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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-05-22 - Orange Coast Pilotr 7 ' .. •. . ouse 0 ,. . I . • DAILY PILOT Hich~rdson Hen:rings . --* * * 10' * * * TUESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 22, 1973 Heopen in· Surprise Move ' YOl.. M. NO. Ma, l lllCTtotl&. • f'AeeS \ • I -• • • • • • • • • Roosevelt Denies Vesco Dealings McCord Testimony Cover Plot Laid To White House WASHINGTON (UPI) -.Charging the events "smacked of the situation which Hitler's intelligence chiefs found themselves in," bugging conspirator James W. McCord Jr. testified today he was convinced the White House plotted to blame the CIA for Watergate. McCord said during his 2~ hour morn- ing testimony that he wa~ told that Richard M. Helms was fll'ed as CIA director and replaced with JBIMS R. Schlesinger, who "would go along" with lhe White House plans lo blame the CIA. President Nixon recently nominated Schlesinger to be def ease secretary. Reading from prepared memos during his second day of testimony at the televised Senate Watergate hearings, McCord also said: -Co.conspirator G. Gordon Liddy told him in January, 1972, of a plan to break into the safe of Hank Greenspun, publisher of the Las Vegas Sun, and that "a Hoy.•ard Hughes plane would be stan- ding by to fly them into a South American counlrY ... " It was the first time Hughes' name has been mentioned. -McCord, who was a CIA agent for 19 years, said when he heard of efforts to put the Watergate blame on lhe .CIA, hg_, wrote John J. Caulfield, 'a former White Britain's Move To Protect Fleet Opposed LONDON (UPI) -Britain's d<cl1!.., It send warships to protect its fishing vessels inside Iceland's fishing limJt of 50 nautical miles is an act of "serious ag~ gression." Iceland 's fisheries Minister Ludvik Jose(sson said today. · "It is a very serious thing to do and the prospect for resolving the w~Ie silu~tion is getting worse and won~, he said at Lo>don's Heathrow aifpOrt be/ore !lying to Reykjav1k for a cabinet ,.eeUng. "I can't see what Britain h1 trying to achieve by sending in warships because I'm sure they, won't catch any more fllh," he .. id. "Do they think they CfD fish somt: more1" . The Defense Ministry $Bid today !bat 3J British trawlers had been fishing under naval ·protectkm imlde the Icelan.. die limit f0< 24 hours wllhoot any In· cJdents reported. Jn Reykjavik the Icelandic cabinet was r.leetlng today to eonslder lt.9 next move. Prime Minister owur Johanwon said Monday his govern-I Is canalderlng whether 10 ask tho North Au.nllc Treaty Organiz.ot!po c Ill< u~~·to1ID. t1rveneln ~ sltua'llon. ' . '• 1 , I ' ' House aide and a friend, denouncing the "ruthless attempt" and warning that if officials wanted the Watergate affair "to blow," that was the way to do it. -Mrs. E. Howard Hunt Jr., late wife IS.. McCORD, Page %) Richardson Nomination Opens Again WASHINGTON (AP ) -In a surprise move, the Senate Judiciary Committee reopened its bearings today on Elliot L. Richardson's nomination to be attorney general. In the reopened session, he was ques· tioned about the circumstances of a meet- ing he bad with a former White House aide, Egil Krogh, who has taken responsibility for the break-in at the of· lice of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiartist. The committee had been in closed ses· sion for about an hour when Richardson suddenly appeared and was ushered into the room . A few minutes later the com- mittee announced its public hearings wooJd be resumed. Se~ v" Tunney '(D;Cllil.),opened the Q~onirig by asking Richardson to describe once again• the conversation he liad on April 3() with John D. Ehrlichman, fonner chief domestic adviser to Pr•i- dent Nixon. Richardson · said that Ehrlichman cal- led him to say that Krogh would like to see hilll and that he had what Ehrllchman thought was ''Worthwhile in- formaUon .to give him." Krogh ·ronnerly worked in the White .House ;,nd headed a group known as the plumbers, which Was assigned to run down aJi~. plug Jeak5 of national security Information. · Richardson testified that Ehrlichme.n told hlm that Krogh had infonnalion about "an aspect of the overall situation l ought to know about." • Richard&On, who previously h a· d teitllled about meeting with Krogh on May 1 slid th&t Ehrlichman in 'his call did not give him any clue as to what Krogh wanted to discuss. NI he had belore, Richardson said that Krogh gave him a summary account or his role in the break-in at lhe psychlatrilt's office and was concerned about what dbcJosure he mould make and to whom and whether he could do so without violating national security mat· teTs lhat were ·tnvolved. ' • W~i~e Qouse Company U'I Tltl ..... t. Mike Garcia, a Sacramento mode] and Playboy play· mate who's going to a White House dinner hosted by .President Nixon Thursday in honor of former Vietnam POWs, poses in a bikini she designed and plans to present to the President's two daughters. She calls the creation a 0 Mikini." .Coast Restaurant Bombed Phon.e Ba11dit Blamed; Patro1is' Escape 'Miracle' ' By JOANNE REYMlLDS 01 !tit DIUY 'lklt St.ti A bomb exploded Monday ni ght in a Huntington Beach restaurant \vas prob- ably detonated by the telephone bandit who held up the restaurant three days earlier, police theorized today . No one was injured in the lllast at the Si~!er ~ak House at 18552 Bcach 'Blvd. Polite said· there were an uncounted number of customers in the restaurant and five employes when the bomb ex- plocled at 9:20 p.m., blowing a 21 !>Y 2.8-- inctthble ln the kitchen ceiling . ExpJoslvea experts from the U.S. Treasury's alcohol, tobacco and firearms division who have been called in on the case said "It was a miracle'' that no one inside or outside the restaurant was tut by the large chunks of flying shrapnel from the pipe bomb. Detective Sgt. Monte McKennon of the Huntington Beach police said treasury agents have been called in because ponessk>n or a bomb is a federal offense. A note found taped to tbe restaurant's back door threatening damage to the building is what police believe to be the link between the bombing and the holdup which occu rred last Thursday, In that holdup, the unseen bandit made the restaurant the seventh victim of his robber.y·by·telephone technique. McKennon said lhis momin& that he believes that the bomb was plented sometime Monday and set off to . show that the telephone bandit "means busmess." The phantom bandit has netted more than $2, 700 in the pMt month by vic- timizing franchise . businesses in Hun- tington Beach, Fountain Valley and Costa Mesa. He usually calls the businesses and tells the person who answers the pllone that he has a high powered rifle aimea at them. If they fail to cooperate, they will be shot. In a few ot the holdups, the caller has allO told the victim that there la a bomb planted inside the bullness and It wllr be detonated If the businessman does not do • as the robber says. McKennon said that in the cases where bombs were mentioned, the premises had been thoroughly seatched and no bombs have been found . "We will be going back V> the other viclirm to cbeck ror any suspicious ac- tivity since they were held up ," he said. Those businesses include the Stop and Go Market, 18913 ~1agnolia St, Fountain Valley; ~cDonald's hamburger stand, 20362 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach'; Bu rger King. 2015 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa: Pantry Liquor, 21572 Brookhurst St., Huntington Beach and Farrell's Ice . Cream, 16301 BCach Blvd., Huntington Beach. The explosion at the Siziler is the fir!lt time thall violence bu resulted from the telephone bandit's acUvUies. "We will be working very hard on thls case to stop him be.for;e he tries It agelo." McKennon said . tt'ei noted that all the evidence collected at ·the setne of the bombing has been (SH BOMB, P1ge t) Swiss Seek On Cliarges By L. PETER KRIEG 01 tllt Dllty l'lltt Shin Former congressman James Roosevelt, now a Newport Beach resi- dent, is wanted by the Swiss: government on fraud charges involving an alleged $224 mJlllon swindle also involving New York financier Robert L. Vesco. Roosevelt told the Daily Pilot today be has no Intention of responding to the war- rant and says he doesn't know what he'll do until he confers with his Swiu lawyer, Daniel Guggenheim. Roosevelt proclaimed his lrmocence admitting only he may have been vi~ timized by placing bis trust in the management or the Investors Oveneas Fund (IOS), of which be served u a director from 1967-1971. The U.S. Securities and E•cbanp Commission also charged Roosevelt with looting the $224 million from the Fund of Funds and other IOS glamor funds. Roosevelt. however, said he has en· tered a consent decree on those charges agreeing to abandon all dealings with t~ fund . "I've had nothing to do with it since 1971 ," Roosevelt said. Vesoo, who Is reportedly in Cost.a Rica is also wanted In the United States ill ronnection with a secret contribution to President Nixon's 1972 campaign. Roosevelt said Vesco was appointed to the JOS board in 1970, just bef0<e be, Roosevelt, resigned. Roosevelt, who mov.ed to the Irvine Company's Spyglass Hill homes above Corona del Mar last year, also claimed • (See ROOSEVELT, Page Z) 1 Orange Weather ~1ostly sunny Wednesday, follow. ing the usual low clouds in the morning hours. Highs of 68 at the beaches rising to 75 inland. Over- night IO\\/S in the 50s. INSIDE TODAY A g1rn batlle, which btgan after th.e Indian armu mutinied · and tried to disarm atoce units "' northern India, left 15 men dead . Sec sory Page 4 • L.M .... ,4 I aoatl11t 11 C•lil1!4'11/I I Cl•nlfltd U·H: c-1u 11 c ... 1-1111 u Dfllll NM\t" ' a4l•Mtlll ,.... , •11ttfllllllfMflt , .. 11 '1111111<• lt-11 ,., Tiit 19ttnl ' Htr-..e 14 1 .. M UMtrt lJ ,,,,....... 1,.11 """' .... , ..... N1tltllal Ntw& 4 Dr•111t C-ty ' J.-r11 1•11 llodl M1rlltt& ,.tl r~\'f11M1 tt fM•tws ,..,, l#Nllw 4 ._......,., ... ,,...,.. ...,,,. . . I DAILY PU.OT s TliHda1, Miy 22, 197J ,,..ton Research Pot Predictions Prove Accurate? B05TON (AP) -lleoeJJ'd>m aay they hlive developed a method to tell tn ed- vance which teen-agers are likely to use marijuana, which ones will go on to hard drup and whiC'h onea wlll remain ooouaers. In a report from the Departmtnt of Psychiatry at Masl&chulett• Gtner•l H0tpital~ the researcher• aald tod~y they analyzed data from 2,m junior high and bigb school students in the Boston area. In that computer analysis , drug use in Kissinger , Tlw Confer For Six Ho1irs PARIS (UPI) -Vietnam negol11tor1 Henry A. Kissinger and Le Due Tho held a record six-hour, IS.minute talk session on ceas~fire violl!tions today and agreed to meet again Wednesday. After the meeting Kl5Singer told newsmen : "I have nothing to aay. We will meet again tomorrow ." 1 Xlalnger did not specify Ille meeting place but, accordlfl&' to the system ot nrtation adopted by the two aides, It r a'hould be on the American "home ground," a villa at suburban Saint Nom La Breteche. Today's meeting was at a Communist villa In another suburb, .Glf Sur Yvette. Orly airport officials said Kissinger aide William H. Sullivan was scheduled to fly back to Washington tonight in a special air force plane. Kissinger and Tho, architects of the Jan. 'J.7 Vletnam truce agreement, met for nearly five hours Monday -their fourth meeting in the latest round of negotiations. Kiesinger said alter Mon- day's session that he and Tho had made "some progress." .. Kissinger also scheduled a meeting with French Foreign Minister Michel Jobert presumably to work out further details on the forthcoming summit meeting on Iceland between President Nixon and Prts1dent George• Pompldou. Orly Airport ofUd:ala said Ki5alnger's private plane was expected lo return to Paris from Its temporary base in Germany at the same time. There was no comment today from the U.S. or North Vlebtamese delegates on when the talks might end. But .as the meeting started, a North Vietnamese truck trought two cartoos of document. and a large typewriter to the house, prompting: speculation among reporter'!'! that the tw<> sides were preparing a final agreement -as they did shortly before the end of the Vietnam peace treaty talks last January. In other developments: Cambodia forces with strong U.S alr support rought to regain control of a s\1:-mtle stretch of Highway 4 linking Phnom Penh with the southern seaport cf Kompong Som, 134 miles to the southwest. Saigon presented a new seven·polnt plan today that It said was designed to make the cease-fire v.·ork. The com- mtmlst! rejected It. From Page I BOMB ... turned over to the Treasury agents for analysis In their lab in Washington, D.C. Police are working on a thoeory that the telephone bandit Is actually more than one person beeause of the speed with whJch the money Is picked up. They belleve one person does the .. telephone end of the robbery directing the victim to put the money at the back d. his business in a 58.Ck. They think a sec· ond person has the area staked out and picks up the money and can leave well ahead of the arrival of police. OU.N•I COAST " DAILY PILOT fM ~l'lff (HI! OAllY 'llOT, Witt\ W!ll(ll b _,....._ llM N-Pr .. 1, It P\llllltl'IM llY lhl Or•"Otl P.•• ,ultlltlllnt t.mc-y. , .... l'ltll .. llllM •r. Ml"""'· Menol1y "'._.. Prlll1y, fW Co1!1 M ... , NNOOtl 111(11, """"""9fl 91ad'll llC111n!lln Vtllty, L.aellfta IMdl. lnlno/5Nfl•tll and kn Cltmlfltt/ '"91'1 Ju1n Glpl1tr1n1. A 111111.. "91on•I ..ittlofl It JIUblltllef S1MHVI llld Sllnlla'(I, Tiie prlft(IHI !Ml!lllllftl plelll 11 It JJt Wt1I 11'1 &tr-.t, COlll M ... , C:1L...,nl1, tHH, k1•1n N. W1H Pr•klfflt ""' """'l!tlwr J11\t Jt. c.,,1,., Vie. P'r*"-'1 ,.,. c;....,11 MIMOf• Tl!111'111 K11wll '",..... Tllt"'I¥ A. Murp~in1 MtMflllf ........ 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CA~. ~-., ('"'""' D.61 -'""'' w fJltll a .11 -"'1" 111111t.,., ........ , ... ., ... -lllly'. • 1971 was predicted from five nondrug- rclated factors -lnc:ludlng ac1demlc performance and cigarette smoking - measured in 1969. 1be researchers said the analysis was 68 percent accurate in predicting the. nondrug uaen who went on to martju.ana alone and 77 percent accurate ln 1howtn.r "'hat nonusers went to both marijuana and hard drugs 11uch as heroin, stimulants. de pre s e ssa n ts and hallucinogens. 'n\e data were also 72 percent accurate In predicting 'i\'hat nonusers eventually used and type of drug and 67 percent ac· ~rate in predicting which new mari· Jt.ana users went to hard drup. The re.searcher:. said that In comparing data rrom noousers and those already us- lng drugs at the beginning of the 1tudy Jn 1969, the computer was able to lllOl't out the two groups with 81 percent accuracy 11!· ; only nondrug-related information. The report was to be presented today at the National Research Council-Na· tlonal Academy of Sciences meeting of the C.Ommittee on Problems of Drug Dependence held at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill. The study was compiled by Ors. Gene ~1. Smith of Massachusetts General, Charles P. Fogg of Boltoo University, Herbert Greenwald of Bridgewater State College and Richard LaBrie, an in· dependent consullant-statlJtlcian. The five elements aue1sed in 1969 were rebelliousness againlt rulet and a.utborjUe1 as measµred . by .a quea· t10Maire, rating s of obedience, grade average, cigarette smoklng and un- favorable attitudes toward cigarette smoking. "Each of the predictors significantly discriminates between nonusers who will remain nclnusers and those who will become users," the report said. . "I!? addition. i;ach predictor variable s1gruficantly dlscriminates between those who will become hard drug users and those who wil! limit their drug use to marijuana taken only lnfrequently." The tendency toward rebe.llion and cigarette smoking i n c r e a s e d pr(>. gressively from the no-drug group to the marijuana-only group and was greatest with the hard-drug users, the report said. Better school marks, greater obedience and negative attitudes toward cigarette smoking were highest with the nonuse group and decreased progresslvely toward the stude.nta who started drug use early. "We need to emphasize," Smith said in an interview, "that we are talking about stau.tluJ probabillllel ln groupa, and not indlvlduall. "These results apply on the avera1e and there are many individual ex· ceptJons," he continued . •'Parents readlng tiu, 11tucfi should not be too alarmed if their ehlld Smokes cigarettes afld Isn't · gettblg good grades: This doesn't necessarUy mpan that he will uae drugs." ''Some students who are rebellious, and who smoke and drink and get poor grades do not become drug users," the study ~aid "and aome top studentJ who are not rebellious and who do not smoke er drink do become drug u.sers." Doctor Reports Needle · Method Eases Toothache KANSAS CITY (AP) -A Chinese physician told a dentists' convention here ?-.1onday she uses acupuncture to relieve toothaches and the method ""•orks 90 percent of the time." Dr. Lao Chi Hwa who practices at Waukegan Ill. spoke at the joint annual convention of the Missouri and Kansas State dental associations. "I only treat the pain. not the cause - 'A-"h.ich is the dentist's job," she said. In her technica l presentation Dr. i,ao talked about the history of acupuncture variation in needles, puncture points related to the teeth and signs \\•hich indicate the technique should not be used. She says she does not recommend it for alcoholics. those \\'ilh anemia or those 1\·ho perspire a Jot. Dr. Louis A. Saporito of Newark N.J. president of the American Dental Association told the opening session of the three·day meeting that the dentist's r!1ost critica l proble_m Is getting the pa- hcnl to adhere lo daily care of his Leeth. Death Ray Data Being Excl1anged LONDON (AP ) -The British govern- ment Is exchanging Information wtth the United StateS on a laser "dtath ray" both nations are developing to destroy aircraft and missiles at long range the Defense Ministry said today. ' A spokesman said work on a powerful long-range IRSer gun has been going o~ for some time. Scientific sources said the gun being developed has a range of 70 miles and ultimately can be mounted In aircraft. But they said the first te1ts wlll probably take place on lhlpboerd because of the eleetrlad power needed. A laser produce11 a beam of lnten11e light waves concentrated along " very narrow line rather than acatterlng as from a normal lig:tit source. Since light travels at 188,000 mile11 a StCOnd a laser wtapon's beam would reach 11!: target almogt instantaneously. • .. FromP.,.el ROOSEVELT •• tho <hars<• lhollldll't l>t labeled !nud. "'i'be chatl" are m!Sll\Allllemalt of the company. Under Swiss la•, the1 call it fraOO ," be said. . "I know t havt n't com1n1tled fraud . They say we sh<>uld have known that the company was DOt in u eood • fi.o.ancial poe!Uoo a1 management led lnvett.ora lo believe," Rooeevelt said. He said he simply took the word of several top underwriting companie11: "1bey thought the fund was do1n1 a good job," Roosevelt 1a\d. Roosevelt, v.