ls 72 boles. You have to.play all of VANCOUVER, B.C. them. Your scores on the first Karen . Magnussen of North bale is as important as your Vancouver, wimer of the 1973 scores 00 the last." World Figure Skating cham- And it was the last hole, pionships, has signed a three- where Crampton took a year contract with I c e I Capades. do u b e -bogey six, that George Eby of Los Angeles. Weiskopf won the tournament , sitting at the time rather president of Ice Capades, said nervously on a folding chair the contract "will earn. Karen behind tlle tree. the highest amount ever paid Weiskopf collected the lo a performer, or an act, in $30,000 top prize by a stroke, the 33-year history or Ice Capades." finishing with a one-under-par 69 for m; which included a He said the 21·year-old par on the last hole, some 10 champion will perform in the Each league was to decide today which of its co-run· nersUp would assume its loop's No. 2 l>rth In the elimina- tions. AMAlhMMll Fr.-wey No. 3 or M.lrl'l'IO(ll• No. 3 (C•ITljlrUlo or Newtlllry l"lr'k) •I lB MUllt•n R•mDM •I M.ller 0.1 Slor.1 11 Or1ree P1 OI Verdtt 1t SI. John Boeco Burbilnk •I No. TOITlllCI M.lrmonte No. I (C..n.r111o ., N...WUry P1rlt~I H-Sum.et No. 2 Lo.rt or AMhtlm\ of Fr-•v Ho. 2 Full1rton or Lowell M'/r ti Lia tmltos Irv nt No. 3 (Megnollt or SA Vtlley) :,~'I:" No. 3 {lo.rt or Anthelml. 1t SI. Ptlll ti Sav•nna ~~"':t ~.f'i1r:~lt VtlllY Bu.rwi ti Htwthorr>e Sanlt Monlct 11 RO<rtt lrvl"' No. 2 (SA Vtlley or ~t.I •I C"'1ftV VIU1 P•rk ., w .. r.m AAA leuNll (lpporwnt to bl dttermlned •I El '=-.a• to bl determined ,, Rg:~: :,11~,:f:tpomtfY s1r.J::: ti Cltrlffl'IOnt Gll'"den .Grav. •I Sin lemtrdlno Wqrtm11n 11 l.t Mfradt scnurr 11 Los Altos ~~t .to,-.. ko. ~tl!l"l)'lll'ltd It Nort1 Vlsl1 1t ,.lditt t Edaewood ti Monlcl1lr Sf. l11rn1rd 11 Antlllool Vttlty Strr• ti Lvnwood 011POnent to Ill det1rmlned •I Nett G!Mdort ti Sin Gtbr1tl L1url1111er 11 S11nt1 M1r11 AAAA TMll!is ll"IClllWOOd II Bewirlv Hrl/• Coron.1 di! Mir tt A~ld I Stnll 81•bllr1 ti lowolt H_,. ti Stnl11 Monie• Rtdondo ti "•IOI Vll"dft No. Torr1!!(9 •I 5unnv HHI• Rldll'flM 111 FODl!>l1t Newport Htrbor ti LB Poly ... Qwrtt Hiii Of' Vidor v1nev ti Stn M1u1no Uplt.-.d ti Rowltnd No. 11!1'wr$~ 11t Stn Gtbrltl Neff 11 U Qulnlt M1rk IC~I ,., Le Sern1 Glendlr• '' c 11 ... mon1 S11nt1 M,r11 191 Thoustnd 01k1 Harvtrd ti 8eltllower E1ims Set For Tonight · t he[ c t two companies of Ice C,apade.s, nunu es ore r a m P 0 n I In Canad' The 13th arnual West Coast showed up. P ay g 13 1an cities and Llltdlno tcorts •nd ITIO!llY wlnnl"9• a number of U.S. cities. Match Game Bow l i n g In ''"' ~bo,ooo co1on111 N111on11 1riv119' Eliminations gets under way 11011 golf tournemenl: ff nk. B l · 2 '"" w.,..,... a e ts tonight at Kona Lanes in Costa Tbls weekend Dave Grant will discover just bow much his Oraoge Coast College junior varsity crew has im- proved. The Pirates will be com- peting In the Western Sprints, the biggest crew event staged oo the West Qiast Friday and Saturday at L ex-l n gton Reservoir near San Jose. OCC will meet all the top collegiate rowing powers this side of the Rockies. Action runs from 7:30 a".m. to a p.m. on Friday and 7:15 a.m. tQ noon, Saturday. More than 55 races will be cooteoi.d dwillg the two-day event. The OCC junior varsity eight Is the defending Western Sprints champ, b av i n g Baseball Leaders AMERICAN LEAGU IE BATTINV 11111 ti bl1S1 -P.Kelly, Chi, .A.151 IC.lrkHtrkk. kC, .3701 Holl, M>n, .:tlwl W.Honun, 1,H11, .:U..1 IJJunm, '-1~ • .:WU. RUN$ -Ml)'tllNY, KC, 2; It. .IK........n, Utltt, bl I'••• ... "''"' )l; 011•1 K._, ;.../ II.Ir._,." IC.., ,._..., ti.. tt\,N:i 1tA·11 eU IN -""4yblrry, Kt_;, 32; Mllflln. Chi, J41 Mweli<, HY, 221 lc.J~ O.-.. :tll T~, VII<, ~I, HITS-Ro!U. 1u:, -Wi K.JiK~ O.k, U1 7 Tied Wllfl 34. DOIJBLES-llol••· KCI '" 1Clriw.1r1ek. "'· lli D.Allen, en, 101 U•ll.i; "'"-· •; $ T1ea Will'.,. T1<lPlES -HtrooH'. 85", 31 E.Brlnkrnan1 Del; 3; Br{gga, Mlll " SPlnctr. Ct, 31 D.Alll'll. r..nl, 3; H lie, M"b'' H ME RUNS -0.Mey, Mil, t1 ~J~[Ji' ,~c, ti Ttn•ce, Otk. I; PITCHING I• DK\1lons) -Sllltttortf, KC.r .. 1, ~ U l llll!Mr, C1I, S-1. AU. 1.1) Wood, 1..hl, 1-2. .IOO, l.39 E.Fllolwf", Chi, 4-~1 MID. 3.16 co1m1111 Dtlt, '-~1 .750, 2..w Hoitit'l'Wltl1 Otk1 .6-i, .750, 1.2' Colbot!l.1 ¥!!.t 3-1, .7!5/J, 2.oo. M.-dlch, NY, ~., ·'~~~· ::.TRI EOUTS -N.RYlll. C•!1.i.: 5/1191!"1 •I, ff1 G.Ptrrv, Clt 5'1 w , Chi, Ql Tl911t, Ban, •11 Bly(even, Mn, 411 Hol1Imtn1..0H. Al. NATIONAL lEAGUa BATTING (ISO 111 0.1$) -S•~to, thl, .)6h Mtlt, LA, .Ml~IOfl, Hlni .. 3671 defeated the powerful Washington JVs by five seconds last year. This time it could turn into a no t h e r Pirates-Huskies doonybrook. Grant's Bucs lost to Washingtoo by 16.7 seconds last April 7 In the San Diego Regatta, placing belind the Huskies and th'e N a v a l Academy. Since that time OCC has beaten seven con- secutive opponents and bas a combined lo.3 record The Bucs have not lost to a California collegiate crew this season. "We were young and in- experienced when we met Washington In San Diego," Grant said. "It was our first raef of the year and our fn. experl.eoce was clearly vmble. We've worked hard and have come a long way since then." "T'nis has been a fun crew to coach," Grant said. "The oarsmen have grown tremen- doosly. Last year we were very strong, but we were otroog J'llhl from the begin- ning. 'Ibis year we've come on tremendously." OCC will he the only com- munity college entered in the sprints. All other schools are of the foor·year variety. That hasn't stopped the Pirates in the past. They have won four Western Sprints titles since 1966. Because ~ ts a com- munity college the Bucs are DOI allowed to compete OO· the varsity level but ere limited to junior varsity and freshman competition. "Aga..inst \\'ashin gton that really doesn't mean much." Grant said. ''It has six varsity boats. The first boat races against varsity L'Ompetition and the second rae,-es against the JVs. The competition between those two boats is fierce and the difference between them Is negligible.'' Grant says the most im- JX>rlant part o{ the race with Washington may be the first 750 meters. "The start is probably the weakest part of our race," he said. "We've been working on it all week and if we can im· prove we can pick up as many as lwo boat lengths. "If we can keep Washington from getting by ua for the first 750 meters we can beat them." Following the sprint s tht' Pirates will make their second lrip to Europe. The Sues com· peled there Jn 1971. They are scheduled to participnle in three regattas in England and one in Ireland. OCC is Cfltered in the l\tarlow Regatta on t h t' Thames, slated for June 23 : the Nottinghamshire Regatta . June 31: and the 136-yea r-old Hoya l Henley Uegatta at Henley on the Thames. July 4. 7. The Bucs will also comPete in the Dublin Regatta July 13· 14. In 1971 Ornnge Coast became the first crew ever to sweep all four events in the ' Dublin event F•lrly1 Mon.~.l5t· x, SF, .3x.. llUNS -. SF, 3,; Wynn, Hin, • 28; ~, Clll, 251 Wthon, Hin 2S1 SJ0.000 69 611 10 69--276 M 120 he · t·u Bruce cr1mp1on. AT L ·A N:T A _ Hammerin' esa as g.n compe 1 on ~~~:,:sHeirdl 513,a1s:: !: fr r:=I~~ H k in the race for the title. l Eide ,050 6, 11_211 an Aaron'~ early season It beg ' t 9 'cl k d J~Lll Bo~c! 56,HO !g .. ~ 7tl 61-260 h pl ha lOS a 0 oc 3fl Halt trwln u.100 10 n 10-2'1 ome run s urge s been a continues every Mooday eve- k•rrnlt Ltr1•Y· 5,100 11 10 11 M-211 • surprise for the ·At 1 ant a Ding until the fm· als Aug, 17. ~\~, u:·~,,~ ftk~. All, 23' Row, BUCS IN SPRINTS -Orange Coast College's crew Charlie Herzog, Chris Klinke, Jeff Masterron, Phil w~~ BH~r,r~~; JNF;r,!:.~h,~, U~l be one of the favorites ln this week's Wesbml Peterson, Grei Tyson, Curt Hoyt, stroke Mike Mo6re John M•IYll•v. $4,07S 7J 10 '' 10-292 B I ~-Mt4tJn Rudolph, raves s ugger '1¥~ continues 'lbe:eventual winner goes on to A.ml!~~25s.' rr."'A-1 siUe~i". sF. Sprints1 'Ite oarsmen, from left, are bow Mark Fitx:ti, and coxswain ltod Packwood. 41; , Hin, 45/ WtllOn, Hin. 40 _ _:. _______ __:_ ___ _:_c__c._ _____ __: _____________ . _________ _ W.Dlvll, LA. 42, OOUBlES -Cflllno, Hin, 121 80t'lds, SF, 12; c,.rdMitl, Chi. 9; Tovtr, Phi, ti r~n:I Tllompt0n, .'3 '' 61 7l-2B2 his relentless Cfuµ'.ge toward the 'ftate roll-off OVet the La· So1.01s 7• v n 10-212 Babe Ruth's all-titlit? record. bor 'nay weekend. f~U.•. t~'t::~~ 5L_~. ~~~r.! "I didn't t~ I14·~ve that h Elims is rolled in four· ~~~vi ~.f»'°° ~ft~~t:~ many by now, ': Aaron said game segments with the field TRIPLES -Me~, Hhl, •j St len, f'9h, 31 Ml'Odox, SF, 31 1 T Uh 2. L'i3 Gr•h•m. 5~.«IO 11*n-1t-ns Sunday after belting his ninth cut in hall after seven w....t.·. Bob Dickson, ,2 • .00 n .JU&.n -215 ~ cMries s111ord, 12...00 11.11.12.11-21s and tenth homers of the year Pico. RiVera's George Shore HOME RUNS -Sltrv-11. Poh, 101 H.Atron. At.!, 101 Bench, Cln, t; Mee.~. SF, tr Mond1y, Ch•, I; Wvnn. Htn, I: Bonits, SF, I . Gene llnler, Sl.17S 11..,_16-11-186 h B ~hu R~rs. u.a1s 6t·1•-n-10--m as t e raves split a is back to defend his title as 11:~ ~'~d~1fi~j75 ~:H:H~~=r.: d~bleheader witb the San• are former winners Gary t:.·~ 'a'"~~wu.500 ~~:~~ii Diego Padres. Madison of San Bernardino STOLEN BASES -Ctdttlo, Hin. 16; Mon:l•n, Cln, 15; Bonds. SFI JI; i.o,es. LA, 111 E. Htrnlndlz SD, . PITCHING CA O.Cll(ons) -KOOSl'!'llln, NY, s-o11.000, 1.79 SOS., SF, 4-.(.lf U•9, 1.62 Bl llngMm, Cln. 6-].r._ .IJ , t.fi R1uu, HtnL~, •. m, 2.01 '--"'"' lA .t.1, .too, 2.0ll Loc11:1r, Chi, 3·1, .750, 1.16 Htl, Cln, 3-1, .750, AJ5 DIRoblrts, Hin, B....:i Allin, 51,21s n-7 11.11.1 • The pair, one in each game, (l!n'l) Lamar Keck or Caooga :$dl~~:Sli~t:1s ~1l~f.EJ!! 'llfte~ Aaron's care·er total to Park ' (1963-69) and Bob ).1, .760 2.79. Aryvan, '1.2'1' 13.J0..7).7~• • 683, J Us1 31 away frQm Ruth's Ramirez '<lf Anaheim (1961 5~r. %~~:·,l~;,~s ~Ztft~-m revered standard of 714. '64). ' STRllCEOUTS -Ctr11on, Phi, 411 Sttwr, NY, 5'11 SCll'toft LA, 511 Jenklnt, Chi, '31 RIUSCMI, Chi, 421 Gibson SIL, ... Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division w L Milwaukee 14 14 Baltimore 14 16 New York 14 16 Boston 13 15 Detroit 14 17 Cleveland 14 18 West Dlvtslon Chicago 18 8 Kansas City , 20 12 Angels 15 13 Oakland 17 15 Minnesota 12 14 Texas 10 17 Sund•Y'J Gii'* New York .t.9, Belllmore 0.6 M!lw1ukff 6, Oetrvll 5, 10 Innings BCl'Uon I. Cleveland 3 Mlnnesot• 5, IC11ns.111 Cttv O Ant•I• 3, Ctilaigo 0 TllCIS 7, 0.kllnil ) TOdlY'I O•H Pct. .500 .467 ,467 .464 .452 .438 .692 .625 .536 .531 .462 .370 GB ! I> 1 I 1% 2 I 4 4 6 81> Mlnl\HOI• (IC11t +2 llld Corbin 0.1) 1t Tt•M IP•ul ).# Ind Sl•riflou" ~) Dem.II {COll!mtn 6-2} et Ntw Tcrt !P~ .. , Bal!lmore (Alexander .Ml ti Boston ILff HJ Allffh (Sinter S.11 ti K..,... Cll'I' (Dr..O J.ll Cl-lltl'WI (Tklrvw .Ml II M11wtuttH (Cfl-· Pion 0.11 Chic.to (Wood .. 2) 11 o.ktlnd (HollVMn .. ii -· Ottroft ti New York 8•111more ti llollon Ml-'t 11 TllCH Al!Ttll 11 Ki-Cll'I' C~lll'ld 11 Mllwtull;et Chlct90 If OeklMll ..... NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago New York Montreal Pittsburgh Philadelphia St. Louis East Dlvtsloa W L 20 13 17 14 13 15 12 14 11 19 8 22 West Division San Francisco 25 12 Houston 22 12 Cincinnati 19 13 Dodgers 19 15 Atlanta 12 19 San Diego 12 22 Sll!MllY'I Glmet; Chk:lvo .._., PhlltclelPhl1 2-3 S11n 01"90 6-2, Atl•nt1 ol4 NIW Y0111: 4, Plttsbu1'11h ' SI. loull 3, Munlrnl 2 ClllCIMlll 2. ~ 0 014tW1 lS. 6tn Fr11'1d~ l Tldl'('s OlmH Pct. .606 .548 .464 .462 .367 .267 .676 .647 .594 .559 .367 .353 GB 2 2 41> 41> 71> lOlh: rn 31> 4'h 10 • 11 'h Ntw York (K-.intn S.0) 11 ChltMO (Hooton .,, Monl1'9111 (lttnflo 2>21 tf Pltttbur911 1Br1ta 1-31 PllUldtlplllt (8!'1tt 0.1 « lontlort 2°") 11 St . Louis (C14!Yeltl'ld NI Al1enl1 {Morton WI If Hou.ton {Or~nn .. ,, S..n frtnciKO !lrtdleY t-11 II kn Dil90 fCortl:ll'tl 2.JJ Only llllTMI ICftldulld, T"'""'f't .._.. Phllldelc>l'llt ti SI. lOUll Mtw Yon. 11 Ollato MonlNll 11 PUbtluntll OMtll"t ti CIMltinelf AllM!tt 11 Hou.Ion S..n Fr111tlKO ti $tn ~ltQO Leonard In Field At Indy Harris Sets Record; SoCal S pikef est Next Alter some sparkling per-of 43-2~, wiping out his old form.ances in the West Coast mark ol. 47·11¥' established Relays ·at Fresno Saturday, earlier this season. Mesan In Lead AtWIBC three area junior milege track Harris was third In the event INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -and field standouts will com-behind Jotm Triplett of West LAS VEGAS (AP) -Bobble Defending national champion pete in the Southern Caldomia Valley (18-2) and Raildy Daw-Buffaloe of Costa Mesa rolled Joe Leooarn finally made the finals this Saturday at ComJ>-son af North Peralta (48-71>). a 7116 series Sunday to take the . 1 [ the ton College. And In tho long jump, the 0 Div! · 1 1 1 d · tentative ineup or $1 Rustlers sophomore went 23-7 pen s1on s ng es ea m million Indy 500 race In Sun Golden West's Ray Harris f the 17116,000 Women's lntema-• • is entered in the Jong jump or secood behind Ken Dun- day 's second ses.skln of time and triple jump, teammate can of Sacramento (24-2). tional Bowling Cong res s trials for the 57th running of Jack McQuown will run tn ·the McQuown was just as busy championship tournament. the May 28 classic. mile and Orange Coast's Tony in the \wo-day spikefest at Mrs. Buffaloe rolled games After a variety of Ciliniardlandishotts enteput.red in the jave-F~a"ncbored GtMden West's of 278, 225, 21)3 to record the . highest series in the four·year mechanical problems, the 38-Golden West's Rust.Jen: also distance medley relay team to history of the WIBC toorna· year-old San Jose veteran set· have a 440 relay quartet run-a fine clocking of 10:13.0 Sat· ment. Her m ts the highest Ued for a 1(}.mile average of nlng Wednesday at Compton. urday as the Rustlers placed game of this year's 107-day '""--seventh behind Laney's win· h' h d J I 20 189.954 m.p.h. in his Pamelli· ,.,n:: event is being rerun slnce ning mark of lO:Ol. tourney w 1c en s u Y . Offenhauser. the staggers were set improp-McOuown had a mile clock-Fitzpetrick Chevrolet, the '-...Some Indianapolis ~1otor erly in the prelims last week. ing of 4:15.4. Others in lhe Concord, Calif. team which SJ>eeclway observers con-Running for the Rustlers in foursome included Bob Brick· won the 1969 WJBC title, sidered the speed bonlerline the 3 o'clock event wUI be ner (l:57.5 balf mile ) Tom tallied 2897 pins to move into for holding a starting spot. Tom Oasso, Dennis Maas, Bowman (5Z.7 quarter mile). first place by three pins. The 33 best qualifying runs Dennis Myers and Steve and Dave l«kman (3:rn Two members or the team, through next weekend will Thrapp. 1320). Bowman was knocked Pat Costello o1 Union City. produce 1 threethe starling Held._ned h~t~5.!tllm!ay, l!arrls down at one stage of his leg. Ca!il., and Ellen Duval o1 On Y spots rema1 He set a school remrd In the lbut still bad a top perlorm-Berkeley, combined for a 1219 to be filled after six lo.mile tri 1 . ith ance, said Noon. series to take over second runs Sunday. P e Jump w a top effort McQuown al.so had a good place in Open DI v i s i on The first 30 qualifiers aver· time of 1:55.0 in the two-mile doubles. aged a record 192.Sn m.p.h., F• h R 'relay, helping the Rustlers to Miss Costello Jed the na· a.561 m.p.h. faster than the IS eport a sixth place finish in 7:56.o. tion's women bowlers last first 30 qualifiers last year. the first time this season year with a 211 average. fwtr s. Speeds dropped sharp 1 y MAlllU P••• _ .. ,,.,,-, ''' they've gone under four min-Duval, who averages 209. is a [ Saturda ' d ~ " u•~ WIBC Hall o{ Fame member rom ys recor • roe-cod. o.c.-s. Smashing runs. topped by u, N D1100 1M11111c1r.1 ,. .. , -11! Other members of the qUar· and a two-time Wt BC cham· tflQ "11: "' "tlowttl ' 2 bonito, J Johmy Rutherford's 198.413 "'f._,.,..ott:T IA"'• ltllfl ... I _ •• tet included Brickner (1:59.9), pion . m Ph in 8 BrUJ.sb.American •nollfl: 1l0. 1:1or11to, JO wlh 11 nick Mark Mitchell (2 :00.3) and The doubles lead was taken hf~id McLaren-Offy. ~;~~.: ~t: n-~k ·~~·i Lockman (1:59.9). by Dotty Fothergill of North Other qualifiers Sunday ol':;.1=-r'.:... 220 ~"'•: .._. Meanwtiile Ciarelli placed Attleboro, Mass., and Millie w .. -Mike Hiss of Tustin, last t•11to N''· l blrr1C....:11, 600 11on11oil 2 fifth in the javelin with a Matlorelln of Rochester , N.Y., ... ,. ~/~'· lt<1 rock tOd, ' rnttktr , ' -i h' best h WIBC All E ts d [ year's Indy rookie of the year, •c,t•,r=s\'D'l· 95 1 throw U1 205-5 ( 1s 11eason t e ven e en- at 191.939, and Dick Simon, rl(:uo., m rriito, J"t:;:: t>!u~r2 is 217·7) and went unplaced ding champion and recent win· Salt Lake City. Utah, 191.276. "'il1N·1J'A 'W.~~·ay -ii 11111ttr•: in the shot ,with a 49-1 effort. ner of the U.S. Women's Open. Most of the fast.tr driver-car .k1A'r)iftlio lnM st, u111111,.1 -.. 1 -;--;;;;-~·;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;r in h 11...,!e..,: J wHowt.11. 2 "fll'!llte Ml bls1, II comb atlort.! were -among t e 41 c111c-o t1n1. 11111111101, '° """ ~,,, 2' first • uaHll hlch 105 bonl19. IS INCk11"91, ISPOrtlfllllllll .. -uay q ers, w . -126 1no1trt: ''° bOnlla. 267 ctllco Included former Indy wtmers blu, " Miid IN•. 2 htllbul, «15 rock Al and Bobby Unser, Mark ciiAtADISI rov• -"'1nqt"11: 1-* Donohue, Mario Andrettl and --;~;;;';"~""~-~;"'~· ';;'~';;"""'~iiiiiiiiiiil( A.J. Foyt Jr. j,.;;;;;.·;.-;--;;;;;;;;;;;;,,;-;-;;·;.;·---PDlt L•T•C• I IA'IN'I TIP" r 'I,'' NEWPORT LEASE ~ CL..Nlly ..-&-epaclMll LH1l119 a ll Vohfcl11 645-2202 $3l·fl607 71 C..IUec c..,. 4e YUM 117'.H -H 0 .1.L If You Own A •••• PORSCHl.-CORVETTl-JAG-MERCEDES OR OTH ER TOP-Of.THE-LINE CAR~ YOU V/ANT THE IESTI IS Yt!Alll llC"t!ll!IEN"'I! IN: n r.:..:TO r ODY ,, PA'P'~TING e DETAILING rOMIE T01 1719 POMONA AV. COSTA MESA PHONE '4'2"·1S10 I ) ) ' • ' ' • • • I ' ' I ' .18 DAILY PILOT $ Mood'I'•. M'1 14, 1973 Doage's Sport Rallye N~t Just Trallsportation Car . By CARL CARSTENSEN Ot ... DtllY l'tltl "•" For people who take delight in ~tint. cornering and handling a tar, Dodge haa ilt- troduced a new Sport Rallye coupe for the mid-1973 model year. "In an indualry·wide shift al many buyers away from the muscle or specialty compact c:a.r, tber..e. l!as been a trend toward the smaller, leas powerful car which is both economical and fun to drive," said Robert 1.A>omis, Dodge general ·sales manager. "And we think the Dart Rallye is just such a car." LOOMIS SAID the trend by car builders and designers over the years has been to respond to buyer demands for comfort. safety, appearance, Convenience, ease or operation and silence." Today's can are all of these desirable things -so much so, that there isn't much for the operator to do after turn- ing on the ignitlon but steer and stay alert. "For people who regard their car only as transporta- tion, that's fine," Loomis said. "But there always has been and still is a large number of so-<:alled afl;icionadoes. whose greatest enjoyment from their car is in the ve ry pleasure of driving." Loomis said the name ra\lye identifies with ·this type of driving and thus the reason for the new Dart Rall ye. DODGE DART RALL YE-The '73 Sport Rallye is less powerful and more eco- nomical but handles with Ille best of today's fun cars. It is equipped with 4 speed and small V-8 ·as standard equipment. suspension and deluxe vinyl inside. . This addition to the Dodge Dart line seems to offer en ap- pealing alternate to com- petitive four -and-six--0ylinder cars both in bud&et and reduc- ed operating costs. * Within the next two years, at least six rotary engine powered vehicles may be available in the U.S .. FROM JTS NEAR-curiosity stage just a few years ago, the Wankel engine seems to be becoming a household ques- tion. At this time only the Jap- anese import Ma2.da has a pro- duction model of the rotary in operation in the U.S. Now, after much. specula- tion, General Mottrs has an- noon~that the ·engine will be av ·table in the 1975 Chevrol Vega. A recent bank ~ws bulletin indicated three more import cars al.so will offer the Wankel engine soon. Mercedes-Benz reportedly will a c h i e v e capability for mass production of Wankel engines within 24 months. The first application is expected to replace the 4- cylinder gasoline en&ines in the Mercedes-Benz 200 and 220 series cars. THE DATSUN reporl<dly will offer its own Wankel powered cars in 1974: Another possibility Is the French·built Ci~. The finan cial news bulletin also said that while ~ i n- dtl!try executives still think the Wankel engine w!}! provs. to be tomething of a ' flash··m the Pan," many parts and components makers a r e rushing to develop new pnr ducts to replace those they now make. R«ent news items have tn- d i cat e d questionable characteristics of Ute rotary which add up to high main- tenance costs and expensive repairs but it's far.too early to tally the votes so this timely competikc or the standard combustion engine bears close watching during the next two years. * LARS J. LARSON parts manager ~t J:ohnson & Son Lincoln Mercury has been judged outstariding in customer service and sales and management ability and will receive FcxV. Motor Com- pany's Silver Medallion Award. The award is part of a pro- gram· • to honor dealership parts and aervlce..-managers across the country. rrs A F I V E-passenger coupe wi!h smBll block 318 c.I. ~V-8 engine and a four-speed, close-ratio manual transmission with disc brakes included as standard equi~ IIH!nl. Your Money's Worth The Rallye package includes power steering, b e e f e d -u p How to Handle Puts and Calls f at. yours moy not ! 1 "'C011Plm 01.AN•I ~couNn co¥11A1JI .... , •• ..,ii":-........ IMc S.. C .......... Mlulo11 YMjo Dana Pohtt , as well as Lo leoch alld mott of L.A. o MONTH TO MONTH RENTAL IA.SIS 3 NO DEl"OSIT Rl9UlllD ON APPROVED CREDIT 4 ONLY $17.00 PER MONTH TOTAL COST 1 •• 11 .. ltff ,...., 5 NIW COMPACT UNIT sm 11 114 •4 •1/21 VOICE MISSAGI PAGERS ALSO ARE AYAILAILI 7 FULL FREE MAINTENANCE By SYLVIA PORTER Friday's column began this introduction into the "new world" of trading ·in puls and •. caJls .. 'l'odal''•· coalipues. . ,~ t1;· ve fult -~Id !loo for an to buy 100 shares of , Aj . . trap Co .. stock at $50 .... ·are &ny tiil)e in I ~ the~ six plOOths.,.You have bought this "call" on Ajax Mousetrap because you think the oili stock wi l l & jump to $100 a share within WILL TRADE 51 29,000 l tt Tnnt Deecl For HOMO or Y.c.•t 499-4588 the six-DlOlltb, Io-day period and you will make a lot of mooey oo a mloor stake. Here are some of the things that tbeo can happen to your cal),cio,.Aju MO!JSelrap stock . <ll .AJu Moosetnp taw off.as you anHclpated and !t1 hi!4 '!90 within the O!)!ion pet1¢. Now y~ exercise your opti()I}, buy ·the 100 shares at $50, turn around and sen the shares you acquired at $50 on the open market for $90. You have received . $9,000 from the sale of the shares. From this subtract the $5,000 you paid foe 'them, !lie $500 premium for the oPtion and about $130 in brokerage com- mi ssions. You wind up with a profit of $3,370. (On a stake of $500.) (!) NOW LOOK at another scenario. You buy the option and three months later, Ajax Mousetrap nosedives to $40 and stops there. What do you do? Nothing. You simply Jet the option expire and you are out $501). Your loss is limited to the cost of your option. And broker., Over 70 member firms of the New York Stock Ex· change have put and call departments. No matter what sort Of firm you deal with, usually a NYSE ~ finn muol endorse all epcjori cm· ' tr~;.. ;;~e-mi_)lriis_,. a r e negoti'ab1e and depend on the volatility of the stock and length of the option cootract. The longer lbe contract, the higher the premium, and the more volatile -the · stock. the costlier the inmium. Other factors helping to determine the premium price you -are the number of option writers who are interested In offering the stock and the quality and number of shares outstanding. ON APRIL Z6, in Chicago. the first organized option market opened -the Oticago Board Options Exchange. It is · the first continuous exchange market for put and call op- tions in this CO\Dltry. ORANGE COUNTY RADIOTELEPHONE SERVICE'" PRIVATE TRUST you thank your lucky stars FUNDS AVAllABLE that you didn't buy 100 shares The purpose of the new market is to make options more p:ipular by establishing a central point where many options can be traded and where option prices can be dissemi nated daily. Its most unusual feature is that it pro- vides a resale market for those who have already bought options. FOR REAL ESTATE LOAMS of Ajax Mousetrap for $5,000 111 1 211d TAUSt oeeos and watch your investment s1,soo To S2$0.00D shr'nk to "000 714 •135-3305 UI" TO llO% LOANS OH 1 ..,, • 401 50. SANTA FE, SANTA ANA TAUST OEEO COLLATERAL (3) Or say the price or Ajax "91n Ugll!NI ... cl'I, Ml111t11 Vl•I•· NA..Olft f:QUITY fUMDC Mousetrap moves up to $54. •11• l"ol111, S•11 Cll't'M1111, 5111 Juan N1w~ort c enter y d 'd to e•eret'se your 1pf1lr•no, El Tlr9, c•ll 1•11 flff 1120 N1wport Ce1111r om. OU CCI e "' 496.3223 "'twport e11eh, c1111. (7141 &44-8124 option because, even if you i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:=~~~I haven't made a profit, you can For instance, if yoo had bought that six-month option fo r 100 .shares of Ajax before the CBOE , you had only two choices : exercise your option or let it lapse. cut down on your option cost. 0 E ~/ RD R if· A Here's the mathematics. 1 0 0 0 'J You exercise your option to buy at $50, then sell the stock for $54. You have received Beautiful ' Stick-on LABELS i;·". YOURS TODAY! Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Order For Yourself or a Friend· Nlay be used on envelopes as retur~ifdress labels. Also very handy as identification labels for marking personal items such •s books, records, photos, etc. Labels stick on 9less and may be used for marking home canned fot:d items. AU labels are printed with stylis h Vo9ue type on fine quality wh ite· 9.•mmed paper. 1-:,;::~c:; ... :::;.:-1111-::;;::;----,, f 1"1111 l"rlftt1111 L•llel Olv., l".0, lol 1* I ' _ Ct.ti M...a, Cllll, P'.1'2' t'' I I I .. I 1 I I , I I I L ____ PIL~T -~~!~.!'!~~----J $5.400, against which your ex- penses are SS,000 to buy the stock. $500 for the premium ror the option, $130 in broker's commissions. In this example. you come out with a loss of $230, whi ch is better than let- ti ng your option expire and being out $500. PUTS WORK the same way but in reverse. 1bere are also Irvine Co~ Asparagus Crop Up some very fancy devices. such A potential 10 perci!nt in· as "straddles," which are a crease over last year in combination of a put and call Orange County asparagus pro- option., "strips," which are duction is anticipated, weather two puts and one call, and permitting, rePorted Jim Man- "straps," which are one put assero, row crop manager and two calls. But don't get in-for the Irvine Company's volved in them unless you're a Agricultural Division. truly S'Ophistlca ted investor. Nationally, this yea r's aspa- ln anoth er situation you ragus crop looks good, too. might have a short position in which should help maintain a s.tock you can . protect by prices about 1972 levels hf> buying a call option, or you • sa · d ' mighl protect a profit in a 1 • • Jona: position-by the purchase Manassero said that the of. a put option and there are a !·2SO--acre crop currently be- number of other Strategies. 1ng harvested shoo!~ produc~ Puts and calls are available about 3,000 crates daily durl!'· frorh. some 20 dealers who the peak season. The crort i make up the membership of being packed at the Irv!•· the Put and can Brokers and Company paek!ng house. Dealers Amclatlon Many o! About 60 percent of the cm• these lfetlers 1111v'eriise in the Is distri buted in the Orang• linruicla1 1 e c t I o n s of County-Lo! Angeles area ant' new~rs g!vil!i a wn.F.!!!'& is handled by almost all major ()(""some Grtlic puts and ca s foocf-lnarkels. Tbe remainder available. of the crop Is distributed to the East Coast, Canada. Italy, OR MORE IJKELY, you England, Denmark, Sweden wtn den! wtth your own and 1'1'111Ce. ' , • ' • • -. W a11 · Street . ' •• ' • •• • ' • . . . '" • I ' Fifteen . out of every. 100 Americans today 'own st<>t:k. W~. ;c~uldn't prove it, ()f ,course, but it . See l"l.S ·.'li~~ty .that the percentage is even greater here in the Or- ange Coast area ... and it's growing every . day .. • ' l . That's why the DAILY PILOT was proud, years ago, -to be the first newspaper in Orange County to bring its readers "today's final stocks today" via super high speed wire services. We're still doing it in every ·home- delivered edition and the service gets better all the time. ' ' Wall Street's computers "talk to" computers in the DAILY PILOT plant every trading day at the rate of more than 1,000 words per minute. It takes only 12 minutes to move the entire New York and American Stock Exchange reports from the canyons of Wall Street to the typesetting machines of the DAILY PILOT right here on the Orange Coast. • And when technology finds a way to beat that· speed reco rd, the DAILY . PILOT, no doubt, ·will be am~g the , I first to use it to bring rea.ders "today's action today." When it comes to financi.al news, the · one. that means business is the • '• • • --... ~ ·-. ) .• • ' I . I I l • t 1 I ' I ' l . l ' i I l l ! I I ! • l I i f ' t • I l I I l . l I i l ' ! • \ • j l I ; I I I ! l l i i I ! • 1 I I • l I I ' I ; I • I ' • • I I~ . I • . I I I I . • I I I i I j I I ! I I • ' I ! I t • l t • ~ l ! I i. I I ( I • • ' l I I I I ' • I t I . I l ~ < ~ ~ #:· . " ' , . ,. t . ' . " . ' I ' l .J • • • • " AMONG TH 'E GREAT ONE 'S . ' • Here, among some of the great newspapers of the world, is an old friend. The DAILY PILOT looks as much at home on this international newspaper rack as it does at the fron t doo r of thousands of 0 range Coast area homes where it is dropped daily. That should tell you something. It should tell you that a "home- town newspaper" can be sophisticated and still not lose touch with what's hap- pening at city hall. Whether it's news from around the world or down the block, the DAILY PILOT packages it best for you. And the simple fact is that, because the DAILY PILOT emphasizes local coverage, you'll find a lot of stories in it you can't find in any other newspaper in the world. On this international news rack, it's among the great ones of the world. But at home, it's the great- est one in the world (for local news). . ' ' - - • • rEOR SEB VF. • tJ I . - I . • • ' ' • • ... Jt WLYPIU>T M-,, 11<U 14, 197) TONIGHT'S TV IDGHLIGHTS KCET m 7:30 -Stalin. On tbe :IOth annl•er- sory of the Russian dl.Utor's death, KCET and the BBC P"""'•t a documentary on J0$0f Stalin. CBS e 10:00-Women of the Year, 1978. Rosa- lond Rul6el\ is boctess frsl pi, preaentaUon of awards honmng American -.en for slgnlllcant achievement. J ABC a 10:30 -What Abo l Tomorrow! A fc>- cus on new melihods by ~ scientists are dll- covering way. lo help tllem ......,. effects of new '-. technological developments on future generallonl. .... TV DAILY LOG Monday Evening MAY14 .... naaeemm-w•-·-IJ)W-a...., ...... GJDIP 9 I ••• ...... , .. l!lllMtl1111rW m--m--""Ill -·- • -(IO) "1111 """' -(llr1) '61 -E.ddlt AllMn. to.let ""'· (I) cm II-. W11ttr Cmnkit1 ,,_ .... , ..... 1!1---...... -m---119,...· ' l!ll1'tltllt-1Elllt- 7:008CJJBlll-e ........ -.. (l)T••C11 1,111;11 Emplo)ftnt Ac•llCJ' Into Luc(t ...... D ill Ill RIC -MM: t<l C2IWl -""' ...... """ 1'111" (R) (COIA) '61 -Bob Hope, "'1!Us Ollltr. A Kny 1erp1nt In tbt PIClflc: d11ri111 World W•r II 1nsl•r1 1 Pl•n to rlCMf 1 11111~· Ill shlploed"' *'· 8 CIJCIJ IDUC--: CC) !IOI......, --Colld. (•IN) '69-Rlc:hlrd lurtoll, Clint tutwood, M11y Urt. SM11 Miii nd OM WOllllll JlrlehiM ttiroup 1 b1indln1 lftCIWStorm 111 ttlt Bmri1n Alps to rncu1 111 Amir· ic.tn 1111er1J 1111ii1 h1td pdso111 r In 1 Mui fortrtss. ·-Ul .... llSt.CriNlllHCriNI 1:'°8 !IJ DW ... -(R) Do•• 111d tM ottitr ttn111ts In ttlt 1p1rt· m•nt buildl1111111 horriflld wh1n HI· ltmplfH Mr . .llrvis blCOma tMlr lllW llndlord. D0ot111p-a-......... II MICMcM ltall• llil-!IJ --a-•11JLlotl moiM..., ll:OO .. ,_,,_ fl ,.,11 ........ fl!) i--"Htldn't Opus 20 #f" m-m,.., ......... m-co.o l!l-- l:IOD--·-If .. a. .... Carol Llwrw;e pl$tl. CIJ -·-Dl>t ... -b .... 8 -· t<l \2111 ....... 1111 C111" (wet) '67 -J11M1 Qam11, Jason Rollatdl, Robtrt Rpn. (I} Tt T• Ill Td !IJ 1't-n G -I -\2111 """ flrill"' (WIS) '50--lattlltl !tall· wyct, W11llf Huston. i!IWIN-m1>t111ot m-m I IHCWI Sbi~~ KCETJ BBC eo- productd docum1nt1ry on .Iosep!! Stalin, m1rkin1 the 20th annlwrurJ of th1 dittator's death. m TM Ainsh1rtr Em ltn, • ., l'harl9 m si-ta CMilltnp II) 1111.W.1 F1•lly t:oo 1J ()) lluUMll (R) Gltn Co!batt 8 CLAIROL * "WOME,r;~ YEAR- '1973' II 8 (() i IHCIA I W1... tf U. Yw, 1173 Rosalind RUSMU llf'IH •• llosttsS fof th• pmentltioll of fW1nl1 honorin& Anltritln wom•n for slplflc:lnt 1d'llwtmtnl bned ttllOll ladlu' Homt Joumll rtadtt" 111ttlon ind PfOl'..sloMI oplnlo11. ···-D ..... _ ,..,,, • -• ee,ttln John "•yamyl:ll, nlumtd "111 ........ . . ....., ... .. l!l Md11ttie1 AIM ftn1• "Alu· 1nd1r Nmky" (Russlln, 1931) Tiils 1ple b1ttl1 film chronldu t\doly of 1 13th·c•ntury Rus&lan princ1 Oftf both MonROI 1nd Ttutonlc In· .. .. n. 10:308To6 .... o rnoo m••••<•A• w 1111 Ait9t 1...,..n "F1cin1 the Con· Hquences" Pro1ram IGCUses on new mtlhods by which scienlists i re dis- coverin1 wa)'S that will htlp them 11sess tlfects of ntw ltchf'IDl01it1I developments on future 11ntf1lions. ID Tr11t Adwnlllrt mtv M11skal al) News/Silorts l'Jlsls IS I yount con'lid WhO, 11:00 fJ Q Q mm aJ Nm upon 11le1se from prison, t1ku a (I) 00@) News tofllrttl to kill I min ht hu ntver 0 0118 Sttp Beyond mtl. @ M1rsh1I Dillon 0 al m llu1h·hl (R) Chtrlie &:J Movie: (C) "Ten Thouulld ltd· C1ll1s, Sindy Duncan, Johnny Car· roolfls" (com) '57-Dean M1rtin, son ind Arthur Godlrty 1uest. Eve Bartok. 0 (]) (j) r!) i IPICIA'I J1e111utt m Trvth or Con11qu111ca C.Ust111 "500 Mllllon Years Bt· m Movlt• .. Jun111 Fipters" (dr1) ne1th lh• Sea" Conc1med tboul '6!-Rich~1d Todd. d1m11e to m1rin1 life off Ntw Cale· m Child Johnson Nill led 6011!1, ceustd bJ dumpin1 wastts . !IOfl'I mi111r1I strip minln1, lhe 11:30 II (I) CBS Litt Movil: "Tiii 1111· Cousl11u p1rty u1mints tht shit· poulblt 1'11rs" (com) '68-David lows of Noumea U10011. Rmuch· Ni'ten, lol1 Albri1ht. Ch1d [verett tr1 dlscowr th1r1 Is an 1p~u1nl 0 @I (S Jollnny Cano11 1bsenc• of lift until 1n Incredible g Min 1111 SUltcaM networt ol UCIPI holes art found 0 (]) (1) l!D Didi Cavett Ctrol ruffirmln1 lh1 1muin1 1daplabUI· Burnett 111ests. ty on n1tur1. m Tt Tert tht TruUI m :::.:.1141 Mrs. MYir 1%:00 m Allrti liitc.llooQ: }rtHnts I Henuao• c.r1it m M1111e ..... st1ow le Mvliull1111t 12:3D 0 ""' m, Ml(lllll\9 V11dts SM m Mowlt: "Whittli111 i11 the Dar\" mJ Mtwit: (Ziii') "ClllM Cllpptl" (com) '43 -Rid S~elton, Mn (•IN) '36-f'tt O'lrl1n. Ruthorlord. 1:30 GJ MtlY Crilli11 Sh1w GD DraM• t:OO IJ ()) Htrt'• LlltJ (R) Uncle H1r· ry, un1bl1 lo find 1 suit1bl1 :wbsU· lull iKret111 durln1 Lucy's •b· stnCI, d1cid1s lo mav1 !ht Unique Tuesday DAYTIME MOVIES m Pttticut Junctio11 1:00 (I) B 0 (I) News 1:45 U Movit: "Thi l11s11r 11111011 stolJ" (biol '57-t>ontld O'Conoo1, S:lDfJNew1 1:00m .,. ow et1icare" <dr1> ·311- Trront Power, Nict f1)'11 Oot Amtth•. 1:30 O "Thi Cll1•ptal" (dr1) '49 - Ki1k Oou1!1s, Ruth Rom1n, t:JOD (C) ...... dlnl" (bio) 'SJ-Tony S:OO CIJ (C) "bsa11t 111 1 Quttn" Part Cllrtlt, .llnlt lei1h. I (dr1) •66 -F11nk Sin11f1, Virn1 lO.-OO {})"Mlntf C.i(' (dll) '57 -~·(C) "Nl""* C1ll1ry~ (susp) '69 TOllY Curtis, M1rtlla Hyer. WI' •"' 8 "luUI Vlllty" (•ts) '46-Rob· -Roddy Mc0ow•l1, Join C11w1ord. ett LOWllJ, H1ltn Gilbert. ):)0 &:J (C) "'His Nti11tJ O'Kfft1• l!.ilO e ~ (Wei) '54 -William (1dV) '54 -Burt Lanc1111r, .k>l11 -. ._ -.. ,_ Rico. ('°"') ·-.n1 Mclltm1, Ct"°' 4:tl G -: t<l ll'tl ~-II--,,.... Id~),..__ Btnr, l :JO -POCUS OltANe• COUNTY It) C~OC•·TV) "l Pofllfht C111 Autflon" -'"' ,Hott .nm COOfll' -~lttl'•rv --1:fl0 •tslNST•IN CC) ('Ill " Moorllflflk:.M ~,.,., °" "" .,..., 11.UM&ill lll1"'ln'IN«". Ito mlft) l :IO -IUl:TM CONTltoL± A DIClllON 1'011: YOUll: Tl:l:N.t.0111., (C) An AdYOc:1lt\ 111mmer totel1I. ('Ill Ito mini f:JO _,. MINllTll WITM •. , !Cl l'l51 H...,.WOl'l'lln itlr1blllh Drew - oolllk1t lnltn'tew · 11'1 Woekv, Kooky, one! Wiid "SLITHER" '"'' Burt Raynolds , "FUZZ" c,.,.,... ·-"TH• P'AMILYH (R) • "MAllHI• CAULD•R• IRI _,...,. .. "PIDDLll ON THI IOOf" 7 ... t :41 , .... Celer IG-1 Shlfte Wedi aad•y St1nl.., K11br1,k'1 "CLOCKWOll OU.NG-I" ... "DULING" l1rD1r1 Het1h1y Both Color t R.) OW PLAYING RISIRVID SIATs On Sale Dai17 12 'Iii I MARLON BRANDO .ilL tpBi1s @ "i:.=-Un11t4 Arltslt MOM. THRU THURS. I P.M. fRIDIY J L 9,45 SITUROAl 2-7 L HI SUMO!! l-1 L I ALL SIA.TS $4,00 WKOAYS 6:45 SAT. & SUN. 12:45 "CHEIR LEADERS" "SfOUCTION Of INCi' IOTH JlAtLlm •AT(O t)t) -- Good Deed Peo le make the scene Sundays in the l1tj!ljijl!1)i • \ 'Barret Ftdl of Pennies' r 1 .-' . • ,,-,nt.111 L1gh( Comedy 10 Clemente ~::~~::: · • 11 l•t-LA. Tim• BJ roM TiTuS Of ... .,..., ..... , ... "A •AlllL 'llL .. L 0, PllOUll" Palrlck'• prose is no l Itinerant yo• n I follrslnger "THE EMIQDlllTS" pungently enough written to who&e character is even Mn I The plays of John Patrio!f, with the notable e1cepllon of "Teahoule of the August Moon," may be generally cbaraclerlied as lightweight, llgbthearled and usually quite light In their comic Impact. A comH'f W JOfln '•trkk. dll"IC1M ~ JOllllll "°"""""' IOllfld ~ lltllllna bl" f" ·-.. :..=-~_<!!'"" qualily &J satire, and •• pure farther oul than !he family's AllO (l'O) ~y it misses the mark _ yet is the most lm· LaurMC• otlwftr ;;~it~roim ~·~"!f.°l l= twll 'Y hit CJtmlll~ lt-P"llllOM "2 even turthu. · aglnatlvely written of the lot. ''SLEm'' Mark Razor gives an excellent TM• CAST Adon It Se1Mrlla11 ......... Pl\ll SMIM Mint l1nworll111 ........... Dor" Denki •1vi11 ...................... Mini. lttiior ~·~ ............. . .... ··= nc l'ollll'IO ............ II~ No,. Men. thru Fri. IMl1rant1 7:1• lleuth t 110 "A Barrel Full of Pennies," the latest Palrlclc offering malting Its local debut at the °"'" l.11 ............... ~"" T San CI em en t' Community---------- Theater. falls preUy neeUy U.. -man-Hart classic of the 1930'•· 'l1lE STORY centers on a Brooklyn cab driver, without much upstairs but a lot of boort,. who can't resist brlna1nlC home strays -~. ducki; blrds or people. nus atmosphere is anathema to his marriageable daughter who's ashamed to brlni her o!Oce name home to meet the fami- ly. (Unlike "You Can't Take ft wlth You," she never dQeS.) performance In this role, playlng the facsimile of a grownup Charlie Brown with hilarious aplomb and the vQ<:al proweas of Del'ler Franklin from radio's old "Corli.n *********** Archer" ahow. to this categoey. It abounds In Neither the play itaeH nor the playwrtgllt'a penchant for ' eccenbicity with a central the San Clemente production plot line bomwed almQst bag under the cllrection of Joanne and baggage from "You Can't Applegett. produces much of a Take It with You," the Kauf-reading on the laugh meter. The saving grace of both the play and the producUon i! an Paul Steele plays t h e benevolent cabbie with a stagy comic style and a credible Armenian ..,.,..,1, Doris Donita fashions an even more credi· ble Jewish accent as she moves quite naturally through , the role of the mother. 'Gigi' Makes Stage Debut THE IMPATIENT ingenue is portrayed halfheartedly by Ardis Faith who encounters problems in maintaining her SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) - The first Lerner and Loewe musical in 13 years - a theatrical version of the movie "Gigi" -premiers Tuesday after nearly a year of. work on new numbers by the team that split up after "My Fair Lady" and "C8melot." Composer Frederick Loewe, 72, wh:> retired to Palm Springs in 1960 after a major heart attack, agreed to do the stage play after being lured back to work in June of 1971 by a mOvie script written by lyricist Alan Jay Lerner, 54. The film, "The L i t t I e Prince," won't be released un- til next year, but "Gigi" is ex- JM:Cled to reach Broadway in November following tryouts in did Gigi. I hope it ·s very character between Jines and in five cities across the na tion. good." delivering her d i a I o g u e "f came back <-·u•• of a Le and , •• ha without distracting pauses. ~ ~ mer '-"""we ve Sharon Todd has little to do script by Alan called 'The Lit-written five new songs for the but react with distaste in her tie Prince' which Paramount musical, most of lhem for the role o( the taciturn aunt, but sent to me," Loewe said at a girl in the tiUe role, altlw>ugh she does this quite believably. news conference prior to the one is a major production The remaining character is opening. "I could not possibly number with 10 pages of lyrics something else again -an ag- resist It. There are limits to and 72 pages of orchestration ing catatonic clobbered by Papa's cab 30 ye•~ ago who's any resistance." that Loewe calls "a whole been in a standuj; ·coma ever "When Edwin Lester (im-comic opera." since. Mark Manning does a presario of the San Francisco "[ just got carried awa y," fine job in this role, thoug}) the and I..os Angeles Civic Light added Lerner, who stayed agiog of a young man rather Opera companies) heard we busy after the breakup with than seeking out an older ac· tor is somewhat questionable. were-collaborating again, he Loewe with the musicals "On "A Barrel Full of Pennies" called and said, 'What about a Clear Day You Can See ' continues for two more Gigi?' He had been calling me Forever" and "Coco" and film weekends, Thursdays throu~h for years, suggesting that we versions of "Clear Day" and Saturdays, at the Cabrillo do a satage version. I told him the Lerner-Loewe s tage Playhouse, 202 A v en i d a to talk to Alan and we finally musical, "Paint YOur Wagon." Cabrillo, San Clemente. ;=:::================-= ••• "Flnlan's Rainbow" lG) KLONDIKE ICE ARENA -........ ,_ "~•l'). S IADIUM -l .~,; " .... >\l(U 1,.-.f!.J,(. :rr-• -' r•--·w.o • STADIUM ,3 ~: '""~''"-.:!'·• -·. -.... SIAD/UM J ,; '-,,_ '.lt 1••1 I' I ol' ,• • ... "Ph:Ic·•P On IDI" Ill "Man Of La M1nchaH (PG} "Th• War letwMn Men anti WIM'ftM'I" (PO} "Tlte &otawcry" IPlil ... "Lady SI ... Tlte ••" IRI "Fist Of P11ry" (I) ... "RH Su11" U.A. CITV a SOUTH ~DAIT CINIMA~TUISOAY Jkl -(ALL LADllS A GOLDIN AOlltS-Ol'ININQ TIL 21• ,.M, CMrtfS ln111Mft-T1Uy S1v1l15 JUI lrtl•lld ''THE l'AMILY" Clint 1!111Yraod "HANG 'EM HIGH., 1•111 hr Cellr CRJ !ii1i ..... i!'i!,.=,= .. ·;;;~:r:·:t::~)~~~~~[ aH1I. :::;:: So11lf'I . 11:4} 1.m. Chai . Bn11150ll Ttlly S1~1l15 Cln1m1 Jiii lrtl111d D1ity 'THE FAMILY' ''t"Hi1~r· • -pl11t-11 :4S lo Mori Thdll1 I 2:00 p.m. "BAO CHARLEiTON CHAR LIE ,. Both Color (RI ''THE f'RENCH CO HHECTtON" "MASH " • s.,: i. S11~. Kld'1 Sllowt "OODZILLA VS. SMOO MONSTER" 12&2 p.m. • Goldle H•wn W1rre11 B11tty 'S COLLARS s• Both t11 Color! tPGI t MllC SICATIHO •'tel HOC~lY t f!(;Ullf U:ATIMG • S'llll S~411NCi t '111V41l I GAOi.ii' 1 .. Sf~\JCT!OfjS • IKATlS -U llS -lllNT•U -111,•lllJ • IHCl.liL llATIS JO GllOUPS • lllTMllV.llT NOW OPEN l•H•YAl lOlt• ,OI flAllll -II-IAllUI oPlN 1 DAVI" Wtll( • HOllO•YI M!> ,AIJLJ.jlll..0 4vt~ COSTA MlS.-• NlAll SOUTH COAST ,LAZA o f'MON( 111• 171-1159 ·:·: ·::: .. ·. " . - : . :· ... •, ,_,,, .... .:: :..-'"r;'.·: : ~.-'f: .... ,., .. ..... ENDS TOMORROW SOUTH COAST ,u,u, I THJ:AT•l- Sln ;>;._. ,,ry. •I lrt11ol St,. Co1!1 M .. 1, $46-2n1 LAGUNA SDUTH COAST THEAT•t:-e111t Hwy, LIO-ltlldl 49 .. 1114 liAL l&ACH IAY THEATRl!-Mll~ SI. 1t ,Kiiie CNll Hwy-411...SJl "Ill.LT JACK" "llll T JACK" ' -FIVE flNGllS Of DEATH 111 DOlllMAN G Jl.lo'f~ (.U.fll 1Al.l y kfllflt'Mll SllTHH (PG) PLl..S • FllANIC SINATRA DIRTY DINGUS MAGii rl'GI ' FISTS Of fUlY i•I PL.US 1 CHARLES BROHSON llD -"°' .............. 1 .. ·11 , • • , .. adl llwlll. ' 6 H••N• llwd. • ·lt J.W.E~ C.V.li SALL V kEllERl<Wt SllTMH "°' l'LUS t FRANK $1Jrl.\TA.A DIRTY DINGUS MAGii IPGl Llf':.Gl11 A~e. -•I 9111.nOI\ 521-2123 Slnt• An• '•MW•J no.or Cl>tp..,tn Aoe, 55 .. 7022 S•nla •111 ,, .......... . Cl>•PI"'•" A••· SSS.7012 He•po<I ,, ..... , II Ilk"' St, ~S.JJIJ "THE l'A.MILY'" CR) Dl•n• •011 "LADY SINGS THI ILUiS"l•I Ch•rffl lrtn-/Jltl lrll•llll ., . .fJI. Q!I' I I W f Ml, 11 t!!pl ft.-........... , __ ,,,~ .. """"' "'"""'" '"'' .. l llMIM"l "i(>o40fAU!' ·onrntersun la• 11•.o.r::oClll' •• ~~a· -i!f_~ ·;:: .. .... !i! . Ytel -• 1 av.um .... t ... "t••• .. ,: ~· ..... : -L ,-r t ~~. -. I Ma::Jr:vonSydow 2nd MrT 1.Jv lJl1mann JACK LEMMON JULIET MILU In ' Tbe~'1AVANTI!" ,, ' ' l OWAR f gi STAlllNO/ t l\l\l\1 t\JI~ I "' ' ' • '" . ... . . . . '. •••"' I• •i>OI '•.,• "··-· ......... ~···· .. ... ·-~··-,;? .. __ 7_• EXCLUSIVE WEIK -·-~-- TA~ Wiravt:At MELVIN DOUGLAS ··• rs 1 llllf ...... "" s. -··- I ( 5 J alu the be~ ya• Ya Da , ya1 Co. hri 'I'1 SOl M< Sal no• to I m< th• wh by 1 de' bt' "' for op • po na Int "' of I th! '1'11 (l (l Re ' Iii co 'co po se m ju M Di Bl C1 In m in M m ,, tr p< SI W• I • 0 w c lo d1 " "' rr I . sf ol aJ b: c ti B I! " !, ~ A « c K ~ 2. ~ F 5 u t 0 • I I • ' M-,, ... 14, 1973 Tempo Wins Opening Day Prize =lea Lt1!E2~ oF Ranch 1 I • Inspection Conduct.ed 56 Years By ALMON LOCKABEY _ ..... Joseph M. 'lllomu' &Hoot aluminum cruller Ternpo won the sweepstakes award ror tHe best prol,.slonally maintain«! yacht at Newport llarbor Yacht Club's 51111 OpeolnJ Day IMpecti-On Sunday. Tempo is a Burger designed yaCbt built 0by the Blll1!tf Boat Co. In Florida In !Ml. Since bringing her to Newport the 'lbornues have cruJ&ed as far south u Puerto Vallarta, Melico and as far north u San P'ranci8co. The boat is now being prepared for a trip to Alaska. HUNDREDS OF N H Y C members and guests attended the tradlttooal gala opening which was marred thla year ,by crisp weather. But the wealher did not deter yacht owners !run bring· Ing their g a ll y decorated craft alongside the club docks for the annual inspecUon and \ open house aboard. Commodore Ted Munroe presided over the tradlUooal flag raising «rtmOllies and introduced the club's staff commodores and current slate of flag officers. Especially honored were three Orange Q>unty POWs. They were Maj. David Luna (USAF), Capl. Dami Pyle (USAF), and Lt. David Rehmann (USN). O'l1IER FLl.G olflcmr of NHYC are Don Wattlon, vice commodore; Leo Ben:dnl, rear commodore; Roger Meisinger, port captain.: 'lbayer Crispin, sea-etary; Tom W i Ider, measurer; Anthony Brown, judie advocate; Dr. Gordon MacDonald, fleet 1 urge on . Directors are Qispln, Henry Bocklngbam, Bill Bent&, Allen Campbell and Frank Mallory. Non-O!lm (junior) officers introduced Were Phil Ram- ming, commodore; Jim Buck· ingham, v i c e commodore; Mark Gaudio, rear com- modore; Carolyn WI 1son 1 secretary, Vicki Call, treasurer, and Dwight Belden, port captain. Commodore 11unroe paid special tribute to the crew wbo won the San Diego Lipton Guhl's Sonic Wins Oose Log Contest Bob Guill'• Sonic, out of California Yadlt Club, was tile winner of Shark Island Yacht Club's Invitational predicted log race out of Newport Sotur· day. Sonic, the King Brugman season lql>polnt trophy win- ner in 1m, completed the ~ mile oourae with an error O! 1.209 percent. Runner-up was For Me Too, skippmd by Morris Edelstein of Calllornla Yacht Cloo wttll an error of 1.229. 'l1IE RACE WAS sponaored by the SOutbern California Cruiser Auoclation and sanc- tioned by the American l'l>...r Boat Assoct&tlon. There were 19 entries, includq first year racen. Final results: (I) Sonic, Bob Guill, CYC, 1.209; (2) For Me Ton, Morris Edelstein, eve, 1.299; (3) Alexis, Gonlon Snow, SIYC; (4) Fultana. Weldoo, Fulton, CYC; (5) Hala Loolse, Ray Knowles, SA YC. First Year Racers: (!) Minuet, Datle COllup, CYC, 2.111; (2) Judy Ann, Gerald Martin, SIYC, Z.1115; (3) Lady Flo, John McDoonell, SIYC, 5.183. California Yocht Club won the American Morine Team Trophy witb an svera,re error of 1.371. Winners Listed • Windsurfer sallon braved and equally chilly nten SWl- day In the Al.amltoo Bay 116- gaua. 'lbel'e were 19 ...-1n- tbe best four out "Ove l!t1eo. Tr..,ny winners: (I) Bruce MaUack Voyagers YC; (2) Pat Love, SMYC; (I) Hoyle Schweltur, MYC: (4) -Gary Seaman, MYC!; (~) Ue bet.._, Alan Parduccl, MYC and Tad Spring.,., NBDRA. 2nd Time Froal Wn Servket I "' H--l--hF:+-1·21 Two y01n qo U..ltt Do• nll Jr •• ol Killeen, T,x,, wu found guilty by a Tens Jury and sentenctd to 30 years in prison for ,.mng mariju1na. l--+?-1--++-I E Afe!r numerot11 appeals and a circuit of Teiu appNll courts, Dennis WH granted a new trial. "HQW do you plead, Mr. Derutls?" District Judge J.F. ClaW90ll, who presided over Dennis' ipreviou.s trial, asked him. "Guilty. your honor," Den· nis replied. Clawson thens en ten c ed ( PEOPLE ) I ~ ' ., !now th« ~ .... ,,,, ,,..,. but Ir -"' ...... .., -w NEWPORT HARBOR YACHT CLUB OBSERVES 56th OPE ING DAY Olfl,.,. S.lute Colc>rt With D ,..sad Y achti In B1ckgn>11nd - CballengelTropliy for tile club ..,,...,.,,. this year. They were Tim >--.;.,,.•$ Hogan, sklpper; Ge or g e Tooby, Tom Hogan, Rick llamb!etm, George Twist and Duffy Duffield. FRED DUCKE'IT, president of !be NHYC anglers Clt1b was presented wilh a .-peeiaJ flag. Music for the occasion was provided by the 3rd Marine Aircraft Wmg.Band. Other winnen: in the annual inspection: 111 Junior Non-Calm -Salty ::;;:\' Dog (Sabot) John Benjamin. . Senl<X" Non-O!lm -Fidget III (Sabot) Mike Arrigo. Dsysailer -Bansbee (Int.· 14) Mike Allen. Sail under 40 feet (""""r maintained) -E m pa t by (Alberg-30) Jack 'Vance. Sall over 40 feet (owner maintained) -Westerly (Cal- 48) Jack Hogan. POWER UNDER 40 feet (own~maintained) Happiness (Grand Banks-12) Ben Ben.. jamln and Dick Jordon. Power over 40 feet (owner maintained) A qui 1 a (DeFever-50) Nelson Jones. Over 40 feet professionally maintained -Tempo. Bay boat -Bay Wagon (19 ft. Chris Craft) Shirley WUson. Special award -Vapor, 1903 Herresholf s1eo1n launch, Jon Msrtin. Backal:Ler Victorious Boat No. I, skippered by Tom Blaekaller cl Newport Harbor Yacht Club WB! the correcied tllll8 winner Sotur· day In NJ!YC's Opening Day race from Loi Angeles Harbor. 1be race started at noon from LA YC and finished off the Newport Pier. 'lbe race is !0< Ocean Racing, Pacific Handicap and Midget Ocean Racing Fleet )'lldltll. Trophy winners : OCEAN RACING-(I) Boot No. I, Tom Blackaller, NHYC; (2) Ghost, John !Uynolds, NJ!YC; (3) Qia.squie, DeMi> Clioate SI BYC. PllRF-0) Ko Tori, Me I Pierce. BYC; (2) Wlndsong, Dale Gallon (unattached); (3) Commotion, Buller and !JCUITl- brac, NHYC. MORF-(1) Tex Maro, PeJTy Mason, BYC; (2) Orange BIOS· som, Mike Kenney. PMYC; (3) Mooo.shadO\v, Ron Thomas, SI BYC. UCI Team Nabs First UC! and UCLA sal1onl won the r1ib1 to represent tho Wast Coast tn the natlonal In· tercollegiate championships Sunday by plaolng on .. two In the n a t t o n a 1 eliminations .. rlcs at San Diego. !llgllt lchooll ~ "'" eluding Berkeley end Sanford, In a Ill-nee round robin In Fly!lli Junior di,.,..... UC! skippers were Don Thofnpoon In tho A division end Jeff Mcllermald In tho II&. c..wmen .,.... J"f Gluer and Terry 'hylor. UCLA tklp- pera were Ed Foo, )(Im Gage and Bill Neufeld. The natkmals will be h e I d Jme 10 at Eqle Mountain Lake, Ft. Worth. T!x. In ao a ... sloops. SWEEPSTAKES WINNER -Joe Thomas and bis wife Jill aeft) and daughter Jill display handsome Sweepstakes Trophy aboard their 64-foot yacht Tempo for the best professionally maintained vessel at Newport Harbor Yacht Club's 56th annual Opening Day inspection. New England SkippersShine In Champion Tempest Race New England skippers, led by brothers Jim and Jack Lin· ville of Rowaton; Con n . , dominated the first race of the Tempest Class North American cbamplonship at Long Beach Harbor SUnday. The Linville brothers won the 18-mlle race by 20 seconds over Van Alan Clark Jr. of the Guadalupe Racers Bunched The 12 yacht& which started Balboa Yacht Club 's Guadalupe Island race Satur- day at noon were half-way to the otrshore rock Sunday. The Island Is about !00 miles from Now?>ort. The fleet was bunched about 160 miles along the rhumbline and were still holding the brisk westerly wtnds that prevailed Saturday. Jack Blbb's Colurnbia·50 yawl lotermezzo was the overall handlcap feader in the ocean racing divll\on, and Whitney ColllM' Newporter-40 Leprechaun was leading the Paelllc Handicap fleet on cor· reot<d time. Standlnp: OVERALL (Ocean Racing) -(I) Intermeu.oi 12) Swill, Jack Mallinckrodt, BYC: (3) Tallll\1111, Bob Williams. BYC. CLASS A -(I l Intcnne:r:ro; (i) Loco Vlcnte; (3) Spirit. CLASS B -(I) Swift; (2) Tallsman; (I) Declllon. PHRF -(I) Lepreehaun ; rsl Tepsi. ril Matang1. Beverly Yacht Clu b, Marion , Mass. Tom Gates of South Coast Corinthian Yacht CJub was·20 seconds behind Clark t o become the only West Coast skipper to place. ARGYLE CAMPBELL, the West Coast favorite broke a halyard on .. third of the way around the course and failed to finish. 'The race was sailed in 12-16 knot winds outside ol Long Beach Harbor. Alamitos Bay Yacht Club i1 the host. There are 17 entries in the six-race championship series. The top 10 flnt&beni will qualify !or tile world cham· pionship for the class at Ladies Day Race Log Naples, Ilaly in September. THE NORTB AMERICAN championships will he decided on the best five out of six race s. Another 18-miler will be sailed today, two U.mile races Tuesday, one 18-mile race on Wednesday and a final race of 18 miles on 'Thursday. The ZO.foot Tempest Class is one of the six Olympic c1asse3. It is a high -performance dinghy which requires the crew to hang outboard on a trapeze when beating to weather or reaching in strong breezes. Top seven finishers in Sun· day's race: ( i) Jim Linville, Noroton YC, Rowaton, Conn.; (2) Van Alan Clark, Jr., Beverly YC, Marion . Mass.; (3) Tom Ga les, South Coast Corinthian YC, ·Marina de! Rey: (4) Dav Id Bruce-Falconer, Norotoo YC: (5) John Rart, Booton YC; (8) Bill Saltonstall Jr., Beverly YC; 7) David McComb, Boston YC. Accident Rate Down on Boats SACRAMENTO (AP) Detplte an lncreued oumber of pleasure boat.I on California watel"3, lhe accident rate fell by 18 percent between li'll and 11112, aa)'I tho state Department of NavlpUon and Ocean Development. The depsrtmtnt said Tue .. day tho number ol boat& Jn. creased i-about l!0,000 to 571,000 during tho period bul the number of bcddenta !ell fn>m 7118 to 812. Tiit accident rale 11 fllW'ed In terma ol ac- cident& per 10,000 boats. DeMIS to IO years' probation, ,\ with credit given for two years 11_...,.,,.,1.,. __ .,...,_,_...., ............. . In the Bell County Jail. * Actor Cameron Mltehell and Margaret A1ollll10, widow ol state Sen. James P. "Spo.t'' Mozingo of Darllnfton, S.C. were manied In San Juan, Puerto Rico. Mitchell recenUy completed filming of a movle,11Tbe Mid- night Man," at Clemson University and announced plans to form a movie com- pany based in Sooth Carolins. * Former Gov. Jamtt A. Rhodes is eligible tQ nm for a third tenn as governor in 1974, tile Ohio supreme Court ruled . Rhndeo, who served In the post from 11163 'to 1971, challenged a oectlon of the Ohio coostitut1on providing that "no paraon llhaJl 'bold the oUlce ol govmior for a period longer than two 1uccesslve terms of four years." * Supreme Court J u s t i c e Wllllam O. llaqlu bu been named a commander rJ. the Order of the Golden Ark In a ceremony at the Netherlands Embassy in Washington. The order, establlabed by Prince Bernhard In 1971, recognizes service in the cauae of conservation. Dougtas is the author oJ a number of articles and bookl on the subject. h1 the Service Coast G u a rd Ueutenant Lommoad M. Poebold, soo ol Mr. and Mrs. Heinz 0. Paetx· old of 19862 Leighton Lane, Huntington Beach hu return· ed to his homeport in Oakland, after an Ocean Patrol In the Pacific between San Francisco and Honolulu. Navy Commlllder Joe t. !WJMd, husband "' t h e former Miss Mary R. Loog of Newport Beach, particlpsted in the commtsaioning ceremonlea ol new Korean Navy o!flcers at tho Naval Academy, Chinhae, Koru. · Navy Airman . _Paid D. Gutaf-sm of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Gustaf'°" ol 11172 Irby Lane, Htintlngton Beach, graduated from r e c r u l t training at tho Naval Training Center in San Diego. Navy Seaman Apprentice Daryle D. J1cobs Jr. !!Oii of Mr. and Mrs. Daryle D. Jacobs Sr., of 61121 Cum· berland D r i v e , HunUnaton Beach, graduated ffom recruit training at the Naval Training Center In San Diego. Navy Construction Recnllt Orll D••YM. IOll ol Mr. aftd Mrs. John R. llOno¥an "' 11$1 Daremer-e, ffunllngton Beach. graduated from rec r u J t training al tho Naval Tralnlnl eerii.. 1n s.. Dlqo. Navy FtrelDID Recrult Willis W. !lpwlock 1011 "Mn. Maxine Spurlock " I 7S I Labrador Ortve, Colta Mtaa, graduate from .-.11 tnlnlllr at the Navo! Training Center at San Dtqo. He Is a ....,._ cl Estancia !Ugh School, ~ Mesa. ' . Marine LMCe Corpor1l Ral ... 8. ~Jr.""'"' Mr. and Mr&. Ralph s. DePhiWps Sr., " .U 1-de Vega, Mlulon Vlelo. ..U awarded a letter ct · 0... mondatlosl -Iha l<tl* Defense ,...,. CoaullltMltr during ceromonlea In Sia Diego. · Marine F I r 1 t Lleutljlllll Mlelolel IL llpo, oqo 0( Mr, and Mrt. Thacnat K. !Pt! II %1112 Lockhtveo Clrdt, Jlut>. tington Beach, plrllcplted 171 E1erot&e Exotla Doiieet vt with MlrlM Air llUiil*I Squadron In San DleJO. Actor t.aare!e Harvey.ii at M•-•••-•••,.. .. ••••••••• the UCLA Medical Center F th R d recovering from an abdominal . or e ecor operation. Harvey, 44, was~ on •••••=-ill'•rn•••F•FRR~'"'"..,...,..,. ...... . to relieve an abdoinlnaf con- 1 i SIKo. LI WT'tne:I Lee·~ dition resulting from aurguy Dl••O ut Offl "''~· 'Mt<"lerlt A. 1M WllllMI J , ''· last year for a bowel dllorder, Mtll•. ,..,...,.. AMI .,.. .._,,. _....,.. a spokesman said. M11or. l"IWlll• MM.,..~""""' The spokesman said Harvey Of 1'f arrf.age ~~~~ ""'"" a...._.91~~ e~ts to leave the hospital Mee1111111. """"' w """ ... ll. ""...... 'ltM MIY I L...-:11, .. lt"Wlt V ...... tM __ ~ ...... this week and plans to be in Sllrowlec;, l"redlrlcll M. •lld G•11 1, Qlnlcl, Cll,..,, 0 . tM C,~"f '· London June 1 to fullill pro-Witt•· •tttv L. w JlfMt o. :i:':."'M:v 'C~~·it:-. .,_ f .. " "onsl commJtme~-. Hi le, Glor!• Mid Slllle 1.M Hll'lttl-. T"tM \.,,_ Ml ,,__t.1 111.D lloe. hrtllf M. •fld NICl'lohl N. l!ve-......,........ * Jlllln-. M1rp11rl1 llfll!r, •lid MllW -Gfll, Ctdll• OWi ... 11N J~ Last fall, Tllomu w . G=~· llaOM'I H. •nd Vll'fl'91• ldt ''~~ ,.,.,... . P•Y "" Callabu and WUIJam F. ~flt.'=1~j!"j. ~!t:,~.*-t . T't=Mft' 1tc4i!r• INMI IM ,,_.,., Carley paid $500,000 for 3.5 Albtrt, Ellubttll Ann w Mtrv!ft Ell H~· -... '::1 '"" .... I Sq Gno, Jacq1,1tlllll L. tM Ttrrv A. I ·-... '"'"I acres on exc uslve uaw e:1r1y, ·-o. •lld 1-a Mtrle '"'..., 1 ....., ' Slcll.W, bMtt Alltn Mt _..... AM Island, ne1t door to Sen. r1111w, ~...., •· •lld IUcNtd o. =· '""' M. '"" T~ w.111, 011nn• •lld ll~n ~" • J ,.. , F.dwant M.. KennedJ'• sum. lloblrh. ,IOrlnCt JHll tlld V•" Gtnt "" Oii • r, . ... Stmhl•"'· l"IOIY Mtt ,,.. Jtrrv oun "'· IM o.iwtil o.. mer home. No.w, they've won 1.,,,., .,.,.., M. Mid 1ttt11et111t 1. ltwwt, A.~"''* • pemUssion from 1a Judie to Men!JOmlN, earr1e li"91'f11 w H•r,,. gcn.Jr.'.J:':;.e;r~~ :" subdivide the property into w.!Z:':tu J1111 ''"' Ch.IM Har....-, ~~.:.. -="'= =~ •· lot lot•IO, J111lu (, and An"*"f J, '' ., seven s. McM•n•, ,,,.,, J11N1 •M L•rrv 1•n•1ACUftMtV Mal .. KeMedy, O em o c rat I c cnnton •""'"....,.a ' senator from Masaachuaettl, Mtt.O::lcl, Albert SntM •1'111 2111• ftl~!:-O.Yltl ,..,,.... ·..., tMllt and five Squaw I al and :J1f:::'c1f::'.i'~ ~,. 1. 1~":.':n:1.!"t c. neighbors vainly opposed the P'hllllp1, Mll•t•el• o. 1M DoMlcl '· '"""'· C1rttyi1 Mery 11111 D..if subdivision, oayin& it would 1C•"'•n•1111\. C,.111t11a Jt111· and wi1111m 01ck1v, J_,,. 1. 111c1 Wllll"" ,,., CMirt" • Ltr11blt1, tt"'6rt It. tP111 l'.w J. u ... ..,. the "delicate ecological Wlktll, i..ur• L. •M H.,llWfl L•• Kl•''"· M111IM v. IN 1i«Wft Arlllur ...... ..~. ··-•• •lld J.-o . .. ••••••• -· ...... -••• balance or the area." v.";.,, ,_,...,.,. ,., 1ne11-.,, o. ~.,.,';,'"'oi.n. fMr1t _. ...W... * ('"Ile)'' t>Mlld M. Jr. •IMI 1(1tlll111'1 M. Arnold • Golden West Sets Oasses For Summer Seventy.five courses from art to theater wlll be offered from JUDI II to Aug. 10 .. part of Goldm West College'a summer seaston. Regillratloll for summer school will bo held June II from I 1.m. to 3 p.m. and from I p.m. to I p.m. In tho college center. Regt&tratlon will 1llo be taken June U.1$ and June II and 19. To be ellglble to 1ti...I the summer aelllon. 1 t u d e n t s must be II. high ICbool gradua,.. or have completed lbe 11111 grade and have I permit can! from their hl&h tcbool. out.<>f«ate ruld<at fees, for Individual& who have not llVed conllnuou1ly In Clallloml1 for one year, .,.. $27 per unlL Summer course• ire av11lable Jn tho followlns aub-Ject 1rea1: admlnltlnllon ·of justice (law onlonltmmt), art, busm., -tology. Engllsb, h e a II h education, mBlhematics, music, nuralng, IC"nce, IOCial scilnce, speech, and theater art.. McCh.orf , MlrJ-1• AMI I ncl DllVMI llffll•, Kltl'M L. lfllf MwTW WW. MktlMI • McGutr .. KatMllM Mii ,_ lirt , .... Ma)' I """"Ill~ hllfl!ftl I . Ml JiNMt a. Jr. LI ,ac,, Ch.Ir ... tM Otlw• I"~. Mtr1•rtt AfMI.. 1M ,,.._ W•rrt11, l"•YI: I . •lld °""' H, 0.vlt llWll'b, fmli ll. IN JUllillh A. 0vnt111, LYftllt Ttttt tM l'l'MWklt (Ill..,.., llolllrt J. tncl Ctrtll , Minr'y "'""· Dtittl• Leu ''"' Gary ..... ~ ........ A. lfllf ,.,.,.,,... .... St.111, C•tol'l'll ll. ltl'ld I~ L. "°"'' LU'-Liv* Mlf C'9rt Jiry 0.tflltflbtfn, Glr•I Otlll •!Id O•rv U. T....., .,...,., Ntfl "" ...,._. V•lll11, Merv NOYlll• ft 'tflll Merle ' COllWI V1 T-• A..,,.'""''· H•Ntf. ,._.... N.,... Mw..-. AM H1llllltr\, Mery T. -M-lct J. Or1Mm, J~W ......... ,,.. ~ WOIMn, SVU-M. Md llllty A. CilnWtf, I C, Mii Wfl"9 J: snow, Lynn lrldll'f 111111 .,,.,._ Dl1ne Lutll, J1A1111 lfM" aiM ,,.;ry fulh, J1mt1 l . ltl'ld T"fV-LIV MCJUlr, 1.Ullall -J"'* HttrY MllllcPI, Htlg• llld NCll"Wt Ctlt!Dll, Lynlll Mii Tlf'r\t~W llrr)', Tlloltllt Horlell •!Id OOnN Oolitrllrl'I, C1r11Yt1 -.NI lf'lltt . Mlrla I Oll'.I•• ........ C.. 1111111 ll . . fMM ••• 1 Nori F. Ind Cll111ff I . • • ..,, Tlltl W. lfllf W. H1,,,lfOl'I. ICtlth AS6M •llCI """Mir~ .. ll'l'lltf', J ... 11 AM"" trirrM ,......,._ ar1111111tt. \llorm111 "· •lld MlldrlCI M. I NWl'I, II:~" L, ~ Ttff'll' 0. GrlrfllPI, 1'1ul'W1"1l1' W Lll'lll• llutll MtrpPI, hYtrlY Ji.ftll llllf M11Witl Ml"'--· \.utllla P•tm•• Ind """'" I CMrl" H. • kl'Mft, Clf'• l'l'llll llfMI WlllllM W. Jr, Mtltlllf!Y, Llo\I ""'-lfld 01wtt Arttwr am.re, VINlrlli A. W ~ S.. CtrrlHn, Jo A1111 111111 ...... l"""ttl Jlfltll'I, Shi'-All!! lftd ,,_ (ll!!rtlt ......,...., 1'1111111 ""' ..-Glot'tf °""""'' h r•• J. "f.""'' •· Fink,~ t . tlllf 1NrrY 1M llllltrtf, Wllllll "f. ~ ltty M. Cfulcklfllr*. Roy A, '11111 Shlll1 O. ~ 0.-lfl C. Wit C\"\11 TIMilMI ·~,.. v~· Mii w wiu ... c ~ oor• '!t'Y ""' """' ttA .,,..,..., Jlf'\lt lfWWd INf T.,... ._....... '""~''-. ••' '' I\. ~~Ii 11..,1111 c...., YOlll'll. '-fflfl I. W ~I ""9fllr4, Jl¥ct JMll tfld' ll:lcMnil l•w•rdt. "*"f h . W I UufM ~,. I!~ ...... llllf L. UI VlfM, 1¥111l"! C. Md lftM I. IMlll'I. DltN a. Mf O. ~.I.tr.ti L\.,,. Ott.W L, Tr~ Lto I . W ~ P. llMtllft. lmlM &.. .... ,,,..,,..II I . Clfltit'tM, ttrYI tM Drilf JCJMt, Jlflll llitM "" .IMllt Oltllflt GltlltP!e, Merif'lt .\. tN PN I . ko1t. Und• lflCI Alff• ...... MIY I •-•llr. Nt.ry Uilil 11111 ThtOOIA '''* "'""•· Olltftl It.'"" lliWll't 01i. Ctrllllfl. Kt!lf "· W ""'"' , Gori-. f'lffldl I.MM Mf 'MtllMI ltuctcw, c~ •lltW. Mid J'* LM Krtlllr, Jti111 lntfl .,., t¥ifl MWr H.,,., Deller .. L. Ind StlPNfl O. .,,_,_y, Wl)'M OeyW .... MlfJerlt Mll1•'· 1!¥• Mii trlll ......... ,,. ,,. .... Jl-L ll.wec. 111i1 llil~ M.I ....... Mtfl• 'lli'tlfllt 11'1111 J•'H•n ... .. .... r#tltf I \.lft'll, .... 111 I . llfllf """" J. Sltw1rt, Jllln A, Ind tn1*ftl M. ....,, , ..... I ....... .,._. I . o.tl1tttt1, h!Wffl' It. Mii HM M. JtlWIMin. 09n I ...... C4lllll'lt .l. ~· ·-...... """ ...... -.. --·· """"' -·--"'-" ~·· (afol Ind kolt ........ T1""'9, ...... J-Mt.HM fl1trkll ,,._.,.....,. h'f'lll lfllf '-111t11 LMU PtHMtt, J9llll'IM H.-..,. AIMtt WtltfwM. Jira aitll• Mf ...... Wlh!:f, 11119M ~ .......... --_.., ~:::.t"'~~":.. ... ..=; !':"' lotdt, 0.... It .. 111i Wt1ew Al!<M O\lrl#lt. .. )IL .... a.--. W Mowlti liM"' M. Mf LI• K. ~ Vk:,:. a. !!-~--""""" '""'' ""9 M. .,,. ltintN P. .......,, ICltl wtlMIM .-i Dt\lfil l'lrb. fUNf! .... Jllln Otlttlil \.tB, J'"'ll l. l'fll I It""""' ,a, Mllllf, enld IC"""!I '"' Iii* 0.lrl Pt•tol't• Vl11!1ni. LM .... 0.,y l.M ~.Dorl• M. .,.. . .,.,. 111. Mtm., Tl)Otrltt "'""" Jr. 11141 Moil. Ml/Ill J. •Ml "'"" J. Merfl'l"ft lllll °"11'1'• Hl!tCY L. .... .,..,,.. J. AllPlfY, Mt C.,...11"8 W 1.trM L 04illor. Aflltl •M WdllMI C-ltt. Dtllw"' L. ttllf Pr•• &1tlbul"J, J ..... tti A..,_ llikMnl W. ' Uwtrf, TMrtM MW C= l.lrnlll, KIMttfl flWI ... Jlfl Ctrll ltllerG, Wllll•M J, INI . P, Mcllltvrt •. hl'Otl J. tH S"""' 0. ~11, Tllftlt!W I . n lttlffM • Iii.--~"'* ltOMM IM KMtll .Meo.weft, 1.lllM Lllfill 0.. lillll ''""" flf'ltl(t Ht'I'" I ' ... ,• ' I ' I I • .. .- ' ' ' : ' I . I I ' n DAI~ V l'ILDT - f "~ 1.55 '·" 1.62 1.1• '"' "" 10,04 f,11 .... , 1.095 '·"' •. 11 l .'1 11 .17 10,70 "" DAIIAY PILOT CLASSIFIED I ---l~I -·-I~ ;G;";"";;'4;1;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;l,;;G;•;•;•!:.;•;l;;:;;:;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;.l-°"~"-"-'"·-1~~~~~~ MEN UKE $1,500 DOWN 3 Bedroom, 2 baths, fire. place, new ctplg., 2 car gar. lmmed. ..... $27,950. IDEAL FOR GUEST HOME 5 Bedroom, 2 -Clooe to shopping, $32,500. Roy McC•rdl. Rultor 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. 541-7729 NEWPORT LIVING 3 BR • Beautifully designed interior . h~ muter · huge wood-burning fire- place • professionally land· scaped, Westdiff schools & mopping. Ot11u"'. ~21 '1733 Westdlft Dr., N.B, CALL 64:>7221 • EXCLUSIVE • • Westcliff-Dover • •••• home ror gracious living • formal dining, 4 bedrms .. fan1lly room off lovely garden t o r en· * UNIVERSITY * PARK PIUSh landscaping, law main· tenance, ~utifully decor- ated adult occupied home. Many extras, 2 large Bed- rooms, den, dining, hard to find Si~e story and the only one available • $45,500. C A L L 545-8424 SoothCo Realtors. WALK TO SHOPPING 3 Bdr. 2'ba1h home located on quiet tree lined street in beautiful Eastside Co!lta Mesa. You don't need a car here just wa1k a few steps and you are there. Only $33.500 offered by Steve Queal • Red Carpet, Rea \ton 546-8640. TWO HOUSES- EASTSIDE Custom 2 bdrm., 1 bath home with older 1 bd rm. 1 bath home in rear. Loads of garages, excellent in- vestment. Only S 4 0 , 0 0 0 Presented by Doug Jones. Red Carpel, Rea l tors &l&-864(). SALESMEN- -.. ANXIOUS TO EARN l\fONEY • larger split, hon· us, other fringe benefits . CAlJ.. GINNY, 557-4130. TIME-FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT 1 WANT AD 642-5678 DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST'S leading Marketplace r ! VIEW Lovely Cameo Highlands honw on large, beautifully iandlcaped lot. 3 Bedrooms plus convertible d c n , speck>us living room with fireplace &: sliding glo.u doon to covered pe.Uo. Loll: of privacy: private com- munity beach. $Tl,OO). HARBOR COMP'ANY REAL'IORS SINCE 1914 673-4400 BUILD AN ESTATE FOR YOURSELF ~:§-~HERITAGE . • REALTORS •••••••••• FIX UP AND SAVES$ Great entertaining in SpaniAA decor PLUS 4 bedrooms, clo.'ll! to schools & shopping. Only $42,500. GINNY l\'IORRISON ' .. ;~. ~=-·~•Verde Or. Eut, •--* Costa Mesa "*•••* 561..WO (Open Evenings) MESA VERDE- MODEL HOME This 3 bd m1 3 bath home is i mm a cu1ate. Absolutely nothing to be done inside or out. just \\'aiting for you to n1ove in. Priced nt ~'3.S.950 nnd Presented bv Pc1er Viotto -Rl'd Cii.rpct, Realtors 54&-$40 NEWPORT HEIGHTS INCOME Sharp. sJ1atj1 2 bdnn. duplex rompletely redecorated and only 7 yrs old. Imagine being this cloee to the ocean tor only $51,500. Presented by Pat. Kent -Red Carpet. Rt:altors !W&-S640. NEW TRIPLEXES IN cosr A MESA 3 Bdrm., 1 :;~ Bath 2 Bdr1n., 11'1 B&th l Bdrm .. 'i Bath 10% 00\\IN Or•nve County Apartment RHltors ~7-47'11 $ MONEY MAKERS TRADE • S unlla tor IMd In e.ny atta, L-ee & clear. nx uP, pn>titJ .Duplex $22,950 TWO 3 Br. houses. Good net "CJM\ flow". $29,500. S UNITS $61,900. 14. 3 Bt. 2 ba. hous.e + 2 duplextroo !lOO' lot; Good incOme. Flr<l Walker Realtor ASK f()R BRUCE IJ:l.0121 611-1411 CONSTRUCTION Ladies like con1fort, ease o! maintenance, both like the prestige of a fine home in a good neighborhood a n d everyone lovcs an outstand· lng' view of the ocean. Three kingsized bedrooms .,..,ith spacious closela and a full bath for eacil, built-in kitchen w'ith view, nice family roon1 and a huge bonus room y,•ith separate ehtrance. At $99,500 this \\'OD't last long, 673-8550. OPE.N nL '1 • tr'S FUN ro Bf NICE/ f . . I COPPER PLUMBING This 4 txtrm. home, in Mesa dt>I Mar, has this & everything else you v.'8.Jlt. Close to schools, l'l e \Y carp. & d1·apes, ne w screens, elec. garage door opener & many other ex· tras. Only $38,IXXl Call NO\V to see! BOAT YARD Rear alley entrance 60 you can park your own boat; also, a beautiful 2 bdnn. honie, beamed ceil's., v."OOd· burning trplc., lwcurious drapes & carpets; il'l ex· elusive Bayshot'CS. Offered tor t:">l,IXXl. Act Now! MORGAN REAL TY 673-6642 675-649S WINTER OF DISCONTENT ~s over. It's sunshine time, and time to buy that special 4 bedroom hon1l' near 1.ne marina Uiat you've been wanting. The \vam1th of this bright and cheery hon1e 'vill entice you to start packing today. And the price is right too at only $33,950! Call tlO\\', 847-6010 OPEN Tll 8 • IT'S FUN TO 8E NICE/ THE REAL ESTATERS A WINNER JN COST A lo.IF.SA. located on Beach SI. 3 Bedrm, 1~1 bath, clean, sharp home_ Must go this \11ecl:end. A real buy at 1972 price of only $25,950. Ntwp0rt at Fairview 646-1111 (1nrtlm•) PERFECT FOR EASY LIV- ING 1his Ofle's i 11 delighUully sharp condition. :t Bcdroon1s, 2 baths. and just short walk to clubhouse .'i: pools. Thrcnv a\\·ay the la\\1llTIO\\'er and enjoy the 1.rcckend. Priced o n I y $23,950. and rendy for your in.,.pectlon. 5465a0 Open Eves. -.,.v» HERITAGE . . REALTORS •••••••••• 4 Unique Units $6300 do~·n ~ts you into gross in- come of $7680. \Ve have $50,400 loa.n ro111mltmcnt. Excellent <.'Ond!Uon a n d potential. Ideally located. Will exchange. $63,CMX>. ACT NOW! 646--71n. OPEN 111. • • "°" FUN 70 SE MCEf ~ ll~l;ltll "DO YOUR OWN THING" This home l'le(!(]s carpets Md interior point, bul II kqte<f in College PA.rlc tn.ct. llard"'OOd noora, 11 hake roor, t'OITler' lot, 3 bedroonu.. Priced to tell at $30,!rJO. A COATS & W Al.LACE EX· CLUSIVEll EASTSIDE CUSTOM 4 bdml, 3 bath custom hontft on large comer lot. Thlt home hM 'vtrythl.ng and ill Just 10 mon1hs na"" Wt s~ant pr!'" only $45,000. Prtlenled by Doug Jones • Red C&rptl, Rraltor• $l6-ll&W. • • I ' I I 1 -· lllrlA,1973 ' • • ; The 'Blcpst Marketplice on the'·OriftP .CGlst ~-··· •••••• JOO·S)C .... ....... .. • • • • • • _,,950.990 ....,. . ~ ,. -·-....... 90lr.9" IAq:l~uiu••· , ·• ••• , ,• ~--799 DAILY ~-Pl LOT CLASSIFIED · ADS . . . -.. .......... • • • • • • • • • .$25 • ,$1119 ""'"""'-"'· ..... m--.,. """ !.-°""'""· ' . ' · "°· -199 fft;intial ••••••••• 200 •299 ....... for Saie •••••• 100 ·1'24 "°" • ...... . . . . . . . 550 .. ,,, ~ •••• •.• •• 800•"'9 ·vou . ~Sell It, Fi.I~_· It, ( 6.42 •5678·) One ·~II ServiCe Trade .It -With a Want Ad . , . Fas~ q-ed1t Approval ..... ..•........ 300·"99 Sd>ook..., ............. S75 -'99 -""" .......... 600 -699 o.n.r.1 3 BDRMS-$23,9501 Lots of towering shade trees, 2 baths. Air-con- dltionlng. Riclily pan- eled living room. All new kitchen with built- i\15. Dining room. Rear living room. Lath & plaster construction. brk 54-0-1720 VERY IDEALI $34,950. Tb at special family home. Extra large living room with wall shelves. 3 bed- rooms, 2 baths. Dining room. Cheerful kitchen with built-ins. Patio. Fireplace & f a m i I y room. brk 54-0-1720 $30,500- PICTURESQUE SPANISH BEAUTY Ver)'· lovely 3 bedroom Elegant home. On a ·home. Formal dining quiet cul de sac street. room. Kitchen built-ins. 3 bedrooms. D in in g Two patios. New plush room, patio. Built-ins carpets. 2 baths. Fire-& dishwashe1' Family place. Rear 1 i vi n g room, fireplace. Fiber- room. Forced air heat. glass screened atrium Quality built. Jmmedi-with wet bar. Indirect ate possession possible. lighting. A must see! brk 54-0-1720 brk $4-0,800. 54-0-1720 ·' 2955 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 540-1720 General ~o~~~s.~:: ·- Only Experience Can Provide JUST LISTED Six !-bdrm. furnished units. Always rented. Sharpest 6 unit comple~ in Eastside Costa Mesa. Drive by 2220 Elden Ave. & see if you don't agree. Call us for details. 4-PLEX SOUTH OF HWY. Two - 2 bdrm. units & two -I bdrm. units. Xlnt cond. Always rented. Beautifully land- scaped courtyard. Two 2-car garages. Xlnt buy at $126,500. 15 -30 -LOVE ii Tennis buffs -to the Bluffs! Everything you could want in this great condo to free you for THE sport! Incl. a view of the Npt. Bch. Tennis Club. Toni Escobar LONESOME HILL TOP HOME Ready for love & attention! Move in & en· joy the quiet H;lrbor View. neighbor~ood, view of hills & peel< of Pacific. 3 BR s. & fam. rm. Triona-Bergin . . OCEANFRONT ESTATE Enchanting view. ~xclusive area w/private beach. Luxurioos home w/4 bdrms., 411 baths. Pool & therapy w /jacuzzi. $350,000. Carol Tatum ENGLISH VILLAGE CHARM Old Corona de! Mar delighUul area, So. of Hwy. Walk I<> beach, park & shops. 3 BR's. & gst. qtrs. Remodeled 1971. $89,950. DANA POINT VIEW LOT Spectacular· harbor & ocean vista. Large level lot. Priced at $159,000. Gene Vreeland HARBOR VIEW PORTOFINO 3 BR., 3'At ba's ., fam. rm., din. rm., game rm_; brick patio ·& shake roof. OWner lranJ- ferred, short escrow 0.1(, $81,900 Fee. Howard Wells SPANISH OCEANFRONT San Clemente showplace. 3 Prime-view M lots. Use as home + Income or develop condominiums. Exel. fin. '249,000. Call G<!o. Grupe · ~ Coldw11,Banlcs '44-2430 ~ $50 NEWPORT CENTER OR., N.8.- . ....,..,_ _ ..... Gener•I Gen.r•I ~-SM;tt ~ lllASSGCITlS R~l\LTQRS 21211 EASrCOllSTHIGHWAY CORONA DB.MM.CALIF. 644·7Z10 GET IN THE SWIM . . . in this !8'x36' heated POOL. Great EASTSIDE location! Close to Westcliff shop- ping. 3 Bedroom, convertible den, 2 baths, fireplace, plus ROOM TO ADD ON. 10% down -owner will carry 10% -2nd T.D. $39,500. Call for ap'pointmenl- FAMILY HOME , PRICE REDUCED -TWO STORY ••. for the large family with a need for· many extras. SEPARATE family room, 5 bed- rooms, 3 baths, LARGE kitchen with dining area, PLUS a formal dining room, two fire- places (I in the upstairs master suite). Large fenced yard for the children ...... $54,900. FOR THE. FAMILY' , '-. . . . within walking distance to :schools and shopping? 4 Bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace. Has assumable VA loan-All' for on!y.$29,950. AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCJATES REAL TORS • . . • 644-7270 .__-__ ,.,._-_ _J~ I o.n.r•I A BIG LOT FOR BIG PLANS On Lido Isle; across from the Bay; a cute and clever smaller home that is stressed for a second story and is set on a 55 x 88 lot (that's big for Lido!) Many custom, quality dec,grator features in the home thi!lt will cap- ture your fancy. This could be your way to go! Call for detail>. UNl9UI HOMll OF NIWPOIT llACH. '4WIOO ·-~-..-1 U~l()UI: t1f)Ml:i REALTORS General "OWNER CLIMBING WALLS" ... has bought another house; ·this is your chance :--ownet wants offer oh this elegant, lge.-b8yview.ho111e ; 5 BR., 4 ha.· complete entertainment center around lge. Jitd. & filt'd. po<il;' loc;ked wrought iron gates. Ask· ing $166,000. Land avail. Tl'IE BLUFFS -·FOR LEASE Back Bay view. 3 BR. 2 Ba., '475 MO/lease CORBIN.; MARTIN General SUPPLY LIMITED. DEMAND GREAT! ....... Crut l'.oodomlnlut\I Homes, clust•rtd •bout MadtollM c:ourty.a, occupy OM of the ... rllNillna: ilrp ............. w. ....... hldl. ExactlJ rlfhl for penna· Miii rtsldencr ar ~ home. SUMltcb, flrtpllcq, wet bars. Suit-IJtt'I klldlUS,. tuck·ttndtr douW. Pr.tn. Helttd Mlrim• mloilpool. __ .,.,,,, SIUllU, thtrtpy patl Aft Ide• rlor mall'lttMnet pl'OYlded. A ·-~ .. 11o<lous 11¥1 ... 1'111, -'rior -i..$65,495 .... ... _ .. , .. ___ . , . 644-7662 JG ::;;•:.:n;::•;;r•:.:l _____ _::G;;•:.:ne::r.:•:..1 -----1 REAL TORS C•ll Anytime ** ** ** * TAYLOR CO. * BIG CANYON C.C.-$124,500 Spectaoolar open beam ·~el\fllg~, · µirge rooms: & a teri'ific floor plan in this 5 bed- room home. Family room, formal dining room & 3 baths. 3 Fireplaces & 3-car garage. Fine carpeting & drapes. Quick possession. ' 10ur 28th Year'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Roal! ''Overlookinv Big Canyon Country Club'' NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644.4910 General General GALAXY VIEW 4 Bedroom, 4 bath home. Beautiful decora- to! furnishings included. Large, covered pool with roll-back-roof ................. $245,000. BIU GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 B•y1lde Dr., Suite I, Newport Beach 675-6161 General MACNAB IRVINE SPYGLASS RIDGE Spectactilar view -professionally decorat- ed 4 BR, FR. $98,500. Loia Miller 64U235. (Ql3) . IRYINE J.ERRACE ·VIEW HOME Gorge<ius 91ew eztencling from ocean to Fashion Island. 2 BR -conv. den -pool home. Quiet street -low main!. grounds. $19,500. Tom QU8eb 644-QOO, (Q14) 'JUST LISTED _;-125' WATERFRONT Terrific for indoor/outdoor Uving-<lnter- taining .. Beauilfully remodeled-huge MBR suitO-'-addiUonal 3 !!R's, 2 baths, formal DR, lg. LR & FR each w/flreplllce:Noth- ing like It in Balboa Coves. *170,llOO. Gloden Fay 64U235. (Ql7) . ..... ' ' [Irvine 1-·-~"'c.o.-I I OI Dawr Dr ... IM2 .. 2H 1'44 -'44-1200 ' General CAMEO SHORES Q\ltstancling contemporary design~ four bedroom home with magnificent white waler and canyon view. Three UllllSually arranged separat.! bedroom wings. 'LOV,e!y' lndcior ·planUng with ·skylight. Sparkling pool and re- laxing saruia., Gracious living ~ilOlll. dining • room 1 .arid bi-eakfast room arrangement .. Three car garage'includes .boat storage. Next to private beach. Call 67&-7225. Remodeled EASTSIDE COSf'A Pl-1ESA. New Carpets and Drapes. Corner H9me. 2 Bedroom, l Bath. WON'T LAST! Call • now, 646--05.55. Secluded Duplex FRilr.Pkltlc Cbm ffll'hfrif: llV Slipertor AIMut to l'lcondl~, 11ld dlr1ct1J to #12 Robo• c:-t. . .. ·. 11flrb1• (714) MU141 ___ . ...,' ,._It ...... --k•-tlhdtlc 11.C., ... ,, ~.,. K.IMt Cll',..., .. ...... c.... • Im frrlClfll ,.,C,, I"' G} • =-=--Owner transferred, leaving Garden Settire. Pr t v a c y May 3l!lt, must seU! 3 BR, Galore: Pa rtia11y F urnished. l.~i BA, Townhouse In beau. EASTSIDE COSTA MESA.. t1ful Fountain Vallel".· Own. Each are 1 . B e droom . -------- er ha.~ reduced price for $3.5,500. Call an y t r me, Goff Course 1 "" ..,,, 646--0soo. __.-... Pastoral .Paradise 'J!; II GOOD\\'IN .... /\ "' v DUPLEX 2 Charming cottages near park & beach. 1-Bdnn., l ba. each. Always rented, ·winter 8t sum!!l_er~2,500 Call: 673-3663 b-IJ-ai!RI ~8. associated BROKERS -~£ AL T()q S '~1.~ W Bolbor 111 1~1 l You have a go1den op. portunlty to ach~ve that rare combination of distinctive charm and elegance In a settfn& that Is a veritable Eden. Cooled by IOfi breezes wafting m,centa of flekl and lake mingled with the 9lrll•Of birds right lnto your own nesl, yoo'll thrill to the exquisite Mcar, and Incomparable eomtort afforded by this v e r y special home. You must ex· perience thil one -we can not dellCrlbe It. $68,o:x>. Call 54&-2313. OPEN tJL 9 • R"8 RM lD 8E MOEi ~ 11~6'111 $©\\.~lA-LG'BtfS .. Thal Intriguing Word Game with a Chuckle ..... ., ""' .. fGllAll-"'"---- 0 r:".:-mbt:r ...1. ::: low to form tow tlmp1-word&. I RUQK!'S I _·1 1-1r . I'. { i Lt i i I RYTOF ~ I, I ·I" I Toll·monoreo1-01any. ~-=-==· :::· =-=~~ cnoebeot!Mend of !My.or. I SOPREC I ""' • 1--.· l;..~ . .:;.I ~l,:.;..;.l .=-,....l -1 G ~i::: :0 tt.. ~i!.,= L. """"'.-L . ...I..-'·'-._--'-yo< d"°lop """' ... No. 3 l>olow, . ' ! "l'lks"tS;~~~s umas ~ I' r I' r f.. I· ! li<~~e lfTTfls I I I I I f SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 700 \ l 18 ROOM MANSION \\'fouaht 1ron fence protecta magnificent 18 room estate on picturesque park-like grounds. Veranda entry. All spacious rooms. 5 bedroonis. Secludf'd master quarters with private garden view and 6th baU1 . Goum1et Id!· chen \vllh builhlns. Fonnal dining l'OOITl. Library &: 1nusia chambenl with llre- place. ''BAlLROOM" with dance :flOor. O>mpletely separate 2 bedroom GUEsr HOUSE \\'Ith kitchen and bath. Great for \\'eek-t-nd entertalrllng. FANTASTIC! CaU 64!>-0300. 101!1 \I I . OI \0\ " R£A,l<JR\ Get YOIR' Weed Dil)ger You'll be dlgglrw Up the v.·ttds arowxf thia one. You \\/On't really mind when you see the 1noooy )'OU'll S8V!' on lhil 3 bedroom, 2 b&th home. If )'Ou're the kind of J>E'raotl who saves nM>ntY and who would like to d~ate a hofl'M! the way you want lo, you'll already ha ve a JtOOCI start with the beautitWJy panelled living room and brick fireplace. Quality bulll from the word "go," Kitchen hru1 a 1fU built-In R&O and stumung cabi.nttry, Double attached ·~arn~e. Qui<'t stt'ei!t. At· ti't'lchve neighborhood. Pric- ed to move quickly at $28,250. Convenllonal tenns. CaU NOW SU-2535. OPEN 11L 9 • IT'S FUN 10 8E NICE ~: Rililill IRVINE RANCH Give yourself a break, buy th is 4 bdr, 2 bath home sur· rounded by parks, teMi!I L'OurtS, &. SV.'lmtn!Jig J)bol. AJI this for $36.000. ~nted by Linda Reechia -Red * SOMETHING SPECIAL IN COLLEGE PARK * Carpet, Re11l!ors 546-8640 !Mc~ Boy A spafkling clean weU main- tained '3 bedroom, 2 bath home "'ith fonna1 dlnlng, !amily room, pool sized yard and inside laundry on a lovely tree lined low traf· fit street. ST:>-6679. ONLY $33,950 Nigel Balley & As5oc. REALTOR Invest Wisely I BY OWNER 3 br, !rplc, <."OY'ered patio, new kitchen, 64(}.(1166" or 640-0'227. Belboo Penlnsull .DUPLEX-47',5GO 2 ~ 3 BR., 9 ba. 2 fl'l'L MOdt'i'n· &: rclurbl!hed ~ car gar, Act fut! I --GE.MMi-- 1610 W, O>ut HW)'., N.B. REALTORS 51U123 Coll!!!! P•rk BY OWNER, 3 Br, 2 Ba. $.16,500. 545-00 Coron• del, ~ TJtACT FEYER A daeaae that attacks wbst .)'OU .dllcov.r. 'that ....,. third ~ on your block · )o(j(ii' alike! REMEDY: · The un.onct. °"""' lllati· lands and an extra thup 3 bedroom horrie '"'1th pool $ed yard, wall,lng d1&t""" to private beach. $62,900 tee. can 6"1S-6879. N""' lalley & Ass0c. On•ner leaving. ,Hu.gt' 4 lxlrn1. 'REALTOR Gani.n · ,.. li;tit trees. 3 e C~M DUPLEX e baths. Covered patio. Faml· Assume 7% loon ly rot., fireplace. Forma1 2 BR&: den & 1 BR wllt dlning nn., built 1 n • · Walk to be.Ch. 173.500 Prestiglou5. brl<. l42.950. OPEN DAILY 1-5 ~1720. Qw.,... trans. Park-like yanl. Sl3 ORCHID 3 bdrm& .. · 2 baths. Dining Oceanv1ew ~l~t}' 6"13-2100 rm., bulJt.lns. Fireplace. BY owner-Lm k Harbor Patio. Boat & camper ac· View, 4 BR, tam. rm;, 21Ai ceu. Large a.torage area. BA, 2 frplcs. wet bar, self. bric $31,950. 540-1720. cleaning oven, alr cond, Owner sacrifice. Spa,nish 3 upgraded thruout, P rO 1. bdrm. 3 baths. ·tnfluentlal Japaneae ldacpg, Catalina home. Family nn. format view, $88,500. 64+-8.'S99 for dining rm., Bu l ll ·ln5 . appl. - Fireplace. ,TU> roof. Model IRVINE TERRACE condiUon. Near c oun t r Y Great family home. 4 Br, 2~ ·~ub, brtc $46, 750. 9'$-2390. BA, lam, ,din, utll nn.1 ne MedltelTanean ~. :'!!:'1wn1c1~= · ·Villa 'In yanls. PrlnclpalS only. 673-3001'. Owne~. Corona del Mar NEW ouPLEX -ere•• ..,. Let us show )'Oll a really view plus extf'T'.lslve green unusual home with many in· belt -$too.cm. Prin. only. terestirig features. Nicely * 673-9739 * located on large private cor· Cott• MeN . ._. ner lot, Two bedrooms, tv.-o ====----·I baths, dining room, lovely patio, 2 fU"eplaces and a goodly ,nwnht'r or extras that are important in a home. Call 6'J"3..«;50 for an appointment. $m,CXX>. • OPEN m. •• rrs fUH TO 8E NICE/ FORECLOSURE 5 +Gum $29,250 AGENT 645-0303 I ~ *~.el1x by th• Pool* Quiet 2 story, 2 BR1 l'ii BA. Adi.lit condo. E·111de. CM. Steal thi~ from Owner. Anx· ,.::::::::::;:::;;~:.;;:~~,.-: iouS for Quick Escrow! I • •· •· • • a • a a 963-2187 alt 4 PM. anY.fune t,tESTLED weekends. IN BETWEEN OF..SlRED Location. fdesa -Veme No. 2 yr. lmmac. 2 aiory, 2300 sq. !t. 4 BR. 3 BA, lam. rm. Nr. Elem. & Intenned. ·sch!. A'lall July. By Owner $44,950. 561-eOO. ALL THE TREES IS THIS £UST0M 4 BEDROOM 2 bl\th, Eutside Costa Mesa home. 114'x.1S3' R-2 lot al· lords complete pr I v a· c y . Olmer ,...W. exchange or tell MESA VERDE Lovdy 3 BR, 2 BA. block n....n EvH, wall >an! & pa~ 'IUi« ...,.... l"elident.lal area, 10~ down, al $37,500. 54;66llO ......... HERITAGE . . REALTORS I a •·• a a a a .a a NO SPRING ~LEANING \ lll.000. * - COLJ..EGE PAR K C>m- brldge Model 3 BR, 2 Ba, 2 frplcs, f'edecorated ir)s:ide & out. By OWlll!r $34,950. 9'19-0618 f BR • Sharp! Ex« Home w/m.any extra! .t nu carpet. By i>Wner, ,anxious. $3'4,190. Principals onl.Y. (1\ 82&-667lor82HaXI. BY 'owner. 4.X1 F.ather St, !BR, 2BA. bltllu, qulel atreet nr achools & abop- plng. $34,500. 83'1-'f!T. BY OWNER • S Bdm + lae rftm Jtm l.tlnal -cul de aac Vic &d< Bay • Pr\N:. Oob' $29,500 Tel ;44-T.ISI BY OWNER, ~ BR, 2 BA. crpt•. drrs· .-110, c1u-...1poo1, '"-lo .. 1m1,_ 1 ' • • • • DAILY PILOr _ ...... ~I --~I -:--111• ..__ I~ I _.,_ I~ ~~ .. -" ...... -.:_L '~11;1 ;;-~I·~· l~~~l;-~ ... ;-~' ll!~[~ ~-~ ... ~-~·:lill! c--. SWHORE con AG£ ONLY $1300 DOWN Clean It alw'P· 2 A: den or 3 bdrm•. l~ bath. Selle.r wm pay $1.000 ot buyer• closing -.. Hmryl $26,000. Call -· · ''[I'~ [II Hunt1......., -If""!'!'!'!'!."'""" ,....,. Ne"l'Orl -_, ___ • ,_ -ue jk-•n• • H•-• Unfum. · m ·Hou ... ·Untum. '* "'UICK New ... oa IDYU.Wl.D l~!?l'~'l'~!~~~~11y~~21111?150~..-~ ... ~·~1 :=;;;1~1"~'~"';.;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I POS,.SESSION $29,950. e!,,N;:.,OY ~';!A:!, D•...i...x 3)11~1.aJp pdlie, .u. l•CANI>Y suPPLY ROUTE --POO' ~L , .....-, cedar and nwmn!ta -., CNO •~ • -r~~L•~n) 2 BR. 1 Ba ............. ~ ....-rvv the 1po.dous tile entry al. ""'"'-· N-n........1--·' ~"" ,, •v ,,~ ,. SR 2 •·••-·-3 .l 1aml!y rm l!I bod>, 4 ~· ~ ~ r.'..~Uon '"s~ ~·-~, -~ 3.a Well le tanJc on r.;r"lr· PAllT OR J'ULL -·~ • • ~uu ......... ~-;;;;i...,, "\ -..., 2 -IOY"4' thls 3 bdrm., •n -~. _ pa-~ n. -~··• ·•-· all ·~ 2 BR den 2 '· ail" cond"' otone ~. W,., crpla .l a.ocldo --•· ~ Family room, fonnaJ dtnJnr • -au~w •~w• Now avdable In or..,.. • ' -. -loc. -•· " -"•to -r-.... • Deluxe ftatures Include --u. o ... .t... for devei-..-. ""--n. _ _. .,, _ __.'-•-b ....... 3 BR. 2 btllhs •.•..• USS/215 -~· -~ n "w budwood 1Joan and & are•t l:fteoltelt Joca. 1Joor m-b I k "' ..._, ...-~"' --·-• -·-•-13S61400 beach lh c:bolce Hunt. Reh. ~ ovtnl:led lot oa qulet don acroa from park. Price firenlace.ao. i:vWi• use ~ ili11 bmem. Proptlle ~--' neverat ~ areu. You mq keep )'OUI' 0-<PI 71 3 BR. %1,i ba. '' -area. NJ~-~•• 9!!0. • ~ -~ •-J.~ ••· •-~ r y pubi rn•~ -~~-• t BR. 2 baths .... • ..... $2111 .-~ ---• Jiu --· Call w ~ .. -•~·-~ ~. In ldtchcn1 and bothl. Wallt pe• acre.' CAIL BW Go~ ~nt ...-~• All loca· ...... 4 BR. 2\1 ba ....... lm/«i> CALL 962 E. MUf:;i"l 8 d h'll in cloM!ta -OQen b9am Otil· 67S-4000. ~ are com:merd.a1 or i ' BR. A fain. rm. • .•. $475 LA CUESTA TIBURON ~e I 1::.: \"r!:ndryro ... r:.lorr.!~ PETE BARRETT ~!ltn>ilhed JI; : 4.13 W. J9th St .. Coot• M ... 'BR., tam. rm,. 2 bailto: -REDUCED-CONDO 1 1 1109 -'J>O ·-nn. ~ 1.854S.CoutHwy.,L&IUna Turtte Rock Hills •••• $415 3 BEDROOM & lom!al din· .~. Call --REALTOR-"""" dlltri-lo< our (Plcc&d!Uy Cimls) 5 BR. 211 ba ....... $365/J!fi !M9l trw l"OOStt +family room. MOit In-demand Ooot plan. REALTY O/lt£N11L.P•IT3FIMTOBEMUI 1.•<1 r.._ candy <Mound., Almond -We JJave Summer Renta.h; =":e..56 ~aim:~1,~ ~ ~~e2~~~· = u~::k1c!:.~ ~ llfiitll!JI oo AC No.-;;;:~ ::Cer.aa:mJ:,tti·P=:: ~:~r.::esao~~ I d h'll ~·',1-<.[1\ \ ( ~- MESA VERDE ~e'.s962.~appttosbow ~·~~r!~s~ Call An~.~~ ~ Ji@Df ~w~2auw~~:srui Ocean ~tsier:s·. pa:~~·~~~r\R re I DR!VE $44B,9YOOA,N 0 ROOM ..__ BOAT paagooe· •• 112 ~ ~~••0,.1 MONARCH BAY Ce 1 natiooaJJy on T.V. ••c.) W• bowe. Child/pet ok. Yard. JVf" .,¥_ <UC 1M'-"ll ls tuU HARBOR vu HOMES mt try are a national company. $1SO • NEWPORT Beac.11 2 REALTY Q1EXX Otrr 28 7 3 Sharp f bedrooo1 located on yard work, this Is real fun ~me be:,~~~ y4 ~~ Monteg6 4 Br, 1 Story latt/Crypt1 15' Good income potential. Yoo Br Apt. Partly furn. Car-A Company With Vil~ EUROPA DRIVE. =~~ ~ r lot aA~ ~ living, CALL S0.'45.1. bdrm.s,, wood paneled den, See VIP's golfing in Big Can-CEMETERY Lota Pacific must have U brs. per week port. Yearly. Univ. Parle Center, Irvinr 4 Bedrm. 2 baths, Palo Verde place ~ ·1~ bath.a 2 $28, 900. e.legant formal dining room, yon from back yard. Over VieW Memorial Park. Wlll llPllf'e thne (da,,ys or eves). $175 • COSTA MKa 2 Br Call Anytime, 552-7500 stme ftreplace, large llv· bl............'.. to ~~.:.... HI. ~-VA NO 00WN. l Bedrooms, spacioul'I fantiJy room plm 1ized cul-de-sac lot. Pro!. discount. 96:J-2187 after 4PM $2385 REQUIRED Howes. Pet conah:lered. OUit'e hours 8 AM to 8 PM 1_ _ drps Sprink uuo;3 L<.11,.,1u vwn.... secluded patio area with landscaped, covered palk>, ~ more lnformadon write: Gar. Encl yard l'i==== "16 rm ..... .,..., · · must tell. CAU. 96'J.8851. 2 battia. bulltinl, lovely largl' healed pool. Price hat boat pad. Fan ta s t i ca 11 y Commercl•I ROtn'E DEPARTMENT $250 • NEWPORT Beach 'Jli Jen, out-lighting, qU!et 4 BEDRM $25 500 worl<able kitdlen, formal J~<t been reduced. 1112,000. opgnuled. Island kitcheo, P 'roporty 151 #23," P.O. Box 1739 BR "°""" Parlly tum 4 BR. 211 ba ............ $4.15 ~rm.;GENT Vacant lor ~ ~-~1:1'=~~ f.::8!f ~ vaulted beam ceiling, Del Covina, Calif. 91Tn. ' Gar End Ya.ro · ~ ~~ ~ ba~ ··~·1• ..... $365 Cost• M.sa RNlty l" tile be.lb, FA heat, w/w trees. Wallt to Flw Points 'Ii. I~~ ~ We, foil wall paper, all 2. ADJOINING Income~ Include Jt>one no. , CALL 645-0111 ~ . wee u •7711 * c-· elec bl"-•·--~-Ing A ~---t t .,e,..,,,.,, tinted gla.511, paneled garage erties, cent. C.M. $75,CO'.t. --<BBllllf<.R. 2 ~.B. R. ... Hil •• ,. •••• !175 * -·~ ~~. ---~PP , c•=~• o "' REAL ESTA'JE w/wall of cabinets, Jawtdcy owne•. 64>-=IM""'5Ell. LAGUNA BEACH OFFlCE ~ T. Is •• ~15 CLUTTERED boat door. Flagstone patio the JowE'Sf: interest available. '" sink, and so much more! PARTNER Serving Laauna D Point 3 BR. 2 ba., fum .••.••• $400 BEAUTY ~~·:sty~= =~~mobile lJ90 Glenneyre St. Immaculate. Owner. Condominiums San Clemente,' C:-· 5 BR. 2~ ba.. •••••••••• $385 VA·FHA..OK. CALL 96U851. 494-9-t7J 549-03l6 644-7l44. for s•le 160 ACI'IVE wtm: S12,SOO CASH $160 • OCEAN View . 1 BR i Laguna Beach LIKE JHE BLUFFS?, .lo MAN AGE MEN T Furn. Yearly. Avail Now! 4 Bedrm .. 2 Bath, 1 400 sq. ft. CONJ){) -Park-like sur· ABILITY fl"r.) . WALK to Beach 2 BR. 't-~, • • ... ""··,wshr·r·. Askw' =._.Ing_ crptpri"'-.,.· ·111Y.1ir-CUSTOM BUILT ,unarng.. I NB 3 BR , .. ...,...., WK.I ••""'""'"'"' I ~ • Close-in walk to town & EMERGENCY! Tranderred ~ $43,IMXli:: Bl<r. '6'1'3-52:ii .9tart1ng la!ary of $300 per End gar. Priv. yard. Ma· bea~ N 4 bdrm owner must move lmmed!at· 642--~"". wieek plus equal share ot ture adults. $35.900. Call BA0KERS INC. r.."1'1. • ~ " 2 bath ly' Majesti 4 BR. 3 BA ~ profits shouJd euUy nel $225 • srEPS to. Surf! 2 BR. l•rwln re•lty Inc. home with lge. Ya.rd, room e · c • HUNTINGTON HARBOR ....,......, selected over -.""" Bltns. Priv patio, Small pet "SINCE 11WA" for pool. Heavy shake roof, plUJ rumpus room. $77,500. PACIF1C CONDO.~ bllc to .,_ • ., """uw ok --..., '614405 (24 hrs) shingle siding. Asking <_You own the land.) Attrac· beach. Low down. 2ll: ~t year. In1ormation to S245-SPACIOUS 3 Br 2 Ba. lst.Wes~ttn BaM Bldg. $25,500. F 1 $69.SOO. livE' terms. V. E. Howard 592-293G ~d lpablnt onlyrv! lnRel con-Poot Dbl gar Kkts/Pet D Uruven.i55~7P000ark, IrvNllnehho ~ ~~ ';!S~lde *· M..:. "':f~ ~~~; = Oree OSUre lSD~. & °'· ReaJoon, 00-8400 lncomo Property 166 g~~~·~~~ *. L';('~t.9ti~Ss ~ L:;~n• a:.ch 9 1.oaed prot.aional ~-~ ..... ~~ VACANT ~ ~ STEPS TO OCEAN DELUXE 4-PLEXES Pilot, P.O. Box l.SliO, Coeta FREE RENTAL SERVICE _ 1.t-_S2'7Wf~l•mson Mlnutea to trwy, SUb;rut Pennsylvania Dutch Cottage, 494-5671 499.2100 2Ji7.i:.·Fr~~ 3 t~R·~a~; (1) 3 BR (2) 'J BR (1) 1 BR Mesa, Cal. !0326. $250 • 2 Br. hse. Comp! $160 ~ Nice 1 J;h'. apt. 2 blka R ~1 ,,... u• '"O terma. arudous teller. CALL just redecorated • BRAND pool t nnl S45 500 ALL units have frplc'a, cen-redec. Bltns, gar, yard. Npt beach. Bltns, crptl'I, drps., e• tor ___ , 893-8533. NEW plush pile carpet &: ZONED M·l: "Handyman CA~Woob Ri::A'L TY tral heat, e.ir/cond., closed OOUTH LAKE TAHOE HgU. $2'25 • Compl redec. 1 br $800 custom shutters. Floor-ti>-Special" is the theme for garages. Walk to shop'g & 25 unit "Mom & Pop" $450 -4 + tam, frplc. Im· house. So. Laguna. Gar, • celling roe.ring b r 1 ck this older 1 bdrm. cottage. * 548-1290 * schls. Pool facil. motel one block to lak mac. home. Air/cond. Lake pa&, deck. Quiet & seclud· Fount1ln V1ltey TOTAL CASH fireplace in paneled family Exterior ot white clapboard OPEN HOUSE Dally~ Room' for 12 m<>n! uni~ Forest. ed. ···-· MR GI, -advan!Bge of room. MAN-SIZE sruoy siding, wood s h t n g I e GOLF COURSE s !32r11!. "1"'nv·.·.·,c-.G. !40.lm down, 1245 im lull ~I • Util Pd. s + study, $235. • 2 Br. frplc, bltns, OWNER anxious. .-.,.,.en low interemt: an.llable. 3 WITH LIBRARY. Copper roolline&. Nestled beneath r-.. ., price • ' • •• .,. • Gar. Channelfront. carport, deck. Nr. beach. master bedrm. suite. Bullt· Bedrooms 2 baths blliltin Kettle gourmet kitchen with tall shade trees. In the ESTA TE Corp. jg UNIT motel on H Newport. Child ok. In BBQ. 4 bdrm•. Family kitchen ;_;., di..hwulttt, all !be Jar.st features. Two "VlLLAGE" INDUSTRIAL 6~2 No 50 $3851m lull pri« wy NU-VIEW RENTALS 1275 ·New 2 Br Hse. 7/2. nn .. !lttpJ.,,. .• olnlng nn. cupets drapes brick fin>. big vanity baths, PWS A ZONE. An out.standing 2 + GUEST EXCHANGE ' Iii uNiT ;,,01e1 on the 673-4030 "' '494-3248 NU-VIEW RENTALS Built·tns. Privat• ,.,.r yard. place ui sunk<o 'uv1ng room, o NE y EAR o Lo· potential for only 1'3,950 539,250 Jake plus adJaoent 'lB wilt 1.ANDLORDSI 673-4030 •• 494-3248 Brtr: $38,500. 842-2561. bardv.-ood tJoon. A real HEATED, SPARKLING FUU. PRICE. R-2 LOt/wni take 6 tfntts. ap&rtment house. SJ,;185;1))). • l .. une Hills OWNER leaving. 4 bdmu.. 2 charmer "" cul-de-aac loL ROMAN T.J L"E D SWIM' MiS!ion Realty 494--0731 AGENT 645..0303 Huntington Seaob. '' Owner/Broker. C CJ I We Specialize In NeWport -'"'-C...C...---- beths. Extra-large patio. Setler transferred • rush. MlNG. POOL W/A SIZZI.r FOR: 10 to 15 .Units 1n Phil McNamee, VILLAGE Beach e Corona de! M6.r e NEW Wortd. 2 Br & den 2 Built·lns. Dining rm . CALL 893-8533. ING JACUZZI! Owner ha.a L•guna Niguel * SPANISH * Qrange County. -REAL ESTATE. 96Z-44TI. 1:. Laguna. Our Reutal Ser· Ba, patio, dbl garage. t0w Fireplace. Rear~ nn. priced the ·property Swisschaletw/Spanlshmotil. Sr»rling Investment Money to L01n 240 vice 11 FREE to You! Try maint. Pool $210. 830-4047. Very rooiey. brk $34,500. thou.sand! under market PANORAMIC VIEW 3 BR, 2 ba, remodeled to C Nu.View, 962--6566. value for a weekend sale. V~~b 0~n~~ra: ~ ~, perfection! Extra lge. yard, 6;;t2 , 1 1 TD L '-NU.VIEW RENTALS Mission Vielo OWNER moving. L a·r g e ~JMMICKSPRICEcJ36•95f!s NO water ocean vlew on the room for pool, Hurry! s oa n1 673-4030 or 494-3248 LARGE 2 BR, 2 BA, tam home. 3 -.. .. 2 baths. · to pect othe• from thls ~~ con-BALBOA BAY PROP. 40 UNITS IN A PARK c dol M 1p1 · Lale " L Rear livin& nn., .llrepla~. Bkr. 96U6ll. temporary arteci-"~ * 642.-7491 * ~ Outstanding garden apta: on UP TO 95% o~ron• er rm, ; ~-9~ :res ~c:e~ 8':=. ~~~: Price Reduced ~':. 21:;~ ~+~en~ * 2 UNITS* ~!pt ac:~s.1?:~!~~ 2ild JD Loans ~~ i!~. Hd~; ~~Newport se1cr- m1m. !J62..8llll6. $2,000 formal din .. breakfast ba•, Large R-2 Lot 7% financing, 6.7 x .,.,... 3BR, 2BA._ 2 t,,,lc. Wuhe, Blufft-Avall. N- TAHrrIAN Home • Owner ''READ THIS'' on this beautiful custom bltin kit., NEW plush crpt, Close To Beach $495,~. Principals only. lowest rites O r1n9e Co. dryer, refrig. L«e gar, Cpt1, 3 BR 2 tJf. 1 "' $385 Spac. 4 BR 1 1ty Exec. car-home with huge family NEW paint inside & out. Asking $52,500 Sparling Investment Corp. S•ttler Mtg, Co. drps. lM $500 mo. 673-6635 3 Bi ~ ha. ~~i~ · ~tlo nf!r h 0 me. Ex o t I c super modem kitchen, de-. IT'S A BEAUTY. i76,fM. (Needed. rental listings) 638--5662 .. 2-2171 54J..06JI Pblynes:Lsn lndacp. PRtio & Fixer • 4 Bdrm + luxe bit-ins • includes re-By owner. 831-2478 BALBOA BAY PROP. *42 u * Serving Harbor area 21 yrs. Cost• Mesi! 4 Br. 2~ ba. ~::::: ~ boat gate. otn rm & dinette 30' Fa R frigerator, freezer. ALL PANORAMlC * 67'7420 * n1'ts -3 Br. 2 ba. "Bonita" .... .u:n ott bit-in kitchen. Lrg sep. ... m. m. + terms available, no down to OCEAN VIE\V in beautiful ~ . NEED CASH? $1,000, or up MESA DEL MAR . _,., fam rm le formal Uv area. Vets. Hurry, this won't last monarch bay. Terrace, 4 br, PENINSULA DUPLEX to $3,000, $10,000 and more. 3 Br. 2%: ba., View • ••• $475 Muter IUite w /d re 1 11 1 g 40' Pool • Beach • . full price $28,700. 3 ba, beam ceiling, bltin kit, Furnished for summer ren-CENTRAL COSI'A MESA Remember Avco Thrltt for 3 Br. Close to C.M. High & m..UFFS REALTY 644-llll ara A walk ln doeeta. O'pt $27 500 formal din, view from all taJ, 2 BR, 2 BA, lower, $485 000 a Real Estate Loan. Upon Davis schools. $295. Ask for THE BLUFFS _Lovely 4 'Br & eust. drpa. 4 m1n. to SD ' • rooms. Room for pool on w/pat1o &: 2 BR, 1 BA, up-approval, use the money Jack Pede; 3 Ba, pool pri.vll. & yard trwy, 6 min. to heh. Walk to UNBELIEVABLE BUY OF Jar. lot. Only 2% yn. old. per, w/sundeck. Nlce con· f however YOU like. Also ask * 54&0022 * maintenance $450 per mo. shop'g cntr. $ 3 8 , 2 5 0 , THE CENTURY!! Real Elltate, 1682 Edinger $89,950. By owner. 831-2478 dition. Asking $72,500 Agent Ed Riddle Realtor 646-88U about our u n 11 e cu re d BUSINESS ione live in this lat & iut mo's in advance.. 4M-1954. · Just listed, you can't miss! Ave., Htmtington Beach. Lanun• Nl,.uef 675---1972, 675-4073 eves. personal loans. A V C 0 older 3 BR, l'h Ba home, 8 mo. minJmum or 12 mo ... """OTH Modem conveniences. 4 Call 842-4455. Open Eves. ~ ., N ...... * DANA POINT TIIR.IFT. $300/mo wtr pd. _ Suitable max. Lease. No pets, Avail """'""' queen lxlrm's. Hoge paneled ewport Hei .... ts Fourplex $18,950. 63> Newport Center Dr. for Studio or lmall business. 5/26. 644-4902. Js thls 2100 sq. ft. single fam. rm. with mammoth CONDO. 2 BR, 2 BA on Gou Du.plex $55,950. Suite 101 540-5148 or 548-T145. WATERFRONT_ Prlv. patio dory home. Carpets never fireplace, overlooks fan· 17' X 40' POOL ~sur~se,bb.111"'0c,bedn•u.t ~.•900••·. PRIME AREA Triplex $66,950. Newport Beach 833-3440 2 BR. cpt/d~ ga.. & dock for up to 28• _ lived on, decorator drapes, tutlc 40' pool. Deluxe .._ IQ .,.... Love · \VEBB REALTY 493-0.,,.... .,., • • ..... ~-fonnal di°"* rm., tam rm., bulltin kitchen. Bar. Full~ Oll-de-.sac lot, pool and fruit 831 a charming setting? uu CASH IN A HURRY! -wkbench, adult cpl only, no boat. 3 Br, den, 2 Ba, trplc. game room, plus solid brick size dining rm., nice trees galore &UJ'l'OWld lovely Lido Isle SEE this remodeled home PRU.IE East Side 4-plex, Borrow on your home, paid pets. $1'15. 5 4 8-8 2 51 Util incl. $550. Yr Jy, playbou81!. So much for the carpets, boat acceu with 4 bedroom, 21Ai bath hoi:ie, 1 with NEW kit. cab. bltins., enclsd gar, yards & trees, for or not. Use fund!! to con-548-1400. ' 642--0306. price. $39,900. separate storage near the upgraded thruout. E>cteosive * EXCLUSIVE * ~·~~~~· EW:r'~inL~ comp!. re fur b I sb ed , 110lidate bills, improve your VACANT 2 Br has all Sl4S THE mutts brand new 4 BR for PERFORMANCE beach, E-z·te~. NO GIM· U9e of mirrors and tile. Im-4 Bdnns., plus den· s baths. tam. & bonus rm. Plus 5-18-0378, 644-2259, princ. on-~manye, b~ ~~rtyeo': Aho 3 Br, rec rm & pool: 3 BA, poo'1 & yard maint.' 96:J..562'1 MICKS. ITS FOR REAL! possible to describe the ex· 50 Ft. Nord c'o r n er, large covered patio, dbl ly. tide tlal •"'El"str-~· in Kids/pets. .Agt. Fee. CUst crpt &: drps, $EiOO mo. OWNER LEAVING STATE -Call early 962-5585 tras that enhance this home. Magnificent, custom home garage & boat storage l!p'ea. 4 PLEX, $85,000. yrl,y gross n ~ cettl m.3430 1st & lut plus SXO dep. Must sell, beautUul 4 Call today • New listing • $170,000. ' $.52,500. $9500. Wik to beach & Dana ~GNAL m~O~TG~G~ 00: 3 br, 1 be., gar, crpt. dnt., l"'°833-=='8635~·==,-,~-~- bedroom. open balcony .. f· wonPR'tlClastE. -REDU. CED RENTALS Som CAL"L e~ U •·H l4 Pt Ha.bor, 496-5988. m•1 5'6--01116. $25<1. mo. lncd yd, =LUXURIOUS Vu on Santa fiee I library, garden kitch, & leases.: mer, winter ,• •• Lots for Sale 170 Monrovia, 64 6 -114 5 I Ana golf course. I.rs 4 Br, 3 cuetom crpts & drpl. Com· RANCHO LA CUESTA L __ ............._, ~ be.. Gardener. $495 roo, or munlty pool, "' 21 acre Lovely comer Joi, beautifully 3317 VllDO REALTY N REALTY VIEW LOT 2ND Trust Deeds MESA VERDE, Trl·level,. 16'5 mo turn. 1 Small pet. park, $40,250. SUbmlt on a Lido, Npt Beach ••r l'f t wport Pott Office BR 3 BA bltns """-ie....,.. Yr lease. 557.J3409. down. REAL ESTATE landscaped, low mainten-67~7300 O Fabulous View of Bay & PRIVATE FUNDS AVAIL. ~us(, ·~~--·SHARP 2 BR. 2 Ba Bluit FAIR 536-25Sl ancl'. Upgraded thruout. _ WNER LEAVING Ocean. Spectacular night Any Amount • · mo. · all bl . • 11..:.,,. s. SWIMMING POOL Mim>red closet d001'!, ""°' LIDO ISLE BEAUTY Fo• Oregon-wj]J ~I this 3 lime P800f""L Build )'OU' MESA VERDE 4 Bdrm Uk t-ms, C"P .. -~.pool. BY Owner, 3 BR, 2 BA, lge tone green shag carpets, Charming 5 BR. & family br .. 2 bath home m Newpqrt Dream Home on this 60' x * C•ll 675-4494 BKR. new. Avail approx. 'MS: $330 Mo. 642--0li7. t1nlahed bonua~nn, antlqU,! 41d~~· 1!, ~:~rt~i::~f;: cathedral ceiln.ig. 4 Bed· rm. 40 Ft. lot. Lovely ~eighta for $44,950. Walkiilg 92' Jot. Will consider yacht 15th. 673-4706 4 BR, 2 BA, FIR, DIR, rlua entry, w paper, 5 lndscpd, fenced, 1ri; H&F room, 2 baths, large family garden patio. $105,000 d is~ to elementary, in part. $67500 979-3194 3 BR. Businea zone 20) frplc. Harbor Vu Homes. Cl loan, $35,900, alt 2 pm pool, oversized dbl gar, 1rg room, all electric kitchen, LIDO REAL TY Heinz Kaiser &: Harbor ' ' . Money W•nted 250 Newport Blvd. $250. ~. 644-54il or (213) 79M824. 839-1895 ..1-. continuous cleaning oven. 3317 Via Lido,~!. Beach High schools Vogel Co Goll course R-1 Lot 548-~' .14.::90:::·:._ ______ •1 • VETERANS e fam rm, w/w crpts & ,,...,s, Realtors 548-g346 ' 158' on 15th Tee, ot Mesa $14 500 lat 2nd mortgage ,....,.. ~ blUn range, dbl oven, ifany extras to enjoy. 3 Min· 67~7 4 BDRM • 3 BA Jg 1. Verde c.c. Fantastic view, • or ! oosii.ble· l --,3-8:cR.=-"'2 "BO-A=$~2!15=1M~0~14 BR TownhOUse In the Heated 15'x40' custom pool, 4 dshwshr, FA ht. 8 yrs new. utcs to beach. Walle to OUR EXCLUSIVES .. , , e iv rm, 2 546-300) I 54~1926 ::::! ~~~;~ ~ ~~!; 2782 Mendoza Near schooi; muffs, bltna. Avail July ht. 2 b th Onl Extra cabinets. Good Joe, schoois. CALL 9f:i8.4«ij, sty, beam clngs in every ™Uft:U o. _.,, 546-5291 6".-6966 Owne · Call owner wknds or aft 5. bedrms, a s. Y close to shopping & schools, TRIPLEX -$179,000. Studto room. Also alt. 2 BR apt DANA POINT miidential 60' Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, • r. 644-1006. $32,500. NO do~~F paymts less than rent. 2 BR. & two :l4bdnns. w/sep patio, $99,SOO. x 100' lot on Oiula Vista St. Costa Mesa, Calli. 92626 NEW paint • 2 BR &: den 5.;:;,B:,,R"""J°'B"A""'F°"/R"°'D'"IR=-~,-_I ESTATE FAIR. . I' 3 SI'ORIES, bayfront, ocean GRUBB & ELLIS co. $15,500. 493-0441. Mortg•ges, ~..ai:wok· E~e._ f!lcd patio. 2 yrd. I Pool p' riv!. Haroo'r v~ view.• Bdrtm .. 4 belhs REAL'll'.>RS Mountat'n Dosort T ~--~ •~"-;=-:;:=· ~~;.,00-6583=~;...·_ Gonion Orovo $230.000 2863 E C t H CdM ' rust ~• •"'"j BR 2 BA In . Hms: $515. 833-3894. * VETERANS * 962·4471 ( ::::.) 54'"8103 LIDO REAL TY . J,;:7080wy, Resort 174 $195/rOO. Also '1 Br°.'1 l ~THE Blutts -New 3 B•. 3 HEATED 15."'<40 pool 4 large 3377 Via 6LJ7~7300• N'pL Beach San Cle m ente ASSUME approx. 40% equity PUT YOUR MONEY duplex, $185. 548-8945. ~~$475.1.eue. Br. 2 Ba. Only $32,SOO, No O\VNER anxious. Precious 3 "" & mo. payments of S~SSO TO WORK FOR YOUI Fount•ln V•lley N · down. Real Estate Fair. bdrm. Colorful landscaping. N'iission Vl•IO BY Own£'r, nearly new 3 BR mo. for 5 acres nr future Earn 10% interest on well· ewport Hefght1 !13&-2551 Formal dining rm., built· Buy HOftte Now, + den, 2 BA home, ocean & P a Im d a I e-Lan caster secured 2nd Tn.llt Deeda on 6 BDRM on cul-de..ac Just Hunt ington Buch lns. Stone fireplace. Large BY Owner, 3 br, Aliso Villa gol! course view, 700 sq. ft. airport. 64.>-3849 eve. Orange County real estate. North of Mile ~ Park. 2 BR, lrg yard, patio, gar,, patio. 2 baths. brk $31,950. Build Units Later! Condo. Plan B. Appnt. deck, priv. beach, $48,500. SIGNAL MORTGAGE co. Downstairs baa 4 br, frpl, ::f ~· ~vlb. 5/6 &: e VACANT e 842-669l. SHARP, SHARP 2 br. home. 83?-0077 Open house Sat & Sun 12-4, R•nche1, F•rms, <n4J ~106 utll rm. Oversized garage 1:1,:::=-!=:;:=-· ..::::=::::.. __ us. GOV'T. APPRAISED [ O\VNER moving. Filtered locatf'd on huge lot zoned Newport Be1ch 257 Via San Andreas, SC. Grovu 180 4500 Campus Dr., N.B. fenced yard. L&e all elect,,_S;..•;;;n;..l;;;•..;A.;;n;;;•:;.... ___ _ ' AT $Z7,250. pool, patio. Decking. Built-for five units, build now or 492-9498. ldtch & din rm. Upstairs'. Comer lot 4 BR. 2 BA, ins. 3 bdrms, 3 baths. lat€!?'. Asking price $32,<XXJ. S•nta Ana 2~ level aCl'E'S betwttn has lge tinlahed bonus rm, QUIET street, 3 Br, 2 Ba, b!lins, 3 ' YTll nc1v. J...011· Dining rm. lireplace. Fami· Chvnet will seriously con· Just on t he M.rket Capistrano & Lake Elalnore. I 744 sq tt includes 2 br Cll'ts, drp!!, ntnge &: retrig., DO\VN FHA-VA terms. C'tll Jy rm. Park-like yard. brk sider ALL OFFERS. Call HARBOR VIEW llOME Car-2 YEARS NEW 3 Br, 2 Ba, $3,920-acre. $975 down pay· closet!, sink, cupboards: $315 mo. 547~; 64S-46l5 dawn, FHA-VA terms. Call $36.500. 846-1383. mel. model garden cabana 7% VA, many extras. ment, euy terms. 8.13-3223 recreadon area. Xlnt tor Jge HoUMI Furn. or ~~7533·.· SCOTT REALTY . Just One Tri-Plex•. pro!. lndttcpg ..... .anien: 133.900. Sandpoint• Tr. N•. R I E w tod 114 family. $350 mo.' l5&.ssll7 Unfurn. 310 ~ Real Estate private lot! i Bdrm, 2 Ba, ~31C.09t Plaza. {) w n er " st•te an HovMS Fumlshld 300 FOR LEASE, F.V., 2 & 3 G 1 ..::::.,,::~~==-H"O"'ME='"'· Left at this fantastic price of , .. _ rm J rm ~-••~ BR Condos encl 2 onora * TRADE YOUR * 7682 Edinger Ave. 842~. -... ·• v. "~uuun· * ~ I k C h * • car gu,l.;..;=..:;.;..-----1 • for income • Five units $69,500. Walk to the beach. Opm evn til 8:30. ity Oubhouse k pool, gTeel'I-,..u C m Gener•I 20x22 bun rm, prlv patio'. with 3 BR 2~ BA owner's l'llsy. Qualified bu.yen get belt. Fee land, by owner ~ Will buy Yout property. AU Poets. tennia, sauna, child mE Blllffs, 3 BR, 11il bL, unit. Near Huntington Har· tbt interest break they're * BIG SUR * $69,500. Xl30 Port Provence. I --I~ cash within 72. hrs. Call 2 Bedroom -on the beach -play area, South Bay furn. Lovely patk>, nr. pool ~·-Call 968 ••1 looking for. llurry and call FRANCJOCAN FOUNTAINS Wkly 9·5 558-1500 • Ask for ,..... 962-8851 .._ summer rentals -Realty, 962--3002, Owner I: bike trail. Uve like a king ....,.... · """ · mw for appt. to see. Tom Hoover, or nitel,y & 2 Bedroom -on the canal _ Agent at $395 per mo. * Crest Realty · ~t~~:,~Y d!in:ru~·I= wlmds H>-0'137. i t summer rentals -RENT or Lease Optkln 3 COBRSTA2 bMesa, super ~ 3 VACANT $19,950 bednns and sundeck above BEACON Bay Frnt _ 2 + Mobile Homes •m11 1 Bedroom -on the canal -BR, l% BA. Condo. Blins, ·. a. home, unf. Newly New carpet k pa.int, 3 BR l'h ltcal Estate, 7682 Edinger garag~. This o~e won't last, guest rm + apt, dock for 2 For S.11 125 _!____ 3f== ... Corona~: :/w, Nwshr/dr&·d refri&'i :!t. = ~ &: quiet: BA. $500. down to Vets, or Avto., 842-44$. Open eves. hurry. Only $52,200. CALL· -55' boat.a, dble a:ar, tennia. M BROKERS INC. Townhouse $400.00 ove. ew crp 11>1· Db Bay & Beach RJty. &?S--3000 $950. down to .,,..... M"'t til 8·30 847-8531 or 840-1351 116.'i.lm, 10% dwn. ''""Ider otor Home Rentais 5 Bedroo H b .... Prlv. patio. 1215 mo. "?-..;..:e::;:==~.::::::~1 be sold. can 8nytime. · · trades. JMD, 838-2257 m -a r O r 548-3643 aft 4 pm. Condomlntvms DRAW THE DRAPES 11!~!1 View $600.00 Unfu 320 SCO'rI' REALTY, 536-7533 I HARBOR Vt e w Hms • SALES l LEASING I I~ S Bedroom -$pw:la.sll$675.00 4 BE~RM 2 B.A.nf, .eparate -~".'~.-:.............. - LITTLE RANCHO 81~ ;::!~'Tn~~-i~t:aer::=e.1 • j • ; · Montego. 4 Br, 2 Ba, FIR, Ml eervlce fa cl llty ~ · 5 Bedroom _ -Lido lllle ... family nn, new crpts, drps, Coltl MHI " on ...... i_ J•-Jot zoned IM 1 T h he 1 , DIR. Owner. $64,500. O Ml ff . irummer ttntal ... paint & wallpepe.r thruout.o-:.;;;.:.::...:.:;:::_ ____ , Wut -·-poo • 0 go \\'It l poo JS 83J...3894 mar o or om es NO tee $350 + dep. ,~ unlta rn... slu a cute little a lovely Franciscan style , · Illa-. 67>7225 EST • AIR 2BR condomlnlum $220 mo 2 BR house. Anyono can home. Ente:r!&inin,a features HARBOR View Home-3 br, 2 Busln... $105 • UtU Pd. New A nice ATE F 5J6..%16t crptl, drpl, dah}wah, fiid qualify. St>oculalon dream! • cul<tom wet bar and lam!· SPANISH HACIENDA ba, lam. rm, llv. rm, din 531-6800 Opportunity 200 Bach. w/gar. ~ ltudeltl, Huntington llNch yro. Water pd. 56!-5283 p:J.ilOO CE Jy Jivin& Is reserved for the Desperate o~'lX'r must sell nn, Jar. yd, r~C(', $68,500. OiM. l!I Toro lo< PERFORMAN rumpus room. Call us aboui lmmro. 3BR. 2BA, like new Ji44..S0!5 HEMET SJB5 • Util Pd. 1 Br. Qcoan. 3 BEDRM, 2 balh, toWI>-;:o;...:.:;;.:... _____ I 847~3584. this trg 4 bedroom home. carpel~. drapes~-~~~· 5 BAYCR.EST-Extrn Clean 10 x 45 1 BR. iv/covered A_NIMAL LOVERS front. Beaut loc! Le,runa. houM. $215. per mo. BR.AND new 3 BR. 2 BA, PRESTIGE Tract 3 Br, 1% tor PERFORMANCE min to beach. l.AliC V.'tll 4 Bdrma, 3 Bath1• family pat)() on xtl'I. lrg lot. Adlt 000 KENNEL, baud· $2!"4 -Lrg. 2 Br. oce&n Ninr Bltlns fl rtplace In carpets A drape~ attached ba, 2QJc25 fatn rm, 1900 ~ft. 963-5621 ke:pt lot, fenced yard. Rm, formal dining room. J)f.l'k, No pets. $3,SOO . Will [Qi( and grotrnils, Bact apt. 2 bllai beach. ~· Xln t 'Cond. & ' loc. gar, pa~ $215 ptr Fp,1_!'.°:!:r'.~1!.'?'oafn~ OWNER leu1J1g. CU•.tom 136i::;1·P~~iTJfW'ANCE Dy Owner. 165.900 646-ol4t16 COMider ir>de to. equity in e s.,yAL·LBettANYTol l ~E e NU.VIEW RIN ALS AGENT "2A47l orl;';'mon:::;tb.;::,..:==:-~--I ..... ,__..,. ..-..--... pool Renr living nn faml OCEANFRONT sml home or condo. Carl I cj "' m-«>30 or ~ e:.a.I.. , Huntl__._. ·--·h Jn/ouL Clooe to achls, · . .. . 8·17-3584 N"1son. 646-3921 or Eve. '1S.1117 NEWPORT HEIGHTS ..... 103. A1k for Delo.1c..,;;...;.;.;.;"•=·-;;;..;·-=~--I ahopa, bch A trwy. $41,500. ly rm., lirep~. Dining rm Duplex, owner/ a i: en t 1- By o..... -Shag ....,,els. 4 bdnns. Boat Irvine 673-9266 846-l305 AREA. Th,.. lood,_ c BDRM, $225. mo. Sec. ~ 2BR. 2BA. bltlns, c:ri>C.. drl>I, REPOSS ESS IONS ::,'~ ~l~'j!,~ul. b r k · MODEL HOME ~fi~';"·:..=. 't~.;n t~ll~hodbalho~,!!~•n,..tfy ~-=l:t,~ ~~ r.',':· ~!~~'."' prlvL ::"or lnformaUon and location OWNER selllng. Wro~t-• BY OWNER • •873-8563• "911 f:littt. I faJ ' tUMV _ , HARBOR Vu Hm'-c.armei, 3 BR, 11il BA. Crpta, drpe. mth.,.f11A&VAbom ... lrobdn po. l<,_lencinz. < 4 BR 3 BA+ bonua rm, BAYSHORES OWNER °""''1 ~. r·~~i,::::_marilhR 0 ~_!r··!.!"\,1!'1,!.B<>,ll<OJ' ~~-OlnM~On.54··=-ntJOOOL Contact • rmL, 2 batiui. BoAt ac-parquet fln, ahq crpt, cov -Acluln , ........... .. .... _.,.,.., .-.,. lnl.I'· 1;,o ...... • •"II•-UAI. KASABIAN cell. Dining rm.. patio, pailo outo 'pr Ink i. rs . 4 SOM, 3 BATH Fomlly • Elecctronlc Ml/Almbl tor. 2 BR. 2 BA, ftr.ced, $lsi 2 Br. w r, clryr, •Iv built-ina Nice yanl. brk. S57,00o. Principals only. Hom~. $61,900. 64i.3494. Acre•1• for sale 150 • L= Store t8M~ AllD 3 BR. 2 tty home rt!frig. Vn ~ ~15. $1'1'5 Roal E ol•I• HU644 133.lm. -8.JS.2616, IWUlOR VIEW BUILDER'S A'M'ENT70N : ~r!"t!:"' Newpori Beech -wlpao!. Aft. ho. rtl-8l30 mo. ~ all 6pm. fl'!ll\C!IASE OR 1 YR LEASE BY o.-,. beaul. 3 Br .. 2 UNlV ERSITY Par1< • 3 Br & ~m· ;wr:; Sol= Ololce ~. Tu.tin. Ap-HOLLAND ..... S.lts 1 BR. --$1<!, ulil pd. "Mab n.om For '-'' rat Profit "' •U•lned - 4-11<, 21' be.. 3 ru pr, t Bo. dell, uv, din nn, fr1>Jc, Atnum. Extra yaro. Comm. · Y I proved tor IS unit" 6CM1'1l or JWll.-Olllll ...._ fJlo CdM. L BR -4 ... cloan out tbe -)'OU aell thnluah ftlull-1r0t· ...,,, I'!" ll<&<:h. detalll Sl>o. tl!op. -· ........ privl. Prln<lpab .,.ey, Sy Ocoenfront Dup OX DANIA REALTY CO: l7l6 "'-•-Coot& Meta ' bochclor Uftltl lt4rt'I 115. ... t":""'"t jlrnl! Imo -U,. D&ll> Pilot Cl...Ultld eall -all 4pm _, -· Slll,lei) 5.!6-7329 Own<:r. 5.\Hl38. Prine. ooty Act fm.3112 " 84Wi60 * v.-.... Alt-no. !IHllO· wllh ~ Piiot Oa•llltld Adi. ~ I ' I l -381 ta .. " Ill Ti Hi I I B .. N' 2 3 ' ' DI N 3 A i D1 ~ - 1 " ' q -• ~ ! S\ ' u ' • ' B 2 ' I \ J l l 3 • • • F I l ( ( , : ' • • ' t : ' ' I I ' -' • ........ . •• f • -- I I -1 , -· •• -~-11~1 [ ,. I I .. _ I~ I ....---. ., I~ I __ ....... ............... ~~~~~~~M~~~·~M~q~"~'~l9~n~~~~~~~~OAJ~L~Y~M~L~Q~::I ~ 1~1-....... , I[!) I -I~ l;..--~l~:...""':il'.m -Ltoll---~l§l;lf!~-·~·-....... ;;1~;;;1 'j O.rages for R111t 435 lndlllfrl•l R1nt1I 450 Loci 555 O.rdenlng 320 Apb. Furn. 360 ~·· Unlum. 36$ ~:... or Unfvm. m ~m. o~ Unfum. 370 1--------Colli ""'"' COii• - Mlulon Vleio --=----,..-,;;.;.;.._D;..;l!_L_U_X_E___ ~C;;;oct;;;;•;M;•;'";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;C;o;ll;1;Mo;;;;H;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 3BR, 2BA condo. •nclud at· LIVE LIKE A KIN.,. APARTMENTS • !Ac aar. crptt, drpo, d1w. At Budget Pricesl self cleaning oven, patio, wlm ~• I I -FURN!SllED • ~ ~ ,. v ' .-,,. UNFURNimED T-U...,.,m. 335 * POOLS Huntlntton -h * ENCLOSED GARAGES t A 4 BR. Towobouacs. 1111 * CONVENIENT Ba. Bltna, crpts, drp!I, tenc· TO AU.. BEACHES Newport llMch Air Cood • F'r\llC'I • S SWim• tnin& Pooll • lleallb Spa • Tennla Oourta • Garno 1.1"9 BillJard Room. ls.drm.}~t163 2 Bedrm. l'rom 12<» MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE EL PUERTO MESA FOR I BETTER ~- .:;.;;;~A;L;7LS;P:A;C;;E~~:1 ;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1REWA'iu,, Waoo.n walk! A~-P!-~-,..,-.~ ... -.... ~-.-.-.~-nn~cd·I NOW LEASING cane, In.ltialis un ntetal e!:. ganJetling te1uu. SeMng Se.If Stw... , Huntlnoton 8each Lo!lt vie. or Vlctoria It only II( tatates, apt & Mini W•rehouu1 NEW M..l Plaf.'t'ntla. Lots of sen· lndu:oi 1.."01nplexe1. f"rtt eat. Various shes 1rom $7.50/mo. thnental value. 6*-4TI6 01· CU1ton1 Landscape Maint V lock it. U ketp the key. 9'W Sq, Ft.• Up aft 3:X> "'kdyg 63!)...t•7t. iTl•O S31-71SO On 5ite m.rr1. 24 hr. li'CCill •=i ! =d LOST r.lll.le Shepherd ntLXt'<I .. A Frank ?<.1. Nelson Co." Nomov<'ln-Nomoveoutfee .,.~~..,~~..,..,~.,! Y.'i huskey. Sllvl•r collar, 70 .:;..,neral 5ervlce1 Security Patrolled M-1 1300 sq. rt, front otftct. lbs. Nr. Vic. or llorl>or & • . Open Dally for Inspection lrg rear door. 12-10 Lopn Bernard St .. C.l\1:. Anln1al 110ME Se~itt & Decon.1.1.na. Han1ilton A Ne\\•land St., }lB St .. $l!ll ino. 6"6-5033 days 11teds n1edical atten. Unmed. t-"'rte t5tll!1Rtell. Call ?I-Wk, &11.0S19, l.t no aru, 646-0697 ~l !fves. Coota~t tH6-T229. 492--0627, 6 to S PM OOUBLE gru'llge tor rent. H 11 ~·10/lno. 177 E. 2'2nd st.. Rentals Wanted 460 LOsr :\l11lf' Shf'ltlf' pup. au ng C •t .,.,., ""·'"' -:o:nblE' 1'()lor \\'/"·hltt-onl --~~------1 osta "esa. v-u·,)Q'O,}, '* \\'A.Vl'EO GAR1\GE t<ht>sl, R n10. No collar or YARD. garage r;lellll_UPI· Office Rental 440 in Co:o:1a hlesa TO. ni.,·11 of 22nd St., N11tpt H.t·!uove-lrt.'tll<: dirt 1 vy. ed patio. 96W1111. I FROM $140 MONTH DULTS-LEASE ADULTS PLEASE A 1250 VILLA POMONA Z Br. 2 ba. CllJ'POrt, 2400 Harbor Blvd .. C.111. <n41 5574!020 RENTAL OFFICE OPEN 9:30 AM to 5:30 P?il *RENTALS* YEARLY From $650 Month SUMMER From $1200 Month ~. ~~ DENTAL sunE Nt'\vport Beach: Established dental suite s e r v in g Newport Beach & Coatn Mesa. :J operatorles, lab, dark roon1, p1•ivate Office & rec e pt i 011 area. All ca b in e t r y Installed. Ad· jacent to ~ID offices & pharn1acy. All ut!I. Air cond. !\Iusic & janitorial in· eluded . Fully carpeted & draped. Phone: l\1.r. Ho\\'ard !714) 64~101. 6•16--1736 Days Blvd. Rf'Y.'l\rd. ~t5t. Drl\"t'\.\'YS. grading. &47-2666. ~~~~~~~~~~1 1_,()ST tr\sh Setter. 4 O\OS .. Gf'.'.N 1'!1tuling. Tree/~rub c.. ;. Orangt'\vood & t~ilbert. GC. 11:1111 . Gar & :~ cle-anup. ................. ]( iij14J RE\\',\_RD! 61:Hillts' o J' Esl. 531-6.'\77, 551~1. 3 Br. 2 ba. gar, pool 1300 PHONE 642·2015 REALTOR 642·53l3 Duplex•• Furn. N1wporl Boldt 3 BDRM oceanfront, 2 ba. Avail now until JWlC 15111. $300. mo. 675-5366 Duplexes Unfurn. 350 Huntington leacb ll760 Pomona Ave.) Huntington Beach $14»165 BACHELOR &: 1 BR,. patios, frplc's priv. garages - Divided bath & lots ol closets.. Rec. hall, pool & pool tables, aauna baths. See for yourself. 17301 Keelson Ln, (1 blk W. or Beach, 1 blk N. of SlaterJ. NEW 2 BEDROOM 8'2-7848 l Bath, enclosed pvt garage WALK TO BEACH In duplex building, $185. per • mo. Manager at 313 Oswego, New 2 BR, Ci'pt/drps, Huntington Beach. dshwshr, frpl. 205 15th. 536-4152 ~84~7~"'95==c7=·~-~~~- $140 -ULTRA NICE Apt. 6 Pools. 4 1.1ardens. Sauna. Tennis. Prtvate pa t I o . Adults. Ph: 84&--0259. [ ~"for Rent Apts. furn. General SWINGER'S pad $295. a month, one bedroom, all utilities, on the canal with slip for 40' boat. Can sublease slip for $15.00 a month. Bkr. 675-7225 Balbo1 l1lond Newport Buch $29.50 per Wk & up. 1 BR, 2 BR & Bachelors. Color TV, maid serv, p0ol. The Mesa, 415 N. Newport Bl., NB 640-9681 FURN New 2 BR Duplex. 2 Br, gar space, on bch. Adults no pets. Yr lse. Res: 2131693--5743 OJ' Bus : 213/44H450. Santa Ane rURN Apt -Avil May 14th. Sublease 2 BR, 1 %; BA. Refs req'd. Adulls. No children, no pets. Ph: 836-4138. Apt. Unfurn. 365 BILL GRUNDY RHltor 675-6161 More Room-Less Money COME see a real garden apt! Like Uvi.ng in a home for $162.SOIMO. 2 BR, 11,2 BA. 2 prk'g places, priv patios & rec areas. Wilson Gardens, on Wilson St., W. ot Harbor. No child./pet. 2283 "Fountain Way Erurt 64&-2846 Pork-Like Surroun~lng QUIET DELUXE 1, 2 & 3 BR APTS. Pvt Patiol * I-ltd Pool Nr. Shop'g * Adults oni.v Martinique Apts. tm Santa Ana Ave., CM Mgr Apt 1l3 646-5542 ADULT LIVING FOR LESS e I Ml. to llMch e Sun Decks & Patlo1 • Carpets, Drapes e Loads of Parking • Gor190s-Pool e Rec. Room 714/646-6505 $130 '"' ALL unLm1s PAID 1 & 2 BORM'S. Furn. & Unfutn. Av1il. 1959 MAPLE STREET, COSTA MESA Alto Gar1ges for Rent Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apll., -'----------Furn. or Unfurn. Newport Beach ''Rent A Piece of a ~alece'' Costa Mesa TIIE EXCITING PALM MESA APTS. PRESTIGE OFFICES Fountain Valley, Bcauti· ful new building, ground noor, 3,000 square feet, will divide into smaller ottiecs. 