·ho Is teaching a course an 1 the Congress at UC lrvl.ne, •aid he doesn't know what he'll do ~bout the warrant until he talkl with hit llwyer.~ "[ have no intention of goinc ··to Switzerland unless there 11 some re~ to go." be said. , R~velt and \1esco are among six present a.Jtd fonner !OS directors wanted by !be Sv.·1ss government. . The Swiss \Yarrants were issued Feb. I to allow police to detain the six men for questioning in case they retum to Switzerland. Vesco was arrested in Geneva more than a year 'ago on a private crimlna.l complaint. He was freed by a maglstrate court when the complaint w a 1 withdrawn. Field Strung tor Beans Vesco has been indicted in New York . aloog with fC>nner Attorney General John Mitchell In connection with the secret $200,000 cash contribution to President Nixon's re--electloo campaign. They were accused of seeking to block a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation of the handling of IOS funds. Also named in the indictment y,•cre former Com- merce Secretary Ji.1aurice Stans and a New Jersey politician. Harry Sea rs. Interesting patterns of strings decorate Ranch acr~ age along Culver Drive in the city of Irvine. Gene Kawa1nura's Western f\.tarketing Compa,ny leased the parcel near Barranca Road. Kawamura grows pole beans, a vegetable crop not unlike string beans except that the beans grow on the strings and do not have strings in the beans, an Irvine Company SJ>?kesma n explained. Machines thread the string in c'.1sscross fashion on poles. Japanese farming tech- niques produces a greater yield of high quaJity beans, ranch spokesmen noted. Official sources said the four others wanted in Geneva are present JOS com- pany president f.lilton Meissni;r. fonner president Ed Cowett, former direct.on C. Henry Buhl 11[, and Ulrich Strickler, Swiss former director of one of the IOS b1¥1ks and believed among tpe company's largest shareholders. April Living Cost Leaps Prices Ease Sliglitly, Still Up Sliarply, U.S. Says The warrants were issued by Geneva examining magistrate Pierre Christian Weber, whose orfice refused to talk to the press. Weber had ordered the arrest of !OS founder and former director Bernard Cornfeld \vhile he visited Geneva to see Meissner last Monday. Meissner has since disappeared. WASHINGTON (AP) -The Cost of Living eased slightly in ~pri~ but. the in- crease still was extra-0rd1nar1ly high, the government reported today. Sharp ad· vances were recorded 1n the cost of food, clothirijl. used cars and gasoline. The Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics said consumer prices rose seven-tenths of one per~nt last month, following a nine-tenths-of-one-per· cent jump in March. April's jump match- · Fro1n Page 1 McCORD .•. of a fellow Watergate conspirator, told him that her husband had dictated a let- ter which reportedly threatened "to blow the White House out of the water." -Mn. Hunt said during the same """ veraaUon last November that her hus· band, a former White House consultant, "had infonnatlon which could impeach the President." -Former Attorney General John N. Mitchell and his wife Martha received "numerous threats in. writing and by phone" about the time of the May , 1972. assassination attempt against Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace, and ooe ''greatly upset" Mrs. Mitchell because it came through a telephone with an unliated number. -Before the Watergate bugging oc- curred, the Committee to Re-elect the President was deeply concerned about possible campaign violence. "Uppennost in everyone's minds, and certainly In my mind," were the disruptions at the 1968 Democratic National COnventlon and re- cent bombings at the Capitol and Pen- tagon. -He made two calls to embassies in Washington -identified ln published reports a! those of Chile and Israel - and had conversations that he ls sure were tapped. McCord, security chter at Nixon's re- election c<>mmittee at the time of the June 17 break-in at Democratic national headquarters In the Watergate complex, wrote Chief U.S. District Judge John J. Sirles In March charging that perjury was committed at the trial and that there was political pressure for a ooverup. Discussi ng the alleged effort to blame the CIA. McCord said, "Among other things, this also smacked of the situation which Hitler's intelligence chiefs found 1hemselves in, in the 1930s and 1940s. 1vhen they 1vere put in the position of having lo tell him what they thought he wanted to hear about foreign military capabilities and Intentions, instead of 1vhat they really believed ." A spokesman for Hughes in Los Angeles declined comment on McCord's testimony. Under close questioning by Sen. J.Jerman E. Talmadge (D-Ga.,) McCord acknowledged that he had learned of White House pressures directly only from 1-lunt; Hunt's attorney, William E. Bltt· man: and Gerald Alch, whom McCord later fired as his lawyer. Of his letter to Caulfield, l\1cCord testified: "The letter was couched in strong language because it seemed to me at the time thal this was the only language that !he White House underatood." He said the letter stated: "Dear Jack: I am sorry to have to write you this letter. U Helms pe1 and 1he \Vatergate operation ls laid at CIA'• feet where lt does not belOng, every tree In the f<>rest will fall. It wtll be a scorch- ed desert . The whole matter Is at the precipice right now. Pass the message that If they want It to blow, they are on exactly the right course. I'm torr)' that you wlll get hurt In the fallout." McCord said he told Alch , "even U It meant my freedom, I would not tum on the organl:r..atlon that had employed me for 19 years and wrongJy deal such a damaslns blow lhet It would take yeau for It to recover from It." • ed February's increase . March's jump was a 22-ycar r~cord. The bureau said food brought in grocecy slores rose 1.6 percent, less than in each of the preceding three months but considerably higher than usual for April. Fruits and vegetables were higher than normal and beef prices continued to climb, but the government said the in- crease was much smaller than in recent months. Prices on a broad range of consumer goods other than food moved up sharply in April , reflecting recent wholesale price increases since the Nixon Administration dropped price controls in January. The jump in overall consumer prices pushed the goverMient's retall price in- dex up at a sea500ally adjusted annual rate of 9.2 percent over the past three 33 Pendleton Marines Recover From Poisoning Thirty-three Camp Pendleton Marines who suffered food poisoning Monday were all scheduled to be: released today from the U.S. Naval Hospital on the base. Samples of the food all the Marines ate in a mess hall at Camp San Onofre were stlll undergoing laboratory testa today. Medical officers aaid they suspected slic- ed ham as being the cause. Camp San Onofre is a training area for basic infantry units. The 33 Marines af- fected Monday were only a portion of those eating breakfast there, a spokesman said. All the men were listed in satisfactory condition early this morning. They had been taken lo the base hospital by helicopter shortly before noon Monday. months. The administration has set a goal of reducing inf!ation to 2.5 percent by the end of the year. The April consumer price index for all items showed a climb of 0.9 Index points from March, up from 129.8 to 130.7. The Index figure , based on 1967 prices, means it took $13.07 In April to pay for the same "market baset'' cf typical family goods and services that cost $10.00 six years ago . In a separate report the bureau said average \\"eekly wages in April rose four- tenths of a percent, to $14l.72. The rise resulted from increases of 0.5 percent each in the average work week and ln average hourly earnings which were partially offset by a seasonally adjusted 6/loth of a percent Increase in consum- er prices. Vesco was head or the lntemational Controls Corp. when he took over IOS. Details of the takeover are still a mystery. The American financier is believed to be in Costa Rica where he reportedly owns considerable property. Official sources there have hinted Vesco planned to renounce U.S. citizenship and become a Costa Rican citizen . Roosevelt served six terms in Congress from Beverly Hills. The eldest son of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, he resigned his seat in 1965 to become ambassador to the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations. He went to work for IOS in 1967. •tnsane Mo1nent!' l1inocent Man Fingered iii Theft MIAMI (UPI} -Police have arrested a young gas station em· ploye whose testimony _put 24-year-old \Villiam Gerome Parker in jail three months for a en.me he didn't commit. Parker was released from jail ~farch 30 after the state attorney's office received a letter from Gary fl.lichael Reuss, 20 saying that "in a moment of insanity1 I stole $40 and put the blaine on someone else." Parker, who was arrested Jan. 12 on charges of robbing a ser- vice station where Reuss worked, said after he was freed that a man from the state attorney's office apologized and said "they were sorry I had to stay in jail this whole time." Reuss was arrested Sunda.y night and _ch.arged with perjury, petty larceny and falsely reporting the comm1ss1on of a crime. . Police said Reuss apparently spotted Parker's car at a conven- ience store next to the service -station, wrote down the license num·· ber and reported that number to police when he claimed he had been robbed. Reuss later identified Parker at the police station and at a preliminary hearing. PRUDENT BUYING " Throughout our 78 years of carpet retailing, one fact becomes quite evident -that when money is less plentiful, people buy better quality. This is contrary to popular belief, but makes good sense if you think about it. When you have to concern yourself with value and performance, you are likely to buy better quality. At Alden's in the last four years, our per unit sale has been more expensive carpeting, reflecting t'his , fact. Consequently, we have the largest selection of finer qualities you will see anywhere, all at competitive prices. The end result is customer satisfaction, pride and recommendations which provide our overwhelming source of new business. • ' ALDEN'S .., CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA I 646-4038 Moo. • Tltun. f lo 5:301 Fri. f 1o t: Sat. f 1JO lo I •• G De La pla Ile gol jun foll wh ing mi ho an we en K wi 193 fea " tog ter an Vo u1 \Vi lik " fa w br ch la m M ' di '° M to IO of ru cu ot th d J is p G L rl p c p • 2 l n • s i f f 0 f r .. h I T11esday, M.1y 22. 1973 s DAILY PILOT 3 Avco Grading Halts as Lawyers Plan Actiori By TOM BA11LEY CM .. Ofiltr ........... Grading operations over much of Avco Development Corporation's $100 mUllon Laguna Nigud ~terprise ls at a stan(lstill today while the company's ex· ecutives and lawyers mull the best way to combat an Orange County Superior Court construction ban. Trial lawyer R. Wicks Sll:lphens II ex- plained Monday after Judge Herbert, Jierlands halted grading on the planned golf course with the second of two in- junctions signed by him that ''Avco can follow one or two courses." Slepbens Pid It Is more llkel1 that Avco will tum &o the favor OI the ~v!rorun<nt>I CoaliUon of Orange Coun- ty. Or, be said, Avco can continue to press Its case with the South Coast Regional c.ommissloo with the hope that the con- servation agency will issue emergency permits that would allow grading to con- tinue. Until then, grading will not be allowed within 1,000 yards of the mean h.igb tide line oo either the Alpha Beta shopping complex or the golf course. Judge Herlands refused to issue an ln· Top Forties Singer Vaughn Monroe Succumbs at 62 From Wlre Services STUART, Fla. -Vaughn ,Monroe, whose smooth baritone voice maite "Rae· ing With the MOOCI" and other songs million sellers, has died at 62. Monroe died Monday in a Stuart hospital. His widow said he became ill and underwent stomach surgery two \veeks ago after returning from an engagement in Louisville, Ky., during the Kentocky Derby. Born in Akron, Ohio, he was playing with bands in western Pennsylvania at the age of 15. tfe fonned bl.s own band in 1937, and for ei~ years the group was featured on the popular radio program, "Camel Caravan." The band stayed togethe r until 1953. He was one of the first major en· tertainers to do television conunercials and for 15 years was known as "The Voice of RCA." Monroe'! hits included "Ghost Riders in the Sky." "There I've Said It Again" Clinir Cuswdy Will Alternate, Jurist Decrees BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) -Surrogate William J. Regan arrived at a Solomon· like decision on the question of whether a son or a daughter legally Inherited their father's rocking chair. Mildred Hoover said she believed she was entitled to the chair since her brother, Arthur, had received another chaJr from their father. Arthur said his fathe r wanted him to have the rocker. The rocking chair was not explicitly mentioned in the will or Burr C. McDowel when he died last J uly. It only stated that his $20,000 estate was to be <livided eq~lly between the daughter and son. Regan decided recently that Arthur McDowell will have use of the chair "up to and including July 1, 1973," when be is to make it available to hi.!1 sister. She, in turn, will have it until the end of Decembe; 1973. From then on, Regan ruled, the son and daughter will have custody of the chair for alternating sis:- month periods. \Vhichever of the heirs ouUives the other will have permanent possession of the chair, Regan ruled. and "Ballerina.'' ''We made no concessions to rock n' roll," he said in a recent interview. "ll is foreign to me. I would be out of place if 1 ever lried it. "The record industry today is such that they put records out like popcorn ," he said. "The young performers make one record and they are hot. They have never been through the one-night stand business -playing in barns, freezing lo death in unheated ballrooms." A private funeral was scheduled with burial in Stuart, where Monroe had lived for the past seven years. Although his career included a few mo- tion pictures, Monroe himself would have passed up his longtime association with RCA victor as a popular vocal artists for greater recognition as a bandleadcr, ar- ranger, and trwnpet pla yer. It was, in fact, while playing the trumpet that he won his first professional big band job while still in high school in_ his native Akron, Ohio. He had won the Ohio State trumpet contest while a teenager, and as a high school student he managed to work as a featured vocalist as well as trumpet player with professional swing bands of the early '305. "Don't think 1 like the idea or making all those voice records ," he once said. "We have plenty of good jazzmen in the band and I'd like to do some in- strumentals, but RCA Victor tells me to keep right 1on singing." And while his band catapulted such stars as Bobby Nichols on trumpet and lead trombonist Ray Conniff to fame of their own, his bands always featured vocals by the conductor himself. In the '40s he was compared to Rudy Vallee as a romantic band leader with many female fans and hot-selling records. His musicians often joined in the singing, and along with his own solos, Monroe featured the Murphy Sisters and the Moonmaids, among other groups. When the Dorseys and other bands declined, Monroe managed to hang on µntil the end of the decade , probably due largely to his accent on singing and his own personal draw. In 1950, .. with the new medium of television growing, NBC gave Monroe his own show. There were also some film parts, mostly Westerns such as "Singing Guns," the "Toughest Gun in Arizona," and "Meet the People." He is survived by his widow Marian and two married daughters, Candice Wagner and Christina Smith, and two grandchildren. Liza Swit~hes In Love With Petet Sellers LONDON (AP) -Liza Minnelll said to- <lay that her engagement to Deal Arn~ Jr., who is six years younger than she is, is over and she's in love with comedian Peter Sellers, who's 20 years her senior. Laughing and giggling, the late Judy Garland's daughter said her affair with Ludlle Ball's son had ended since shear- rived in London 12 days ago and met Sellers, a veteran of three marriages. "It's all very simple," said the Oscar· winning American singer and actress. "MY engagement -our relationship -' had been deteriorating for som~ - pleasantly, luckily. "We are no longer engaged. lt's all called off. "I fell in love with thl11 man and 1 am pleased to say he fell in love with me. I am really terrifically happy.'' Liza is 27, Sellers Is 47 and Desl Jr. ls 21. Young Arnaz told a reporter In Hollywood before Liza made her an- nouncement: "Something hliS gone wrong. that's for sure. It all turned sour since Llza went to England ." Uza, dressed In a black pants suit, was joyful and bubbly at her news con· ference, called after a night on the town with Sellen. She and Sellers had be<n ,... t011ether frequently since the OScar-winnlni star of the movie •jCablret" cam~ to Landon. The couple dined late togother at a fashionable West End of London restaurant Monday night, and even perfonned an Impromptu duet for customers. Pursued by newsmen into the small hours of today, neither Uza nor Sellers would confirm talk of romance . At the news conference she explained : "I had certain obligations yeaterday. I had to mii.ke a !ew phone calls to friends In the Unlt>d States. l had to clear the boards." I .. - SHE 'LL TAKE SELLERS Actre11 Liu Mlnnelll Friends. of Sellers and Liza had said earlier the couple had known each other for a tong time. But Liza insisted their friends hip only began when 11ho came to London lt:Ji.14 than two weeks 11go, . "although I have always been an admirer of his marvelOWl talent." th.a laughed aside qutet\ons about ~ marriage date. Sellet'! Is at prescnl oeparat>d from hls third wife. jtmetioo that would have stopped grading on a nearby tract dewted to homes and cmdominiums. Bot Collliticn attorney Stanley Jones