50c per square foot , inclUdl!'S carpets, drapes, all utilities, jani- tor service. Call Marilyn Stovull (n4> 832--5440. OCEAN and MINUTES ro NPT. BCH. UNION BANK SQUARE Badl, 1 & 2 BR. from $150 ORANGE _ Rll-8230. · 32' FURNI1'lJltE Vun for '-;jjjijjji;iijjji;ii;ii~~~ \VHITE fcnt. pug 1)\\11, lost locul fun1 h.'\\llS & pn'I • 515 vl1-. 20th St. ,'-c trvlnel huullng. ~R-L-162. 500 C~I. Ans, to l\llNGTOJ, Ll)Ci\L ino\'lng & hauling by Announcements ----------1 RE\\'AIW! 549-4020. student. Large truck. Reas. WRITERS :\11NIA'rUt~E br,vn <loxic, :\1·1-1846 or 5..14-216-1. Small groups in n1y home. 11111.lt>, art>u Of ·Mth Balboa, Sl\IPLOADER ,ti dump truck M. \\'. or TI1 classes. Be-NB. 6T;>-1889 or 642-ZJ45. \\'Ork . Concrete, asphult glnners o~ experie-n~. S~:T"O"i'.lk\'ys. 1 \'ound . ''h:. 11uwing. breaking. s.m.1110. Critiques, field llipg, shrle Post olth·p or i\larkel Ball· Housecle1nlng shows. 962-2213 after 5 Pill. kf't, N.li. 675-0922. HOUSE OF CLEAN Floors, \vindo\1·s. t\"Ulls, t.·ar-1 ~ I I~ "'"' .~ ""n'"'· 7 Yrs. '"''· . ~ . ln1lruction ,.....--fi.1:.?-6824 nr 646-2S21. MIC 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiii~ IF. X P E R t EN CED house P I • cleaner and e.>:(.-ellent cook. _•r_so_n_•_• _____ 5_30_,schools & \Viii babysit. &l5--8148 aft 5 VETERANS Earn $4.58 to $7.00 per hour guaranteed by uaing your G.J. Benefits \Vhlle at- tending Santa Ana College. Call now - 547-9561 Ext 370 575 pin. C•r pet Cle1nlft9 Ebronix Floor Care & Windows Instruction• Tutoring Cllnlc Dutch Malnt Serv. 537-1?11:11 READING Dodlc1t1d CIHnln9 SPELLING * WE DO EVEHYTHING * MATH Relt. 1'"'ree est, 646-2839 HARBOR GREENS Furn. It Unfum. Fr $130. Bach, 1, 2 & 3 BR'1. Models Open 10 'tll 7 pm. 2700 Petenon Way, CM, nr. Har. bor Blvd. & Adams. HARBOR VIEW Adults, No Peta. 2000 sq It modem o"l-bldg NEED crew for 6-8 mo's ·~ M-· Dr. u" ' c-·lse to Caribbean aL...A_. Free Diagnostic Testing Xlnt Houseclean1"-.,. El partm '" d lgned .wo.r. "'"°' \Vlll divide. All services. ,.. uvtUu 979 1626 ·~ egant a enl:) es (5 blk.t trom54&-N~ Blvd.) r-n-..ted, panelled. 6th 26' sailbolit. Pref. fem. ~ By Day. Own Tmllllportatton v.·ith a Master's touch, su-.._.....,.. 1"30 N "" d * 83&-0IH8 * perb house security, exclu· floor. Sacrifice sub-let. Ideal ,Ir' • o ('xp . .x:n name GIRLS 7-15, S\\•in1. surf. sive Vena.Oles Club and * CASA VICI'ORIA * for insurance office. Call address 8c phone to :l\f.W. volley ball, ru1s & cratts, & L.\1 COMPLETE HOUSE bar 1 & 2 BR. Furn & Unturn. (714 ) 547-0039. Gibbons, P.O. Box 2603 good vibes. 5 t<.tornlngs a CLEANING SERVICE. pool with unique Agua • r..-,, dra-, D/\", TV Fullerton, C.a 9a>33. y.·eek • 4 wks. Con1plete info * 646-5943 * 548--3068 * fountains and formal gar· .......... t""~ Y".. '' 2 BR 1~2 BA studio $175 plus dens. All part of the South ant. Pool. etc. Coore by & SPACE available, Cost a FULLY LICENSED Call ~1712. Cleanlna: Jlomes & Otflcea dep., avail May 12 and 1 Coast's finest apartment inquire about our Move-In Mesa * SPIRITUALIST * THE Wet Canvas Art Gallery Call ROBBIES RAGAMUF BR, $140 plus dep. carports, comniunily. Allowance. 525 Victoria St. WALKER & LEE BLDG. Spiritual readings 10 am·lO 18582 Beach Blvd., lt.B. * 673-0S19 * ~~~ry15._1nr shppg & f.rwys, 1 Bedroom/studios from $195 at llarbor, .C.M. 642-8970. 2790 Harbor Blvd, Harbor at pm. Advice on all n1atters. Oil PalntiJig ClaS8Cs 'MQ-\.1' 2 Bedroom from $305 2BR IBA furn $220 Adams, First class deluxe 312 N. El Camino Rt>nl, San ~2929 . J•nitorfa1 CH RMI G Mod '· 9A .. 1·1 d k 2BR 1 BA furn ~90 Clemente . 492-9136, ~~~~~~~~~~! __ ..,.. _______ _ Also Avail June lst, 2 br, 2 * 646-8666 * service. Call Gene Hill, PR~I Pregnancy. Con-~--· bonded. 7 Yrt exp. in arta. 546-0370 ~ ' • ' • ' . • A N _ 2 br, 2 ba, ell!' open ·"1-1 us · un •• suites including air, music, 492_0034_ · . ~ OFJo~ICE cle&nin ... , 1 1 C , d , ga.Qle-n apt. bltins, $165. ~~ -151 E. 21st, c.~'I. carpets, ample parking full I I - ba bltins, incld yard. No. 1 ·BR. Furn It Unf. Pool nr 642--0200 I 557--0136 f id en t , s y 1n pa th e t I c . 64~ or 646-2521. C.M. 548-4411 or 979-0745 shops. Adults, no pets. Util EXEC==u'°r"r"'\TE"'°"-,u-,l'"te-s,-~im-.1 pregnancy counseling. Abor· Painting & ' " ATI'RACTIVE large 1 BR ON THE BLUFFS pd. 1884 Mnrovla. 548--0336 mediate occupancy, Coast Uon & adoptions ref.642-44 P1perh1ntl"9 NEWPORT HEIGHTS quiet area, adults, no pets. AT NEWPORT Huittlntton llMch Hwy, at Newpoct Blvd. APCARE 36 B1by1lttlng AREA. Large 2 bed-Coin laundry. tl35. 646--0176 Ample free par king. PREGNANT? Thinking ab-· ~----No \Yuttne room, built-In kitchen, * * SPACIOUS 2 BR. crpts, From Newport Blvd., tum at LA QUINTA HERMOSA 642--4644~ ortion? Know all the facts CHILD CARS ln my borne, * WALLPAPER """' d h .L dra ~40 "·~-' H 'ta! n--d (I block FULL SERVICE first! Call UFE LINE -24 dependable & reliable, Child· When .,,..., call .. u •• •r it w• ... er, wall to pe1 .• ,, . ~n.ILl•iru. pref. osp1 n.ua Spanish Country Estate Liv-h "'~~ =.f)o'J tro 2 5 5464145 ., J"'.. ,_.. wall carpets, drapes, 673-8145 aft 6. above Pacific C.oast H.wy) to ing & Spacious Apts. Ter· Westcllff Bull ding rs, ........ --....-. ren m to • -• 548·1444 eves. 1--------·-I eel $250 NE\V 2 BR, 2 BA, drps, entrance. 900 Cagney Lane, raced pool, sunken gas Corner WestcliU Drive '& LEARN : Auto suggestion. It Bu1ines1 Service PAINTING It rcpatr, 35 1l'I $25 WEEK & UP CmOonl th gAd1ragel. O pol r crptg, Pool, BBQ, Gar. NTewpol 1'!., Bea(cnh,4Ca) .... ~~ BBQ. Unbelievable Living. Irvine Blvd., New po r I can change your Ii I e. •• \l.'Orkma.nNhip KWlf". Take • Sleeping: Rooms • ults, n pe 1. Adulls only, no pets. 376 w. e et""'"e-: VW"'l}Ul)I• I BR. UNFURN $165 Beach. l\-1r. H 0 w ARD Instruction. counseling, lee-BOOKKEEPING & Account-advantage or my exp. • Housekeepini 1\ooms Realtor 6424353. Bay. PARK NEWPORT 1 BR. FURN $185 645-6101. tures 54~2529 ing Service, systcm1:1 de-"'536-""'7056~;c.· ===~~- •Ocean Vlow Apts ! ELEGANT 2 Bew/gar, fi'pl, Lrg. 2 BR, apt., d'P', APARTMENTS 2 BR. FURN $215 OFFICE AVAIL YOUNG COUPLES 18·1' + signed '"" YOW' bookk,.plng TOTAL SERVICES CO. BALBOA INN nr shops/heh. $350. Yrly. dsh\\'SI", pool, quiet area, ALL trrduiILITINESP PAID T"--I . I 1· Parties or meet cpl to C'pl needs. Free Eat Im ate a. Paintt"'"', Ute ...,_,_., A ts, o ets 11•=-man rvuie tl\V inn Call "Leah" 2·8pm. 539-3344 9'J8-4264. .,,d;.;:..., or;:;;,>;".:.:;' Ul5 ~T:;7~treet ~illi· Eve I wk 11 d s ~~only. $180 free utils. on the bay (4 blks S. of San Diego Frwy Beautiful office offer 1 _,_,, - S•lboa Penlnsuf1 I I I I I I Lux partm t li . on Beach, 1 blk W. on llolt reception. xerox & library. ALCOHOL54I~S....,,7AnonyfllO':ls· TYPING C PROf. paintpr, honest work, 1 FRESHLY furn duplex, 2 Balboa Island * SHADY ELMS-POOL ury a en ving to 16211 Parkside Lane.) Call 714-833-36Z!. Phone -••" or write LIBRA OFC. SERVI ES ttu. lnVtxt, tree ttt. 1 BR. 2 BA, tplc, lge pa.tlo, ---------l e Adults Poolside $145 up. j;yer= u:i~a:~Pa~7 .~~~<~n_4)_84_7·~5441-~~ 3 RM deluxe suite, adj. P.O. Box 1223, Costa Mesa., * MS 1150 * Refs. 54&--2159. aC'l"OSI from beach. Avail tll OCEANFRONT •Children dead-end st. 8,vimmlnz pools, 1 lighted 1 BR. Deluxe. Adult poolside Airporter Hotel & o .c. CaUSW~.NLeGahl~~0 52!1.C!!;_~Sf)o'J Carpet S.rvlce Pla~\er, P•tch; Repair J une 30 at $1'5 per mo. $175 177 E. 2'lnd St., CM 642-3645 tennis courts, plus miles of garden bungalow, near airport.. Full services, """'° t''" iN'1".,,.._ 644-1517. Channing Vu, studio, avail LARGE-Eaatside 1 Br. $130, bicycle trails, putting, ahuf· ocean. Frplc., lrg patio, 6 54clft .. no lease req. 2172 Social Clubs 535 JOHN'S Carpet & Upholatecy *All· P~~ ~~G Coron• del Mar yearly, adl!s • no pets. 2 llr $150. Crpt&, drps, bltns, Deboard. croquet. Junior l 's Jl!Xlis, sauna, tennis. $160. DuPont, Rm. 8, 833-322.l ";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;! Ori-Shampoo free Scotch· .,,....,1. r ~-'l:'lllwuatr• 1---------1 67J.6372 pool. No pet.. Singles ok. from $189.:lO monthly: also 1 846-0258. 1617 WESTCLIFF • guard <Soil Retardant•!. · Call li40-W5 FURNISHED Apt -$160. Util B1lboa Peninsula 615-1573 Bk:r. and 2-bedroom plans and 5 MINtITES to pcean, 2 BR, 3400, 1294, 756 & 540 sq. ft. LO~!.~~ DISCOVERY Degreasers & all colol" Plumbing pd. 11~ blk to ocean. No pets.1 ----------Eist Bluff 2-story town houses. Elf'C-bltns, OW, closed garage, Amp 1 e pr kg . u t 11 . PROFESSIONALS ln a field brighteners & 10 mlnutel----"------1 ~2500 __ Se_a~w-·ew_,_OIM __ . ___ 1BRANO New Oceanfront ---------1 tric kitchens, private patios shag & drps, eves/wknds Baumgardner No. 104 . of Amateur Matchmakers. bleach for y.•hlle carJ)E'ts. · L.R. CYJ'IS PLUMBING Cott• Mna Condominium. 2 Br, 2 Ba. e DELU)C.E e or balconies, carpeting, dra-962-5605 541 5032 Save your mone b) I Rernodela & Rtpaln Water $400/ Y I perles SUbleITanean park ~--=-------(Est. !966). lri 'w11'1 savl ng be t d' •-t · mo. ear e a s e · 3 BR, 2 BA A~ for lease. ' • Nawport Be1ch OFFICE sp&.~e for rent. (n4) 835-6885 (213) 387~3393 me extra PIJ. <' ean a ers, L&posaus, U1'1UlC'e!l, • Casa d. Oro 6T:>-7694 Incld spac. master wite, lng wlUt elevaton. Optional N rt Be ch W tcllJJ living rm., dining rm, & dshwashn:. 642-QSl MIC & maid service. Just north of ewpo a • es hall $15. AnY' rm. $7.50. BIA. Complete Plumbtna AU. ~S PAID 3 BR, 2BA, frplc. Beach & din nn & dbl garage-; auto Fa&bioit Island at Jamboree OCEAN VIEW: modem, all lll'ea, 1,000 sq. ft,. sharp,,;:=======; ch 110 ~ 1 15 0 _ 1 Compare before you rent Bay. Like New! $.)25/per door opener avail. Pool & and San Joaquin Hills Road. electric, crpts, drps, bltns, call Gene Hill, 642-0200. 11 :up ._ w' ha"',a r . tl5 yrs1.1-'~C,rv""'ce~. ==-====- mo. ~. 1 Recreation area. Telephone <n4l '"l900 halcony, pool. 1 BR., fum & t!IVI Sq Ft OFF1CE /kit & Loll llMI ,__ · ta coun I, M PLUMBING REPAIR Custom designed, featuring: e 1287 e _... unfurn. Lease. Adults only. """' · · w method. I do \\Wk my.elf. No job too small • S~~uligs ~ting~chen with in-Corona del Mar 865 Amigos Way, NB for rental lnformation Mafrai Apts. 1510 w. Bal· Ba, $155. ALSO 600 Sq. Ft. Good ref. 531--0101. * * 642-3128 * '* S<parate dln'g area Managed by boa, N.B. Cn4) 675-4nl. STORE $155, C.M. &l(l.2130 F d (f ·• I 550 CARP>:!' toe aale by Carpet Sowlnt/Alteratlon1 \VILLIAM WALTERS ro. LIDO Isle. 2 BR. r ba. Avail. YEARLY rental, delux 2BR, SPACE available ln front of-oun rM -• Layer. Rttnnants, m 11. n y··------------I" •Home-like storage-~ now. $.125 Mo., yearly flee. Ideal for b~lnessman sizes Call John 540-2(8 1 Al I a-642 SMS e Pl'lvate patios a -..-fountain V1llay PENIN. Pt. 2 BR. 1 ha. 2BA. apt, frplc, dsh/wsh, needing desk space. 548-7249 WHITE female Ger man . t.rat on • : ~:b~e gp=:n w/storage ~ ?...,_ 2 Furn. or unfurn. $200 Mo, pri patio. 675-1058. DESK apace available $50 ~p~erd 4~frog. 4 m;~:; C1rpenter Neat, acante. 20 years exp. _ __:;;~ 2 BR, BA, wldishwasher, yrly. WINTER, Summer, Yrly, mo. Will provide fumib.ire v c1n1ty ., a ALL TYPES Tiie e King-si Bdrms adlts only. No pets. $190 mo. Anita's Rentals, Bkr, 2005 Peninsula 675-1386, ask for l----------I • Pool • Barbecues • SUI'-ON TEN ACRES 96S-5237. w. Balboa Blvd, 673-2008. !~~.b~. ~se~~crm~'it Mark. CARPENTRY CERAMIC TILE NEW I roun~ed with plush land· Apts. furn,/unfurn. Lease Huntington Beach Newport Heights Huntington Beach. 642-432! FOUND: Little fmL dog -Large or small. 536-1648 rem.ode!. Free eat. Small aca~~~is. No Pets. I ~a~~nnfs J:;!~~t'I~=: WAITING -Buslnn1 Rental 445 Shepherd-type. Vic, Prince· NEW, remodel, frame &: job1 welcome. 5S&-2426ijj. •II LARGE 1 BR $185 9W Sea Lan, CdM IW-2Gll LIST CLEAN 1or2 BR. Adul ts, no ton Or. College Park &J'.fa. flnh1h, stores, offices &: 365 w. Wilson 642-19TI (MacArthur nr Coasi ltwy) pets. Lge klt. $13.>$I50. 2421 35 FT. OF office or store C.?1-'I. P 1 ea s e Identify. homes elc. Custom work. , jrpl LOW WEEKL y RATES I '!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!!!l!!!I!!!!!!!~ O~!N E. 16th St NB 646-1801 frontage, 145 E. 18th St., ~ att. 1,30, Licensed. 962-1961. . 11 •i E I S • I 'ru 2 I EXCLUSIVE NEWLY dee. 1 br, furn or C.M. Approv. ~ sq. ft. at FND : 10 speed bike, vlc. CABINETS, paneling, doora, . xecut ve. u1te1 ST redec. br, poo • 1, 2 or 3 BR Apt unfurn. pool. Call 646-4664 28c sq. !t. Can divide. C.J.S. Yorktown & Brookhurst. thelves. patios. f en<' e 1 , 2080 Newport Blvd. bltins, dshwhr, 2 patios, at the BIG CANYON 2405% E. 16th. Real Est.ate, 54,S.U68, Please Identify. gate•, repairs. 539-724.S aft 6. Job Wanted, Mlle 700 J Co.I. Mel• ad"11'· $225. 67>-1418 ev". VILLA YORBA G 11 ~~~~~~~~~ 968-5340 or ivkends. Luxur y o Course SEPARATE building + gar. FOR Experienced Carpentry, , STUDl6402S·2&6111 BR'S lBR 3BA, firepl, bltlrui. Huntil . ...,.I Beach Apartments I •, JI &) 1000 sq ft panlg, "crpls, adj ~~ed ::am,kali.e~!aedA 1o,:_ .. ~~r/lln4!.'!'·nCaU9T eo, •• a,v.• -SCRAM-LETS .'j W/accept sing l es or (7 4 842·9622 NEWPORT BEACH ltllntlll ,-.,bu2~=;.o rner. 645-2020/ iwu ,,.....,0:1" ...,.. • FREE Llnens families. $365/Mo. 675-7977, 2 BEDROOM, 1 beth, $475.-$730 ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~ -u;JIJ\1 Vic Balboa Point. 675--4426 C.Jment, Concrete ANSWERS e FREE Utilities 409 a.1ft..1-1d CdM Phone 714/6.•~ A.t:MI OFFICE/Store nr. N'pt. FOUND wedding band (Goldl ---'-----'--1 • Full Kitchen .. -..lf!iv ' ' builtlns, fully carpeted, ~" 400 Post Office & depot. M7 Sq. w / ins c r Ip ti on ) Vic FOUNDATIONS -ArtiJrtlc i • Heated Pool 2,.,~R. 1 BALrg, 2 blkll 1220'0 UDyttle Children OK. $145. per THE NEW _Roo_m_•--~---fl. $160. Agt 64&-2414. Mariners Park. 54fHS48. Plante-rs:.-.concrete & brick Squirm -Hazel -Forty -I • Laundry F il'tl ~rorui. poo. . ' th C 11 DALE patios l LI 'd 6#-0687 BC I es .!\fr. Brock 546--1600, eves mon • a , BAYWOOD APARTMENTS ROOMS $UI wk up w/ldt $30 Industrial Rental 450 FOUND young large Shep-' e c. 0· . Corpse -moRT ' •. TPhoV &nem~drvlsecerv avail. 833-3227 962-4471 , in Newport Beach are wk up apts. Childrn & pet herd-Collie mix. Vic. of La-PATIOS, walks, drlve!I. Saw, Tall men are aa SHORT as ~ ' 1 ready Th sa1 o"lce · " 2316 N rt Bl d M·I, 1680 sq ft, 1670 Placen-"""• Hills. Call 830-6893 break, remove A tepl1:1.ce anyone else at the end of l 2 BR, din. rm, frp c, new *MOVE IN TODAY* · e es u 18 secuon. ewpo v , tl C Geo •--54uooo ._ th $30. WEEK & UP crpts & drp&. $285/mo. Call Spac. 2 BR. $149. Kicls open daily from 10 AM to CM. 548-9755, 5,15-3967. s! A1380ve,/"•~'t1641~7WS oods, Found Samoyed concrete. a-owa wrest. 1::.•°"'Y,c.•ar=·~----- • Studio It 1 BR Apts. l\1r Beals 556--8790 I Pool Ga 6:30 Pt<.I. MacArthur Blvd. Guest H-· 415 '"" V'IQ" • • Call 63"'232 PATIOS-PLANTERS lliIALE, 30 w/BA. desires TV & Maid •-rv1 A 'L . ' • we come. · r. !736!-A & San J · .,,_ ........ 4001 H BIRCH N B ~ I • ~ ce va1 3 BR, below highway. flrplc, Keelson Ln (l blk W. of o:.~~=lhwo Road. • , • , ----------All Concrete work. 894-35.33. any type o work. Beach •Phone Servlce-Htd. PooJ _ .. k d I" ·~· Bea h Bi d tt SI te ) ,,..............., ROOM for senior citize-n.<1, 4000 en. ft. 541-5032 Need a "Pad"? Pla1,,-e an ad! Contractor area. Hrs/pay t 1 ex ~,b I c . • ~u•-o & Pet "·-"on sunuec , gar, a u ..... ......,-. c v ., o a r . .... 67, 000, e·-s . ... u wo:: ""'"u 673-1418 eves. or 1vkends. 847-t260. OCEAN VIEW private or semi-private, ,.........,... ""' • U20 Monthly 2 BR ·~•/ ~,. ,_ 2;;-;B;::--=::;1,--d=.,.,--,w"alk"""~ New Upper 3 BR, 2 BA, best of care and low rates. 2316 Newport Blvd., CM · _..,mo ........ • .......... r, new Y ecor. to Beaut l tu 11 y appointed Walking distance to stores & JACK Taulane -Repair DRU Al MER, exper1enced ' romod., addlt. 20 yrs exp. wants work. I 548-9755 or 645-3967 GBearal. <?,?_ • ........,<lrp. Call Mr. ocea~-.,<!~:_.,gar. Blint. $195 thruout. Immed. o cc up. on bus line. C.ome for a Ad Good For $5 on Rent _--'~·-~--·~-·-----I mo. wv-vLW. $425/mo. Agent 675-1972, vi.sit. Call 892-5493 *SUS CASITAS c_o_s_11_M_111_n ____ -'-l lrvlno 675-4073 eves. Summer R1nt1l1 420 Trader's Paradise Llc'd. My Way Co. 547..0036 842-9!>19 '1 1 Droftlnt Job W1nttld, Fom1le 702 Furn Bachelor .l 1 BR'S. 2 BR l" ba dio · rl ---------a BR. 2 ba. Nr. beaeh $350 Mod I 0 Dally ' .Ill ,, Stu • p W h I e 11 pen • patio Sml child ok, no pets, 2 BR, 1% ba., air cond. $2'lS e ave summer renta s 2U() Newport Blvd., CM $lOO. 130 Jo Ann;' Ms..3627 BOB PETTIT MARSHALL Realty 67$4600 BEAtrr. F1JRN 2 BR $175. aft 3, REALTOR 552-700:> S.-n Clemente MAMMOTII La k e Con-I 1" nes domlolum 2BR, 2BA. si ps rm, llJU'Wk, ao p et s . Reaid, Comm'I Indus. NEED he-Ip at b:lme! We Room Additions. Remnclels haV<' ttlde1, nu r 1e1 , Oe.l•n D aftl-A oc ho u s ekprs, companion1. • r ··• 11 Homemakers Upjohn, 2960 Randolph Ave .. CM 547 ••~ Bit-ins, w/w, Htd pool. 2 br trailer, no ~ta. w Legun• Beach Adults, no pet!. (Infant ok) chlldren, $130 util pd. =&l=H520-=· ""'..,......,,,.--=--,.,,,-I &i6-µo9 LAGUNA estate living on 2BR Avail June 15 -Sept 15, z""'s'=R"."'A"'d"'u"u-,,-00--pe°'ts-.-B=A"'Y= acres of gardens. Wide F\llly furn., Color TV, MEADOWS ·~ 387 W ocean views. Lge., custom 10, poo_t,jacuul, tenni,, Tee t1" mes 551~ or 557-9695 "1IOOI· ll·E~lect""'r"lc"'•"t ..:.:..=="--IH1lp W•ntld, M A F 710 2 L&rg1;! 3 BR, 2 BA apt1, .c21co""~59C' .. ~24o=18c.' -..,----lndry rm, nr beach, shop-HOUSE SIT your beach prop ping, Bus depot. 0.ildren June-Oct by metlculou• & dollars ELECTRICIAN II "8ed ACCOUNTANT atereo wa she r Id ry er , ~ '· .. d<'corator apts. 1'~ rp l c • • , ---'•·red no ~-no sum· trustworthy cple xlnt ref., • ce ' F•• Paid Nationally known 1..vuiu~ • tR',.. bay 15 S»-8195 bonded. Small Jobi, nlaint & -.--c-· • mer rates $2:10. mo; 492-6852. area Yl"S ""'------------------"! repaln M8-5203 firm needs lnd1v. wlde:gree 979-1752, $245 Ba.v St. CM. 646-0073 close to beach. Swimming -•o[O A t ru pe LARCE 2 BR. Uke a home. pool loon. 2 BR .. 2 bath& • ...,, v P • m, non Encl garqe available. Call Only 3 apts. at $450 to $65() Apta., • Rentals. to Shir• 430 '. · &: some exper. v.•/oU oo. HA\TE 37 ""'it LA •Pl -M·I • -with 4 B .. l..... •• A Gardenlft9 pref'd. Salary to $800. AllO Furn. or Unfvm, 370 SHARE Apt or Houae & .... • .._... c ~·M val•·.~· fee Jobs. Call Sally Hart, over 50. $110/mo, 2191 642.-1656 m o n t h l y , incl util. Harbor Blvd., CM. Acn:u UNFURN.-"";,;;~.,l""'&-2"'""BR""""G"'ard...,.e-n I Con.o:dd'ernte adults. 494-4653 from K·Mart. D/W pri or un.•r broker. ~ T S/Pool Apts. F<>plc, ' y ,~ -I BR. llN· errace. • patio. t16$-$1l!O. 557-2841 L19u•• Hiiis Ideal for Bachelor!. A<tlts, , .... no pct1. 1993 Church St .. LRG 2 B~_crpts, drps, blbis, ~9633. prlv. pauu. No pet.8. $15$. 557-0080. PANORAMIC view of mta, 3 BR condo , 2 Ba, Cl'])ts, &: drps, encll patio. siis. mo. 58<Hl29G. General New Newport Village 1 BR. Ft'PlC. Bcsm ce.n.1 "''°""°''""',...,'"".,.......,..,.,,.,.. Patio. 1 adult. Utll. incl SPAC. 2 BR, 2 BA. nr. 11ehla, $152. ~ shop'g & ir;!J.. No polJ. AVAIL Now -E/1ide 2 Be, ~l"'l65,,;/M.;;:-'O,,_,-="'~~,-...,.. --------·l e Otole< ot loctltlon 1\9 Ba, pool, nr &chools A GROUND floor 2 BR, patio, DL.X 2 &: 3 Br .. 2 Ba. Encl e Tennill, Volb"b&ll. Pool Mo11 V1rdo thop'&· No petlll. 646-047.f. newly carpted & draped. 678 gar. $165 up. Rental Ofc., e Arts &: CrW NICE 1 Br dplx. Qulet. Sep Center St, A;)L C. 3095 Mace Ave. 54&-1034. e Bilti&rdt by _.. Employed adult l BR, carpet., dra, ,.trig, Newaort llMch • Giant n.. Room with a ovedO, no E<"· 548-1021. ~,_ $14<1. Part !urn. 1--....._..._______ real playtt piano NEW • 1 BR. Furn. $190. ........,, loo !lla!Jmar. 1700 WESTCLIFF DR. • Athletic - Adulll. no pot,, li4 E. ~h E·SIDE 1 BR. $150 2 BR, 1 & 2 BA. mm •!>' • Bachelor. I' 2 llodroom St., 548-0131: M&-4095. Bltns. w/w diapl, htd pool. ~. Pool. 642-6274. Fum or Untum avaY $Jf1541!1S Nice 1 BR.. Adlts, no pets. SO.ml. LUX. Ba,ylroo~ 2 8R, 2 BA. Adults, no pets rr.Jlen. ,Mature adults. 132 $140 up. 2 Br., 3 Bt., 2 Ba. boat .UP avail. $425 mo. )T-Newport.-J'wy at Ba.ker St. 'JI. Wilaon, CM ~. Pool, btt-lns. play yard. _IY~·-<ITJ.' __ 73_79_~--- U\Q, Bachclor, $120 mo. Hid l996 Maple. W.3813 NEW Ba,yfronl·pr!Y Och & 71"557..0075 ~1,. ____ Adults. No pets. Pier 3BR. 28A. $M0 rno )'I'* ~ Sell tdle. item1 •.. 6U-56'7S ly. 979-0631 or '""'510. • SAVE $$$ HOME plexat6% tlmeagrouw/ otlla esa, . -··-·EXPERT Japan ete M0-6055 CoataJ Pel'IOa t PARTNER Lie. Busine-1111 $150.CW ~ty. Wanl lorl& Tr~de equity for Jot, boat, Gardener. Complete Yard Astency,' 27'90 'Harbor Bl;: Call 836-U94 or 548-1479 range cnus1ng Nlllboo.t. min lralle:r or T ? ! &_.rvlce. Free et1tlmatf'I CM • 65'·75'. Brkr 675-7225. Capri Really 644-7525 548-2661. Iii'&'""'""'""'""'""'""'-! A~~:to ~~· ~:;v~ $800. equity In lot in Hawaii BALBOA l1dand duplex. Top EXPERIENCED Japanete A/PAYABLE Own Br, Ba. Util. Incl. $l30. to trade tor .antlq~e1, ut cond., no vacnn<.')'. $51,000 Garden<'r. Co1nplclc yard Cnll an. 6. 494-8841 objects, paintings, Jewelry, Equity tor Orange-County ma in 1eoance,11hru lll>ery, or you name-It! upt. units. t~s. Fret Cl!t. &G-0347 E $SC...,_ \VOMAN will Mare home 6'q:OSQ2 Hal Pinchin fll!r. 675--4.~92 EXPER. Japanese Ga~ener. S Yrs xper. ..-.. w/n\llture em ployed l ,,-==,.;.~=,.-..,.--,-'" r 111 --•1 toly woman. Call 5'5-4449. VACANT 2.13 ac lruid, vie-w O\VNER desirt.'8 exchange Know how. Tr Imm ln g , '°• mmwu I Malibu. Want income or 2-4 unit building~ In B<'ll for CI t.a.n-u p, S m A l I FEMALE to Iha.re 2 Br house, mature pennn 21 to 30. S!&-71S. houte XI topoarapt:iy. for 3 or 4 br. house in H1mtlng. llll"ld~aplng 968--3486. details. CJS Real Estate. ton Bch, Cocta Mega area. EXP. J a panes e, main· 1740 Orange, C.M. MS-1168. Call 213-869-8346. ten 11. nee, c I ea n -up . Quiel( CASH ltAVE l!lmall equity in Cos1a LANO ln Ante-lope Valley Land!lcape. Free ext. Mesa 4 BR.. plus den home nr nu airport, overlooking 842--8442/847-9438 • P.Pr.S SOO Newport Conler Dr. SUltc 900, N.B. ~1910 w/pool. Would like travel Country Oub A golf coul'S(l, FIRST Visit Free. Aero THROUGH A trler or? wlll trade for 26'-30' boat. Gardening Serv. Main-24 Central Tov.'@r, orange -· · 6'<>4401 lltl2-2661. teoaDC<' & IAJ>dscaping. 547"'446 DAILY PILOT OLDER HotlM Trailer, 26'. l.lke lo b'ad~? OurTrader'a 64.>-t930 215 E. Co~~th HM toUot & shoo.'tr, neecb Paradise column ls fc." :YO'll EXPER. Japaneae Cardentr. Suite F F\lllerton noor l't'peirs • tor Utility 5 llncs Complete yard mr. Rella. &: 870-1833 WANT AD traUer + Good Honda 90, 5 day5 n<'nl. free e$t. 64l-4389. 'Equal Oppor, Eniployer 100 or l2S. 545-0850 eves. tor 5 bucka. t'ut mulls are J'U$l a phone ---------' ••••••••••••••••••••l!.ea!~l_!a~•·:!!•l'.Y.:·!&1!!1Sl8.::"''.!!':, __ St>U ldlt" ltell'IJ( . , . 642-5678: I -• • l • : i' ) DAILY l'llOT Molld.Q, .. ., 14, 1973 1 · I l " h t ' ' lflll I E ett; •• mll -11 u';r1 1 l(D1 I •.. ,_, ·1lDJ :-1 ;;% /;;' ,~l:;:lDJ~1 ~1 ~, ~-Dll;;.1 ~1 ~;;;;;" '';;;' ·;;;lrnJ I ' ors I l[Il]I ._ -'-'': "-" llIIl I l I WMlod, M & " 71t Help w-. M' & ... 7lt ~ w-. M. "~ Help w-. M & " 711 .... , WIMoll, M & "710 ....., ........ a, 710 -w-. M & "7)1 Help Wonlod, M & F 7IO Help w-. M & " m BUYER -------GEL (A•T NIGHT DAJIMAID. • ~ """" KENNEL man or woman lot' _ A~ in penon cif)ll REAL F.SI'ATE.St\LES FACTORY*** =r:r'~.E DIAL A JOB! &V~N~~u:EN ~~~~= MACHINE F/tbne.~ ... rd· v~~:.1rJ. Niro~:=~= .. =:;,m~t,s':1':14f~ Llz R~~ ~1':'1~~ ~OS::l560,0.raMeu, SHOD A~~if:e ~t~·r1::.~e~ ~~:~~=-= New Ute IIXtullrial Dlvi.don !-~or W0mtn Needed Now 2nd " 3td Shilla * Affmbly (Tra ining & Expor) *PC Aanmbly * lnduatrltl Sowing * Injection Molding blanketordenl<expedlilna 4SOll c.5sr.340r01• N •• al--. 940 w. 17th KEYPUNCH Opr, r THE BROADWAY Apply, I Rr. Val"°"" offices and become a Call ~ St,, Colt.a Mei&. f/Ume Pt.nlQQDtl Dept No. 41 FNh1on ltiand C1eanen. 8llii8 Warner, member o.t our Millloaalre An Equal Opportunity ~ GENERAL Help. p/time Hoag l:lOIJptW. Newpoi1 ~~ ~-~ Newport &a«.il ' Fount. Vly. Club. MulU-milllon dollar Empklyer DISHWASHERS, full time. ~ from 5pm on. Drivers Beach. ·~ ._ ... ...-NW'Sel advertlslng program. Fttt BUYER A 11 11 tan t ~-~ or night. Ins. bnltJ. &: KJtchen. Over 2L App,l_y WrvDIMICff ufacturtt Wbo ... MAID, for club work, af· RN-LVN-AIO~ paranteed llcensinf IChool. perienced preferred ·front JoUy Roi:er. 496--0855, tee In p:non, Men F.da, 41lf£. 1\1.trun Immediate ODe9iDp tenlOOll lhUt, 6 hrs. $2.50 hr. 11•7 6: olher Khiftl. TOp pvt l!)ccellent sales ll'aining. offic.!' appearance tof grow-Don. 17th St. Costa l\.1esa fot the !oUowiJw ~Wed. 1Z W. 8a,y .Ave. ducy pay. lmmed. ·pay for Pl~ can Vilt:inla Jone1 lflll Orangf Counly paprr lSH GENERAL production, no QPWTORS position& • · floor duty. Co u n t y w I de SJ;)...48ll. distribu..... Xlnt benefi ... 0 .. , .. ~:'::;iten!,, .• ~~'ifoil experience ..... ..,.,.. daya. • FIRST SHIFT. ' MALE & >'emale Help tnlrvw>I. Mon·Fri •· 5. RED CARPET Ap1lly 8-.5. 1500 E. McFad-C t H So th La, Bio • Dyna m I c • 1~ wanted. Kentucky Fried Lescoulie Nut9ei Regigry Ru ltor.s den,, Santa Ana. DI=W~. u day~~. ArmslroJ'Jg Ave Sant& Ana. \Ve are aeekine ex per. TOOL & DIE MAKERS Chicken,:.1.: Coa!t J-lwy, 351 Jioepital ~··NB ct.ob-'. REAL ESTAT E N""""' Aldeli, U-3 ahilt. GIRL FRIDAY ~:~,.=~.4 ~::! Laguna hy p.,. Lido Bldg I SALES MANAGER Career Secretaries Call 00-3505. Full rune position In one-girl 12,30 am on tl18 Uaivac GRINDER * MANAGER 00.9!155, 5«).!1954. Resale Ottlce needs mim•••" OOM.&STIC Help Geori;e ottice. Heavy typing, filing 1701-lnO. We are willing to MACHINISTS ~omen 1 ~· S:Yrs exper. NURSES Aide ne:eded for with 2 years of Real Estate Average range $500-$750, Top S. NO Jo'EEs. N.B., C.M., Irvine, Orange & S.A. Call Immediately. e P.P.S. Allen Byland Agency, 106-B & P~S. Must be ag train on the tab punch w=en 1 ready to weer, conv .. bol:P: A~ ln pe.1'9Dn, experience. Newport Beach E. 16th St., S.A. 547...(139:). greaExp wenl. S2-~~ hr. t1o start varifier. Location of the key GRINOliR Ing llf!W ~!yeaneo · ~· 340 Vit;tona, .M. area. Expanding company. DONUT lhop • an night ~ y 0~""64~&i ~: fu= d!~ir l::e the~ OPERATOR Apply in~ 'fuCs8~ LVN NUR~ES ~ell~~opportu~ltyA~ shift, fen1ale 2545, apply ln appt. Wknd ok. Island, NeY .. port Beach. (Pbemlicl) • • Fri. Wilson's House of 7-3. p/time. ~urses ~ essi growt · peNIOn. M'R. DONUT, 135 E. GIRL F A Suede 9844 WU.shire Blvd Aide 11-7 ,exper. pref d. Or-1n confidence. Send resume 17th St. CM RIO Y Please call Mrs. Rose SECOND SHIFT Beverly ffiDs 213;55l-0900' derly 3-ll, will train. Mesa lo Classified ad no. 638, c/o DRY cleaning help, Counter Common sense & good office tor an appointment • • MANAGER . TRAINEE. Verde Conv. Hosp, 661 Ce:n-Daily Pik>t, P . 0. Box 1560, 500 Ne"•port Center Dr. girls. exper. preferred or skills could land yoo in lhJs cn4) 547-T57l GRINDER ter St., C.M. 548-5585. Costa Mesa, Cali!. 92626. Conle to our oUice only once Suitr 900, N.B. golden opportunity. Salary Outstanding opportunity to 2 OFFICE RLS to fill cul an application & Gl().1910 "'111 train. Pressen<, Expe•. lo IO(IO. CaU Gloria G"'Y GREAT WESTERN MACHINISTS advance•• managerial peal-GI REAL ESTATE SALES sign up for v.·ork. All your 24 Cenlral Toy,·cr, Ora.nge 549-3.525 or 644-0893. ~. Coastal Pel'80nnei tion In 30-60 days. Our cur· NEEDED le assignments will bemade 547-6446 EDIT & CONTROL Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd., SAYINGS TURRET LATHE rent managers earn Radio telephone dispatch Ney,• & resa · Newpot'I It: when our sta!f calls you. Equal Oppor. Employer CLERK C.M. $100()...$1500 mo. Must have MUJt be 25, able to drive Huntington Beach. Weekly paycheck>. No """'""'"""'""'""""""""'""I GIRLS AND BOYS 1"8 MACHINISTS direct sales expe•lence. Apply In Person HARBOR VIEW FEE '.\ For leading Orange County 'l..l N. Main St., Santa Ana Call Mr. Newman S79-5222 YELLOW CAB CO HOMES · f , CARETAKER for priva!e data proce!!sing firm. Ac· DAILY . Pil..OT routes avail An Equ8.I Oppt,y Employer PRODUCTION MANAGER 186 E. l&th Costa Me~ 1829 Port Sheffield Place Betwn ~i:;;:; & noon I =1dn;;~l~-~3.P~~~e. :U;~~&/o~ ~~I~ ~71?_ able in Corona del Mar KEYPUNCH MACHINE OPERATOR l'danager y,•ho's had' EX OFF! . ' Newport Beach 833-0780 CAR WASH Cha.lle....1ng pcso·i~n 10 .. Telephone Keith Crorts M P"'a'ENCE in a fin,· CE_gu-1, part time, 8-12, wk-days onl,y Kelly G'irls "•' -· 642-4321 between 11 AM and ETAL FINISHER -. iype, file, phone, 12 per I ed . penon who likes problem 12 PM. Da y & Swi·-Shift ~!"7_a~~ specialty •hop. Ph hour t.o start. Irvine REAL E~ATE· mnl employment avail. solving, custo1ner contact. ··• Exce"-t f · be .,.. ,,..., Indus"-'-' p k ~ ~"" •• lo' .en'l ca' wa•h help • GtRLS wanted lo.. Ut:n r1nge ne--. u·uu ar "'"""~ SALESMEN • Why not .. -k 2061 Bu1IM11 Ctr. Dr. lrvlno 833-9107 Across from 0 .C. Airport 1237 So. Maln SI. · Variety of duties. Xlnt • 6 M IU •--"~-'!AN t "· r ll 1 · ""' Apply in pP.rson, 10035 Ellill v.•orking conditions. telephone soliciting. 16 & o's actual work exper, s 11""'•N.1.ug com-" 0 woe,.. u t me in e OPENING e in the hottest area Hun. Ave., F.V. & 481E.17th sr., up. on keypunch, keytape or pany pajd group in-re,ntalty~ea~J:::'ppear. NEW RESTAURANT ting lo n BcachtFountain C.M. Safeguard/Integrated Cali 842-8715 key disc device. surance. ;;:._a Apply~~ ·~ COMPLETE STAFF Valley~ let us train you! CASHIER Da ta Corp. GUARDS • Apply Jn The Apply Personnel Dept. NeWpOrt Blvd, CM ' APPLICATIONS between U ~~~~ J!;LN ~$FA~· Santa Ana 547-9535 Full & P/time Positions Personnel Department am & 3 pm; the 15111, 16th & 962-4471 ' =~21,.;c.:'o&l6-.:..::..c7..:425=,'546.£<181)===--1 open in Long Beach & Monday-Fri. 9 am-12 Noon LSI MANUFACl'URING 17ttl. 1-~=~·=====-j!!!~!!!!!!!!~~!'!'!'""""' iOrange County G.M. New EARLY morning newspaper Compton areas for qualif.led THE CANNERY RECEPT-SEC'Y Accounting Office Car Dealer needs an experl-auto route (J-£ u n ting ton applicants who des i J' e PACIFIC MUTUAL BRAKE 789 w. roth Street Rapidly growing firm needs SUpervisel the accounting enced cashier. 5 days week, Beach), Snl -$225 per mo. steady employment. 18 Yrs 700 Ne\vport Center Dr. TraMport ·OPERATOR Costa Mesa sharp lndiv. w/good ac- aJ¥1 payroll department of salaI1' to $550 based on ex-847·2300 before 10 AM. of age or older. Apply in Newport Beach Dynamics curate typing skills. Variety the district. pertence. OuUine all pre--~--------person, 326 So. Lemon St. PAINTIN9 partner needed, position. Start $450. Call $735 to $898 per mo. vious experience in reply. EASY TO LEARN. Light Anaheim. betwn 9am & LITE M at n ten an c e & 3131 \V. Segerstrom \Ve have an tmmediate all equipment furnished. Linda Ray, 5 4 0 -6 0 5 5, Send Resume to Saddleback Serxl recent photograph if ~~~~ag:u~l3 t~r $5 ~-t:::;~ lpm. housekeeping. FI 1 i me Santa Ana ~ opening tor a person who ~2751mo9 w how to spray. Coastal Personnel Agency, Val~e Unified Sc hoo I one available. Reply to Box ADT Sterliog Sec u r l t y perm. Apply In pe-•n, is able to run a brake and :> • 2790 Harbor Blvd .. C.M. · , supplying families w Ith ·~ Equal Oppc-E I /f D ct, 246~ Chrisant'a no. 635 c10 Dally Pilot, PO Ra\\•leigh H 0 u s·e h 0 1 d Service. Hunt. Bch Conv. Hosp, 1881l •· mp oyer m make setups. Must be cap-RECEPT. to $498 • Drive, ?i.liulon Viejo, Calif. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Calif. Products. Call ( 4 1 5 ) An Equal Oppor. Employer. Florida, H.B. 847-3515. ~fachinist a:bJe of reading blueprints ,PART TIME I:ocal. Lile typing 93>75. 92626. 4#-1871 or write Ra\vleigh J-IAIRDRESSER w Isome LIV~in housekeeper. Ex-• * and must have 0\.\'11 tools. NEW ACCOUNTS \Yestcli[f Of,\RLIES CHILI Co., 306 Adeline St •. follo\vlng. (tec.ept. 3 'days a . celh:bt'"Vorking conditions rw. ELDER CLERK Penonnel Agency Apt ~anagement \Ve need ex.per. cooks. Apply Oakland, Ca. 94007. \vk . Sbarripc:xi girl. Xln 't private room & bath, col~ 1651 E. Edinger, S.A. Assistant in person 3-5 pm or phone ELDERLY man for tool working conds & loca. Cali TV. Mll!ll drive. One chUd 50 W.P.?>.1. typing sh prefer· {Mark III Center) Resident M.IM"'•r for app'L 102 McFadden Pl. pickup delivery servic:Eo, 2 fc. appt. 54Hl.79. age 7. $300 mo. Days:' .. E . Our second opening ls red. ' 542-8836 Major Ne\\1)0rt Bea; firm CLE~l:Gtrn>-:a:• office =s wk~~c~ d_fl~ri ~~'bwA~1g1tedo1EvR~~: ~lz~venirigs; ~7614 NGINE !~=!~~ha~ -UNITED-R~3>th~i!,:~= ~ seeks assistant resident N.B. 2 hrs. in eve. Send Service. 54~. Npt. Bch. Neat Appearance LVN Charge nurse, 7 to 3, LATHE a short are welde.r. Must CALIFORNIA BANK Shift 8 am-4 pm. Mesa manager tor large apt com-resume, Claslrified ad no. Employment ..,. (JI.fin. age 181 -Good driv-days; weekends off. Al!IO, be able to do own setups, Verde Countiy CI u b , plex. Ability to dea1 w/thc 639 C/o Daily Pilot, P.O. HEIRWOOD SHU'ITERS ing record. Apply to Parts 3-l l Olarge Nurse. Needed read blueprints and have 201 Avenida Del Ma.r 54s--0377 for Dick Evarts. ~i~J~ z1a~~p "':~~n:,~ ~2/j.1560, C.OSta Mesa, Ca. 1977 Placentia, C.M. • De~~·s~~l ~1tas1 immediately! 646-77&1 MACHINIST ownSTOtoocls.K ROOM • 84~'.rzlnte ~ =~~7~-e ~J:~:i~x"'~ CLERK Experienced Service MACHINISTS Set up & operate engine lathe · Equal OpfXll". Employer be-willing lo \\'Ork weekends ICD CLERK Is looking 1or Y.'omen to of close tnlerance short run CLERK PART "'-e men D•• er NEEDED NOW! ___ , __ _. '"elconte & · t · 1\tust do O\Vn lathe & mill ~" ~ • "'-'UU.IUl..._.Jy. Salary + CLA VAL COMPAN • in erv1ew new production. Requires min· . . . night. 15-20 hrs: weekly. , reduction in rent. Excellent -Y UNITED residents. Sales or ad-setups & have own tools. 2 !>.1lLSl be willing t d E he I. CALIFORNIA vertising exper. helpful. Good opporttmih· tor ad-tmum YT:'· recent engine tak bed o r~ve xtra-Olre Maintenaiicc, WAITRESS EXPER co. ne Jls. I-fas lmmcd. Opening BANK ·~ lathe expenence. Own hand s e truck on occasion 847-2259. . ' • Ci1ll 644-3389 Must ha.Ve car & type\\'l'ilcr. vancement. Xln't working tools. and have a valid California PART . Full & P(t1me. Must be over Betwn 9 & noon Only PATTERN SHOP 547-3095. conds. Perm. position. Good * drivers license TIME. FULL TIJl.IE 21. Xln t hours. CLERK 3029 Harbor Blvd HOTEL Desk Clerk, niust be benefits. . Sales on Commission + FRY COOK EXPER Costa Mesa exp on NCR 4200, must be REXNORD JNC. Apply Personnel Dept. BonlL'I. fTI4l 963-5514, Full Time. M~ be dean .& ASSEMBLER. s Day Shift 546-2033 able to do nite audit tY.ice a LSI PEru.tANENT part time neat Xln't working condi· 4-40 Week v."ee.k. Good starting salary employment Nights only. lions A: pay. Excellrnt Benefits A·ppl,y Jam a i ca Inn, Specialty Fastener Div. GRIN DER Including weekends. Mature DISHWASHER 1701 Plaeentla, C.1"1. Equal Oppor. Employer 673-8\ID. 3130 W . Harvard ' & dependable, over 21, male Must be neat. & dean Over Equal o~ •. ~~~;e, m/I I "!E~X~E~C!!'.~S~E~C~R~E~T~A~R~Y~I HOUSEKEEPER 214/546.~:,nta A~;/585-2184 OPERATOR Transport ~.;~f,!'."Q.,t:"~~ ... Pr.":: 21· Dependable. . Mala & Fem111a I ~========z Busy V.P. needs your Experienced. English speak-equal oppor. employer m/f Dynamics or Tues. after 8 pm. Apply In Person CLERK c.apable skills &: willing at-ing. Live-In. 5 Days. Gen· Setup &: operate ID. OD, sur-3131 \V. Segerstrom Purchi11lng Supervisor Surf & Sirloin • T rai.,..Skllltd • Competitive Pay • lmmad. Openings • P. P.S. 500 Newport Center Dr. Suite 900, N.B. 640-1970 . \\1ith Credit Unton Exp. ror long term 1c;sign. VOL'!' Instant Personnel Temporary seritlcc 24 Central Tower, Orange 3848 Campus Or., ~le 106 547-6446 j Nl'11•porl Beach MG-1741 .215 E. Commoov:eaUh I Equal Oppor. Employer Suite F Fulk'l'lon CLF.RK _ Ad1nlt1ing, nites, 870-1833 p/timr. Personni.•l Dept Equal Oppor. Employer floag Hosp, N.B. ' e IJSEMBLERS e lst & 2nd shift in Electronics 1-'inn. Night premium of- fered. No experience req. Apply Jn Penon Potter & Brumfield Div, AMF lncofllOrated ·· 26181 Ave Areopuerto San Juan Capistrano An Equal oppor. empl. 1.1 /F AUTO COFFEE shop \l'ailN'SS('s. i\fature dependable. Hun· tington Lane, 19J82 Beach Blvd., Hunting1on Beach, 96J-4a87 Call aft 4 prn for n1>pt. COOK,RELIEF Expe:r. Apply in person only, Alley \Vest, 2100 \I.'. Oct:an· fronl , N.B. COOK, EXPER Lunch-Dinner. Hrs. 12·.'S. INced ~~~~~~~~. PX· • ~;~~a~~~.~~~~• pcrienced, Sell BMC, Fer-coo•· · 1 · n., e.-;per. for oon· ran, nrge inventory or used valescen1 ho!lpital. Ca 11 Cal's, Fre~ clcn10, excellent• 837-8000 for appt~ \1·ork ing conditions, 5c'e Bud I •""iiiii;;;iii;;; ... ii.iiiiiiiii Ryder or Tom Aikin al e Cross country NEWPORT Drive rs IMPORTS • Foromen 3100 \V. Cons! l·h\',}'., N.B. 642·9405 AVON SAYS ''Be Your Own Boss'' Earn. an inco1ne or your 01v n, right in your °'vn neighbor- hood. Be un A VON Rcpre· 5'!ntative. Call 1>0w: 546-5.141 or i')'j().7041 B/\BYSJTIER for ~ Rlrl!I, 8 &· 11 in Jl.iesa Vt>l'd(' n1,~11. 2: 30-6 l\lon·F'Ti, 557. 7548 eves. BABYSJITER needed, mv home, Ea.st Side CostO. Mesa. 548-6'140 nft 5. BEAUTICIANS -l·f.B. & S.A. Busy salon. Take over clientele. Xlnt earnings. can tor appt 968-8080 H.B .. S.A. 979--3590 BEAUTICIAN for b u s y prestige Mlon in South Coast Pl&z.u. Creal worklnx: ooodiliol11. C"11 Bob 540-8888. BF.:.AUTICIAN needed part time, a.l8o booth for rent. 548--2412 or 5()-600 B~. Sheralon Beach Inn. H.B. l\fulft be over 2L Apply In perDl. • Managers • A11ambltrs •Molders e Inspector s • Gal Repairmen /\.ll 3 Shifts \\'r \Viii Train MacGregor Yacht Corp, 1631 l'lacentla, C.M. DA\' v.·aill't>Sse'1. full or par! tlnte. OV('r 21, \V/food le CO\'ktail exper. Jolly Roger, 496-0855. SN' Don. DE LI V 1-.: R \' l\I e n. Pt>l'n1anc>nt p11rt Tin1e for C'arly n10rni1ig ncv.·spaper del i\•ery ro homes i n Ne\\·port Beoch. li.lust havr dept>od11ble rar & b c relinhle, Phone 642-4&Xl ~!~~:. L en~~s~;A~l~an i~'. divldual y,·nnted for Laguna Beh practicc. Exp c r . t'lea!!IS. ruturt limitrd only by inlllotl\'f' to nssume t'C@J)(lll , salllij' 0 fl CTI, . •!H-3596. DENVER MINING CO. Taking appUcaUon!I for: BOOKKEEPER BOOKKEEPER fe>pen.ina-New Restaurant in N.8. AppticaLions brt\\·een 11 am ~ 3 pm the 15th, 16th " 17th. 219 w i- . THE CANNERY a.t~ io' ~~-f~\;, 189 IV. !Wt so.et titudt>. Prestige position in eral house work, 2 school MACHINISTS face & special grinders on Santa Ana Supervises the purchase of 5930 W Co H expanding co. Sa1ary to age children. O\vn room, Prototype & ?i.fodels Metal. short run production. Re-supplies &' equipment for N-,;....rt ~ chwy. $960. Call Gloria Gray, bath, TV, pald vacation. $70 Capable of tooling manu· quires 2 yea.rs general Equal Oppor Employer m /r the school district, and ... ~~""' a 541)..6()55, Coastal Personnel per week. 645.3550. facturing as well as proto. grinder experience. own negotiates service contracts. ~~ ~~ency, 2790 Harbor Blvd., ·~~=~~!~e. c.~~ z~ ~~~~ ~~~~: =~~N~~VIEW BY ~~:~ y~:,:1m~~~nif~ Send ~S:.°m~ope~;;~back ~~A&~uU~~~~~ E:XPERIENCED industrial day, 3-8. OY.'11 t r a 11 Iii, Top pay & fringe benefits. MACHINE TOOL DIV a graduate or u S Ann Valley Un1f1ed Schoo I Apply 2-4pm, no phone SC\ving machlne operator. 5-15-7fi6.1, 833-1662 EOE. • transportation sc~i pref'J Di~trict. 24618 Ouisanta calls. Jedros, 300> Bristol Zig Zag & blind stitch to l·IOUSEWORK. Tues & Fri, ACCURATE MOLD CO. Apply g am-noon. Chari~ Drive, Mission Viejo, Calif.l;;cC:;.M-;;:. ,.._,-.,,,..----~ S:V wet suits. Apply Sea Ref. own transportation, att <213) 860-5.548 CALL 894-4711 E. Smith Co., Inc, 505 31st 92675. RN f/lime. Emergency dept. ·ts, 825 \V. 18th St., Costa 5 pnt. Call G44-Sl4s. CONRAC CORP. St., N.B, 11-7 shift. Xln't employee ~M=e""=· c,8~8ccm;:·.,:12::...cpm=.---INSERTER & Gen'! Mailing MACHINISTS 9200 Bolsa Ave., Westminster MATURE lady to ca~ for 2 ~· i°~ G. Mgr $20K benefits. Contact Emergen-EXPERIENCED bookkeeper I An Equal Opportunity you bo r · Ii es '""".,,...r degree S18K cy Dept Costa Mesa -secretary needed for bu!ly he p. $1.8a hr. Also Pilney Employer ~'Ork~~nt tl~~ogin, condle \PVrodarehousc Mgr $10K ~le.morlal 'Hospital, :11)1 Vlc- accounling o I J ice in Bov.·~s n1ailing n1achi11e opr. , Generous salary Ca I j . Line Mgr $1400 Iona C.Jl.1. 642-2734. Equal Capistraoo Be1lch. o . J . 540-3095. Top rate of pay MA.P.HINISJS 96S--00ll . (Speaker Systems Bckgmdl Oppor. Emplo,Yer. ~~~~~pe;~. ·Co. '196-1 224. ~ y MECHANIC exp'd, own ~;tal~~fuc' to= RN ll·7 shift LVN 3-11 shift. l~NE PERSONNEL Conunensurate w/exper. Pre-I tools, paid ins. Apply in lnven. Clerk $450 99 bed convale~nt center. EXEC. SECRETARY vious \\'Ork necessary in lmmed n...-1 person. 1747 Anaheim Ave. Secretaries $650 ~r~anent positions, good This position rcq's indiv. who SCD\1V"E$....,.Arc""irv • _,.......,"II Costa Mesa. Ex •--· 1700 ne ts. Newpo11 Beach LIVI\.. --~"'-• nlilling machi11es, .Jathes, Top ...... $$$ · ec. """"Y to • area 642-8044 can deal w/the very elite. etc. Must do OY.'ll set-ups & $ 1 $ .........,., l\IBCHANICAL Assembler Sec'ys no sh to $570 · Great PR position. Musi free &: Fee Posilions have o\vn tools. Position l • 6 Per Hour electronics. Start min '. Recept/Typist $550 SA~ES LADIES have some sh. Start $650. Comm'! Indus L Proc S8:Xl open to male or female. wage. Pal Electronics, 639l Escrow Ofer $700 We require 2 sales ladies to Call Sally Hart. ~-!\I . e Grindtrl Westminster Ave., Westm. Cleric """"Bl •AM sell auton1obile11 for Orange Coastal Per!!Onncl A--ncy, · gmt Trainee 10 $800 Call F A .,.~ ~ County' l 2790 H bo ,.,~ Exec. Set·retarics to $i00 or ppt. e OD & IO 894-3&11. Keypunch $500 s orgcst F o r d • ar r Blvd., C.l\f. Giri Fridays-10 $650 fndustrial Relations e Turret L•tha Mec:hanlc>axnarlenced Gen'I Ole, Constr $450 dealer. Guaranteed salary E~E~UTIVE DIRECTOR . Dictaphone Sc>t'y 10 S600 r-Asst. Bkkpr to $600 and car supplied. Prefer Gu·l ~ Club Harben· Area. 1 Hecc pt/Gc-n. OfC' 10 552j (714) 4~9401 • Milling Long Beach area Sec'y/Recept $575 wome n with past Star!lng salary SI0.000, y1·.1 Rec('pfionis t 10 S500 e P rototype 213: 438·4836 Acctng Clerk $525 automotive 11a1 es ex· E .x .Pel' i l' n c e in ad· F'/C Bookkeeper $650 TELONIC l\1EDICATIOJllNurse 3-11:30. Sec'y/Recept $600 perienct", but If not, son1e 111u11strn11on & supervision. Asst Boookkecper fo $600 INDUSTRIES • p p s 99 Bed conv. ctr. Perm NEWPORT sales background required. l'\1ust v.·ork with t'Ommunlt y. A/P C\('rks to 557:; • • • position. Gd b ene fit s . p I A Send resume to Sunset Ford i\lail res111ne to P.O. Box PuyrolltG. Ofc $500 Laguna Beach 642-8CM4. arsonne gency r./o Norn1 Lizel, ~ 4 4 o 1821. Nev.'1>0rl BC'ach, Ca. l\eypunch Operator to $550 500 Newport Center Dr. MEDICAL assistant wanted 133 Dover Or., N.8. Garden Grove Blvd, F /C BOOKKEEPER Out of State Jobs Eiiual Oppor. Employer Suite 900 Newport Bch -e'Y)erience in lab, X-ray 642~3870 \Vestntinster, Ca. 92683. ' P1-opcrty mgm'I firn1 re· Chief Elel~. En~ . S25K I ~ I . 640-l9i0 & EKG, Approx. 32 llrs .. per ru~s-minded creative quires exper. bookkeel)l'r lo Chief i\.1C'ch. Engr S2SK MACHINISTS 24 Central Tower Orange ~~le~~· i t~8::-Public Relations person who's owned their h~le CIR, CID, Billing le 1\lanuf. l\lanager SZ.SK 547--6446' p R tail ho gen I ledgers for shopping Snlcsflilktng Engr S18K NIJE FOREMAN perience. Call 548-3742 own re s p, interested centers. Lite typing, Offices CALL TRISH HOPKINS 215 E. Commonwealth MEN & WOMEN 11-27 • • in fashion It creative selling located near Orange Co. Air· JERRY WHIITEl\fORE Suite F Fullerton Earn to $342.30 salary per EXEC. LEVEL ·for a fine specialty shop. po11. Suhn1h resun1e Of ex· '188 E. J7111 St. (at Irvine) Cl'vl 870--1833 mo. whi1e we teach )'OU a We seek outstanding sales Full ~ ~ i~e. Salary per & salary to Mr. Abel, Suit e 224 642·1470 Secondary Operation Equal Oppor, Employer job sldll in Electronk1, Me-oriented lady for our Irvinel .. •peiiinii. ~':' ~~-"';;~·iiiiiim l P. 0. Box DY, Irvine, C111if. ~ Set1;1p ex.per req'd . for. not· I ~ ~ cha.Dies or Administration. office. Ideal for reAultsl" SALESMEN !l266t ch1ng, ~pplng, d r 1 ! I 1 n g, MACHINISTS -Alter training, earn $45--6(1 oriented, CAreer minded, Full time Expe X1 fo'OOD Service, \\'Orker, pots. JANITORS _ Part time. deburr1ng, broaching. & per mo. for 2 days work. creatlvt! woman who likes to salary co~ &: be~f'ts nt pnns, .~. rlishmachine, full Evenings. r..lan & wife other machine ope.rations. Call TSgt Young, Calif. Air 'run her own show'. This ts Cali tor Appclrrtme1 t · tinH\ 10:30 a.m. _ 7 p.m. lcanls. Irvine ll l'CU. M & r-.t Xln1·r. co. ,_,benefitsh. Perm1 National Guard 979-1343. a ~ponsible &: dignified 540-5050 ext 30 n Good en1ployee benefits, r.falntenance . 213: 333-&125. post1on w c ance or CLA-VAL COMPANY MEN ---•ed . HB FV position offering_ personal JOSEPH M' AG. NIN C advancement. ,,.,~ In ' " ' ' ......,wth w/So. Calif• fa•t- n;;l,1 !>.11.':c;a Hospital. 301 JUNIOR SALESMAN: Has Immediate opening area for morning newipaper ~ Temporary ucl'~ Equal Oppor. Employer \'ictoria, Ci11. Equal oppor. Earn $21).$40 per \\'eek REXNARO INC. In Beach Area auto routes. Approx 2~~ hn Service. XJnt starting salaryl'"'""~~~~~~;,;,;, • ., tuniry rmploycr . v,.vrk:ing after :1Chool nnd . per morning 847--8979 + exp. acct + comm + SALESWOMAN F'ULL or part time on Satu'rdays gelling ne1v MACHINE SHOP MOTEL front office auto allo1v_ It loads of Exper. in quality \VOnlens & SC'll BaslC'-H & other custon1ers for !ht< Daily S~clallv Fastener Dlv. manager. bookkeeping ex· benefits. Call O o t tie children11 shoes. Hemphills Shnkk>e products. 546-1517 Pilot. This is not a paper 3130 W . Hi1rvard Day &·Swing Shift perlence preferred. 5 540-4450 for confidential 54 Fashion Islarxl, N.B'. GENERAL LABOR Newport Be ach Costa Mesa Sant• Ana Ori1ng• & Ir vine No f°l'C5 -\\'~kly Paycher k Day shlfls, 2nd shUts and graveyard . • P. P. S . 500 Ne1\•port Center Dr. Suite 900 Newport Bch 640.1910 24 Central Tower, Ora.nae 547-6446 215 E. Commonwealth route and does nor include Si1nti1 Ane Saddle-'fypre Turret Lathe, day/\Vk incl. Sat Ir. SUn. appt. 644-42'23 Ask for Mr . deliverlC'S or collecting. TI4/546-5100 213/~2184 Turret Lathe, Gener a 1 494-8521. TE!>.lPO TEMPORARY Shoemaker. Iv h I · Sou l I 1 :Pifachlnists, Drill Preu Opr ''-"';c;;;;;;:;;;;;--,..,,---e ave open ngs 1n th-equa oppor. emp oyer m/ & Engine Lathe OperatOr. MOTEL Managers, usJs-llp.P 'SALESWOMAN, or an &e Y•est Costa Mesa and South -====~ , tants or exper. managers. County Girt Shops. Full It Huntirvton Beach only. • AJto 2376 Newport Blvd., CM. REAL ESTATE SALES Part timo. Exp., mature Apply now• 968-964!. MAClllNllll'S TOOL MAKER 64;.3967 FREE LICENSI Interviewii Tues., May 15: DAVENPORT Benelii. include paid vaee-MTS T TRAINING 5-7 p.m .. Galleon Gilts. Sooth Kelly. Girl Ute Industrial Solderers Need kno\vll!!dgc of N.A.S.A. requ.lrementa ttrtiflctl or COl11.Pt\l'tlblc. Elec. ASM1T1blers Able to work und e r mlcroscopt. Needed lmmed. Sct·UP l\len BROWN & SHARPE $f1.Up M~ Good wage11. Xln't oo. be.ne- fll !J. Penn. steady emproy. tne.nt. 2nd shift openJng1. REXNORD INC. Specialty Fastener Dlv. 3UO W. Harvanl Santa AM 21</546:5100 ~ Eaual oppcr. emprloye1 m/f Uoo, paid abaense, group Certified Magnetic Tape hmou.~ Real F.8titl!! Llcens-Coe.st Plaza, Costa Mesa, life a medk'al lrisuntnce a Composer ·Operator. Must ina ~ now available l;;';;phf';i8.1S-,;;;,381""'';;· ,,.---..,,~-1 employee benefit plan&. be exp'd input & output fbTu T8rbe.U Reallors. Free SALESWOMEN, over 35, ex· 4 • ii) Week mil.Chines, t,ypeJetting Ior Placem,.nt Service. Free per dre«ses & sportawear. For YoUt convenience COTTIC!: booka, ma,gazlnl!!s, X 1 n t Training Program. Earn Ot & HB, ~~ Size shop. in. -1701 Placentia Costa benefits &. ~ cor>-while yoo. learn. Call Al Part time tncld. Sun. Call li-fesa. (TI4) 5CJ...2'Jll. ditk>nl. Salary 0 pen. Sloan !714) 832-M40, on 636-1957 eves. & y,•kenda. Equal Oppor. Empk>yer m/f Bond I Parkhursl Public&· Wffkendf (714) 832-10CO. SALESLADY tuU or part tion1. n• · 646--M55. REAL ESTATE SAL.ES. time. No nights°" Su~s. 1 •--=MA~acw-~ NW Car get ,.lldy man. LADY. FOR R E NT A L Please apply In penon <X\,.v .ru ;nulll:I' VIJii C13S1 A lmOI llceNJe AGENCY. GUARANTEE I ONLY. Costa Mesa Station. M:lc ~ I~.~ Tom Stamp Ford 5:j$ N El COMMISSION. PA RT era. :rnJ E. ITth St C M I al!tft. ~I ~ ... O>ni.ct ~!~ R;f~~· ~494-~ O~~· SALES =:Rx . . ' I Employment o1c betwn 8 A ..,.... • ~~. ' • DRU!': STORE ·i ~ 'l:ii· ~ w!'::'· 5 "f: ~>.UICK CASH •Sett~~"" .. f:l: SE~IL'.1.7:.::-.·0640~-_,~ ~----·Op ~~-. THROU"-H & lncailon In Lquna Ex ~. mu.ot b• '2061 Bu1inu1Clr.Dr. , .,.._ por. Em....,=. • ,. ..u.nt llnor Itme. Pi...; ,UJ>'d. Mu.at be able to do Ntwp0rt 'Beftch, Otlit DESK Clttk. Maintenance BOOKKEEPER man, maids. The': Nt!w Suite 1-~ Fullerton ~vino Q3.H07 Vacanclft~ ._,, = ~~AT::\..~~! DAILY PILOT call l!x!Ay. 497·1211. Ci.",:;~~='· 4 Day I A<ro,. l\<om o.c. All'l>Ol'l t\'d:, elc. thiua'flauyPllot 5364>1. CLASSIFIED AD Don1 gi.. up lhe alllo! Pro<lucis, m ·1v: 18th St. PART-TIME MarlM IM Mole!, OllM Ph: 9-J Jam, M~ti. Point Harbor. Call Gene 870-1833 F,,quftl Oppor. Emfl'oyer CiUl!tied Ad. Sell l~ema 6011.r 1'1lot w.Ot Ada have • L .. z.5678 "lbt'' II In •!uo!.l!!<!,~P C.M . I W•nt ad mNli. ..... ~ "'"'1 Call '4>'Jlll -I bo!J!a1"' pion• • -ta Sbtft a-ti.I .,,....,~ Clus!Oed M3 .•. 642.5613 • r..-111a1 11em w1dtt a . "" 1 _496-235:-,_3. _____ _ the Pino)' Pfndw. 011.sl~ Ads ••• ••• &a..S678. You'll find It In Cltt111ined ' ----• r ' -r .. l -' "' H• - Kr • h u II< u ~ Ii 1) u • • n Xl c E S< F n ( n c • I' c t I• c , .. a l r I ' ' ( ( "' s. c G ( ' 1 ~ I ' c I ( ' 0 c ~ I s: I I ' • • . J • . ~ I , ... ' .. r l .... _j ~~"'!.-Hlll : • 1k; 1· -• l[DJ IL.--, •_:'I ___,· l[Il]! I ;I; l[Il) I Ii...., , l[Il] !....__' "'-'~ • . • 'v«rz l ' DAILY PILOT ~ l._-_""""__,I~ ~ ... :i;~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiji~mm l s LlnM, 2 T-, $2.W •· .. Buildinl -rt.II -TV, Rodlo. lflfl, I I Help Wtnf911, M & I' 710He!r Wont.I, M & F 710 Help WOfthd, M & F 710Help Wontwd, M & F 710 lfelp Wontocl, M & I' 710 Holp Wonted, M & F TIDl---""-----1 · ----1 e Surplut.Bulldil!o Storeo 136 DARLING Utile puppltt, THE CALIFORNIAN RESTAURANT Undo..,.lng E"P'nslon P"'llrom Now Interviewing for M•n1gement Apply In PorlOO l.5 P .M. Mondoy thru Frldoy 1400 S. Horbor Blvd., LoHobro Equal Opportunity Employer Holp Wontod, M & F 710 Holp Worltod, M lo F 710 Secretaries The Irvine Company has openings for &eeretarica wlmin of 2 yrs exper. in either or the! following backgrounds. SERVICE station attendant, mature person preferred, Apply at Qoft Chevron, 3531 Newport Blvd., N.B. SERVICE Station attendent, exp. o/21, night:ll. 3928 Ea.st Coast H"'Y· Cd!ii'. 675-2276. SHARP GALS Wauld Yau lie To~ A Part Of Tbe Exciting Computer Industry? VDM Varian Data Machines Has the following immedi1te openings Production Planner VOLT Instant Personnel A Temporary Help Service \VJ'O ri~A 1&a~RK! MATERfAL • 1000'1 ot NEW 1973 RCA Ii: ?.enllh televlskln !>eq:le/poodle, g weekl old. CHOOSE your houri. work ~,;:·~,:O~~btr~l~~: & ste~ clrarance saJe. AU ~ m'°" bomt1, 567~ J for )'OU1'5clf, be )'OUJ' own tr\li: Wiodowa etc • ava.ll. models tn stock A on ·""'"='P'=,,..,=--::---:--=I boos. M•n or women. can BU.ILDERS SURPLUS dboplay .Prk<dlculhanthe 12> BLACK kllleno 8 ...... 1 be &li&:hily handicapped dlscol.Lnters with 3 )T 'Pie-~t. I .F, weaned A h.ebrkn. Ne a t-Oee.n Appearance'. 2400 So. Main St., S.A.. ture tube, I yr parts & ! ~lotntr Ruu Blu 6C-Tl68. Vtl, retired. ~ 21 lO 70. Mon thru Sat 10-5 11ervitt. ! }'fee UHF MIF -------- Supplement your income. TI4: 546-lQ.12 color antenna w/any con- Drive a cab 6 hnl or more a Furniture 110 J10le plll"t"hase <orfer good I rlay. Apply in person, ltm.1 31 May) ABC Color Ml•,_..., Yellow Cab Co., 186 E. 16th ELEGANT lll\i!M'll bt'dnn. TV, 19046 Bro o Jc. h Ur It St .. Costa Mesa. !il't, \\'hi & Rorl\I, ch-e!ISer. 968--3329 & 90:11 Allunta TYPIST minw, l hi.·in 1io11tt.r bed 96)...5509 Huntln&ton Beach C•tl 152 . , \\'Ith canopy, sp1-eftd, 111\P ---·------I Great opportunity fo'. e.xp d stand. desk & chair, chest RENT TO OWN fa.st, 1tQCUr1tte typist. To \\•ltJ1 hulch, ltlmp, bo>; lea~ the Mag Card ex· spring & rn.attres..<i, like ne"" TV'S & STEREO ecull"'.e ~ y p e \\' r I t e r . all for R'\O. 548-2479, $1 o En g 1n eenng background ===""'--..,----, helpful. Salary open. Call ORAP~lES.. 1 o t K. 2 PERSIA.'l kltterw, CFA l'fl· Xlnt. quality. 11'WJOO. A1oo stull M'rvicc. 892-2:)70. Dogs 154 for oppolntment 83.l-8830. niateh i:.:: chfln'S, i'Off~ ro111· No Credi! Oiedt•No Deposit Computer Automation ~ & crul tabl.<'1 !pttn~ F't'l!e Delivery . 1''l<tt Repair e PUPPY WORLD e 18651 \'on Karman Irvine v.oodl.. ~. " a I l 11.c· ~1onthly Rentals A\•allable 100 l\.tIXEO PUPS. Open UNDERGROUND 'c AT v ~=~:;n;1~:a.X:1 ~~: Open Eves. 543 4444 EveL lrl!h Setter $50. inslallers, exper. Trainees darin Dr C l\.1. Ba._qell 1 ~-Doberman $40, L'Onsidered. 642-~. 2624 " . !tt'EREO: 1.913, 200 Watt Bu Temer, T-0.ip Poodle, \\'. Coast Hwy, N . B. , PLUSll v('lvet sofa & love Quadra90n.lc, Garr a rd Chihu&hua, Lab., Boxt>r, Teleprompter Equal Oppor seat. Also HERCULON sofa n1odcl syslemized auto Coc.lrapoo. SWAP Shepherd!! Employer ' . ~ L.S., queen hlde-a-bc>d. tun1ta'b1r. Al\1 / n.t / l\.lPX I lor ?! St~d SePV most .iiiiiiiii;;iiO..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii..,ll cX~l~n!_:t._c_co~nd~. ·~•.!jq~ua~l.c.'6~<>-0069~~ Ret-civer, 4 Quad Speakers, bn..'Cda. 531-5027. Purch1slng Clerk Knowledge of A/P function as related to receiving dept. helpful. Typing 65 w.p.m. & use of 10 key calculator. \Vho are looking fOl' penn Vtime position ~n boutique sales. Must be exper. CaH for appt, THE LOOK B.A. in business adminstration preferred w/2-4 yrs exper. in production & inventory planning & control. •••SOFA & Lovescat, l:ipe deck. \Vas left SAVE ,\ lfOMEt.ESS P , UNSKILLED neve.r used, boU1 for $'155. unclaln1ed, s!lll brand llt'W Springer Spaniel. Buen.jl, r-.., Usually home. 968-7910 in box and guaranteed. Orig Keeshound, Beagle X, ; '-NEEDS YOU! Fln•nc• Secretary Heavy statiktlcal typing & use of 10 key. Organized person required w/expcr. in AIR & cash receipts func· lion. Typing 6.5 w.p.m. General S.cret•ri1I -SHARP, attractive gal need· eel to manage Newport Beach Orflce. Neat ap- pearance, shorthand & typ.. Ing essential. Hours 10:30 to 3:30 !\-1on thru Fri. Sali.ry $3.50 hr. 548-41441548-78.34 SHEET METAL Typing 65 w.p.m. Lite sh & use of 10 key. Require organized Individual '• w/ability to compose cor-l"!"ll.1..ED &: SEMI SKilLED respondenoc. With Exp. In following e SHEAR-BR.AKE Xln't benefits & working e PUNCH PRESS conds. e DRil..L PRESS Call Mrs. Smoot ~~~~r!',f;J,.~CH 644-3389 or e WELDERS e GRINDERS & 644·3317 e TOOL CRIB A'ITEND Xln't wages & benefits K. C. Holloway, Inc 16680 Armstrong Ave. Betwn Sam & 12 noon only. SECRY. R.E. Santi Ana 1714) 557-4040 Secretarial po~ition in active Realtor's office. Beautiful new office In Newpo11 Center. Corfgenial staf( or S~1ALL Auto parts manufac· mature peJ'l:IOnnel. .. A front turer wants s It i 11 e d office position re;iuirlng n1achinist to n.in lathe mill good telephone voice, SI-I & ect. We have paid holidays, IBM Exec. abilities. Real vacations, i n s u r a n c e , e11tate exerience not essen· pension· plan. Call 642-7391 tial, 6ut helpful. Prefer for app't. for interview or local resident. For intervU apply at 858 · Product Pl. call Mrs. Duhl Wesley N. =Nco.=B~. C'M~on-·Fri~· ,_s._s.,.. ---, Taylor Co. 644-4910. &'1ALL auto parts manuf. l""iiii""'ii;i""'iiii;;;oiiii,_I needs girl to do general ofc SEC. RETARY wol'l<, ""' phones. type in· voice:11, file, take orders. Call Mr. Reynolds, 642-7391 OiaHenging positk>n with in· for interview. Crown Mfg. ternational CPA firm in Co., 858 Production Pl .. NB. Newport':11 financial center. Need dynamic, personable Telephone Appt Sec'y gll'l experienced In handling P/TIME all office responsibilities. 5-9 pm, our ofc. CdM. Penn. Typing & :shorthand a must. salaried position requiring Call Mrs. Langton {71-11 personality & salesmanship. 644-4400. 833-3656 or 675-1089 (eves). Liz Reinders Agency 4500 Campus Dr. 546-2U8 Newport Beach SECRETARY Corona del Mar Young architectural fi.nn TOUCH UP MEN seek\ intelligent, attractive Arc Welder secy. 1 girl office, exp. re-Meat Builder quired. Typing, shorthand, M I F b • t xerox. fil ing. Auto required. eta • r1ca or s a I a r y commensurate Coblnetmeker w/exp. Benefits. For appt. Millmen ~61. Exper. in fiberglass only SECRETARY need •PPIY. Apply Mon 1hru Fee Paid. Modem ofc in TI1urs. Fashion Island. Heavy die· Columbia Yachts taphone. Lite sh. Start $595. 275 i\fcConnick, C.i\.1. Also Fee Jobs. Call Hl'lcn Equal Oppor Emi:lloyer m/f Hayes, 540-6055. Coastal TRAINEES, female, elec· Personnel Agency, 2 7 9 0 Ironic assemblers, full tin1c Harbor: Blvd., C.~I. days, start at $ 1. 7 5. SECRETARY -Part tin1c. •54ii!Hl>l ... iilii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii0ii CdM Real Estate Dev. Co. 4 hrs """day, 5 days. Call TRAINEES 673-8497 for appt. Openings range fro m SECRETARY stockroom v:ork to techni· One girl office, re:11ponsible cian trainee. We WRllt to career job w/varlety &. la.lk to you if you are a high Marlletlng Coordinator 2 Yrs exper. Must have expe~. in sales order administration & contracts. Background in engineering or production scheduling help- fu l. Clerk Typist Typing (50 w.p.m.) orders & filing in our purchasing dept. 2 Yrs recent office ex per. Blueprint Machine Opr ~iust have exper. on duplicating machine, engineering files & engineering documenta· tion procedures. .. Computer Operatqr~ -A minimum of ~ yrs computer operations exper. w/l yr DOS. 2nd Shift. Draftsman 2-3 Yrs experience. Mu st have some PC tape· up experience. Print Madiine Operator A miIL of 6 ma's offset press exper; desirable. 2650 Shipping & Receiving Clerk' 2 Positions open. Prefer some shipping &/or receiving exper. ~1ust be willing to work overtime. ~uaiitY Assurance Specialist Primary assignment will be receiving inspec· lion. Duties will include vendor purchasing material control liaison. Electro-Mechanical ln5pec~ Required to inspect computer systems & lower level assemblies for workmanship, completeness documentation. Must have re- lated exper. Second shift Inspector Min. of 3 yrs exper in a receiving ins'pection activity testing resistors, capacitors, pulse transformers, transistors etc. May be re- quired to assist lower 1evel inspectors. In Process Inspector 2 Years recent exper. in a related inspec· tion activity inclu ding cables, circuit boards, chassis etc. Calibration Technician challenge. Must like figures =ie ~~ty =de~t J:'i Salary Open. Phone 543-8358 yr. local \VOrk history & S.Crelliliry, p/time have tinkered with rad.Jo's! Call aft 1 pm 645--0173 OR head high school auto mechanics OR worked on SECURITY Officer, w i I I car repair OR no basic train, days, swing. Person· math. 11 you are interested nel Depl, Hoag l~osp, N.B. in an opportunity to train SERVICE Station Attendant with advancement potential full or p/time. Over 18. Ap-call 545-8261 for an In· ply Brown's Shell, 99J E. taview HPPOintment. An Coast Hwy. NB 644-4131 . equa l 0 1 por t untty Jr. colle2e or technical schoolin~ + 3 yrs exper in calibration of oscilloscopes, VTVM, pre-amps, differential volt meter, digital equipment & other eleclronic lest equip- ment. SKILLED ASSEMBLY ._.