pointed out that grading was 95 percen' complete in lhe area before he fl.led his lawsuit agalnst Avco. Stephens vainly argued until the close of lhe three-day hearing that Avco's five years of work on the old 836-acre Capron property had built up the company's vested rights in the ocean~riented sec- tor. And those rights, he argued, ovemxle Proposition 20 and the subsequent coastal proteclion measure which is being used UPI T1l1p1Kt11 'RACE WITH MOON' OVER Vaughn Monroe in 1947 County Tax Man Sent to Prison On Fra11d Charge r.tarvin T. Stinson, a tax preparer with offices in Santa Ana and Anaheim , has been sentenced to four monlhs in prison and put on probation for 26 months for assisting in the preparation of a false tax return for a client and for failing to file his own income tax return for 1968. Announcement of Stinson's sentencing was nlade by U.S. Attorney William 0. Keller of Los Angeles. Keller said Stinson, 43, operated a tax preparation business known as Orange County Tax Service. The charges upon which he was con- victed involve the preparation of a tax return which contained numerous false and overstated deductions, the attorney said. to halt A\'00 opera-thal an, en- vironmeltallstl c:omplaln. Oostroying the coostliJ>e ID Ibo Sall Cl...t aru. Jlldgo lltrlandJ aboolwd Avco ol all cha r&es ol bad lallh tiul be aveecf with attomeya Jones and MerLyn Jensen that the company had knowingly violated the coastal protection 11.ct. He pointed to testimony in which Avco executive Raymond Peloao admitted from the witness stand that his company had gone ahead with gradlllg and all other development plans and intended to Reports clo .. alter Ille couta1 .......... d- f~lve date or Nav. I. ''That was a case of run speed ahead and damn the torpedoel." Judg• Herlands CCJmmented. And be al.to noted that Avco pumped more than $80,000 into gradlng operations In the two weeks lm· mediately preceding the enactmeQt of Propos!Uon 20. Stephens argued that Avco complied with all pre-Propoe.ltJon 20 government codes to pursue Ill 5all o-eet plans Rnd had Judge Herlands agreeing with him when he said that lhe coastal measure on Gas wu "vague ln much ol !ta tmguq:e.." "Let us flnlah oor gradln&," be plud- ed. "After that, we w!U ga to the com· mission and see.k authority to ao llleld with the rest ol our buildlng pl.am.." Judge Herlands denied the plea wtlh lhe renewed comment that he It ccn- fldent that a final rullng on the issues raised by the Salt Creek lawsuit will have to come from a higher court. He had earlier commented: "Whatever happens, 1 can't see the Ca'ifomla Supreme Court undoing the people'9 in. itiative that we know as Propositioo 20." Conflict Advisers Disagree; Official Gives UpLi1nousine By United Press Intematlonal One government energy adviser warn· ed Monday of a worsening gasoline shortage this summer. But another government energy adviser called such reports "scare tactics" and a cabinet member swapped a limousine for a smaller car to save fuel. In Washington, Charles J. DiBooa, President Nixon's energy adviser, warn- ed that the current gasoline shortage will get worse this summer and pre>bably will continue through next summer. In San Francisco, William A. Johnson, energy adviser to the deputy treasury secretary, said reports of a drastic reduction in the amount of gas available to American drivers are "scare tactics." To save gasoline, Interior Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton said Monday his department has leased a 170-horsepower Plymouth to replace his 34$-horsepower Cadillac for day-to-day business. The Caddy will be kept for transporting dignitaries. "The margin between experiencing and not experiencing gasoline shortages ls very small and only one or two percent reduction In gasoline consumption could make the difference," Morton said. DiBona told a Senate commerce sub- committee Monday that due to a number of factors, including antipollution laws and a decrease in refinery construction, "we have had a very tight fue l oU situa- tion last winter and race an even tighter gasoline situalion this summer. .. 1'Urthermore," he said, "things may nol be much better next year." Johnson told a news conference during the annual convention of the Society of Independent Gasoline Marketers, that "the supply situation is not desperate in this country." "A great myth Is afloat that the price of gas is going up to $1 a gallon. But I don't see that we're going to have a substantial increase in prices." DiBona said that the administration's voluntary fuel allocation program was Atom. Foes Drop .I~sue SAN DIEGO (AP) -Groups opposing the construction of two nuclear power plant units have dropped their argwnent that steam from underground wells would be a better energy source. "\Ve are \Yithdrawing the geothennal issue from the proceedings," attorney Bruce Sharp, representing envirorunental groups, told an Atomic Energy Com- n1i ssion hearing Monday. lle said the groups had decided not to let utility companies crGSs-examine a geothermal power advocate because one of the companies, Southern California Edison, is hostile to the potential of Imperial Valley steam wells as energy sou rces. "He doesn't think he can make his case and that's why he's withdrawn the geothermal issue,'' a company spokesman countered. Dr. Robert Rex, vice president of Pacllic Energy Corp., testified Friday that the Imperial Valley has huge reset\loirs of geothennal energy but Southern California Edison has refused to consider it as an alternative to nuclear power. Edison and San Diego Gas and Electric Company, owners of an atomic plant at San Ooolre in north San Diego County, have applied to build two new units and expand the plaot'1 power fiveloJd by 1980. The AF.c i! expected to make a decision on a licenae this summer after the con- clusion of the hearings. ' being monitored and if it failed, "more stringent measures will be taken under existing authroity." But DiBona said the administration op- posed legislation aimed at alleviating ~ shortages because it would Impose "inflexible, long term requirements" on the oil Industry. "Such action could reduce the overall efficiency of the system and decrease over all output, thereby making a Ugbt situation considerably worse," h e testified . i:;. i:;. i:;. Military Bases In. Southland Cut Gasoline Supplies RIVERSIDE (UP() -Tbe enel'l!Y crisis has reached 15 Sootnern California military bases which have been forced to Cut back gas supplies at their post e1- change stations for servicemen and their families. · A spakesman at March Air Force Bue here said Monday that stations at March had pumped about 475,000 galloM of ps monthly, but are now limited to 250,000 gallons. He said the cutbacks have similarly af. fected If other ba11es. "With the current energy crWs, the oU companies are unable to keep pace wtth the rise in demand for gasoline and are being folced to hold sales a t ap- proximately last year'a level," aa1d U. Col. William S. Hall, chief of - Hall said the reault bu been lhal pa prices at the stations have Increased 2 cent.I .a gallon, wbich J11 stfll 2 to 3 centa a gallon i.u~than whit the publlo ~lly pays, and that ...,ltlni houri have bOen cut. DEMONSTRATOR SALE! • NOW on at Johnson & Son ' 1973's at BIG DISCOUNTS! LINCOLNS, MARQUIS, MONTEGOS, COUGARS, COMETS , CAPRIS, • • • AND • • • STATION WAGONS Chance of the yea1· on our first sale of the year! You Know When Johnson & So11 l1a s a sale, it's a good l()ne! Hurry over to make your choice on nearly eve1·y model in the Lincoln-Mercury line at a Bi g Savin gs ! HURRY, THOUGH, THEY WON 'T LAST LONG! Hom~ Of Th~ NeY.1 Car • , , •'Goi.de•• '.l'oia:ch~' • , "Oran-gt CounttJ'S Tomil)I o/ Tlnt Cari" ohnson&son I I ". ( < ! I I ~ r.11 1 ·, 1 11 , y l .i' f t l . Rome Of Tht N~w Car • , • ''GoUeM "r•11ch"' 2626 COSTA MESA'S HARBOR BLVD OF CARS e ~ ' , ! l . r ' ' ... _ ... India Ch.shes Bloody Armed Police, Tropps • in Pitched Batt"le It's Watergate Time on Tell OFF AND RUNNING D~'!?""--'l'lll" Watergate Show went bee television airways again today to face a uncertain Neilsen Rating. The star far, John McCord, was back in the witness chair early, droning away In reading lrom bis memos. For those of us here along the coastline, McCord Is really just a warmup. We await the appearance of Mr. Herbert Kalmbach, the noted Newport Beach attorney who was formerly !\Ir. Nixon's counsel and assert.ed!y keeper of R e p u b 11 c a n purse.strings. So far, .Kalmbach has proved elusive to those members of the press and television corps who would like to whisper in his ear about certain GOP fmanci.al matters and have him whisper a few things back. Anyway, it Is anticipated t h a t Kalmbach will appear on the Watergate Show and should considerably boost the viewer ratings along the Orange Coast - and elsewhere too. IT IS UNCERTAIN at thb writing what the Watergate Show is going to do to daytime television-watching habits. Certain persons who have brleny fllck .. ed on daytime television and shuddered at that vast wasteland or dramatic 1Ct'eams and toilet bowl cleaning com- men::iab would suggest that daylight teevee has no place to go but up. THUS WATERGATE may prove a boon to tube-watch.Ing during those hours when the sun is up. It may set a whole new trend, The TV people will have enough videotape of the thing to rerun hours and hours or it. Then too , if the Watergate Show proves really popular, the TV people might start televising other Senate and Qingressional hearing11. Can't you just hear the 8n· oouncer now, as the cameras fade away from another three-hour Senate hearing? "Well, that's It for today folks. Be sure to tune in tomorrow for the next exciting session. Will Senator Blowhard get over Ills sniffles and cold and be able to talk again? Will the lower San Joaquin Valley get its $500,000 for alfalfa irrigation? "AND WHAT ABOUT that cute little secretary who was sitting in the back row of the hearing? Will she be playing kneesies with Senator Grunt 's handsome aide again? Tune in tomorrow, folks ... " Well, all this may come to pass. Yet it has developed during the marathon air· ings of the Watergate Show that certain parties out there in teeveeland have call· ed the stations and even the newspapers to file loud and fiery protests. CLEARLY, THESE viewers do not care for the Watergate Show. They miss all lhat regular daytime drama. Shows Jite "When the World Spins on Your •. Sink" or ''Slinking Around in the Shadows" or "John's Other John." Whatever, it is clear that the regular dai- ly airings have some following and these folks resent senatorial intrusions into their video habits. Which brings us, I guess, to one Gerald Granville Bishop, a resident of Redding in our state, \l:ho was arrested the other night after watching a televised baseball contest between the San Francisco Giants and the Astros o( Houston. The Giants lost. WHEREUPON M'R. Bishop allegedly pulled out his .3()..caliber carbine and blasted the television screen with a fusillade of gunfire. This of course gives you one way to vent your frustrations if, in the end, the Watergate.,.Show doesn't come out the way you'd like. Just pull out a dustmop and beat the boob tube to death. U,IT ....... TWO OF FIVE VICTIMS OF A SHOOTOUT LIE DEAD ON STREET Gunman Killed Four Civilians and South Memphis L•wrmn Memphis Ex-convict Goes Berserk; l(ills 5 Persons MEMJ;;;~enn. (AP) -''I guess he just cracked," sai4 WiWam Edward F.armer Jr. "He knew my father -knew him well. We bad been children together.'' Fanner's father was one of four persons fatally wounded Monday by a gunman who sprayed riDe bullets without warning along a qwet Memphis street. The man also killed a police officer before he was forced [rom a house by tear gas and shot to death. AlJTHORITia SAID the gunman, identified as David Sanders, 30, was sauntering down the street with a powerful rifle dangling in his hand when he sudden1y whirled and shot to death four neigllbiodM»od reildents. FOUliltotber people, including a federal parolt ifflcer, were wounded as the gunman fired at passing autos. Witnesses told police the first to die was an elderly junkman, John Aldridge, who was collecting pop bottles and tos- sing them into his two--wheel c&rt. folice said Sanders went a few paces past Aldridge, turned and fired a shot through th e junkman's head. He then spun toward a liquor store and began picking off persons around the· door. PRICE SAID witnesses watched as Mrs. Watson lifted herself up a~ the gunman hit her with four more shots from his lever-action .».30 weapon. Police Chief Bill Price said officers ar- rived at the scene shortly before 1 p.m. PDT and were told by witnesses that the gunman had fled into a house do't\'ll the street. ·As. one of the officers, Patrolman David Wayne Oart, 31, went to the rear of the house the gunman Jumped from behldnd. the garage and fired a shot that struck the patrolman in the head. He then raced Into another house. WITH REINFORCEMENTS on the scene, Price directed that tear gas be ttred into the house;and as Sanders llJ>' peared al the front door and brandisfted his rifle as if to fire, he was shot to death by a volley of shotgun and pistoi fll't. · Police said three persons -Identified only as Sarah Wallace, Bobby Lott and Willie Record -were injured either by gunfire or shatt~ glass as Sanders fired on passing cars. None was believed seriously hurt. · James A. Crawford, the federal parole offi cer, was struck by a bullet while drlv· ing his car. He was listed in satisfactory TilE VICTIMS were William Farmer, condition in a hospital Monday night. NEW DELHI (UPIJ -umta AC· Ille Provlni:laJ Armed Camlaliulary .(PllC) In Pm!e -Indira Gandhi'• -state "' llttaT Pro-lllPlinled today and fougllt pitdled baUleo with army U!q>o ln-lwo dUes. FJl'IEEN Pl!lRBONS .._ killed and »-. ~ -..>dod'ID a~ gun be1tle bet,,_ the men of the PAC and Ille troc,.. al Ille ltate't ln<Utrial d· ty of Koopur, 300 miles -"' be<e, -~-v. K. Slnah said. '!be ollldaI said the ......a..i bave bem hoopillllfed but dediDed to -tbelr ldonllty. '!be otber battle occumd at a PAC · camping ground, 15 miles from Ille Hindu holy city of Benam -tbe c:cmtables battled with the lJOO!lS for an bDur and Soviet Vnion Travel Nixed ~ 'Temporarily' MOSCOW (UPI) -Western diplomats said Monday that authorities have restricted all individual travel in the Soviet Union for a number of resident foreigners. The restrictions fll'St became apparent last Friday when American, British, Canadian and West German d{plomats were told that applications for internal travel were being rejected for the ~ ( IN SHORT ..•. ) ment, the dlpomats said. The ban also applied to We.stern cor- re§po~ts, but it was not known if it affected resident businessmen o r tourists. e Aussie Protest THE HAGUE (UPI) -Australia, claiming all Its inhabitants including un- 'born babies have radioactive particlues in their bodies, Monday asked the lntematklnal Court of Justice to !top France temporarily from atmospberic nuclear tests in the South Pacific. 1be Australian attorney general, Sen.. Lionel Murphy, made the plea for an in- terim lnjun<UO!l pending a final judg- ment of the court when the world court opened oral hearings on separate cases filed by the All3tralian and New Zealand . governments. e LIU Aution STONEWAIL, Tex. (AP) -Mr.s. Lyn· don B. Johnson has thrown what may have been one of the last of the big LBJ R8Jlcb partie,, to sell off her husband's prize herd of Hereford cattle. A total of 213 cattle were sold during the 411 hoor auctioo oa Monda)', bringing In $140,54!0. The highest price pajd for a single head was $2-650 !tr a bull. e Red Bero Deed 73, a retired railroad man, Jessie Dooley, Price said Sanders had seven arrests and Henrietta Watson, known as "Candy on his record, including charges o{ rape, MOScnW (AP) -A JJero•a funeral Girl" because she worked in an adjoining carrying a pistol, assault and battery and and burial beside the Kremlin Wall are candy store. disorderly conduct and drunkenness. planned for Marshal fvan S. Konev, "One of the ladies from down near lhe Price said reCords showed that Sanders whose force.. linked up with the comer called me and told me somebody ... -se~ed-~'°'1-tenn on-a-1963 -Americans on ~..'.ffibe-ID--!M.T,-helped had gone crazy and just started shooting conviction of rape against a minor. take Berlin and captured Prague. · folks and that my husband was one of The 75-year"ld veteran oC the two them."' said Lendora Farmer. 60. Her ZS.. wu-ld wars died Monday after a Joog ill· year-old son, William. said he and S h J Off' • J ness, Tass reported. 'lbe Soviet news Sanders had been classmates toget~er. C 00 1Cl8 S agency said Marshal Ivan 1. Yalrubovsky, Myrtle. Mitchell. operator of. the hquor the commander of Warsaw Pact forces, ~tore, said ~rs. \\latson was hit once an~ To Rai'd Campus is heading the commission arranging the screamed, Oh, My Lord, have mercy, fun ral as she toppled to the sidewalk. e · DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtlivrry of th! Daily Pilot is guaranttPCI Mo...i1v·"•id•f : II v•11 ,., 11•• ~•11t Ytll• P•Ptt •1 J:JO '·'"·• ctn •"" y...,, copy Will k .,.t.,qlll If ,..,, Clll• tni li-t11 1111111 1:ll ...... ~u'"''' Md s..,...,, u ,.. N n.r r•ctl>'t y..., <ttY ty f t .... , Sll""t'' tr I '·"'· S11n<1•r. <Ill 111d • C"f'Y wla ff W.Wtlll ,. Ytll, C•Ut ttt 11-tll •11111 11 '·'"• T tlrptionrs 11\til Or1119c C11111ly Art•• .. , .. ,. '41·Utl Ntrll'twtol N1111llf!t .. 11 lfltll t M Wffl'"ln1I« ••.••• ,.,, .Mf.1111 S111 C-rt. C1pltlr1,_ lttfll, i111 J•111 C1tl1!rt.,., Dt11t l"tl11I, Stulh L1,11n.. lt911111 NlfHI .... •tl•Ult YELLOW SPRINGS. Ohio (UPI) - An!looh College officials say they will enter barricaded buildings today and re- open the school which has been closed by striking students for four weeks. fire department officials reported three !ires early today at buildings on the fringe of the Antioch campus. Fires broke oot in t\vo houses used by the music department and an experimental college buJlding kno""TI as t h e "University Without Walls." Marge Freed, Antioch public in· formal.ion director, said damage wu ''relatively' minor.'' A fire department spokesman said the fires et the two nwsic OOildiogs were definitely arson and that the third blaze \vas "suspicious." The state f i re marshal's office was caUed to in- vestigate. Dollar Recovery Unlikely While Bugging in News LONDON (UPI ) -Demand for gold eased In Europe tod<y and the dollar gained ground on most marfiet. although It dropped to a new low in Paris. Bankers said no marked recovery for the dollar is: likely tmtU the Watergate affair is cleared up. ~ ti,.,. .. Kansas Storms Kill Three '"THE LA.OF~fidence in the ~ ministration of the wwld's most Im· poitant nation bu given rise to ma.ulve uncertainty in the markets which ts-going to persist tmtil Watergate is cleared up," said a spote!ITlail. for Samuel Montagu and Co., Ltd., which operates the London gold market with tour other merchant banka. -Infant Dies as Trailer Overturn,s; 2 W onien Drown Temperatures P1-nlx " ~ Plll•tw..:f" " ~ "''" Lo. .... Porl!