__ SOLDE~ERS Call Immediately Weekends Included • Small parts under magni- :f>iOW glau. CIRCUIT BOARDS e Wire & l·l~s • ~me Schen1atic" &. blueprintl. Top $$$-No f HI • P. P. S. 500 NNport Cenler Dr. Suite 900 Newport Sch 1 ' ~1970 Q4 Central Tower, Ornn;t employer. TYPISTS No FHs-Top $$ • Repro • 1.ecJal • Stat • Gen'I Office Call lmm<diat.iy • P.P.S • GOO NtwpOl't Cente rDr. Suite 900, N.B. 640-1.970 24 Centni.1 Tower, C>ran&e 547-<446 215 'E. Commonwealth Suite F Fullerton 870-1833 F.qual Oppor. Employor Electro-Mechanical Assemblers Min. 6 mo's electronic assembly exper. 1st Shift & some 2nd shift positions immediately available. Electro-Mechanical Assembler 2nd shift. Must have at least I yr rework ex· per. U you meet any of these qualifications & are interested in joining a growing Orange Co. cdmpany that offers xlnl benefits and working conditions. PloHo Apply In Porson \ Mondoy Thr,.u Frldoy 8:30 AM · 4 PM To Tho Porsonnol DoporlrMnl Or Cont•ct: B. Kr1fk• • • Exec. Secretaries Gener•I Sec'ys Dictaphone Sec'ys • Repro Typist Tech Typlsl Sr. Typist .Clerk Typi1t MTST Operator Regitter Today- Work Tomorrow- • • Clerks Filo Clorks Documentation Clerk1 • Bookkeepers Account Clerkt Interviewing Hours 9 A.,,. .• 2 P;M. • Keypunch Oprs Koytope Oprs • PBX Operators Coll Dl...ctors T olotypo Oprs Work Whon lo Whoro You Want Long lo Short Term A1signments . * * CONTEMPORA!l'\'. 10' JJrice $400. Now $1S5. Cash cockapoos. Old En 1 11 I h : ASSEMBLERS Sofa, dining tnblt'. chairs, or small payments. 893--0501 Sheepdog. Many cute mlxed • Male-Female No FHs-Top $$ bullet. Xlnt cond. 847-8906 STEREO: Unclainied 1973 puppl~s. 5 3 4 -J 2 2 8 or ~ HEADBOARD, red vc\vt'I , Gun·a1'fl n1od('I,~ full size _4!»-4 __ S53_. ------t gold trin1 dbl llke l\e\\' $60. turntabl(', A?.1/Fi\1 St('rro A1'"GflAN pups, A.'CC, shots& 548-2479. ' ' ' 1X>eei\·cr, full rnnge air \\'OMned. Oian\pion line. Call In1mcdiately \Veekends Included 816 sp('akers, tap(' deek and Very-reasonable. Tenn.. Machinery h~adphonc plug in jacks. &lf'1-2235 • P.P.S IT--IR-E_>_la-,h"';,-..,-_-9_;_g_4_M_od-ell Brand new . In . box ·c --R-E-AT_D_AN_E-.-9-moo--ol-d-.' 1'lark V, WinolVl Armature guarani~. Orig pnce ll90, AKC. String or Presley lathe. 675-0700.. now $95. Cash_ or small dop. l\.fusl sell. S 150 . ~=""-'------==I payments. 89J...OO()l S45-83k3 500 Newport Center Or. 1M._i_sc:e_ll_•n_oo_u_s ___ a_1_11 *SPRING SPECIAi:"* MALE S:,;01 Bernard, 1 moo. Rebuilt-Picture Tubti AKC ~ered $ ~ 5 O. SUite !KXI, N.B. 640-1970 24 Central ToweJt, Orange 547-<;446 WANTED $85-21 '' or 25'' Color 645-8393' aft. 4PM * 2 YEAR WARRANTY TOY Poodle, white female Installation Available AKC, $ll0. 215 E. Olmmonweallh Suile F Fullerton TICKETS TO LED ZEPPELIN CONCERT ' Rice's Television Service Call &i&-2M9 fonnerly Mes& North Center 1 Bick S. of Baker 5+6-fi002 01.D English Sheep !lo< pup. pies, AKC, xnlt l»ood line, shown by appt. 96)..1444 MIN, Schnauzers 12 wka old, AKC, 3 male:11. 87(1...1833 open ~ (6 days) · Equal Oppor. Employer Plea..sc call 548·7881 CaU 637-4578 Vl:."'TERl_NARIAN .. Assistant * For Coat Only * I 111 ro.r an1.n1al hosp1lal, NB, usc·n 11 h' t kl rod · & frM to You \Vlll train •nature person to s:.u ~ .ml!!. ac e, s . . AFGHAN Pupplea, ch. sittd, $450. Resume to Cl.assi(ied reels, hncs, tackle bo~es, • blondes & brlnd!ea. $75. I: ad no 659 c/o Daily Pilot tools, housewares, cabinet 3 Linet, 2 Times, $2.00 up. 893-2655 or S!M-9703 · ,~. ~--M hardware, and many other1,.--.. •••••• I P.O. Box i.nv, \,,Ul';ta esa Items too nun1erous to men.I• SCHNAUZER PuPll, lhotl, Calif. hon. All very reasonable. ADORABLE kittens, 6 wks, 2 1tud service, terma. ! WAITRESS. Over 21. Lunch 3625 w. 5th St. Santa Ana. fe, 3 111a., grey, bUt/whl, {TI4) a22-8366 & Dinner, p/tiJne..hrs ar· 9:30 to S PM. 1 block oU blk, tlu!ty. Need love. SILKY Puppies · (7 wk1l. j ranged. Apply, Coa.che's Harbor Blvd. ~7604 Intell. pets. E~z groomU., Corner Restaurant So. Cst YOUNG blk. hnl. cat. no lhed, no odor, 557-2821. Plaza, 3333 So. Bristol SL, * AUCTION * Spayed, '1>ots. Nds very BORDER Colll• Pups, ,... .. C.M. Fine Furniture special home -no kids. best bloodline, shota. SlOO. WAITREs.5, over 21, exper. & Appliances 549-1846 Pvt. party. (714) 627-1228 Mexican food. Apply Chilli Auctions Friday, 7:30 p.m. Pepper, 3201 E. Pacific Windy 's Auction Barn Coast Hwy. CdM. 2075% 1'cwport CM 64&-8686 \VAITRES.SES · Food . ~ Behind Tony's' Bldg Mat'I. Cocktail exper. only. Sid sl~"===-"::--0,==,=~ Blue Beel 673-9904 alt 4 DINETTE, leaf. 4 chn: $35, pm ' $40, ~. 6 drawer chest · $27.50, $3.i. Wonder Hcne WAJ'!TED: ~~ accurate $5. Ladies & men's bikes typist familiar w/specg. $24.95. 'IV1 i15 It up. helpful. Call 541)..g'l65, Equal Re f rlgeraton, furniture, Opportunity Employer. miac. USED USABLES, WAREHOUSE workman for 2500 Newport. Blvd, C.M . busy sail fabric firm. Must ="""o=',,t=hru"'=Sa"""t-..,-,_"""".1 accept responsibility. WW SECRETARIAL desk like Ing lo learn. Call 645-1066 new Metal w I \\' h I t e WE NEED Sha k I e e 1'~ormica top. Cost $375-Sell Distributors. No exp. nee. $100 962-6004 just ambition. No layo[fs. P"°RO""F"°ES!='SJ°'o"'N"'Al..,..--sty,..l:-e-poo-·11 548-5253, NOW! table. 7X4. 1 piece slate. Access. included. $250 ~ 673-8774 I ~ ANTIQUE love seat, 4 ,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiimliiiil hitchcock chairs. Gateleg • table. Bric-a-brac. Mink Antiques BOO stole. 548-9778 - (2) 6' Metal tool boxes for GRAND OPENING PU truck. $50 each. Also Antiques, Laguna's newest manual operated lift gate. fine selection of carved $75. 546-8672 847-81.l.5. furniture. AtJ:noires, tables, WATER Softener Refiner chairs, aide .boards •. much fam si. Lifetime frbgls. Seti more. Every item priced at cheap. 543-T:>Sl 24 hr'l'I. special sales price. Corne inl=" .. ~"'°'=-'~==o=-= I and browse at 1550 So. Coast 21 COLOR ColllOle TV $75. Hwy., Laguna Beach. ~~ ~~~er64~~a1 stove 1''UR Sa.le, HEPPLEWHITE Mahogany bureau~esk. c. Musfcal lnatrumenta 122 .;.1775=·,c$900=c.· -=-'-3726=-~=IBANJOS, Guitars $20. up. Appll1ncet 102 Eleetric Guitars from $59.50. Por •n eel In Woman•1 Wwlcl Call Mory Beth 642..5671, ext. UO ~ Graceful Unes Swim Tw-1 • Exper Assemblers Thunder v;bratone $:!85,, , S!IO 1 YR. guarn, del & install. Bandmaster reverbe amps , Late mod. Kenmore washer. & speakers $565., Crown Trainee Assemblers 6.16-2S<IO; 839-lnB. Amplifier S69.50. RECOND. APPLIANCES crown VaJley Niguel P•ckera Delivered -guar. Dunlap's, Music Company 495-1780 1815 Newport, CM 548-7780 ELECTRIC Bass. Brand new REPAIRMAN has washer, condition, New Sirin~ Pro • 6 neral Laborers I electric dryer & a;shwashcr Model, will !Tade '".goo<! e $45 ea. 646-5848. quality acoustic guitar call llocom9AVory Important Person ..• Work for VOLT Instant Personnel Your Executive T e mporory Service e DISHWASHERS, washers, 54.1-9651. dryers, rebl!, guarn & o=fl~ic-o~F-u-rn~i-tu_r_e~/-­ delv'd. ~,,;20; 546-5218. Equip, 824 Rent W••hera/Dryers $2. \Vk. F'1.ll maint. MAROIANT calculator wi!h * fi3S...1202 * tape. Does everything. Paid ·=="='=~~·.C...,.,---1 19511. Sacrilloc lo' S350. 9343 KENMORE Washer, Maytag 536-6300 Knit a !'\ee)t swim suit and Dryer, xlnt cond., prlv par. EXE __ C_.wv_l_c_h_Ml_ll->-~25-s.o-I SIZES 1~16 ._...__. crochel coat to top tt off! ty. $80 pair. 644-4832 chrs $8132 Desks p)/95 Off t., "'1f' ..ffT Bare-back halter awtm suit KENMORE gas dryer. Used Sup! 867 W 19 CM 1>42-3408 lllMiMI lllM-f'.,.. ln euy-knlt rlbbtna ltrlpet.. I tha 1 yr 9 IW'I w kd Crochet coa.l (one aim foe' 8~~ 6 p~ 962.7i'os. ee a.ys Planoa/Org•n• 826 all) in mesh. Use aport yam. GC'ntly flowing Jines sug· Pattern 7445: suit s 1 ~ ot ~ RE1'~RIGERATOR 5 years ORGAN HOBBY gest a tulip shape -evt'n to S(S-10); M(U-141; Lt16) old auto defrost. very clean the lovely curves of the i.ncl. 89:1-9060. pockets. NI) \valst seams -SEVENTY·FIVE CEN'l"8 SEARS Kenmore electric Don't buy any c~gan until sash It or not as you \Vlsh. for each pattem -add 25 dryer. excellent condition. you cnn play! Non.players Send? centa forl e~ch pattern for s75. 586-6356. welcome to attend free work Painted Pattern 9 3 4 3: Air Mall 9.00 Speclal Handl· • shops. For lnfonnatlon Misses' Siles 8, 10. 12, 14, 16. Appl11ncH 802 Contact: Tom Dieterich Size 12 (busl 34) requires ~':fj~~ ~iro: FREIGHT Damage Sale on 642·2151 1518 yards 00-indt fabric. Wffka or more. Sml to new Hot.point & \Vhirlpool Coast Music S.rvfce SEVErfrl'·nvE CENTS Alice Brooks, the DAILY r etrig/wa:11bers/dryen Newport Blvd. at lfarbor for each pattern -add 25 Pn.ar, 105, Needlec:nft 545--07ff0, '•iiiiiiiic.staiiiiiiiMi;eii .. iiiiiiii,_I °"AtrntaMallforand .. cSb.!!'1a1"ernHandlfor De1>L, Box 163. Old a..i... ~=~~--~-1, ~· • Station. N•w Yon. l:f.Y. KENMORE wlllber/dr)ier B Y GRANDS Ing: otherwise thlrd-clul 10011. Print NUDet A ·t..,, $'19 ea. Over 2flO wuh<,.., AB deliwry will take three Zip. Pa,,_ ,...,...,, ~ryrn, refrlg from $39.95. Nov.• save up to $100) on ecr· v.·eekl or more. Send to NEEDLECRAFT '12f ~. ta.in Ooor models. Other Marian Martin. the DAILY Crochet. ltnlt, etc. Fl'M }~REE Pickup-Jb>rrlg., any Grand Pianos from $729. P232Il.01': 442.18thPatteSmt Dept., dlrectlonl.. S)c. nppllance:11, runnlng or no1. Tt~ 11.nd many mort at: \.,.es\ • New lMtaat 1'lacrt."'-..._ Any scrap me1al. 673-52.18 Wallichs Mu5ic City York, N.Y. 10011. Prlnl Basic, t11.ncy knob. pa~· onytlme. NZIAME.P .. 2°Dand&ESS -!'.!'!: tcnm. $1.00. NORGE 18 lb. wasOO', South Cout Plaza 54G-28.1> NVMBER:i:o 1:11 ... ,..._ IMtaat CrotMt BM • avocado, 2 )Tl old, like new Good SEE MORE Q u t ck Le~ by ~tcturMI Pat- 3148 C•mpus Drive $125. Guar. & delivered. Sporting t 830 Fuhkma and choole one tflrm. Sl .00 . Sullo 106 Nowporl 8Hch ;l6-ll672 or 8'7-llllS. POOC TABLE, antlq .. gold. pa~~~""nunlree-e .._.OUl'All .'"*'~tau:.~Ol:n.~ llOTPOINT auto washet & 8', newly rettnlahed, com· So ..... -.>U. ..... '-'....,. $1.00. 1-'rtgidaire auto "'aaher, plete. $200/offer. 6:13-51.41. m-ir~ ~G BOOK OJrnplekl A.fc'U 9eC .. I 547- 215 £. C.Ommonwealth CLASSIFIED ADS FOR ACTION ••• CALL 642-5678 2722 Michelson Dr., Irvine 833·2400, Extensian 336 546-4741 ~Jl>.. good. cond. 14<> ea. TV, Rodlo, HIFI, fl.00. ~1:1. sew today, wear tomor1ow. 11 IU'ty a .. Boob • Slc. ' QUICK CASH Storoo 136 $1. -• 01 u Prloo AW • Stilie F Fllllol'lon l " 11711-1833 • f.CIU"l Oppor. Em~ • 1-~!!!!i"~~~ ... I ,.. "Weed It .6 lta:p' I""°' trnaum to !nib •• Tllm them 1n!D cub -' CALI, Dolly Piiot \ INSTANT FAS H I O N THROUGH A AM RADIO FROM '72 BOOK • H-o I ~l -1 • B po-PINTO. BEST OF!"ER! fultlon facts. $1. Ille. An Equal Oppo-•nltv Employer Eqtk1l 0P1'0l'. Employer DAILY PILOT • 919-7315 • !'at Profit "' attained .,iw,;. M---I -• '" •• 1 Ukt to TradeT Out Tn.dt!r'• )'(Ml 1e1ll throqb nsult~set· 50c. Anl'tlal'llUio~D"f~l WANT AD Pantdloeoolumnbolor)'Olll """Dally Pilot C'.!oaJfled ~ .............. Ll!ltl. ,.. .. 14! oon t c!olq. • • CALL 642•5678 s 11i ... , s di.Ya r... IS. Call Ada. GCHm 1>nutt1111 ""-'°" .co11 lodOY 64U61I. !!!m••••!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ II !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I ______ _,, todal' · · · 642-llm _____________ , I • I l • I • I DAILY PILDl MoM,_,, M~ 14, 1973 l[i) I liil I _.,._ ·I~ I l§J I 1§11 I§ E -tor- Auto S.rvice, P•rt1 949 Autos, Imported 970 A-, lmponod 970 Autos, Utod 990 Avt., Uoed • 990 925 BEAUT. G<\ldina. Partian, Gym Kha.nt. trained. $«XI. Call 952-537$ SPciJtTSTER I thoppet, bl1 lor SllOW w/lotg Of chrome. Li.'M rhan 1,00> to1al u1ll~. ~Ince nu ln 1971. Over $5000 in bikll, Fh111 toi•lling pi'ice S:~.;«i. f'or lime 'ol'ho wttnt the ultim1:1te 1n a srr«'I & idl''"' blkt..' call G44-6500 ur alt ti i·all Gl4·2342 to N.'t- BMW 970 Autos,1_.i.d HONDA PARTS ONLY FOR. SALE CHEAP l'tom 195!1 SEDAN 0. VIiie SALES BMW LEASE 970 A-. l,...n.d PORSCHE '72 Pondle YOLKSWAGIN CHEVROLET FORD ---1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil YW's NEW & USED 2 Big Lontlon1 '73 Monte Carlo I HORS&S Boarded, ridn~ arena k traJ.1a. 20271 Acacia St. S.A. lleiaht.s. 6.&4-5.ll7 fOR sale Oi' ITad~. 7 yr. !IOitlitvTitlinc bone. '""'""· fjut ~lrl!ed. 536-85.11 -· ... CADILLAC Service T1";.i;os1nLM:k111 'l'ravt!-llng Oveneu thi~ aunl- HwJlo mer! \rt c11.n arrange for Air (A:lnd l11onlng Unit 4JeHvf'ry of the BMW of your 1212 South RoM St ., l'hc>k;t' inc luding shipping Sftnlll AIUt hy Pf'\l)nl'. Delivery I! aYBll· ::>42-:1120 11ble in m02it all foreign - -"'-----I i97J SL ?.j(l JIONDA . TiJp '5.J Cht•vy 'i dr, 6 t•yl, :1111K.·t:d. countries. '73 HONDA CIVICS HONDA SANTA ANA 301 W. W•r-54().7430 FREE PRIZES JAGUAR t11·T 5,600 rnUes, silver with bla.ck inlerlor, S auspensk>n, 5 speed, AM/FM S t e re o hldlo, 11poUer, $8l95. 5 MINUTES FROM COSTA MESA 2114 E. JSl' ST .. S.A. 835-6531 !4 MUes No. or So. Coast PlazaJ w, i\T, PS. Air, Landau 1011, I etc., low ntiles, factory wa r· 1971 FORD LTD BROUGHAM ranty. iJ82FSQJ. IVS Engine , ONLY $3995 Power St.,...ong · I Power Disc Brnkes OTHERS TO Cl-IOOSE FROl\1 Air Conditioning HOWARD Chevrolet Tilt StCl'rilti" Wheel Newport Beach Blue Finlah --I~ condit ion. Only l!,000 rru ll'.~. J GQ<MI hc ... ty. Runs, will llCll Bob ML' La r •·JI aulhorl1.cd .70 XJ(E: Jaguar, silver No dt'n l!;, J'4•1·ll-t'I ~h:q)I•. wt10l1.· i·iir or Sl'.!11 parts. '61 BMW Dealt•r ii·/blk lnl., 2 p I ace , Never IX'f'n In !ht" d i11. 1'his l PonluH·. Good n101or 138~H 850 Norlh Beach Blvd., La AM/FM SW, air, 4 spd, hlkt> I~ bcttl'r thttn nt'\\ & uut1J 1runs. + rl•ar cod, llabra new radials, Kooi shocks, k> $8195 NEWPORT IMPORTS :noo \V. Coast Hwy., N.B. 642-9405 15 MINUTES FROM MISSION VIEJO AREA fl1a.cArthur Blvd & Jamboree Durk Blue Vinyl Roof . 833-0555 ~1atchi11~ Brougham Intenor 37 ,000 Miles Showroo1n CondlOon $2695 See at Bo. G 1 900 suv1• youm•tr $350 10 $'11.IO tl'K1.v ~1)(11!. \VIII !'K:U 11">n1. 1'179·5624 or 52'1-5.U.'\ rni., $3850. 968-'755l l =="=·==•~n=o~r~•==== off l'l<'W pru.:1'. tJ11ty $650. pJPr1• ur /l.'.1r111. Call 11.fler CAPRI .69 JAGUAR XKE 4.2, Ex-'70 911-T. Dark green • 556.8597 • 7:30 J>.rn. ;;J3-369l. ----------cep1ionally e1ean nu Urea, AM/FM, appearance group, Do-It-Yourself-Boaters 1-MAv-1Jcz SALE-' '& 1 $3400 830-3098 I owner . Daya 52UJ391; $ SAVF: S Fl:1·:1·: ~l~~J l{.\CI·: Sl·~l'l 'l' I l§J I -'--'---------eves, 635-8673. 1442 SO. BRISTOL, S.A. 546-0220 (S.A. 1''rwy. East 011 lst St. !4 mi.) 19ti7 OlEVY lmpah1. Z d1· hrdtp. Lo mileage, orig owner, fac instal 8 track tpe deck. 4 spke.rs, n/c, p/s. Jl/b, xlnt cood. $975. 1561 Pegasus, Santa Ana Heights ;.l6-4Z16 DA ILY PlWT EMPLOYEE PARh."ING LOT 3.10 West Bay, Costa Meta or '65 IMPALA spt. cpe A-1 eng Call Marg11.rl·l Greeo1nan ~:~1e:!a 1f'f~1i~11i~~l l~'hiis.:1~~' •w"u"'h•"•"~"~T.ICZ •. ~·...,M11X&...,·°"".,·.,·';,.t Au!osforS. Q • I KAR~A~~--~HI~ '69-9ll E, TARGA, silver, s 3 ~ • _ _ --spd, mags, pirellis, FM Haul-001" Pnintl n~ · 1 ~y._-:r ... ~Tffl 1 ••••••••-'69 KARMANN GH IA, rM'w stereo, xlnt 644-4565 Commonwealth Re pa Ir !! · 4 t'•"Of('Ssion:.J MWArce:-A\'W' 1' j BRAND NEW painl, engine, brakes. tires.1 •°'66=""9"12~Y°'e1"1ow"-'-'=Ponc~"he~.-,.,,-. and inside. Needs body e 642-4.121 e \\'Ork, S500 lirn1 5.52-T".:s:ll I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! j eves l' 1970·FORD hlaver1ck, 6 cyl., all deluxr featun's, auton1., facl. uir, radio, heater, ett'., etc. A-I 41nechanically & thruout, lo mi., new tires, xtra whls. $1550. (Blue Bk $1850.) 1 01vner. 495-4556 Service Avallabh..', 100 1. Antiques/Classic s 953 APRI See to appref'. Bes! offr. reblt eng, new clutch, 5 spd. Motors Ltd. Pecff~T~es Marine z::{~~~:ri~1~~?1~~.~1 c~;~~;~s I ~ FOH.D l\tod('I A <:oupr I •73 C 49'.J.-73-16 ~l27S0.,.-;;;-;64H3-:;;-~12::.-;;::::;;:-u:::l·--==:-='S"'a'°'n"t•7:0A.cn=•"7-=--I .71 CAPRICE N th ~t . Joh ,-R·-.-c .-ng CycleS \\·1·:.s l\1l·rc .,~in(•, n<"w Immediate De livery MAZD 1970 9ll T Cpe. Sporto. Mag '71 YW BUG Air, pwr, am/fm, $2900. i<wport Hl •iit·h n s 1 radiator nt't"(is sornc body GUSTAFSON A whls. Am-Fm Lo mi. Xlnt * 846-81})3 * • 673-65-10 • * BUL TACO * I 11ork. ~1w;t ~('It. $9:i0. ur I cond. $5600. 646-7910. Brown 1vith pin striping, 4 ·n CHEVELLE Malibu p/s, I ======~--. iEADQUARTERS FOR hcst offer, 847--li!'i93 tlftcr 6 ,v, 1 Lincoln-Mercury *Maul• 173 Rotary * ROYER spd, (806CF0J . air cond. SparklPs! $24.15. \\'ANTED: Ycurround <ll'C'k or-;sr;RT. r.1()'1'0 x T'T wknds. I 16800 &'Uch 3.t \'Jamer I $66 MONTH $1599 557-6934. 'rFbci::rt for sharp ::;r ~~l~'~ Acccssorieii. I ·51 CAOll..LAC Huntington Beach :lli IHONT•rs OPEN LEASE I M X J~c c-ruisi·r. -· : 1 ll;i.rt~r ~1 \\'il~~1·. ~'.i\1 · ~'l . .1'..:E1'\VOOD 842·8844 * (213) 592.5544 \Vil! accept trade-ins 1969 ROVER 2 O O OTC ' B LL A EY S:::i 4~.no: ~6:i.VefO:~::: . • ----_ _Q4G-4655 ~r-~~~~~-Black. 4 (lot1r. i.;xceUcnt ''Home of the Viking'' CALL l\1R . FRY 842-6666 am/fm, sport rims, xtras. TOYOTA 557 7878 . t INTERNATIONAL 9' HIGH SJ>etd ln.rlut;ihl'.' l!J71 SL .1:~i0 HONDA. 'foµ 1'0ndlllun. Ou1 uf s lorugt'. H B h asking $1200. 675-8214. -pri. Py. '71 fNT'L Travclall , air, boat. fl~rt-:~llt'C~--I:~· 0'.11'" I c·on<lilion. Only 2,000 n1 ilrs. lk'SI nffl'r. :l·1!~1 Anniversary DATSUN uni. eac TOYOTA U!l!81. BEACH BL. 847·855.5 CHRYSLER p!)\\/Cr, auto, exc<'llent cond, O~Jy 11·~·1 ·:, 11111 · • S:NXI I Nn rh•n1s. Pl'rfvet shape. l • .'l nt•. N1•11•J'll1r1 Beac·h. -----------1 IIUN'I'INGTON BEACH $3250. 557-243H. 642-3776 .t/l('i __ .i_piii_. -N1•v1•r 11(',.n in lht' {lir!. Thi~ 'DATSUN MAZDA TOYOTA SALE '68 VW 7 Pais Bus '72 Chrysler N~·port, Show MAVERICK Boats, Powitr 906 1 hikl' i.~ IJ('l1t•r ihun nt•il'.' Recreational AT \llhite 1vith red interior, Room eond. 2 dr. ht, p/s.J----------~ S;ivi· your.-;cH ~2.)0 nr s:::xJ Vehicles 956 NEW 1973 Pr•Devaluation AMIF~1 R.'ldio, Jo1v 111iles, p/b, air, vinyl lop, road ·70 ~tAVERICK. auto. radio, 16' 19,0 llydrt»jWlfl 1nh11ard-1 "fl n1•1v pnr<'. Onl,v $700. PICKUP PRICES 1-lide-a-Bed and 1'abl(', whls. l\1ust sell. Best oUcJ'I Polygbo;i.; tires, new brks, OUl~l~ 90 hll ~)rt in;• ?J\~~;I • 556·8;',97 • 'li:l IN'f S1·11ul, 'fili :::n Chevy 17331 Beach BJ. 842-6Gfi(i $1695 over 1vholesalr book takes n1njor tuneup. xlnt cond. ""' """ ,.,, "" 1 "" '" · -BICYCLE S AL E -""'· 1-w u . "'" "·''· NO DOWN MERCEDES BENZ: BRAN 19 D 72 NEW Laguna Imports ;" call 833-3646. eo. __ .,"!.,.· 11 pvo party. S1650. IV~~ !her~ 11,~n'.l~hl1t•ld 1.111U I Nf:\\I 10 SPEF.D ITALIAN •I in,·11, \\'ar•net' hub S, $fill.2:~ per n10 . !or 48 rno. .....,-..,, misc . sl. .uat' l'<1u1pr. nv,.,.,,,,, .. I .. ba' I II to 0 I . • 49•1075 COMET $1,750. 675-~7. BICYCLES 59.95. BcAt·h . . '·. 01~ · u , P l'. payment pnt.:(' $3m.60. Auto. trans., radio, !act. air • •R MAVERICK 4 dr, auto, . . Bit•yclPs, MG E. H<1lbou & h,u k sr.i.L s1000. 673-1738. A.P.R. 14.347'. 50 USED rood \\I S..\V tires r I YW BUG R/H AIC PS I 250 l l Foot Fibrrglas~ Sl)('i<fl I Blvd .. 1-3.il lbo;.i 675-72'12'. Ht-;AUTIFUI. J\1 F.: YER S gla~: CT£it00615071. · 111 · '66 '61 COi\1ET 2' tlr, lo11J nu tires, $2395. '962----7588 eng, Boal. Red & \\'hilt.'. 2 ~•Her. ·~· • ---, . MANX MERCEDES $2563 Orange, perfect car (889CXUI n1Heage. gocxf tirrs, batlery 20 hp P.t:ert:. & tra1lt·1· \Yilh 12 SUZUhl 4-00 i\ll)hii·r~i.~.~ Dunt• hug;:y. Many extTns. O'N DISPLAY $AVE NOW $699 ,~ SC'al CO\·crs. SJOO/best of. MERCURY new lirt•s. S350. Call af!C'r ~:;;oo_,nr ht•sr orri·i·. (all Sl1<t•rl lt·r:a J. 67H74l! f "16-2267 1-----------1 7:30 p.m. !">4~!~111_. _ _ _ 1 ~'.!6-.iXlX an ~1~12:____ Sharp New Car AT BILL MAXEY er. :... ·11 COUGAR XR7. Xlnt 42' CHRIS CltA~1' 111 IJC•au1 71 .. l-londa 7.Jll. l-:'"111 t•in· /Trucks f 962 '71 J)ATSUN pi<·ku11 y,·/a il' Trade-ins f\n,. .. l••.,:• TOYOTA CONTINENTAL l"Ond. lo mileage, nl'w fil'l's shape, 19fi2. S:11· r if 1 l' l' I d •'.1~>11· ~t.'f'~'11; 1!' 11111•·ai.:i•. ·-. , . . . eood., larg<> \\'hel'IS, slcp Coming In Every D ay -UAA Ull\O ful ly load('d. A ti1 I F' l\1 Tern1s, l'l1ake flHi·r. l'rin-1 Bi .~l of(ri · J7J-~117 __ d I),\ J s tiN p1eku p \\ l<11r htun/M'r & Six-Pal' ealiovcr Ask About Our Unique -JOYOJA t8S.'ll BEACfl BL 847·8555 *MINT CONDITION* stereo, tilt \\'heel, p/steer- eipals onl). f1IX-.-~l1."1 tH' '70 :.::ii 'YA1\-1Al lA 1·.,111!., IHJ'i,:t· \1 lµ•1•ls, SIP[l Can1pf'r. Sleeps four adults. l\UNTINCTON BEACl l ing & brnkes, air cond., 0'"9710 h'k H "" ti 1 1' " .,. t> •··· .___ U sed Mercedes Lease 1 19n · Mai·k III, loaded \\'/ dclux inlerior & con··""le. ,,..,,... . slN'C'f 1 e. ,,_,,,_, u111»' .~· .,1x tte cuuuv1•r It>ebox. s!ove. ,,..~,t . roof Pl .71 SUPER BEETLE. MUST e ·"a 1 JI ~u ·p~ \Vh 'o - '67 ~'TAltC ltA~1' 11;· l!uri;i !16'1-J:Ul:J f'un11.1Cr. Sll'l'IJS fnul' adults. rack:. $2150. or oHer, \Viii ans 1966 llarbor, C.M. 646-9303 S".LL. Sl".ruo /"-"."I "''''I'. x s, u Y ~-. 1 ~· 1 e lln1C' Rl'Cf'll w/blttck vinyl ------· -l!'t'h•1~ slovt· hc:lo1 'rcx r 496-412'1 H f I ,., 'IW ut·., v 1v/rt'<I int., 1vhite vinyl top. roor. Supt>r buy at $3495. ~r. l'll~rglass, 6 h11. J\h·11·.1 '7:l llONIJA :{ii. 1111111 !O!ld raek .. $21~-,;I. 4>He1:. \V i;I _::i:·p'.tt'a1I'. _. ·--ouse 0 mports I '67 TOYOTA Xlnt corul., lo rni. '199-17~ Lil1v mileage. "$5750 firn1! Cull I} rt 11; in11 I OY•ncr Elect. Sl3;J'IPI'. ~ai 6· Liu ' Mn!1Y lH'l'l"ssoi 1e·:o1, $liQll, ~Ppara!c, 49ii-ill2:!. I 1 '173 DATSUNS 6862 l\tonche,o;ter. Buena Park I STOUT PICKUP eve. 494----9173 clay . 6.15-8407 call ho1wn 4 & S 1 714-557-1571 Wl'ekclays 9-6. whet-I trailer, skis & :u•t·c·.~s. I .J,'i7-1071 all br1111. ~ . , • • . on the Sanla Ana Frn•y '69 V\V CAr-.lPER. Xlnt cond. pm only. • Xln t. <..'Ond. -:t_J_20l_I_. -. ~~'ll:JBatitl!GIJ.--Tlt lUMPil---'1~~1'--;~ ~~~~N no:1i~·B'·li~~~k~~~.;1: I ALL M_QD.ELS 523-7250 Lat<· n1odel, overhead cam 1v/1Xlp. top. & ten I. $2T.)(J.l .. ~69"""L~l~N~CO=l~.N""''~C~•n~t~•t~. -=0-,-,rk ·~b/~!~~Ji~G~ld ~~?an::~: BOAT & n1o:or~n~. Ill Ly111a11 J;.~ rond. $625. J~hn~n .1, nihl>l•r, n1any x1ras. $800. IN STOCK * SPECIAL * rngine, ne1v tires, camper ~84.t 4 6 -8 8 7 7 ; t>ves gfay-blk vin fop. All pwr, d lx'int., lo mi .. below book, need~ pa1nt1n~ & 1·n~. rtshing inotoi:...!_~~J. ,}<IS-142_ 8!l2~172 aflf'r-6 µ1n I sh<'tl. (835CPH). · · lilt whl. all Jthr inter. A-1 $3250. 645-2-t82 afl 7. ~pair. ~l nr n1oorin~ J{J{·1•· USED BICYCLES ·6g TOYCYrA H'I 1 . _ BARWICt< IMPORTS $1099 '69 BUG. New tires, new eng. main!. Superb auto. I~=:::..:==::...::::...::..._ __ hon. 5 mu110 Jl'!1y. BP~I of· 111 Ty•••· * "l:l l27,, 1, U T k 1 1 ux ~.-.JIJOOon, :i:fl75 Camino CapistTano '70 MERCEDES BENZ BILL MAXEY brakes, good cond, cleao. Pvt ply. $2450. 67?.-2420. MUSTANG fer. Call .J. Chttr. C.7'.{-3849 I ' ,..._~ "' -·-·_ ·. _r~u; · ownt.·r._ :....... Sa n Juan CapistTano $1050. Call 545--0630. 16, LAP bou . b. Mobile Homes 935 I • 1111, 64;,-J147 afl 4, S9!l.i. 493_3375 or 831•137;, I '68 4-Dr. Hardtop, air, IW\V runa t iv/t a in, I* 'ti2 CJ-IJ:..VY 11 TON . 1 TOYOTA ·67 V\V Bug, FM stl'reo, tit"t's, radial, xlnt cond. 'G7 SHELBY 500. Ne\v paint, C4 lcl·yl.f!Gr~y l\ia"!_!l('f k~ng,•.1 :.11;· 1.;.1:ct>lll•nl fur J\1l'Xit.•o. t·onrlitzon, $.\lC1.~673-X!2og~.~t 1972 240 Z 280 SL CPE ROSTER 18.SSJ BE CH BL 84 radials. ~tany xtras. $790. $l!r.il. 675-4600. bb'u'c"k'..'1,·, l~~ .. -u'p",",'.te~ba. Aclkl a a l'r .a p.rn. "a c 0 · Sfo!{-cont<Jint•d. /\'f'i •rls 11·ork I ~.2. I Au·, Mags, . 4 S 11 l' t• ti . A · i-8555 548----9536 OT 54$-3622 ~· ...... •cv fer. 548-379.i. I s::!l5 F 1rr11. 6-15-1:)30. 1••1 c 11c·vv ... ,c . k •4a::c JJ!. Sparklin).!" polar \lh i I('. l/UNTING1'0N BEACfl '70 V\V -xnll cond . yellO\V COUGAR (Xll\'el". Musi sell immed! ru ,.... " u ,.~ Motor Home• s:.ori aulOnl<il lC', po11·('r s ll't'flllt.:, oyo \\' ) 111 ., rauia ln:'S, (' c. or trade. 830-2616. ~R ····'e 10· 6" ···obi"· · "-· • 011 pt(· -up. $4495 I '70 T ta 11 tk . t .,. 1 1. 1 \\'011h over S200J/sell $1600. Runahoul . 1'> hr> J ohnson S I /R I 94D t·t·J -.,.. BARWICK IMPORTS alr roil<lilionii•«, bolh hard la d C • $1275/bt'sl offe1·. 673-6266 '68 COUGAR, pis, lo1v ec7"-==c°'==,==---~-clectric, !\tono ri·lr All "ood a e en ~R·,lli-..:· ,~ n ru1ser mileage. $1600. 962----789 3 fMl'llAC '65 MustanO' 2 dr ,.. :1'l:l7J (';1n1i110 Ca pislrano .~· son lops. A I accessories. i\IOVING .n1usl sell, '&.I Rus. 11·knd anylime, \Vk days aft. · "' · t'Ond. $675. 492-197::.__ MOTOR HOMES I 1~{.l? 1,~;~:1·<: .. ~·;1 ·.~~-~·1 hu,~1 ht'd1.1 Snn .luun C;1pi:;tr;111u 1"1111 rn ileag-t•. Call for an Station Wagon Xlnt 1· ond . $12..iO/offt•r. 6. ~~; ~l~~I t~~t;?· iuR,1 0.dHe, ,r'-" 0 "'u"t.' CLASSIC &y Boo t. Ni<..'l· JS' .:. "; '·1 .. .,.~ i·o" · i·a 'l!IJ-:'~!7~1 or 8:!1 -1::r; appolnln1rnt 10 see this f'X· 642-056.1 1 ~~===~~~~--• "'"' So.COltsl Litps1r11k1•. Sl!l!ri. j Apollo. Pac"l'st'rll'r, B 11 r 0 n , ~H:t-'.llJ2 t'('J-ilionally n1 a in ta in e d / Bf'1_gt', 4 ~V.D., \\1arn Hubs. VW CAMPER ,65 '67 COUGAR XR-7, full p11·r $.175. 536-8400. &~110 cv('i;, J ;in1 l~u·1·t·. Jtohi11hood Vans 963 1973 DATSUN 510 D is 1 inctiv1· Auton1ob1le, \\11nrh Air Corid, (204BQC1 \1'/air. xln 't cond. P vt ply. __ O_L_D_S_M __ O_B_l_L_E_ 24. INBOARD/outbrrl-.-R.--=\ir \\li>'vi• i:o1'••nl 111 2 l)ool', Auln. trans., Ai\l 8:l~l:l00. (69a.Bls. Dlr.1 II $3199 $900/best offer 675-1428 $1325. ~-2884_ tank, radio, dcp•h rindf'r .r.: KENDON WANTED /{iulio. 1 :17·$~~~5 · ''70 Mercedes Benz BILL MAXEY '70 V\V CAi\fPER. radial ·10 GOLD Elin1inator. ne1v trlr. 639-9382. , MOTOR HOMES I tir!'s. \'Pry clean, musl sell. 302 Bos!! eng., disc brakes, B ARWICK IMPORTS JIM SLEMONS I TOYOTA 8!l7--0.l02 ext. 255/"57-3337 4-spd, >Int rood. 847-1131 1:r BOSTON \\'halrr. 20 lip ~· .... c c · .Johnston, ~Int t,Hllt. SS!l:l. I 707 N. Harbor S_A. :~.~'.;;1 }:~111i/~a~:~:;::11~:,nu I IMPORTS 18881 BEACH BL. 847-8555 '6!l, V\V Squareback DODGE 673----7.166 1 1·1·sc1·v<itlons f1•r' St11111th'I' TICKETS TO 'l!H-::;i7.1 or S.1l-J:l7;1 MERCEDES BENZ ilUNTINGTON BEACH $1400. Nu ~~~~{& Xlnt <.."Ond. -----•. Boats Sail 909 n111v, r•honp l\11ss Hrnn•·t Ill LED ZEPPELIN ·-,io ·n COLT sta. ivgn. \\'ith air ' I !'44-003.'\ CONCERT l'ICKUP. xlnt cnnd, AUTJ-IORIZED '72 TOYOTA '70 V\V Station Wngon, auto, R 'J-I, ne\V tires. $1675 or ::o· TRIJ\1AHA/'\ '.1:1•, I e SALE.~5~.~--PIC</~P r·ull lN.000 oric:. niL, eusl int.. SALES&. SERVICE CEUCA R.~H. Good contl. 545-1441 best of(Pr. 28 ml. to !he I '-" 11 I •• • IC • -'".7""1 fo'/;\1 slc•l't'O t·asSL'l!C deck Jt"m Slemons or 518-7601 g.·•tton. 842-8182. con1p e ..... 1111· ( s p 11 ns. .. SERY E .,..,. "'~ / k "lk · 1 r l 11 11 sp I'S. o v111.v l'OO ,. I S I · C nd Be hu s, crossarn1s. h <' s \ • RENTALS • * For Cast Only * tu11nr•;n1 <"OV<'r, duel exhauf\l I rt pr , Air o , autiful '70 V\IJ Station \IJagon, auto '70 DART Swingt"r pvt par ninlerials, n1us1 si•IJ. Sl:t;.o l!l71J ~·uHfi\i-,.,1-;:-,.,.~,,,~,; systcni. ntags $l600/besi mpO S turquoise finish (7S3EKR) R&ll Good cond 545-1441 . p's 2 ' -t•ash. 5J,q_ll.l6 , 1301 Qua•'I $2699 or :,.1·8-7601 · ty'. au.to, air, 1.. 1.000 Rons :.(nod Sli!."~J 111 t11•s1 ul l offi~r 5~16----S'.!4.1 · mt. Vinyl top. Like ~w. I CbdXlLUd.P.fBllA ~ i\1,\J{(.; 11 -I f1·r . i\1us1 S('11 .. ·118.-c.:Mc.!lc.:: __ '70 DATSUN 1600 Ro.:idster. Nrw8~. ,".9.100Beach BILL MAXEY VOLVO $2095. 551-1278 n , 1n1;1y, un1n<1c· 1~•n!I, EXPLORER -----·c ·' choicc-otr shore n1001·in~ In l)()L)(;Jo: \'an 1!~72. ··ust int, :l;Ol'll , Xlnt conrl. Pri. Prty. ENTER r~ROM !\facAR1'1-IUR 1 TOYOTA VOLVO SALE! FIREBIRD NeivpoM Bay. Pnv pi·I.> j OF nu nl:1 :.;s .(. ju~·~. $:~()1)0, &sl off<'r ovf'r $1,000. I Sales &: Service OLDSMOBILE GMC TRUCKS HONDA CARS UNIVERSITY OLDS 2850 1-larbor Blvd. Costa :i\.fesa 540-9640 '72 GOLD Toronndo, fully · looded, under 16,000 miles. Days 642---5225; eves/wknds, 644----2415 ·72 Torooado. Execuli\'e O\vn- ('d. Xlnt cond. $4.500 or best offer. 640-0169. ""'•" 11 67:!-8600 • '73 Mercedes Benz """! BEACH BL. 847·"''' PLYMOUTH Sest Offer, 771-:)j91i. r.. · •><» O.JJ..J H S • '6~ FIREBIRD 400, pis, CATAMARAN 20 ft~R·Lion.f HUNTINGTON BEACH ·li.·, • ~·ORIJ 11inrro11 \;111. --1968 DATSUN ALL MODELS HUNTINGTON BEACl-l UCJe GVlnCJS J)/b, R .~ 11, super cond., i----------1 Alun1, I,, fil11•rt:I RS, i:.-.OO I 1·:11'111•1t•d. p;1111 •IPrl, S77'.l/uf· 510 WAGON PURCHASE ·66 TOYOTA Corolla Cro\\·n '72 & 173 SlJOO . .Jq7-1 961 after 6Pi\I 1966 PLYflfOIJT1-I wagon 9 c<!ncl .; \'Pry fa sl; .. (~1n11J. t/<l'IOI Bt•al'h Bhil. X.J:l-SSO:~ _f~r._.\l us1 s<'ll. Ph !i ll>-:lfi~ Sp4•1•1I, .\,\! R <l d 1 o LEASE Dfolu.-.;e. great transporta-ONL y fOrtD pass. Top cond. R&H. A/C, wit~ harn<;!t~, 1 r-.i1 I c r . JIUNTINGT(IN BEACI-I Autos W a nted 968 l.\'.C'l.7:1:1 1. Overseas Delivery lion. $150. 6'1&--91':;1, 774-1110. 12 I-----------, PIS, sun screens + lrg box $895/offrr. 64.r70!ll ___ :.i7·--;;-:i( \;t'll -I $139S Cail Jim Goodwin, Dir Ask/Bud !\lyrorn LEFT '\T 1973 P INTO can ·ier. 838-4428. LJOO 14 <.'ompl 11•/lrall1·1·I ::!:J' l ll:-\t 'i)\,1~HEP. '\ .. ; P;~Y ;r<~I.' .DOl;LAlt BARWIC!j: IMPORTS I 548-5104 or 213-282-8406 * ·n TOYCITA Corolla, 101\' PRE·OOi.LAR SQUIRE WAGON '69 ROADRUNNER, 383 4 $950. dr An1A1 B:1ysit11• '"r-:n· CO NTINF'.'lT \lS ~Ul t. 1~.)I. ~ ~r~l_J ~A!,{S' ;~:C~7:l Can11no C~pistrann ., niileagc, a ir. DEVALAUTION Auton1at ic Trnnsmission. Al\! spd, with mags. >..1nt cond. ~r~ or eilll t 7 141 1 -,,..,. l'l".ll,JI·.· ',•. J··111;.., .. R II you1 '.<1 1 1-. extra clean, S:in Juan Capistrano 1!170 2ilO SJ_. COUJ>I;. R<!fl/tan ~Q----9517 aft 6 Pl'lf. R GIR $1500 or best of(cr. 979.7650 .. ~.nu;, "" N Sl'l' us f1 rsl. 19~_'>.175 01. s;~J-!~7:, 1111.. 2 tops & load~ i ncldin~ PRICES! adio. (414 I ' \'AN ('(I N\ 1·.1:s1 1:"o1S BAl 'ER BV!CI\ ·' ·"' ' ;,n1/f111 stereo, sh1l\Y rooin PH \Vf' make overseas deliveries $2581 ,PONTIAC NAPLES Sallu1, fully c<11up-· I r~ • S<'1vi1·c • ft,•111al.~ '>tJ'J" II· ·ht . Bl 1 '72 O,\TSUN 6 ----Pa<· k nu 12 000 Total miles Call TRIUM , See It. You'll Buy It BARWICK IMPORTS ped 2 sails r11cinr: K<•·u· I * D I *IC -· -·• "1 11 v~. 7··.l·Z""" C11b-Ov1'r Ca1n))f'r Deluxe. 644-6::,.,;.. or a[I 6 •·all 6.i.1·23421 ;1) l , han<l trailf'r.· \1111 t'1'lnd. $.1~"i'. anmar nc. 1 osta l\1.~:;u " iJ\/V 6 tJOO · NI,/ ._ ·-,,_ TRS t·on f.WIA 33375 Can1ino Capistrano '72 Grand Prix <-v J\1any exrras! J . n11 .. ror appl to Sl'i' Bt-::AUTIFUL "llAM Sa J C · p 4!J:~-ZZl6. 1::·:u• !lar!~ir ll!v•I., 1:.1.:. 1r-.1rn 1r rS \\'Al'!T1':D $'\000 5!8-6:l!J7 ____ · _ _..:. ____ · ____ \'ertib](', xlnl cond tMf'. , n uan ap1sh·nno 011'cr Steering, Power f:r SAil.B(),\'I', !ik~ Si~ii ~1::1 1i .. 1HJ ':J~:i 1~i-:1• C'nu111 .~·s .72 Di\'l'tiUN :llO Z Pl'ifcc-11 '1:80 SL CPE . AM /l:~M radio,. cass!'tle VQLYQ 493-3J7;i or S31-l'.i75 Brakes, lilt \Vhcel, AirCond, 01· h1·~r off<"r·' Nr \I 111 (;,(;. l>;il..,1111 101 S BUYl·.n I . 111 8 ,1 bluP book Ph IU1'1g 011·nri·. xlnl C'oncl., I~. player, Michelen hrcs. $2950 '69 fORU 2 dr. Full size BuC'ket st•al s, :\M/1',M. ,,.. ;1,'>8~1 3!1i * I BILI : 1\11\Xl·:Y 'r{lY~lTA 6\1D--O·s7ri1 ~~~~. • I rC'd 1\'rhlk 1111 , auto, AM/ Firin. Call after 6 pm for 1966 ltarbor CM 646-9303 lkluxr VS, vinyl top, fae· 17,000 111ilcs, Rallyl' \\'heels (A LlrllRNIA ( ;r 1an1arun · JI B ·"'I !'I S"-~-·-1 FIAT b k N $469.,. -.---.--• l !l71~ J>l\CE-AF\.RO\\'. 22' s(•lf li'i.'!81 Bc:ii:h Blv .. ' s. F1\ol, 11·n1vl hcl!r) \V/tonncau, 1 opp'!.616-7565 · · · • tory a ir, Al\t radio, p\\TStr., !l:JSr·1,vo i. .1 1 _ ' 1·011111111~·11 g1•1lf'r'1!Mr 1·unf & I · 1 .. 1 1 1. • ~i ·, ,),J,J auro lJ ans, $5900. 835-0801. TRIU'lPJI TR'\ •67. "-" Autos, Used 990 .ra es. auto. 1 <'W radial ;J \\'/lra1 <'I', x nt tond. $•150. · ' ' , ' -.---" .., uuuo• b k ~ I k ('.111 %~1H17. ~ •·nJ.!. t11r t'Olld, l•IOf •W.'r·k (Al{ zunkPr! J U~I n""d,. rn11· OPEL cond, Extras. n1ag \lht>els Ill'<'~ • ra es ,. SlOC s, DAVID J . PHILLIPS -----' 11•/l,H!d1•1·, n1•11 t·rp1 s, 1lrp~ I 111· rnavh1• i1's loo old .. Junk '71 FIAT. 12 I 1·on\'('l'tihl1•. 1 Ask for Phil, 675-771R BUICK SI~;:,. 58&-S29S a ft 6· I BUICK PONTIAC OP • :lli' LUIJER.C::·Jtl n1.l'Lng I ,t• 11phol..,lt'I',\. s tr;i;·k Slf')'('ll I l'<ll'S '10111•11 ;lll<l,I' h'l'l'. j h .. u I' gun d r \\' !un int , 1967 FORD FALCON I EL, inc. slMp. $2,000. (':11L 4!)6.21:l() .~· 1ua11~' ,.,lras. l'n l·t•d tu ti:\!i--O!H(I t<\n1/fn1 S1C'l'•~l. 11111}!; ll'hl~. "7fl" \flllTr-: G'r Opl'l l.'X-0 KSWAGEN WAGON 546--1975 hefon · 6 Pl>! ---st·tl. 61!i-Slll2 ' -vW \rAN \l'/SUNf{t}t '~ I '21.11'(1 1ni. ('all ti7::.-:~'i(f.j 0 1' l'l'lll{'!H 1·ond ition. 1. n w v L '61 BUICK tlulom,·•l•" 1can.•n•"••"······· '''II '6 G 1,, DAY ~ I I I -I" v•!tO 1111 1•a.:,;1•, 1•x rr;.1s t t' lt c In ~ '-·' " 9 d p • ,'U•ll' 11 llt •autilul ., .. ., , . . J ',\Y('ASll1'0$1l~l(i. ,,...iir.v ---· Cl J 't C d 2dr V8 Auto itealelean Radio (VMDfi21 l ran nX sh.ip<'. S.'tt•l. l'all 673-!~:it.! or ~~u~ton~. aff :illt~~l:~~i;.'."~~· ___ , !l'~::{l!~I • ·i;7 KiO S. Cou1Jt.• 111'72 1·n~.. :\1~~1',;,f', <'~:::k \~ 1~ ~ n ~~l~c! ~'i~ ~96l~~el~~f!'· 1~~s: Body & int. R~s good. $250~ . $995 S..J MODEL . .',',·,..;.iL·IB 3 U!l. 1·,11.1.1.1,c1 ••• 1,-1.,. u11•1w.·~. si1!1· 111· 1 r a ti<' Autos, lmporteo 970 nu paint. clur ch. d i1'1'. hrks., lil2-,'{!}IO $:125. 644-50.l2. • 543-3691 • BARWICK IMPORTS Fully equipped, black vinyl 1' ' -' '-' •c. •. '' 4~~1-2742. 761 'l'•·n1pl1· Hills l :cl nip~. Sl.'-il/olf•'r ~x'ifHi7t-I ' PANTERA .66 LIJ68 BUICK Special Sta \Vng. 33315 Camino Capis trano lop. S4C:lplcli·. .-l'l(}-2J7:! I 111·., Lu).! H. e THE FINEST IN 1 1962 FlAT 1200 Roadsll•r. I $500. V\V. Good ~~793. Private prty. Orig. owner. Sa n Junn Capistrano 552-7552 '.:.::'.'.....1-,-.-1-10*8 11;-.-. 1.--liE:YJ' _ 21;· ·711 L,\1'\J l.'IU or USED IMPORTS e N<"w lir'f'S /t11)holstcry $2.-il Exceplionally clean. AIC + 4.93-3375 or 831----1375 Private Party "" • ... A * ·7:: Ult'CU\'f.:1{1·:1L Loarlrd. e THE FINEST IN nr offl'r. ti42-? .. 'lJ::. '72 Pantera 'GS V\V BUG many extras. 973-36116. .70 eou ,...., Sed 8 '""'!~!'!"~~~~~!!!'! 11·· rr~11h'r Sl !OO. Run~ good S67i Call 494--3881 ]9 n~J an, pass. A1r/L:1•11 l~ik•· l'H •'I; s, IMPORT SERVIC~ e GLAS ' lo\V miles, AM/F'M l '"" · · 70 RIVIERA _sharp one pis, p/b, a ir. Jugg. rack, BUY OR LEASE 1-----"'-'--1-1111___ 1n1 i l~·I' h111·h, Sips ti 111 7. [)o y<•urs<·lr :i f:J\'1,1, anil r'Ooi r j $8895 I (790CPGl brk 64H~2 lit<' blue , 673-5811. ,73 PONTIACS l\:ITE IOO:J Yi•l!1111 ,\ 1111114' I !lli~~:~7. --l'>t '•' II~ r11•..,1 ()J>l'll Tut's I '67 f;LAS. 1700 GT. lo FOR ACTION ••• 19tl BUICK Limited, 4----rloor, '70 1'~0RD Country .Squir(', DAVE ROSS hu ll ., ~;~1~~~·;11/ r •ptqi· I 'fl!! \\'I NNC:H.\UO 21'. t '11lly :111.J Thu is. iii ~1. Sur.Sun 1nill'~gt'. -.;In! <'nnc!. MRk1· NEWPORT I DAIL y PILOT loaded! Xlnt COl"ldltion $3j()(). air, roof rack. stereo. $Z'l50. men · -.-,,,__ · __ t'lfUiJ!pt'rl. G<"n. 2 11Jr 1·01111. 111 !1, oH<'r. arr G, ;J.-,2-R771 IMPORTS 8.13-8010 or 644;-~ 640-1029. PONTIAC Boats, Slips / Docks 910 ·"•·Ir 1•1111 . Sll'n'? 1;1111', 2 ~i!k1· 1 (EUR '.\ I Don'-I -g-h-;-up -th<' ship! 1 I CLASSIFIED ADS ·n RIVIERA SZ700 1c.66;;C'F;;O"'RO:DO:-L'°'T"D'""4~d°",:--.-;1,.--,,,--,vn 24~0 Harbor Blvd., at l"air 1._·1.'·ks •.. Lo11· 1n1lf'a~ ... $.~OIXI. -OPEAN AUTO) I "Lis!" it 111 rlH.~sifit•tl, Sh ip :1100 \V. Coas! Hwy .. N.B. 642•567B In1nu~-., c 1 o 896 ncl. Luad<'d , 68,000 f, a, all pivr good rubhcr, Drive, Cos!a Mesa 5'16-8017 PHIVATE Ii:>· Bou1 !-;lip ll 71 s Sales (w~RKSi) I 642 9405 · ;.ivo-N<'i.:otin hfr· •·1-.~ .s...n 1o SllOI'<' R1•sults~ fil2-:J67.'t • ni1. 67,SOO mi. Xlnt cond. Sl,100. '67 GTO good engi ne , • :n ::-:i!l:!-:.!::11 • l·'lll'. n ·n1 22· \Vin1wh:1t.:t1. 'm ·~-_c-:' ~ 5"~ •••° CADILLAC 673--0594. "hcnrlcr s, now 4 -s p eed Slo'•"P" ti 11ir. S('lr·eCJ11!a 1ned ALFA ROMEO l .~67~ro==R~D,...,C~o-,,-v-.,-,~;b~lc-.-,X"L lrnns., llC\V tires & rims. Transportalion /W] 1'------...J ~~;~~/!;1:r l!l1e 11111~·. /'hon~· ALFA 1iori11-:<1 ·71 c;·r £m:f§ TAR GAZ-EK:I<'-~~ ·~ullc~!';~c~ af::C ani;;-;~ :i~:.0$~~: ~·JJ~P con-:~ 0;~~1~~"1~:.~0CXJ Rent A Motor Home Sl'IUP.R. l>•iu<lsl4·r. Hr;uid-By <.:LAY.~.)'OUAN rad, tilt & telei;copic '>'•hl. ·73 1'""0RD GRAND ~~~.25~.~nn, air, best oUcr. f V • .AR llS . . , · M lllllA · . I I doo I k 6 0 Q "~ ~ ~ Or your acat1on lll-V.' Radials, ~·u<'I inj('('lron. 1 .·t ' "'"'~· ,; • }.( Y-Da:lr Adi.,1fy eu;J, 'y"' st,;. lJ J:"h. cruise con to, r OC S, T RIN . _.,,_ * 531 -6800 * D1s1" Hrnkr•s, ;, ~J)l't'fl , 218-,•-:A. ,..,R.,, ~ J.«.ord1"g to th• Stari. ~T. ll~~~ way seal. Sable nierallic * 642--.S643 * Classified Ads ••••.. 642-5678. Campers, Sale/ Renf 920 ----ES.I, S:{4~J:i o1· Flrn1 Off1'r. ~ . 11-1419-'To develop messoge.for Tuesdoy, ~1"'5-ST-55 -"'./match. lthr inter & n1atch Autos, Import.cl 970 Autos, Imported 970 3 nm. old ~· [>c.lu~ .. l i1•n1 Tflp C8m!)et' .-.11 .. 11 lnr Jlll'kllp, pf'rfeci 1;:/\apt\ Ofli,;llL'll 1'fli-I -$350.. Q\\•fll'r ~•cnficini.: for $285. 646-6~1. ~ 11m-x p 111. J{f;NT 111.\ 11"1\· 1 ~1 1 :: I ;e: 48.44.73 read word!: corresponding to rut..t>ers 1-67-70 ~vf'"~'PS·i131JOO~;_'i;· ~oos.17~9997~~· ;;;;--,,J,;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;! l-:Jl)nr11°111 l\11ni ~1o h1 1 e /' -cfyoorZodtoc;birthsign. '72 ELDORADO Cabriolet & 11111111'. Sh'<'I~ t ,'Ill J'lll1\·1·r, J Goad J I ~ 61 Out I , I I !:ipl' di·C'k. 9:11;..27r.1 / 2 11 J?H.11> e2T>dw>gs Munroo ot e11t 1er top, J Cuni«t 33 May 63 In :•m/fm, stereo. tpr cl<..>ck: l!r,:: l.)1.~1·0\ t'rl'J' and &luthal "'A J4 Ntw 6• 'l'QU air.' £'Ji!. M_ i!'l:,f,·t>en & whih• :\fl)tnr 11111111·:0 fo11• ~1·J 1t, n1alu• ~Dor J5fl""ll 65Stvle p I I oo 'TI SIX pn1· l·a hov<>r for ·1i;;-BMW • • ,. v-· 66 "-· , r1. p y. a a-, 'nl. B1)h ],1>11i.:1111•Pnn :i a1·, ".-,,.. ..... ~« >:•l:'.fJtil ur i;::r,.:z:i00. 7 fnter!oioiOl"f JT 8e 61 Of '68 CAD. Seel. De Ville fully port ITU('k. :-il•IVt', :olrlk, icf!bo.~. lifio1 roof 1·a.:I;, 1~70 l ANLiAli • IJ1nrh•il. 1 Visit our IK'\V honic! sleept1 4. Like 111•\\, $.-175. or Alr/g.·11. Btkt' ral'k & trlr & ott~r. 49&-4123. hh1·h. s lpl( 7. JJ 111' Uhil' MAJOR"1AY & llall Pini I Book . !!l.i8-~U~7. Can1pcnt II Shf'll s a! far-'71 1':XPLO HEf< 26'. Hcntal - totY prlcc15. ~Clll \\'. lllth, 1~nv. party. 31,IXXl_,nii. Sips j ROY CARVER I C-~· u. Air, self ('OnL la ' of( l s1 I nc. 1969 .IEEP Cam1x.•r, V.(i, 4 :; r1·1nats. 5~8-~ 2.14 E. 17th st. whl rlr. 4· Q.D. &•If cont j ;-ftENT: 27' \Vinnchogo Cosln fi1etia 546·4444 Xlnt cond $3500. 646-{.79'.l_. _ ChiPf111ln. $1.;>t~~ 6. Air ('IU11l. ---~L~EASE A CAMPffi Ir 1r11iler f"Cf)ll irl'I & f}(llu,.('. 610--0370. auppUCtJ: aJ90 V/UJ 1,-un· Trailers, Travel 945 ...-•• 858 w. 18th, C.M. I Cydft Bik-. SHER\\IOOD 'rt>nt 'frailer, ~ 925 $595. S\ptt 6. Xlnt t'Ond. Priv. ~I BULTACO, Slonpa S, 125, nu-. J:OOd. """ Port•· $325. 5.1Hlllll. ~· 5. li>1M077 • part)<. 837~'10t9. 111' SltASTA fully i:,/c, sips, I 6. opt 8. woo. 96i-189:1 wlmrl i\nytim~. wk da,y11 All 6 ' 1973 BAVARIA ' CREVIER BMW Sule~ • Servlc• -I.easing 'i08 W. l <rt Sr.j Sant" Ana 835-2 71 1 8 Duy J8 Solv1 68 St-I t'Qu'd. Steroo. Vlnyl I op ' For J9 Dov 69 ()i 10 01 AO h•",df, 70 Luck $JR.51), 675-2733 673-2872 11 At.t Al Iring 71 Motttr• CHE ROLET 12 Prc!tn :tr<Jt <12 And 72 [!com,,,. 131~-· AJ $ollit 71 RfU!voe ], !mme<1K1ttly "''ti. 7• [r>joyll'lfflf 15"'d•o<• A ~Chtt" 7SHobblts 16 TO<loy A6 ln1••4 76 Dlli:lll!;'* l fV0190 "'A-77You'¥9 lBWl!l •I lnbnlft:n 71~ l91>f<'\U!'I '9Moy 19~ 20 Do !>O GoOd IO~ 21 I~ ~I To 81 Puullre 22 II ~2 bc>loiltcf f12'fllot\ 71 Thk "OI 83 P.lnt 2• E11tf>inla1111 ~ LIQht 114 A 7~ Th•"Q\ 55 T'hoi.t 15 w'~t ;26 Th! .56 11.~r• t6 Time F""~='-'9 27 Madrnon 57 1, 117 Frri"8ff :18YQU ~F~ Q~ ,.o,., ~·" 89 C•~ " fr, l l JO C1111 60 ltplidD!lf 9j) Uwo4 5/1! JUMO ,.\£)Gooa @A.i-f)Nonnl • LlK€ nu, 1969, 4 dr vinyl top, p/s, brand mi tire!, lo mileage. S159'J. 837-7266 '62 SS Olcvy, 58,000 mi. P/S, auto. $625. * 675--5750 * 1005 Cl-IEVY ln1f)ala, (11Uy equip. 2 dr v1nYl h.t., lo1Y mileage $?'JS. 586--4368 '67 CHEVELLE-SS396. 4 •pd. Bucket seats, mag!, reblt '"' $850. 673-1544 '63 IMP. \Van. 4 dr. plit, p/b, air, xln1 lireA & n1ech. 121111-Jin-lOill ·NEWPORT DATSUN HURRY YOU· CAN STILL GIT A NEW DATSUN 110 AT THI OLD P•ICl ----NEW 1973 DATSUN UTILE HUSTLER PICKUP $1 ·50. DOWN $69.62:!~ ' Sale Prf~ $2!05: ~ 14.34. Totn.1 Note-$3341.76 ' • 7 , I I I 7 • • < ti • • • . --· , • • .. • San Clemente ( -. Teday's n.u.I Capi~tran~--Eo1 rj oN •• ' N.Y. Steeb • ' VOL. 66, NO. 134, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 14, 1973 TEN CENTS South Coast Police Crack 'Marijuana Ring' Seven persons, Including three juvenile girls, were arrested and 65 pooncb fl marijuana seized following a raid at a Costa Mesa home by narcotics officers from the Laguna Beach, San Clemente and Costa Mesa police departments Fri· day. The bust ended two weeks of in- vestigation by the Laguna Beach narcotics squad and cracked what Sgt. Neil Purcell alleged was a major supply operation for the Laguna lfeach area. A foot locker·sized box containing 30 Gold Price Hits $106 In Europe LONDON (UPI) -Gold leaped to the highest price In history on European free · : markets today, easily passing the $1~ -an-ounce "barrier." A major British dealer linked the gold stampede to a lack of coofidenre brought on by the. Wateq[ate . aH*)>µ\. others disagreed. -.. .., f kilos of cellophane-wrapped makjuana bricks was held today as·evidence. Police value this haul at 118,000. Arrested were Josepb .Steveling. 30, of 2260 S. Cqast Highway, Laguna Beach, held oo 175,0001 ball ; Jooeph o. Helmer, 42, of Vaid(!>,. Alaska, held on $10,000 bail; John Miller Kaulfm1111, 18, of Palo Alto, Ca!U.,-beld on 110,000'.bail; Barbara AMe Bll!ck,_19, of 4*0 Lenwood, Costa Mesa, held on $10,000 ball. Purce11 ·said ah were booked on charges of pc)ssession or marijuana for 1be gold rush whkh AW a pi'lce of '108.70 on the French COiDilltl<hlllliiirtet ' sent the-dollar skidding on European , money markets as speculators and mulU- national companies unloaded U.S. cur- rency for the precious yellow metal In New York, the stock market took a sharp tumble fn moderately active trading and the Dow Jones averages for 30 blue chip industrial stocks fell 14.07 points in the first hour and a half of trading. U.S. tourists joined the stampede tO buy gold. sa1', He claimed' Steveling was the ~-. an!ll.il!Oged that-the 30-yw-. old La:gm)an. wa..• responsible for sale of. 150 to .i.pou!!!b •& mal'ijUJfta ~ •. A 1$-~·Lapna ·Niguel girl, a 17, yeaM>fd 1 Newpbrt-1 Battcb -girl. and .a ll7"' year-old Whittier f'.UDAWfY were ~ on cb¥ges of,~ion of marijuana for aa1e. · . Stevelini._fo.und ·hiding in a closet.at the Co$la Mesa'. residence at 299 Mesa Drive, · Was , rem6Ved at gunpoint 'bY narootics officers. A I a r g e -b o r ! ' _. automatic pistol was found in the·closet afterward, Sgt. Purcell said. Sgt. Purcell said Laguna Beach of· ricers first began 'investigattng-Stevellog "two weeks ~o .and.allegectl/l&l•se11el'al 6iiys were made by ,olarcQ!Ic;s. ·~!f­ worifinl!'lhi'ougtl the 17-yoar-Okl'. ;Wliittil< girl who was living with·' Steveling, Purcell said. • He said Steveling ·bad i.,.t ,uiidlir suivelllance by' officen for aliout 10 days ~ prior to the raid. Seven narcotics officers including ttiYO . 11Pe.ople with surplus dollars are getting out of the currency into g<>W," said Den- nis Selby, chief 6ullioo dealer ltJr the London gold brokerage flllll of ~ohmon Matthey, Ltd. "Watergate bas Jel't the political situation shaky In the States and . o.itr ,.,,...,..,..... RUSS WINNINGHOFF OF STORER CABLJ;'.:r,V ).EADS OFF FIRST IN ,PONY LEAGUE 'OPENER Brion NUii lock of Chllmplon Pool~ Is Fir st Bosomon; Storer W<Wt Tlio Gime•4 to 3 By late atternoon the price of gold shot this bas put pressure on the dollar." up to $106.17 on the French commercial market -up·rn:ort"tll~1rom Friday's· close of $98.83.· "I think the reasOn for the rise in the price of gold is because of reports in the (See GOLD, Page Z) · ADS IN PILOT RAMBLE ALONG It only took one call (the lint one)· on the first day that the following ad ran to sell tblftbird Rambler In three years for this advertiser: 'IS RAMBLER Classic, xlnt cond, lo ml, auto, pis, p-b, good tires, '4511. (Phone no.) HB. With action like that is it any wonder' that Utis Huntington Beach woman is a loyal ""'' of Dally Piiot classllleil ad- ..nislng power? Plug yoursell tn oo this kind of pulling power. Dial the direct line: 842-5678. ~00 ~.pectators Vfew_ftL~niiig l~~f"/ ' , ' Game -of Season An estlmated. 200 persons -most of them proud parents or baseball players -attended a ¢hilly opening day for •the 'f,; South Coast Pony League season Sal1tr· ~ • day. . And the crowd which braved a cold ~ drizzle at BUccbeim Field in San Juan Capistrano watched ... Storer Ca b I e Television's team beat Champion. P.oois by a score of 4-3. The opening ceremonles Included anJJ>' vocation by the Rev. Ricbard Reeve of the San Jµan Capistrano \:<Jmmunlty Christian Church. lA>ca1 Veterans cf Foreign Wars members formed tbe color guard !or the morning opening. Spokesmen for the leagl# said the six teams in this year's largest-ever pro- gram will play through July 5. 'Ille Pony League this year involves at>out. 80 _boys between 12 and 14 years old. Probe Pushed ' Slwotirig by Officer Questioned By TERRY COVIU.E the back. ot "" OlllW ,...., ,,.,. Miller was helping Fountain Valley The Orange County Grand Juey will be police search for Ronquillo and three asUd tO reopen ii.I invelligalion ln!O the ·. other "Santi Ana youibs wbo had been pollce shootidg death of a young stqpped earqer, but who bad lied from Mexican-Anierican April 13 in t:<Nntaln two Foun~ )'alley officers. , ~ V~le7. . •. Miller to~estigatora he had gun The r • <l'u e s t comes !roll! Or~e dtawo and the youth backed in Dim ',caintf'• Hlililllh,,Jl'elltt~,-:.,...._l111e., isto!I; '"11lch 'l'Ml''Sltui.la;f~~·$iilfa'i1ifiai;jd~.)lll[iF;;...ak: ~. - dtsclm \be shooting. Valley Officer Rol>ert "Several community representaUvu reportecll)I also had . \ have Indicated to us that there is ad-unholstered. dltional in!onnaUon which bu not been ' Morry Undrol, dirctor of the Hu11>111 JlftlOllled to the Grand .Jury, including RelaUou Commi!lloo, to Id ·com- the poosibillty of one or ~ eyewit-mlloioOerl Silurda1 that there ....,.. ..,...,.. sllld Jaclc Turk ol Huntqton dlscnpilc!es betwe<n the ie.tlmony of Beacb, d>ainnm of tile ca11ml•kri. the two olficen, thouah be clld not On tho momlnl ol ~ l 1, el.borate. We9tmlmter Pullco Olllcer 'Ilmotby , U.-a110 pointed to tho lack ol Miller shot Mi&11el Angel Rooqull1o, 20, In (See PROBE, P .. 11 •• ' •' • • ' . •• from San Clemente and one from Costa Mesa were lnvolved in the action Friday. Purcell said two detectives observed the Laguna Niguel and Newport Beach girls go Into the house and then quickly reappear with a brown shopping bag. Of- llcen alleged the bag contained five kilos of the neatiy wrapped pot. More officers were called and entry gained Into the house. 11People were ruming all over the house Hke crazy." Purcell said. He said that. 30 kilos or marijuana were "out in plain sight." He valued the aelJed prop- erty ·al about ,IS,000 oa the street. Purcell said Stevellng would go to the desert areas of San Diego Coun17 and return to the Laguna Beach area by a network of backroadJ, never passing alien Mexican checkpoints. He sald that the base of operatims was moved to the rented Costa Mesa rosidence, next to the Santa Ana Country Club, several weeks ago and thit the home w~s used for the distribution of marijuana. ,, Saddlehack Boy Dies at Havasu • A lightning bolt killed John W. Wade Jr., 19, Saddlebact Col· lege pitcher Sunday and injured seven other persons during a ..ml: pro baseball game at Lake Havasu City, Ariz. WADE, A FORMER Mission Viejo resident, was winding up to deliver a pitch when the big bolt struck, knocking every player in the infield and outfield off their feet. An ambulance operator said the lightning vaporized thel.outh's clothing, leaving only shreds, It struck the young man's hea , . WAD~'S SISTER was watching from the stands and ran acream- mg to l!ls body, ; , . Wlde f"" up 'ln·Onue County. He attended Mbilon Viejo Hl&h Schoo ~ hla. jwil<>r y..,-and played both baseblll and football there. H1I perenta ncenUy mov~d to Lake Havuu. See Page lGJor detailed story an~ pictures. · ' Man Holds Two Hostage At-Op Tank of /et Fuel FORTI.AND, Ore. (UP!i - A man armed with a rifle and shotgun today took two hostages, climbed atop t storage tank containing highly explost e jet fuel and threatened to blow It up. . Coastal Panel Orders Clemente Firm to Halt Developers of a 45-unit condominium in San Clemente are violating ·the coitstal protection Jaw of Proposition 20 and must stop construction, the South Coast Regional Coastal Oxnml.lllon 'said this morning. The Aquarius Dev..,pment Company -t come heforo the COllJ!llls41on and be granted an exemption from tbe law before construction can continue at 406 Pasadena Court, the agency said. Developers hegan trencli and foW>- datlon work two weeks ago without hav- ing been granted an nemption permit, said executive Diredor M e I v in Carpenter. · The oocnpany did file !or an exemption request, but bas not yet come before the coastal agency fyr a bellrlat. "Just becauae IOl'DIODI files for ex- emption doea not give him permias1on to go ahead and build," i.td Comm!Jsioner Judy Rosener. "We iboiild make that clear." - Former Mayor's • Father Assaulted Walter Evans Sr., a retired San Cle- mente contractor and father of a former mayor , was assaulted by an intruder over the weekend, but escaped with minor inj_wies, police said today. Eva .. waa struck In the stomaclt and face by a young man who entered the . family l19me at 131 .\.ventda Mateo early Sunday morning. . . , Police said the tnddent "octumd at about 2:40 a.m. when Ev&Da' grand- daughter, Angela Renee, 14, was awiken- ed by a man who bad' grabbed' her ankle as she slept In the den. The lntrt>der asaerttdly ..a s k • d , "Where'• Jim" alter•:~ the girl. The granddaughter ·and the Intruder began to run from the botlse. Eva ... 811, tried to lntertedt, but was struck. • '\ ' \ The man, identUied as William Howard Abernathy, 25, fired several shota at passing planes and pel'IOlll m the ground, but officers clld nol return the fire for f11r of exploding ibe 1.3 mlllloo gallons of fuel In the tank. -The SO.foot:btgh tank is located In an open field near Portland Airport, which · was closed for a short time but then reopened. Abernathy, an employe ol Lockheed Air Terminal Services at the airport, seat down word with one hostage that if his former wife and children were not brought to the scene by noon be would explode the tank. Deputies said the tank, with a capacity : of 1.6 mllllon gallons, could be exploded , by a shol. 1be hostage, Steve Dailing, a Lockheed mechanic, returned to the tank after · delivering the message but later wu . released unharmed. 1be other hostage was Identified u Gene Lloyd, manager of the Lockheed terminal. Portland police officer Dale Austin said Abernathy wa.s using Lloyd to answer questions shouted to hlm. Uoyd (S.. HOSTAGES, Poge I) Oroge Ceut The sun ;., still on vacatioo aiona the Orange Coast, and weather ex- perts don't expect to see It before Wednesday. Low clouds and roe In the n>omlni boun, ' partly cloudy in 1he afternoon. Highs In the 80s. INSIDE TODAY Formtr Saddltbock Colleae pitcher John Wade WC.! on the mound at Lake Havasu Sunda11 when h< wos killed bu a bolt of lightnp1g whic/1 burned off hi• hair, ctotl1e1 .and left shoe. Hi& parents witftttsed the grilt11 evenl from U\f.(11'Qucilland!.-S•• 1to111 on l'Clfl•.J6, ·• , ...... • ... ...-11 ..,. .... ' -.. C.01-I JlllltMtl .... •• "''""" .... Or•"' C..IY I ,_ " sr:'l'llhrtw " ,_ " ...... l .. ,, --I , .. ~ ,., . _, ... • ·-. --• -. ·-,.,, 5r. . ........... • w .... , ... ::-: .. -.. II ' • \ .. ----- I ¥ WUL1 t'IL.UI • SC Mond<I. Mat 14, Im List .Narrowi- • • ·For WASlllNGTON (UPll -Elllot L. Rkhardson today Identified the ''list'' for selectioo as special g o v e r n m e n t Watergate prosecutor as Warren ?.f. Qris!Opher of Los Angeles, Judge William H. Erickm of Denver. former Judge David W. Peck of New York and Judge Harold R. Tyler, Jr., of New York. Richardson gave the names t o reporten during a break in Senate hear- MARTHA DENIES HAVING NERVOUS BREAKDOWN-Pogo 4 ings on bis nomination for attorney general. t • Ht Aid earlier the White Hoose passed him "two or three names" of possible choices but they were not among the "last four. From P09e J GOLD ... press that there ii an impending financ- iaJ crl$s,'' Emanuel Brunoff, a French gold broker, said. Asked if he believed the rise in the price of gold coold be related to the Watergate scandal in the United States. Brunolf saJd: "In my opinion, I don't tlllnk it could be connetted." The metal's price was fixed at $102..25 an ounce on the big I.:oodon free market in the second of the twice-daily price fix· ings. This Was $2.50 higher . than the morning price, $5.60 higher than Friday's closing price and more than double the of'ficial U.S. gold price. Another gold source said: "Many fore- ign buyers are afraid ot a new monetary ~isi.t. F'J' this reason they are going in great numbers to buy as much gold as they can allord." Other European brokers and currency dealers a190 linked the gold rush and re- newed pressure on the dollar to the re- sultant furor over alleged White House involvement in the bugging of the Demo- cratic Party Washington headquarters . Christopher, 47, 1 Democrat, la a former deputy attorney general, servtng as the No. 2 man In the Justice Depa~ ment from 1967 until 1969. Erickson, 49, ls a Justice of lbe Colorado Slate SUpreme Court. Peck. 71, is a former New York state Appea1s Division justice and ls senior partner in a leading New York law firm. Taylor, who observed his 50tb blrtbday today, has been a member af the U.S. District Court in New York since 1982. Richardson indJcated he might name the special prosecutor by Tuesday. He has !Old senators be will give them virtual veto power over his aelectkn On the third day af Senate hearings on his naminaUon to be attorney general, Richardson was asked by Sen. John V. Tunney (D-Calif.), whether be coosulted with President Nixon or the White House in his search for a special prosecutor. "No," Richardson said. Then he added: "They passed me two ar three names which they asked me to consider." Richanbon told reporters later that G"'1. Alellnder M. Haig, named by Pres- ident Nizon last week to help reorgani:.e tbe Wbite HOUie staff, and another Wbite House assistant be. believed to be newly named . ....,..i ~IB.Gard Garnt<ll! made the recommendations. "They were just names dropped in the hopper," Richardson commented. Richardson was nominated attorney general two weeks ago by Nixon and given 11fuJI authority" over the in· vesligation .of the Watergate scandal. In response to congressionSI d e m a n d , Richardson sa id he would name a special prosecutor and give hirr. "complete . authority" over all Watergate matters. "No · name! suggested by the White House lasted as long as the final 10 or 12 names -not because they came from the WPite House but because l didn't' feel they met my criteria," Richardson said. Richardson told Tunney ln response to aoother question that he had had no in· structions from Nixon or the White House on the scope of the duties of a Watergate prosecutor. Clal'ld Care Defended Cranston Speaks in Mes~ Vows" Figli't Over Cuts Sen. Alan Cranston told a C.Osta Mesa audience this weekend that he is prepared to fight Nixon Administration proposals to reduce federal child care funds. Legio1i of Crabs Invading Beac1i In San Clemente Literally thousands of small, red crabs washed ashore at San Clemente over th e weekend and lifeguards said that the creatures at one point literally covered the strand. Lifeguard Lt. Hank Barnes said the animals, about two inches long , resemble miniature lobsters. "Most or them were alive. On Saturday they were scattered from one end of th'e beach to the other," he said. Lifeguards scooped up a small number al the creatures and placed them in a salt-water aquarium at lifeguard head· quarters, he added. The brightly colored organisms have been noted through the earlier months af this year and fishermen on sport boats have noted..that often their fish are found full of the animals. DAILY PILOT 'T1'tf Or•!WI• Co.111 DAILY PILOT. wltll wflk:I! II COmltlntod ti!• NtWl·Preu, !1 PllDHll\M by lfll Or~ CO.If PllllHll'llng (-ny, $""° r11t eclllkllll 1'9 ~llllMI, M°"lll•Y ll!fl1U911 "'~'f• lllf' Cor.11 M_., Nt.,.POrl 6tKll, Hut1!1nt1fan IHd'l./,._111~ Vtllty Ll9\Jfla 11..cl\, lrvlnels..llllfteck Mii $.an c ...... ~,e/ 5M J\11111 C.lllllr-. A 1fl!gll ...,lonll ICll!lcNI II ~lll'llld iltuft.lys Mid ~y1. TM ... lncfloll ""'4it'I .... 111tnt l1 ti »II W.tl a.y Jir.tt, Cell• -.... CIMlomlt, t»». Rollert N. Wied Ptt:1IMl'I! ,,. l'\oOl!sllft J11k I. Curley VI« '""lftnt .... CO-fi Mt ...... Th'"'"' k111vil Ellllte• The11111 A. Murphifte Mt"'9int Edi!W Ch1rl11 H. L1111 1Jd'le rt1 r. Nill AMl1l111t Ml""'llnGi Ealtwn .. ca. ..... Offlu lOS Norlil ll C11f\l110 R11I, 92672 -·-Cit!• MfN: SM Wftl l•Y Strt11 H~ fM(fl: Im NIWl*'I loult'HFJI ""'°"""""' a.ct11 11'71 •lldl lol.lln1N u.-Mali m ,._, "~• ftllfl•••• fn 4, '4Zo4J21 Cl••""" A4NltM .. 64W671 s. cs "' Al o,,ll,..•» 11' ttrnr 49J.+4H ~. ""' .,..,,... C..tt '*~ ... '*::'· frfil' lllWt ''°'*• Hklttr11-. -nr ... ..,.,.,,ltllNl!tl """' =-~·~·-···· .i .......... "" ·r~--= . .:-,.. .......... °"'' Mal, ~-W cwYW IUI .......,, .., -" U,IJ ~I lftllM ............ .....,.,. • "Adequate day care centers are essen- tial to 'help mothers get off welfare and into productive, paying jobs," the Califamia Democrat said. His remarb were prepared for a public forum sponsored Saturday by the Children's Services C.Ouncil of Orange County on the Orange Coast College cam· pus. Day care centers, Cranston believes, "also are needed so that motbers already working can continue work." Cranston said that restricting eligibility of children for day care services would have "grave consequences, particularly here in California." The proposed cutbacks would exclude more than 22,000 California chHdren from day care programs but Cranston said he and 40 other senators are pledged to see they never occur. The four cutbacks under consideration "·ould affect programs involving pre- school children , children of working mothers, children of migrant workers and children of college-student parents. ' Border Officers Nab 229 Aliens Over Weekend Border patrolmen at the San Onofre checkpoin: reported .:inother weekend o( major 1n igralions by illegal aliens. A total of 229 immigrants were detained at the st~tion over the past fevf' da ys. • Besides the large numbers of illegal migrants. ofricers Saturday arrested t\vo roting men alleged to be smuggl1ng mari· 1uana. Tbe pa ir, ~1arshal Robert Wilkerson, 23, of San Diego and Jeffrey Lauren Evans, 23,. of Aspen, Colo., allegedly were carrying 2tl pouads of the weed Jn the trunk of their car . The discovery was made by officers during a routine immigration check of· ficials said. ' The two men face charge! af smug- gling and \\'ere turned over to U.S. Customs agents. Entertainer Loses Guitar in Newport North Hollywood entertainer G!fbert C. Hintz. complained ID Newport Beach police Swiday that ..._. raided • storeroom at the Newport H'krbor Yacht Club and got away wllli hi s $400 gullar. The valua ble Afarttn slx·strlng guitar "'3! selected from among a variety of other instruments at the elubhouae at 720 W. Bay Ave .. S.fboo. love>Ug•iors said the bayfront club's 70-year~ld switchboard operator reported oeeln~ a long-haired young male stranger skulking &U!pictously ar~ on Slhmlay. ; " Company B0o1t1 Prices · llEW YORK (AP) --Steel c..v.. tbe l)ltlaa'• MCOiid i.u1111 lleel .... _, lollawod tho 1eod ., •Joi 11ee1mr '*1 """~ tbe'"'"" -ml otrlp products. 