• , Ort. " " Albl.lcrt.ltrciw II SG .03 Ak lltl'IOftd " n AIKllOtlOt .. ~ 5,,,.,,,.,,,0 ~ " Alltnll " " SI loult " " •• 81k.,-tJJfia " " Salt Lake n " IOY " .. 5111 ~ltOO ~ " ....... i! " il S..n rtfl(llCO " 81,111tlo .. ~ttl• ll .. ~'''"'Oii n " -" ~ " Wttlllncilon n " I lncrwltll " " V.S. Sum111a~ -·"" r. " -" ,,, ...... " " Hl111'1 W!lllb. l'ltlf tl'WI IOnWI :t rtlft Ftfrbankt ,. ~ b11ter..S wick ,,... of c.nrr ~ tlld Fort W"'111 .. n •11i.rn )(..,,,.. ..,.., tocl<ly, hr-. ~-dltd/11fhl~ In London gold dlanged hands at a day's P"•k ol $111.50, down 50 ceoi. from Monday's all-llme price fixing high of 1112. Bullion brol<eno linked the slacken· Ing demand lo< gold to the White House denial ttlat Henry A. Kissinger will resign. naddal 11ter airborne troop rein- fon:ommls arrlvod- 8tlvEIW. UNITS d the PAC in India'• most populous state muUnied ear· 1y this morning as troops swooped down on several dUes and towna to seize (he police armories. OfGciall ln the . state capital Clf Lucknow said tho government onleted army ll'OOpl to aeize the armories and diaarin the ccmtables after a late night emergency cabinet moetlng Mooday. 'Ibey saidJ govemment actioo came in the wake ri reports that several units of the PAC were planning militant action. Troops with flt:ed bayonets moved into the PoUce bamlcb in Mrs. Gandhi's home state ol Allahabad, disanned the police sentries &nd constables, and took positiom at important street junctions. IN KANPUR, the state's mo!t populous ctty troop& mow1ted guard on the go~mment-owned radio station, I.be main Posts1 and Telegraphs office, the Reserve Bapk of India. the nation's ex· chequer and the p<>wer house, the of. ficials said. ~ said several constables after a two-hour gun battle with the trodps fled With their arms. Several others stoned the troops from the city's narrow, wiJl.. ding alleys. The troops' takeover of police arms and ammunitiOD depots in several other cities and towns was completed without resistance, the officials said. THEY CLAIMED the mutiny had been quelled but admitted the situation in some towns was tense. Close to Peace, Brezhnev States BONN, West G<rmany (AP) -As- serting that the world b closer to durable peace than ever before, Leonid Brezhnev flew home to Moscow today to begin preparing for his visit to President Nixon next month. "Auf wiedersehen," the Soviet Com· munist party chief told West German Chancellor Willy Brandt as he boarded his silver-blue Aeroflot jet in spring sunshine that bathed the Bonn-COiogne airport. THE DEPARTURE of the Soviet Com· muhist party chief on the first an· niversary of Nixon's trip to Moscow end· ed the first visit to West Gennany by a top Soviet leader. During his five days in Bonn, he said Brandt laid the basis for an expansion of trade, technical and scientific cooperation ancf cultural ex· changes between their two countries. BreUmev said in a television address Monday night that improved U.S . ..SOViet relations and otller steps have brought peace closer. Vowing to bring the Soviet Union out of the Cold War and into ever closer cooperation with the We.st, the 6&- year--0Jd party chief said: "The prospects for humanity are becoming increasingly more hopeful. The war ln Vietnam is over. Soviet-American relations continue lo develop f~vorably. "BY AND LARGE, one can say that our planet today has come closer than ever before to durlble peace." The highlight of Brezhnev's visit was his signing Saturday with Brandt of a 1~ year economic cooperation pact pro-- Viding a framework for West German in· vestment to help boost the lagging Soviet economy. In a joint declaration M o n d a y , Brezhnev and Brandt gave their blessing to propo8ed deals including German help in building a Soviet steel mill,· expanding Soviet production of chemicals, machine tools, motors and raw materials, and other exchanges 0£ West German technology for Soviet raw materials. Similar s waps of technology for raw materials are expected to be a main topic for Brezhnev's talks with Nixon. The Soviet and West German leaders, who clearlY -Sot-aloog-weU.-also paved. the way for far-reaching cooperation in the fields of culture, tourism, science, transport, medicine and environmental protection. And they agreed to keep up close pGlitlcal contacts in the future. BRANDT JN A toast at a banquet • Brezhnev gave Monday night said their new goal was "productive coexistence,'' awarently a step forward from "peace- ful coexistence." On the minus side, they failed to resolve their differences over Bonn's at· tempt to tighten its ties with West Berlin and over the Kremlin's desire t.o make , the ·coming 34-oation European Security C.Onference include a swnmit session of the nations' top leaders. Skylab Expert,s Battle Radical Heating Changes CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) '-F1ight directors struggled to control · Skylab's too hot and too cold temperatures in orbit today while ground crewmen prepared to start ·the coontdown for the launch of three astrooauLs on an emergency repair mission. The two-and-a-half-day c o u n t d o w n begins at 5:00 p.m. POT, aiming toward a blastoff at 6 a.m. Friday. Project of~ ficials said they were cont'ident they eould complete the Skylab repair tools and techniques in time to meet the schedule. 11IE SPACE repairmen Charles "Pete" Conrad, Joseph P. Kefwin and Paul J . Weitz were in Huntsville, Ala., to.. tlay for their final underwater rehearsal of spacewalk procedures they might have to use to shade Skylab. The astronauts fly to the launch site tonight. The temperature problem aboard the Skylab presented fl ight controllerw in Houston with a dilemma. The gas in the living quarters was an almost unbearable 121 degrees this morning while the temperature in the ship's shaded airlock module was 34.2 degrees -dangerously close to the freezing ·mark. THE FLIGHT directors fought to keep temperatures aboard the 271-mile-bigh -~Uon-under oontrol-by..oanstantly adjusting its angle to the sun. A mission control spokesman reported ·that the temperatures ' 'a ppear manageable" by trial and error methods. Flight Director ~filton \Vindler called it "one of the great juggling acts that's been around." m f'' • . i t •• •• ... ' ~·-tt ll oeol!J/11 H-tOll • n I ndl lll\llllOl I 1 " " tr" " " TIM 11111 ~ Pltnl "!'JIOrltd "' ... ,.,_, • ~/l, "= ., ~ U,$. ?S OM rn .. north It '\":'-~-' . ,,, THE DOU.AR gained ground during the day IJi London, rucbing 2.5'35 dollan ap!nst the pound by mldaf· letnoon lfalnSI Monday's cloolng rate and alMlmo low ol 2.5780 dollars. In Frankfurt the dollar moved up to 2. 7485 mark• at one point from Monday's close of 2.7405 markl. "Condi~ In the foreljpl exchange market are no longer as hectic ~ have been in recent days," a Fiankfw1 dealer aatd. Brotherly Kiss U~I T ........ t" •• u · 011!tv~1 Ml1ml Mllw~ II Htw 111 -... .. Okltlftornl Ctty " =:. .... .. ll # ·" " "' " " n "' .. llt Hird tt ffll M of two --w.u_..1,, rc~~ll ~ fl'OIT'f II "" &if'l>v ren., I Mil l>Mr\ IW'flll IN Wll ... rv1111111 ICf'oJt "l. ='>'· l~ vie. """' -· N:llY • ~· • "" Url'ltl'. le~' A. ¥tt11, ''' botfl of •• In ..._ '"" )(lrn!Mrlv lro\11._ •• ~ ... }fiittt 8::1 "w -'""" """"'°'" 9111 ~ M tz~r "With the Watergale affair damaging tho dollar almoet dally, E..._. cur- rencies will stUl move forward agllnst the dollar," a London dealer aald . Theresa Rose Decorah is gree~ by her brother, Allerd, 7, at Mltcb- ell Fleld In Milwaukee. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Decorah flew honie after a doctor in Tokyo said the gi rl was too weak to undergo a dell- cate life saving operation to correcl defective liver bile ducts. The family hoped the sucgery could be done If Therese regained her strength. . •• .. • .. l ., ... ·. . • ---. ---. --. --~-- ' Chargei Delaying Hearing on Smog Brown Endorses . B radley ladge'• Opinion ·P r op. 2·1 'Illegal' I' ' SACl\AMENTO (AP) - A hoarloe on whether the stata Air ~ Boan! Is pull> Ing too bani for inltallatlon cl antlsmofl devices oo five million ltlfl&.70 model cars hal been postponed amid cbar&eo that Ila SpollS(lr also l'U push' ing too hard. Rlvenlde) ubd !or the delsy Monday, aaying ~ Al\B cri1ic Sen. Laww3 Walsh (D-llwllinglm Part w a a LOS ANGELES (AP) - Fonner Gov. EdD>und G. Brown hu eudorstd City Councllman Tom Bradley for mayor . SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -A Superior Court Juda:e says that the antibusing lnillative passed last November by Callfornla voters I s un- constitutional. h.is mind on that date. the Judge said, he '>''ill rule in fal/()I' of a suit first brought 13 months ago againsl the San Bernardino School District by the National Association !OT the Advancement or Colored People . ly black, on the west side or !his Southern Calllomla com- munity of 115,000. . ' Sen. W. Craig Biddle (Jl. * * * 'Smog Cops' To Patrol SF Roads SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Hoping to clean up the dirty air that lingers over this city'• famous bay, "smog cops" will ·soon.... patrol freeways and hlghwal"'. Issuing citations to motorists who add to pollution. "If you have ever followed a smoky diesel truck yoo know Jt's not too pleasant, and we're golng to do something about it," said 11lomas Brennan, who Is directing the project for the nine-county Bay Area Pollution Control District. Dressed in gray slacks and navy blue blazers and riding in orange-and-white patrol cars, the smog cops will determine whether smoky diesel trucks and other vehicles a r e violating existing ordinances. "'"'""' the "-IDC. 1be Senile talion Ccmmlttee went along with Riddle and reaciledUled the heartna -wb1cb bad been set !or Moodoy-!<Jr 'lbunday. WAIS! ¥YS ...,,. of the llllJlmo( devioes _..ved by tbe _ ARB have been in-acleqUawy tested and will cause IOIDe cart to cverheat. Mandalory statewide In- stallation ol the d e v I c e 1 crttlciud by Walsh begin> Ju- ly 1 lllllesa Walsll Is succemul in getting the Legislature to order a delaJ. Walsh propmes pootponing the deadline until November aod BMther com- mittee member, Sen. John W. Holmdahl (D-Oaldand), wants it delayed until February. Meanwhlle in San Francisco, tbe r~ air pollution con- trol distrlct has asked for a six nvmth postponement of it! compliance date for emission control e>lans. I Seeking As"lum UPIT....,_.. Ruperto Baliao Oeft), former acting Philippine con· sul general in Los Angeles, requested asylum from Immigration and Naturalization in Sa11 Francisco. Baliao shows his wrist, which he slashed last week to sign in blood a statemeµt against Philippine President Ferdinand Martos. At right is a Manila Free Press newsman. In bis endonement Monday, Brown also urged Mayor Sam Y arty lo dlaclooe bis campaign flnancel, portl<ularly I Q0,900 canlrlbutlon be said lbe wife cl a Yorty aWI member made. "I doo'l have anything lo do with the n1slng of money,'' mpooded Yorty, who bas in tum queaUooed some ot the contributions made to Bradley. llleUIWhlle,. Y orly Said il Bradley Is embarrassed by the endorsement of Black Panther leader Huey Newton, "It's his own fault because bis activity in the past would warrant en- dorsement." Judge Paul Egly stated the position Monday In S a n Bernardino Superior Court. He told attorneys in a desegrega- tkln suit touching on the in- itiative to appear June 10 to argue tbe matter. Unless the attorneys change • The NAACP brought suit seeking an order to direct school officials to balance racial tnrolhnent in one junior high school and six ele1nen· tary schools, all predominant- Bugs ID Bart Qakla1id, Conc ord Li1iked OAKLAND (AP) Autcmatic control gremlins bothered Monday's ceremon ial opening of Bay Area Rapid Trans1t's 19-mile Oakland-Ccn- cord line, newest unit In the $1.& bi 11 ion computer-con- trolled transit system. The ceremonial train started off acwrding to plan and made a lop speed 80-mile-an- hour run to Ylalnut Creek. YORn' SAID he had The six~ar train losded with D. J . Callaghan, district cm----------------------nothing to do with the ~n-dignitaries fin ally completed dorsement by Newton, which the inaugural run from Con-~e Sunday evening after a cord to Oakland after shiftin g news conference called to pro-to slow speed manual opera- There the gremlins fouled up the automatic controls. Under manual control the train proceeded at 25 miles an hour to Lafayette and stepped up to 40 1niles an hour to Orin· da. trot officer, said Monday that the request was made because additional time ris needed to stud y methods of reducing pollution. THE DISl'RICT asked the state Air Resources Board to grant the extra time so the changes can be enacted 1'.:>y Ju- ly 1, 1974 instead of the previous target date of six months earlier. Pair Suspended at SF mote Newtm's new book. tion. Bradley repudiated the en-Regular passenger service' dorsernent and said it looked scheduled at t p.m. marked to him like a trick to discredit the completion of three-fourths his c.ampaign. of BART's ?>mile network in Automatic control w as restored for a flourishing finish run through the tunnel at 75 miles an hour and into the O:J.kland station. . . Jail in Sex Incident SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A male s herirf's deputy who allegedly engaged in sexual in- tercourse with an inmate at Running for a fourth term in the nation's largest locally BART NOW is operating 58 the Women's Jail has been the May 29 runoff against finanred public project. miles of track serving 24 sta- suspended along with a female Bradley, Yorty told a Van The final segment o r tions. The new section's opera- deputy charged with helping Nufs campaign rally that he BART's system is scheduled tion calls for six trains run- him, legal documents have doesn't plan to run !or Presi-to begin service next Sep-ning at ll}minute intervals revealed. dent again. tember between Oakland and fro m Oakland through Orinda. JUDG E EGLV was ap- pointed by the State Judicial Councll ta hear the case. He normally holds court in nearby Pomona in Los An geles Coon· ly The judge sa id recent cou rt decisions including .. ooe by the U.S. Supreme Court. had con- vinced hhn of I he un - c on s I i tutionality of the Wakefield Initiative. Prop. 21 . p.<tssed on a 2-1 wg~ California vote t s~ las\ Nov ember. The inlllatlve. sponsored by Assemb lym an F'toyd Wakefield (R-Los Angelesl. prohibits assigning students to schools on the basis of race or to achieve racial b3lance. A Superior Ccurt judge in Santa Barbara upheld the con- stitutionality of the initiative earlier this year and the Callfornia Supreme Court is expected to review Ih a\ decision shortly. Co1mcihnan Weds Ai lle LOS ANGELES (AP I Saying he had known his ne\v bride since she was four yea rs old, City Councilman Arthur K. Snyder, 40, disclosed that he had married 19-year"ld Michele Noval, a worker in his fie ld office. Salamander Makes Gains Yorty, who had sought the San Francisco through a tun-Lafayette. Walnut Creek, and Copies or letters filed by Democratic nomination in the nel und er San Francisco Bay. Pleasant Hill to Concord. Sheriff Richard· Hongisto ()ft 1972 presidential campaign, \Vilh the start of the Con- Monday with the Ci\l'il Service said "if you want to see TIIE 19-MILF. Oakland·Con· · cord line .service. as many as Snyder, recently divorced, sald Monday they were mar- ried a week earlier in Las. Vegas, Nev. The ,brjde, who ' . also attends the University of So uthern California, so m e tim es ainga pro- fessionally with her rather , society orchestra •leader Ray Nov al. SACRAMENTO IAP) California's nearly e xtinct long-toed salamander h a s gained a new toehold on survival, thanks to thouaands of motorists who shelled out an extra f2.S for personalized license prates. The state Fish and Game Department annouraced Mon- day that it had used money raised by sale of so-called "vanity plates" to purchase one of the two remaining known habitats or the rare and endangered Santa Cruz long- toed salamander. G. Ray Arnett, state fish and game director, said the 3l}acre site, purchased for $85,000, was "the only re- maining undisturbed habitat of the salamander" and "was in imminent danger or being eliminated for construction of a trailer park or some other development." AUTHORRIES say no one knows exactly how many of the tiny, shy' salamanders still survive. Some 600 w e r e counted last year and Dr. Robert C. Stebbins, a University of Ca 1 i r or n i a zoologist, e s t i m a t e s ap- proximately another 600 may also live in the area or the new refuge. The creatures reach an adult 3jze of -5 inches and are black with metalliC-looking spots of yellow gold and orange. Comr¢s!ion said the incident money go out the window just cord line includes a 3.8-m ile 90 electric cars on 18 trains occurred when Deputy Ronald get ln a race like that." tunnel passing through the ac-wi ll be running in East San R. Garcia was invited to the "It cost! too much -tive Hayward .earthquake Francisco Bay s ervic e. millions of dollars -to reach fault. The two side by side Service extends to Fremont on Women's Jail on the morning the people of the country, and bores through the East Bay the south. t'> Richmond on the of May 3 by Helen Panos, a it's really a sad situation that Hills between Chambol C..1n-north. and Concord to the east deputy at that facility. it takes sc much money, but yon and Orinda cost $.1l from 0 a k I and' s hub that is the fact of the matter." million. MacArthur station. MISS PANOS, the letters.--~----------------- -------- charge, took Garcia to a e • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • e female inmate's cell and open-e e eel the door for him. Inside, he e "solicited and a:m.mltted an e act of sexual tntercourse," the documents allege. - ' • • • • • John Dewar &Sons lJ:d. • • • • • • • • invites you to ' join theDewarsl-!ighlander Clan. He'& offering a fantasllc low pru °" IUa ~"White Laber' It'll pat a little Scoix:Ji in every Californian! •A 11111• '-"•'Sm/cit "Join the clan I" Join that happy breed of people who know and appreciate. the fine po Mi ts of a fine SeOtch whisq. for 30 dayt, ~ can try this Authentic Scotch whisky at a very tpttLal price. That means $6,99 a fifth. On June lit. rqular prices take over. Don't wait. Why ~. a c.autiou1 Hiahlander make such a icncrous offer? Bccauae he knows that once you try one bottle oPhis famous "White Lahti," he's ge t you for good . Maybe you're already an old friend of Dewar's or an en- thwiutic new friend. Why not buY a ca.se of 12 fifth1? Now' a the time. You get an c:stra 10% dilcount-<•cn off the $6.99 price.. .,Authentic. 'DEWARS "Whlte Label" Dewar'• neoer 11arle•. ~ scm Wlllll'I' • •• ,.. • o aan .....m ai ....... "'- SPECIAL FIFTH PRICE MAY ONLY Regular price: $7.79 1. • •••••••••••••••••••• SAVE MORE ON A MAYTAG PAIR! e New...._,._.,w_.., • a.ice •• ....,...,.. • A1t1.-k...,.~cottff"ol • u .. fl"'9r • ,...,..... .. ,t9t'ltr •*H•I~ et~ °"9f" e N• w.,_.. • ~ ...... heat • r ..... ,,.., eye .. • RM ...... lhtt mter avis@brown T,ELEVISION e STEREO e APPLIANCU e SALES ~ SERVICE e SINCE 1947 I. 28 Year• of lntegrltu & De pendabllltg ?2·3 COSTA MISA e HARlOR AREA EL TORO e SADDLEBACK VALLEY ti Toro lo1d •t Fr••w•y I N1•t to S1v·O~ I 1)7-)110 ~I' "'""-· RADIO DISPATCHED FACTORY AUTHORIDD TY & APPLIANCE SERVICE PHONE 548-3437 I I l . I II •\ " ' ., i' '· I I •' , • ,. • I ., • ·-. DAD.Y PIIA,tT EDITORIAL PAGE Better to Orange Coast developers, worried about delays and costs. are perhaps understandably still somewhat hos. tile to Proposition 20, the Coastal Zone Co nservation AcL That attitude was apparent at a recent builders' symposium on Propositfon 20 in Newport Beach. But. as Irvine Comr>any executive Ray Watson pointed out. no one will gain anything by "frustrating lbe system" created by the new law. "Let's not hope - let's help," said Watson, referring to builders who are waiting to see if the law will be declared unconstitu· tionaJ. State Attorney General Evelle Younger says chances are remote that will happen. And if he's rjght many builders will have wasted time resisting the law 1n· stead of co ntributing their views to the planninl'( process going on now. Watson offered the new coastal commissions the benefit of the Irvine Con1pany's years of research into coastline planning and ur~ed other developers to do the same. It's a good suggestion, for only by cooperation of all concerned will the commissions be able to balance environment and economy, need and desire. Prediction Comes True In 1951, President Truman appointed a commis- sion to study the nation's fuel supply. In 1952, the com· mission reported back that the demand for energy would triple in the follow ing decade, that a serious problem could be foreseen and that something should be done. Cooperate at an average annual rate or 4.3 percent in the 1960s and the projectfon is lor an increase 0£ 3.4 percent per year for the rest of the century. Much of this consurnrtion is for lransportaUOD and industrial use . f{e sidenl1a energy consumption in Cali· fornia is the lowest among the states because of lhe mlld climate. But there is no denying, in California as elsewhere, the enorinous proliferation of such energy-co°'u:ming amenities as air conditioners, dishwashers, clothes dry· ers and electrical household equipment of all kinds. Alternative sources -nuclear, geothermal and solar energy -are, or could become, available. But it takes about 12 years to get a nuclear generating plant Into operation and the other solutions, stil l in the de- velopmental sta ge, are not expected to make a signi(i· cant contribution before the turn of the century. In tbe interim, energy conservation will have to~ come the order of the day. Some answers suggested at a recent symposium included elimination of non-essen· tial .driving, smaller cars to provide better gas mileage, getting accustomed to homes that are a little warmer in summer and a little cooler in winter, and special energy conservation in industry. . . To this end, the Edison Company has been survey- ing 180 major businesses in Orange Co unty to help de- velop energy conservation plans that could be put into effect 1n the event of a critical shortage, which could come as early as 1975. ! 0 I Nothing was done. And as predicted, two decades later, the ravenous U.S. appetite for energy has caught up with supplies and the predicted crisis appears to be upon us. At federal and state levels, experts are scurry- ing about seeking solutions. The doubters suggest it's probably all a giant rip-off by the oil companies and utilities. But the fact remains that ln California alone, energy consumption i~creased The power-sav ing plans, designed to avert tempor- ary blackouts, include such details as cooling-down plants with air conditioning in the mornings to avoid s~mmer afternoon overloads, turning off lights in unoccu- pied areas and shutting down non.essential equipment. A~ it is tl_1rning out, some of the proposals already are being put into effect by the finns surveyed, as econ- om.y measures. Householders might do well to survey their own.energy consumption. Cutbacks that would help conservation also could help the family budget. '7 gather this ~·akes those statements 'inoperative; gentlemen." Nixon Aloofness Dear ·Disturbs Congress Gloo111y Gus At lhe rate gas is goi ng up,· the guy v"ith the pump will have to have a hair-trigger finger It> give you a dollar's worth or regular. WASHINGTON -President Nixon 's continued aloofness from the crisis that has carried him to the brink of ruin was lroogbl homo last week by his amazing non-react.ion to the newspaper reports Uniting a high administration official to one aspect ol the Watergate .!ICandat for the finl Ume. Mr. NWm did ool llUIMlOll the o!llcta I to ask him about It. Nor did he seek to find out the truth for hlmself. N0< did the development stimu- late..,any Oval Office conversation at all. Beymd this Incident, the President is simply ool. available for the long serious analysis of Walergate and its explosive dangers that many associates believe is imperative. Although he bas seen a few Republican c:ongressmcn lately, they have left his office deeply disturbed by Nixonian detachment from t h e Watergate wreckage. ( EVANS·NOVAK J A.RV. GIHITIY Giii c-""""· •re s11bmltted b'f ruclen '"" do not lte(.llu.llilY nlllKI 1111 ~1 .... 1 el 11\t' n_...... leM YOllr ,,_1 PNYI .. Gloom¥ G111, D•llV f'llO!. '1interim'' chief of staff. counsel Leonard Ga rm ent and press secretary Ron Zieg· !er. They want freq~t\p~ ~ j n t i m a t e · presidential talks '\tlth~ .t!ibine\ and secs two years as the proper tenure for Republican mem~1 90ngress, fresh • lla ig. Another believes he will IJ:e. kept on faces in the l: Hilse an4 ..... for two monlhs. In ~ probability, Mr. bureaucracy and,.'.;. t 1 iinPortaiit, ~.,.~ ,.. ffmn does. ~t kn~w.. . . posure to the p~(-1 • .t,; Under md1\ary d1scipltnc, Haig has no • • : 11.' choice in the matter aod must accept the BUT IN Fl\CT .. :.Mr. NUon's.presJ.dl!l· riBk of watching his brilliant Army tial life has cli~nged veo-litlle; lei:hlig career dirtied or even destroyed if he is to do~bts by bot~-llii supporters. aIJ9 ibis, kept in an essentially political job at the enemies that he means to keep his ~· White 11ouse. Althou:gQ Haig tells in- ises of ' a new open-door p:tlicy~:-The tiri'lates he wants to open up the White symbol is Mr. Nixtlll's refusal,-~ we Jlouse and restore bipartisan civility, he write this, to hold even one press ~~ is tolally subject to orders of the Com· ference -much' less ~egular me;et}ngs mander-in·Chicf. Some Republican critics -operations that e\'en White House: aides see' that as a possibly sinister reason the feel are impera\ive. President chose him. Mr. Nixon's most fervent backers are now saying that ·his refusal lo mecl the press and do it soon .... ·ill undermine their claims that lhe Oval Office has been opened up to bureaucrats and pol iticians Fierce Believ er it• President's Rights Haldeman Held Tight Rein WASIDNGTON -At the center of the \Vatergate web, investigators now believe , is the deposed While House ma- jor domo H.R. Haldeman. Most of the strings in the Watergate tangle seem to lead back to him. String No. 1 _ Most of the men im· younger men who don 't question his in· plicated in the scandal belonged to bis structions. tight little circle. such key Watergate "lle deliberately brought them to the \Vhile House from comparative obscuri· figures as Job n ty, with few political lies. and, therefore, Dean, Jeb Magrud· less risk of d.ivided ... JQC;·. Their er, Dwight Chapin loyalty to Ha•n..m.®;, · litf'd. · · ces, ex· energy to the Salvation Army. THERE HAS been no hint that Haldeman pocketed any of the-campaign cash that passed through his hands. He used it strictly to gain political power and achieve political goals. 'Those who know Haldeman describe him as the sort _of ideologue who would violate the law to achieve law and ordef'. He believes fiercely in the rightness of the NixOn cause. To this end . Haldeman sought to bolster the power of the White House. and Gordon Stra· -ti:ir ~~ •. Chan reported direcl-~ e~etl.· · · . e Presi· dliftA ..... ~ .... •'r.~ i • ; • lytohim. r -·· • '•'·· 't'·"'· ~· HE SPOKE privately of "one-man String No. 2 _ HAWEMAN has b ¢ e ~"dfscltbed in rule," of Pr'esident Nixon 's "right" to run Haldeman was such ne~ acrouhts as .a: ptlgniatist, a the country. As Haldeman saw it, the a meticulous mana-mana gerial type, wOO w8s rl'!br~ in· President was the only official elected by gcr, investigators tcrested in.efficiency ~an1 ldeology,,;This all the people. Haldeman fell this gave have concluded , that is not the irnpre¥Joq'We g~. Qn ·tb~ con· Richard Nixon a mandate. particularly theWatergateoperation.~dn'thaveoc-trary,. he h:1'~' ¥~ .. ~vloti~ which after the 1972 landslide . to set Ille na- curred without his kno~ge: fie stayed he Sl()llght :10 tm~ upon t~ coililtry. lion's policies and, if necessary, to ride behind tl)e scenes, us~1Ioyfl aides to ~o in 1&'fil~~ ~,~::;~i:· ~r::id~~ ~~~ ind~e;ual~~g~ es~~~!~ the dirty work. He kept them on such a stat ''tho 'ITTY\ •• -·Sfr and lin1ited constituencies. tighf •leash, as one inside~i' puit it, that 1 •. a~'.~ .. -~a~e-~·~, .f, :~~·· m· a '"th .> uldn't "lh , his · tx1mg •• """" r.· ¥. 1se. The President , in tum, delegated much e~. co _ sneeze.WE . ~ . pennis--, .llis" gr~·· ' ··· , ~'!'>"'~' ·romta of his power to Haldeman. Explained a s1on Durmg a presiQent~ ~ppearance t·earl~ ~ • a small White House source: "The President bad that ~Pi.n schedUled:. f?i7ihsta~, awl'-"fbrtwle ~~ ._ · ,.i.; !Y. ~!er and a dread that the demands of office would othe~ aide ~sked ·~ ~1J!IT?flle far started tfte', ,•.,: • • · c;ao ',tQ\mdation leavA him no time to think . Bob i::reSJdenl Nixon to . k. fi~vt feet out of in 1922.. ·~ . . • ~1 ,#1olng the Haldeman freed the Pres ident from the THUS, Vr'hi.le stunned Republican politi- cians are beginning to talk of the real ~-possibility-Qf--fmpeachmfflt;--Mr. Nixon seems unable to wrench himsell out of the habit of business as usual. In the judgment of key officials both inside and outside the White House. Mr. Nixon is confiding in oobody. 'Mw.t he did not discuss th06e headlines with the high ad· ministration official ..mo was involved neatly fit s that pattern. Similarly, he has rcslsled the changes being pushed by three top White ~loose officials -Gen. Alexander Haig as as never before. Jif!l'!'l:dttlon:-the-Pre!i.dent-still·seem' 80 far removed from everyday government operations that even Wbite House aides themselves know little about what the future holds. One obvious example is the case of Gen. llaig as "intcrim'1 staff chief. llAJG wants to gel out of politics and back to his job as vice chief of staff 111 the Army within a few \Yccks. or even sooner. Yet. one top \Vhite ll ot1.sc aide FINALLY , Mr. Nixon's sudden decisioo to bring John B. Connally into the While House added still 1nore confusion. Top \Vh ite !louse aides were Jed to un- derstand Connally would have no voice in maj.or_po)jcy de~ is now preparing to draft a new anti-in· flation policy in effect r e p u d i a t i n g Secretary of the Treasury George Shullz's disastrous Phase lII. II is very much like earlier years of thi:> Nixon administration : confusion. uncertaint y. presidential a!oo(ness. The shock is 1hat so little seems to have changed in the face of a crisis of historic proportlons which has far from run its full course. his \vay to greet an unj:lgH.ant labor relig ious i Of Nixon's details that otherwise v.·ould drain his ~r. Chapin said he couldn't do it with-Quaker " , : conslderable time." oUt HalCeman's approval. - -.........,.....,..., • . . .'- ,1{• • ·-. • . ·' STRING NO. 3 -Jeb 'Magruder )13,s --:, ~~~~~i .· •, told prosecutors lbat ex-A I loro $) Ed" "<. 't • N t E h General John Mitchen opposed .. the . uoo lO n 0 no ug \Vaterblljl'.g1ng, although he went .atOng , reluctantly in the end . lt was Dean , ac-~. cording to Magruder. who kept insisting A,,front.;page steft-Y in the New York on going ahead with the schemer·pean, in Tim.~s (plus a full 'page on the inside) turn. has said he took his directions from recent4'· ~.tf'rmed for Europe what I ~YDNEY J.HAR.Rl~ , Gas War Goes in to Reverse Dear President: I. Joe Sikspnk . American, lake pen in hand to stick a tiger in your tank. It's about this gas shortage. "Give me a Seven-high." I says to Pad· dy down to Paddy's Place the other night. "And tell me how come the oil companies suddenly discovered they was running out or ga~:· "It's one of the luckiest discoveri es in the history of the oil busines.1;, Joe," says Paddy. "They discovered it just when there'~ 8 right over the Ala ska pip- tine. a batUe in COngress over nt:'w oil drilling allowances. a struggle with lh~ Administration to raise gas prices. and a running war "'llh ecolog ists over off· shore rigs and oil spills." "YOU CAN'T get much luckier lhan that," says l. "But do you think it'll blo\Y over, Paddy?" "Never Wlderesllmate our g re at American oU (.'Olnpanlct, Joe." says he. "l..ook at the tremendous creative gen ius thcy'v~ used to sell us more tias. You think they can't sell us on the idea Quotes ( ART HOPPE ) lht:'y're running out?" And he tells me how it's going to be rome this summer when I pull 111lu llcrschcl's Friendly Neighborhood Su~r Service. THERE'l.L BE old 1-ll'rschcl. (says Paddy~ standing under the fan1iliH r s1gi1s -"Triple Trading Stamps!" "(Jnc J<'rcc Glass!" "Play the Fun-Ftllcd l'cas & Shells Gan1 c!" Only the sign on the pun111 \Viii say, "$1.90 per gal. inc. taxes." "\VJ1at happened to that g<is prit'C war !:isl Noveni~er, Jlerschcl?" says I. ··Jt's still on. J oe," says he. "And I'm "'inning. How much do you want?" "Well. seeing it's p'aydti y Herschel,'' say!' I. "I'll take a whole ga llon." ·'f ine,'' says he . "But first, h:ind me over my free glass." ' "[ ~Ot lo give you a glass?" says I. "YOU'RE LUCKY," say!!: he. "Next week. you'll need a set of matched stc:1k kni ve s. Now, lei's set, at lrlp\c, you also owe me 214 trading stamps." ·•I ncvt'r 11.kcd lickin g th l'm nnyw:iy :' says I. dlgg1ng then1 oul of the i;:lOYt' cornpartment. "I spend htlurs pasllng them up and I.he ii;uy takes the book 1 labored over, throws ii away <ind ~lvcs me an appliance th at busts a week later." GLENN C. FERGUSON, ~kt:nfltld-"Wash the windows, Joe." s11ys "l( the environmenlllJlsts and tt0logi1ts ltcrschrl. bave their way. we will aeon be able to ''They aren 't dirty," says J lreltbe clean fN!lb air while we elibtr ''Mine are." s3ys he. "Start \\1th 1he ttarve to death, frtcr.e to death or die of one over the cash register. And while ~ or malaria or el'IC'P,halltis or you're at it. let's check lhc oil J rlo11'1 Mme~ dread dilfa.se. Wont lhal bc..,..-...);now how many quprl.IJ I got l"ft in 111• nictf ventory. ~ WELL, GETTING back to Paddy's Place, Pres ident,. I order another Seven· hi'gh.~hd say: "P.,addy, you mean I'll have to·waSh fl.er$chel's ."'indows. check his oi l and ~ve h.iitl a.g!Jiss and.trading sla1nps tu gtif a gkllon of gas-l can't afford ?'' ''Not to mention losing a fin to him. Jue. trying to'g~ss whi ch shell the pea 's under," says _Piddy. i.And after that. you'll be ready to 'vrite you r Congressrnan demanding pipelines. drill- ing allowances. off-s hore rigs and John Connally for Ecology !)1rcc!or." Of course. Pres ident. ~1avbe the (;Oun~ try's really running out Or gas. But 1 \Y011lrln 't worry none. Like f'arld y says. "When you think how the auto~o~ilc ,fi ll~ the air with sn1og, the hospitals with bodies and the coun- try side with concrete, u·e shou ld be so lucky." ..... 'l'ruly Yours Joe Sikspak. American 'Who's winning?' ltaldcman. said oot IO'hg ago about the U.S. -that, String No. 4 -Haldeman controJled a in oUr ijfc'reasingly technological society, $350,000 cash fund that .~ll.~rentlf was ·the tnore educalion you have, the more used to bribe the Watergate defendants li>rety )'OU are to be hit by unemploy- lo kceP. their mouths· shut The money ment ... was delivered by Haldetnan's assistant, Unemployment among the "highly · Gordon Strachan, to the apartment of qualilied" in West· campaign aide Fred La.Rue . Like the em Europe is now others. La.Rue was also a Haldeman ~g a serious loyalist. social'llf'oblem, as it has been for some NOT LONG after the Waterbusg:ers time here. The dizzy. were arrested, our White House sources ing rate of mergers tipped us orr that the plo\ had and corporate reorg- Haldeman's Imprint all over it. Although an i z at 1 0 n s has these sources had demonstrated their reliability in the pas' t, we knew they thrown tens of thou-sands of technica l disliked Haldeman intensely. \Ve there-fore investigated cautiously and ·Oould and managerial people out of jobs, with rind no direct Haldeman involvement. less possibility of ~mpl~t than a But -we were able to report on August 22, 1972, that Haldeman was calling the political shots for ~esideot Nixon . "Operating out of the White H.,~e on government salary," we w r"u t e, "J~a ldeman has tried lo remain the in- visible man of the campaign. "BUT WE .have established that most of the impOrwnt campaign decisions have come through him ... Haldeman issues pollt!cal directives. approves cam- paign contracts. receives polJlical reports and coordinates campaign activities . , . 