'liiursday, U.S. Steel, tbe biggest steelmaker, announced It wu rala- iDC prices 00 hlib -llb<et ateef mi average of 4.1 percent, ef. fecUve June 15. Other 1teelmakers, 1ncb1Joc .-& Laughlin, Wheel· IQf-PIUlburgb, K a i s e r Md -· -almflar hikes the lollowing day. 'lbe proposed inC'l"e&Jes have en- countered oppositon from the c.o&t of Uving Cooncil. however, whlch says it plans to review U.S. Steel'a Juslificatloo for the boost. Police Halt Car, Find Woman Shot Adelaide Li.ma, director of Fountain Valley's Colonia Juarez Community Center, remains in critical condition tc>- day after she was shot several times ln an unexplained incident Saturday. Mrs. Luna, «. of 10371 Calle Independencia, is in the intensive care wlit of Fauntain Valley Community Hospital after undergoing surgery for bullet wounds in her head, ann and back. Mrs. Luna was fowld in a car stopped for a traffic violation by OOlcer Ron Gillman. The driver of tbe car, Richard Arechabaca Morones, 46, of 4906 W. 7th St., Santa .\J!a, WU takt!I\ into CUllDdy • .. charges of .....uJi with intent to commit murder. InvesUgators said !Oday tbey have not establlsbed what started tbe Incident, but tbey will be !IJing charges against Morones this afternoon. According to police reports, Gillman allegedly saw Morones make an illegal U·turn near the hltersectian of Euclid Street and Warner Avenue at about 12:30 a.m. The officer reported that wben be walked up to the side of the car, be saw Mrs. Luna who wu bleeding profusely. She was taken immediately to the nearby hospital and Moronea was taken into custody. He allegedly told officers he ""' IWPt! her to tbe holpltal. Investigators said she bad been sbot with a .22-caliber revolver which they found when they took Morones into custody. Fl'Ollf Pqe J HOSTAGE •.• Wa! being sent to the edge of the tank to wave his anns in reply while Abernathy beld a gwi pointed at him. John Murpha, a !upervisor r o r Lockheed, said Abernathy drove lo the Lockheed lank farm facility aboot 4 a.m. and captured the ty,·o men. A spokesman for the Multnomah County sheriff's office said shots were fired then, but no one was hurt. Efforts were made to drain the tank through underground >booes but they were not successful. Dailing told Murpba: "He ain't listen- ing to nothing." Abernathy's ex·wfie, Nancy, and his children live in Bellingham, Wash., 250 miles north of Portland. Efforts were being made to bring her to Portland. A woman friend of Abernathy's also was being taken to the scene to see if she could ta1k him into surrendering. The sheriff's office said Abernathy spent (OW' months as a patient ol the Veterans' Administration Hospital crisis clinlc in Portland several months ago during divorce proceedings. The fuel tank where Abernathy was balding hostages is some distance from lhe airport tenninal and is surroonded by open fields. The main street running nearby, Marine Drive, was closed to traf~ fie. UC Irvine Gym H ost,s Volleyball Playoffs Tonight UC Irvine tonight will bolt tbe regional f111als of the Southern Ca I If o r n I a Collegiate volleyball aasoclaUon at 8 o'clock in Crawford Hail. Dr. Robert Nelfoomb, lecturer In !Oda! science .00 coach ol the Anteaters volleyball team, said Crawford Hail af- fords the Long Bead> State and San Diego State teams the neutral oourt they need. Play tooJcbt will determine which of tbe two top teams will go directly Into finals set for later this month In Sin Diego. The two :!ChlolJ finished in a deadlocl< In drcuU standlnp with 9 Md 2 r=nls, forcing lhe playol&. The Jut· Ume the two teams played, 5,000 attended. Crawford HaU ... ts only 2.000 and tickets wlll be 50 cenls each, Newcomb said. Leier of tonight's volleyblll 1"<8lonal final must play epin thlJ weekend to qualify f0< the nationals. Tm!lghl'• wJn. ner 1tands "a good chance" of being na- tional clwnpilllJS, Newcomb speculated. .. . . . . ' .Close E"y~ 1n·&ich By TERRY COVILLE ot ... .,., ..... ,,.,, ... The United States !ired a shot !Oday which you might say was "beard around the worid." Vibrations from the Skylab fauoching were certainly felt in Huntington Beach where most of it was des.igned and built at McDonnell Douglas Astronautics. Top engineers gathered in a special control room this momlng to watch the launching. They'll use that control room throughout Skylab's HO days of manned orbit to back up the Houston Space Cent« in case any problems arise. Engineers in Huntington Beach will be called on to answer any questions which may come up during the flight. Local reac'Uon to this morning's suc- cessful shot was, as expected, one of joy and relief, though McDormell Douglas of· ficials did not have much to say about it. Hugh R. Bowe, executive assistant to the chalnnan and president of McDonnell Douglas Astronautics, summed up the company's official view: "We>re proud to be a part of Skylab's fint team. We are anticipating with great interest lhe benefits to humanity direetly attributable to Skylab I , America's first arbiting space station." The space workshop, which will be home for three separate three-man crews of a.stronauta, was officially finished in Huntington Beach Sept. 8, when it was turned over to NASA officials. McDonnell Douglas had a $390 million contract to build the Skylab, a partially complete backup unit and certain grouild support systems. At the peak of 8ctivity, in May of 1972, there were 2,600 workers at the Hun- tington Beach plant concentrating on Skylab I. Skylab workers accounted (or more than half tbe plant's work force. Wbile the eod of Skylab means tbe beginning of a new step in space ex· ploration, it also means more to hun- dreds of local Skylab workers . The sad part ol their project is that many, lf not most, of them are now out of work. They must seek new jobs, a somewhat difficult task in the field of aerospace. In Jllkl.April, McDonnell Dougw an- nounced it would lay di 2,000 Skylab workers over a period of nine months. Those layol!s would affect Huntington Beach, Sanla Monica and the Cape Ken· nedy facility. Luggage F alli From Airplane An Orange County A i r p o r t nmway was ina d vertent ly "bombed" by a Golden West Airlines commuter plane this morning. The DeHavilland Twin Otter bound for Los Angeles dropped three pieces of baggage from an improperly clased compartment on takeoff, an airline spokesman said today. The garment bag, briefcase and suitcase "·ere retrieved after the ?ilot turned back and landed the plane. There was oo damage to the con· tents although lbe ·bri~fcase opened upoo impact, :1Cattedng papers on the nmway, according to the spokesman. ·-.. ---. •• f I , , , I , ' , I --~ ... llot - ' I I S'LASHDOWN I''''"" '""' 12"' .. ""==-=. ~ .::::-....:;: -· -~---_:--::--~· .. I OO.,.il11 1ovthwell o,S.,Di•o• U .. t TllllPllott HERE'S HOW AMERICA'S FIRST SPACE STATION WILL START ThrH Men to Follow Utiearthly 'Home' into Historic Orbit Tuesd1y First U.S. Space Station Blasted Into Earth Orbit CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) - Skylab, America''! first space station, rocketed away from earth today to serve as a giant "cabin in: the sky" for nine astronauts in the next elght monlhs. A minute Into the filgbt , Missloo Con- trol Center reported good thrust In all five -first-stage engines an4 said it was "looking good." The first stage shut down and the second-stage separated and ignited right Writings Link Man w Possibw Killings of 26 VERO BEACH, Fla. (AP) -A bun- dr!d pageo of bandwrltten noles telling of hangings, rltuallatic murders ml. I!" acts may link a jalled man to the deaths of up to 26 women, Slate Attorney Robert Stooesays. If tbe manuscripts "'"' be believed, be said, "I doo't thlnk the country bas ever seen anything ol thla mqnitude." The man -serving a slJ:.month sentence 1n Fort Pierce on an aasault 1 convlctton -has not been charged 1n any ol the crimes. But be has been questioned in the deaths of two Fort Lauderdale area teen· age girls "11ose skeletons v.·ere found on a remote beach Aprll 1. The manuscripts and other items, some of which were identified as belong- ing to murder victims and missing persons, were seized last month at the home of the suspect's mother, Stone said. The notes were written in first-person story form . Also found were photos, drawings, gold·filled teeth, a purse and trinkets, authorities said. The man was questioned in the deaths of Susan Place and Georgia Jessup, who disappeared from their F'brt Lauderdale homes last September. oq schedule, 21h: minutes into the flight. The fir.It three-man crew is set to tide another rocket into space Tuesday morn· ing to hook up with the station , which is as large as a three-bedroom house, for a record 28 days in orbit. Skylab l astroOauts Charles Conrad Jr., Dr. Joseph P. Kerwin and Paul J . \Veitz watched from three miles away as a 33-story-tall Saturn 5 rocket thundered skyy:ard at 10:30 a.m. PDT., right on schedule, propelling the 85-ton laboratory toward orbit. The astronauts' smaller, 22-story Saturn lB rocket stood on another pad 8,700 feet away, awailirij,: the signal to blast off at 10 a.rn. Tuesday ii all goes well. • Also observing were the members o{ Skylab 2 and 3 crews, who are to rocket up to the same stalian later this year, each for 56-day visits. The astronauts and thousands of others in the Cape Kennedy area watched as the big booster rose slowly from its pad, gradually easing over on a nartheast course as its five first-stage engines belched a fiery tali 2,200 feet long. It was the final plarmed flight for the Saturn 5, the world's largest and most powerful rocket, which was built for the Apollo program. From Pagel PROBE .•. community input into the first Grand Jury bearing. The Grand Jury on April 30 declared Officer Miller innocent of any wrong- doing in the death of Ranquillo. The District Attorney's officer, which in· vestigated the matter for the Grand Jury, had recommended such a verdict. Lindros told the commission., lt\at. the District Attorney's office gave him full cooperation in Jook1ng into the details of the first investigation. •••••••• ••••••• • FREEZE FO OD PRI CES Wi1h Thit COMPACT Ziii ''· Chist FREEZER I ,.......,, __ •f:: ..... ..... ,,......_l .. ·~-......... 0.., 15915 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH 0'4 Al"l"llllOV•D ct111•01T WI DILIVll , ,,...,.. ..... .=:-... l ... ·--. .... .. .n. ....... .--. ..._ ....... -...... ~ 19911 • •' I• , ., "' ., .... ' • ' • • • ' ' : J ! I • I_ ·~ ,. " ; .. :\ I ,., .-. fl -;; t .. -,•. .• . " ... -· \.:: . . ·-! • • • •" 1"· .. ;· .. .. ... ,. ... : • I ... • I .. _ • 'i .. . \• -4 ..... , .. , .. -- , ~;r;; x , -~- ~·J ll<I. ~·· ~nfrl ~t I l-!t. ;\ 1't!t. .ilt"J ~"" f t'Or 11 ~ .;. .. ;! .~;-·) ,,. M~ ~?< 1 .. ~ \ftll I :--- - .. , ,,_ •. ,, - . -. , .. ........ ·~ .. .. ,_' • • • • : !" : , ... • • . " : '!· • 1_ - 1· .- " • ·' " .. , " . .. ' ·:i • ~) - .~: " - f -,, l .. '•' - I ''• \'-' ... _, ' -. ... ·-· . ;;.. . . :" : I ::., f ~-'. ;. '' -· . ;· ~:. " . . ' . . -·· .. ' " --. " . . I •-• ' ' I" -. •, •' . \• .... ,, ,_. 1· •• I' J ,~ ~-- r.· ·, ' ..... . I~ ~:\1 ,.*.: ~I 'rf .. fk!~.· ~i' . ~fr' tt •. (,.Jr-_,! 1lrPt,• .Tit ... - ~~~· !.!"! "ll c.: t ~~, .. ~ftt .. !!)flo 1nr. • -. . ~-.-J 8 DA!tY-PJtOT • sc -Mondq, May 14, 1973 Dodge's Spor,·.n.allye ~ot ' . ' Just Ti;·an.s·portation Car By C<\]\I. CAll$TE.'ISEN ot k Ollli-Plltt Slaff . ' . For people who Jake deligbr . Jn ahifting\ corpering ,and ~a car, Dodge baa ·In- troduced a ""' sport Rallye coupe for !be mid-i973 model year. . " , ·~In an tnduatry-wide shift Ol rpany buyers a'Y•Y from lbe J11US$le Qr specialty compact i . car, there · has been a tr~d 0 toward ~ sffialler, l~s ~ · powerful cir -whl_ch is b?th ecoacimieal Sod run to drive," . said Robert Loomis, Dodae general ·sales .manager. "And we think . !he Dart Rallye is j\lst such<' a ca~-.1' . ' . ' L\>OMIS SAID. l~e . trend by car > bUiJdll1J' and dtsig'ners over the ye:_a'ti has· beeh , to respond to buyer demands for comfort, safety, appearance, convenience, ease of,operation and silence." --' Today's cars are all of these desirable U.ings -so much so, thal there isn't much Jor the operator to do after turn- . ing on the JgniQon but steer · and stay alert. "·'For People who regard . their' car orily as transporta- tion, that's fine," Loomis Said, DODGE DART RALL YE-The '73 Sport Rallye is less powerful and more flC()o ooimcal but bandies with the best of wday's fun • can. It is equipped with 4 speed and small V·8 as sfandard equipment. · sUspension inside. _ Th~s addition to the Dodge Dart line seems to offer an ap- pealing alternate tO · com- petitiv~ £our and six-cylinder cars both in budget and reduc- ed operating costs . * Within the next two years, at least six rotary engine pcwered vehicles may be available m the U.S .. · "But there always has beeli and still is a large nurpber of FROM ITS NEAR-curiosity so-called afficionadoes. whose stage just a few years ago, the greatest enjoyment.from their Wanke~ engi'ne seems to be car is in the very pleasure of becoming a household ques- drtving." Loomis said the . tion. A.t this time only the Jap- rtame raUye ide.ntifies with anese import Mazda has a pro- thi.s type of driving imd thus . duct1on model of the rotary in ·the reason for the new · Dart · operation m the U.S.• Rallye. · · Now,' after much specula- • JT'S 'A F I v E-posseoger coupe with small bJock 3~8 c.i. v..a engine , and a .four-speed, close!r·atio ·manual tiansmissiOO with disc brakes included " as standard equip- ment . The Rally~ package include~ power steerittg; b e e f e d -u p thaLyoyrs may noU eoMPLm 01ANG1 COUN11 COWIU.GI 1.f.alftt: Lot•.C. .._ S.. CS..lft, M"9Jo11 Ylefo DGiftCI rolitt, • well OI . hacll Md IHst ··-L.A. MONTH TO MONTH RINTAL lislS 1 NO DIPOSR 'UQUtllD , ON APPIOYID CllDn" 4 ONLY $17.IO PU MQ:MT TOTAL COST. . 1 <••lhftff'itcl ~} 5 NIW COICl'ACT UNIT Stzl 111/4•4a l/2I VOi~ MESSAGE "PA.Gib ALSO All AYAILAILE fUW. -.IHI M_AINTINANC .... OR~NG£COU N7 Y ll~IJI07El E !'HONE ~lllVI C[ INC . " tjon, General Motors has an- nounced that the engine will be available in 1 the 1975 Cbemlet Vega. '- PRIVATE TRUST FUIDS .AVAllJBLE FO" REAL ESTATE LOANS , 1tl t 2nd TRllST DEEDS , $1,!iOO To '260.000 UP TO 80% LciANS ON TRUST DEED C0tt.AT£1\AI. NfWllOllT !QtJIT'f IUJIDa • Ntwp0rt Cent•r 820 N..,port C.nNlr Orf'fll Nnpon b•aell. C•llf.:(7i4) &44-882• .. Periqnatized • . Stylish • .... Or<fer for Y ourHlf or 1 Friend, ' ' '• . . ' Mey.l:;e used on ,enve·lopies es r•turi:'I address ltt>els. Also ·very handy · es identific,tion libels fo r merkin9 ptn'onel itemr such· es boojc11 rtCords, phof61 , etc~ lebeh: sticlc "On glass end rney be .U:l•a. for .,,.,.,ing>\h'ome Canned focd ttims. •All · le belt .!rt P.tihted with st~l!i.h VogUf type' ~n f.ine quelitY -w'hite· ' ,ummed peper. 1 • • .. .. .. ---..,------~-_._-..:.~---t 7 ,IM}!llJlltalpJpll.~Cft,tllilr119".wkhtl.JSlf'j •' l · f '"l'!li Pttlltlfle UM! blv., P.O. Mi IM 1. : :c.ft M•· '9W, ., . • ' ' I I I " 1' I o·: I . . I · .. :. "L.-·--~~~L~!jJ!~J!tt$i--,.-J • • • ' .. ..... . . .... . .... .. . . • • DAllV PllDT ·sr~ ~ llrlef Mater Dei {'. . ' -Chile Is Next Gets Rams For U.S. Team In Playoffs Mater Del Hiih's_M&elus League baseball cbaropjoai play ho>i to (he Citrus Bell League runn erup R a m on a Rams 1-~riday in the first round of the ClF AAAA baseball playoHs. MEXICO CITY -The U.S. Davis Cup teMis team will return borne from Its 4-1 vie· tory over Mexico in the North American 1.o\le final op- timistic about lls chances to beal Oille -and happy about the prodpect of playing on its own oowts fQr the first time In JI> years. Erik Vao Dillen, 22, ol San Mateo who with Tom Gorman woo the doubles match of the series saturday against Raul RamireZ and Vicente Zarazua, said he thought th<! team's Wei skopf ' Victory A Gift ' _ F:Ql\T_ y.'ORTil, Tex. (AP) -"It was," said -Tom Weiskopf, '.'a beck of a way to win a golf toumameq!." But be wasn't comj>lalning. "I don't want to be hypocrit- ical. You got to feel happy. But it's a different kind of wilt" '!be tal l, blood 0 h f o otrongman p I u c k e d the 11511,000 Colonial National Invitation tiUe from Bruce Crampton's hip pocket on the 72lld and final hole Sunday. It was more a gift t b a n theft, actually. . But Weiskopf quoted his old friend and fellow Olilo State alumnus, Jack Nick1aus, in summation: "A golf t00rnament ls 72 bol ... You have to play all ol them. Your scores on the first hole is as Important as your scores on the last." And j t was the last bole, where Cnmptoo took a do u bl e-bogey six, that Weiskopf won the jollrnament, sitting at the time rather nervously on a folding chair behind the tree. Weiskopf collected t he $30,000 top prize by a stroke, finJshing with a one.under-par 69 fOI' 297, wbfch included a par on the last OOle, some 10 minutes before Crampton showed up. Uadlno acorft •nd money w111111no~ 111 1119 ~/><1.000 Colonial Nellonel ln'i'lle· fll!f1 (lol tour~mtnl: lOl'l'i Wtltkotlf, SJ0,000 69 "' 70 69-216 Bn.ict· CrMnpton, l13A7S ti6 69 69 n-111 erry H••rdi SIJA7S 69 69 71 61-177 Lee Eldtr S1.G50 70 68 69 71-278 J11llvs Boroa $6,150 69 7.1 10 69-280 H•I• ll"ll'ln $5,100 7D 6' 72 11l-:1111 IC•rm1t Z.rt•y, $,100 71 70 11 69-2'1 John Mehlffsy, M.OJ'S n 70 69 76--282 Melon Rudolph, So(,01S 73 6f 67 n-2112 L90Nird lhomp$on. 5'A7S 74 61 11 70-U2 J1l'll wteel\en, 13.~ 7.l-T.l-704--211 Letwon H•rrls, i.l,900 70-71-70-r.l-211• Cherin Coody, Slt..900 11>-n-12-1G-'lll' R•rt GrHne, ,,,.,..,. n-11-11~-:iu Lou Gr1h1m, Sl.«lO 72.U.71·76-715 Bob 01,ki.on, $2,400 72-1l-48·12-2ijS Chlrln Sifford, 12,400 71-71-72-71-285 Glll9 U tt1er, $1.875 71.U.76-71-286 Pt\11 Rodg...s1 $1,175 69·1'·73-76--2!6 Kin SllU, Sl..1175 iie·71-73·74-2il6 Riv Flovcl. S1,t7S 7•-r.1-73~7-nt •-Ben Crenillaw 75-71·73~7-786 0.1n1 Bemen $1,500 70-71>-78~f-217 eud Allin, s1J1s n-n-11-14-m D1!!d Gr•h•m, s1.21s 71-73-70-14-?U =~'R-:-!~;:...'lf.~ls r,':~:~~t:ra Art1W1ll, Sl.2'15 13-70-7J-72-211 ".lilf, W10kl11S, f''j15 11•P-73-71-2il O+ • MO«IV, S ,i S 7i.;7•·7S-61-21B p:issibilities of defeating the South American Zone finalist were "very good." ·•we beat them S-0 last year in thei r country," Van Dillen said ol the 1972 series against Chile. The United Stales won the two singles matches Sunday. Solomon beat Ramirez 8-6, 7-5, 7·5, and Dick Stocktoo. 22, downed !Jlis Baraldi 2-6, &-1 , &- 3, !H;. In tennis com petition Newport Harbor's perennial Sunset League ~mpioos are .. t Long Bea ch Poly In lhe first round of the AAAA tennis eliminations while I r v i n e League kingpin Corona del Mar is at Arcadia. LAGUNA llEACH HIGH'S VARSITY TRACK AND FIELD CHAMPIONS, UNDEFEATED IN ORANGE LEAGUE DUAL MEET ACTI ON. I MacCall Named NEW YORK -Laguna Beach's George MacCall, a for· mer nonplaying captain of lhe U.S. Davis Cup team , has been named <:0mmissiooer ol the new World Profe&'lional Tennis League, it was reported Sun~ day nlght by tne National Broadcasting Co. n et w o r k radio show "Monitor." The AAAA baseball situation is somewhat cloudy with Irvine League runner sup Magnolia and Santa Ana Valley and SUnset League run- nersup Anaheim and Loara fighting for three available berths. Western Sprints Next for occ The pro tennis league, with more than a dozen cities com~ peting, is scheduled to begin operation late this year. Only the Boston and New York _franchises have not dellnilely been settled for the tennis league. King Tops TOKYO -Top.seeded Billie Jean King of Long Be;tch displayed strong net play in the third set Sunday to score a M, 5-7 ~ 6-3 victory over Nancy Gunter and capture the top prize of $8,400 in the Toray- Sillock Women's Professional tennis tournament. RoSemary Casals defeated Francoise Durr of ·France 6-3, &-1 for third place In lhe !&- player tournament. .Karen Signs VANCOUVER, B.C. Karen Magnussen of North VancOuver, winner of the 1973 World Figure Skating cham- pionships, has signed a three· year contract with I c e Capades. George Eby of Los Angeles, p~sident of Ice Capades, said the contract "will earn Karen the highest amount ever paid to a perfonner, or an act, in the 33-year JJjstory of Jee Capades." He said the 21-year-oJd champion will perform in the two comp~ies of Jee Capades, playing 13 Canadian cities and a number of U.S. cities. Hank Belts 2 Each league was to decide today which of its co-run· nersup would assume its loop's No. 2 berth in the elimina- tions. /UM Beseblill Fretw1v No. 3 or Marmonte No. 3 (Camarillo or N11w1Wry P•rl!J •I LB M llUkan Rl rn«le II Me!lf' oer Sltrra 11 Or•noe Palos VerCll' at St. John Bosco 8urbenk 11 No. Torrance MarmonUI No. 2 (Camar111o el NewlWl'v Parkl at Huene"" StmiMI No, 2 lt.o.rl or An1hl!m1 " Freew1v No. 2 IFuUer!on or Lowell Muir 11 L0$ Alamitos Irvine No. 3 !Meanoua or SA Val\•" or S1tnMI No. 3 {Loara or Analltllm al Arc•dla St. P1ul 11 Sev•nna No!rt Oarne 11 Crese11t1t1 Vallev l..ekt'WOOO II Car Hfah Buena af H1wttiorne Santa Monlc1 11 ROYal lrv!ne No. 2 (SA Valley or Magnolia) •I Chlttav VIII• P•rk II Wttlarn AAA 81HtMlll Opponent lo be d~mlned •I El Segundo OllPOnent to be ~lermlnff ti R<aemead Gth• 111 e!,ho!l Montgomery Cabrlllo 11 Avlallo<> e1r1row at Claremont G1rd111 Grove a! San eemardJno Workmen al L• Mirada Schurr 11 Los Al!01 OP-I lo be del1rmlned al Norlhvltw Nori• Vista al Pacific• Edoewood at Montclair 51. ·'Bernard at Anlelope V1lley Serra 111 Lvnwood OD!>Orlenl fo he det1rmlned 11 Nlff GlendOI'• 11 San Gabriel Le11rlnger at S•nlB Ma•!• MM Tt111111 lnal--1 at Btvf.rlv Hiiis Corona def M,,r at Areitdle S11nta Ba•b•r11 at L.,.,0!1 HOOVIM" at S1nl11 Monk a Redondo II Palos v...oes No. Torr1oc1 at Sunnv Hll1s li~lllnll~ 11! Foalhfll N-POrt Harbor at LB PolV ... Quartt HUI or Vklor Vat!1y el Sen Merlrio tJl)land al Rowland No. Rlv~r11<1~ at San Gabriel Neff at La Quinta Mark Keo~I et La Seme Glendora 11 Cl1remont Sin!a Marl• 11 Thous1nd Oaks Harvard 11 Be!lllower EJims Set For Tonight This weekend Dave Grant will discover just how much his orange Coast College junior varsity crew bas im· proved. The Pirates wtll be com- peting In tile Western Sprints, the biggest crew event staged on the West Coast Friday and Saturday at Lexington Reservoir near San Jose. OCC will meet all the top collegiate rowing powers this side of the Rockies. Action runs from 7:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Friday and 7:15 a.m. to noon, Saturday. More . than 55 races will Ile contested during lhe tw<><lay event. The OCC junior varsity eight Is the defending Western Sprints champ, h a v 1 n g Leaders . AMERICAN LEAGUE BATIIN" \1111 a1 D11s1 -P.K1Hy, cn1; .Csi Klr1r.oe1 rlck. KC, .3101 Hou, M.n • .:io•; w.H1111on, ueo, .:M.•1 U.Au•n• l.l••·-~-A.UNS -M&yw ry, KC, 21 R. Jac..i;un, u111;, 2:>; "'"'"'"'' lh., 2'1 Otis, K\., ~•; K1rqi.11riCK, "'-• 2J. RUNS IJATTCO IN -Mllvberry, I((, ~; Melton, Chi, 2'l M11rwr, NY, ~ R.Jac...on, 0.1<.. 22; Tanace, Vlk. ll, HIT~Role1; KC, :s¥; R.Jacl<tOll, Oak, 35; 7 Tl90 Wllh :M. OOU8 ·L ES-Rol••• KCI 12; l(lrkDalrlck, KC, 11 ; O.Allm, en, 10; U1l1_, K.1., ~; S Tl6d With 1. TKIPLES -Herper B$1l, J; E.Brlnkm•n Oet· 3· Brfg.g1, Mii, ·3; S!lfnctr, c1I, a1 6.Allen, c.111, l ; Hl1l1, Mln.1,.J, HvME RUNS -D.Mey, Mii, fJ MeyDerry, ICC, f J Tanoc:e, O•lt. II Tl6d With 6-PITCHING (4 Decisions) -SDl/tt"ff' kC.t &-!, .&S~ ~.61 flll!lfr, C•I, J. \ .W. 1.7l wooa, 1.111, 1-2. .aoo. l.39 E.F ..,.,, cn1. ~!" .eoo, 3.&6 eo1"""' 0.1, •1.i .750, :l.3V Ho1nme11, O.k. 6-1, -150, 1.n i~~fd'. 't:~.)-1, ,750, 2.&4 Medich, NY, ~TA.1Reouts -N.ay111, C•!(. 101 l.lneer, C1I, tt1 G.Perry, Cltl 561 wood, Chl, 43; T1en1, Bin, 411 Blv 1w.n, Mln, '1' Hollim.:~1PJ:1i.t1·LeAOUI BATTING "(60 •I blh) -Santo, Clll, ,369; Mllll1, LA, Ml W1ti.on, Htn, .3671 Falrlv, Mon._.J51;j_ Matklo~ SF, .156. defeated the po w e r f u 1 We've worked hard and have Washington JVs by five comea.longwaysincethen." secood$ last year. 'Ibis time it "This has been a fwt crew to could turn into an o t h e r coach,'' Grant said. "1be PirateirHuakies dmnybrook. oarsmen have grown tremen- Grant's Bucs lost to dously. Last year we were Washhtgton by 16.7 seconds very strong, but we were last April 7 in the San Diego strong right from the begin- Regatta, placing bemnd the ning. This year we've come on Huskiies and the Nava l tremendously." Academy. Since that lime OCC will he the only com· OCC bas bea~ seven CQfl~..munity.. college entered in the secutive opponents and has a sprints. All other schools are combined 10-2 .record. 1be of the four·year variety. That Bucs have not lost to a hasn't stopped the Pirates in California collegiate crew this the past. They have won four season. Western Sprints tiUes since "We were young and in-1966. experienced when we met Because OCC ls a com- Washington Jn San Diego," munity college the Bucs are Grant said. "It Wj!S our first not allowed to compete on the race of the year and our in-varsity level but are limited to ex~rience was clearly visible. junior varsity and freshman competition. "Against Washington that really doesn't mean much," Grant said. "It has six varsity boats. The first boat races against varsity competition and the second races against the JVs. The competition between those two boats is fierce and tile difference between them is negligible." Grant says the most im· portant part of the race with Washington may be the first 750 meters. "The stari Is probably the weakest part of our r:ace," he said. "We've been working on· it all week and if we can im· prove we can pick up as many as two boat lengths. "If we can keep Washington from getting ·by us for the first 750 meters we can beat them." Following~ the sprints the Pirates will makeibelr second trip to Europe. The Bucs com- peted there in 1971. They are scheduled to participate in three regattas in England and one in Ireland. OCC is entered in the Marlow Regatta on t h e Thames, slated for June 23; the Nottinghamshire Regatta. June 31; and the 136-year-old Royal Henley Regatta at Henley on tb19Tharnes, July 4- 7. The Bucs will also compe te in the Dublin Regatta July 13· 14. Jn 1~71 Orange Coast became the first crew ever to sweep all four events 1n the Dublin event. ATLANT A -Hammerin' Hank Aaron's early season home run splurge has been a· surprise for the A t 1 a n t a Braves slugger who continues his relentless charge toward Babe Ruth's all-time record. The 13th annual West Coast Match Game Bowling Eliminations gets under way tonight at Kona Lanes in Costa Mesa as 120 begin Cl?lllpetition in the race ror the title. It begins at 9 o'clock and coatinues every Monday eve-- ning Wltil the finals Aug. 17. The even1ual winner goes on to the state roll-off over the La· bor Day weekend. RUMS -lll<lnCn, SF, Jn wvnn, HM, 28; 1.arden•t, Clll, 25; WetSOll, Hin, :U ; Ch arlie Herzog, Chris Klinke, Jeff Masterson, Phil Peterson, Greg Tyson, Curt Hoyt, stroke Mike Moore and roxswain Rod Packwood. ~l~~ii:J:·:~.v?s! fr~. At1, 131 Rou, BUCS IN SPRINTS -Orange Coast College's crew w:i't::i~ 8H~r~91 1~~::::.11·~· I~; will be one of the favorites in this week's Western A.~:~T'0'Cnr,; rF .• ~·; s;u:1&., SF, Sprints. Th~ oarsmen, from left, are 'bow Mark Fitch, 4111 Cadeno, Ht(l, 45; Webon, Hin, 44; _ _'-_C'-' _ _-'. ___ _.:_ ___ _.:_ _______ _.:_ ______________________ _ W.Dlvl•, LA, tt. DOUBLES -Cedeno, Htn, 121 9Qn01, SF, 121 (:•n:llllllll, Chi, f; Tov1r, Phi, 9; . ............... "I didn't think I'd have 'that many by now," .Aaron said Sunday after ·belting his ninth and tenth homers of the year as the Braves split a doubleheader with the San Diego Padres. The Elims is rolled in four· game segments with the field cut in half after seven weeks. TRIPLES -Met?aer, Hin, 'l. S.1111!.llUen, pgh, 3; M•ildox, SF, J; I TJftl Wlfl'I 2. HOME RUNS -Sl•rvell, pgh, 101 H.A1ro11, Alj, 10; Banet\, Cln{. 91 McC~;,, S1-, 91 MondlV, Ch, I; The pair, one in each game, lifted Aaron's career total to 683, just 31 away from Ruth's revered standard of 714. Pico Rivera's George Shore is back to defend his title as are former winners Gary Madison of San Bernardino (1971), Lamar Keck of Canoga Park (1968-69) and Bob Ramirez of Anaheim (1961, '64). WX~'8LEN' g~~~ 5l~ Htn, 161 Monian, Cl1!1 IS1 Bonds, SF1 h1 LOpn, LA. ""lOI E. Nern11MM1; SD, v. PITCHING !A Oe<:l!lons) -K()(ISmen, NV, s-o11.ooo, 1.7' SON, SF, 4-0i 1.000, 1.62 Bl ll1111hlm~ Clnl 6-!i . ·~'· 2.•9 R11111s, H1n1_.s-1, .133, .en ~111 LA. 4-1, ,fQO, 2.w Locker, Chi, 3-11 .7rill. 1.to Hel, Cln, 3-1, .1!/J, A.l5 O.Rooerts. Htn, 3-1 , .150 2.19. STR llC'.EOIJTS -C1rlton.t.. Phi, 61 ; Saevtr, NY. SAi Sutton LA. ~lJ Jenkins, Chi, '31 RevscMI. Chi, "21 Glbfm SIL, ... Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division w L Pct. GB Milwaukee 14 14 .500 Baltimore 14 16 .467 1~6 New York 14 16 .467 1 Boston 13 15 .464 l Detroit II 17 .452 Ill Cleveland JI 18 .438 2 West Division Chicago 18 8 .692 Kansas City 20 12 .625 l Angels 15 13 .536 4 Oakland 17 15 .531 4 Minnesota 12 14 .462 6 Texas 10 17 .3111 81>. 5unllar's G1""1 New Yorlc 4-9, B~ltlmote 0.-6 MflwaukH 6, De!rtlll 5, 10 lnnlngt Bo1ton I, Clewlancl l MFnnlSOTI J, K1ni11 CltV t Allttl• ,, Ch!CIOO 0 lf'DS 7, 0.1(1 .... ! Tod1y"1 ~ Ml,,,_.1 {Keat .. , Ind Co~lll 0.1) ., Ta•M (Pe!JI J-2 •ncl S!enhouM 0-3) Delrort (Colemen 6-2) at N~ Yorli: (Ptltr.ort "'' Baltimore (At1x1ndef 3-11) at Botton (LH 3-GJ A111•I• (SI~ S-1) at Keni.at CllY CDravo l-2) (leY•land (Tldrow 3-4) •I MllWl<lktl {Chem· Pion G-1) ChleffO (Wood 1-2) •I O.kelnd !Holtun•n 1-21 T-• Dtom:>lt •I Ntw Yortt B•lllmor• It Boaton Mlnt!HOl8 •I 'Ttxa• All9fill 11 KenSM Cltv Cltveltnd I I Mltw1\lkH Chk.aoo et OM:l1lllllll I Oemt• l NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division w L Chicago 211 13 New York 17 14 Montreal 13 15 Pittsburgh 12 14 Philadelphia ll 19 St. Louis 8 22 West Division • San Francisco 1' 12 Houston 22 12 Cincinnati 19 13 Dodgers 19 15 Atlanta 12 19 San Diego 12 22 SUTICl'V't Gemet Clllca1!o 4-9, Phll110e11>11!a 2-3 San D!eoo 6-l, Allanta 4-6 New YOl1t ,, Pl!llbunih A St. Louil 3. Montreal 2 Clncln,,.i[ 2, liouslon O ooctpn 15, San FrancillCO 3 Tod1Y'1 ~mn Pel .606 .548 .464 .462 .367 .267 .676 ,647 .594 .559 .387 .353 GB 2 2 411 411 71> IOI> l \0 311 41> 111 11\0 New York· IKooun111 .S-0) •I Chlcato (Hooton •·2) Mon!r .. I (A;tnko 2-2) If l'lll•bul'9h (Brllft 1.31 Phlled•lphla {8nttt 0.1 or L.ol'lbort 2-'J et St. Lou\1 CCJevr-Jencl Ml All•n1 .. {Morton 2-3) 11 Hol.tston iGrltfll'I .. 1) San FrMClsco (Bracllsy 2-1) el sen Dlfto (Corldns Nl Onlv oeme.s ~ltd. Twncl1Y'I 0..,,. PhU""ohl1 tt SI. LOUii Ntw Yori!; II ClllUIOO Mo<ll1ffl 11 Ptltlburtll Dod1tn •I C!nc1t11•111I •tlenll et Houston Sin FrencilOO •I 5111 DI~ Leonard In Field At Indy Harris Sets Record; SoCal S pikefest Next Mesan After some sparkling per--of 4S.21h, wiping out his old formances in the West Coast mark of 47-111/• established Relays at Fresno Saturday, earlier this season. In Lead At WIBC three area junior college track Harris was third.in the event INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -and field standouts will com-behind Jolm Triplett of West LAS VEGAS (AP) -Bobbie Defending national champion pete in the .southern California Valley (49-2 ) and Randy Daw-Buffaloe of Costa Mesa rolled Joe Leonard finally made the finals this Saturday at Comp-son of North Peralta '(48-71/~). a 706 series SUnday to take the entat. 1· f the $1 ton College. And in the long jump, the Open Division singles lead in t 1ve meup or Rustlers sophomore went 23-7 mill. Ind 500 . Sun Golden West's Ray Harris the $706,000 Women's Interna4 ion y· race m • is entered in the Jong jump for second behind Ken Dun- day's second session of Ume and triple jump, teammate can of Sacramento (24-2). tional Bowling Congres s trials for the 57th running of Jack McQuown will run tn the McQuown was just as busy championship tournament. the May 28 classic. mile and Orange Coast's Tony in the two-day spike[est at Mrs. Buffaloe rolled games Af1.er a variety of Ciarelli is entered in the jav~ F~Mcbored Golden West's of 278, 225, '203 to record the lin and shot put. highest series in the four-year mechanical problems, the 38-Golden West's RusUers also distance medley relay team ~o -..history of the WIBC tourna· year-old San Jose veteran set-have a 440 relay quartet run-a fine clocking of 10:13.0 Sat4 ment. Her 278 is the highest tied for a 10-mile average of Ding Wednesday at Compton. urday as the Rustlers placed game of this year's 107-day amell Th t . be' . seventh behind Laney's win· tournev which ends July 20. 189.954 rn.p.h. in his P i-e even lS mg rerun stnce 'ning mark of 10:01. .1 Offenhauser. the staggers were set imp~ McQuown had a mile c)ock-Fitzpatrick Chevrolet, the Some Indianapolis Motor erly in the prelims last week. ing of 4:15_4, Others in the Concord, Calif. team which Sp~way ob s e r v er s o:in-Running for the Rustlers in foursome included Bob Blick· won the 1969 WIBC title. sidered the speed borderline the 3 o'clock event will be ner (l :57,5 half mile) Tom tallied 2897 pins to move into for holding a starting spot. Tom O&sso, Dennis Maas, Bowman (52.7 quarter mile), first place by three pins. The 33 best qualifying runs Dennis Myers and S t eve and Dave Lockman ca:07 Two members of the team, through next weekend will Thrapp. 1320). Bowman was knocked Pat Coetello of Union City, produce the starting field. At Fresno Saturday, Harris down at one stage of his leg. Calif., and Ellen Duval of Only three s....v• remained hadHelh<!seltopa sceffhooortl.reconl in the 'but still had a top perform-Berkeley, comkbined for a 12td9 """' said N series to ta e over secon to be filled after six 11).mile 1 · 1 J .th t elf ance, OOD. Ope 0 · · runs Sunday. np e ump Wl a op ort McQuown also had 8 good place in n t v 1 s: ion The first 80 qualifiers aver-time of 1:55.0 in the two-mile doubles. I h I Ing lh R ti t Miss Costello led the na· aged a record 192.572 m.p.b., F '!-L R re ay, e u e us ers o bo 1 1 8.561 m.p.h. faster than the Jail eport a sixth place finish in 7:56.0, tion's women w ers ast first 30 qualifiers last year. the first tbne this seam year with a 211 average, Mrs. Speed d~pped 8 b ar p Iv they've gone under four min· Duval, who averages 209, is a s .,. ..1 MAUtu Pll• -ss •n;l.n1 41s 1 WIBC Hall of Fame member from Saturday's reco r d-''it m . u es. d · WIB ham h1ng .........M b AN 011.0 lM•dr.r '""'> -173 Other members of the quar-an a two-tune C c • smas runs.. t"l't""... y ~~~ .sn Y•llowt11, 2 ~110, s:s tet included Brickner (1 :59.9), pion. Johnny " Rutherford's 198.413 H IW~•T (A"'• l•ltdllll) -M 'tchell c· 11113) and The doubles lead was taken m.p.h. in a British-American ll'!lll•rt: uo bonito, 10 be•.!r 11 rock Mark Mi .: . cod. l~r'• Lac:kw.I -lVT •nt•-1 t.oc•-·· (1 59 9) bv DOttv Fot""...nll of North hybrid McLaren-Offy. se bonito, ~ bl••· n roi:11: tOd, 1 iuu411 : • • ..1 ' ·-.~· Other qualifiers gun d 8 y 111~r'~A 2~1~';'1:. 220 •:i:,n: ,... Meanwhile Ciarelli placed Attleboro, Mass., and Millie were Mike Hiss of Tustin, last ~:l\~1?'f;;3~r·~•·4'%ecti~i. t flfth in tJle javelin with a Martorella of Rochester, N.Y., f the ""'" '" .. ,. throw of 205-0 (his season best the WIBC All Even ts defen- year's Indy rookie 0 year, r~ ocii~Nli'f•~110~' J"T~r:r ~ ... ~rs is 217·7) and went unplaced ding champion and recent win· at 191.939, and Dick Simon, hall 1 2' rock coo In th shot ··'th a ••·1 elf rt ner of the U.S. Women's Open. Salt Lake City, Utah, 191.276. 1t'•NA DEL 1l1Y -n •no•tr•: ';;;;;;;e,.;;;;;w;:;•;;;J';;~;,;;;;;:o;;;.;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;:;, Most of the faster driver~ar ~l-.T~nio 11t1111 st. S,,,.11t, -.,. I combinations were among the :rc':li'~\.~lto;r~11~~soi. .. '= t::: uallfl bl-"-109 bonllo. I• lt'ltClt.,..., fSpetrtfftM111J 24 flrst-day q ers, w n;ll -'" •110lln! 260 boflllo, ,,7 c11llto ineluded former Indv wil'll'lers No'lS, u .. 1111 !Miu. 2 ~u:iu:. AOS rM'I Al and Bobby u"""i· Mark co;:A11'D''' "ovt-•· ,.,,.., •••. , ,., """"' w ~ ro'",.,... 1 ·~1-·- D-..ohu•. Mario And etU end 0 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;-.:;• A.J. Foyt Jr. ftO!t L·~-• 1A•t11t"' '"''"" ~-' 1.-=--==···-----.. NEWPORT LEASES , .... ..., ........ .,. .... 111 Looting all Vehlclas '71 -~-- ff You Own A • PORSCHl!--CORYETTl--JAG--MIRCIDES en OTM!n TCP·O~~THE·LINI CARS.- YOU '"l\nn' THa IESTI lS YIAIS l:Xf'lll:llN't! tH: \ /\' ·ro f ODY C" P/\'t"';'ING e 1'ETAILING 645-2202 ''-~~~~~~~~ ... 1 ..... •.1·"··" .. -..... '.o•.1.1. ...... ,.., ___ --~-~~~~--~ .... ~--~~ ...... I •• •• . , •' . ,._ .. ; -1 . . -' •• . -- -. . . . • -y • ,, r , • .... . ·-' .. __ , . ·-· . '/ .. , 4 •• "-. .. -.; -· -..... .. -. . '· -• . _, . - :: . : •' . ·--. • "' -• .. ' . ' '. ,. " -· .- ·,· .. . •. -· .. , --• " . • ; f ' . -. . -., -' . . ,. -' . -~· ' -. "' -· . ..... ,, • " " i ~. . ~ . ..... . , -.. ! 4. t • -· ..... • ... . ·-· ... • .... , •' .. •' "-· . ,. ' -. ,, ; -,, . -. •' -. ... ' ... .,., .-,, .. . . . .. ··-~· _, .... _, ., ........ ·-· "' '. . .. -. ' . . ;".J ,,,.., __ , # "" -.. ' -.:· •'• t -~ "' -.. ,,. .. . , .... ' . ' . •' .. ... " .. " , . •' ... . " :· . . " •' --· , . • l . ': .. ,. •· ... -· rl• ' -.. -·· ... ; .. t :. -. " •'. . . . .. . •' •-•t • >'"! • : Ii -... ~·· -· ,, . . • y I • I :-• i '\ ., • ..... ~ .... ::.1 .. ,!', 1· -• ' • t • ' -,., _ .... ,. ,.._ I •:1 ,.•'.; ., .... ,~;· ,,.... ,., ,_ . . . ·'. ,. .. .. ...... --.1 . . . ~ o!!f' • •• • ·~f' ,. ~····I .. . . . ' ' . . . .. . ~ . ; , . . -·' .•1• , . '·:;:· ' ~ :11r' • r-• I •'' t' .,., , .. ,.1 • l .. ,1 r:;:.~ t# _,., .. t' •. ~ •' -.l' •' ' li ... , __ -.. . ··ti u _. • ' •I , .. .. "' • • • •: ' .. - " . .. . -• • • • ··-· .. • .. . . . . -. . .. . ' . .. . . .. .. . -· . -· ' ... _ .. ~ ...... '· ,i•..; •••. .. . .. . . . • , .. T 11°""1, ..., 14, 1973 SC DAILY Pll.llT .If "'· ··- M~day's Closing Prices-Complete New Y or){ Stock Exchange List ' • • . •• .. • ' • o,lll.Y PILOT -· M11 U, 1971 TONIGIIT'S TV illGJH,IGHTS KCET flD 7:30 -Stal.in. On the 20tb anniver· sary of lb Russian dlctator's death, KCET and the BBC !l<'*DI a documentary on Josef Stalin. CBS e 10:00-Women of the Year, 1973. J\o$a. lond RIUSell is hostess for ~ presentation of awarde honoring American women• for significant adlievement. ABC O 10:30 -What Aliout Tomorrow? A fo. cus on new methods by wb)cli sclentlrts ar& dif- c:overing ways to help them usess effects of ~ew technological developments on future generation.t. ··-----:------- TV DAILY LOG Mondoy Evening MAY 14 1:00aao111 mm CE""' Wilill -a-illl4l- fJWtdMDIH1rAllwl mn.-... .... ,'" 111•-r.-m--u-lfll>"'- •:• 00 ...,... .... ,... 0 -· (IO) """ """' Om" (dtl) •'65 -f:ddlt Albert, loube So!ll. Employment Ajel'ICy Into lucy'1 ho mt. D ®l Ill lllC "'"'" w..i.: CCI (2hr) "'Private "hY ol stt. O'Faf· rell'' (R) (com) '68-Sob Hope, Phyllis Diiier. A Navy ser1e1nt In lht Pacific d11rin1 World Wit II 1nain1ers • plan lo rtcO¥er 1 sunk· tn shlplold of bter. 0 ill ill CE AIC M"dll M"11: (C) (90) "W11111 El&I•• Dart .. Concl. (adV) '69-Rlclltrd Bur\On, Clint £1atwood, Mary Uri. Saven m1p and on• woman p1rachut1 throu1h a bllndin1 snowitorm In tht B1v1rl1n Alps tO rncue 1n Amer· lean 1en111I blln1 'held prlsontr In 1 Nazi fortrtu. m Dr•1Ml fi)Nln• &I La CrildAi ll•n Crild1 CJ) CIS ..... Willer Cronkite B HM 1111 Wiii Tl'IYll Iii -'"""' .... m...,,_ m M1111Cmctlllhlw m-. . l!lllllfnu- 6)UttltlllClll• 9:30 IJ ()) Dorlt DtJ Show (R) Doris and !he otlltr tenants tn the 1p1rt· men! bulhlln1 11e horrified W'htn iN· · ···-·t&mpl1td lih. Jarvis bk.OJl\U tllelf . new findlord. 11 OM Sttp kyond o- 111 ~· .. .., &> Mlldltdl• 1un1111 fli.)Y1rl-.tffl 1:00 ID Ill D Ill"'"' ..... 11, "' Doll1is (I) Trvtll tr Cort~u111Ct1 (I) Wlldfff• Tlllttn IJWWtMy UM7 m1i..e...., 10:00 0 CLAIROL QI I DrN111 If Jtlnni1 fl Slllplt•tntt M1ri1 * · presents "WOMEN OF THE YEAR- ID Lt1111: Qu11t1t "H1ydn'1 Opus 20 #6'' ill M""' Em Y1rilcladn·Mutittll1 (Dllm'Chtrt ·--"'"' J:Jll 11 Jtt111ny Mann'• Sbnd '' 11111 a. Carol Lawrence runts. (}) Kop11'1 Ktl'MI B Tll• Mew Pritt 11 llpt " -· (t) (2~~ ·11o~ ,, tlo C•" (wes) '67 -J1mei Gtmer, J1"3n Roblnb, Robert Ryan. (1) T1 Ttll tflf Truth rn n. n"111ttk1n fJ MIHitll $ Mowle: (2hr) "TM r•" (WIS) ·~•rb•r• Stan· wyck, Witter Huston. 111 Wll<I ~ ..... ' 1973'" fJ C1J I ltiCp;L! Wollltll ti tllt Y1ar, I9n Rosalind Russell serves ts hostess for the prMtnt1tion of 1w1rds honorlnr Amtrlcan women tor sirniflctnt achievement b1sed upon tidies' Hom• Joum11 re1der re1ction and prolession1J opinion. omm•ows 0 R1t\I Phllbl-n l1lb T1 ••• Capt1ln John Naysmyth, returned POW, ruesls. EB Roller 1ii1mes Ui) Hum1nitles Film fOl\lm "AltJ.· 1nder NtV1ky" (Russian, 19311) This epic battle film chronicles victorr of 1 131h·century Russian princt over both Mongol 1nd T1utonlc In· Ylderi. mllllt Girt .. """'' 10:300l•lk lick EID 1 iflCJAl I StaWn KC£T /BBC co- produCMI docum1nt11y on Joseph S!tlin, m1rkin1 the 20th 1nniv1riuy of lh1 dictator's de1lh . lf1l TIMI AdwtltlHtr Em""· .. , Pln1"1'9 (D $filftl Chltltnp m Tiii Addtll• f .. u, o rn@ fl)! SflC!M I w ~. t About Tomorrow? "Facin1 tht Con· sequences" ProRr•m focuses on new methods by which sden!isb ire dis- coveiinr ways that will help them assess erf1cts o! new tecbnclorittl devtlopmenls on future 1ener11ions. (D Tnie AdY1nturt CJlV Musical ~-'"'"' 1:45 B MfN: "Thi ludtr ke&loR ...,,. (blo) ·~1-t>onald o·~nnor, J:IDID- l:OD m "I• Old Cfllcqo" (dr1) '38 -Tuesday T)'l'On• Power, Alitt f1)'t, Oc11 Ame ch•. DAYTIME MOVIES l:JO D '1>I Ch••""" l"•l '49 -Kl~ Oou1l1s, Rutb Rom1n . 1:318 (C) "KouM1d" (bio) '53-Tony 3:00 CJ) (C) "Asalult In 1 QUffll" P1rt Curtis, J1net Lelah. 1 (dr•) '66 -F11nk Sin1t11, Vlrn1 lO:OO CJ) "'Mlltw c.r.," (dr•) ·~7 -~'<C> "Nl..i.t 11111t-(susp) '6! r.,., Curtis, M•rtf'I• ttytr. \JJI! •"' ,, 9 ....... '""""' (wtt) '4&-Rob--Roddy MeOowall, 1o1n Crtwfo1d. lft lowtlJ, Hel~n CUbert. S:JO 0 (Cl "His N•luty O'KMl1" Jljl. ~ (Wfl) '54 -Willitm (•av) '5' -Burt ltnttsltr, Jottt ___ .. T_ Rlct. C-> '15-il'd Moc•-. ColOll 4:00 ID Ml"4: ttl C2Wi ·1-Ill· i.an. ,._.. (dr1) '6'-Gtnt 81r17, A;# -T"l •UT COfQUMllt CONll$T CC) (JCAICl "Wvleft Tu• • .,.. ..... • -INNatlfl'lll 11» -ll.t:CT•tC COMl'AMY CC) IClW) EMAtloMI entll'l•lnflWll, Mlltlc llM nwnw fO .,_,. """"" --· t:• MUJlll• .,..liT (C) CCTWI EOUU!kw\11 proff'•m for p r • • .....,... {Jt mflil) - f~OO -T"I ftlAT cbNSUMll COllTllT (C.) UCAl(;I "~ 'T ....... ~ • -,__.Oii '"' •:» -lllOCUt OllANGI COUNTY (C) IKOCE·'TV) "5oo111thl on A\lfl'IOI'•" wflfl Hoat Jll!'I COO!*' -1..IMt•ry -· 1:00 llllNtTllN IC) !PlSI A blO(lrtJ)tllul OOCUrntnt1rv on tllt 11rt•I ltVMl•n Fl111'1m••or. (IO mlnl l :JO -lllTN CONTJl:Of.1 A OICISION 1101 YOU• TllNAGll" (CJ All Advoc:•IH llllTUMI' tf'*;lll, 1'111 (.0 mlnl t :• _. MINUTlt WITH , •• (CJ lflt•> Nt'l\'lwatn•ll IUUbllfl or .... -Plllll<tl ~nltrv1*"" LIDO "'~''" e' r _ H I., ' ~ • ' . -\. 11'1 Wa.cky,J~ooky, and Wlkt "SLITHER" Burt R1ynold1 "FUZZ" Now Ployln~ "FIDDLER ON THE ROOF" (PO} 7 ud t:45 p.m. ColOt' tGJ Startl Wednetday St•nl1y K11br1ck'1 "CLOCKWORK ORANGE" ••• "DEALING-" NATIONAi GENERAL . THEATRES OW PLAYING R!SIRVED SEATS On Sale Daily 12 'Iii 9 MARLON BRANDO .bL '}>it1s . f.tA .:JOOE UNClt~ • 'e> 11~n~11 Un1!1d11rh11~ MON. !HRU THURS. 8 P.M. FRIDAY 7 I g,45 SAIUROAY 1·7 & 9'45 SUNDAY 1-5 & 8 I.. --..cA::.:ll SEATS $4,00 WKDAYS 6 :45 SAl. & SUN. 12:4S "CHIER LEADERS" ··s1ournoN or 1Ncr· BOTH JIATLlRIS RATfD IX) ·-. (Good Deed People) make the scene Sundays in the l1fJ!fjijll1ll "" ",,,,., • Light Comedy _ in Cl_emente 19* ...i NSWfOllT IMl-IPJ One Of TM YMrt 10 1-.-L.A. Tl""' By TOM TITUS , Of ni. Dfllly .. ltlf ft•ft ",f, u•rtlL ,UU. CW f'INtdlf" he of J"" p tri"" •~ trr Jtllln htr'&dl. lit"'°"' llT· T play1 u1•u a ~. .1 .tMJ"eo.ir. tOUnd •1'111 tklllt~~ with the notable exception of ~="""~,..o.:;r m.r:!:' ~ "Teahouse of the August Dt'eMn1M'f11Uf'letM 1~L:1,.. Moon," may be generally ~1~~. "'"t~X1tv" TMt•tMr,r, ~ gh ,t-flkl C•llrllto. San c """""· characterized as lightwei t, R•""'''lon• ""°""· Patrick's ..-b D o I =Uy enouah wrjtten to as aaUre, and u pure y It ...... the mirk even further. "THE EIGRANTS" Al'° !'Gl Uur~• Ollvlff "SLEUTH" itinerant y o u n 1 lolksinler whole character is even farther out than the family's -yet is the tnost Im· aglnaUvely written of the lot. Marl< Ra1.or gives an exceltent perfm:manee In this rote, Not• Mon. thrt.1 Prl. • lighthearted and usually quite ™' CAST light in their COmiC imn<1Ct. ACIOl'lll $1m1rl11n .•• , . , , .. '•111 SiMI• ,,... Mine s1rmirlt1n .... ,_ ..... 00!"11 Doftk• "A Barrel Full of Pennies," Alvin ...................... M1r11: Jt11or Alie.II ••-""""" Arcllf F11t1'1 the latest Patrick offering Uriel• N•mo ............ M•rt M•M~ THE STORY centers oa a Brooklyn cab driver, without much upsWrt but a lot of heart, who can't resist bril>gll!g home strays -do~s. ducks, birds or people. This atmosphere is anathema to his marriageable daughter who's ·ashamed. to bring her olftce flame borne to meet the fami· ly. (Unlike "You C.n't Take II with You,'' she never da:es.) playing the facsimile of a grownup Charlie Brown with 1~E"!'m"!'l~~·"!'•"!'n"!'t•"!'7"!'•"!'IO"!'l"!'l"!' .. "!'t"!'h"!'t"!'::IO~ hllariou> aplomb and the vocau: making its local debut at the _,_,_~_'"_'_'_·_··_··_··_·_··_··_· ·_··_·'-"-~--T­ San C I e m e n t e Community Theater, falls pretty neatly in- to this category. It abound.f in the playwright's penchant for eccentricity, with a· central plot line borrowed almost bag and baggage from "You Can 't Take It with You," the Kauf· man-Hart classic of the 1930's. proww of .. Deztu Franklin from •adio's old "Corliss ********* * * Archer" show. Neither the play itselt, nor the San Clemente production under the direction of Joanne Applegett. produces much of a reading on the laugh meter. The saving gr8ce of both the play and the production is an 'Gigi' Makes Stage Debut SAN FRANCISCO !UPI) - The first Lerner and Loewe musical in 13 years -a theatrical version of the movie "Gigi" -premiers Tuesday after nearly a year of work on new numbers by the team that split up after "My Fair Lady" and "Camelot." Composer Frederick Loewe, 72, who retired to Palm Springs in 1960 after a major heart attack, agreed to do the stage play after being lured back to work in June of 1971 by a movie script written by lyricist Alan Jay Lerner,.~.- The film , "The L i t t I e Prince," won't be released Un- til next year, but "Gigi" is ex- pected to reach Broadway in Nove mber follov•ing tryouts in did Gigi. I hope it's very five cities across t,pe nation. good." "l came back because of a Lerner and Loewe have script by Alan called ''ftie Lit--written five new songs for ihe tie Prince' which Paramount musical , most of them for the sent to me," Loewe said at a girl in the title role, although news conference prior to the one is a major production opening. "I could not possibly ··.number with 10 pages. of lyrics resist ii. There are limits to and 72 pages of orchestration any resistance.'' . that Loewe calls "a whole "When Edwin Lester (im-comic opera." presario ~ the San Francisco "I just got carried awaY.," ·and Los Angeles Civic Light added Lerner, who stayed Opera companies) heard we busy after the breakup with were collaborating again, he Loewe with the musicals "On called and said, 'What about a Clear Day You Can See Gigi?' He had been calling me Forever" and ''Coco" and film for years, suggesting that we versions of "Clear Day" and do a· satage version. I told him the Lerner<I.Dewe s t a g e to talk to Alan and we finally musical;"Paint Your Wagon." · Paul Steele plays th e benevolent cabbJe with a stagy comic style and a credible Armenian accent . Doris Dooka fashions an even more credi· ble Jewish accent as she moves quite naturally through the role of the mother. THE IMPATIENT ingenue is portrayed haUheartedly by Ardis Faith who encounters problems in maintaining her character between lines and in delivering her d i a 1 o g u e without distracting pauses. Sharon Todd has little to do but react with distaste in her role of the taciturn awit, but she does this quite believably. The remaining character is something else again -an ag. ing catatonic clobbered by Papa's cab 30 years ago who's been in a standup coma ever since. Mark Manning does a fine job in this role, though the aging of a young man rather than seeking out an older ac- tor Is somewhat questionable. -"A Barrel Full of Pennies" continues for two m o r e weekends. Thursdays throuli(h Saturdays, ·at the Cabrillo Playhouse. 202 A v e n i d a Cabrillo; San Clemente.· ANO • "Finlan's Rainbow" t G) t ~KLDNDIKE ICE ARENA •• "The Sisters" tR> ..... "Pl<k·•P On 101 " (RI "M•n Of L• Minch•" (PG) "Thi W•r B1twffn Min •lffl Women" (PG) "The Getaway" C PG I .,, "Lady Sln9s Tho ICues" CRJ --... ,,J.-~-·:J1~ll1' . "Fist Of Fury" l Rl STADIUM.,,-.;;, ... "Red Sun" t. ...o11D.1tn~w__. Clntmas Dilly tE•c. S11n. • Hol. ll::JO to 2:Hp.m. $1 :00 ::~l1 U.A, CITY lo IOUTH COAST CINl!MAS--TUESOAY Jkl tALL LADIEI & GOLOIEN AGl!RS-OPENtNG TIL 2:00 P.M. Cllflrltt lronlOr.-Ttlly S•Vil~I Jiii ll'lt•nd "THE l'AMILY" Cllnl llltWODd "HANO 'EM HIGH" 11111 In Color (A) ·:;'illl SM •• 0:\t·I·! Burt Aey1111td .. Dy1n C•n111n "SHAMUS'' 1'0) G11dlt HIWn·Wllrttn ltllty "S OOlLA•S S" C1l1r !POI ~i:'~.m. ~;~:~; 911r1 R1ynold1 ::~:: Oyin C1nnoR ·:•:•: "SHAMUS" !::::: -Phi-:::::: • Goldle H1wn W•rrtn lt•llY 'I DOLLAAS S' eorh 1n co11rl (POI M•IS. 011ty "l'ETE 'n' Tll.LllE" • "JOE KIOO" Color 11'0) S•f. & Su11. at 12 & 2 p.m, "GOO.Zit.LA VS. SMOG A ~~=~:;~;:~c~0;:" .''.:, •• :r-.~·.:: V "CACTUS IN THE SNOW" ltltl In Color! IPGJ Maxwn9><lcw 1Jv Ullmann JACIC LEMMON JVl.IET MILLI In • n..~~"AVANTll" •PUBLIC SICJr,TI~ • IC( HOCKlY • flGUAE SKATJNG • S'l!D SK.O.TING • ,/llUATE. G~OUP !NSTl'IVC.TIONS • SltA.1($ -$ALIS -ftlNTAtS -ftEPAll'I~ • SPECIAi. /lloTES TO GllOU'5 • /llSTAUl\,UjT NOW OPEN lllll_V ... TIOHI PCM. CLUlll HOW ll!PIG f.U:IN OPlN 1 OAYS A W!lll • ...,LIO ... YI 615 '"ULA/I IND AVE, COSTA MESA . Nllo/I soun; COAST Pl Allo I Plo!ONl 111~ en.use ENDS TOMORROW SOUTH COAST PLAZA I TNEATllE- 11111 Dil98 Fry. •I lrlllol SI,, COii• M.,., J4'-Vll LAGUNA SOUTH COAST THIATRE-C .. 11 Hwy, L.1911111 lll<h 4' .. 111• SlliAL BEACH BAY THEATR:ll-M1r11 SI, II P•clllc C••Sf Hwy-4314"1 ,"Jiddler R.80f· 2":~RIAT WIEK ~PINA~( '• I '\ f \f I ' I \ 11 " ' .... . . fll'U AD!.11.l MOYllS! II.} IAINIOW lllOOI !11 (2.) GIMMI IHILnl IJ.) TWO LI.NI IUCK'fOP Ill &an Di•10 f'w7 C•Di•tr•no Oll·ramp • • II FIVl FINGEIS OF DIATH Ill OOlf:IMAN GANG IH I J.\,V,f) (~AN !Alt Y KEUEILY.All 5LITHIR lllGJ PLUS I FRANK SINATRA ''° DIRTY DINGUS MAGii INI lle1ch llwd. so. or·G.l•ll•n G1owe f<tt•IV ~34·6212 FISTS OF fUIY t•I PLUS t CKAA:lES BA:ON$0N RID SllN;=l'°==I===~ lmp1rl1I Mlw'n , , , , 911ch llvd. ' • H••bor ltvd. I .J 152 J.i.ME~ CAAN.~LLY l(ELLE AAIAN SLITHll (PGI PLUS t f R.1.111( SINlo TR ft DIRTY DINGUS MAGii !PG\ Ur;oln Av1. we•I ol l<nltt S27·2223 S."t• An• ''" ... ' ..... Cll•pmln Av1. 55 .. 7022 S1nt• An• rr••••V near C~•l'f"•n Avt . ssa-1022· N~WPO•I ft•t•IY 1t B•••• SI. 5'5-JJJ3 TllSN ~Wvr111 MILVIH DOUGLAS ..... llllnf ... ~ "" t ,. ' • •• Lag1111a .Beaeh N.Y. Stoeks-EDITION ~L. 66, NO. 134, 2'SEC110 NS, 28 .P.flGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAClfORNIA MONDAY, MAY i4, 1973 TEN CENTS • South Coast Police CraCk 'Marijuana Ring' .. ~ . "":..,1 !&even persons, includlng three juvenile girls, were arrested Ind 65 pounds of marijuana seized following a raid at a Costa Mesa borne by narcotk:s olflcen 1rom the Laguna Beach, san Clem!llte ud Costa M0$8 police departmenta Fri- day. 1be bust ended two weeks of in- vestigation by lbe Laguna Beach nareottcs squad and cracked what Sgt. NeU Puniell alleged was a major supply ~atiori (pr the Laguna Beach area. }\. foot locker-sized box containing 30 • l • r. • Gold Price kilos of cellophane-wrapped marijuana bricks was held today as evidence. Police value this haul at $16,000. Arrested were Joseph Steveling, 30, o[ 2260 S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach, held on 175,000 bail ; Jooeph 0. Helmer. 42, o[ Valdez, Alaska, held OD · $10.000 bail; John Miller Kauffman, 18, of Palo Alto, Calif., held on $10,000 bail ; Barbara Anne Black, 19, of 44-0 Lenwood, Costa Mesa •. held on $10,000 bail. Purcell said all were booked on charges of possession of marijuana for • n1n· sale. He clainted Steveling was the ringleader, and all~ged that the :JO.year. old Lqpnan ~ respopsible for sale of 150 to 200 poonds of '1)arijuana weekly. A ~year.aid Laguna Niguel girl. a 17· yeaNlld Newport Beach girl and a 17- year-old WhlWer runaway were booked m ebar1ts ol poaessim of mar1juana for sale. Stevellng, fuurid biding In a closet at the Costa Mesa residence at 299 Mesa Drive, was removed at gunpoint by narcotici officers. A I a r g e • b o r e • I automaUc pistol waa found in the clooel afterward, Sgt, Purcel1 aald . . Sgt. Purcell aald Laguna Beach of· ficen llrsl began Investigating Stoveling two ....U aio and alleged that ,......J buys Were l,'.n8de by narmtjcs qents 'Wortil!c· throulh· the !?·year-old Wh!Wer girl who WM living with Stevellng, Purcell aald. He aald Stevellng had been under survelilallce by olficen for about 10 dJ3s prior to the raid. Seven narcotics officers including two from San Clemente and ooe from Costa Mesa w~ involved In the acUon Friday. Purcell said two detectives observed the Laguna Nlgllel and Newport Beach girls go Into the house and theo quickly l'OIP!>W' with a brown shopping bag. 01- ficen alloged the bag cootained five kilos of the neaU7 wrapped pot. More olftcm were caJ!ed and entry gatned Into lbe house. "People were· running all over the home like crazy," Purcell said. He said ~ 30 Jtuos of marijuana were "out in ~ plain sight." He vaJued the seized prop- erty at about $15,000 on the street. Purcell said Steveling would go to the desert areas of San Diego County and return to the Laguna Beach area by a network of backroads, never passing alien Me>lcan chtckpolnts. He sald that the bue of operations WIS moved to the rented Costa Mesa residence. next to the santa Ana Country Club, several week! ago and that the home was used for the distribution ol marijuana. s a a er " .. Saddlehack Boy ,-.Hits $106 . Dies at. Havasu ' ' 7 1' I In Europe LONDON (UPI) -Gold leaped to the highest Price ln history on European free markets today, easily passing the $100. an.ounce ''barrier.'' A major British dealer linked the gold stampede to a Jack cJ. confidence brought on by the Watergate affair bat others djsagroed. ' :rhe gold ru,m which saw a prlCe of $106.70 Oil the Frenchoommorcial markel -t the.clollar> ........ on ~ nlQney inarketa as speculBt«s llllllllilllll> nltiOllal companies unlooded U.S. 'tfd'. ~ for the precious ;i<IJOw metal. · .In New Ycrk, the ·atock market took a a!Tlirp tumble In moderately acUve trading and the Dow Jones averages for 30 blue chip industrial atocD !ell 11.0'I points in the first hour and a hall o[ trading. 'u.s. 'tourists joined the stampede to buY gold. ·:'People with surplus dollar! are getting O!jl of the currency Into gold," said Den- lllli Selby, chief bullion 11 .. 1er for the Ialdon gold brokerage firm of Johnson Matthey, Ltd, "Watergate has left the pOiiticai ·sltuaUoo shaky In the States and ~ late _!lfternoon the price of gold shot tiils has put pressure oo the dollar." l!P. io lt06.l'I on the French commercial ·market -up mere than f1 Crom Friday's cl0.. of $98.83. ''I think the reason for the rise in the pnce ol gold is because ol reports in the pr-ess that there is an impending financ· i~ crisis," Emanuel Bnmoff, a French pd broker, said. Asked if he believed the rise in the Ilic• o[ gold could he related to the ~ (See <iOLD, Page Z) taguna Burglars Hit Three Homes T ' ';ntr.o Laglina Beach iesidences were hli .bY burgtani aa a total of oearly'IZ,000 4t.m and jewelry was taken in crimes reported Friday to police. ' ·Joyce W"tloox Phelps of 330 CUff Drive tolil olftcen l800· worth of jewelry. alberwltt! and a cosmetic -cue was taloen .following a lreak' In ·111 \)le' residenc<. • .~ Htralez o1 37' Ledroit ,Street, told olllcers $840 in property including caeh f.and a camera· wil11 taken .from his ~· Entry was gained by an un¥nown niean1, officers• said. Mark Guardiola of '393 Dartmoor Strte~ reported the theft of $330 in jewelry from his residence. Officers said no 'sip of forced edtry was evident. A.PS IN PILO T RA'MBLE A.LONG . :a 4Dly 'look one call (the llnt one) on Ibo llnl day that the !ollowb>& od ran to ll!ill-the third Rambler In Ihm yean for t!Uodverlloer: '. 11 •lo RAMBLER Ctall.;: zlnl ~ cond, lo mt, autoJ pis, p-b, ·•II rood llres, 1450. (Pllone no.) '111• lie. Wlth action like that is it aey wooder that this Huntington Beacb ......., ii a loyal uaer of Dlily Pilot claOBIOed acl-•ertiline pow<r? Plug yruneu ·Ill GO this kind ol pulling power. Diel the dlrecl nnel 'MWm. , ' Only Home ile KIW'Ws,;., · ··. ' ' . The little boy inSide this plastic tent, who is known to tlie wi>rld as David, is now 112 years ,old andibas , been living inside the lif .. sustaining bubble since . fiv~'ieeo.nds alter .be was -Oorn. The sterile cocooii pl"<J!ects David who was bori!'.Without a lilit.utal de- fense system .-his ·body canpot fil!llt .germs.: The . boy.is being cared for ~t the Jlaylor t:lruversity Med· ·ical Center in Houston, Texai;. . · , · Greenbelt Fi,ght Heats Up Leaders Hope Laguna Officials Will Back Effort By· JAN WORTH Louis Helmieich. counsel for . Of .-. ~two l'fltt stiff' Rossmoor, said tOday be )\ad not heard Laguna Beach Greenbelt leaders today directly lroln-the Greenbelt group and are hopeful that the city will join them in could not yet comment on the possibility an . effort to obtain a temporary or legal action. restraining order again~t grading on a The Greenbelt group has objected to tract by lbe Rossmoor Corporauoo. th~ proposal because It felt the grading The·subdivision ln questlOn ~i~ behind plin to move more than one million cubic the Syclmore Hills aree•lietween£1 T«o yards of ear)!!' would upjet flood control ·Road and Laguna canyon· Rood. I~ was jn Laguna·.Beach. appiooed Jail summer lor-singl .. family The tract is part of the Laguna homes ·and multiple-[amlly units. waterahed. Neil Rehkop, attorney for t h e Rehkop aald he is "wholeheartedly Greeohelt group, said all ·procedures to penuaded" that lbe Greenbelt can afll'eal county ppproval o[ the grading prevail through the restraining order and permit had been tried unsuccessfully. order to lliow cause phases of the legal H a restraining order is obtained, next , actim if the dty of LagWll. Beach joins sttp will be to obtain an order that as a party plaintiff. ~r prove in court why they should As for liability to-the city, Rehkop said not be stOpped from grading the 178-acrc there would be none if the restraining tract: order was deniefi because Rossmoor , . • • Bo y in Dismay T~pp1£s lnw Swim Pool, Dies A lltll• Coala Mesa boy's rear at an ac· cideul that Injured his su.,titute daddy In a •footer care home for the retan\ed sent hlm l'1lllninlJ lo his death Saturday. Coroner'• deputies said Michael P. McAlu.ter, 9. son ol Mr. and Mrs. Chu-lei McAllister, ·toppled lnto._a swim- ming pool at toeez llocJcy Road, in the Santa Ana area, and drowned. Jnvestlptors said Frederick Williams, a sdioo[ teacher who operstes lbe aheltered envlr'onrntllt borne for ban- dialpped chUdmi was repairing a garaae door w:llen the miobap oc<urred. A larie !pring S«Uring the door SDI!