'Ibose on the inside say he is the most powerful man in the 1972 campaign, ~­ ond only to the President himseU." It took us until February 25, 1973. before we could link Haldcman's name for the rirst time to Watergate . Still, we could only report that "the Watergate tracks (lead ) right up· to Haldeman '& door." We noted that F'Bt agents had bct..on £orbldden lrom questioning him. "Vet," we wrote, "they were able 1o trace Watergate clues to llaldeman ald,s, who never make a move without asking lialdemnn." TllEN WE doscribcd how he operated. "Ha ldeman exercises hi! power ," we reported. '"from behind lhe scenes, carefully staying In the darkest part of the President's sh.odoll. Jle .hal sur- rounded himself with bMghl, disciplined , - • waiter or a ca bbie. • 1N BRITAIN alone, unemployment among the highly qualified has risen fcqtet ··t hig her than other groups, ntarI.r bllng since 1968 ; the same is true In · urope . According to the Times survey, "The available evidence shows that the manager anti , the technologist have more trouble gelling new jobs than t~ factory Worker\ and that the older the person Is, the longer he waits." And does he wait. Wben 4,300 wnrkers were dismissed at Rolls-Royce In 1971 - including 1,000 on the technical stafr -10 percent of them were still without a job after a year. The average period of unemployment was three months. A deeade ago 97 percent found new jobs within three weeks. IN ONE conSolidntion alone, or the three biggest Britl~h electrical firms - some 50,000 perSOnl:I lost their jobs, In- cluding al.lout 2.000 scientists In pure research . Much the same has Jattl)' boon happenlng in Sweden, the Netherlands, and even prosperous W~t Germany. Everyone remembers what hflppened when Boeing go~ into trouble a couple or yean ago -scient ists weff! driving cabs, palnUng houses, ,citing f'"uller brushes, to supplement their meagre $75 I n un".mploymcnt lmura"nce, which expired aft'r six months, anyway. OF COURSE, there is n o t h J n g ;i, shameful in doing these jobs , but it is shameful tbat any country would so neglect and underenlploy men who have obtained the highest degrees and the ut· most proficiency in specialized fields . Especially when these countries keep stressing the "importance of education" and urging young people to ge t that diploma and that degree and "contribute to the higher productivity" of the slate. Everywhere in the West, also , is the in· creasing trend toward hiring younger people and letting older ones go : so that a scienti st or technician or administrator over 45 is in grave peril of never recuperating Crom the blow If he loses bis job th".Ough a merger. Why shouldn't the: "youth culture'' reel cocky w h e n Establi shments everywhere treat older workers so shabbily? And "'YhY bother to '!el the diploma when it may only mean the slag·heap after 20 years of loyal work? OlAMfll COAIT DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed, P1WUshtr Thoma.s Keevil, Editor Barba ro Kreibich .Editorial Page Editor The t'dttorlal .p&ge or 1he Dnlly Pilot °M'ek8 to inform and 1tlmulate readi:'rs by p!Uenting on thl8 page lflvene •commt'ntary'an IOl't<'s ot In· IPft'SI by 5Ynd l<:11led rolwnniata and cartoonists, by providlnit a tonim for rttder!I' view! and by preacntinr thls ncwspuper's oplnk>ns and Ideas on eurrent topics. 111f" f"C!itorilll opinion., of 1he Dally Pl lot appe11r only in tht editorial column al the top of the pa.a:e. Opinions exprellSCd by the rol· umnists snd c.-r1oon!st• and 'lettir:r \vrlttnl art their own and no~ .mcnt of their views by the Dally PUot 'llhoukl "' lnfttml. Tuesday, May 22, 1973 Isotope Dangers Reported SACRAMENTO (AP) State health authoriUes have ordered a halt to the medical use of a dangerous rad.Joactive isqtOjle. The order came after t h e U.S. Atomic Energy Oom- missloo said the l>Otope prob- ably w a s involved in the deaths cl at least three persons tn the oountry. State Health Director James M. Stubbleblne Mid PbYslclans a n d radiologic techniclam licemed by the state to use the material -Technetium fer. rous h yd rox id e macroag. ( SCIENCE ) gregates -had been notified tQ discontinue their use. The Isotope is used to identify tumors in the lungs, Stul>- blebine said. • Flight FaUure SANTA CRUZ (UPI) Students at UC Santa Cruz could have used so.me advice as they failed miserably io. at- tempts to fly. They strapped on m u I t i t'Olored (..'Ontraptions resembling giant kites and ran down a 60-foot knoll trying to soar during "the great body flying exhibition." "The wind is in inverse pro- portion to the number of peo- ple bere," lamented flight in· structor Alan Diinen .. • Venus Weather LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Astronomers at Cal Tech say that Venus has a weatbeT cy· cle lasting four days in which cloud layers rise af19 fall near· ly a mile in an "acconiion·llke movement." The astronomers have been talclng Infrared photographs ol Venus from a mountaintop ob.l!rvato.ry south of here. Dr. Louise Young said the team found that carbon-diox· tde levels on the mysterious plant fluctuate by as much as 20 percent, creating rhythmic cloud movement during a four· day cy,cle. • Pair Honored LOS ANGELES (AP) Two professors have b e e n named the state's scientists of the year. 11k? professors, physicists Theodore W. HaDBCh and Art!iur L. Scbawlow, were given the $5,000 1973 Calilontla Scientist of the Year award In a joint presentation by the California Museum of Science and Industry and its educa- tional afnliate, the Califomla Museum Foundation. The physicists were honored for developing a technique that uses a laser light to show the makeup of atoms. • Internal Look MENLO PARK (AP) -An ultrasonic camera b e i n g developed will display llve television images ot internal organs Including t h e i r movements and other soft tissues invisible to Xrays~ reaearcbers say. ~ ---- --~ --4 • • The BClentlsts at Stanford1 __________ _ Research Institute hope t b e device will prove effective for detecting heart d I s e a s e • cancer and other diseases. as well as recording the move- ment of the human fetus. 1be camera will work by bollncing souod waves off of internal organs tQ produce a live television image of the organs and their movements. •NoQuark•. LIVERMORE (UPI) Another quark bunt is over - with the usual lack of success. Failure to find the elusive !Nbatomic particle, believed by many scientists to be the basic buUdlng block ot all matter, was reported by Dr· Arnold F. Clark of Lawrence lJvennore Laboratory· He said his research team examined 200,000 photo! of cosrrtic ray showers from outer space in four yean without rmdlng any •lgn <>! a quark among one million particle track•. Huck Finn A Russian? MOSCOW (AP) -Film director Georgl! Danella has made a Russian version of Mark Twaln's "Huckleberry Finn,'' the Soviet news agency Tass nported. ·Danella '1wa11 able to recreate the authentic at. mosphere of the novel, ltai human mesaage a n d 1ubile irony ••• " Tass said. Prison Violence Feared By PAT SAUER < C8'ftel ..... lel'Ylcie SACRAMENTO -T·h,e California Department ol Cor· recUons is trying to avert,:a violent outl:reak among ,.. """A 1 detainees deapite an apj>areD Inability to get enouatr· buses to transport them ·1rom . a holding facWty to deslgiiated institution.. ,, The department's Receptiqn Guidance Center in Vacaville -designed to aoeommodale 472 inmates -curr<J>tlY "ac- commodates" 592, some 71 of them "literally sleeping on'lhe floor," according to Ken Brown, .spokesman ·for the California medical I a Cll l l t y chapter cl the Californl« Cor· rectlonal Officers AisiclaUon. OFFICERS DESCRUI!! It' U "an explosive situation that, !f lelt unchecked, may wcll leaid to bloodshed Md possibly eve11 death." · Walter Barkdull, lcg)llaUve coordinator .for the deJialt· ment, admlta the laclllty • ls "quite overcrowded'.', buttt~t "things conspired together"'~ crute the 1ltuatloo. First; Barlalbll Aid, the deportmeDI had 11'9 ~ Iv C8rTY prisooort from the reception center to othe• •)n- stitutlon5, as dcdded by plnce- ment characterlsilca or the ~ dlvl<l\lal tnmata. ' " • • ''i:. r T....,;, M_,,22,·l'ln • .... .. , • " .. "I ., • ' I • " .. :Natural·.• Menthol Blend (meins ' naturalfy' fmhJaste) Salem's unique blend· features natural menthol; not the ki1'(f-made in ' labora- te<ies .. Like-our superb tobaccos, our menthol is-naturally grown . You'll •get·a taste thars not harsh -or hot ... a taste as naturally c00I and fresh as Sp1ingtime. I • O••u o,1 ••••o•-51"~'''· " • •, I , Wammg :. The S'yrgeon General Has Determined Tlla1.tigarene Srtloking 'Is Dangerous 10 Your Heallh. 19 mg. "taf', 1.3 mg. nicot~e 8'1. par Citf&tla, FTC Repon FEB. '73. . - DAil Y PILOT 7 • It's the Capital Shuffle By DICK WEST WASlllNGTON (UPI) • . The Senate Judiciary eo... ~ mittee has been holding hear-- ings on the nomination of Elliot Rlcbard90n, f o r m e r secretary of llealth, EducaUon and Welfare and present secretary of Defense, to be the future Attorney General. After one session, a col· league turned to me and said, "I wonder why Richardson can't t~p a steady Job." ••t DUNNO," J said. "J was just wondering the same tiling about Schlesinger. u The reference was to James R. Schelsinger, director of the Centeral Intelligence Agency and former cha1nnan of the Atomic Energy Commission who has now been nominated to head the Delense Depart· ment, In the old days, tramp printers and olber workers who drifted Crom job to job usually were regarded as shiftless malcontents, or at least Jacking in stick4 to- itiveness. "YOU'LL NEVER get ahead that way," other people would tell them.• .. Nobody wants to hire someone who barely hangs around long enough to learn the ropes." 8ut President Nlxon arr parenUy has no compunctions against hlrirw itinerants. Rlchanl>0n la switching lo the Juatlce Department alter .1• only being at tl)e Pentagon ~: long enough to hear the orion-, i: tation lecture and ,.. the VD " movie. AND SCHLESINGER bad hardly heeJ1 wi1h the CIA lone enough to get measured for a cloak and stgn up !or dagger practice. • Yet, Ni1<1n hired them as readily aa be would. aomeaoe . 't who was Jh~Y married •i; to hla job. . ,. ' John Connally io -·' new mtploye who aeema to ll Buffalo ' Tactics Outlaw~d PROE:Nnr, Ariz. (AP) Holcter, ol buffalo permlta In Ariwna will have to huo.1-thelr game this fall, nthet""'11~ having it brought to them. the Arizona "Game and F i s b Department reporta, john Russo, game menage- . menl ctitef !or the depart- ment, s.ald ~ new rules will eliminate "herding'' buUalo Into the llne ol lire ol shooters. •'TBIS CHANGE means buf· falo hWllel'I actually will have to hunt," IWS9o said, ex~ plalnlng that the game will be kept In areaa ranging from 2,000 acres to 38,000 acres in •tu In nol1bem Arlionn. n.1 Society for the Preven- tion of Cruelty to Animal> lnc. or 'l\lcson last year saJd il planned court action to stop the hunt, but no suit was filed. AFTER VIEWING t h e shoot, members of the group said they would press for leglsla(tve action to change or eliminate the shoot. Ruaao said the cost of a buf. lalo permit this year will be much bigher. He ,..id aomo permlta win cost ftl!O, and others, wh1ch will permit the shooter to keep all the meat, will be fl!O. He .. Id 126 penntts will be • j.uued lor the bunt. have· trouble •tlcklDi lo - Job. RE 'l'llJED his band H Navy secretary for aWhlle. you'll recall, and later stayed on al the Treuury Depart. ment at least long enough to hang up bi• hat. " • •• • .. " • • ., Now he'• taken a part..tlme summer Job at the Wbtto House. I don't know bow be got It but I uaume be enrolled in one of those intern pro- grams. 4 ' Not that there haven't always been government. of- flclals wilh vagabond shoes and anta In their panta who thooght the grass loolred -tn the o!!t!!f pasture_. I REMEMBER Arthur Goldberg coming here .. the J o b 1 1 on admlniJtraUon'1 Labor oecretary .and then rut- ting .about to the Supreme Court and United Natktns. He nevet could settle doWJ4 that ·: '• .. •! •• ,, •, .. , ,. ' '"l\:" Richardson and SchJe. Inger appear to be part o( a new breed of transitory publlc servants. One more job swap " . ' and they11 be lDcluded In the Migratory Labor Ad. Marines' Jet Plan A~cked WAlll!IN'G'l;'ON (AP) -Tbo .• Navy op-a Marine CorPo plan lo buy 1311 of the jet llgllten that now · are the Navy.'1 malnatay. : ' • • f • . ' • . :'· ' • .. " . " • • ' 1· I r •• ~· .: :,. I • • • Adm. Elmo R. Zumwalr told a House ·Approprtatk>na sub- oommitlee be feels it would he a "very bad Oeclslonu for the Marlnoa to buy Ille F4J lighter• rather than the Flis now Wlder development. :· .. ZUMWALT REFUSED to state publicly ru.. primary obo jectloo, aaylng U Is clasoilied. At the same time, Zumwalt Md Navy Secretary John W. Warner discouraged thei idea o/ a Oy-oll competition be- tween the F 14 Md the Air Force's F15. Gen. Hobert E. Cuslunan Jr., the Marine C«ps com· mandant, asked for the Ft fighters. He said he needed more pl~nes at leu cost. WARNER SAID a Pe11tagon oommtttee will recommsnd ~hortlv whe•""r the Navy shoo11 "''v ._.· 1 Its FU. con .. Unue Flt development or switch to the. FU. ZUmwalt said the Na'I'}' needs the F14 Md Ila Photnll< mlastles for protection from 1111'5 eneO\i m1ulle attacllf, • ' . • .. .. • • ..,. • • . .. . ' . • • •• • ' . • 1 ' . I ' ' • I ' I • ' ' I I I ; ' ' -! ' • I . . • l ' ' I • I ' ' • l i • i ' ' .. T-. M., 22, 1973 QUHNIE lly Phil lnt9rlandi L. M. Boyd Your Dog Can Catch Measles Our Love and War man says the average blind date only ha! one chance in four ol fltlccess. By success, be doesn't mean matrimony. He means she likes him and be likes her. These odda aren't good. They suggest a man and woman unaQ'.fuainted should schedule their first get~ together for a cup of cotree, drink, whatever. Their second, for lunch. Their third then, if such is tG be, for an evening out. The heart of an astronaut gets smaller when he sails Into outer space ... Ostrich meat that's proceued like beef jerky is called biltong ... Telephone books in Denmark list everybody's occupation . . . A camel's eye has three lids, a shutter, a shade and a wiper ... Average working man now gets around 121 days off a year. Whenever you kJss that girl in pub Uc, young fellow , certainly remove your hat, if any. That's tbe decree of the good manners expe~. · . UfS .AND. DOWNS -Con!itder, please, the number of ~'up'' and ."down'1 phrases of similar meaning. Llke "shut up" and "pi~ down." Or "uPbraid" and "dress down ." -Or "Give up -the gboet" and "lay down one's Ufe." ~ "Cqtd up" ~nd cloae,down.'' Or "turn up one's nose a& • 'and "JOok doWn one11 nose at.'' Or "up.set" an~" cast.'' Or "eat it' up" and "!Will Jt down." our 1 ·mml ta)'I tM list is u:ten!i•e. . • ' Q. "Cao .a p,?t pup .catch the measles?" A. Can Indeed, am surpriJed to learn. And ~I same, too. IJkewise mumps, report the medicos. Q. "Whete did Gl'e<I\ Gocld.,s salad dressing • nate?" , / A. In the kitchen of the Palace Hotel in San Franci- The chef there named it ln honor of thal movie tlUM "The Green Goddesa." Years Just Mexico Near Power Ctjsis Dome Shoriage--Bis ' Reno Man Fi~ Theh of Whole House REYNOSA, Muiw iAPI -beating and many llldullr1.,. Sli ped B Mexico faces an energy cri.Sll Dovali sakt Pemex caonot P Y meel demaod I«~ g¥ and if the national petroleum 1n thl centnl *"-of Mex- monopoly does oot ••pand lco and aJoog the U.S. bord<r . RENO, N•v. (AP) -J.U F. MarUaU bu _, coo- fronted 1fitb a h 0 U I l D g shortage -be aaid hit waa stolen from ill lot near Quffm:. "'lbat'I part of the ]l<Obkm, f gueu, travelln8 around too much. oot taking care o( thiop on time." trouble u I don't do llOllle .... For Ethel rapidly more import• .. m be Framen in Chihuahua. stale, low ,..ting." oecesoary, th• oU company's be said. have -,-ted * dlre<:tor says. soedal pennlA!lon tO Import WASHINGTON !AP) -'11>< Anlionlo Dovali Jaime, dir«·' tiua fuel from the \lnlted mistake wu discovered when SANTEE, Calif. (AP) -tor general of Petroleos Me:ci· States In ordfr to 'teef thelr downtown Reno. * JUPITER, Fla. (AP) Actor Bart R<ynoldl daean't want lhe world beating a Pith ( J "no trespaulng" ·~ mt bis sLamJlll began com.ins oft U., Ethel fteumow' who started callM Peme1. said Sunday irrigaUoo pumPll r u ~ o l n g . press io honor of A.P. QIM.. ~ whUe Woo dr ow that the most urgent problem DavaliblamedeiplonUonand abtl, founde_r oC the Bank of ~ was in the White is that of liquified gas which ls wildcat fallures for t be America. Hit fint name was ~ 11 still going strong _ ~~used~;in;ho;;""';;';or;;cookin;;;· ;;g;a;nd;;;s;ho;rt;a~ge;in;;M~e~xi~co;.~~;;;: PEOPLE to hil door. So hes potUnc rancb, to dl-• p<Oplo lnml borP>f1 in uninvited and '--------"' uldng ftlr • auidod -· Anyone oeelng .. GUt,.f· "I llb·to thfnt l'nt1 Jll"llJ place, one~• tor y, two-grepriow B u y, •" &aid bedroom, white Jrame ltruc· Reinofdt, known u tbe na- ture wilh cedar ah.Ingle rooting tioo'• premier lllde, male was asked to report It 10 magaz!M model, 11but right miaapelled "Amedeo " Instead ot "Amldio." ' bill ftll!JY she's ready \0 wlnd ~~ --=~er.,:!1' .~t~ no idea of teaching so Postal 8ervke spokesman'. <MJ8, Mrs. Reusnow says. "I plained. 1"J'be e 0 1 r 1 e t ~ d was 1';1;51 &otng to teach a few ltampt carreot11 are · beiaa yeara. ' reprlnlecl II .., Clllmated colt '11>< ftnl schoolhouse in of. m,a ." -,,.hlcb -taught was a single police. now I don't have a whole hell The mlnip need never have room tn Paxton, JU., to which occurred, the apokesman ad--she rot!~ horseba,ct. s h e ded. Giannini rarely UJell~ll recalls, I wa~ everything - first name, preferring only m. custodian, maintenance man, * ol a lot of choice in the mat- HOLLY BLUFF, ~fiss. (AP) ter. I've been WOl'king like a P o s t m a s t e r W .C. crazy man lately and my doc- Sharbna.P, Jr., continues to ton say I'm going to be in makl hil appointed rounds iUals. everyt.hlng." At nJcllt, lbe eanied a degree ll Depmil v.mnl.if · . come -well, h1gh water. HJ sO by boat two times a day I« receipt and dilpatdl of man for th& people who elected to stick tt out heft," .J>e aaid of thl• flooded llttl• MllslMlw! delta town. 11>e bank's itlU open, too. "'Ille 'Drive-In' sign has been er~ out,'' Sbarbrou&h .said, "and 'Float' put over tbe 'Drive' to read 'Ploet-ln Win- dow.' It worts, too -l'vt .