>' ped an4 tlammed Wllllams in the lhouldor area, ""'1ing the McAllilter • boy fleetog from lbe. llicbtelling com- motion. ~ lie was I-la Ille pool shortly al· terwanl and taba lo Tml1n Commimlty Hoopltal and ~ dead. Williams -treated !Of. -. Injury. Roary was ecbodoled .fer 7:!0 tonight fer Ille boy, """' lieqidim Mau set !er n-, at IO -.m., "'°' Ill S~;;lohn the Boptilt C.thollc-Cllurdl, Colla Mesa. Burial will be in ~ ..... Cemetery, El T«o. , Burll90tl !ncJado 1111 ...,.. )Jlrellls, or the -al 2111 ~ Rood, Colla Meea: bnitben, Matlbew, Mark, Kevin and Johni a tilter, Dmlle, pl\11 llJ'Alldpmnls Mr. aod Mn. David McAWlter and Mn. Ama lltlnkman. • would not be delayed. . Granting the restraining order would be a statement by the court that the plaintiff's interests should be protected, Rehkop said, and thus would reduce (See GREENBELT, Pqe II Four Possible Prosecutors Identified WASHINGTON (UPll -Elliot L. Richard.son today identified the "Ji.!lt" fOr selection as special g o v e r n me n t Watergate prosecutor as Warren M. Christopher of Los Angeles, Judge William H. Erickson of Denver, former Judge David W. Peck of New York aod Judge Harold R. Tyler, Jr., or New York. Riclujrdson gave ll1e .nameJ to reporters dUrlng a break in Senate bear- MARTHA DEN IES HAVING NERVOUS .aitEAKDOWN-'-Page 4 lnp on • h& ·nomlnatioo for ottomey genoraI • Ire oaJd earlllir1he White llruae ~ him fjtwo or lbree names" of p:mlb'- cboices but they were not among the lut fourr Christopher. 47, a Dtmocra~ la a former dtJ>UIY 1ttomey general, oerving as the No. I min In the Justice Dtport.- m•nt from 1917 'until 11189. ErlckBOn. 49, la a jualice of the Colorodo Stat. &rpreme Court. Peck, 'II, la a formor New~ State A-18 Dlvlllool JUstiee ..... ii aentor partner 1n • ludinc New-ork In nrm. Taylor who obtenoed bil 5tllh ·birthday today, ~ been a .... tier ol lbt U.S. CSeo·WATEllGAT&, hp II, • ·-! • A lil?htning bolt killed John W. Wade Jr •• 19, Saddleback Col· Jege pitclier Sunday and injured seven other penons during a aeml- pro baseball game at Lake Havasu City, Ariz. WADE. A FORMER Mission Viejo resident, was winding up to deliver a pitch when the big bolt struck, knocking every player in the infield and outfield off their feet. . . An ambulance operator said the lightning vaporized the youth's clothing, leaving only shreds. It struck the young man's head. . WADE'S SISTER . was watching from the 1tands and ran acream· ing to his body. . , _.,. ... ,Wide grew up IP. Oranae County. He attended XUdO!I vt.Jo High School through bis junior year and played both baieball and ~. ther.. 'Illa perenll :reeenQy 111ovecl to Lake Havaau. See . • ~ i.G for detailed ll01')' and ¢ctuna: · . .• ManHolds .. TwoHostage ' . Atop Tank of Jet ,Fuel PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) -A man anned with a rifle and shotgun today took two hostages·, clhnbed atop a Fans Go Berserk When Rock Fest Mtisic Halted SAN JOSE (AP) -A rock festival here that drew up to 10,000 spedaton en· ded with an estimated 300 youths throw- ing bottles and swinging clubs because they didn't want the music to atop, authorities said. When sheri!Ps deputies arrived at the private park site to·break up a knife fight Sunday, there were only about 1,000 peraons still at the festival. When officers ordered the mllllc to end, angry partlclpanta grabbed biilties and.broke up aoft drink atanda to use the wood for clubs. 011 .. youth waa hospltallled witll a·lmlle wound .and three peraona were arrested for dnmkem!ess, olficlals llld. One 1herilf'1 deputy WU alabbed lo the back wttb a broken' bottla but a bullet- pniol v.st kept him from a llab -· The incident aroae. beoauae·· more persons ume to the ....,.rt 'than the lhree·square block area 'C.U!d bold, Shert!Ps Lt. Darrold Thoma• said. Legion of . Crabs lnvmling ~eacli Iii San Ckmen.te Literally tbolllllllil ol amall, red craba wUhed amor. al Son Clemente over the weektricl and •"llfopanil Nld that the creatures at one point Ilttrally covered the strand. · Lll•1uml' LI. llanlt Barnes said the antmall, · lbout ""'lnchea Ioaa. resemble mtmature lobaterl. .. Moet of them were alive. On Slturday they were ocatlen!d from one encl ol the beach to the other." he said. Lllquards '"°"Ped up .a tmall number of tbe creatlD'el and placed them bt a salt-water aquarium at llfeauard head- quarten, be added. . The briihtly colored oqa~ have been ~ throu&h the earlier months or Ibis ,.ar and fisbtrmea GO oport boota haY9 noted that of tao their. fisb art IOUDCI lull of the animals . ,j stora~ .tank CCIDlainln1 highly exploalv• jet fµel and threatened to blow It up. The man, Identified aa William Howard Abernathy, 25, !Ired several shots at pa11ln1 planea and peraons on the BfOUlld. but of!lcers dld not return the fire for fear o[ explOdlng the p mlllioo gallons ol luel In the tank. The ~loot-high tank IJ located in an open field near Portland Airport, wbic11 waa closed for a sbort time but then reopened, Abernathy, an employe of Lockheed Air Terminal Services at the airport. eent down word with one hostage that if hta fonner wife and children were not brought to the acene by noon he would explode the tank. Deputies said the tank, with a capacity of I.I million galloos, could be exploded by a shot. The hosta1e, Steve Dailing. a Lockheed mechanic, returned lo the tank after delivering the message but later was released unhamed. The other hostage was ldentilled u Gehe Uoyd, manager of the Lockheed terminal. Portland police ofllcer Dale Auattn said Abernathy WU ualng Lloyd to (See HOSTAGES, Pqe %) Oraa1e The !itJn is Billi m vacation along the Orange Coast, and ,...!her ex- perts doo't expect to aee it before WedneJday. Low clouds Ind fOlf in the morning hours, partly cloudy In the afternoon. H1if1a in the tKls. INSIDE TODAY Ano!Mr govml!llC!ll offid41 link<d lo Wotnpatc COi• 1k11 g ... on "od11tndllnJ!iH 1tow• ofter rtpOTt he offrred o c.,.. IJ)lrator ezccutil>c clcmenqr In return fOT'lllcncc. Storv, Page 4. .... ~ u..J&., 111Lor LI Net11,AI~ Moodq, U., 14, i97l Senator Charges' • Mrire C'IA Links. WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Stuart Symington (0-Mo.l said today three highly placeJ White Hoose Sl arr members tried seriously last year to in· volve the CIA In covert matters other than the burglary or the office ol Dr. Daniel EUsberg's psychlltrlst. Frot1tP .. el WATERGATE • • Dillrlct Coor\ in New York 1ince 11162. Ricbanlson indicated be mlgbt name the special P""""'"tor by Tuesday. He bas told senators be will give them virtual veto power over bis selection. On the third day or Senate hearings on his nomination to be attorney general, Richardson was asked by Sen. John V. Tunney (0-Callf.), whether he consulted \Vith President Nixon or the White House tn his search for a special prosecutor. "No, 11 Richardson said. Then he added: "They passed me two or three names which they asked me to consider. " Richardson told ~rten later that Gen. Alexander M. llaii', named by Pres- ident Nixon Ian wee\ fu help reorganize the Wblte Hoose staff, and another Wblte Houle ustllant be believed to be newly named counsel Leooard Garment made lbe ...ammendatlom. "They ~ jlllt nllDes dropped In the bopper," RichardJon commented. Richardson waa nominate~ attorney general two wee\A,. ago by Nixon and given "full aulhority" over the in· vestigation of the Watergate scandal. In response to c;ongresslona1,.d e m a n d , ··-Rkhardson Slid he would name-a special prosecutor and give hirr "complete authority" over all Watergate matters: "No name! suggested by the White Hou,,e luted as long as the final 10 or 12 names -not because they came from the Wblte House but because I didn't fetl they met my criteria," Richardson said. .!Ucharcbon told Tunney in response to another question that he had had no in- structJons from Nixon or the White HoMe on the 1eope of the duties of a Watergate prooecutor. Advisory Council Topic of Special,: . . ' . Area Meetings Four meetings have been scheduled in the Saddleback Valley to offer residents a chance to react fo proposals that a municipal advisory council (MAC) be organized for the area. The MAC, a relatively new innovation in California, would provide official elected spokesman from the Valley area to advise the county, Ideally providing more effective representation of local needs in non-city areas than now exists. The proposals prepared by the Sad- dleback Area Coordinating Council , were aired for the first time six weeks ago. SACC officials will meet with memben of the Washington Club in LelJure World at 7:30 p.m. Tueoday in Clubhouse Two. Mission Viejo Homeownen Association members will analyze the subject at 7:30 p.m. May 22 in ~1ission Viejo High schoot. Lak e Fore'st Homeowners '.li'ill discuss the MAC. at 7:30 p.m. May 23 at a yet to be announced location. Residents of Laguna Niguel will have opportun ity to discuss the MAC at 7:30 p.m. 1'.1ay 29 at Crown Valley Elemen~ tary School. Nance North. a member or the com- mlltee that produced the' report, said four meetings have already been held to huh over the proposals, rMChtng only 250 citizens out ol a total of 70,000 In the 10().square mile area. "We'll schedule more meetings on re- quest" she said. "We're anxious to find • all .. out just what residents re y want. OU.N•I COAST u DAILY PILOT l lM or ..... co." OAtLY PILOT. wtfll wflldt II comlllfttd llM lrf_p, .. ._ II Pllbfllfltd tJr tilt Or1nge CN al Publl.,,11111 COlllPl"Y· 1"111• r•hl edition! ••• Pllbllti'Md, Mllrld1r throuori r'rld1y, '°" Colli M..,., H•wi>0•1 IHeh. H1111"1111ton ' 9"Mdl/fl""'ttlll Vl llfy. Ug- 8Ndl, INllle/Slddl1bKk 111C1 kl! C"'""-"11/ I.Ill Ju... fiplt"-A 1l1111to rt11oNol •1tfoool II publltlltll lalllrdtV. Ind SvrldiyJ. fl'll ptlM'-1 M llltilfte Ill"" b; 11 S10 Wtd· .. ., • .,..,, co.ti ..... C.llfiontlt, '1Ut, l•Mrl N. W1 .. ,.,......., .,,. fllllt!llM< J1a• I, Curl1y VQ ,,_IHM d ~I ~ T1t•M11 IC11vil EdllW n-•• A. M11rphi111 """'91111 r.clltlt Ch1rl11 H. Lff1 IUclritrd P. N1H Aul.t1111 #\11\fOlfltl ldllon '---: 222 '""• A.,.11111 M1a1"' Ml.,,,,,. ~.o. ••• '"· •2•st -~ t• (;11111 M9i1 DI w .. 1 .. Y°l!1fft H...,.,, -..ctl1 »J.J Hewwt llut.va"' H""'lllf!O!I llffCll: )717J a .. cti lovll't'1N lln•Otnwlft1 JOfHortll 11 C.1111,... !1111 ...... ~., /7141 M2"'4J21 ., Cf I'*' Altai· ' I Mt.1671 ;. 1.e11i1M ..... Al ..,_,11 .... 1 , TJI I' 4""4" ~t. .,,a, ar....,. c..t ~ ..... ... ~ ............ lf!Wtrttllna, ~ ....... """" .... ,.,.. ........ ...... • ...., .. iM 7 I f WIWllW filllCflt ,.,.. ....... ..,,..,. ..... .................... c..-... Ct• ... I '4Nliiii lw ClrTtw ..... ....,, .,. """ a.1• """""'' 11111w.r. ............ • .. Reporting on secret testimony lnim !oor omclals ol the Central Intelligence Agency, Sfmlngton said he waa aurprised to learn that former White House chief ot stall H:ll. !laldeman wu "heavily .II> volved..". Symlng!Dn, acting chaliman ol the Senate Armed Servlcea Committee, aald the oilier· White House aides reported to be Involved were Jolm D. Ehrllchman, IOf!llOI' chief clmneatlc advber to Pros!· dent Nlxcm. and former White Hou.e counsel John w. Dean m. ' He would not reveal detalll ol the testimony but llld now revelatloos bad come from the CIA'• deputy director, Army Lt. Gen. Vernon Walters. Gen. Waltera did not join the CIA until December and Symlncton said the general testified to episodes involing the three White House aides that have oc· curred since that time. "Wbat I learned toda y that I didn't know before was how deeply involved Haldeman was as well as Ehrlichman and Dean," Symington said. "Whalever the CIA was ordered to do.'' he said, "was al the direction of the top staff people of Lbe White House. They would have liked to see the CIA in- volved." Symington coollrmed "there were other matters besides the Ellsberg case in which the Wh ite House staff tried to involve the CIA." He refused under repeated questioning to give details. ln aaotber Watergate development U.S. J udje John Sirica today ordered the clerk of his court to take possession of classified documents that had been plac- ed in a sale deposit box by Dean, the man fired as White House counsel by President Nixon in the Watergate affair. Followhlg a brief hearin g, Siriea ordered that certified copies of the documents be made avaiaJble to govern- ment prosecutors in the Watergate case and to the Senate special committee. By making the Papers available, to the prosecutors, who are under the executive branch, they'll a1so be available to the White House which has asked for their return. The White House requested the originals; it will get ooly copies. Contents of the documents were not disclosed at the hearing, but Dean told Sirica they were of a security classifica- Uon entitled "top secret handled via commit channels ." Dea'n said that cla'sSlficatlon Is stricter than top secret. • Dean was not available tor commtOl after the hearing. But he told the court "those 'Vii<> d14 the classifying fell something in there cou ld affect the national security.'1 Arch Beach Area Gets Repaving Streets t or n up during installation of sewers in the Arch Beach Heights district of Laguna Beacb are being repaved this week. Work was under way today on resurfac~ ing· of streets running in north-south directions. Streets rwuilng In eas~west directions will be completed later in the week. In additio ,n Summit Drive will be repaved from Arch Beach Heights to Pearl Street. t 'rotn Page l GREENBELT •• liability of the plaintif f. Officials of Laguna Beach have not said if they wHI join the legal action but dty planolng DirectOt' Wayne Moody has protested the Roesmoor trad several times in county planning commission meeUngs. Reports from the county !tall afflrmed Greenbelt objections. Citing the flood control dangers to Laguna Beach as "ex· tremely susceptible," the last staff report on the project said any project in- creasing water runoff into the watershed is "highl y undesirable ." However. the Ros smoor Planned Com- munity. including the tract In question, was approved in principle in the 1960s. Though county planning co mmissioners expressed their dissalisfaction with the grading plan when they approved it last month, they said they felt that lo im- prove the situation a new tract map would have to be drawn up. Since the map had been approved by a .previous commission, the dec!Jlon to design a new tract map wouJd• be a VOJuotary one by Ross moor, and could "Rot be required by the county. Roamoor representatives have ac· cused the county planning staff of stall· ing for time in approving the plan, cla~ ing 11\.e Laguna Hills developers have been "at the mercy or envlronmenW!its oo the plaming stall." . The pnbelt group and the county plaoolng staff also said the tract will "start the degradation of two tcenic highways. Laguna Canyon Road and El Toro Road." Cycle Stunte1· D.ies SAN DIEGO (AP ) -KJm C. Oark, 20, died in Doctors A06J>ltal about an hour after be cruhed during 1 motorcycle ract at Carlsbad Raceway. Clark, a ltU:- dent at San Diego Mesa College, wu cllmblng a ste>ep h!O Sunday when be Jost c:<ntrol of t is cycle. He lllllfered bead and ._k . .injuries. .- S~Company Boo ts Prices • Ni:w YORK (AP) -lletlllebem -Corp. tho natloo'' second r...-ttteel -· lcUowld tbe : leM of major aleelmakerl loday aod ~ tbe pficel of -Ind lftr1D products. •. .'l'hursday, U.S. Steel, the biggest sle!elmaker, announced it wu rais- ing prices on high volume sheet steel an average of 4.8 percent, ef- fective ~une 15. Otber steelmakers, including.Jones & Laughlin, Wheel- jng-Pittlburgh, K a i 1 e r and Armco, announced similar hikes tbe'lollowing day. Tbe proposed increases nave en· countered oppooiton from the Cot;t of Living Council, however, which aays ti plans to rtvlew U.S. Steel'• justilicatloo !or the boost. Laguna Unit To Pick New School Chief J..aguna Beach Unified School District trustees will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in regular session at the Education Center, 550 Blumont Street, Laguna Beach. At the meeting, the board is .,.pected to annollllce the selection of the new district superintendent. Discussions with candidates for the job have been going on for several months. It Is eIJ>ecled that tl!e matter will be added to the published agenda as a sup- pl,emental item during the course of the session. The board will also be presented with a request by Charle! Hess, assistant superintendent for business, to be relea s· ed from his post May 26 in order that he may assume duties with the Palm Springs Unified School OOltrict this month. Dr. Hess was one of Uie three top ad- ministrators of the district f1red by ac- tion of trustees Gerald Linke, Patricia Gillette and William Thomas: HeM said trustees have had a preliminary schoob budget for about five months, but that work at flnaliz.ing it was delayed because trustees have not gotten down to &eriOU5 salary talU with teachers. Other agenda items are largely routine including the presentation of reports on summer school proposals and the adult education curriculum. ... Fou.~~in v iilley Shooting Victim Remains Critical Adelaide Luna, director of Fountain Valley's Colonia Juarez Community Center, remains in critical condition to-. day after she was shot .several times in an unexplained Incident Saturday. Mrs. Luna.. «, of !037! Calle Independencla, ls in the intensive care unit or Fountain Valley Community Hospital after undergoing surgery for bullet wounds in her head, arm and back. Mrs. Luna was found in a car stopped for a traffic violation by Officer Ron Gillman. The driver of the car, Richard Arechabaca Morones, 46, of 4906 W. 7th St., Santa Ana. was taken into custody on charges of assault with intent to commit murder. Investigators said today they have not established what started the incident, but they will be filing charges against Morones this afternoon. Acoording to police reports, GUlman allegedly saw Morones make an illegal U-tum near the intersection of Euclid Street and Warner Avenue at about 12:30 a.m. The officer reported that when he. walked up to the side of the car. he saw Mrs . Luna who was bleeding profusely. She was taken immediately to the nearby hospital and Morones was taken into custody. He allegedly told officers he \\·as taking her to the hospital. l11vestigators said she had been sho t \Vilh a .22-caliber revolver which they found when they took Morones into custody. Border Officers Nab 229 Aliens Over Weekend Bonier patrolmen at the San Onofre chectpoint reported another weekend of major migrations by illegal aliens. A total or 229 immigrants were detained at . the ataUon over the past few days. Besides the large numbers of illegal migrants, orficers Saturday arrested two young 1nen alleged to be smuggling marl· juana . The pair, t\1arshal Robert Wilkerson, 23, of San Diego and Jeffrey Lauren Evans, 23, ol Aspen, Colo., alle11ediy were carrying 28 pounds ol the weed in the trunk or their car. The diJCOVery wu made by olflcera during 1 routine ·Immigration cbeclt, ol· nctala llld. • The two meo bet dwi .. of smug· gllng and were tumed ...,. to u.s. CustOIDI agents. -·~ Skylab~. Clos~ Eye lli'Beach By TERRY COVILLE Of l'lllo 01llr Piiot S1'11 The United States fired a shot today which you might say was '"heard around the world ." Vibrations from the Skylab launching were certainly felt in Huntington Beach where most of it was designed and built at McDonnell Douglas Astrooautics. Top engineers gathered in a special control room this morning to watch the laimcbing. They'll use that control room througbout Skylab's 110 days ol manned orbit to back up the Houston Space Center in case any problems arise. Engineers in Huntington Beach will be caUed on to answer any questions which may come up during the fiight. Local reaction to this morning 's suc-- cessful shot was, as expected , one of joy and relief, though McDonnell Douglas of- ficials did not have much to say about it. Hugh R. Bowe, executive assistant to the chairman and president of McDonnell Douglas Astronautics, summed up the company's official view : "We're proud to be a part of Skylab's first team. We are anticipating with great interest the benefits to humanity directly attributable to Skylab I , America's first orbiting space station." 1be space workshop, which will be home for three separate three-man crews of astronauts, was officially finished in . Huntington Beach Sept. 8, when it 'vas turned over to NASA officials. • McDonnell Douglas had a $390 millim contract to build the Skylab, a partially complete backup unit and certain grouild support systems. At the peak of. actlyity,jo May of 1972, there were 2,600 workers at the Hun· lington Beach plant concentrating on ' Skylab I. Skylab workers accounted for more than half the plant's work force. ' While the end of Skylab means the beginning of a new step in space ex- ploration, it also means more ·io hun- dreds ol local Skylab workers. The sad part ol their project is that many, if not most, of them are now out of work. They must seek new jobs, a somewhat difficult task In the field of aerospaee. In mid-April, McDonnell Dougla. air nounced it would Jay olf 2,000 Skylab workers over a period of nine months. Those layoffs would affect Huntington Beacb, Santa Monica and the Cape Ken· nedy fadltty. Frot1tPagel GOLD ••• Watergate scandal in the United States, Brunoff said: "In my opinion, I don't think it could be connected." · The metal's price was fU:ed at $102.15 an ounce on the big Loodon free market in the second of the twice-daily price fix- ings. This was $2.50 higher tban tbe morning price, $5.60 bigher than Friday's closing price and more than double the olllcial U.S. gold price. Another gold source said: "Many fore- ign buyers are afraid of a new monetary crisis. For this reason they !I'e going in great numbers to buy as much· gold as they can afford.'' Other European brokers and currency dealers also linked the gold rush and re. newed pressure on the dollar to the re- sultant furor over alleged White House involvement in the bugging of the Demo- cratic Party Washington headquarters. •••••••• • . . . • ' ,~-+ , .. . ~~ , I I , , / I " lovncl\ Moyl4 Sl· 1 Sat1i1r1t S .. I f I I I I I I ' I I Sl·2 Sotv'"' ll , , , ' . ' ' \ I • I I I S'LASHOOWM 1:.4~ PM .. J-12'" 100 ,,..;,,, J011tl.we1t .,$9"0i1,. UPI T1l111h•l1 I -· " .. .; •• " _, . " " .. HERE'S HOW AMERfCA'S FIRST SPACE STATION WILL START r Three Men to Follow Unearthly 'Home' into Historic Or~it Tuesd1y First U.S. Space Station Blasted Into Earth Orbit .. CAPE KENNEDY, ·Fla. (AP) - Skylab, America's-first space station, rocketed away from earth today .to serve as a giant "cabin in the sky" for nine astronauts in the next eight months . A minute into the fl!g."i!,_,~ '.Con- trol Center reported good Ulrust in all five first-stage engines and said it was "looking good ." The first stage shut down and the second-stage separated anq ignited right on schedule, 2~ minutes into the llght. The first three-man crew is set to ride another rocket into space Tuesday morn- ing to book up with the station, which is DC Irvine Gym Hosts Volleyball Pla~@f.is~rT'Qni.Uh~ J , > Jt'& MO~bQ ll"u UC Irvine tonight Ylill'fi&\ ti!" {~ii!t!BV finals of the Sou them .Ca l 1 f o r ri 1 a Collegiate volleyball 8.SSGCl8tion )if:_ 8, o'clock in Crawford Hall. · · Dr. Robert Newcomb, lecturer·in social science and coach · of the AnleaterJ volleyball team, said Crawfortl Hall af. fords the I.oog Beacb · state and San Diego Stat-e teams the nelitral court they need. Play tonight will determine which o1 the two top teams will go din!Ctly into fmals set for later this montb in San Die~. The two schools finished in a deadlo<k in circuit standings wftb 9 and 2 records, forcing the playolrs. The last time the two teams played, 5,000 attended. Crawford Hall seats only 2,000 and tickets will be 50 cents each, Newcomb said. Looer of tonight's volleyball regional final must play again this weekend to qualify for the nationals. Toniighl's win- ner stands "a good chance" of being na· tional champions. ·NeWcolJ'lb speculat~. . . as large as a three-bedroom house, for a _ record 28 days in· orbit. Skylab l astronauts Charles ,Cont13:d · Jr., Dr. Jo.seph P. Kerwin anil ·Paul J.' \Veilz watchod·from three miles -away ;.5~i a 33-story-lall Saturn 5 rocket thundered sky\vard at 10:30 a.m. PDT., right on " schedule. propelling the SS.ton laboratory tov.•ard orbit. The astronauts' s.rnaller, 22--story. Saturn IB rocket stood on another pad 8.700 feet away, awaitinL th e signal te blast off at 10 a.m. Tuesday lf all goe.l well. Also observing were the members ol Skylab 2 and 3 crews, who are to rocket' up to the same station later this year, each for S6-day visits. The astronauts and thousands ol. other1 1 in the Cape Kennedy area. watched as the: big boosl,er. ro~ slowly rrom its pad_, gradually easing over on a northeast" <;1lU'•e as its Qr• .(int-stage eniiJnes biol~. a lleJ:Y. ~·:t~ l~t-long, . _. ,jj,.wli.JM final ·planned filght !or th .. siliifii:~·; ~e world's largest 8nd moat~ poWfrrw, FOcket, which was built for the. Apo~Q program. From Pagel HOSTAGES. • • answer · questions shouted to him. Uoyd was being sent ti> the edge of the tank td wave his arms in reply while Abernathy held a gun pointed at bim. John 'Murpba, a supervisor f o r Lockheed, said Abernathy drove to th!! Lockheed tank fann facility about 4 a.m'. and captured the two men. A spokesman· for the Multnomah County sheriffs office said shots ·v.·ere fired then, but no one v.·as hurt. Efforts were made to drain Jhe tanJ;: through' underground hoees but th")' were not successful. Dailing told Murph&: "He ain't liste.S. ing to nothi ng.!' · '? . ............ . I 15995 ., ....... .... ,ft:' ... L-. ·--:i==-. .... tPlo L ,,_ ... -·-- 1nn • • FRll DRAWlfl!G • ~ :l~:OWAVEOVEN •, y Appnlll • ' I 7 .... Sadd.lehaek • , ' . \ Te .. y's Fl••I N.Y. Steeb -: VOL. 66, NO. 13<4, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,· CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 1<4, 19n TEN CENTS Gold Price flits $106 In Europe • LONDON . (UPI) -Gold leaped to the highest price in history on European free markets today, easily passing the $1~ an-oupce ~'barrier." A major British dealer linked the gold stampede to a lack of confidence brought , cti by the Watergate affair but others ilisagreed. • _. • 'Ille gold rush which saw a price or 1106.70 oo the French COll)Jllercial market ""'t the dollar skidding 00 European money m_.kets as aj>eculators and multi· natiooal companies unloaded U.S. cur- ,...cy for the preclous yellow metal. In New York, the stock'market took a sharp tumble In nM>derately active trading and the Dow Jones averages for 30 blue chip industrial stocks fell 14.07 poinls in the first hour and a half of trading. U.S. tourists joined the stampede to buy gold. "People with surplus dollars are getting OOt of the currency into gold, 'j..§id Den- nis Selby, ·chief bullion dealer for the f.oodon gold broker~ge fmn of Johnson )1atth,ey, Ltd. "Watergate bas 1$ the political situation shaky in the Slates and i By, late af!emoon the· price o( gold sbot tjiis 118' put presaure on the dollar." Ill> to $106.17 on the Frmcb eornmercial market -up m<re than '7 from Friday's elose of $98.83. ~ ' .. , tbtnl: the ........ tilt the r11e=· price of gold is becaUle of~ preQ that there is an irilpendtDI I i~ crisis," Emanuel Brunoff, a French gpld broker, said. ·Asked if he believed the rise in the price of gold coold be related to the Watergate scandal In the United states, B'nmoff said: "In mr opjnion, I don't think It could lie ClOIUlected.'' 'Ille metal'1•flice was fixed at $102.25 an ounce on the big London free market In the &e«llld of the twice-daily price fix· ings. Thill was $2.50 higher than the momlog price, $5.60 bigher than J'riday's elooing price and more than double the Official U.S. gold price. ' Another gold 3'IW'ce Aid: ''llfany fore- )Cft buyers are afnid of a new Dl<lOelary (See GOLD, Pqo I) Children Blamed For $17,500 Fire • At Irvine Home • 'Childiah curiosity a\>OUt incense today \Vas blamed for a SUnday fire which caused an ~mated $17,500 in damage to a Walnut Square townhouse in Irvine. Orailge County fire investigators said the fire was at the bome of Mis. Judy Wagner, 14*. Oval Road, irvlne. 'Ille blne cleotroyed a di>wtlstalrs bedroom and l'09U!led ln menilvt l!lloke and water' dimage to the home. No one was Injured: 'Fire Ph!ventioo Capt. Carl Wolf said fltemen :controlled the bl82e within 20 minutes of tbe 9:5' a.m. call. Units from -Irvine -and the Red Hill statl<ia of the county FU. n.,artment re$J10bded. Wolf said tAere ·waa ~ struc- tural damage to tbe condominium atruc- ture valued at more than $100,000. ,Wolf said Mrs. Wagner's cbildren ad- mitted to baving played with the Incense In .tbe downstairs bedroom. The illaie _ "cooked" ror nearly five hours before it" wu dilcovered by family members, he said. J:I>S IN' PILOT IUMBLe A'£0NG • !~ oilly took one call (the flnt one) on the llral day tbat the followtn( ad ran to :;&~~mbler In lhree yean foe , '1$ RAMBLER Oallic, DI "'' cond, lo ml, auto; pl• 'J>b, . ~· f: Urea, '4$0. (P!Joneno.) !.. • I .~ Saddleback Boy Dies at Havasu Only Home He Knows The little boy inside this plastic tent, y,•~o is known to the world as David, is now 1 ~ years old and has been living inside ,the life-sustaining bubble since five seconds after he was born. The sterile cocoon protects David who was born without a naturaJ de- fense. system -hi s body cannot" fight germs: The l!oy is being cared for at the Baylor University Med- ical Center in Houston, Texas. ' .. i-1itliv llitidS - • Three Astronauts Join Up With Station Tuesday CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) -Sky- lab, America'• ftnt space station, rocket· ed. ID.to orbit today but failure of two IOlar panels to extend lhreate.ned lo jeopardize the mission. From WJre Services CAPE KENNEDY -America's Skylab &p8ce statlon ioCketed successfully into orbit today while its fll'st three astronautS waited on the groUnd for their chance to join it Tuesday. The big space.Wp, largest ever launch- ed, soared into a ·near-perfect 271-mile- high orbit at 10 :40 p.rn. (PDT), 10 'minutes after a flawless launch. Moonwalk veteran Charles "Pete" Four Possible Prosecutors Conrad, Dr, Joseph P. Kerwin, the na- tion's first space physi~an, and aeronautical engineer Paul J . Wellz iv-e set for launch at 10 a.m. Tuesday. They plan to spend a record 2.8 days in otbit. The three a~tronauts watched a~ their space laboratory rocketed out or sight in- to a cloud cover. The smooth ·rught 'irlto spa<e marked a new era in the U.S. space program. Pro- ject Skylab Is designed to pusb back the , Irvine Trustees . To Rule on Cost Of School Land frontier of human endurance in earth or:bit and cash in on the promise of spacefilght. Once iJJ orbil , Skylab quickly eeparated from it! spent secand stage ·rocket. Five minuteS later,· Skylab's pro t e ct i v e cocoon-like nOse ·cover separated in four pieces as pl~ Then Skylab, following orders from its onboatd eleCt.rontc brains, slowly swung itt hlgh-poWered solar observatory. into position. Misslon cont rol in Houston reported it securely latched in place. The astronauts plan to use it to cooduct the most extensive solar studies ever at- tempted. The astronauts and thousands of. others in the Cape Kennedy area watched as the big booster rose slowly from Its pad, gradually easing over on a northeast course as its five first-stage engines belched a fiery tail 2,200 feet long. Prices of school sites set aside in future Irvine • housing subdivlskms may be established. by school orflctals at the Jde.ntif ied ~i~i~'.ty agen~ies approve the sub- It was the final planned Digit! for the Satwn s. the worfd's large.st and most Powerful rocket, which was buUt for the Apollo program. The astronauts' smaller, 22--story Sat- urn IB rocket stood on anothe~d 8,700 feet away, awaiting the s to blast oU Tuesday if all goes we . U _ Elllot L. . Tooighl, Irvine Unified School'Diltrict . WASllJNGTON ( PJ) lruJteos wUI consider a resolution re- Ri~n ~ M,len~ed the .. "ll&t'~1for 1 qUiring designation and pricing Of tcbool aetection as ~tal gov·e·rn'nr'ent slte. when "tracts are approved by the wat.raf,f .~ia; ii 'warr,. · M.' ~ " · e pllimlng a ency." Christ.plier 'of ·,Los' An1eles, 'Jndge ' ~~. ·stao1ey·cJ.y· will introduce Wllllam 'H . .Er!Ckson ol Denver, form,r . lbe bojifd.,...Uested resolutloo during :the Judge David .W. Peck of New York and · meeq.,.Mo1"7:30 In Rancho San Ji>a- Also observing were the members d. Skylab 2 and ·3 crews, who are to rocket up to the same station later this year, eacb for 56<1ay vi.sill. Judge Harold R. Tyler, Jr., of New York. quin lnt"""""'8te Scbool, 4661 Michelson Richardson gave the names to Ave., UNvttsib' Park. · Once In orbit, Ille Skylab, which resembled a huge bullet a.a it sat Oil the launch pad covered by a metal ahroud, began blossoming into a full-scale spac,e reporters ~uring a break in Senate liear-.. Corey saya<t'be resolution is similar to one. idopted '6y the San Joaquin Elemen- tary DiNlct. On July 1, Irvine Unified takes over schools run by that district and lnberlill a• acbool shortage problem throughout the district. station. , · MARTHA DENIES HAVING NERVOUS BREAKDOWN-Page 4 logs. on bis nomination for attorney general. He said·earlier the White House passed him "two or three names" of possible cholces but they were not among the last rour. Chiist~r. 47, a Democrat. is a ' , !See WATERGATE, Pa1e !) . . , Newport Offic.el'· . . Discovers Body A Newport 8'ocb polic<man checkln& a report of 8 &Uiplclous per900 tn a car perked at the Fashion Island shopplnf center ·Saturday diacovered the body or a Santa Ana woman who had apparenUy taken her life. . . First, the four sections of the 26,000. pound shroud pttled away like clam shells and flew off into space. Then, an on-board computer com- (See SKYLAB, Page !) Boy in Dismay Topples . . . . . ' .~Into· Swim P ool,}Dies ..... I I ' ..._ A lltUe C<ilo. MMJ ~a.rear at an ao-boy .fl~ il.im . the friglltening com- c)\lent that'111jured *'-tltute daddy motion . In a looter -. biat tor tlie n>tanled He wu lound In the pool shortly al-..,,. ,_ ' •-ternrd and loken to Tustin CommlDllty ""t him,,..,.."' Ma djoth oaturday. Ho!pital and J!l')llOWlced dea4. WllU11111 1Col'wr'I dtp JJea llld Mlchael P. w•--"ltreited roi-a shoulder injury. Mi!Affliter, t,., .., of. llr, and Mn. .;Jaary was scheduled ror 7:30 toni&ht Ollrlea M~. klppltd Into a awim-l<ir the boy, end Requiem Maaa oel ll\bls pool at 1• ~ Road, In the lor Toesday at 10 a.m .. both In St. John -AU n, mi dronad. the S.pdst Cltbolic Churcb, COila Mesa. A liJlhtning bolt killed John W. Wade Jr .. 19, Saddleback Col- lege pitclier Sunday and injured seven other persons during a semi· o pro baseball game at Lake Havasu City, Ariz. WADE, A FORMER Mission Viejo resident, was winding up to deliver a pitch when the big boll struck, knocking every player in the infield and outfield off tljeir feet. An ambulance operator said the lightning vaporized the youth's clothing, leaving only shreds. It struck \he young man's head, WADI'S SISTER was watching from the stands and ran scream- ing to his body. Wade grew up In Orange County. He aUended Mission Viejo High School through his junior year and played both ba&eblll and football there. His parenta re<1enUy moved to ·Lake Havasu. See Page 16 for deWled story lµld.pietures. ... Effect in County: High Court Barg Cities From Curbing Jet Flights By JOHN ZALLER Of "" °""' , ... , .. ,, Ip_ • '1eciilon that mlpt al!ec! opera- ' •(ot,~e ~ Ai""'1,. lllt U.S. Sctpreme Court rule•f 5 to 4 today !hat ~ cannot'"'A~"' on ,pr!.. -\ •• 1man, asaistant .orana• QiUDtf -deallne wltfl •iJ!>ort af-lalrs. l8ld the ruling probobly would not allec\ abort-term operation of the airport but ltllgbt bave long-le'Jll el!ects. "We bave 'a publlcly owned and operated airport." Nutman commented. "Todar',, ruliJJg concemed a privately owned airport, which Is a very different case. "But It ill possible !hat airlines might attempt to use the ruling to remove the curfews they now have," he.said. Jel lakeolf• 'are cumotly banned rrom Orange Qxihty Ai.,,ort belween 10 p.m. lfld.7 •·m· Landinp •re banned after It p.m. Oftlclall fJwn Alrwest t1tiJ IDOl'llillJ 41 ala.d to CXllDl'DIDt an tbe eourt dMllilll. ! ~ ·aloo clee11nod lo Uy wheilie< the airline nnta to rm fUchtl durll!c houn that .... -restricled. Officials from Air Callfoml1, the other maj« calrier at 0r..,. County, _.., not available for comment. Jn a dispute between the dty of Burbank and tbe private owners ol Burbank Airport, the Supmne Court rul· ed that the city does not bave the right to impooe Qlght curfew1 because authority In that area ii preempted by the federal government. Ma~Hol&\:woHostage Atop Tank of ]et Fuel PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) -A man armed with a rifle and shotgun today took two hostages, climbed atop a storage tank containing hiahly exploaive jet fuel and threatened to blow It up . The man, ldenUl!ed .. WUllam Howard Abernathy, 25, fired several shots at passing planes and persons on the ground, but officers did not retnni the fire for rear of exploding the U million gallons of fuel In the tank. Ille SO.foot·high tank is localed in an open field near Portland Airport, whicb wu closed for a ahbrt time ·but then reopened. A~thy,. ao employe of Lockheed Air Terminal Services at the IJJi>ort; ""t UC Irvine Gym Hosts Volleyball Plnyoffs Tonig1it UC Irvine tonight wtll boot the regional finals of the Southern C a 11 f o r n I a Collegiate volleyball aaaoelatlon at 8 o'clock in Crawford Hall~ Dr. Robert Newcomb, lecturer in social acla1ce and coach of ·the Anteaters vollfyball team, aald Crawfor:I Hall al· r-the Looc Beocll State and s.n Otego Si.le teami the neutral court they Deed. ' • • ,Play tonl&llt 'wtn detun\lne whiCh of tbO two top -will ... dlnctly Into fmals eet !or later this month iJJ San Di . ;,.:·two rcbooll finillled In a deadloclt In dn:uft llalldlnp with I and 2 t'e<'Onla, lon:lng the playoll •. down word with one hostage that if hi111 former wile and children were not brought to the scene by noon he would explode the tank. Deputies said the tank, with a capacity of 1:6 milllon gallons, coold be exploded by a shot. The hostage, Steve Dailing, a Lockheed mechanic, returned to the tank after delivering the message but later waa released w\harmed. The other hostage w.. Identified as Gene Lloyd, manager ol the Lockbeed terminal. PorUand police officer Dale Alll\ID said Abematby w.. using Lloyd to an1wer questions shouted to him. IJoyd was being sent to the edp of the tank to wave his arms in rept:hlle Abernathy held a gun pomted at . 1 Oraage c:.uc Weadter The aun is stlll on vacation along the Orange Goos~ and weather ex· perts don't expect to see It berore Wedne!day. Low cloudl and fog in the morning houn, parUy cloudy In the afternoon. H1gbt In the 608. INSW.E TODAY Another g........m officl4l lmk<d ta w atlrQ<IU ""' llal gone on ''adminil&Totioe leave" after nport h• dff'1'ed o c.,.. iptrator executive cJ~ m retvrn far sif•noc. Storr, Pope f. ....... "• .......... r With action like !hat la it Ill)' wonder lhll thll Huntlngtoo 8oacb -ii a loyal ... r of DaQy Pilot claalfied ad- vutlllni power? Plue ,.....u In '"' this kind of pu1llnc power. Dill the direct line:.....,._ Pati:olman 11"1 R<>dgm noted II preJCrlptioa drug villa were found with Margaret E. JOl1ff, 46, who lay oo the back aeat with Ille car radio •till playing. 1mestlpliJn uld ~ Wlfl111111, Burial will be In Ascemtoa Cemetery, a acbo6I' ·~ who operates the El Toro. The laat Ume the two toams played, 5,000 atteoded. Cr1wfanl Hall oeatl only • 2,000 and Ucketl '!'ill be IO """" e1cb, Newcoinb said. -. c...... a-• • • A note esplalning• desPondency over Ill hoaltb was tumed· ovef'io Orotc• Olanly aawer'a deputiea by fnveatlgatJnc police of Don. allellend ...,., • ..,t ..i.. tor ban-SU!Y)von include the boy's ~. of dicapped cblldnn -.iepobblc a garage tbe borne at Ill~ ~ Costa -wbm •·lnioMP-tbld. Mesa; brotbm, , Mart.,kevln A 1....., ~ IOCllrlnl 1llt door 111>11> and Joho; a , Denlae,_ plua ped and ollliimW WIJJilma in the ll'lndPorenill Mr. ind Mn, l>lvid lboulder area, .....,. the McAIU.ter · McAUL.te! and Mra. Abna Brfllkman. • ~-· ' . ... . .. ~ . , .. 1-r of tonllh\'a volleyball i'eg!Cllal Dnal ·muat play again. tllb --to qualify lot the ~lcNJo. Toolllht'1 win-ner stand! "a chance" Olbtlng na- tional cbamplw, 'Newcomb ape<ulaled. • ' i=::... i; _... .......... --. ,_.., I • ~· .... -~ .~ 14 ......... • 1'J • ' \ f OAll V PILOT IS Mond.11. May 14, 1973 • • Little teagu~ Q,asehall: ' _, . Entry Into Real ~ orld By L. PETER KRIEG or Ille D.P. Staff ALMOST EIGHT YEARS AGO, my wile bore me a lint child. A stroog and healthy son. He has survived his infancy and early chijdbnnd re- ,, markably unscathed by youthful traum&1. There've been no broken bones, no grave lllneues. .He's never been lost 1n the woods or in a department store. He did chip a baby tooth. And once be ran away from home fo< hali an hour. But he hu boea sheltered from the realities of the worJch.up unW fe11 weeks ago. He went oul f0< Lillie league ~ball In !nine. My wife and I bad our misgivinga, the typical ones about the pressures of organized activitles on a child, 1uu•o .!i whether we might find ourselves pushing too hard. Of COW'se there were also all those things we'd heard about the ·Llttle Lea· gue program, itself, being more concemeawttt1raffles and rules than the boys having a good time and maybe learning some fundamentals of a great · sport. . . Btrr l\10ST OF TJIE DOUBTS were discounted. For five years I had coached in an intra-<ity tackle football program in Connecticut. And last year l be- came involved in an excellent Irvine flag football league. My son went to those football tryouts last summer-end cried the whole night when he !OWJd our he was too young. It broke my heart and I knew they needed coaches. Les would be my water boy. Now maybe baseball and football aren'I comparable. But you'd think they should he. In my six years as a coach in football, the parental involvement and the pressures were almost noo-eilitent. Sure, boys would nm Into their mothets' arm.! after ocoring a llO-yard touch- down. But if a father ever gave a boy a bad Ume about dropping a pass, or complained he wasn'I playing enough, he would he privately talked to at ooce. That almost always put an end to it. THERE IS SORT OF an unexplained air around a football team bench. May- be a footbaJI coach is more .aloof. Maybe It's because football relies more • on a teain' effort than the illdlvidual performances that are keys to baseball. While far more parents attend youth foot.ball games tharl Little League games, and yell at least as Jou~ly (or a touchdown as a ~me :un, they are far more respectable in their altitudes toward the sport-1nclud1ng , and per- haps especially, the orlicJ,als. I suppose Carol, ·my wire, and I should h.ave ~n forewarned when, two weeks before Little League tryouts, the Irvine Llttle League sent around a nyer telling boys in the north ,end of town to ignore tryout information given them by the Tustin Little League. But Les Vf!f'Y badly wanted to play, and, like most fathers. that pleased me. TI!\fE CA!\IE FOR the first practice game. It was the top half of the first inning-Les was tucked safely in the middle of the bench---and a father who was calling balls and strikes said a pitch nicked the comer for a third strike. 1be batter's shcll:Jdera slumped as be turned quietly to go sit down. The .Uence was shattered as a rather hefty woman bellowed at the father- ump, ·~vou blind s.o.b.!" Now for the most part, the sniping at the umpires is confined to muted growls and gasps. And that's part of the game. But too often feelings erupi like at one very recent game when one coach sat there calling the other coach denegrating names. The atmosphere was polri4. ~ boys on both te-played a terrible game. They didn'l know what to n\ake of it. It doesn't have to be that way. LmLE LEAGUE BASEBALL can be a father watching his seven-year-old.I son· al jecond l>ast, stal'<ilng t~er .. "8red· IO' dealh and ,1n Iota\ awe and ~· fusion .' Mother hope~ nobody hits a ball toward him. . J..jttle Leagu~ baseball can be an exciting opportunity to mold our youth. To let them learn discipline, let them learn that hard work and practice will mak~ them do better, at anything. To Jet them learn to lose, but learn that winning is better-and a lot more fun. Little League baseball will always be for fathers. But fathers must learn how to make Little League baseball a learning experience for their sons. Leads 12-fJoat Event O'Brien Makes Spirited Dash in Guaclalupe Race I Bob O'Brien's, 56-foot yav:I Spirit from California Yacht Club was standing off Guadalupe Island at 8 a.nl. today and "·as leading the 12-boal race fleet on both elapsed and corrected times. Word from the escort vessel La Fiesta "'·as that Spirit would round the island this morning and head for home on the 600-mile race. Weather in the vicinity ol the island was overcut with Ught winds. Secon1' on elapsed time behind Spirit was Jirli Seal's Q))umbia SO sloop Loco Viente ll and behind Loco Viente was J~ Bibb's Columbia 50 Yawl Inlemlez· zo. OlANGI COAST II DAILY PILOT Tltr Ortll',lt C0311 OAILY PILOT, wl!lt """lei\ It combl...i ft>@ HtWl•Prn1. 11 pUblltltfd by ll'lf Ortl'lfe Coa1t Publll.lil"!I Comr>tny. St.,._ rtl• ..:111oon1 ••• PllClll$1'e!:I, ltlondty 1t1ro11111t Frlo.1. lor Coslt M.,., Nrwr:iort •e.dl. Hvnllll(tkiol a1ac:1t/F°""rtlft \ltlley, t~un• ... ell, lrvlnt/SlddlttKll tnd St " Cltfl'IC'n!t/ lfl'I Jut11 Ct9islr-. A •Ir.ult r-'lioll.ll tdlllofl 1$ ~ltfted Stlurdt'f'I -Sundtys. fl'lt Jllrlloci.,.I ~ltl'l11'41 ltitflt It ,I l.1D W"I l t Y 5trwt, 0.ft ""-· Ctlllor"lt, ~. fleO.rt N. Weed "'"IMlll tlllll PllOlllMr Jtck fl. Cvrley Vb ...... lllWI ...... 0-tl MtlMW n-•• K.,,11 l!ClllOr TI!o111tt A. M11r,hi11e 1o1 • ...,1 ... Editor C~•if•t H. leo1 Richtrd ~. N1!1 Aldlllfll ""' ........ l!flten -.. CMtt ,._ ... , »t Wnt a.,. S'"9t N_,,.,, ... (JI: »al Ntw119rl hlllt\ltrtll ~ htd'll :m "-' ..,......, ... Hu11!'"9ICWI IMdll 17171 IMCfrl llOultVINI Mii C"-'9~ a.I Norlll El Ctrnllll ltttl , ........ fn4l 64J-4JJI • C ........ ...,.,.,. .... 64Z·l671 • a.a , ...... ..,.,... .. : '-' , •••• 4tJ.441t • -c.TleM. lt/J. Ot'MN C.tt l"ia1i.ii1ri1 ~ .............. llll.lltr1 ...... ...... ...--ow ., ---~ IMf..wl .. ""' ......................... ,.... .......... ~ ..... ......,, . --= ..... ~ " '''" -c.-r-. .. _..... W (:N'1w IOI .. ....,, ., -" ..... .,...lfill'rl """""' ............. fNl'llW. Gorrccted time positions are : 1. Spirit, 2. Loco 'Viente, 3. Jnterme7.zo. Class A: I. Spirit. 2. Loco Viente, 3. Int ermezzo. Class B: I. Decision, Pa u I Burger, DRYC 2. Swift , Jack ~1allinckrodt BYC 3. Talisman, Bob \Yilliams, BYC. PHRF: l. Leprechaun, W h It n e y Collins, LBYC 2. Malangi. Ed Carpenter. BYC 3. Kismet Bob Wiiis CYC. (FOl' earlier story see Boating Page 21.) Fro1n Page l SKYLAB ... manded a set of arm-like metal rods to extend from the top of the vehicle, hoisting into plac(' a box-shaped array or six telscopes, \\'hich the astronauts will use to observe the sun and other celestial phenomena. The stat ion i~ !he si1.c or a lhrec- bedroom house and is the largest, most complex spaceship ever bullt . From Page 1 GOLD ..• crisis. Fer this reason they are eo'ng in great numbers to buy as much gold as they..,. afford ." Other European brokers and cwmicy dealert alao llllked lhe 1old rush and re- ntwed Jn!SUre on lhe dollar to the ,.,. .Wtanl IUror over alleged White House involvement In the bugging of the Demo- cratic Party Washington headquarters . Mail Problems Told WASHINGTON (AP) -Govemmenl auditors said Saturday "the Postal Sttvlce's mall processing problems are the direct r""lt ol Its elforti 10 bc<ome sell·aupporting." The General Accounting omoe ttport said coots are 1<>lng up without better resulll. But It saya there is room !or optimism hecau,. pootal authoritlta !lnaJly aclmJt lben la I prob-leftl, \ . ..._"' .. ' . Ul"I Tt19Pllo .. Fl.aming Terrer Vittorio Mascia, 54, screams as he tries to put out flames on back in Anzio, Italy. Spectator rushes to · aid. Mascia was doused with flaming oil mixture when winds toppled Olympic games. torch used in youth Cranston Speaks in Mes~ Vows Fight Over Cuts Advisory Council Topic of Special Area Meetings Sen. Alan Cranston told a Costa Mesa audieilce this week,end that be is prepared lo fight NiXon Administration proposals to reduce federal child care funds. "Adequate day care centers are essen~ tial to help mothers get off welfare and into productive, paying jobs," the California Democrat said. Writings Link Mari to Possible Killings of 26 VERO BEACH, Fla. (AP) - A hun- dred pages of handwritten notes telling of hangings, ritualistic . murders and sex ac~ may link a jailed man lo the.deaths of up to 26 women, State' Attorney 'kobe:rt Stone says. If the manuscripts can be believed , he said, "I don't think the country has ever seen anyt hing of this magnitude." The man -serving a six-month sentence in Fort Pierce on an assault conviction-has not been charged in any ol the crimes. But he has been questioned in the deaths of two Fort Laul::lerdale area teen- age girls whose skeletons were fOlllld on a remole beach April 1. The manuscripts and other items, some of which were identified as belong· ing to murder victims and missing persons, were seized last monlh at the home of the suspect's mother, Stone said. The notes were written in first-person story form. Also found were photos, drawings, gold-filled teeth, a purse and trinkets, authorities said. His remarks w,ere prepared for a public forum sponsored Saturday by the Children's Services Council of Orange County on the Orange Coast College cam- pus. Day care centers, Cranston believes, "also are neP.ded so that mothers already wOrking ra11 continue work." Cranston said lhat restricting eligibility ol children for day care services would have "grave consequences, particularly here in California." - The proposed cutbacks would exclude more than 22,000 California children from day car~ programs but CranstoD said he and 40 other senators are pledgett. to see they never occur. The four cutbacks under cmsideration would affect programs involving pre- school children, children of working mothers, children of migrant workers, and children of college-student parents. Luggage Falls ' From Airplan.e An Orange County Ai r port runway was in advert en t ly "bombed" by a Golden West Airlines commuter plane this morning. The DeHavilland Twin Otter bound !or Los Angeles dropped three pieces of baggage from an improperly closed compartment on takooff, an airline spokesman said today. The garment bag, briefcase and suitcase were retrieved after the pilot turned back and landed the Four meetings have been scheduled in the Saddteback. Valley to of/.er r~deii.ts a chance to react to proposals that a• municipal advisory council (MAC) be organized for the area. The MAC, a relatively new innovation in California, wouJd provide official elected spokesman from the Valley area to advise the county, jdeally providing more effective representation of local needs in non-city areas than now exists. The proposals prepared by the Sed- dleback Area Coordinating Council, were aired for the first time six weeks ago. SACC officials will meet with members of the Washington Club in Leisure World at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Clubhouse Two. Mission Viejo Homeowners Association members will analyze the subject at 7:3{) p.m. May 22 in Mission Viejo High Scbool. . Lake Forest Homeowners will discuss the MA<;;, at 7:~ p.m. May 2.1 at a yet ,t~ be announce«I IOcalloft. · Residents or Laguna; "~~1·Wi1T-'h3vt · opportunity to di scuss tfie-: ~1A~ ~t · 1·~ p.m. May 29 at Crown VSlley 'Elemen· tary School. Nance North, a member qf the com· mittee that produced the reJ!(>rt, said four meetings have already been held to hash over the proposals, reaching only 250 citizens out of a total of 70,000 in the 100-square mile area. "We'll schedule more meeting! on _te- quest," she said. "We're anxious to find out just what resident! reallj' want." County Planners Set Saddleback Session plane. County planning commissioners will be There was no damage to the con-in the Saddleback Valley tonight for a tents although the briefcase opened meeting open to all citizens. P be Co t • upon impact, scattering papers on Set for 7:30 at La Paz fntermediate 1·0 n Innes the runway, according to t he School in Mission Viejo, the session will spokesnlf:n. cover proposed grov.'th policy for the Into Mysterious 1 .=-======="-'::.:.:0 ":::.:" 1 Y.· Deatl1 of Mexican Coroner's Investigators today ere con- tinuing the chemical analysis t o determine the cause of death of a young man whose body was apparently dumped in a field in San Juan Capistrano last week. •••••••• • • Solon Says CIA Linked To Episodes .: WASHINGTON !AP) -Sen._ Stuart.: Symington (0.Mo.I said today three ; highl y place~ \Yhite House s t a .r f,, members tri ed seriously last year to m· 11 volve the CIA in covert matters other than the burglary of the office of Dr ... • Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist. rl • Reporting on secret testimony from,;'. four officials of the Central lntelligence 1 Agency, Symington said he was surprised to learn that former White House chief of· staff H.R. Haldeman was "heavily in- volved." Symington. acting chainnan of the Senate Armed Services C-Ommittee, said 1' the other White House aides reported to be involved were John D. Ehrlichman, former chief domestic adviser to Presi·. dent Nixon. and former \Vhite House' counsel John \V. Denn Ill. l ~le \\'Ou ld not reveal details of the tcstimonv but said new revelations had come frOn1 the CJA's deputy director. Army Lt. Gen. Vernon Walters. ' Gen. Walters did not join the CIA until ' December and Symington said the general testified to episodes involing the three White Hoose aides that have oc· curred since that time. ..• "What l learned today that I didn'.t ·• know before was how deeply involved J Haldeman was as weU as EhrUchman and Dean," Symington said. ~ "Whatever the CIA was ordered to ~ do," be said, "was at the direction of the · top staff pewle of the White House. They ·i would have liked to see the CIA in-1 volved." 4 Symington confirmed uthere were other matters besides the Ellsberg case t in which the White House staff tried to,, involve the CIA." .' He...rclused under repeated questionlng • to give details. ' In another Watergate development U.S. Judge John Sirica today ordered the clerk or his court to take possession of classified documents that had been plac-~ ed in a safe deposit box by Dean, the man fired as White House counsel by President Nixon in the Watergate affair .. Following a brief hearing, Sirlca ordered that certified copies of the. documents be made avaialble t,o govern-; ment prosecutors in the Watergate case i and to the Senate special committee. ~ .. From Page l .:>. ., WATERGATE . ~· fi1IQ,l;f> rr1111 •· fo~mer ~tPlllY attorney general, serving • as the .No. 2.man in the Justice Depart-. ment from .1967 until 1969. Erickson , 49. is a justice of the · Colorado State Supreme Court. Pecik, 71, is a former New York State · Appeals Division justice and is senk>r partner in a leading New York law firm. , Taylor, who observed his 50th birthday • today, has been a member of the U.S. • District Court in New York since 1982. I Richardson indicated he might name'; the speeial prosecutor by Tuesday. He has told senators he ~ will give theDl"'> virtual veto power over his selection. ., On the third day of Senate hearings Oil' hfs nomination to be attorney general;_ Richardson was asked by Sen. John V ... Tunney (0.Calif.), whether he consulted- with President Nixon or the \Vh ite }louse in his seatch for a special prosecutor. J "No ;'' Richardson said. ! Then he added : "They passed me twq or three names which they asked rrye. tq consider." f 1 ' I ( And the probers admitled today the likelihood that the male Mexican in his mid 20s may have been an illegal im- migrant who died from elthaust fumes in the trunk of a smuggler's car. THE GRFAI ESt APPLIANCE VALUESl\l 25VEARS! • • Traces of carbon monoxide have been noted in the remains, c o r o n e r ' s spokesm('n said. But a death certificate has yet to be completed and until the lengthy tox- icological examinations are complete . an official cause \\1il: not be released. So far, investigation has failed to yield an identity to the body . Doggks Line Up Fo~cina.tion Tuesda y Ni glit Low-cost rabies vaccination c I i n i c s will he offered Tuesday at lour Orange Coast area locations, according to the Orange County Htalth Department. The clinics will be <Jpcn from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. for Vaccination of dogs at a cost of $2 each. ThMJgsaUons are: C:OSta w : Orange C o u n I y fairgrounds, Fair Drive al Fairview Road. · El Toro : Lake Forest Shopping Center, Ridge Route Drive Jrvlnt : Walnut Village Sb opp Ing Center, <lllver oM!\_at Walnut Avenue. Wesbninster: Sigler Park, Golden West Slrti!t at Westmlnater Boulevanl. Ooo ov., four rooolhs jl<l 1111111 be vaedhated aplllst nbieljlld licensed. • 15995 ........ ~ .~,_ ...... _ ·--hhC.. • r,....,cr.. ..... ,111111 .... ·---t• 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH 'ON AP'P'llOVl:D ClllOIT ' BIG JU c .. fl 'NO FROST' A!FAIGEAATOA.fAEE~EA • •llt'•-"*C-· .. -..... .. .. _ ............. . -.. 1 ....... -'""" .,, .... , """'' ., .. 141111• tic... ........... ~ 1 ........... .. .~ ... 0.1 .. -~~'*!"""." 29995 faF 11 Oii ............. .t:-... LMlll ·--.,.... . .,... ........... -...... ,.. .. -·-- 111" FRH DRAWING Q :~:OWAVE OVEN i:p 6 RPIS 111 ,,.T 7' .....,. O"AWIHGr7t1l1!fl,..111 .. , ..... r"'----1 VOV Halo HOT •• 11••••"f 0 Wit'• '· .. By '1'Elll!V COVILLE ot .. ,.,, Plllt ''"' The· United Slates fired a shol· loday ~hk:h you ~gbt say was "beard around the worfch'' - . \',\\iral\Ons~fu>m the Skylab l~unching "'.~ ceitalnly"fett . in Huntington. Beach wbm mO!I of ii JV•• designed and buill a~ McDollllell Douglas Astronautics. · 1 'l'op ,....,..,., uthered In .. a special c:Oo1ro1l'1J!Olll' ll\is IDoining ·to walch the laUlichlng. 'They'll usi thal coolrol room ' . . ~ thnlOghout Skylab's 140 days of rnarmed Dou&lai Astronautics, swruned up the orbit to back up lhe ijouslon Space .,..,pany•s offlclal view: Center. ln caa any problems ari!e. "We're 'Pn>Ud lo be a part of Skylab's ~-in ll'!"llogtoo Beach will be • firsl team. We are anticipating with called on to answer ,any qtieslions which greal inte"'81 the benellls• to humanity may COID&"P during the Oigbt. directly,. allrlbutable lo Skylab I , Local rea~ ~ this moniing's sue--America's first orbiting~~ station." cessful sbol -, u . expecled, one of joy 'lbe xpace workshop, which will be and.relief, thoUgh MCllonnell ilo!Jglas of· home for thJ"j!e separate three-man crews ficlals did•DOI bave diuc1r1o 'iay'ahou1 it of 'istrooaul$, waa officially flnlshed ill Huc!11,lt Bowe, executive assistant to HlBltlngton Beach Sept 8, when ii was lbe cbairman and piti!ldenl of McDonnell turned over lo NASA officials. -- -Tfi4ay'1 Fla•I N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS McDonoell Douglaa had a $390 millioo contract to build Ille' Skylab, a ~ally complete backup unit, ind certain grouild support system1. At .the peak of activity, in May of 197!, there were 2,600 workers at the Hun- tington Beach i)lant concentrating on Skylab f. Sky!ab workers accounted for more than half the plant's work force. While the end of Skylab means lhe beglnning of a new. step in space ex· {See DOUGLAS, Page 2) -Th;ath Probe_· to Reopen County .Grani;l Jury to Study Valley Shooiing 'lbe Orange Coljnly Grand Jury will be as:ke(f to reopen its investigation into the police · shooting death of a young , Mexican~.-\mericap April 13 in F~wttain Valley. . ditional lnfonnatim which bas not been presented lo Ille Grand Jury, including the possibility of one or. more eyewit· nesses ,." said Jack Turk of Huntington Bea<:h, chainnan of the coffimi.ssion. , olher Sanla Ana youths who had been stopped earlier, but who ·had Oed from -two Fouiltain Valley officers . · " missioners Saturday that there """ discrepancies .between the testimony of th< ' two ofll.cers, though he did nol elaborate. ~ Llndros also pointed to the lack of community input into the first Grand Jury hearing. . 'lbe re q u e.s t comes from Orange County's HtUllBD l«llatiorp ~on which met Saturday in Santa An~ to discuss •Ille shooting~ On , the morning 9f April 13 , Westminster Police Officer Timothy 'Miller shol Miguel. Angel Ronquillo, 20, in tbe back. Miller told investigators he had his gun drawn and the youth backed into h1m causing the pistol to fire accidenta lly; Miller was acco mpanied by Fountain . Valley Officer Robert ·f\iosely , who reportedly also had his· p i s t o 1 unholstered . The Grand Jury on April 30 declllr!'d . "Several cOmihuaity representatives have 'indicated ·to US that there is ad· Police ·Halt Car, Find . . Miller was helping F:ountain Valley police search for Ronquillo and three Morry Lindros, dlrctor of the Human Relations Commission, t o l d com· Liglltning J(ills Pitcher • From Saddleback JC ""'"~-~fit!nin'g bolt ~~;ma "W~ Wade r~'l9,. Sad~ba~I< Col· • lete"Jli er.Sui\day· . .and injured llO••n· q~ persons d & a -1· ~~F"1t"1:11Al1!' at· ~flna&U Glty,. ...,,., . • . .·~, •. ,.·*··'"--\.'.' ' . WADE, A ,FORMER Mission .Viejo resident, was winding up to ,deliver a pitch when the big bolt struck, knocking every player in the infiel<l ""4 o!Jifield off their feet. · An· amJ>Ulante operator raid the lightning vaporized the youth's cicithing, leiving•only,.hieds, It struck the·young man's head, ' WADE'S SISTER was watching from the stands and ran scream· ing to.biS bOdy. . .. Wade few up in .OJ:ange· county. He attended Mission Viejo High Schoo through his Jwlior year and played both baseball and football there. His pai-enls recently moved to Lake Havasu. See ' .-Pag'e'16 for detailed-story and pictures. ' ' ' FBI Marksman Shoots Gunman Atop F·uel Tank BULLETIN PORTLAND, Qre. (AP) -An FBI mork4man ohol and killed an airport employe who had lttld a man hostage al· moR elgllt boan atop an aviation tuel tank today near Portland . fntematlonal Alrpo_rt, aulho~ said. Tbe hostage was reported safe. ' was , closed for a short time but then reopened. Abernathy, an emplQYJ!l of Lockheed Air Terrnillal Services at the airport, aent down word with one hostage that if his fonner , wile and children were noi, broughl tO the scene by nocii"be would explode the tank. Deputies said the tank, with a eapactty of 1.8 milllon ,au.as, -be Uproded by a sho~ The boslage, steve Dailing, a IAckbeed mecbahic, returned to-tho Ian~ alter delivering lhe message biij later. waa released 1!'*8rmed· . The olber ~ge was ldemUDed aa Gene Lloyd, manager of Ille Lockheed le~al. . . Poi1land polke officer Dale Allllln said Abernathy wu uslnj[ Lloyd to answor questlona sltotlted lo him. Lfor<! was being aenl to the ecl8< of the tank lo wave biJ tir1lls in r'epiy wblle Abernathy held a gun poillted 11 him. · Jahn . Murpba, ·a anperVjlor for Lockheed, said Abernathy'droYe to the Locllheed lank farm faetllljJ about ! a.m. and caplured the lwo rnea. A opokesrnan for the.Multnomah County lllleriff'a office said shota were fired then, bul. no one WU hurt. . ' Efforls were made to drain the tank through ~ ~. but they were · not sucoeuful.,. • • · Dallillg told Murpba: "He ain't u.ten; in8 to nothing." , Abernathy's ex•l'fle, Nancy, and his chlldmi live in Belltnghim, Wash., 250 lnllei norllrof Portland. . • .. Ef!orts WM be1ni rnade"jo 'blfng her' lo Poflllmd. A woman friend of Abematey's also was being taken to the scene to see Ir she could talk him Into iumoriderlilJ. · .. . • The 1berlif's ofllce uld Abemathy !pent four montha as a pollen! of the Veterana' AtlnllnlstNUon llotpltal crlsil clilllc Jn Portland several months ago during dlvoroe proceedinp. The fuel tank where Atiernathy waa holding bottag .. ii ...... ~ the airport l«"mlnal and ii by open lieldi. The main 1treet !llllllng nemy, Marine Drive, wu clolod to Inf· fie. ,. 'I" • • • Officer Milter innocent of a111_ ·vnJDg· ~ doing ill the death of· Ronquillo. 'lbe District Attorney's ofiicet. which in· (See PROBE, Page !)' . Police Nab 7 In Marijuana Rqid in .M~a "'4p.. .. -: . ' ~ Sevlll persons,_lncludll!& llu:<e juvenile gt~ were arrested . and ~ pounds of marijuana· seized following a raid at a Costa Mesa home by narcotlca oftlcen from the Laguna Beach., San Clemente and Cotta Mesa police deparlrnenta Fri· day. 1be bust ended two weeks of in- vestigation hY the Laguna Beach narcotics squad and cracked what ~· Nell Purcell alleged was a maj~ aupply operation for the Laguna Beach area. A foot· Iock<Nlzed box conlalnlng 30 kiloo of cellophane-wrapPed marijuana bricks was held loday as evidence. Police value this haul at $16,000. Arrested were Joseph Slevellng, 30, of !260 S. Coasl Highway. Laguna Beach, held on $75,000 bail; Joseph 0. Helmer. 42, of Valdez, Alaska, held on. 110,000 ball; ·John 'Miller Kauffman, 18, of Palo Alto. Cal~ .• held Oii 110,000.ball; Barbara Anne Black, 19, of 440 Wwood, Colta Me8a : lield onllO;OOO ball.' .. . ' Pw'cell aafd ' all were booked m charges of possession of marijuana for sale. He, claimed Steveling was the ringleader, and alleged lhat the 30-)'<!ar· old-LB;gun~ was responsible for sale of llO 19.200 pounds of marijuana weekly. k !~year-old 4guna Niguel girl, a 17· year-old Newport Beach girl and a 17· YfllMlld Whittler nmaway were booked on cbargea of possesslon of marijuana for •Ale. steveling, found biding in a closet al the· Costa Mesa residence at 299 Mes& Dr).ve, Was removed at gunpoint by narcotics ' officers. A I a r ge-bo re autootlltic pistol was found In lbe closet ~rward, Sgt. Purcell said. Sgt. ·Purcell said Laguna Beach of· Deers fll'!lf b'egan investigatinJ( Steveling two weeks ago and elleged t6at several boiys were made by narcotics a'ents working through tlie 17·year-<>ld Whittier girl who 'wu llvin(' 'lllth ·stevellng, Purcell said ! He sald Steveling had been \lllder ; , (See MARIJUANA,•Pap I) 'Weiitle-er • • The sun Is still on. vacauoo along · the ()range Coal!,. and weather ex· perts dOD't elq>llel lo ,.. ti before Wedneaday. Lolf clouds and fog in I the morning !'lW:s, pertly cloudy in Ille_.~ Hlgha in the eo., tNSLOE TeDA Y r. Ano~r govmiment official linked to Watergate case ha$ ! Qont on '"administrative leave" after ttporl he offerad a co .. spirotor executive c~ in ' retunt for silenu. Stoey, Poge 4. ·- " .. Only Home He Knows The little boy inside this plastic tent, who is known to -tlfe world u David, is now 11> years Old and has been living Inside the life-sustaining bubble since five 5e00nds after be was born. The sterile cocoon P~'l D~yjj. ·wh,o w_as born without a natural de- f ep~ 1y'stem ~ lillDP<IY cannot fil?ht germs. The boy Is· being carod for.at the Baylor University Med- icat Cente,r 1n Houston, Texas.' • From Page 1 MARIJUANA • • Cranston Speaks in Mes~ ;::i::,ani:~~ricersforaboutrnd•Y• •. Vows Fio-ht Over Cuts Seven narcotics officers mcludmg two ~ ~ _ from San Clemente and ooe from Costa ?i-tesa were involved in the action Friday. Purcell said two detectives oMerved lhe Laguna Niguel and Newport Beach girla go into the house and ~ quickly rea ppear with a brown shopping bag. 0[· ficers alleged the bag contained five kilos of tbe neatly wnpped pot. More oUiceri: were called and entry gained into · the house. "People were running all over the house like crazy," Purcell said. He said that 30 kilos of marijuana were "out in plain sight." He valued the seized prop- erly al aboul 115,000 on the street. Purcell said SteveUng would go to the desert areas of San Diego County and return to the Lagtma Beach area by a network or backroads, never passing alien Mexican checkpoints. ·' He said lhat the base ol operations was· moved to the rented Costa Mesa residence, next to the Santa Ana Country Club several weeks ago and that· the horn~ was used for the distribution or marijuana. Last Customer Holds Up Tavern In Huntington Huntington Beach police are looking for the patron of a Huntington Beach bar who held up the saloon before leaving it early Sunday morning. Colleen Lane, 24, and Joe Galsini, 64, manager and bartender of the Ninth \Vave, 16903 Algonquin St. sai~ the bandit was the la st customer left m the bar when they began to close up at 1:50 a.m. They told police that the 40 to 45--year~ old man, wearing a dark wig spotted With grey, pulled a small caliber gun-on them and ordered them to take the eath'!tr.iy out of the bar cash register. •· Escorting them into the bar's ofti~i. he also had 1'-1iss Lane open and empty the safe before binding Uteir hands and f~t with tape and forcing them to Ile on the floor. - About five minutes after the bandit fled the two were freed by ow n'e r Allyn Miller who had ..,me to collecHhe night's receipts. .. ... · ~ Police reports show that f89!) ·wa s t.Uen in the robbery. • ; OIAN•I COAST ... ' ',, ... DAILY PILOT Tiit Ort""' CO..! DAtL Y PILO'l wtlll wtllc:ft 11 ~. tM fll•...,.Pr111, ff Plltlll.,.,.. .,r • tM Qr1""' Co.11 PWtl$/llncl C,,.....rry, St,. r9'9 lldlTloM 1r1 pt,ID!lslltd, MOl'ld1y th<"Oll(llt l"rlf.IY, flH' Cot!I Mt11, Nt'W!Xlrf kedt. H ..... tlngton le1Cllli"Mffll1in VIII~. lA;UM -.a., lr.lne/$adifJ1bKll: 11111 Slln a..r.nt1/ SM JWn ClpillrAllO. A 1ingJ1 r1t1ionll edflliWI Is p,11111""8 Si ....... )'i Ind .....,...,.. ' Tiii Pl"lrK ... 1 pvtill"""9 pl9flt Is 11 Q Wes! .. ., SlrMI, C..I• MIN, Clllfornll, tM». Robert N. Wied '""'"~' 11111 "*""tr J1ek R, C11rl1y VI« l"rttldlnt Ind 0-11 Ml!\191f' TI!o111n K11vil Edir.r The1111 A. M11rphi111 , M-eln~ 1idUor I Cht tlM H. loot ' Rith11!il P. N1U , • A111$t1111 MIMtJ"' Edllon 1.,,.,...c .... rtt1 Wt1t Or11191 C.V..!J Editor " ............. OHkt • 17171 le1ch lo11l1"'"' ~ M1lliftj ""'*•Ml P.O. lo• 1•0. •2MI --~-..mi m for"I A-CMfl --..1 ... Yt'nl 11)' Strwt ....._., t.ct11 Gil N...,..-t lllllWll'C .. °""""'91 -,..,. tJ C.mffll .... ,.,,,a,,s in•• M2~121 a 1WsJ .Wsalf trf MJ-1111 ,.,.. ..... .,... c.., """' ¥ ... -·-~· "7J. ~ .. ~-=c: ;;;w• ,.::,...-;-MWri ........ I ..... _, • ••sit: r wtw ....._ • --·~ ........... ----·~-·-~ 1 ieocrVfM .... (.fl"rllr taM • :=: • ~-"""'"'""' '""""" , I Sen. Alan Cranston told a Costa Mesa audience this weekend that he is preP{lred to fight Nixon Administration proposals to r~uce federal child care funds. "Adequate day care centers are essen- tial to help mothers get off welfare and into productive, paying jobs," the California Democrat said. His remarks were prepared for a public forum sponsored Sat\D'day by the Children's Services ColIDCll of Orange Coun(y on the Orange Coast College cam- pus. Day care centers, Cranston believes, "also are needed so that mothers already worilng can contViue work." Cranston said iliat restricting eligibility of children for day care services would have· "grave consequences, particularly here in California." The propMed cutbacks would exclude more than 22,000 California children from day care programs but Cranston said he and 4-0 other senators are pledged to see they never occur. The four cutbacks' under consideration would affect program! involving pre- school children, children of working mothers, children of migrant workers, and children of college-student parents. Leads 12-boat Event O'B1·ien ·Makes Spirited· Dash in Guadalupe Race Bob O'Brien's 56-foot yawl Spirit lrom California Yacht Club was standing off Ouadalupe Island at 8 a.of. today and was leading the 12-boat ra ce fleet on both elapsed and corrected times. woro from the escort vessel La Fiesta .jiis that Splrtt would round lhe island ~ morning and head for home on the 6(1().mile race. \Veather in the vicinity of the island was overcast with light winds. · Second on elapsed time behind Spirit was Jim Seal's Columbia 50 sloop Loco Vienle II and behind Loco Vitnte was J~ck Bibb's Columbia 50 Yawl Intennez· zo. Corrected time positions are : 1. Spirit, 2. Loco Viente, 3. Intermezzo. Class A: I. Spirit, 2. Loco Viente, 3. Intermezzo. Clau B: 1. Decision, Paul Burger, Pare1its' Rights Sessio11 Slat;ed A panel discussion on "The Legal Rights and Responsibilities 'Of Parent:!I Before the Law" \viii be held at 7:45 p.m., Tuesday, at Fountain Valley's Tamura School, 1734-0 Santa Suzanne Ave. The panel \vill consist of a deputy district attorney . a court refe ree. a pro- bation ofliccr and a public gua rdian representative. Tuesday's program is sponsored by the Orange County chapter or the California Association for Neurologically Han· ilicapped Children. Mrs. Joyce Riley. program chairman, . .says the iliscussion should interest the ))arents of learning disabled and behavior disordered children because they most frequenUy run afoul of the law. Fro1n Page 1 PROBE •.. vestlpted • the matter for the Grand Jury, had recommended such a verdict. Lindros told the commission that the District Attorney's office gave him full cooperation in looking into the details of the first investigation. Commlulon Chairman Turlc also said the suspc!nsion of Officer Miller, or his reaalgnment, would also be recom- mended pending any f u r t h e r in- vestigation of the shooting. The Human Relations Cornmlssk>n was asked to act on the shooting by Mexican· American. from Santa Ana who were friends and relatives of the dead youlh. They banded the commiasion a peUJlan •iped by 315 people. asking tor ..-. Grand Jury lnvesllgation. ~ DRYC 2. Swill, Jack Mallinckrodt BYC 3. Talisman, Bob Williams, BYC. PHRF: I. Leprechaun, Whitney Collins, LBYC 2. Matangi, Ed Carpenter, BYC 3. Kismet Bob Wills CYC. (For earlier story see Boating Page 21.) Doggies Li1ie Up For V accinatio11 Tuesday Night Low-cost rabies vaccination c l i n i c s will be offered Tuesday at four Orange Coast area locations, according to the Orange County Health Deparbnent. The clinics l'.111 be open from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. for vaccination of dogs at a cost of $2 each. The locations are: Costa Mesa: Orange County Fairgrounds, Fair Drive at Fairview Road. El Toro: Lake Forest Shopping Center, Ridge Route Drive. Irvine: Walnut Village Shopping Center, Culver Drive at Walnut Avenue. Westminster : Sigler Park, Golden West Street at Westminster Boulevard. Dogs over four montm old must be vaccinated against rabies and licensed. Registration Set ' For Kindergarten Pre-registration of children who will attend kindergarten next year in the Hunlinglon Beach City (elemeolary ) School District will he•held Wednesday. Parents are asked to register their children at the school nearest their home between 1 p.m. and 4 p.m. To he eligible for kindergarten, a child must be five years old on or before Dec. 2, 1973. Proof of age may be shown by a birth or baptismal certificate. The parent muat also show proof that the child has had adequate pollo, measles and DPT lmmunlzaUon. Regular reglstraUon will be held afler Aug_ ·30, Ice Cream Fete Set By Valley Students Ice cream lovers will have their night Tuesday at Fountain Valley High School. The sophomore cla" IJ hol<Ung ao Ice cream ooclal, ollering unllml~ secoods for $1. The fund raising even! will be held lrom 7 p.m. to I p.m. in the hlih 1chool'1 I cal~~rla1 and will also ltature Laurel and tw'Clf and Cbarll1 CbaptiD movle1. ' , .. • • ·~Reiter.ates ' I ' I 'Nix~ii·:Stand • WASl!{)IGT()N (,UPI) -White-HoUle pr.ess Secretary Roqald L. ruegler reilerai.d today denials thal Ptesident Nlx111 had any knowi.dge of the~lng ot the Watergate or efforts to cover it up. Ziegler, however, declined under repeated que.!ltions by reporters to issue a flat denial of a Newsweek magazine report that former White Hoose counsel John W. Dean never made an In- vestigation and report of the Watergate which Nixon attributed to him last August. (Relai.d stories, Page 3). Ziegler said the White House would stand on remarks Ni.Ion made in .a televised speech April 30 in which be said he had been misled by members of his staff until last March into thinking the Watergate was far less serious than he now considers it. Ziegler declined to vouch similarly for a H'ixon statement Aug. 29 that Dean conducted ·an , investigation of the Watergate affair and issued a report ex· onerating all persons then employed by the Administration. Ziegler noted that Nixon said April 30 his previoUs statement& were based on information available at the time they were made and that some of that in· formation now appeared to be incorrect. Robert W. lee Services Tuesday Funeral services are .scheduled Tues- day ror 21·year-old Robe.rt William Lee o( Huntington Beach who was killed last Thursday when the truck he was driving careened off the San Diego Freeway into a flood control ditch in Irvine. Services will be at 3 p.m. at the Peek Family Colonial Funeral Hom e , Westminster. ·Burial will follow at Westminster Memorial Park. Lee was to have been married Satur· day. Survivors include his parents, Mr. and ~Us. John D. Lee, 6901 Breeland Ave., Huntington Beach; a sister, Carol Ann of the home;. two brothers, Pifarlin, of the home, and Jack of Sturgis, S.D., and his maternal grandmother, Mrs. Haul Hen. nan of Huntington Beach. Music Festival Slated Tuesday Students from eight Huntington Beach elementary schools will combine their mus ical talents Tuesday evening for the annual north zone music festival of the Ocean View School District. The concert will begin at 7:30 p.m. at the Marina High School gymnasium. The festival will feature the choirs of Glen View, Robinwood. College View, Village View, Circle View, Spring View and Sun View schools. Accompaniment will be provided by the North Zone Orchestra conducted by teacher Gene Goto. Pianists are Chet Hansen and Beth Lee. The program was organized by vocal music teachers Sharyl Parker and Joyce Stofft. ••••••••• • • -~ ..---~~~~~·-.....~~~~~~~~~! • " , .. l011"Clt Moy I• Sl·l .. ' S•twttS • • f ' I 1: ' ' I I ' ,. " , ... lou"ch Moy IS s1~2 S.ttt'" 11 -.c,_ ~ --- ·- ·~-·· 0".'' ---' ' I • lf-fNTtt SPLASHDOWN 1•.C• PM J~12th :.;... -;;;p-=..-=-.::::.:::: -. . ... .:::..::.::::: --:::::::---.. - I001111il•1 1011lltw•it elSonOl.,. -" ~ 1;, '" . .. :1 -1 ~· . U~I Ttl.....,_ .~ HERE'S HOW AME(U~A'S FIRST SPACE STATION WILL START ·;~ ThrM Mon to ~ollow Unearthly 'Hon,.' Into Historic Orbll Tuesday 1 ,, . ·-,. F1'0lll P .. e l Airplane Prices Don't Take Off/ SKYLAB··· Apollo program. · <• ' -~ In Big Auction The a.s1rooauts' smaller, :12-s1ory s.(' urn lB rocket stood on another pad 8,700 !eel away, awalllng the aipal lo blast off Tuesday if all goes well. -. The nostalgia crau· -that bas many !llolorlsts out llllOOpUtg llrO)jDd barns and old garages for cara of the pre and post· World Wat II years apparenily failx lo afflict flying erilhusiasts. . Bidding for afri>lanes horoly gol off the . ground at Buena Park'il Movie World Cara of the Slats and Plaliea of Fame Sundai during· the aecood '!e!slon ol a weekend auctioo ol the prlxed anilques,. ~e the way they snapped up an- tiq ue cars Saturday, bida were so low SUnday for four old figbtei'I -burs and theirs -that dejected museum offlc:Ws decided to hang onto them for another year. Professional auctioneers led by Jack Brucker will try again to peddle a 1938 vintage Seversky 2PA G u a r d s m a n fighter; a 1!!45 Mltsub~ JZI>µ repui.d to be the last survivor among 3,000 Japanese kamikaze planes ; a 19~1 Curtiss !'¥•~ reQ!ica and a;l950, eonytt li3B liaisdn fighter. ' · 1be Kruse Boys, professioiµd auc- lioneers from A,.,.,,,, Ind ., had been DP' timistic about disposing of· the fout aircraft during the $.1 million dealings over the weekend. They expecled oilers of up lo $50,000 . for the · air armada, but bids peaked out at a paltry m1d·$20,000 average. Billed as the First Annual C'.allfornia Coastal Auction, the event saw a car sold for the fourth highest figure of any ever disposed of on the public ouctioo block. A 1932 Duesenberg dual cowl Phaeton once owned by ·Canadian stripper Valli Broglie was taken for $87,500 by Ray Luggart, a Naples, Fla., building con- tractor. Ash Sale Contested WASIUNGTON (UPI) -R<p. Les Aspin (!>-Wis.) wants to know whether. and on what terms, Roy L. >,.sh sold about 2.50 000 shares of Litton Industries stock aft~ he resigned as president of thal firm to become federal budget director. · - Also, observing were the •memhers 01, Skylab 2 and 3 crews, who are to rocket up to the same statioo laier, lbls year,, each for 56-day vl.51ts. : Once in orbit, tile Skylab, which resembled a huge bullel as II aal on Ille launch pad covered by a metal shrouc\ began blossoming into a full-scale spact station. First, the four sections of the 26,000.t pound shroud peeled away like cJa'li,. shells and new off into space. ~ ,rj, Then, an on-board computer com-, manded a set of arm·like metal roda to:: extend from the top of the .vehlcl~. ~ hoisting into plae< a box-shaped array of six tel.scopes, which the astronauts will ' use to observe the 1un and other celestial1• phenomena. · .. : The slation ls the slxe ol a lbret. bedfoom ~ and is the largest, mo;i · complex spaceship ever built. .. .. Fl'Otll Page I. " DOUGLAS • • • i-'• ploration, it also means more to min-"' dreds of local Skylab workers. ' . The sad part of their project b ~~ many, if not most, .ol them are now 0&4~1 of work. They must seek new jobe, ·ii..: somewhat difficult task in the field' of . .... ,,. aerospace. ..; .. i In mid-April, Mclloonell Douglas l!ili, nounced ii would Jay. df 2,000 Skylab workers over a period ot nine montl'ls.~, Those layoffs wouJd affect Huntin~~ Beach. Santa Monica and lhe Cape K~., nedy facility . .;. . .... ... .. . , , . ! .... . . ,,,. FREEZE FOOD PRICES Witli This COMPACT .106 lti. Chtsl FREEZER BI G 14.7 Ct.t. Ft. 'NO FROsr REFRIGERATOR·FREEZER • l'tlJl., u:>M !'1"! /11 I ntlil. .·11 •,,.._T~ •t-.... -.... ....,._,Ill ·~_ ............. t•• --• I 90 bAYS . SAME AS CASH ..... ,_ .. '---· --·· -·-........ "" ,, __ ,.. ••k 14Clklol ...... -'"-.......... -. -~-~~ 29911 Tlf 1& I>' ·--.fe:' ... Lfo* 't::I.""' :r-. .......... -•"-! ..... ·=- ' t•" PlllDIAWING Q :~:OWAVE OVEN t;p 6 99"1'1 'J•T 1t ,..lj .. !illl<'-.-----1 WI DILIVER •••wt,.. llllft1Rs WI SllVICI ~OU w~:~o NOT 11 ~n•••N1' WllNITAU • ••••••••••••••• ... -~JO ' " ' I ; ( v j , c I J s b n v ti I s u ~ f• d 0 It c A I ~ e t E • d ~ v 0 b b .. t• J c c e n F 0 d n • p ; r 0 j i j I I • I ·I • 'List ~!rrowip.~ . ,,. For Prosecutor. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Elliot L. Rlcbardsoo today idtnllfled tllo. "llst" for le1ection. as apecial g o v e r ll m e n t Watergate 1 prosecutor u Warren K. Christopher of Los Angeles, Judge Willlam H. Erickoon of Denver, former ~udge David w. Peck of New York aod ~udge Harold R. Tyler, Jr., of New York. · Richardson gave the . names to reporters during a break in Senate bear-• f MARTHA DENIES HAVING 'NERVOUS BREAKDOWN-Pago 4 Jngs on his nomination for attorney .general. · Ha Nid earlier the White House passed :)ilm "two or three names" of possible ~boices but they were not among the last lour. Appeals Division justice aod is senior partner in a leading New York law firm. Taylor, who observed bl.s 50th birthday today, bas been a member of the U.S. District Court in New York since 1962. Rlchardsoo Indicated he might name the special prosecutor by Tuesday. He bas told senators he will give them virtual veto power over hls selection. On the third day of Senate hearing., on his nomination to be attorney general, Richardson WM asked by Sen. John V. Tunney (D-Callf.), whether he consulted with President Nixon or the White House in his search for a special prosecutor. "No.'' Richardson said . Tben be added: '"Ibey passed me two or three names which they asked me to consider." ,• fi'kwaing Terror . , -• H DAILY Pt LDT 3 , Of ,:Sig· . ht·~·. r • 'I ' UPl .T ....... Rush Sends ' I Metal Past · ' • ' .. $100 Mark LONDON (UPI) -Gold leaped to the ~ price In ~ts_tory on European free JU.i!ets today, ,eully passing the 1100- al'H>Ullee "barrier.'' • A. m.i<r British dealer linked the gold slcnpede IA> • lack of confidence brought on· b!t !he Watergate affair but others disagreed. The gold rush which ssw a prioe of 11118.70 on lhe Fr<nch commercial market sent; the. dollar skidding on European money markets as speculators and multi· ~tion#tl companies unloaded U.S. cur- rency for the precious yellow metal. · In New Ycrk, tbe stock market took a sharpi tumble in moderately active trading and I.be Dow Jones 1verages for SO blue chip iDdll!trial stocks fell 1-4 .07 points in the first hour aod a hall of trading. ..:rht. market eventually closed off 18.'9 . points. , • U.S. tourlsls joined the stampede to buy gold. Jl Christopher, 47, ·a Democrat, is a ltormor deputy attorney general, serving is tJ:>e No. 2 man in the Justice· Depart- ~ from 1967 until 1969. ·: Erickson, 49, is a justice cf the Colorado state Supreme Court. Rld>anlson told reporters later that Gen. Alexander M. Haig, named by Pres· ident Nim:J. last week to help reorganiJe the Wblle House staff, aod another White House assistant be believed whe newly named coumel Leonard Garment made the recommendations. "They were just names dropped in the bopper," Rlcharcboo commented. Vittorio Mascia, 54, screams as he tries to put out flames on back in .Anzio, Italy. Spectator rushes to aid. Mascia was doused with flaming o!I mixture when winds toppled Olympic torch used in youth games. • "People with surplus dollars are getting out of the currency into gold ," said Den· nis Selby, cblel bullion dealer for the Loodoo gold brokerage firm of Johnson Matthey, Ltd. "Watercate has i<lt the Peck, 71, is a former New York State * * *. Solon Cites Richardson was nominated attorney general, two week.! ago by N'J.J:on ahd given "fCllJ: authority" over the in· vestigation of the Watergate scandal. In response to congressional d e m a n d • White House • Richardson said he wOuJd name a special pri>secutor arid give · hbr.. "complete authority" over all Watergate matters. . Pink · Bus Line Purchase A.gain. Gtven Approval ' . Link to CIA WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Stuart Symington (D-Mo.) said today three highly placeJ White Hruae s t a 11 members tried seriously last year to in- volve the CIA in· covert matters other tHl!n the burglary of the olllce of Dr. Daniel Elbberg's psychiatrist. Reporting oo .eCret testimooy from f<iUJ'.ofUclals of the Oentral lntelligenoe Aaency, Symlngton saJ4 lie -IUl)lrised to learn that former White HOUie chief d.. llaff H.R. Haldeman was "heavily l1>- v9lved." Symington, acting chainnan of the Senate Armed Seryloes Committee, IB!d the other White Hoose aides reported to be involved were John D. Ehrlicbman, former chief domestic adviser to Presi· dent N1.100, and former White House cowisel John w. Dean Ill. Ha would not reveal details of the tesllmooy but said new revelatloos had come from the CIA's deputy director, ~ LI. Gen. Vernen Walters. Gen. Walters did DOI join the CIA until lle<ember and Symington said the gmeral testified to episodes lnvoling the ~ White House aides ·that have oo- cllf!'ed slnee that time. ~What I leaaied today that I dido't know before was how deeply involved Haldeman was 8! well as F..hrllchman arid Deao," Symington said. i''Wbatever the CIA was ordered to 00,f' be said, "was at the direction of the top stall people of the White House. They wduld have liked to see the CIA fn. vdtved." Symington confirmed "there were offier matters besides the Ellsberg case In which the White House stall ~ IA> involve the CIA." He reluied under repeated questloolllg . to give details. In~ Watergate development U.S. Judge John Sirica loday ordt!red the clerk of hls court to take posses!lon of classified documents that had been plac- ed in ,.,_asfe deposit box by Dean, !lie man fired as White House oounsel by Presi.i.rtt.Nll:on In the Watergate affair. Following a brief bearing, S1rica onlered 'that certified copies of the documen~ be made avaialble to govern- ment pt'08eCUtors in the Watergate case and to the Senate special commfttee. By makinjl the Papers available to the prosecutors,~who are under the executive btanch, they ll also he avallablil tO th~ White House which has asked for their return. '1'he 'White House req~ted the orig1nals; it will.get Olli)' copte.. • "No names suggested by the White House lasted as long as the flnalf'IO or 12 names -not because they came from the ·White House but because I didn't feel they met my criteria," Richardson said. Rlchardoon told Tunney In response to aoother question that he bad bad no in- structions fr:om Nixon or the White House on the scope of the duties of a Watergate prosecutor. Probe Continues · ' Into M.ysterioo.s . Death of Me:Xican Coroner's investigators today are con· tinuing the Chemical analysis t o determine the cause of defth of a young man whose body was apparently dumped in a field in San Juan Capistrano last week. And the probers admitted today the likelihood that the male Mmcan In his mid 20s mey have .been an Illegal im- mlgrint who died from "ubaust lumeJ in the trunk of a smuggler's.car. Traces of carbon monoxide have been noted in the remains, coroner 's apokesmen said. But a death cerlif1Cate has yet to be completed' and · until the lengthy , tox- ico1oglcal eraminations are complete, an official cause wi& not be released. SO far, lnvestlgatioo has failed to yield an identity to the body. 18 Pups Enough Purchase of the Pink Bus Line was ap. proved today for the second time by Orange County Transit District directors. Three weeks ago the district agreed to buy the line from Mike and Paul Kadletz. 'IT»eir line bas provided service between La Habra aod Huntington Beach !or the past .two years. But tbe bus line operators balked at the $30,000 price offered by the district becauae they said 1be ' aeles agreement call~ f~1 1:t:ie,vt '.,l\>. cmtinue ~.Jtion of the Beacll Boulevful !In• this ~er. The Kadletz brothets claimed that the district directot'S ha~ added that pro- vision after ~ had ·signed ·the sales contract. J. Today's offer, is to buy 't~e line for $321000, up1 $2,000 from the Oi1ginal offer and d6es not include the requirement for the brothers to continue operation this summer. Attorney Terry Mosbenko, representing the bas line, said. bis clients want Wltil a week· from Tuesday to consider the new offep.,. He hinted that they might want more money for the line. Border Officers' N ah 229 Aliens Over Weekend Border patrolmen at the San Onofre checkpoint reported another weekend of major migrations by illegal aliens. A total of 229 immigrants were detained at For St. Bernard the ~tatioo over the past few day•. · . , .• .. ytsld~ the large numbers of illegal · • • ~ r • ' nugrants,.~iceR: Saturday arrested two PHILADELPHIA (AP ) -Lady young men alleged to he s!Dijgg)ing mari- Ssmantha's owners don 't know il it'5 a juana. ... ~ but they waot to l"ake sure she The pair, Mabhai . Robert< W~kerson,' doesn t top bet . perlormaoce of giving 23, of San Diego an'd •Jeffrey" Lauren birth to l~ J>111>p1es m, a »llour period. Evans, zs, of ·Aspen, Colo., allegedl,Y All but two sunived. • .. were carrying 28 pounds or the weed m "That was· just too manjo, owner the trunk of their car. DonaJ4 Huachtr '!'id So-y <11 the 111(). The ~ \vas mide by offioers pound St. Jlen!&nl'• activity. "She's during a rouUne immigration check, Of. tired, and she comes fll"lt. 'We'll probably ficials said. : ' fix her:" The two men face charges or smug- Jn. the meantime, it seems doubtful gling and were turned over ,tO tr.S. that Sam will be mee!,ing with Luke der Customs agents. .. i 41derbund' -Luke for short -the ZOO-l ~ (l!lUnd proud pedigreed father. llusdler, a sell-employed paperhanger, said 1A about slx weeks he and hls wire Ch~ will sell the puppies.and give a l0w IA> frleods. · · • . Fan$.. Go Berserk • _i(4.li•· •• • When '.'Rook , Fest :sexy Art)vork? .,. Music . Halte~.' I - -SAN JOSE ·(AP) ..,, A rock teiittval bore that drew up to 10,000 spectatoni en- ded !i!tb an ~•led· 30() youths tbfow. inlt-'bOttles aod swinging club& because ~Y dido~· want the music IA> stol>, authorities said. ' -~tudent's $cnlptures Xd :out HOUS'roN (UPI) -Jean Ellzlibelh Hntclpilm i. a 17-year-<>ld bfcb ltboOl senlo ""° is a little coofU9ed today. '"l'Iie 1oachers told me my -k is on a col~ level and is not a~tahle on a bltb 0 school , level, whatovet that me~rl~ sbe said. ' ~ did a pair of ~!pores for a high " 1111 .oow. One of the glazed llallM <a nude embrace between a male female. The other allowed a nude man ,poman· and cblld. Je• 'worked for 70 hours -..,,l<bool nlgbta and weekends -to linllh the W<>rQI She admJta to being ~ by Mlc:btiangelo. She said the took preli~ry draWinp of the oculplurel to ort teacben tbrtie ' monllis ago aod they approved them. "One art leidler ~ the reproductive Q!1ll\I fi the ~ ...,.. too .detailed," said ~ean·i-. Helly. "Another said the slatuet _..too rsy." fean took ber statues IA> the art show sa~·bul· ..... •topped from pdttlng them on dllpliy by lichool officials. "They ara not a~to because 111e7, are a b11·..iv-1or thla tpye of show, • Ulistant pr!Dclpel a.one.. Vann said. "BUI Ibey ""''VflY llae plecta of art . wort." · 1 I . ' Jean'• lather was outrqed. Ha parked his car -the, street rnim the art lest!•al and dbplayOd the 111Juet all day oil the car~ for....,.... to -- t Wben sheriffs deputleo arrlved al the private pork-site to ~up a knife fight Suoday, there wore only about l,IKIO per90ns still at the festival. When officers ~ed the m1JStc to ..... iliicrY perticfponts rr•libed bottles • 1"14,broke up sofJ'drlnlt llaods to USC the •lriMI ,for clubs. , · • Oneyouth was boopltaliaed with a knife wound...od three pii...,. were arrested Int clnmllennea," olllclals said. Ole allorill'i df!IUl1-llllil>ed In the baclr wllli a brolien baifJe Ills! •·bullet- prool -bpi him from a llall wound. '!be lnddent a.--.se more ptnOnl came to the coocert t~ the three-square block area could hold, Sherill's Lt. Darrold Thomas said. High Court Rules Women Get ,Depend~nts' Benefits poUtlcal 1ltuation-1haky In the Statea aod this baa put preaure on the dollar." By .(ate altemoob..the price of gold obot up to $106.17 on the Frenctt.commerclal 1 market -up more than fl from Friday 's clooe of $91.13. "I think the rtllOlt for the rise in the price al gold ii because ol reports In the preos that there is an Impending financ- ial crisis," Emanuel Brunofi, a French \ WASmNGTON (UP I) -The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 8 to I toda y that women members·of the armed forces are el}titled to dependents' benefits on the same basis as men -a possible Jand· mark decision in' favor of women's rights. The apinion brought the women's rights movement nearer than ever before ·to winning a high court ruling that sex is in the same "suspect" classification as race and alienage. The vote was 4 to 4 on this broad issue. One justice abstained. Governments have a harder time justi· 1y1ng,)aws which 9e!'Y benejiti to persons . in "suspect!l classilicatJons. Nevertheless, Air Force Lt. Sharron Frontiero won her point, with only Ju stice William H. Rehnquist dissenting, because other jUstlces voted in her faVOr on the basis of past decisions. She sued to obtain benefits for her stu· den t tiusband, Joseph Frontiero, then at· tending Huntington Co 11 e g e in M AJ gold broker, said. ~~~ihe =~ed services bas been Asked· if be believed the rise In the getting hous!Iig and medical allowances price of' gold cOOld be related to the automaticallv for his wife, whether he Watergate scandll in 'the United States, J, Brunoff said: 0 1n my opinion, I don't actually . _su~rts her or not, while the 6,000 .. i'nan'ied -Nomen ' must prove they ·~ 1:.0 could._tal•t ""pr=~~ at 'I02.2il crntribute more than half their husbands' • support. an. ounce on the bl( Londoa free market The Administration argued that the dif-in the teCOOd of the twice;lal!y price fix· . ference in treatment. bet\\-een the sexes ings. This wu '2.50 higher thin the was,jus\ifled ~Y the need for efficiency in morning price, 15.110 blch« thao Frtdly'o administration. . , cJoo108 fllioe and men than ·double the _1_A special thrst-judge fedtral court olflclal' ti.g. IOld price. ...,hlkl.-ibe statute. _ l , t .,, Aitolher gold aource said: "Many lore- )U$tlCe William J. Brennan Jr. an-~.b\W'!rt, are afraid of• new .monetary n6unced the court's judgment in an opi-crifis. For ~ teason they are golnt:·tn nlon which said AlllericB "has had a Jeng great· numbers to buy u mucb gold as and unrortwiate h!Story .of . s e ,x they can afford." discrimiriation . · Other European broken and currency Those vi>tlng for Lt, Frontiero but on dealeJ'I alao linked the gold nish and re- nartower constitutional grounds were newed pressure on the dollar to the re- Chief ·Justice Warren E. Burger and suhant furor over a11eged White Hoose Justices Potter Stewart. Lewis F. Powell invotveriient' ~ the buQlng of the Demo- Jr. and Harry A. Jlliclcmun. cratic Party Waahln~ headquarten. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiii FqR THAT TAILORED LOOK I • GRIECO'$ Tropic•I Welfht, Two.lutfoti Sult i11 1.191 or'Gt-tiy -$111.00, Dtcto• ·,f'd CoOoit Shirt. by UQ!e Shirtm•••r• -$ IJ.00. •. . - . J'Relps c!f{e.a9er ., • N...,.,. ...... Wihhlre. si,.,. •• o.~ ''•"•"·· l1k1w1o4, w .. +1 c~,.. ' t 4 OAIL V PILOT Back to The - Drawing Board DOIJBLE TAltES DEPT. -Somellmes evmll of lhe day leave you with the feel· Ing that everylhlng Is oupposed to be going one dlrtcllcn end it ends up the op. poslle. It even happens on Mother's Day, lor goodoea sake. You know, all you want to do Is take the Mothen In your family out for a little &mday bn!atlut end keep them oot of the ldtcbm for a few hours. Thinking ahead with your usual precision, you call up the restaurant the day before to assure a reserva&n. No, Ibey don't take reaervatlons for fewer than sis penons. No, 10:30 a.m. would be a very JX10r time for Mother's Day breakfast. Geis you in with all the crowd. Everybody wani. to eat Mother's Day breakfast at 10:30. WHY NOT TRY 9 a.m.? Helpful sug: gestloo from tlje restaurant bead man. Doo't worry about a reservation. All will be well at i a.m. · So you arrive with two Mothlt and ....rted family meml>em at 9 a.m. U that's nOt a crowd you'd bate to see what the place looks lilce wllen it really gels jammed. Apologetic restaurant open1tor qgesls there will be a slight wait for a table. You eat Montber's Day breakfast at 10:30 a.m. Just the time you aelecled In the first place, right? Happy Mother's Day. * ANOTHER TYPE OF Mon)'• celebra- tloo al! set doWn at Ramona where they are not having the famed pageant bot rather, a famed temi.s match. Women's tlllist end motbe< Margaret Court is ocheduled to .1!'8' britches from aging former tennis great Bobby Riggs of Newport Beach, tbe big mouth of the net world. Riggs failed to follow Moll!t!r's Dey I script. Wipes up court with Mrs. Court. Happy Molher's Dey. * EVEN TR E ROADS to places fail to follow logic these days, as this dad can attest. Time to take daughter downcoast San Juan Capistrano way to locate yet- unidentilied horse stable. Only known fact ls that stable i! on "the same mad as the Mission." Aha, clues are narrowed. Mission ls on two main roads, one called Ortega Highway and the other, Camino Capistrano. Carefully check phone book. All listed horse stables are on Ortega Highway. Jsn'I that shnple? AD you have to do is drive out the old Ortega and you're sure to find Jllopor borne for horses. Right? Wrong. LONG DRIVE OUT Ortega toms up many sanctuaries for hay-buroen wt all tile wrong ones. Frustrated, you finally stop to inquire d. three very 1utbentic- looldng Capistrano """"°ys. Th e y gesture a lot toward old Missk>n. That's right. Co!Tect horse boardirw house is later located on the wrong road which turned out to be the rf&hl road. * SO TRAT BRINGS you back to Blue Monday, folks. Just look at lllat early moming weather. Sorely it's going to rain buck.... But wail. I know hoW ll>ngs haven't been following the script. Thlng> Just aren't what they seem. Break out the raincoat and e little later, you may wish you'd gone to the beach. M.....,, Mor 14, 1973 Probe of U.S. Boinhing OKU R eds Crying Foul; Con trol Unit to Stud y Charges SAIGON (UPI) -The lnlenallonal COmmllsloo for control and Supervision (ICCS) 8'1'eed today to lnvesllgata Viet Co1111 charges tbal the United States baa been bombing In South Vlelnam wt only U tho Commun!N widen lCCS alr cor- rldon to a lale degree. of a Communist attack Sunday ~ against government milJUa near VI Thanh In the Mekoog Delta 1111 miles soutbw..t ol Saigon. Communlat cuusl- Ues were unkown. Cambodian autboritlea announced to- day a "major victory" by 1ovemment fora!• balU!ng Oomnwnl.sls for nearly eight weeks In and near Takeo, a besieg· ed provincial capltli M miles south of Phnom Ptnh. Heavy flgbt!ng end Intensive U.S. bomb- ing were reporled lrl other parts ol the country, the only Indochina country with no formal cease-fll"e agreement Spokesmen for the cambodlan high military command said cambodlan lroops killed! 6l Communist troops &m- day in figlltlng 111 miles 10uthweat ol Takeo. Their own losses, the spokesmen said, were two dead and two wounded. Informed sources said the United States welcomed the ICCS probe o1 the Viet CO!lg charge that American war planes have bombed, 1traled and made rocket attacks on targets Inside South Vietnam in violation of the Jan. rt Paris cease-fire agreement. It was the first Communist charge of direct U.S. military involvement since lbe Jan. 28 ceese-llre. Watergate W eh Spreading Tr easury Offic ial 'on Le ave' in Wake of Charges !ndoneslen Ambaasador H. R • Dharsooo told UPI correspoodent Tracy Wood, "Our leama are going to ln- vesUgate it, provided they get a security guarantee." Dbarsono ssld the ICCS will lns~t on air safety COrTidors five mlles wide to reach the •Ile of the alleged bombing about 80 miles north of Saigon along Higbway 13. He said the 31>-mile salety corridor proposed by the Viet Cong 11is just too narrow. If they can't fuIOU the requirements, we can't fulfill the in. vestigation." · A Caoadlan ICCS source told UPI's Nguyen Anh Tuyet that the Indonesians proposed the investigation, as requested by the Provisional Revolutionary Govern- 'ment and other ICC'S members con- curred. A Communist concessipn on width of air corridors in the bombing Jn- vestigaNon could break th e deadlock which has blocked the release of the re- maining 252 ·govermnent civilian war prisoners tbe PRG says It holds . Release of the dvlll8n!ba.J been stalled for two weeb: as a result of the disagreement over the width of air safety corridors. In other Southeast Asia developments: Lt. COi. Le Trung Hien. spokesman.tnr . the South Vietnamese c om m a n d , reported that three 105 mm artillery shells struck an ICCS field office 'tl miles north of Saigon shortly before midnight &unday night. Although both sides use 105 mm artillery, Hien said no govenunent guns in the area were firing at the time . JCCS sources said the building is used only in the daytime and there was no ICCS personnel on band at the·time. South Vietnamese military sources also said that nearly 40 of about 100 govern- ment defenders were missing in the wake * * * W ASlllNGTON (UPI) - A Treasury Departmmt ofllclal wluntarUy went oo "adminbtrailve leave" Sunday following . a publlslled report be olfered a Walergale a>ruJpiralor executive clemen- cy In retum for silence. A Treasury spol:esman said Jolm J. Caulfield, 44, aaked for the leave oo his own lnitlaUve and ft was granted "t.hrougb normai cbannelJ ... He Is al least the 11th government (J(. llclal to step aside alter being pubUcly linked to the Watergale acandal . The Los Angeles Times reported earlier Stmday that Caulfiel<f: a former White House aide, held two secret meetings last January with James W. McCord Jr., who was then on trial for coospiracy, burglary mi bogilng In !ht Watergate case. The Times, citing "a source involved in the matter," ..aid Caulfield "repeatedly told McOJnf at these ·meetinp-., , tbal McCord could expect executive clemency in 10 or If months if he remained silent ·- INSULT ADDED TO BIG INJURY PATCHOGUE, N.Y. (AP). -Just across tho road from the boYfiood home of former Atty. Gen. Jolm N. Milcbell the're's a new apartment complex. The name? "Watergate Apartments::.'.._ Cambodia Units Straggle Into, City, Guns Blazing PHNOM PENH. Cambodia (AP) - About 500 Cambodian troops, hungry and unpaid, marched into Phnom Penh today, firing their guns into the air. As they straggled past the capital's principal hotel at luoch time, guests div- ed for cover under restaurant tables and ducked behind trees lll'Ollild tbe swiffi. ming pool. Soldiers complaining they had received no pay for 1 month and no food for three days inarebed In from Plmom Basetb, 11 miles to the oortbW"5t. They said they had left their officers behind and threatened to move on Marshal Lon Nol's presidential palace ii the government failed to pay their wages. They entered the dty, In a thunder of gunfire blazing into the air with automatic rifles and machine guns. Downtown crowds scattered Into shop doorways but the troops showed no hosUllty to civilians, and newsmen saw no looting although a number fJ( soldi""' carried full bottles of liquor. 1be troops wore blue regimental scarves and bendannas with their tattered camouflage uniforms. Many soldiers who recenUy traosferred to the elile 7th Divison were in their early teens, car· rying weapons aJmost as big as lhemselves. A coovoy of trucks aCOJmpanied the column, but the troops said they march- ed In to dramatize their p6ght. They converged on the anny pay of. fice, where they were met by lhe division commander, Brig. Gen. Um Khauv, who promised all would be paid ii they assembled at a huge dty sports sladium a mile away. Waving blue and red C&mbodian flags tied to the barrels o( their weapons and whooping, the troops moved of! in a pouring rain to stadium parking lot. The anny paymuter hastily produced a sack oC money and the troops fonned up to collect the equivalent of about $17 each -one month's pay for an enlisted man. out ol. this he iw to buy his own food. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE O!livrry of tht D1llr Pilot is guar1ntttd M_,..,.,..,rlt•Vt II "" 49 Mt li.vt ''""' ,..,... •r J:» "'"·• tfll lflll ""r cooy will M IWMlllt M rw, C1lll t rl llkt1t V1tlll 7:)1 , ..... 111wr111r lflll '"""'' II ,.. • Mt rm! .... .,..,.. c..,. ., ' t .lft, ......... , ..... '·'"· S,,.,.t,, Ctll t..C I C...., Wiii ....... , 19 fMI. Ctlll trt llWltll llMH If 1,111. Ttttpllones Mttt Or11ttt c-1, "'"' ....... "2"'1121 N..-tllwt.t K..,llllftttl lladl •"' Wnl"'""'"" .......... S4f.1nt It• ci.-,., <•'""'"" k•c". St• J••• C1,+ltr"", Dollll "91111, Sffltl l.tt\lfll, i...-Mltwt .... m-mt at the trial end accepted impl'isonment." The newspaper said the meetings took place by prearraogemeni In the woods along the George Wasbinglon Memor!sl Parkw'By across the Potomac River from W&3h!ngtoo. McCord later was coovtcted In con· nection with the June 17, 1972. OOgglng of Democratic national headquarters at the Walergate. C&ulfield ls a IS.year veteran of the New York City Police Department. He spent three years oo the White House stall, u an aide to presidential assistant John D. Ehrlichman end later to White House counsel John W. Dean III, working on law enforcement policy. Caulfield moved to the Treasury Department a year ago -after the alleged m<etings with McCord. Since Ju. !y l, he has held the ttUe of ass!stanl director for criminal enforcement in the department's Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms Bureau. ' McCord ll3l! teililied that be repeatedly turned down iimilar offers of clemency relayed to him by ro<:oospirator E. Howard Hunt In his sworn testimony that has been made public, McCord never mentioned such an .offer from Caulfield: McCord did say that C a u II i e I d recruited him to become security chief for President Nixon's re-electlon cam- paign. The Los Angeles Times' report.was the second recent reference to executive clemency in the Watergate case. Newsweek maga.z.i.ne earlier quoted Dean as quoting John J:)rlichman as saying President Ni.Ion 6.ild consider clemen- cy for Hunt. * * * UPIT ....... Scotches Rumor Fonner Beatie Paul McCartney • denied widespread rumors the world famoWI rock group would reunite. He oaid the group may . do things for each' other but ·. 0 th.ere will be no comeback." Magazine Says Martha Treated for BreakdUwn · NEW YORK (UPI) -Time magazine said Sllnday that Martha Mllcbell, wile of former Attorney General John N. Mitchell has undergone treatment for a nervous breakdown. But Mrs. Mitchell returned tO her rnidtaWn i[iartmern Son· day and denied it. At the Mllcbells' midtown Manhattan apartment, dOOrman Edward Garber said Mrs. Mitchell and a female friend entered the wilding about 4:30 p.m. and "seemed oltay -she was In good· spirits." Garner, who said he persmally bad not· seen Mrs. Mitchell in a week, said she and the friend Mio drove tho car i/I which they arriyed made two lripa. between the car and the apartment car- rying "flowers, a plant, and &me bags.". He said be thought they "came from Ill! country." ... NOW THRU MAY 26, 1973 • . WE HAVE FARM FRESH MILK DAILY COUPON OFFER . ' ' l 11111111111111111 WITH THIS COUPON a HALF' GALLON • ORANGE 59¢: : JUICE REG. : • COUPON GOOD THlU MAY U, lt7J, 75t • 1•1111111111111111~1111 f I 1111111111111111~ WITH THIS COUPON 1 flmi2~00ZEN I ICE :t·;ARS 99ti' 2 .xizi;;; REG. 11- couPON GOOD THlU MAY ... ""· $1.26 11111111111111111 11111111111111111 1111111111111111 .WITH THIS COUPON : W~~~:EHIS COUPON I ' • 6 PPEPSloz. 69t i GRAEGGSHITE 2 $ia~ i I A[G. I 2 FUTS REG. " I COUPON GOOD THl U MAY 26, 1'7l. B9t • COUPON GOOD THRU MAY U, lf71, $1.65 ... Ill 1111111111111111111 llllllllllllllllllJ 11111111111111111 11111111111111111 I ' f t '· Most of U.S. Cool, Wet WITH THIS COUPON 1 WITH THIS COUPON I 2 -11/2 LB. LOAVES a FARMER JOHN I WEBER'S 2 • · • 1/2 LB. PKG. 2 ' 1 ·, Thunderswrms Dampen Mi.dwest, Oregon, California ' • BREAD , !6~: .. SAUSAGE i79t: 1 1.IMIT: 4 1 1 1 • COUPON GOOD THlU MAY ... tt71. '96 ~ VALUE• • COUPON GOOD THlU MAY ... lf71. AEG.94•. 111111•111111111111 1111111111111111111 . -11111111111111111 11111111111111111 WITH THIS COUPON 1 WITH THIS COUPON , I 1 LB. TUB 1 I GOLO•N•SWEET SOFT I SINGLE STICK 2 dort" 1 : --~~~m~~~~~~' 31,\~,~ i ~ ~·-!.~~[~~-~ ~!.~ i ••1111111•11111•1111111 '11111111111111111111111 ., • 1814 If, Edinger St,, Santa Ana , Calif, • 1116 S, Standard, Santa Ana, Calif, • 425 State College Bl'fd,, Anahe111, C4li!. • 10751 Yelltllinster, Gardm Gron, Cllit. • • ,. • 12811 Gardm Grote Bl'rd.t Garden Gro>re, Cali!, • 2721 orance..OliT• Rd., Orange, cal.if, • 1712 s.nta Ana St., Costa Mea, Calit, • 1927 w. 17t11 st., S111ta Ana , Cllit. ' J, " ( ' I :1 J I ' J i I • ,j ~ 4 I I J l • , • .... • • -Ora~e ~~!!-.... .. .._ --N.Y. StH.ks I • I . •• VOL. 66~ NO. 134, 2 SECTIOl"S. 21 PAGES • 0~6E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY-14, 1973 N TEN CENTS ~ ~ AcUon --.., tbe beelll of an olfer ·by the lrVlne CM!pmy to turn over Up- per Bay 1anda .to -Isl ..- for iipn\ocltite uae by tbe public. To4a1'• lldion .... !he" (irst by any public cillldal• toward taking 1lP t b. ...mpmy on Its oiler. The-""11' iepla!jn' fonrardOd a letler to· Secretary at· lnterljr 1lAicen C. B .. ~Indicating the intent to Introduce the Up S.y IeplaUm. Tbey asked for c:ooperllioll and ~ from t be · ·-.. ' < ... . . . Nixon Adminlstratioo, The text at thelt. lelter Indicated, "It Is our undenlandllic lbat. over the put several years the Department ol tbe Jn. terior bu· b e',e n .~uctin8: studies of U-Newport ·Bay, to . determine tbe feasibility o( Its mlabllabment in wbole, or In port, u • a 1Ultlonal wildlile refuge. We are 'Nrther advised the department bas -sollclllng data fnllJ1 other fed-eral and lllote agt!lldea in the preparaUon of these studies. • ... ·-. ' 0 Recent events have made the com· · pleUao and publlcaUoo of the dtport- ment'a c:oocluslona lncreaain([ly . .,...t 11\B'O baa been . a 'reciskln at the land esi:hange agreement betwoen tbe Oow!ty of Orange and the lrv1ne Company. At a meellng beld ...... uy in San Francisco, the Irvine O!mpany .,_ to transfer the ~y lmmedlately to the piblic fee' tta: uee, in e1rhange. for an asaurance at just compeosalioll In the near future, and the reeolution rt related matters. "!joo>aver, juxtapooed against lb e s e events Is tbe faCt tbeR bas been no ~·plan~ "liirdior the poleDUal use at Uppei; Newport Bay or the preserva- tion at Its ,._..... advanced by any of tbe ~Isl agenclto ulftl8ing a iurlodlelll!>al ht~·ln !be area. "Tbll. llllCO<liioly about tbe fate of Upper Newport Bay sbould not be unduly ~ At pment, we know of no pn!(ll'&lll to protect the extsllng wildlife and recreaUonal values of the Upper Bay. We are concerned that any unnecessary delay in establishing any designated por· tlon of the area as a refuge may place lbeae values in jeopardy. "TherefQr!l, we feel It would be help- ful to bave available to .,. at the earliest )IOSSible moment, Y'Mll' deportment's re- port oo the wildlife values present In the area, the Importance of the preservatton of these values, tbe amount ol land which (See UPPER, l'qe Z) a • '!l -eo Jet Flight Curb Ruled ' . Not Legal . Jn a decision that could affect opera· lil!n of Oranse County Airport, tbe U.S. SUpreme Court ruled 5:-4 today ttii!"local agencies cannot: impose curfews on jet fllihts from private abports. llobert Nutmalr, an assistaill Orange County couneel who · deo!s ' wltb airport affairs,' >aid the rulinC pnlbalil""'"'"ld DOI allect"am !em! ... ~ .... oiti port bu! might have laat lenn -. !1We have • pub&lf': -airjlolt," Nutliian daj's rulili( ooocemod • airport, whidl is a vtry ~ : ~'.But it Is possible that alrlfnel atlempl to use the roUnc to ,.,,.,.. O,rfen they now have:• be said. • : Jet takeolfs are cutT<l!\l1 banned lrom Oranse Coonty Airport belw.em 10 p.rn. 8l'd 7 a.m.. landings are bailDed after 11 p.m. Ofllcllli lrom :AJ..-. Ibis lllGIDing tjOcllned ootnm!lll .. ·!be."""" ~ Tiiey also declined to say whether the ill'line wanted to nm fll&llts -durlni hours Ouit now are restricted: . : "'It would be pre111111ptous at II' to oay ~ther we want late nliht fllihts until liO can ... a lull . ten· OI tbe ,cDurt de-~lSlon." an Airwest ~ ~ ... '. ·Alrwe:st ts cµrren y oPOt'.!!th!g .. !111 a 11¥>nti>t<>-month lease al tbe airport. .:.llobert Clifford, president at Air Cali- fornia , .said he doubts the recent·.case ~ apply at Orange County Airpori. "But even if it did give us a legal precedent to push for nlgllt late lllghts," :: (See JETPORT, Pip ZJ ' ~: Luggag~~F.-lill:s · Fr~m Airplane An·' Oi'ange County A I r p o r .t ,runway was i.n.advert~ntly . : "bombed'' by. -. ~ -T/llt : Airlines cOmmilter_ .. plane this "'~· . ' Tbe Dellavilland Twin Oller • bound lot 1"" Angeiea Jlrol!pO!I . • Uu'ee p1 ..... of .bolPP lrom an • ,hDprcperly clneed "1Mpatbl!"'t "Oil tal!Oolf, an a1r11ne·apo1i11nw>._aald )oday. -. . The garment bag, -..... and ; suitelie were retrieved altei the 'oilol turned baCk and. laniled lhii . ·~Jane, . . 1 'Mtere was no damage.,to the £OD- .tents.although the briefcase ·open i . upon lm_l>act, tcattering papers on 1 • the nmway, according to l he 1 spokeilllf'•· ... A.DS IN PIWT -IU/tfBEE -A.IJONG ,t 'onlf'tool: one call (Iha-·-) ., jbe -d.r that !be followlna ad ran· to lfiill the third -In -lUll for 'fb1s .m.ru-; , Wllll acli<lr\ like thll ii It 1111 woncla- that ll!ls H\IOllD&IOO BiaCll -ts a loYal mer ol Dally Pilot dfdllltd » ~--? .... -,...11111 ill • lllil kind ol pul1lna JIO'll<I'· Dial Ille --,liJ>e: MMl'll. -- Two Solar Panels Foul Up . . CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) -Sky· lab, America'• ftrR ~ atatloa, rocket- ed Into orbU .fldly' bot falJwre of tw• tlOlar _panels ti -threatened to J....0-.Aemlnlto. . From Wire Ser\'jces CAPE KENNEDY -America's Skylab S~" ll!Jti<m 'tut ~~~to ~ • ' ill Wlfte,.1~: ~ !Al_ll!l 'm Ii!@ ~-..16eir.. . ~ll!Cil.//t.lotil.1t Tllefiliy. • . "'1Mww..-.ut'p.•ilqesi .,..,,,: iti ed, ...met Into • ,_.,,.,1ec1 ~ high -at IO:• a.m. (~.Ii minutel after a fliwless launch. Moonwalk veteran Olarlel "Pete"· . Conrad, Dr. Joaepb P. Kerwin, the na• !Ion's first space physician, and aerooiautl<al engineer Paul J. Wela are set for'. launch al 10 a.m. Tueaday. They plan to spend a ttc:ord 28 days In orbll 1be three aStrOnautl watched aa their space Iaboiatoiy rvcl<eted out of si&hl in- to a cloud cOVer. 1 • ''llhe ·smooth ·flight Into opace marted a new eni hi the U.S.• ,P... program. Pro- ject Skylab 11 dellgned to pull> hick the frontier or .hUman' ~urance In' earth or&it and <Uh In on the prOmloe of spaceflight. . · · Once in orbi~ Skylab quickly separated _ , , , .. • u", • . . ...... . from its ape.nt second stage rocket. Five SKYLAB· F~NS":USE'SHADE ;UMBRELL;AS-AS ROCKET L:"IFTS OFF' mmiltes later, Skylab's protect Ive ·Giant Sat um y,p~s Fl rat Orbiting' SPac9 Station cocoon-like noS. cover separated In four . . ' ~M~~ ' FBI Marksman S'hoots . , .., t· G.anman. Awp-':'fuet·Tatrk ' -' <. answer quesUoos shooted".to big!. IJoyd was being sent to tbe edge of tbe link to wave hls arnu In reply while Ai!Omathy 1ie!a"a 11111 "pointed at him. · ·_Jobn Murpha, a s1lpervlsor • {or Loc:ltheed, said Abernathy drove· to the i...Ckbeed tsnt fium factllty abojJI 4 a:m . and captured tbe. hro men . .A sjlollesman for the Multnomah Clounty sberlfl'1 office said shots were fired then, . but '"" o~e was hurt. .. .. ..,.\:,.-, Efforts .. · made to ·drain t~ \ank through underground , s but ,they were not sucoeisful. ! · t Then Sktlab, following orders rrom•its onboatd e!~tronic brains, slowly swung its lilgh-powered solar observatory into position. Missjon control in Houston reported it secUrely latched 1n place. The astronauts plan to use It to conduct the most extensive solar studies ever at· tempted . The astronauts and thousands of others in the Cape Kennedy area watched as the big booster roae slowly from l!s pad, gradually easing over on a northeast course as Its five first~tage engines belched a Jlery ta\! Z,200 feet loog. It was the fiha1 planned. Olilit for tbe Saturn 5, the world's largest and most powerful rocket~ which wu built for the Apollo program. The astronauts' smaller, 2ktory Sat. um IB rocket stood oo anotberr B,700 feet away, awailln& tbe st to blast off Tuesday ii all -we . Also observing ...,.. the members ol Skylab 2 and 3 crews. who are to rocket up to the same station later thiJ year, each ror 56-day visits. l'OR'.)'l.AND, Ore. (UPI) -A man anned wiih a rifle and shotgun today took · two .,ho$iges, climbed atop a storage tank l'Jlllaittlng highly· explosive je\.fuel,.;and ~atened to blow it up . ,.--.,.----,.---·'---..'-----~--------, • The manr ideolified as William Howard ··1 . Abemaihy, 25 fired several shots at Lo h. · • ':' Kill p• h ;.s ,:J:~~e;~~h~ . .. ~ tn1:11~ -s 1tc er. gallons of f1ieI in the tank. • Tbe 51).fool.hJgb lank Is located in an 'V s ddl h k JC -lleld neat PortlaJ\d Airport. -which 'D rom a e ' ac was .clneed for a short llJJie but then ' . . ~ ~" Abomathf -Iii employe of Lockheed • . ..,,......; , A1t'IW11••r&an1ceoattbealrport,aent . A llalllnill& bolt ....... :John w .. wade Jr., 19, Sad~eback Col· otqm Ward WI.lb one hostap that if 'hls )ege ~ $WldlJ 1114_ :tntured .aeven otber J>el'IODS dunng a aeml- --wife MCI· cblldrea were ilOl . pro basebllt',_..,. .iii. ~e Havuu City, Am. . ......,_ to Ille· -by ,_, be would . . : ..,ADI • -111R "-.. v· j ...:... ' . wl din ~tbe lank~· .. , • , .., .•. _,,_,.., ::i,. • .,...,.. •9• 1e o • .,..lbln~ was n g up to Depiilaa said the lank with a caj)acity ......_ I .. tch•wbein Ille 'big bolt struck, knocklhg every player ln at 11 -pllGna ~ be exploded • Ille Infield llld °'*9eld oil. their feet. ~ -· bJ ~ lhot: ' :All~·oi*ator Nld the ll&hlnlng vaporized the youth's The boolop, SleVO Oalllng, ·a-Loc:i<heecl ~Ci' I I OJJ!Y ~·· It atruck lh..-young man 's head, ~ returned .to !be tsnt after • . ' • , . .. ._,._ 1JiO lllellii• bul late!' wia WAI ~ 1'"t,..ichiJ!g froin U.. lllJllds and ran scream--·--.,. lnl to 1111 < • • • ~ .U::C. wu 1c1enuned .,· • · Wall8 'IJii,,t_ 1111' Ill ~..;.c~. He'· atWJded Mission' Viejo Ga ~. ,,,.._ of the Lockheed ~ !lcbloI liroa)b Ill• jilnlor )'ear and pll}9d botfi baseball and terminal. football !hlN. 1118 ,p'areqit .tecently moved ·to Lake Hav~511., See PGrfland police o111cer Dale Allftln Pap 1e. for: delllle4atory illd plclure1. . :-------·--~,.---11111 ~a.,. -... Uoyd to • • 1 • • ' • Sl·I , . ..,,... 1 o ..... .... , .. f I ' ' I I I ' I ' htl lellf'Ch ·M07fS , SL•2 s.t ....... ' ••OI'••• 011t•t• ---+ ' \ \ I I I I I . 11-IHTR'f ' + ~ l'~AIHOOWN 11•• l:M JWM 12ril ~.£ ~... --::--~· -.. - too 111n .. u~wrhwe1t .,,.. ..... UPIT ....... HERE'S .HOW AMERICA'S FIRST SP~CE STATiON WILL START Th-Mtn 11! Follow U....rthly 'Home . Into Historic Orbit T.,.aday ' Hu .n.tingtpn Crew Views Launch of First s~kyl:ab By TERRY COVJUE Al the peak of activily, in May of 1972, ·CH "" .,.,., '"" ,..,. there were 2,600 workers at the Hun· The United Slates fired a shot today tington Beach plant concentraling on which you might say was "heard around Skylab I. Skylab workers accounted for the l\'Orld." more than haU the plant's work force. VlbraUons from the Skylab lallllclllng While the end of Skylab means tbe beginning of a new step Jn space ex· were. certalnJy felt in Huntington Beach ploraUon, It also means .more to hun· wbere most .of It was designed and built dreds of local Skylab workers. et McDonnell llouglas ~"'lll'uUca. The sad part of lhelr project Is that Top englneen ga~ Iii a spec:lal many, il not most, of them are now out cmtrol room thla lllOl'il!Dc .. to watdl tbe . of work. They must seek new jobo, a lawichlng. They'll uae tbat control. room """"what dilflcult tssk in the field of throughout Skylab'i ltO ilays of manned aerospace. orbit to back up the ·u-.. Space • In mJd.AprlI, Mcllonnell Doiiglu ... Center In case illy probleml artae. DOtll1Ced it would lay off 2,000 Skylab E)iglneerl In Huhlin8too Beach will be workers over a period at nine lnonths. called on to answer any queatlooa which 1boae layolfs would allect Hllllllnltoo may come. up ~ !be fllchl. Beach, Sants Monica and tbe Cape Ken· Local reaetlnlno \1111-momlng's sue-nedy facility. cesaful sbol Wu, as ~. one at joy and .rellel, tbou&h Mcllonbell Douglas of· fictals did not bave much to aay about It. Hugh R. Bowe, exdve' asslstsnt to · the chairman and president o!Mcllonnell Douglas Astronautics, lummtd up the company's official View ! 1 _ "We're proud to be a part of Skylab's fint team. We are antlclpaling with great interest the ben<fits tO humanity dire'dly attributable to, Skylab 1. America's firs~ orbiting )pace ataUon." Tbe space ""!tsbop, which will be home for thtee 'lepll'lte three-man crews • at astronauts, Wai olllcWly flnlsbed in Hmtinaton Beacb Sept._•, when It WU turned OYtr to NASA amcaall. McDonnell DoHpa bid a $111) million contract to build lhO Skyla~, a partJally complote ~ unit Ind certain. "°"1tf oupport.~ Hwigry Hikers Fed • MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UP() ·-A woman COJD?l•ined to police Sunday ihat about 100 of tl,000 .walkers In a buQler hlke .. tole 1100 wort!I ol food oll lier catertna w8i0"· Mrf· Lory llarrlloo; 13, of Oak Cree~. 18ld the hlken, who marched to.r1llo money for ZO local, na· tional and inttmallonal projects. sraJ>bed the food from the open dilplays . Welidter · The 5W1 is aUU on vac1tion along the Orange Coast. and weather e1· perts doa't,expect to see It.before Wednesday. Low clouds and fog in the mornJni hours. partly cloudy In tbe anon-. Hlgba In tbe IOI. INSUJE TOD,\" Anotller goomi...,.t official lmk<d to Waur(IQU ..,. 1141 p()llf "" "admlnlltrotivc i.o.." a/lcT report he off<Ttd. a • .,.. aplralor •Zfcutivc <1"m<11CJ1 In return for silcnc«. Stol'1/, Page 4. . .. ..-., " -· . ,........ ........ --I ''"'"' ,..,. ll ...... ...., Plcll Mlrii• 1•tt ·-. =-. 'I -......... --~ .. ' •• ,Z DAILY PlLOT H "-· 11111•. 197) · 'In Bhrlichman's Sa fe' • • •• • .. . • -.• ~ Ellsb8rg Wiretap Fil~, F ()llnd , ~ ~ ; . ~. ., WASHINGTON (AP ) -Aeling FBI Di- rector WUllam D. Ri>::kelshaus sald today that the mlsllng wiretap flle in the Daniel Ellsberg·Pentagon Papers ctue has been found in a safe at lbc off1ce of former prf.l!idential aide John DI. Ebrlichman. Files on soroe l~ others involving 4. newsmen and 1% government officials were also found In the safe, he said . Ziegle r Says Nixon Was In the Dark WASHINGTON (UPI) -White House press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler reiterated today denials that President Nixon had any knowledge of the bugging of the Watergate or efforts to cover it up. Ziegler, however, declined under repeated questions by reporters to ilsUe a flat denial of a Newnteek magazine report that .former White House OOUllkl John W. Dean never made an in- veallgatlon and report ol the Watergate which Nllon attrlbutod to him last Aupll. (Relatad 11«1 .. , Page 3). ZlegJer said the White House would stand on remarks Nixon made in a televised speeeh April 30 in which he said he bad been misled by members of his stall until lat March Into thinking the Watergate wai far less serious than he * riow considers it. FromP .. el UPPER ... must he IC<JU!red to insure their pro- tection, and the relatiOlllblp ol the wild· life values to open space and recreation values also present in the Upper New- port Ba,y. "We want to know the department's recommeodaUon on whether the preaer- vatlon ol Upper Newport Bay abould be solely a lederal project or whether a e<> aperative program involving state ,a n d local governments iJ feasible. Finally, we need to have the department'&, esti, mate of the cost of acquisition of the property. "We are prepared lo introdu(\C ·at the propitious time, legislation to ~bil>h a national wildlife refuge in lJpper New- port Bay if that seems to be the best proposal after we've reviewed the de- partment's report. Toward that end, we invite your suggestions about language for the legislaUon, and we solicit a n d would urge your support and coopera- tion in getting the measure through Con· gre!ll!.--" St-eel Compan y Boosts Prices NEW YORK !AP) -Bethlehem Steel Corp., the nation's secood largest steel company, followed the lead of major steelmakers today and boosted the prices of sheet and strip products. Thursday, U.S. Steel. the biggest steelmaker, announced it was rais- ing prices on high volume sheet steel an average of 4.8 percent, ef-\ feclive JWle 15. Other steelma,kers, including Jones & Laughlin, Wheel- ing-Pittsburgh, K a I s e r and Armco, announced similar hike.s the lollowlng day. The proposed in~ have en- countered OIJPO.'itoo from the Cost of Uving Council, however, whlc.h says it plans to review U.S. Steel'• justification for the booet. OIANal COAST ' DAILY PILOT Tnt ,0 •1»01 COii! DAILY l'llOT, ,.llh-.tiid'I II CDIT!fllned Jnt Nt~·P"H' It 111.>bl!SIUld bl' l1't Or•»0• Co11t Publl1hl»0 Comrwonv. $f1M- r1tt t1UllOfll lrt 1111bll1Md, MOflillV ttlroutl'I • l"rlll1y, •or Cosll Mt .. , N""""9rl ltKh, Hunllno1on l 11chll"Oun111n v111ev, Ll91o111& INdl, lr•lne/Slddlloblell Ind Jin Cllmtnltf Jin J11<1n C.11!11r-. A 1tngl1 ,..glonll edllion 11 PllO!khld 11~.-•lld 5und1n. Tiii prlMlPll PllO!ltl'llnp ,La!ll h It l)I) Wesl ltt Slrett, COJl1 M111, Ctllltmlf, ntH. lohtrf N. W1H .. rnllll"N Ind .. '*lltlloer J 1c.li l. Curl ty Vl(t .. rnlllllll ~ ~II Mantttr Thtll'l11 k'11..;I ElltPtr Th11111' A, Murphlnt MttllOlrlti IEdlltt l . P1f1r k.rltt NNW' a.tell City 1111111 --Offko °1JJJ N1wp1tt l111l1w114 M1/ll"1 A4ltlr11u P.O. 101 1175, tlUJ ---, .... MIMI lie Wttl Ill' f!IHI ~ ... di: m llw11t """"u• H1111INIM ~h: 1'91S INdl loultv*'"CI JM c""'9ni.: JU Nllflll II (.emlftt 11: .. 1 , .. .,. •• 17141 '41-4JJ1 C' WW Mw_.I M1 '41·1671 """llM' lf71,. OHonfl C.Ut P•IWi'"' ~. -"""' .--.. llllltltlllofta, ...... ...,... tr liYwllMfnlMI "'""' fM1 .. 1¥ IL 111 """'9Wt Nfdll ,_. ..... _,,.,, ...... . ......... ~ .... llC..."IMM. ~ ·---h' CMTlllP ..... """"""' W NII D.lf fMfl!Mr1 ......,.. r ,..,.. tut IMl!IMY. The recent nvelatlon that Elbberl'• telephone convmaUona had been tapped by the FBI while he was staying at the houoe ol M«ton Halperin -then an aid• to Dr. Henry Kissinger -was a central elelllllll citod by Judge Matthew Byrne in dlsmialing lhe government'• c a s e against Ellsherg. PYior to the dlsmlasal, Byrne asked to I • ' • ' ... the lop ol tbe wiretaps but the FBI uid it -wiable to locate them. Ruckelsbaus told a ...,. confe"'1CO that that Ille and llOlllO If othen con- e<mlng wiretaps which ranged lrom May 11169 to February of 1'71 "were lo- catod in the White llouae, having been flied in a Ille ID l\lr. Ebrllchmln'I outer office." Child Care Defended Cranston Speaks in Mesa, Vows Fight Over Cuts Sen. Alan Cranston told a C.Osta Mesa audience this weekend that he is prepared to fight Nixon Administration proposals to reduce federal child care funds. "Adequate day care centers are eeaen- tial to help mothers gel oll weliare and Into productive, paylnf Jobe," the Spirit leading Guadalupe Race In Both Times Bob O'Brien's Sf.foot yawl Spirit from California Yacht Club was standing off Guadalupe Island at 8 a:.m. today and was leading the 12-boat race fleet on both elapsed and correctecftimej: Word from the escort veWl La Fiesta was that Spirit would round the island this morning and head for home on the ~mile race. Weather in lhe vicinity of the island was overcast with light winds. Se<ond on elapsed time behind Spirit was Jim Seal's Ollumbia 50 sloop Loco Viente II ana behind Loco Viente W85 Jack Bibb'.s Columbia 50 Yawl Intermei- ro. Corrected time JX15ition.s are: 1. Spirit, 2. Loco Viente, 3. Intermezzo. C1ass A: 1. Spirit, 2. Loco· Viente, 3. Intermezzo. Cla.ss B: 1. Decision, Pa u I Burger, DRYC Z. Swilt, Jack Mallinckrodt BYC 3. Tallsnian, Bob Williams,. BYC. PHRF: 1. Leprechaun, W h 1 t n e y Collins, LBYC 2, Matangi, Ed carpenter. BYC 3. Kismet Bob Wills CYC. (For earlier story see Boating Page 21.) Nudie Raiders Ke eping Wa tch ·Over Mesa Bars Costa Mesa police department vice of· ficers •are poised for further raids on the Fire Houae night spot today If com- pliance with a new anti-nudity law is not met. Sgt. John Regan, chief of the vice and narcotics detail. said his men would m"ake periodic cheeks on the 17th Street soda pop parlor throughout the day. If nudity persists, so will vice arrests under sections 61300-61305 of the Costa Ptlesa Ordinance Code. The sections pro- hibit nude entertainment in places where food and drink are sold. Offkers raided the Fire House twice on Friday and once on Saturday, arresting a total of six persons, several of them more than once. There were no arrests Sunday. Regan said one of the raids Saturday had the effect of shutting down the Fire House. ''We took everybody and there was no one left to keep it open," he ex- plained. After the employes bailed out and resumed operation of the Fire House, Regan said his men visited the place again and found all the dancer s clothed . "It \Yas my impression that they didn't want to dance nude any more. There was one girl who wa s technically in violation because or the clothes ~he was wearing but she covered herself up. I got the feel- ing they didn't want any more of this type of arrest action," Regan said. • To make certain all Fire House employes understood the new ordinance and its application , Regan said he counseled them personally. "They have all been advised of the sec- tion. They have no excuse to break the law &fain. U they break II, they know it will be them, not their employer, who must suffer the consequences." Newport Officer Discovers Bod y A New port Beach policeman chec king a report of a suspicious person in a ca r parked at the Fashion Island shopping center Saturday discovered the body of a Santa Ana woman who had apparenlly taken her life. Patrolman Ron Rodgera notod 14 preocrtpllon drug viols were found with Marpret E. Jones, 41, who lay on the ~ck oeat with the cer radio 1Ull playing. A note uplalnl~ despondency over Ill health was turned over to Orange Coonty coroner's depuUea by lnveotlg1tlng police officers. • , California Democrat .said. His remarks were prepared for a public forum sponsored Saturday by the Children's Services Council of Orange County on the Orange Coast CoUege cam- pus. Day care centers, Cranston believes, "alWare needed sO that mothers already worldug can continue work." Cranston oaid that reatrictlng eligibility of children for day care aervkes would have "grave consequences, particularly here in California." 'Ille proposed cutback> would exclude more than 22,000 California d!lldren lrom day care programs but Crarutoa said h• and 40 other senators are pledged to see they never occur. The four cutbacks under consideration would affect progra?M involving pre- school children, children of working mothers , children of migrant workers and childrfn of college-student parents. ' • • Building Permit Issuances Total $28.5 Million New statewide development controls enacted over the past year have ap- parently had little effect on the number and value of building permits issued in Ne.port Bea<:b since Jan. I. Building Officer Bobby Fowler said t~ day the •ctty Issued 15.7 million worth ol pennits In Aprll 'lirlnglng the total valua· lion so far this year to $28.5 million. That's nearly double the value during the same period last year. Fowler said many of the projects, unl~s they are exempt for one reason or another, still must clear the South Coest Regional Qutal Conservation Com- mission before they can be built. Single lamily homes lead the way dur- ing April with a total valuation of 12.8 million tor f/1 houaes. Fowler said the largeat single permit Wa.5 for a $93,000 house at 'El Augusta Lane owned by Harold Hartley. More than 12.5 mlllioo worth of permits were Wued to the Dooald Bren Company IO< conatructlon ol 81 home! in the uteimon ol. Harbor View Homes. Fowler said the biggest single com- mercial permit Wa.5 for t h e Don Koll Company's $893,600 office building at 4040 MacArthur Blvd. 'lllat was followed by Walter Bolello's $350,000 Velvet Turtle restaurant in Fashion Island and a $280,000 restaurant by Harry Healy at 4243 Martingale Way. Fowler said the total valuation or permits issued in the first 10 months of the fiscal year is aboug $94 .S mlllion - nearly $30 million ahead of the entire last fiscal year . Action Starts In Attorney's Perjury T~wi Jury selection began today in the Orange Cowtty Superior Court trial of Newport Beach attorney Everett Eldon Stone. who is accused of offering a witness $1 ,000 to provide false testimony in the lawyer's trial on lewd cmduct charges. Judge H. Walter Steiner was appointed today by presiding Judge Bruce Sumner to take the bench in the trial of Stone, 42, Stone is charg<d with soliciting perjury and bribing a witness. It is alleged that Stone offered the witness 11,000 and actually peld him $500 in return for a false acccotmt of an in- cident involving Stooe and a policeman In the restroom ol a Santa Ana parl<. Stone was lound guilty of lewd conduct and fined $500 by Municipal Court Judge Paul Mast after the polic.man told the jury that the lawyer made Improper ad- vances "-"hile both m~ occupied the rest room. S-. who lives In Newport and prac> tlces law in Santa Ana, also faces disciplinary action by the stat{ bar ol Cal~omla on the lewd conduct conviction. His ;appeal in that case has been rejected by the superior Cown appellate division. Ash Sale Contested WASHINGTON (UPI) -Rep. Les Aa_pln ([).Wis,) wanta to ltnow whether, ahd on what torml, Roy L. Ash sold about ll!0,000 lharu ol Lltlon lndultrtea •tock after be relltned as prealdont ol that firm to become federal budcet director. Ri>::kelaliaus 11ld all the wiretaps had been pl~ after President Nllon - and specllk:alty Kissinger -aired their concern to the FBI that leaka to the news media could be imperiling jnter· national 0it8oilatloni relative to the war in Vietnam and Strategic Arms Limita· tion. But the acting directir sald a fll'limln- ary look confmned no such dangen to his knowledge in that none of the indi· viduab who were tapped had been pros- r:cuted or deprived of their government pools. Ruckelshaus said the search for t h • m .. culminatod after agents interviewed Robert Mardian, fom;ier assistant at- torney general, at hls home in Phoenix, Ariz. and learned from him that t b e y might atlll be at the White House. According to Ruckelshaus, Mardian claimed that former FBI Assistant Di· rector W. C. SuJllvan removed the files from the FBI because he felt "that Mr. Hoover might use the records in some maM er against the attorney general or the President." Sullivan. Ruckelshaus said . "does not affirm" f.1ardian's ver- sion . In any event, Ruckelshaus said, SUili- van dellvel'!d the flies to Mardian who then took them to the White House. Ruckellbaus said the FBI recards, In- cluding notations by the late J. ¥,gar Hoover, indicate t bat then-Atty. Gen. John N. MitcheU later told Hoover that the r~.. had been dtstroyed. Mitcheul has denied making such a statement. Poppy Sale " Ruckelahaus said that he had gone to the White House personally Saturday to retrieve the wiretap files, and at ooe point "bad to ann wrestle w i t h the Seen!! Service" to gel them. Mendy COulter, 11, poppy girl of American l..eB'.ion Auxiliary, New-· v port Harbor P<>st 291, !iells season's first Memonal poppy to Newport Beach Mayor Donald Mcinnis. Small , red, crepe paper poppies serve as reminders of thooe who died in battle for their country. Flowers will be sold throughout Newport Beach tliis Friday and Saturday. 1 -·--1'i'oe~fi!'u!ed'for~re4 needy..veterans-..Alld.l!!~amilies....o:_ ~ Boys Club Swim . Lessons Slared For Harbor Area Swimming instructors at the Boys Club of the Harbor Area are hoping to make a big splash this summer with children of all ages . They are offering swim lesaons begin- ning June 11 at the Central Branch, 594 Center St., Costa Mesa. There are .si.1 different cliwes for non- swimm.e~ 'and aw~s of varying degrees ,of proficiency. AU will he held between 9 a.m'. and 11:30 a.m. and noon to 2 p.m .. Monday through Friday. Cost of 1nstrUctlim is $22 for children under 2, $20 for 2-3-year-olds, $16 for f..&. year-oJds, $12 fQr children 12 and older, and $10 for intermediates and advanced Swinlmers. A 50 P.ercent deposit must be paid at the time of registration. For s~fic ~tra~Qri information call the Boys Club, 548-9387. Newport Plan. Topic Of. Ci tizens' Meet Frbm Pflfle I JETPORT .. ; he said. "we wouldn't want to attempt to do anything that the community does not want. I want to stress that as sroogly as possible." In a dlspule between ·the clty ol Bur· hen); and Lockheed Air Terminal Inc., the Supreme Court ruled that the city doesn't have the right to impose flight curfews because authority in that area is preempted by the federal government. In delivering the majority opinion, Justice 1Wllliam O. Douglas said tiaat• ii cities bagan to regulate times when planes could take off >lllld 18'<1 it ~ lead to 1 "pieceineal'1 Ii) tfacf~ I The case involved a 1968 BurlJ:ank law setting an 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. curfew, -and Lockheed Air Terminal Inc., owner and operator ol Burbank Ait1Jo'1·. . · Nutman of the county cpW)Scl!:i .office explained that Burbank ba4 attempted to enforce its curfew restrictfons under . au- thority ol its polioe power1. But at Orange County Airport. Nut- man said, the curfew was enforced· through the landlord-tenant relationship that existed between·the coonty and the airlines. Cmtinuing . with an examination ol "The principle that federal control pre- urbon deYelopment, the Citizem' Harbor empts local control could ·he applied In Area Research Team will convene 'Ibllr5-a very broad manner," Nutrn8n said. day for a review of Newport Beach's "How broadly ,wiJI depeni:t on the lang- general plan and rezoning ideas. uage of the Court decision, and I have- Rod Gunn, the beach ci_ty's advan ce n'l yet had a chance to see a copy or planning teclmician , will address CHART the decision.'' members at 7:30 a.m. at the Mesa Verde In the court decision Douglas wrote Country Club in Costa Mesa. No ad-that Congress has delegated power to re- mi ssion is charged for the informal gulate airlines to the Federal Aviation breakfast gatherings and the public is in· Administration FAA which now acts in vited to the sessions. _______ P_ro_tect_ion Agency. •••••••• • .. ( J 1&995 119'• 90 DAYS SAM E AS CASH ON AP .. "OYID CltlOIT Eva McCullocli, :! 40-year Area . Resident, Dead :1 I .. Eva K. McOilloch, 93, cultivated t11a-· rose garden at her Balboo cottage f<>r .. more than three decades and maintained' membmhip In. the Railroad Englneeri . AU.l.iliary for 69 years. 1 Stmday she joined her husband, wOOse 1 own eartbly ticket as an engioeeT for the Louisville and Nashville Railroad In Ala=· bama was ·canceled by a fatal heart at.-' tack nearly \fO!years ago. J! tieath'C&me for the 93-year-old womari~ wh9. had lived at 306 E. Bay Ave., on the Balboa PeninStlla ever since she came west to follow the couple's son Clarence:'" Funeral services will be in Binning-' ham, Ala., Wedne!day, with the pastor' of the Inglenook Presbyterian Church-: whose membership rolls she never left-·\ officiating. . . .Despite her nearly lour decades ol , liviiig In the lla1tior Area, Mrs. Mcait loch .... not widely lmown. . •• "She .was just a fine little old lady wttf' minded her own business," says ~ daughter-in-law, Mrs. Clarence M.cCuJ. 1 loch. -~ "Her gardeo was her life," addecf'' Mrs. McCulloch whose husband is a ' Harbor Area contractor: and CU!tom borne , builder. f· Her specialty, notes Mn. McCulloch,. was roses, but the little southern lady gr:ew every type of fiower that would . flourish on a cool coast so far from ·1 balmy Alabama. •· No local funeral services were sched~ uled . BIG 14.1-Cu. Ft 'NO FROSr RffRIG ERATOR·FREEZER • ..... _.c-·-· ..... ~--· -·-... -... ·:::.-·" •• c.. .......... ~ 1 •• ....-.~ .... oo .. --~·~-~ 299H ·--·e-·-. .. . -,,.,. ............ .F'"'i=..-. -........... · 11111 Jl:T 71 ,.~ Dll'Aw1HO"l-,T1rull•lll"r1 .. Ns.----"I VOU ~l:ID NOT •s ~-~·l~T TO Wflll, ,, .. ' . ... ,) •I ~~ , ... ;:H 'l " ',. ,,. ... " ~~ r;·'. I n ( t • • .. • I ~ ' . j I ' I l j ,I ' I 1 1 • • , • • . • . ' . . . . • • N. 'Y. St.eek.II p: ' . ' • ,VOL. 66, NO. 1~4, 2 SECTIONS, 28./AGES . . . ORAN6E COU!'ITT', CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 14, 1973 · . . c T~ CENTS ~ 3 ~ . . . . . 65 \ .. . ' Rounds · of Pot Seized in Mesa ~ .. -· 1nc1-.i -iu...u. gbfo, were arresteli uc! II pomds <i nariJuana eeUed followlnt a raid ot • C!llta Mesa borne by' narcotia! Ollice!W t., the Laguna Beach, s.i> Clemen10 and Collta Mesa poUce deparUqhit. Fri· day. .. •. . Tho bust ended twO weeks cl ... . .-;galillll by the · LajuDa Beach nll'CO!lca i19uad and cracked what Sit. N,a PurCell allefed W8I a ~ ouppiy· 1 op1rat1on for the.Laguna lleaCb area1 . A ' ' . Ehrlichman ·-·sa~-,re~ .. .J Secret Fi"le • 1W ASIUNGTON (AP) -Aeling FBI Di- ri!ctor. William D. Ruckelsbaus said IDday 'that the mi5sing wiretap file in the Daniel 1!ibberg-Eentagon Pape!W case bas been (~ in a safe at the office cl fonne~ ~enlial aide Jolm D .. Ehrlichman. j ·FU8a oft some 16 others . invOiving 4 · ......,,.,, and 11 govemmeot ·~ldala were alao found in the safe, be laid.. ...... alao -Ill. the~ --lRelaled -. Pqe 3). /l'be recent ....iatlm ~ ~·· tallohooe conve!Wlti<D bldbem lappid jjji1ibe FBI while he wu ~-oilbe hOllle of Mortop Halperin -Ull!ll ID·aide to Dr. Henry Kiaalnger -was .a cmtral element cited by Judge Matthew Byrne in •dismissing the govemmeot's case aplnst Ellsl1<rg. ··Prior to the dimllasalt llyme asked to ... the lop -cl the wiretaps but the FBI eald It was UD8ble to locate lhem. ; · '.!Wckelshaus told a newo cooference tilat that file and llOlll8 11 .athm con- ~ng wiretaps which ranged Ir om )foy 1969 to February cl 1171 l'w<ft Jo. cated in the Wbite House, baVing been med In a safe in Mr. Ehrlichman's outer ~.·· ':.:Jluckelahaus said all the wiretaps had been placed after President Nixon· - aiid specifically Kllsinger -aired their C!lQCem to the FBI that leaks to the D<WS media could be Imperiling lnter- nat.looal negotiations relative to the war iac;Yletoam and Strategic Arms Llmlta· ttiin. . . • But the acting director said a prelimin-•rt look coofinned no such dangers to hil kiiowledge In that none of the ind\- Vlduals who were.taJiped had been proo- ....ted qr depriftd ol their gommneot p>sfs. . . Ruckellhaus aaid the search for. t he !Ui« culmlnilted after agents inU!rVlewed l\ollerl 14ardian, former aaaislant at- IOl:ney poeral, at his borne In Phoenix, .\lii. ondo learned from him that I h e Y ~lht llill be at the While Home. :·~ to Ructelsba111,• Manllan cliilmed that former FBI Aas!Blallt DI· rector W:. C. Sullivan removed tbe files f-Jhe ,FBJ beCllille he felt '"thal·Jolr. Hoiwer mlibt use the records in ..,.. iniliDar against the allOrney general « tile -Prelideot." Sullivan, JlockehNUI said, "doe! not affirm" Mardian'a ver-- slc!n. : , • 1J). any pmit, Ructelahaus llllld, SUD!' ._v.!ll .. d<ll'verect the files to }!ardtan who ~look them to the White Bouie. J l\&ictellhaul aaid ·the FBI .--di, In- ~ nolatloos by the<lale J. Edgar ~f indicate that theo-Alty. G<n. J.G!!llir· lolilchell later told Hoover that 1hji:..{lloll bad been destroyed. Mi1dleul llu deoled maldnl llllch a ·statement. .. ' ..... , . ·ADS 'IN PlWT . • r' i&:MBLE A.WNG . .rt only took one .call (the flnl'""'"l w lbi ftnt dlJi that the lllllowlnC. id ran to ~ r-~ ~bltr In three -;·for '' 'ti RAMBLER ci..ic, nit • : cand, lo rill, auto, pl•, ]>ll, ·,, ~t:.'llreo, '4111. (~ ao.) :~ action like that II II~ -=~'.:. ~ :::+:"': •..: ~power? l'llll ,_ ..... tllil ~~:~powv.Dlll .. .... • • . ... .. ... ' . - A llliJt 'locllliMbod box contaloinc 30 kiklo cl. ~'-•wrapped 11Wijuana bricb-beld today as •evidence. Police -Mid !1°11 • booted oo ~ tbe CoMa U... resideDoe at M -cllarpa:., ::I• "' marjjuana for ilrlft; . ..... removed •I l\IDl)Gi!ll · bY value --ot J!::· . tale; lie~, ~ 'f'U the narqllk:s offi<e!'J!. A I a r g e ·bore .ringlooder, and lllepd ilia\ 'U\e 3&-year-automatic pistol was f<lund in the cloael Amited wn ste.e)lng, 30, of • S. CoM llllbW8J, I.;.1na Beach, hold Cl! fl5Mll' bail; ~ 0. Helmer, 42, cl \Vaid;; ~. 'llel\l.., $10,000 bail; John l!iller Kauffman. 11, •of Palo Alto, ~if., held Oii $10,lllO bail: Barbara Anne 1'111:1:,''19,' of t4CI Lenwood,· Collto Mesa, held on $10,000 bail. old i.a-n. was.=·rcr aale of a!tenmd, Sgt. Purcell aald. 150 to lillO paqnda of . . weekly. Sgt. Pun:ell eaid IAguna Beach of· A JS.,_ tl&lllll ~ &irJ,a 17· fice!W flnl bepn tn.-tcattn, Slevellng yeor-Glil ~liaOC!i itrl' and -• 17· two ....U ago ~ alleged that aeveral yelNlld Wlil~ ~way .,.re booked · buys wm made ~y oarcotics agents oo !>barges of }oolessioo of marijuana working through thti 17-year-old Wh!Uler 1 for aale. • .rlrl who was living with Steveling, · Steveling, found hiding in a ciooet al Purcell said. 'I ., -----:·,,• , ··-. ',I.\~ J •• ,,'.';~~ • SKYLAB FANS U.SE·SHADE llMBREl:LAS'AS 'ROCKl!lr :1.:1p:rs:opp, • Gtant '~tvt;n V..Prap'e11 First °"!1tin!!#O<o .St~~· .,. • FBI Marksman Shoots ' . .. .... - . ....... .... .. i. . y • l{~nlfiaii it top !!~f'f;~~k . . . ... ,· ' .... ; .. -..:; ··> ' • ! . . ·~· h_ • --BUI1.sT!N : • ,answer quest10m";.ibouted'·11>, ... Uoyd Two Solar Panels • ------'~ Fouttfp- CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (;\!') - Skyllb, America's flnl spoce llatioo, rocketed Into orbit today, but !allure of two solar panels to extend threatened to . jeopardize the mllsloo. · 'lbe llDIDIDDe«f SkyJata. WU fired into t orl?lt to aenre-u a ;'cabin in the sky" for nine astrmauts In the next eight tnonths, with the flrit three-mao crew sdieduled JO be launcfied to tbe .la6 ~y. A Salum l rocket propelled the SS.ton Skylalf inf<i'li. peped orbit 'nearly :l'I\ f'!lt'J~·'~ ..... ., ... ,1 ! ., ~well • Mllllga Com1e1 Cealfr ~ ...riy !WO liours ...... , • ...,.,.-~PDT lllliir•41e two ~Dot 'IClllr P1f1011 had not ~,.i. An •ffort was be&!g made to eztmcl the wing-like panels by 'radio signal from the ground. . u· the paoeJ,s do 'nOt deploy, It is doubtful that utrooatus Charles Conrad Jr., Dr. Jooepll .... Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz will rocke!",into space to hooic up with the station, on· Tuesday. , . "If the wings are not CO!llPletely deployed, r frankly doubt that ·we'll Rlld them up," -launch directot Walter Kapryan said. . · The. sol!' cells are desigoed to collect the rays of the sun aod coovert them to electrical eoergy to run the spaCecralt systems. • Conrad, Kerwin and Weitz, ·who are scheduled to spend a record Z8 · days aboard the orbiting laboratory, watched the liftoff of the Saturn l from a viewing area lhree miles away. · 'lbelr smaller Saturn 1B rocket stood on anotli,r launch pad ·8,700 feet away. The planned lunch Ume is 10 a.m. PDT Tuesday . Once in orbit, Skylab quickly separated from its spent second stage rocket. Five minutes later, Skylab's p r o t e c ti v e. cocoon-like nose cover separated In four pieces as planned. . The astronauts pJan to use It to conduct the most extensive 90l.ar studle5 ever at· tempted. . 1 • • \ ... PORn.AllD Ore. · (AP) u FBI was being sent to the edge:of the't:iiilt to --,.;. .. ·ldlW• a olrporl • wava his arma In i:ei>1Y •hlle. Abernathy em~•w llellfa'mdliotlta-.i-Jld~ a.'lun ~-~t llhJI· The astronauts and thousands of others In the Cape Kenoedy area walclled as the big booster rose slowly from Its pad, gradually easing over on a northeast , . , . , · •· · · Jolin Murpha · a """1'Vlaor f o r IDOll efPI . lloan atop "!' 'msdoo fael · Lockheed, aald i~tl!r ciroVe, IP the tuk ~ -, Por1lucl latenalloliol· • -Locrheecl tank fann faciDfy about t a.m ... Alrport, aulllorltlts Aid. ~ bos_tage and ~ptureG the 1,w9-'!"!!;•A·~< ..,.. ""°rted oafe. for !be Multnomah Coonlji ~· office -:___ said shots """' fl!'d lhen, •but no one POJn'[:AND. ore. (UPI) - A man anniil 'l'lth a rifle an~ shotgun today loQk 'two .•hostages,.' climbed ~top a storage tank contalJlit!g highly explosl.e jet fuel and threalened to b)ow it up. WU burl , Ellorts · ~ made to drain the tsnk tln-qh ~ i.,,.. .but they 'Were not~ DaUlng Ioli( M'.uijJha I "lie ain't liiten· ihg to nothing." ,. course as its five first.-stage engines belched a fiery tall 2,200 feet long. n was the final planned flight for the Saturn 5, the world's largest aad most powerful rocket, which was built for tbe Apollo program. Also observing were the members of .Skylab 2 and 3 crews, who are to rocket up. to the same station later this year, each for 56-day visits . 'nle slition is the size of a three- bedtoom house and lB the largest, most com pier spaceship ever built. He aaid Stevellng had been under surve!llanee by olllcers for about 10 days pr1or to the raic1. Seven nan:otlco ' ollicera lDcfudlng two from San Clem .. ta ·and ..,. from Costa Mesa were Involved In the -Friday. Purcell aald two detectt ... oblerved the IAguna NilUel and Newport Beach girls go. Into the house and then qu1ckly reappear with a brown shopping bag. Of- flcen·all'l"!l lhe bag contained five kilos of tbe oeaUy wrapped pol. More olllcers were called and entry gained Into the house. "'People were ·nmn1ng all over the house like cfl:zy,0 Purcell said., He. said tliat 30 ldloo of marijuana were "out In plain st,bt." He vilued the 1elled ~ erty at about fll,111111 on the ru.tel. Purcell said Sle'iellng would 10 to the desert areas of San Dl<flO County and return to the Laguna Beach area by a network of backroacls, never pusing (See MAllJJllANA, Pap Z) Lightning .Kill~ Pite<her · F-i---Om S.addleback JC ----------------1-~ A lightning bolt killed John w. Wade. Jr., 19, Saddleback Col· lege pitcher Sunday and Injured seven other penons during a 1emi- pro 'baseball game at Lake Havasu City, Ariz. . · WADE, A FORMER Mission Viejo mldent, '\VIS winding up to deliver a' pitch when the big bolt struck; knocking every player In the infield and outfield off their feet . · An aJnbulanc;e operator.said the lightning vaporized the youth's clothing, leaving only shreds. It struck the young man's bead. . W~PE'S SISTER was walclµng from the .• els and ran scream· tog,tO hlS body. . i I Wade few up in Orange County. He attended Mllslon Viejo High Sch0J1 through Ills junior year and pily9d bath i.seball.'11Cl .fbo~ ttli9re. ~ -*a 'J'!IC8DUJ1 mond to ·LAU Hnuu. See 'Page f8 ot·4etalle4sl'orj and Piclw'M- ~ . • ·~ .. HuntingtOn Creiv Views Launch of First Skylab ' By 'TERRY COVIUE oi, .. o.lty """'"'" The United States fired a shot today which you mig)lt say wu "beard moi.d the worid." Vlbratioo1 lrotp the SkyllJ> :llwlchtng ~ere · certainly felt In Huntington Beach .where IDOll Of It :wu drilgned ·llld'bullt al McDonnell Douglas AatrmauUca. · Top engineers gathered In a ljJe<;tal Luggage Falls From Airplane An Orange County A Ir port runway was lnadvertentt·y "bombed" by a Golden rWat Airlines 1 commuter plane this morning. The Dellavilland , .Twin Otter bound 1or 1.o.1 Ancelea ,mopped three piecea of baggaae 1hJm an improperl)"'clooed cofllj>lli1nielil on ts'<eoU, an airline ~ Aid today. · The garment bag, briefriae and suitcase were retrieved" after the pilot turned back and landod the plane.· · _ There wu no damap lo !lie con- tents although the briefcue'oponed upinJmpacl, acattertna pol*t on the runway, •"""1llDI· to t h e spokesman. ' · " . control room thll morning to watch the 'launching. They'll uae that contn>I room throughout Skyllb's 140 days-of ·lllOlllled orbit . to beck up the -Space C.01« In Cue Ill)' problems arise. IEnglneers In Homtington Beach will be, called oil to amwer any questlona wb!cb may come up during the flight. : Local reactioa'ln lhll morning'• -ceaaful allot waa, u espected, 111e cl joy and ftllef, tboucb MoDomell DoUldu fll. fidals did not bave much to eay a&oat IL Huodi R. Bowe, esei:UUve asafllanl le the cliairman and president of McDcmnell Douglas Aatronautlcs, IJUllU!led up the company's offlCl.11 view : "We're proud to be a part of SQlab's lint team. We are anticipating with great lnte.-..1 tbe beneflls to humanity d\fel'UY attributable to Stcylab I , America's firat orbiting space staUm. • The· space workshop, which will be home. for three 1epar1te three-man crews cl astnllfauts, was offidally flnixhed In Homtington Beach Sept. !, wben It was turned over to NASA olfidala. McDonnell Douglas had a $3911 mllllon contract to bulld the Skylab, a partially complete backup unit and certain groui>d -rt l!YStems-. Al tM peak of acUvlty, In May <if' 1172, there were Z,!llO Wvrb!W at the Hun-linclon ~h plabt concentriittng· m · Slcylab I. Slcylab W.r'<ers ll<OOUllted for Jll!)re than half the plant's work f~. 'l'be man, idenlJJled as William Howard Abernathy, !$, fired several , shots at paMlng planes and persons on tbe grouncj, l!!!t officers <!id .not return · the fire for fear cl exploding the 1.3 mllllon gallolis:tl fuel In the tluik. ~ude.-~quad on Full ·Alert 1Jeailler The 111>-foot.\Jig\i tanli is located In an open field near Portland Airport, which • , ~for a~ linoe but then • Mesa V.ice .. Officers Wait, Watch .for .YwlatWns . , The sun la •till on vacation alone the Orange Coast, and weather OX· perts doo't expect to aee It before Wednesday. Low clGudl aad toe in the momlllg boun, portly cloudy In the afternoon. Highs In the Ill. A-,, ~ omploye Of !-<Jckheed · ~' , , Air ,.,_ __ at the .. lriort, sent Colla 'Mesa ·P9llii d~t vice of- - -hostagf \6at U his Ileen 'ano ~ 11r.fitrlhil, raldl on the wfle lid children ·wei:-e oot ~ HOqtie l!lilit 1 lpl)t todiy II,·*'"' the -b)' -• -F ....... -·-llllf•l"dilyJaw•Ji'mt ·~tilt ttnk. 11111. • • • • • ' Deputlel IP! the tank, with a capod17 ap. Jolln·~ dtW ~the vice and cl U ,mlDllll Calloal could be ...,-....... ...a, Aid llil mea fttald b1 • iliol. , ' • .... -.. a.om !J!l ,the 17t1! ttftet .'Jlle' ........ -..nauq, a.Lockheed. ... PDP. ..... ir-....... tl!a dal-. :l!:'i:i ::=i.:. ~·~a:: .Jira:.: ···::-:i.-: ••••~· t =or· 11Cldl.~•n~ .Jl!ll ... 11•1'8 WU idinUfted a · '1 SJl!f') I •llplleel Geoe l.lo,d, ~ ., the Lockbeed food ad *'* --' . # ' ........... Ollloln,rolded Ille Fite a.... twice"" ,...,... polleo ....,. Dale -Jl'lldtlJ 11111-on lltllmdot, amottnc • aid A..,.1111 wu 1111ng u.,.i 10 total of m .....-, ·.....w Ill them ' .. •·than once. There were no arrests 9unday. • · Regan aaid one of the raids Saturday had the effect or shutting down the Fire HOu.e. ''We took everybody and there was no one left to keep It open," be ~­ pll!Ded. Alier 1he employes balled out and ~ operation of the Fin Houae, lfepn laid his men vlalted ~-· place apln lod foonf all the doncera Oo4hed. "U ._ my 'hllprllllon that t!1e7 dldn.l waal-to ~ilude any mora. Thero waa one P1 •!lo ""' technically in Violation bocaue ol the clothes she was weartnc but ahe covered herself up. I got the feel· Ing they didn't want any more of this . type of .ar:rest actJon\" Regan saia. To make certain aD Fire lloU,. employes Wlde!Wlood th! n ordinance and tis 1ppllcatlon, Rotian uld he COUDleleCI 'them' ileraonall'. ''1Y have all 'been ldvlled cl the sec- tion. They have no exctlie to brook the law qain. II they brook H, thoy know It will be them, oot theh' employer, who must suffer the COlllflQuenceJ. 11 Fire Houae manaPmonl ·hal pli>dpd to -the nude -In the face cl lepl advenlty. 'But, ...... Illy llOhiil could not be contacted on how kq he l!t- tendl to carry out tllat policy. Rotiao uld he penonany , belte+a tt (See NUDES, Pict tJ • INSIDE 'JODA Y Another aovmi,..nl of/!cial lint<d 16 WotarQOlf c:Ose ""' oon.e on "odmiftiltnaffw leooc" •fttT rsport hi oft-Nd • '°""' lpirotor rzocutlw ckmcnct/ in rrhlm for 111.,,.., Story, P•Q• 4. ~....... ~. c ..... J ~ ~ iii= 1i •Isl& II i -. ......... :'=:t t1 • • .. .... u. Mondu, Mu 14, 1~73 Blp•rtu-Effort .. • , " ·solons · to Back 'Bay :J C.Ulamla Sens. Alan Cranston and John Tunney wUl join Rep. Andzow J. Hlnahaw and Rep. Clair W. Burgener in intnJdutllw Jeglilatlon lo .crute ·a na- tiooal wtldufe preserve In Upper New- port Bay. Amlounc<mont OI tbe bipartisan eflorl to Cftlte the Back Bay preserve came from Congressman Hinshaw'• office to- da.J'. }llnahaw and Bur1ener are Republi· Caill while Cranston an d Tunoey are Dtmocratl. Adloo comes oo the heels of an offer bY the Irvine COmpony lo turn over Up- per Bay landa lo governmental agencies , foe Immediate me bY the publlc. Today'• action was the fim by any pbbllc olflclall towa ld talclng up t h e -y "" 111 offer. The four leglllal«s forwarded a letter lo Secretory ol lntertoc Rogers C. B. Morton lndlcaUng the intent to introduce the Upper Bay legislation. They asked for cooperation and support from th e Nllon "Administration. 1be ,tut of their letter indicated, 1'lt is our omderstandlng that over the peat several ,..n the Deportmelll ol the In-terior ·bis b •en cond\ICllnl studies ol Upper JfOwport Bay, lo determine the feasil>llll1-# !Ill eotabllahment In whole, or in Part as a national wildlife refuge. We are ftirther advised the department hao Won oollcltlng data ll'Om other !ed- en! 4J1d Biiie agencies in the preparation ol these otudles. 0 Recent events have made the com· pletioo and publication of the depart- ment's cuidualana Increasingly urgent. 'lbere bu been a reclslon ol the land eidianae agreement between the County ol ·0rance and lbe lrvlDe Company. - At a mettlng held r_,Uy In San Francisco, the Irvine Company olf...., to transfer the property immediately to the.public for ita use, in e1.chan1e for an assurance ot just compmtation Jn the near futuu, 1¢ the reoolutioo ol related matters. "Howevtt, )uztapooed agaillll t h e s e evenll ·ii JhO fact there baa bee\ no overall:plai> regarding the potendal U10 ol IJppr Newport Bay or the preoerva· tion ol'lto resources advanced bY any ot the.governmental a1encies exi:ressing a jurisdlctlonal Interest In the area. _ 0 This uncertainty about the fate of Upper Newport Bay should not be Wlduly prolonged. At present, we know of no program to protect the exiatlng wildlife and recreational values of Ute Upper Bay. We are concerned that any unnecessary delay in establishing any designated por- Uon ol the are.a as a refup may j>tace !llese valuea In jeopenly. ''n.r.fbre, ... feel it would be help- ful Jo bave available lo ua at the earliest possible moment, your department's re- port oo the wildlife values present in the area, the importance or the preservation of these values, the amount or land which must be acquired to insure their pro- tection, and the relationship of the wild· Only Home Be Knows The little boy inside this plasti c tent, who is kno\Vll to the world as David, is now 1 'h years old and bas been living inside the life-sustaining bubble since five seconds after he was born. The sterile cocoon UPIT ....... protects David who was born without a natural d~ fense system -bis body cannot fight germs. The boy is being cared far at the Baylor University Med- ical Center in Houston, Texas. Boy in Dismay Topples Spirit Leading Guadalupe Race In Both Times Into Swim Pool, Dres life values to open $p&ce: and recreaUon Bob O'Brien's 6&-foOt yawl Spirit from values a1ao present in the Upper New· A little Costa Mesa boy's fear at an ac· dicapped children was repairing a garage Mesa 's Planners poet Bay. cident that iniured his subotitute daddy door when the mislliP occurred. GCa!Udoalrnis ~~.:,Club was standingloda" andoff "We want to know the department 's . -.. A large spring securing the door map-ua upe uuwu at 8 a.m. y · ,, • recommendation on whether the preser-in a ~oster c~re homhi e ~f~~thtbSae trerdtarded ped and slamm~ 'Williams in t~ _ wu leadJng the 12-boat race Deet on both 'Co -T mght vation o!UpperNewportBayohouldbe""·--•bunrunmng.to. ·-u •Y-·-AfMJ!dl!r~cfinr"iill!'·-eiiijiitQOiia~Jtlliies. . Jet Flight .... : • • • Curb Ruled ~ Not Legal •• .. Id a decfsioe that could affect opera- ' lion ol Orange County Airport, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 5-4 today that local agencies cannot impose curfews on jet O!ghto from private alq>ortJ. Robert ,flutman, an umtant 01'1Dge County ~ who deals with airport afiiin, said the rulio&. probably would not affect short tenn operation or the air- port but might have long tenn effecta. "We have a publicly owned and oper· ated a.lr,,ort,'' Nutrnan-commented. "'i"o-, day's nlling conc~ed. 1 privately owned. airport, which is 1 very different case .... "But H is possible that airlines mill!f attempt to use the ruling to remove &bet curfews they now have," he said. ...f Jet takeoffs are currently banned !rum. Orange County Airport between 10 p.nil and 7 a.m .. Landings are banned aft~r 11 p.m. i'l I Officials from Alrwest this morning. declined comment on the court decision . They also declfned to say whether the. airline wanted to run flights during holfl's that now are restricted. "It would be presumptous of us to say· whether we want late night flights untll- we can see a full text ol the court de-· cisioo," an Airwest spokesman said. Alrwest io currently operating on ~ month-to-month lease at th.e a!!:J>ort. .,,,c Robert Clifford, president ol Air C.µ- romia, said he doubts the recent ~. would apply at Orange County Airport., , "But even if it did give us a leg~, precedent to push ror night late flights,. he said, "we wouldn't want to ~ttem~t. to do anything that the commuruty does not want. I want to stress that as srong;ly as possible." In a dl!pute between the city of Bur· bank and Lockheed Air Tenninal In~1 •. nvene 0 solely a federal project or whether a co-Coroner'a deputies aaid Michael P. boy f!~lng..jr~lenlng-eom-Word fro;;. the escort vesael La Fiesta ,.;.---. -.---operlitlw-.program:lnvolvlnrsnrtnrrrd-Mdillister,-9, -son -ot· Mr,...,.anct ·Mrs., .motion. -· · -id round the Island Fourtan separate agenda terns : iocal governments is feasible. Fina Uy, Charles McAllister, toppled in.lo a swim· He was found in· the JIC!OI shortly af. was that Spiritancl , scheduled for discussion and 1 act in we need to have the department's estl· ming pool at 10962 Rocky Road, Jn the terward and taken to Tustm Community this morning bead for home on the the Supreme Court ruled. that the. ctty doesn't have lhf rigbt Jo Impose flight cu~irae -•11tboritr rirt-1ha~~...,__ is -~by the federal govemme!S. Jn delivering the majority opinloit:. Justice William O. Douglas said that If 1 l I I ' tonight ~ the Costa Mesa P ann g mate of the cost of acquisition of the Santa Ana area, and droWJted . Hospital and pronounced dead. WJlllams ~mile race. ,•~ Commission convenes Its 6:.30 mee~lngb property rnvestigators said Frederit}c \Villiams, was treated for a shoulder injury. W!atber tn the vicinity of the island A ione except!~ perm~tCllsoffugDrt. Y "W ~ ,..,...""',.ed to introduce at the . a school tea_cher who operates the Rosary was scheduled for 7:30 toni1Ii.t was overca3t with light winds. Edwanl J . Plsoni, 2209 ive, . e !'A ... _. . . . sheltered env1Ionment home for ban-for the b:>y, and Requiem Mass &et . . . Ne--port Beach, for a 1().unit apartm~t propttlous ~e, legislation • to establish for Tuesday at 10 a.m., both in st John Secood cm elapsed time behind Spi.nt complex at Ul Avocado St., Jn an Rl-CP a national wildlife refuge In Upper New-the Baptist Catholic Church, Cooll Mesa. wu Jim Seal's Coltonbla 50 aloop Loco zone heads the list. ' port Bay 11 that !eems lo be the best p Ii SI . Burial wUl he In Aaoension Cemetery, Vlmte n and behind Loco Viente .... Commissioners will also consider proposal after we ve reviewed the de· 0 00 aymg El Toro aeveral sign request• and hear staff partment's report. Toward that end, we Survivors Include the boy'o parents ol Jld Blbb's Cohnnbla :IO Yawl lntermez· reports on others, which would be sUbject invite your suggestions about language hed the home at 20f Loyola Road, ~ zo. 1o more restriction If tbe city lllopts a for the IegislatiOlf, and we ooUcit and Inquiry Pus Mesa· brothen Matthew Mark, Kevin Corrected time positloo.s are : f. Spirit, togti new s1gn control ordinance. woul~ urg~ your suppcr"t and coopera-and 1John; a' sister, 'Denise, plu.s %. Loco Vtente, 3. Intermezzo. TONIGIIT COST A MESA PLANNING COM- MlSSION -Regular meeting, City Hall, 6:30 p.m. UC! LECTURES -"Understanding the Stock ).iarket," part or series on Investment Alternatives, 101 Physical Sciences, 7·10 p.m. Admission $6.50. "Af- firmative Obligation to Integrate Public Education," part of aeries on Education and Law, Social Science Hall , 7·10 p.m. Alimission $5. nJESDAY, MAY 15 NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL BOARD-· Regulsr meeting, Costa Mesa High Lyceum, 7:30 p.m. SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB -Com- munity Recreation Center, ll a.m. • 3 p.m. UCI LECTURE -"Evenings With and By Eugene Loring," Fine Arts Village Theater, 8 p.m. "TWELFTH NIGHT" -Fine Arn Village· Concert Hall , May 1 5 -19 , Admission fl. Phone ~17. UC! LECTURES -"Impact of Intern- ment. . . " part of series on Japanese Internment, 178 Humanities Hall~ 1-9:30 p.m. Admission $4.50 "Futw-es or Archeology & Environment of Orange County," 104 Physical Sciences, 7-i:30 p.m. Adml.Mion $5. OltANal COAST • QI DAILY PILOT TM Or ..... Colill OAIL.Y PILOT, wlltl wlilctl ~ 11 c:omblntll IPl1 lrNw1·Prff1, 11 Pl/b'lltl\td t'( lfl1 Or11191 C0.11 Pv.blltfllnl! Col!'IPlfly ...... fllt' tdlllonl 1r1 puOlfjllld, MIW\d1y ltlniugPI . f'"rld1y, fll' Cot.ti~ M111, N'""l)Or1 aPCll, • Huntlllg!M a..ct1/FOW1t1ln v1n.y, ~ all'dl, lr't'ffll/SlddllCWICt Ind Sit! ClltnfnM/ kn J11911 C1pl1tr1,.., A 1111911 rtOIOnel ldllloo! '" llUbll1'*1 .&.ttwo.yo ...... ~~ Tiiie ,.-lt>l:lfitl "*lltlllfll ,...,, 11 11 DO Wffl ••Y S!rMt, C-11 Miu, Clllftr?llt, "6». loliert N. W11cl Pr.ld1111 1-.t PWUlllef J1ck l . Curl1y Vice l"fnldl!tl Miii ~r11.M.9Mt1<" Thom•t K11't'U Ecl!tor Tli11111t A. Mur,hi111 Mefllflflv h !tor cti• ... •• H. leo1 l 1ch1r'll '· N11f A.N1111111 ,M1111tlnt Ellloo c... .... OHM. lion m gettmg the measure through Con-granc1~-1s ·Mr.· and Mrs. Qavid CI A 1 s irlt • Loco Vi te 3 " B Co ty U "t ~-· ass : . P ' •· ien ' . greS11. y , UQ fil MeAllister and Mrs. Anna Brinkman. lnlermnzo, . , Ex-Co sta Mesa ., Man Recovering From Blast Burns ·Former Costa Mesa resident John -M:"as1yn, 24, was reported improving tcr · day from critical burns he received May 5 in a mobile borne explosion that killed his !&-year-old wife . • Mn. Charles Colburn, or {540 Elm Ave., said he;r M>n , a forn1er Newport Harbor High School and Cooll Mesa High School student, has been taken off the critical liSt but 11be has a Jong way to go." Maslyn is at San Lulo Obispb General Hospilal where he was taken after the blast. His brtae ol two weekl, Elizabeth Ann Maslyn, died in the fire. Their 50-foot house trailer blew up while parked in an Atascadero mobile home park .. The cause of the explosion is still under Investigation. 1'.1aslyn, a cabinet maker and pa.inter, lived in Costa Mesa until he moved to the San Luis Obispo area three years ago. F ountairi Valley Sliooting Victim Re1nai ns Critical Adelaide Luna, director of Fountain Valley's Colonitt Juarel; Community Center. remains Jn critical condition to. day after she was shot several times in an unexplained incident Saturday. ~1rs. Luna, 44. of . 10371 Calle lndepcndencia, is in the Intenalve care unit of F'ountain Valley Community Hospital after undergoing SW'gery for bullet wounds in her head, arm end back. ?\1rs. Luna was Cound in a car itopped for a t{affic violation by Officer Ron Gillman. The driver of the car, Richard Arechabaca liforones, 46, oC 4908' W. 7th St .. Santa Ana. was taken into cu!tody on charges or assault with lntent to commit murder. Investigators said today they ha ve not established what started the Incident, but they will be filing char1es a1alnst Ptforones this afternoon. According to police reports, Gillman allegedly saw Morones make an illegal U·tum near the intersection of Euclid Street and Warner Avenue at about 12:30 a.m. The officer report.<! that when he u·alked up to the side of the car, he saw Mrs. Luna who wao bleedinf profuoely. The Orange Cotmty Grand Jury '.Vill be aslr.e<f tp reopen its investigation into the police shooting death of a young Mexican-American April 13 in Fountain Valley. The r e q u e s t comes from Oran1e County's Human Relatlons Commission which met Saturday in Santa Ana to dl5CllS! the shooting. "Several community representatives have indicated to us that there is ad· ditional information which Ms not been presented Jo the Grand Jury, including the possibility of one or more eyev.·it- nesses," said Jack Turk of Huntington Beach, chainnan of the commission. On the morning of April 1 3 , Westminster Police Officer Timothy Miller shot Miguel Angel Rooqulllo, 20, in the back. Miller was helping Fountain Valley police search for Ronquillo and three other Santa Ana youths who had been stopped earlier, but who had lied from two Fountain Valley officers. Miller told investigators he had his gun drawn and the youth backed into him causing the pistol to fire accidentally. Miller was accompanied by Fountain Valley Officer Robert Mo..ely, who reportedly also had his p i s t o I unholstered. Morry Lindros; dirctor of the Human Relations Commission, to 1 d com· missioners Saturday that there were discrepancies between the testimony of the two officers, though he did not · elaborate. Lindros also pointed to the lack of commW'llty ineut into the first Grand Jury hearing. The Grand Jury on April 30 declared Officer Miller innocent or any wrong- doing in Ufe death of Ronquillo. The District Attorney's officer, which in- vestigated the matter for the Grand Jury, had recommended such a v~rdict. Lind.ros told the commission that the District Attorney's office gave him full cooperation in looking into the details o( the first investigation. CommisS;on Cbainnan Turk also said the suspension of Officer Miller, or his reassignment, would also be recom· mended pending any f u r t h e r in· vestigaUon of the shooting. The Human Relations Commission 1\·as asked to act on the shooting by Pt1exlcan- Amerlcans from Santa Ana who v.·cre friends and relatives of the dead you th. They handed the commission a petltloo signed by 315 people, asking for another Grand Jury investigation. From Pagel MA RIJUANA • • ' Doggies Line Up For V:Jccination Tuesday )Vight . . Low~ rabies vaccination c 1in lc1 will be offered Tueaday. a( ~ Orange Coast area locations, accordihg to the Orange County Health De~ent. The clinics will be open ttoin 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. for vaccination of dogs at a cost of $2 .each. 'I11e locations are: C'.o.!Jta Mesa : Orange Co u n t y Fairgrounds, Fair Drive at Fainriew Road. El Toro: Lake Forest Shopping Center, Ridge Route Drive. Irvine : Walnut Village Shopping Center , Culver Drive at Walnut Avenue. Westminster: Sigler Park, Golden West Street at Westmin ster Boulevard. Dogs over four months old must be vaccinated against rabies and licensed. •••••••• • ·Class B: 1. Decision, Pa u J Burger, DRYC S. Swift, Jack 14alllnctrodl BYC t Talioman, Bob WJlllama,• BYC. I PllRF: I. Leprechaun ,. W b 1 t n e y CoUlno, LBYC S. Matanct, Ed Carpenter, BYC 3. Kismet B ob Wuta CYC. (Foe earlier story see.Boating Page Zl.) Newport Plan Topic Of Citizens' Meet Con.tinuing with an enmjnation of urban development, the Citizens' Harbor Area Research Team will convene Thurs-- day for a review of Newport Beach's general plan and rezoning lcleaa. Rod Gwm, the beach city's advance planning technician, will address CHART members at 7:30 a.m. at the Mesa Verde Country Club in Costa Mesa. No ad· mission is charged for the informal breakfast gatherings and the public ism.. vited to the sessions. FREEZE FOOD 'RICES With Tllk COMrACT 21111•. Cllttt FREEZER ,...,_1 __ • c-1 ... .., w .. ........... ""'-'" oc-.. ....,~.o.., ···- 1&9'• •• ,,.'-"JC.... ... _,.,..... ---·--,_ ... :!:':'1111~ ·--..... 111'' 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH Off Alll"'-OYID C"IDIT cities bagan to regulate times when planes could take off and land It coui:l lead to a "piecemeal" alr traffic now.~ The case involved a 1968 Burbank law setting an 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. curfew, and Lockheed Air Tenninal Inc., owner an4. operator of Burbank Airport. " Nutrnan of the county counsel's offi~· explained that Burbank had attempted lo enforce Its curfew restrictions under at.t-. tbority o( its police powers. I · But at Orange County Airport, Nut- man said, the curlew was enforced througb the landlord-tenant relationship that existed between the county and the airlines. "The principle tl!at federal control pre- empta local cmtrol could be appl ied In' a very broad manner," Nutman saJd: "How broadly will depend on the lang- uage of the court decision, and I have.:- n't yet i\&d a chance to see a copy or the dec:Woo... - In the court decision Douglas wrote' that Coogress has delegated 1JOWU Jo re- gulate airlines to the Federal A vlatloo Admlnlstratlon FAA whldt now act.9 Jn Protectloo Agency. Frot11 Page l NUDES ... '' urlair that the management ordefs the dancers to violate the law. In his opinlon.L "it's Just not right for the owners to ask , their employes to commit a crime." ~ No arrests have been made by Costa Mesa pallce at Papa Joe's. Regaq, reported that the topless bar bas order~. its entertainers covered end that periodic. checks have disclosed It Is complying fully with the ordinance. ,,..,...,. ... c_,. .._ ..... .. ... --... -........... -tUfl ·'-"" .... "'" .... ••C.··--1 ... ...-·.~--:~~~ 29915 Tlf 15 OI' ·--.t:-........ ·-... ··--'""' ............. ,,.•1 ·-;;~ ..... ·=-- 1n11 Piii DRAWING MlcROWAVE OVEN Ht"' AQQ!llll ,. -· ••' ' --' She was taken Immediately Jo the nearby hospllal and MoronCJ was taken into custody. He allegedly told ofricm he •·as taking her Jo the hospital . alien Mexican checkpoints. JCT 1• Pj:ip~ WI DllJVlll •••w•,...~,lliniltii1111'"t•"'o:----I WI snvlCI \'OU H&&D H01' 8C...Ji'llJ&•&H"1" • Investigators aald she had been ohol wllh a .22-callber revolver which they found •ben !hey took Moronu Into <USIOdy. I He oald-that th<! base of operaUons was 1 moved to the rented Costa ft1esa residence, next lo the Santa Ana Country Club, several weeks ago and that tho I borne was used for the dlslributloo of marijuana. • • TOWllol, WllNITAU e •••••••••••••••• ~ ' I J J " ., i , • j ·• 1 ! J, t i • 1 ' • ~ j ( t ' ( I 1 t I ' .I •I j , •