__ ed it to mab the feir depoctt• Ibis office bu made llnce Ille water covered the ttreets." Tl'l'llsvn.il Fla. (AP) - Circuit QJurt Judge Dive Strawn bu hit upon a way to cut down c:m the gu. He boldt pretrial conference. over the telephone lnatead. of in his courtroom. ' Volunteer Army ' Raising Doubts Aft4r as years .. •' teacher ' :,in Cbleago area' ICbools, she mQto:ed to Santee ln>tlt50 and took up eiemen187 15Chool classes again. < ~ . ' ' CATARACl'S,WEJlE remov· ed from both her eyes 10 years ago, but Mrs. Reusnow kept WASHINGTON {AP) .. -Another general 1 a-id working. Some Pentagon o!flclala are privately, ''The feeling'\ ia Authorities for years have b e ~om I n I lncreulngly ~ growina: that It doubtful we described 'Elbel Reuinow as certain that the United Stalel can mab it." the oldest l<lcber atill cal' can maintain adequate armed rYlnlr a fuU clusroom Joed in forcea on an all-volunteer A C1VJLIAN official added: canfornla and the California basia. "U we adhere to quality goala, teacher with the loo I est · One lllllllJlcant Indicator of It is beginning to appear as u reconl ol classroom ~· ooncero wu the nceot crea· lt wUI be damned bani to fill fle'Plle her·a&t.'tliey refw- lion ol I specW high-level the ..,.Y1ce3• ,...._.th ob-· ed to drop her• e:rtend\!11 Ille task force to monitor ci•••iy ... ""6 annual contract an nu-a 11 y """"' jectlves." be f "h the many-sided effort to at-cause o er exceptional tract and hold en 0 ugh In a study for Congress , the ability -she's the greatest vobmteers. General Accowiting Office -.ye've ever seen," an ad- Tbe task Corce is headed by predi~ted early this month ministrator said last year. Deputy Secretary of Defense that the armed services could But this is the last month William P .. Clements Jr ~l ~ Plany as 83,000 short or for Ethel Reusnow. now 75, wbtch means the weei.-too4tHW ~Jr i!'I of the 354,000 new \'oluntarily ending 56 years of DEL WEl>NESDAY NIGHT" . ,. M•k• Wedne,d•v night your ni9ht to ••tout. At D•I l•co, ~Wtldn•1day night ;, l•co Night. ~OU 91t •ill t••tv Del r.co• f.r iu1t $1.75! Thi. W•dn•1dev, cfr;,,, t+iru for• f•m ily 1i1• rn.•I yo11 won't forge!. At pric•s you'll find herd to b••t. NEWPORT BEACH SANTA ANA Bristol (PaliSades) at Campus 4th St. •nd Newport Fwy. COSTA MESA -Baker At F1irwiew • TUSTIN Red Hill Near S.nta Ana Fwy • Opposing attorneys argue via a conference call, with .the judge ruling on points of law. He sees it as a minor en- vironmental triumph in the field of air pollution, and curb on overly talkative lawyers supervJlkln or UW tfMrt• 1i flt ll.biii\LI next year unless (utltime teaching. biiMI taken <Y'td IHJl-1awer-m@:btal standards are lowered. [1"'"-----;;;ii;--iiii-.;;iiii;i;oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ lt-Yel offlciala. "" • But the Anny and the other * NEW YORK (AP ) .,;, Clothes make the man, or ii( the case of 92·year-old Ned Brown, maybe it's the other way around. A former boxing columnist, magazine editor, and stlll very much a man about town, he was evicted from his ruverside Drive apartment because, he said, he forgot to pay the rent. .u,;~e made a recent visit to • where his bltlsJg h~ld , but f I .,ic item . .!1~~;-&•., --mwi~ ... ltl , •. -Hl'Vkel resl!t lhe idea of ac· '11111 JllllltAGON'i ~ ceptlng ""'"' men who have 1Jm 11. thal Ille .aJJ. not graduated from high eoncept ooundwill aebtlfil ' Jll!d who score among Thal bu betn lb Une ~ . lowtot In qualification <iuiael ol lbt Niaall l!!tli· . tloQ~lltflil'e tllio Teti mooths ago, the Pen-. -dialtlnl lilion p!ll tr!lo ~ffect a new ltlta APll!Y last fl,IDI! tionus to lul'f young men into enlisUng for Jround-com- n. O'elpton W. bat jobs In !lit f.rllly and the A1-1""[llil Army chief of ldar1ne Cof'lts, AtJ atea of con- stsfl, 11Jt1 a rtporter recently •l~er,bl• dlffllUlty jn raising he Ii~ yet Pf"pared to """1P m•nJ>dW<r. predlll -~outcome. All!llitl flut lilt l••t ll'Of!lh, the indlcl u~ IO lU><lt ~\af!I l\J( 14 rals< that bl' no w "ter, Ill•• -t a It a,lflt! fer a f"'11"-year =8'flenot wilboul lh• _ tllt b e ca u 1 e Jllf nl the dnn It ... ""' er bonus Wlll!l'I· WWl!ftl Ii, well enough. _ •• MONTH END CL,EARANCE LOOK _W"AT ONE DOLLAR ••• , ;WILia ·a Y • •• ' ' >1-' "· • ·' air•t ::::. ::i: lllUe Jimmy Osmond ? Is he am-; Get uour WILD CAm.E -Has anybodv yet domesticated lhit - . -- wild breed of East Indian cattle known as the Gaur' ll ~ not. why not? Tbofle beaat.s are·said to stand seven teet Jee c bigb al the sbouldea. lnddenlall)', !he smallest breed or _ _ cattle, the Anoa of the Celibes, ls also wild. Rarely gro.,.,'s over thift feet tall. · Possible this world will run•out of penguins. too. Arctic expl<ll'en took dogs down there. Some went half v.ild. lf you've ever seen a ctllcken-killlng canine, you can picture what happens when one of those dogs cuts loose in a colony of. waddlers. Most attractive nighttime garment for the girl who's pleuingly plwnp is a )ong navy blue nightg0"'-11 open at the throat with sleeves below the efbows. claims an au- thority on femi.Dine costwnes. Addrtsa mail to L. l\f. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, New- pott Beaclt, Calif. 92660. WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW OF ORANGE COUNTY noYISIONAllY ACCftOlm> •Y 1M1 COMMIMl Of IAI IX:AMINIH Of THI JTAll IAI OF CNJIOINIA FULL · TfME L.4W STUDY PROGRAM NDW AVAILABLE • If ,... .., • .,,., 11 with.,. A.A..,_, tr e If ,..... ... "tf 2J ....... ..,. •"•1"'4 lit .,,.,..... lo1tell1ctv•I Mlllty tht "111tiY•lt"' •I 1N'f• fi. ate ~"""' lly hldl, e n., J.D, 1r U.1. fftrM UR i.. ..,...., I" I yeM't .., IH• •f fl'll-fl-l1w 1Wr /IS·lf c1 .. _..,. i...,,. ,., ..-..kl, '' '" 4 r1MI Ir l•tl •f , .... ~ .,,.,..llK• fl ti••-,er _ _., 1-4 Jie,,u l"f dKIJ -4 fM ... _ ' • -..W. .. lfll• thOI C1lif..N1 k luR .. 1Ke", Wllft OI PNONl fOI INfOIMATION 01 CATAlOOUI 800 South Brookhurst Anoholm 92804 17141 635-3453 °'....... .... •lit~•· ....... th• C.llr.n.I• ....... ............ ". APPi. Y NOW fOI SEPTEMBER 6th DAY, EVENING OR WEEKEND CWSES and open an •nt at Western lid at the salnt tln'ltl • Over 7 mllllon copi es in print ... this giant new edition is comrileiely' revised and Includes spo~s and general records, and photographs. No argument should be without one. While you 're here, find out about all the advantages of Westem Fed account~ and services : 5-6% lnterest;·the Capital Club With 11$ many free services and activities; the friendly smile we have for you whether you're a customer or not. w Western Federal s~ 2744 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar Hugh Evan1, Jt. President • u11ta o'ttr $300 mllllon --- JEG. TO $5 • eg. to $7 BOYS FAMOUS MAKE 95~ FLARES s2so KNIT TOPS SHIRTS Rog. $6 INllANTS •uN SUITS ILOUSES SHIRTS ~:L~ES s1 ae !Nl'ANTS e DRESSES e QIAPER SETS e TOPS PRICE DRESSES SKiR1S TOPS . FLARES OFF ug TOU.@ S:.!!P.!!.. e MASTll CHARGE e IANKAMlllCAID e 'j'.OUNCnAND .e :.GINTIT GIRLS Swimsuits ~~L. s22s $6.00 .ANY lnM IN OUR ••• STORE OFF HAllOI ILYD. AT WILSON, ST .. con• MISA -541-1440 ( HAllOI SHOflPING CINTIR I I r I . • ' • ' • • • • ~. l: .. •· l . . ' • • • ' . • • ' • \: • I ! ' Record For the Dissolutions Of Marriage •IW Mef It Jollnlon, R-ld WffiM'l:I ~ M.lrlorll ,_ Uc., Wllllal'l't a .. Jr. ~ Detlor•ll G. ~1111. " ..... M. ... Al'fl'Mitld •. lortol ... EdWln Cti.rlft, Jr., ~ Lllldl ..... ~llMn, T...,., Lovlt •nd U.lf• -.!:_tne c..roi. El\Ulblottl 91111 W1111Mn ~'-R. Wld COnnlt O.lt, PftWIV •nd Oowlt1 Mc:lmo.I\,. Ellttbetll A. Ind Dtnnl1 L. A~ ~ Elll•bettl Mid ._.. Rlctn:I. Judltll D. Ind Wllll•m 9., Jr. Grimes, K\'Oko .nci Jollll lur1 Ci.ytor, Wiiii. L. Ind Bftsl• M. 9"'1ll'lerd, Aril,.q I . tnd Eew..rd L. Tumer. Mtlry Ann •nd Dougl11 Altn H111'1911, DI-Rvltl Ind IUl'YI Fr•llklln H~. Fr.nc. L Ind Olffonl J. M.fl9, Ullt Ind J-RtOI~ 11\lrttunl, J-LIWI• Ind C•rol Lynn 1<11..,, c~,,_. •nd win .... Rov W1lkw . Uvrel J. •nd Roblll"l E. J•rM11h1, c.--,11 e . Ind JoM .1. Mlondott. J-lt oiMI 1nd Mormwi Sier, J1Mt LwlM 1nd LutM!" Mirlon flli.. Mly , • S.lltnd, M•ry J1rw •nd L1rry f . w.lu, 0. Vonl Sue Ind G1ry R1y 811k1mltr, J1rit Anne 1,.0 W1llw J1ck McGr•lll, Anltr1 L. Ind Jpme1 JI: •. H•lvwnon. C-flnA EHi•beth •rw:I C1rl TlilrM1 J-. K•tllerlrw R11tll •1111 Mlcll1et ... , Crmev, Lloyd a. Ind Oillly J . JOit, M1tlll11 L. Ind E1n1191M t. Collty, JK-M. •l'ld Mtrv L. Oehn1, l<•ltllnn K. Ind Robffl W. CMti.i•I, Allcl W. •nd Cll•rlts E•rl Lltclll1, Roo.rt P. •nd Ruth M. Ovffy, Ol1nne LnllY tnd John Fr1ncl1 S.ndo¥1I, 9•rbtr• J, tnd P1ul L. Poll1rd, EdWV'd L. tnd Pllylo!vs J . Meullll, &lrllllo V .Incl G1ylon C. Dlv11, 81ltl M.lrl• •nd Wllll1m Simm!• NllWblU, W1Ultm C1rol 1nd S.tty Ann 9--., Ernetl 0. Mid JIClllJlllM R. M°"""'• JNn 9nd Jen Leroy SperU. L1rrv !. and K-J. Wallw. C.rat1 Ann and J•ll'llS Jolln Tri,a F aeing •Trial In Prostitution SANTA ANA Three women booked oo (\l'Olititutloo charges in criminal &cnon that cotncilded with the closing via a civil suit ol lhelr Huntlnglon Beach headqu.arten have been ordered to face trJal June 21 Jn Orange COWlly SUJ>Orior Court. JUDGE J~ Turner set lhe 'iri&l date fik Judy Ann Funds Go To Cities SANT A ANA -Payment ol funds for revenue sharing pro. ject.s in Villa Part and Orange has been approved by the Orange Comly Board of Supervisors. Orange .will get $69,942 from the county's, share of the federal revenae sharing funds for the expansion of the city's Hart Park. Villa Park gets $17,500 for the county's share for con· struction of a community swimming pool . K1iwneyer, 25, Helen Marie Ryan , S7, and carol Ann Do- rnilln, Z'I, all formerly of 67111 Capstone Orlve, and ooted the lact thal trial 11awyer Paul carwo will repreoeot the trio. The three women are free on ball. They were arrested on multiple prostitution and con. splracy charges when HWl- Ungton Beach p o l i c e i.tl; vestlgated reports f r o m neighborl who becoioe.curioos •bout !he f-y . with wblcb1 9* three residents entertalne4'male guests at the Capstone Drive home. A PREVIOUS ruling by Judge Robert P. Kneeland puts 8762 Capstone Drive in the "bawdy house" category irovided for in California's so. called Red Light Abatement Act. .. The house has been closed under sheriff's surveillance jiendlng a Superior Coitrt trial that could end with a ruling that the house must be 90!d at public auction. The three defendants reveal· ed that they are now living in Los Angeles. ORANGE COtJNTY Immigrant Faces Trial SANTA ANA -An African immigrant who allegedly used his job as an Orange County social worker to swindle welfare recipients out of near- ly $2,000 has been ord!!f'd to face trial July 2 in Orange County :;tJperior Court. Judge James Turner set the trial date for Cy Ndame Wright, 23, also known as Cyrus Wri~t and as Endome Qusine, the name he OOre in his home land of Sierra Leooe, West Africa It's Women's Week at UCI JK~, L•nc• T11om11 •nd Alldr•v Plays, films, panel discus-film, "The Girls," which open· counseling on women's legal Mc~nr11, s1tvtn Artt111r •l'ld P•mel• sions and demonstrations ed the New York Women's rigfts and employment op-Rl~~MirtM •l'ld ernnto • 'd f b-Film Festival this year; a po r tunities, ronsciousness· Todd, Tr11111 Qt.No •l'ld eurv Gene covermg a wi e range 0 su slide show on women in art raising sessioos £or both men ~~~~JT .. ·~ 'f".;' F. jects are being presented dur· bistory, "Sisters or the Palet· and women, slide sho w s P=:-1 Mld!tflt ...,.xi• •nd Ron.Id ing "'Women's Week" on the te"; a presentation on ~1£.<J.e-relating to self·help in Gldolnv1, vwon1c.1 J••n •l'ld Mlc11M1 UC Irvine campus this week. fense, "Rape: Never Again ," women's heallh problems. a Grl!fittl ' ho d Mwr1•m. Jtl'l'llS AllftlMy , n a JOiin The program is sponsored and c o n c e r t s by two one-womah art s w an 9,~:,':';~~ EV0111W •nd M1tn..i Lw by the Student Activities Of· women's rock groups in Cam-discussions of women as pro· R.-,, Ron.11<1 •l'ld Sylvl1 fice, UCI women's Center, pus Park. • fessors, women 's war ex· P•1•tox. J11,!'~1~,,!,' conctpC!an Women's Opportunity Center Topics for two panel discus· periences, radical therapy and Lu1>1on. •on111e s. •nd Ectw•n:1 1., Jr. and the Assoeiated Students. sions will be "What Are You radical feminist life styles. Gllll•m, K1thlltrl o . Ind K"'1ntth w. A r be Phllllp1, 1t-•d L. 1nd N111q1 A. Highlights will. include 1ex-Goirig To Be When YQU Grow program o events may J-. Jo Ann •nd O..-•ld ll'Ul;i, Jr. -.Pnte1 ·from the Ros a I i e Up, Little Girl?" and "Freud's obtained from ·the Student ........,l1m, JC>ln H. •nd J1mts A. .. ... t'... Am · •11w, c .1ro1 J•nne •l'ld Jatwt llk:IMird, Abrams play, "Myth erica, Stereotypes: Where Did They Activities Office, first floor of s.J~•l,e>onnt M. n Mia-I,.,_ Ho• Far Have You Really Go Wrong?" Gateway Conunons on the UCI 1tuff11o, Mtry ~.Ind ll•~ Ltiu11 Come?",· the ·Mai Zetter, .ling The schedule also will offer campus. ·~ Ju1w1 11.1ct1.1,.. ·1t111 s.mr• _:_:.:.:_...:__....., __ --'c..:__..: _____________ _.: _________ I 9ullodl, JMt tl'ld DclklrlS .l.-n Frlltltrg, 1..-E-.tt, Jr.. ll'ld JMnlt C•rroll WNttMIH, El.i. L. Ind W1lllnglon J . Glrl•nd, Rllondlo A. tnd Rldlwd A. Dur>Ltp, G•lt H•l•ll• ..W f'Mll Mk:t1Mt 5'rr•. T ... _ Incl H1rokt D•nllf Elll:ln, Uurlfl,.. J11n etld l'"Y Scott ....... Mloy 11 T•lt. ""'11 Jt_I,.. Ind J.tflTf 11.obttt Allrtd, Mtrvln H. Ind I~ Brrr111:1 ... , A.vt1n Alr....i .nci S...~ln Btcblrom, Rlch.lrd EIWllOd, Sr., Mid .. ~ a.v.cs., Riii ........ flt 11\d .!Ofln . Andr-, Scr..tl, FrMltlvri C • .111111 •0bf• U. P'I"'-!, K•li'IMM L.orr1I,.. Ind Jtftrwy ,,.,. Chs_., SMrllll S. '"4 Edwin Roblll"t Aubuchon, R-ld ll•Y Ind C"""I AM 'Fr•nll, K1rl1 L. lnll Timothy 11., ' Ltwl1, DmlM I. •nd T'*"-1 J. Cl•r11:, Comt111C1 H. •!Id CloMld E. WlllY• O•vld F. •nd S.r•ll M. W111\tr1, Tlf'ft.I •nd Timothy Hoo-11, Conni• L. •l'ld Mormtn s. Ad•lr, Tllom•t.and Fkln M. •t""°"· WlUl•m It, Jr., •l'ld S111•nne Mllcldox, OoMld LM llnd C•rolln A. Snldlr, P11111y A. ll'ld Ktllll 11.. K•llw'yn, knvu •l'ld C11rt11 LtnJV v ... O.llMI, L•.,.._ tnd Jan Ewrett Knl;ht, Vick R., Jr. Ind •IYlf'ly J, Dom•nlc, M.1lt M. •nd Jollrt A. B•rll:w, MilrllVT1 ll. lfld T11omt1 E. Llnl'IH. K•thl-•nd DM!llf It. Mltltl", L• M•r Albert Jr., Incl Mtry Mtrg•r1t er_, Mt11n!119, Btttv J. Ind SI-V, St. On91, B•rtilf'I Ind M\'f'Oft D. Cr1ln, Lynne An,.. Md llk:ky AIM Rllllcll:I, Ag"'' M. Md 'Thlodurl ll•lpl'I Cl'lllt'cl!, Llndli Ind .. ,.,.., Alvin Lltd1•rn. Allee Lorr•IM .. Norm.n . ., '°'IKIOI, G~lllP* end """"'1cio .... Silnllfr, P'1trlcl• tncl John Giibert Dunev•11, Dlbr• tnd J1'"'" El/llWlt , ... M.ly 16 80i'nln. V'ililli A. li'iil'·Dil\ri11 E, VlldeZ. EIHnor •nd Jou A~.-0.ncy, J. Iii. •!Id AnM Vwonlc1 8111ntll, C.1rrntr1 El.11....-.Ind Anltlony ... AO\jfrrr, $yt~11 J. Ind Sl<'glo Pop1, 0...K L. •nd Connl1 M. lloclrlglltl. Rubm L. •nd JlldY S11v•r, l'J.olorn F. tncl 1"111:r1 R11d, Kr111 Ir-Ind Kii: Br'\'OHI Ogl1. 91Ve1'1Y J. tnd Bob F. B•ly, WHll•m MyrOl'I •nd Rlblc:CI JHn G1rm1n, 8•111.1 M•rl1 •nd Ktnr'lllll Dwgl11 K.,ney, H•llCV A. tl'td Mlcf\HI J, M11rr•y, Ctndlce A. •l'ld Tlloma1 G. K11lgn1, G•ry LM .Ind C•rol SUI Death Not&ee. OAKD•M V~I O.kOln. Rnldent of a.111qe 1 d•t1 of dfetll, Mloy 21, 1'73. •urtlll9d by' Wiii, M1v1 O.kcNni,.. bf'ottlet'I, Robert L, of l~hof Ctr! uekden, ;venlde1 iii!«, Mrs. 019" f'1r111warlh, Lat Angeln. Stnic.. Tllund1y, Mey t4, 1 f'M Wnldlff CMPtl, 'ltllll Bl~ Robtii J-.Siw. of IN CIM.lrch Ill' JHw. Cllf"tlt of Utt.r DIV S4'l11h, offkltll"'I. F1ml1y WQGfttt "-wltl'llftl lo m11k1 -i •I eonlrlbufhinl, PINH contrlllut• to m. H9ft l'"und. Wnfdlff O..Ptl .Mclrtwry, ..,._.., Olr..:.tor-.. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTIJARY m E. 17Ua St:, Costa Mesa . ··-BAL'J'Z.dRGERON FUNEllAL HOME c. .... del Mar - Colla -lff.Wt • BELL BROADWAY MORTIJABY llt ~Colla M.,. • MoCORMICK LAGUNA YOU ARE Alt.INVITtl> TO A of Jack lalanne's· COMING ATTRACTION! NOW SERVJf4G THE COSTA MESA / SANTAANA COMMUNITY. TAKE ADVAN·TAGE OF OUR SPECIAL PRE-OPENING BEACl;I MORTUARY --·-~M.. -. PHASE-1'--3QFFER. •• ,., PACIJl'IC VIEW I MKMOlllAL PARK Ceme~,:or1am -Padllc View Drive N...,.,. lied. caulornl1 ·-• PEU FAMILY COLONlAL F.UNERAL , ilOME ~1 llolu Ate. w-•-lfi.ms SMITll!P rl>aruAJlY rn Mota 111. H..u.gtooBeodi •-r This ls the total a\lllrage cost II you enroll only on a course designed lndlvldually for you. JACK LA LANIE'S ln"f'"" HEALTH SPAS COSTA MES4/SANTA ANA , 3611 SOUTH BRISTOL ., ,. _, _' Construction !lite at corner · Brl1101 and MacArthur ... • . 'cALLNOW 919·480.P f.., 1••' , • ..,..~t ~ a~o ···"'· .... ,.. " ' '' DAJL Y PILOT f • Death P.enalty ·Bill Pushed e\.o.c. ~s Of tllil o.lty -.... Sl•ft Senator James E. Whetmore (R·Fullerton) says lhal il the Asse.n1ll.y leadership does not pennit SB-450, the death penalty bill, to reach lbe full Assembly, it will be "pompous neglect of the mandate o( the people m California who are demaDd1ng retW"D of the death penalty to the statute books." 11le As.sembly C r i m i n a I Justice Committee plans to consider SB-450, by Senator George Deulanejian, June 5. "It is hard to Wlderstand bow this committee c a n justify ignoring lhe results m Proposition 17 in 1972 when two-thirds ot .the voters in California voted for the return o1 lhe death penalty," Whet- more said. by W-y. Call the pnved and senl !o the Senate wltb the public 1 ch o o I chamber at Ml·5353. noor three measures dealing buildings and grounds. The l.><eakl8't Is scheduled 1iiiiiiiiiiiiiijji;jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii In the Trabuco Room of SanlO ·HcNneowners: Ana's Saddle~k Inn . if there's ~ng advertised ii JIM ~tANIS of Westmln.ster today's (J r.L-1o has been elected first vie<: ....... you u 1lu own, chairman of lhe American mber who help Independent Party's Orange reine mn eoon1y Central Commiuee. He JOU buy 'it, replaces John Ortman who moved to Norco. Manis was active in the United Repllblicans o f California (UROCl unW he swilcbed parties last year. * BILLS DEALING with weapons and intruders on liC!hool campuses have been sent to the Senate by the Sen· ate Judiciary Committee. Avco. You can convert the bullt-up equity in your house Into cash Jn your hands. Cash to do whatever you want to do. end pay back conveniently over a period or yea111. H-LoanstoS2S,OOO. * One of the bills. by Senator REP. ANDREW Hinshaw (R· Dennis E. Carpo,!er (R- Newport. Beach) will speak Newpor:t Beach), woold make Friday at a 7:30 l)t'eakfast it illegal for anyone except sponsored by the Greater San· police or employes to possess ta Ana Chamber of Com· firearms or other deadJy merce. weapons on a c o I l e g e . Over $5,000 on Rul Eobll8 and-Penonal Property.' ..iflAVCD FINANCIAL SERVICES 117' "•l'bOr Blvd., Co1•• MIU .. 51» N, A!Nlltlm Blvd., AMll•lm .. no 5. EU<::lkl 51., An•Mlm . ........ ..... . •• .U.)1114 ................. sis.•16 ...... nwut . ..... ~ .. ".' • . .• . .. .. t4J-Ml11 The public is invited. The university or pubic school 11"1 8rto1111ur11 sr .. G•n:I'" c;"'v' 11422 8t•d1 llvf., H11!1lh1t!Oll 8t'1Ch . 21111 $. M•l11 St., S•11l1. An.1 611 W. 11111 51., S•nl1. A11• ....•... tolll W•5lfllln1ter Ave .. Wntml111IH .. . #", .. , ........ s.tf.SMI '. ' . • • . . ". .. • . 5'J-4U1 .. ................ ~ cost is $3.50 per person. campus. Reservations should ~bei_m~a~de:__~T~h~e'_~co'.'m~•rru~·t~te"'e~a~l~so'_~a":p-i! ... "'ll"'tl"'ll"'ll"'ll"'ll"'ll"'ll"'ll ..... "'ll"'ll"'ll"'ll~~llll Introductory Special On General's New Smooth Riding , 4-Ply Polyester Cord Poly·Jet WHITEWALLS $ 90 / J I ' . [ ti r " I I ' l~A11-t8 --.---·f...--1--P-• tube I••• whit.wall, plut 11.13 Fed. EJc. Tu Charge It ~-II At General Tire SIZE REPLACES REG. LOW SALE FED. EX. TAX PAIR PRICE PAIR PR ICE PER TIRE A78-1 3 6.00.13 2 lor $49.90 2 for $37.90 $1 .83 878-13 6.50-13 2 for $51.90 2 for $39.90 $1.81 E78-14 7.0017.35-14 2 lor $55.90 2 for $43.90 $2.22 F78'14 7 .50/7. 75-14 2 for $57.90 2 for $45.90 $2.37 G78-14 8.0018.25-14 2 for $63.90 2 for $49.90 $2.53 G78-15 7.1018.25-15 $2.60 . H78-14 8.50 18.55-14 2 for$69.~ 2 for $55.90 $2.75 H78-15 7.60/8.55·15 $2.80 J78-15" 8.0016.85-15 2 for $73.90 2 for $59.90 $3.01 ' L78-15• 9.15-15 2 for $77.90 2 for $61.90 , $3.13 •Av1ll1bl• In wnile.,111 only 8l1ctw•H• u LI .. P•r Tit• ""'" CMICli Sttou+O °"' ""'""'' o! -Ii••• O< 11 .... "'" lhofl du•! ... lll!t ... ,,., •• wilt -• ..., "'"-" plKtd l\OW tor ,~hit• 0111 .. ., •! '"' td .. tllwd prict, TlllE L tflbk~ \' l.:INID All GNMENT \·/e correct Cast•r, Camber, Too.in, Too-out to your car mo nu , ticturer' s sp•ciTications ... s.f.:y check •nd •diust your ~teer:ngt General Jato Super 100 -GOLFBALLS 3-BALL $153 PAK • Cutless Cover • Hlg)'I Tenlk>n Wlndlng • Energb.ad Center DON SWEDLUND COAST GENER AL .,,.~ -r ....,.., •• _,., .. M•• "" 585 WEST 19th ST., CP!\I 0 '· r:~:::~1 ::1=1~ 646-5033 -540-5710. 7:'" f ( ...._'"'---·-·•-'··--Sooner or l~ter, you'll own Generals ..... -----' -ll 'I ' I • ' I • I ! ' ' , DAILY PllDT ..... ft,......,............ ~~~~ ....... c..1111 ......... ~ .......... " ... ' .... .,_ -MMt .., .. ~~ ::...-:=::::=~:"' ~· .. W. rtttfilM ......... T ,,,,.._ 0-CW.- o...I .,. ''"..., ., "-'• "11. ,.. ....,,n ., WIL4 .,.. '°" ~ " ..,.,. .,... " c:.n.-w. ., J-'"· ...,_._ urnwn ~,.., ._ ...,. .....,. ....,.. ..... 1n .,.,.,.. ''" '-'*"• ., ftlC1.A. •· MOOfle, lllM ,........ ,..""'-dAlifN .,._.,.. "" ...., c:..t • .,,.._ ~lt. ~ • Tl"kU. •19'0111 ""°°"'•• ...,,_. .,. ,_... .. m. ._., wt111 .. ........,_ Or..... C-t D•lh' '°""' Drilc:99..._ tM ~ vwcMra, WI ""-efflm fll May tt. ft. 2f, 1'7J 1-..;) "°1"1C'E II HfllE-•'t' •IYEH !!WI JM ciwt: 91 .._ ....,.. _......, -'• • li.Ol'TM M. •EAA "" flllM '*"'" • "'1· ,. IN'-' """' wltll ... .--y PtJBlJC N-CE n.. 1w ,.....,.. .. ..tt """,,,, ,_., _,..,.. .., "" vi*'~ .. ,.. .,_ "¥ Lattwf 1'.t.,.,_..,., .. il'ttlt'-o1 J ...... Y~. ISO t-t\' ....... L0t --------~----•'.,,..._. .. ~ 11 INde '°' MflW ,..,.... C..llf .... wllldl •• "" ..... ., Comeback Begun By Roz Russell NOTK• TO C•IOrTOlll _.,tk\Nf"t. end 1911' th9 time Hd ~ tMli.11 o1 ._. ~ ill -"' ~ 11«1. lltl_.1'1 U.C.C.I fll ,_rfft9 .._..,,.. hM "'-M1 fof' J-'*"'•lftl1111 .. lfW nl•t. of Mid ~. a.er... ..., _... f, ltn, .. f :a •·"'"" In tM C°'lrl,_, ot w1111111 ,_ mMttW 1n.r ttw fir• ,utlllu· fl) A bl.Ilk h'IM .... It 1b0vt '9 tie "*"9. ~""*" No. ll Ill llld cwrt, II 1(111 tlDll ot 1'111 Mitlu, lbl The n1m11 ~ IMI-.oer-t1I/ Cl..tc Cen• Orlw WMI, In IN Clty of Dtl.-cl M.-io 4, It?) The ,,..,1"°ror .,,: lanl1 ""-• Cefli....nl1, Elt1C E . HVJS, ~ ChllOrlft'• , ... , ... '"" 01191 """" 11, 1m. Eucvtof °' ,,.. Wiii 1t0 E. um '''"' wtLllAM •• SI IOIOf, of Mild ~· C111l1 Mtia, C1lll'Dml1 (4'lll"IY Cllt'lr JI .... \/IM'lflt llw ,..""" eMI 11¥11-lllkl,...._ of I . ••Mot• MOOtt•, UIJ .._..., IN¥C. tfle ,,_,.,_ .,... "' ..... ....... I.II ~ (II#, ""' o.i11 " °''* F-.w..tton. .....,... ...._ c•..,.• n..t • ..._., .., • ....., . ........ l'.t1 ,,.., ......,. ,.."6H\\ • CMltom.11 Cltll'O'I•""' &"....., IWl .......... htlill ..... 0rlfl99 c .. 11 0.lty fl'llot, 87 BOB 11IOMA!I •If I. llllbwtMrl •M ... n ,..,...,.... ~ c-i Deity "11ef, l!My •• lJ, tt. 2t. Im 1-.n hYM1y Hllta. C1Hfonll1 1-~~n.~,,,~~n.~·"'~----~·~·n~-:'."'1 ·---;;;;;;;-;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:----1 L.---JI ...... ...._ my '"-." All ..,.,. ....,_ -llMI lddt'tf,-~ ~ ..... ... ~ ..., w t1w .,...,.,.,..,. ""'""" """.,.,,, PUBLIC NCYl'ICE ..... t ••"-"-...! many BEVERLY HILl.S (AP) When Roaaliod Ruaaeil ac· c •pt e d ""' latmWUrtan awanl from the llotiGa Pi<> ture Academy in Marc1J. llu! thanbd thooe wlso had - '-" ..,.,, .o ,,, ., kntlWI tv ttM tr111•· PU111lC N011CE 1QA; .... .,.._,,.. ...... ,,..: -"°"tc:• To c•1Dm>A1 teJevialon viewers, who hadn't lei n. kut1e111 and _._,.. dltcrl~Clll Uncltf' ~ prlWI"""-1/1/t "'-fl'Mf~ IU"l•to• COtJIT O' THS i.--11..~ •L.-1-I °',,,.'"'"""' ,. ... ,,_"""' lf'I. l!'mplOY"'*lf ,f.cf "'""· ... U.S. °""'''" 11'.t.TI (W CAUP09:•r• POil A.l'NWll IMR MIC IUUQenie y Slodt In trMit. "'dint. tiqUIPtMnt, INftf 1111 I.It.or .... lfloaittd tl06.))0 TH• COUWT'Y 0' Oll..U.01 vjtaJ Jt<a hid bef.11 lick. tr• -~ ....i" "' • Cll'leln Fr.cit y-,,,, fllllR ,. CITY 01' HUH· ........ ,,1n ~~ .. r...S::..~~k=ls~TINGTOH IEACM .. _....,,rile Sic· f1Jtlll of lfOIA STEl'HAHIA Altbougb ahe made no secret c , flOft "' hdlc ,,,....,,.,...,,. P'•ot••m GAAHOViklA SfllOTHEll, O.C..Md. of the tact neither bas she Sir..,, ... MMe, C.!1""1111 !PEl'I fW fl'-. C'HJ'. TJlif CITY 01' HUH• MOTIC:f: 1$ H!.IE•Y G1VEM to IM ' (.) T-~ • .,,,.. l'he .,.., .... '11 .,,..,. TINGTOH •EACH ......,.._. ~ 1911-11'11 Crllllllll't or ltll .._. __. llMcldlnl spoken much of the arthritb wt.Celt n.. ""!ll 1r*""tr 11 to ti. ~ ••tr111111!1.-"tw.n: ltllt •11 IM"'IOlll hlV'lnf ci.1,,,. IOllMt ttw at•·-• ••·t ·~-·--~ to -• _,_ -· Cl'Y elf H~ lllflc:ll Ml lff MWI dkl6tftl tr• rtqlllrlll to ,. .. ~ wn.; ... ~ ""\::41~g:iu ICllll a.nil ell ~ filT & $A, ~ Vii Hllll"lltfOll i-.cft ' with ri.. nlCHMl'Y WOUC"""•· In "'9 of11ct her acting C8l'eel' three lbd I Lido. H-.iort 9MtA, C•Llfroml1, Cln Of EIMlltl-t1rY $dlMI Ohl. ll,f1S lif tlM Cllt-of N lllOW 9tllllltid t-1, Of .,.... J""" lL 1m. "~ ._.. tv ,,,._, ~. _,., ,,. '* .. ~..... half yearr ago. Oiled MIY 11. 1'71 UnlClll Hilfl 1CMof 01.. .,. -..chert, hi trll \llldlnlgnlld ti h lllflc1 "'--iJ -·-1-1..-Gt•ltll CHIU>llEH'S Willtm!Mttr lcfl«ll Oltlf1ct ''*of kAll.. SEELY, Atflln't9y 1t Lew. )N Olllll: flOW •~wuuug lllC"T Cf:NTllll, IHC. Tot1I ''°' .. ht! ~ Otlw. ~ &IKl'I, career. Earlier thls year Jbe •v: IYH L 111111141, TM ~f _.,. .. ••IYl!Md 111 tutl Cllfforllfl ,.,.,., '#fllctl ,, lf\f •• of .-.... In ...... ~~ mov-Tr•n•lwOf' '' ttle FINll'CI 09pe,,.._1 0 6"I $I bull-• of !tit urMJtirllllftld lfl .n tNl,.,.1 rr-<..,,. tie:•lll~ DELLA ,., GlllS l'OUHDATtOH Hllftflftff\WI 1-.ctl C•llfwrll~ .... "ptrt1/11lne ,. ,,.. .. 1 ... of .. Id Hcldllll, le. Last week ahe emceed a ••: E,•rJ! II. V•\191'1n1, 1111w11twd ,_..;. """" Uftlll s·oO l'M wt111111 ,_ """"'' '"., ,,.. 11r11 p.ullllc•· CBS tele••·Jon •"""'al from Ir: dlrn G. V•Ullhln. Ml't'" im.. 19 """""' -111j, °" 1.,f !IOl'I ol 1111• l'IOllc•. •"II .,.. ... . (Br!Json, Iler prciduoer bu•· band) was previewing 'Gener1Uon' and rebearalna 'Coco.' " Tr1n1l1r..1 •• I 01ttd ,,,.,.,. 14, 1m w-·"·m-• K .......... ~1 l'vbUaht(f °"'""'Coat O•llY l"!lof ~ ~ ' ,,.....ldilocl "'• ftO!lc• ., ft• IOPMtA 0 SCHWPS ......... &.& ..... I .......... ",, ...... II er, n. 1m ,,.,.,. ::=.°:i.': ,~~ J;'.,' 1a"."f'm~1v ... no h1C11trl11;,, ,,,. wi11 "Women of the Year, 1173.'' SHE RECAlLED th1t her httl wr1ttwn '""111cettori ot htltttll°"' to of ""' ,.,..... 11•"'111 otclljiott She also Is consJdering a PUBUC NC)MCE c-1 -,.. wr1tt ... -"' ,...., HALL JllL Y hands hurt at the fllm loca· ------------1" tubtftlltld "'Mr, EM'I Hlf'1m •I HM A."-1':: ::,::=on~ return to the at.age. t'oo, but ahe had believed that NOTICI 01" DlllOLUTIOM lllow ldclreu w to: M-..rt hec:ll, C1'""'1111 fSMt o• PAllTMlllSMtl' """· l"IO¥d t . tctnrd• T1111 cn41 .,....,,., BETWEEN telephone calla: wu ca\191!d by the snow. She Publl( .,.,lu 11 IMrlbY" ,1.,.,. 11111 ft..i-1 ~ Ad!ftf11hff1,.,. ,....,,,...,. ttr •AIQtt\r LA-n. ..a --- .IAME1 •• WATSO.N •lld Glll!"GOllY L :: ~ 0.'9 ,,_ Pl,llllllNd °"'"" c ... , tl•llY 1"11.i .• al IK:l" .u.:-Vei-1y Drive 111111111;, had no other lnlding of the Wl-iAll.N. tlfl''11;1far1 dolll(I tMlfth1 • F --~--.. ,, .... . May tt. 2t, Ind J~ s. IL 1'11 ,~,,.n Miu Rlllsell dilamed her ill· -ina at•···· ~ fl'll fklltloul nfm M"" end 1lylf • lft r_,....., ,... ., .,,,,...,_"& wa,.;r., of ACCIHT LIGHTING AND ELl!CT•le, Attn: M•. E111111 C•tlldl PUBLIC N-CE ness. Miss Rlmdl sought help •I MOtZ 0ttty Dr., ctty of L~ NfOWI, hbttlllld 0!"11111 ~ 01ltr '"""'· Vil "f •·• ~-t •-·..i.t TV filGIUJGHTS • KIU • 7:JO -"l'hl BK!.':& .. at Tolu>Ri." WU-Uam HoldM llld G....,. aw ID lh1' 1054 drama let aplmt I.be loaaxlroP ot the Korean War. CBS a 9.00 - N ... Einmy Ahlds. Tbe --get tbolr own !Dim)' lhow, with natwork new1111an hOlllnr tile !Int anaual award ceremon- ies for newt and docwneatarru of the NaUonal Academ:r of Televlllon Atta llld Sciences. NBC D 10:00 -American Communlml Today. An uamlnatlon of the Community Party, USA, homd by NBC com11>911dent Frank Mt:Gee. TV DAILY LOG Tuesday Evening llAY22 ............. m111-•-(j)lol-··--·· IDflll-mStorT"' ·Ml--• Mllet• tip"- DCD(l)l9AICT-- ICI (Ill) 'W ._ -<•> l...,l '12-t.onnM StMn&. Ytll JohM011, Cftttltt Htltort tt11t1y, Jim Hutton. A ''""" .. 1tttu b«errru tn. ~ tor • fflttmlty. (])fJBCgL!~ H1111Ptfo ----m "'~ •llffto -8ht_1_ 1111 ..... ,. ,..._ fll lllM ., ........ u... ..,,,, ""' 1114 tbs Pmidenc:y" covnry °' °'•"""· 11.1, °' c 1nftml1, did ""'.,. n, 1m -------~""'.':"'~"1 ---Plc:Tir!Oii.':~;s;J!"-!•--·1 1-.i u-=: wors onsuru,..., from Floyd o d 1 um, in-CWI ftMI Jrd Ay f!f ...... II. 1m. tty """'111 • PICTITIOUI eUSINWSI of arthritla in history," $})e """'-'AJ d Jo · <::Dft...,1, ci1uo1v1 ni. wkl penM<ll'llp .,,. PUBIJC NOTICE NAMI STATIMl•T d1.1:1uU1 ist an a ngtnne l:IO(j) ttrmlntll 11111r r9!1Tlon1 •• per1111r1 TM foll-'1111 Plt'IOl'I 11 doing ll\lllfll•H remarked w1tb only a hint or friend. He had helped foond . ........ """' t!Mrtlft . II: whims "I ke 0 Mt.It: ll't. -........ Ill -- __ ,_ t:Jl8(1)116C@:i'9tn 111f hell· .-.., lm•r Awllrtt Th• first •n· 1'11111 ···~ tttlll'IOllill of th• JllfloJlll kldt/111 If Ttlt't'lalolt Am tnl Sclw.tl 11 lloslld by Mtwolk S1ld bullftHI In "" t\11111'1 Wiit lit (611· Hone• llfVl'fUI• 1101 0 1VllJl:StFIED COMMODITIES, llSf y. WO up one the Arthritis Foundation and • , .. , ·-· ·- dwt.d by GIU!GOlllY l . WWALIH, ""'° Notte• 11 1'11<.ey ,1_ !NI"" loerd of Nwdlc PIK•, OrMOt. C.lllllrflll nus morning in New York with had interested her In .. -. ........... (1111•) '69 -Mll'IJ wrn pey •rid dbcN~ 111 t111111111n 1nc1 T•v11 ... 1111 11'11 c.. 1 eomm .......... Coll-a• lloti«l lllvtf'oll, llff Hwdlc P'LK•, ha-•· u•-•·-·. I coukln 't ... ., Slatt, sttN Altl!llG. 09b of "" " lfld Kii ti i. I ., f °'••· C1Utor1111. I-ll&C UilUl.!ll porting jt. "I appeared on ,..,!~.la 1111 ';,'""· , Y• • ,_ ~~ 0:..~""9eldt~·~'~:1•t:::i~~ Tiii• bllll111u~~ ~1ec1 .,.,. ftot11rt ambulate, but I managed to telet"•M• for 11 years," ·"-(J)CIS ._ Wtlttt Crlllkltt - j HPACIFIC VIBRATIOHS" ............... -L.A..n..t -7:ll _. ftJI OW PLAYING IUllYID sun D• S.lo 0.llJ ll 'Iii I MARLON BRANDO .ltL 'J>Bi1s @-::.:-1111•'-'""'" MDI. THRU THURS. I P.M. FRIDIT l I !:IS SITURDll 1·11 HS Sl/1011 l·S l I t.::--..::•::;IL:.:HATS $4.00 -n•U· Ill.."""' 11 .. 1 Hlll O'TOOU $0PMIA 10.tH -aliN OI I.' MMC..-.N PO "Ul:NI ... 1111 M«1W'" Wl(OA'l'S 6:'5 ..... -.... J "'CHiii llAOllS" ''S!OUCllOll OF l"Cl" IOTM flANllS llAflO IX ~ FIH'tl'll< ftOllCI II llMll)y OIY'fll Ille! "" Wftnndl'f, J"'"" It. tm It t1'll """'~· 111-°''· '" lncf • . _. -I ...... --· fly back ~y ~~ --... -'""' vr>dff111111111 wnt "°' N r1111t11•lblt, from Ing ~· of Mid w...11 41111'kt JtoMrt Jtlw••1 it"• vu ......-..,..,. remarked, "and then I ended --tt1t1 d•v e111 '°" t f!Y 00Uwllon1 l1>Currld loc.tttd 11 1ft ~ A-ut. Coll• Tiii• ,,.,...,ant w11 lflld wfttl !tit c-. here ..,. lletw lftMtt. - Dy GJl:EGOllY L. V4!ALEN In 1'111 -Mftt, C•lllomlt. " wllkll tlont Slid bldl ty OHk of °''"°' c-ry 911 ,,,..., .. ,,,,, • up with the dtsease. '1 UV "''"'or 111"" ,...,,. e11,,.. ~'"'· wfn t11 ~kf'f 'l"'M'I ,.,. rMCJ tot: lffS.OC "u1• "For four or flvt months 1 Odium referred her to Dr. m..., trtmlll •-...a ··~· ... Dot 5-r· l-;;;~P.i~i'-i•~~ii"iiii~ lnto11 1n4I hul Wlllllfftl put DATED AT Lllfll -..cti, C.1tfw1111, '"'' 1raT10H'iJtY iuP11>t1Es. wa•••• M. eoeioew hid. J'rn that kind 6f~rson: RI~--· F-· .. ·-, •-·"'lrne fl!I "" -''" d1y.of ""'"· 1m All bid• 1(1 to" In ICCOl'denn wlttri .-.. ·-• \;IUU"U ... ,. ...... Ii W•ie• J,,.,., 11:. w111t111 "" 111111VC11CW11 •ftd c""'111-•lld .. --~ ....... I thinJc I can deal prob-1 -•-'" the ,....I 1 · st - -Pvbll1he.1 or1""" '°''' 01111 ~11o1. "l*Clrlc1t1tl'I• Wltlcti ,,. new °" Ill• i ftd 11411 Cl'tfllllltw -....Wtr•. le-• better ,_, m y, e I f, 'auer ~· 'IF' gatn -.:.i 1-IMe Mly n, 197l 11'~7' tnay ... llCVfld In "" «fie• ot Ill• ,......,.. ,.,.,.,..,, .. ...., u7 arthritis. When the physician m .... ~------------111>r.1rct11t1ng ,.....,1 or Mid ""°" 11t1trlct. "ubOtlll'd Or•ng• CN1t 011ty Piiot M•v without having frJ,nds ask, examt-·• her, he rem••ked, • ' PUBLIC N<mCE Etcri bl4*r f'IM/Sf IUbt'NI wltlt 1111 bid 1 1. u , 12, tt. 1m 1a.n 1R:U ... -..... '"" '""' ·a~ ·-you feel1'11JI'.' " llO&ll ''"' c11t111r1 c11eck, cwll"-d dllt:k, "" bid-.......... ., "You know, many people in ·-.... _ ·--.11 ...... 1ttn .. 11!1•--•1CT1T1ou1 ·.--.. -,-,-,-.. ---d.,. •• 11onc1 ,,.,..,, PllY•bt• 1o_ '"• °'"" -' Pusuc NOTICE h ~L.:. m Utc11 ...... •AM• ITATllM•NT 1111 CN•I com"'111'111Y Clift-a• 0 11tr1ct l---c=:=:=:::-:==::---·I MISS RUSSELL said that your pro(eaalon 1ve uw; lO:lllDllllD• .,.. "Atntflten ll'll following Ptl'lalt 11 doll'lll blnl1111• .... I'll of Trwtws Ill ll'I •moulll l'IOI leu ,ICTITIOUI •UllNlll the lnte••ity ol ~-•Mhrltl• d!Jease, but don't edmlt Jt. 7:tt8 (J) II m.... Com111U111$M Tod-Frtt1t Mc:Gft is •1• lillft fl .... ll*'eanf 15"') ol tlll IUfft bl.i IW MAMS 11'ATIMIWT '"" "ll:l' .., • •1 . MOOUL.All P'llOOIJCTI, 177•2 C.mhlCI -'l'••r't CMlrtcl •• 1 giMOrMllM !I'll! ltll 'tollowh11 .,_, 11 dtln1 blnln•11 attack may have bee1J due to They think it la associated • ..... .. ...... !lost fct fl!b ltdW·lt·Clt'l-bt·tlllill •X· Cooltlf-, L-·-~ N•wt n.11 tlw blddll' W1R Mtw llltt 11'11 ,....,._.. Ito • with (j) ~ ..... ~ tM •-..,,~ Pl~ Modvt1r M~-;;v;•ctvrlrll inc • Cfl'lh'Kt " ,,,. -•• _..., to "''"'· THI Vl!LV!T J'llOO so11ne ,.,,,,.,. her weakened condition. She age. Tl'llll •Cl " •• •mi .. ._.. ~l "1' C1IHw11J1 Cor••lklfl. t11u ,;,,.,,,,. In 1111 twnt 'fl ,.,,.,,.. te '"'"' JflflO 1uc11 lldl.. '2:U41 C•mll'IO C11011h'•111. 1111 had hee f'lmi .,....__ 1 -• (I) ltl .. 11 Mu~ U.S.A. c1p1'"'"°· U91111• H...,.., c .. 1,, tM'7 _,,,.K,, 1._ IDfOCllQ"' '"' <"Kk wtn J11111 c1p111r-. c1. n.n. n 1 ng 1~ ninaz.. •1AS A matter of faet, more .... eem- Tri/1 t11111na1 11 cOflductld b't' • cor· .. '°""''"· .. 111 "" ''" " • t>oM, 1"' stir,,,.,. II!. Otr'Cl1. n1 •1c~11 lng Mrs. Pollifax" at 11,lOO teenagers than old people have II WW'1 Mr UM? c. Plll'•llon. • !'!!.!..!:'"'• ~ wltl .. ftrltlllld 16 Mid Orlvt, c1 •• ,.....,,, C1lt1ornl1. ID I I -• -a (J) CJ) m ...... ...,. M.D. MOOULAll MANUf'ACTUlllHG, .... N7 ..... !:'.."''' -., ....... ._ Tt111 tMlneu I• coM\ICtld DY '" 1"" feel a1Utude in the Grand Te-arthritis. Some people ire ....... -r IR) M • Ulrit -INC. r -"'''I' ...... " ............ dlYldUll. She said • f ..... ., ........ •11•r II I .. Ill JDM a. llL(it, ltl, pr"14inf llM'teodMl"for'forty.flve 1-4:51~ lflw 1111 ltllrtly •. G1rcl1 ttm.!. : born With it." •• ,, ... lfltflt Mt'Wtl&fll 'l'Otllfll w1ft1 ll)'INttln• Thh 1111_, w.1 fl'N ""'"' 11'11 C-'f,.. 11.,.~~ .. -T-~•-,_._ .. Ttll11f1,._1 w,, Ii,_, with 11\f (0ti11-"J W81 Under terrific llraln, Or. Freyherg rrescribed 11 wllo '410 •· I! '1 ly Cltrk " O~ Cavnty °" Mly ll. P!'IYll'" .f"r1lect1~" tny ll'ld '" bldt or ry Cllf'k of Or•flll' COl.l"'Y Otl A!H'll JO, not only becaU5e Of the rugged rnedi"Alion and ex~i•a {or tll Tlill fflMll Qtf Oii I l'rJ '"'' t IO' lfr.I hi walw ,,,... l"'Olli.rtll• ot Jn-un. , .... _ ,.Mf11 ... ._ • ...... 1n1 1111 • ~ 411ft. nan fonftaU"-111 •flY w. ... .,, "" btfdlng. _.,.... work, but out of worry that we Miss Ru.aell, as well as treat. e.tltl: ,,... ... -. ... -r-P•l looflt l'ublllhld Otanot C...t Olfty P'lkit, Slllf*I: HOlllMAN e:. WATSON P'llbllsMd OrMll• C•l1 0•11'1' l"ll .. , ·,,~j •-·· be ( j --·• """ t2. "· •nd JVM s, 1i.. 1m 1m.n s.c, .. _,, May 1. •· 1s. tt. 1t11 1m.n m1&'1 JUX mem rs o our ment «her acute anemil. "1 QJ Um' a. •Ml Ml fllllllr 1l1r 111 this •aka! PUBLIC N<mCE 1...,. "',.,.,.'"' PUBLIC NOT!-comPany. nte shortest drop got so 1 couldn't face another 1!J..., a.. ,., """Met Dft14 bf. ONrl; J-lJ. 1m · 111• '·'"· "'.:. over the aide was 5,000 feet, ol !ood bu I P'Ubll1Md0t•,.•Ct11to11ty1"nt1M111 _________ ~--i tray , t ate ,. .. 1...,, .... ,,._ .... ..,...,. l'tCTIT10UI 1t11•••11 21. "' ,,,, ,.,.n l"ICTmOVI •t11111S11 and we almost lost lwo men. anyway," she recalled. ....._,,_ --•-. .. -..t: 111.,.,. '-· MAMa JTATIMINT MAMI ITATIMIWT [ tin ['ltl --• .., -,,.. t1111ciwt111 Ptl'MM "' ooi,. PUllUC NO'nCE TM f9llow1ne Pf!'-11 doll'IGI IM!Mn " was ea g very 1 e, She swam dally in her pool, D'*' ....,_ ,w. ,.. Wtttr, bltlc: lltemltJ tor 11f•, bu1111111 "' 11 : Y M •1", •", "c • and I didn't want to drink which was heated to t4 "*" ., 1 --b lollowH ll'Olll its pur• be11tt-,.1UA. JM.l'I, ltlO Hwtior llvd., C.ll MOTIC• llfVtTI ... •IDS a C 0 L 0 0 .. .. L.--~ • f I • /Mil, n..t7 ••D rrut ..,, m ••11v1ce, 11U1 IC -.....~t. 1rv1n,, wat'r Ul;:\Alluse rt wu so ar o degrees, and she exerclsred her ""'" °" ~ ti Mttl,. 11(1 Nl'IP to pioll~IDll. JOhft ""-" ....,1_"'.'. J"'""" Clrclt, NOTlet: IS HIE'llflV OIVEM ,,,., ... 1. C.11""111• '2101 .... to the bat~ When I h-·· -"It'• not the Jorn' t ...... , M I , CMll Mtll, C.llf, ,.. f1f ......... Wiii lrll ,_.,..,. W flw Cff"I' JGIWt A. """*'· tol T-fll'I., C•I• B" IK"'111lo ~-., I lllL IQ. T.a M Armo a.... NIIMI\. Mm """"'· "c.otoo • -·,. w1r.• '"' c1~ c·~•!.. "'"'· C.tltorfll1 n.. n-1~bed the picture, I came that's the ~•·-·, lt'a the ltMllllr. -,_ -.. ANlhllm. blff. ,..o. .. r-. Cltl9 ""' ... c1i1l.w11i;,"'.., T?111 Mi,... '• tlNwfW bY' 111 •~ 11o'"~me and wr1.......r 4 o o .,.vuu:u. ,...,. <i11'1.,, .;-1 ..=.............. G.._: car, '1• "*" " Tt.11 llllll-I• <*ldllc!M W' '""*'•' .,, ....,. ""' """'of H:tt '·"" .,_ ,.,,. ~Yld1.tl1,. ~•f!ldll' ~ muscle behind the joint." -....... _,,.., W (lfr1) '$t -Jtff Ch1Ml1r. "'~'"""""'· ,..,, J-•· 1tn. •Id• win " ,111111c1v """ Christmu presents, which I GIOlp, Ywtl1 Mlmlwl. Joh! Mow.nr .,,... ...,. MW r...i ,...,.. '' n100 •·"'" " Thi• 111 ... "'• w1111 ttll c_. Th I t fl to GltADUAIL y !he r-'ned (i) '• , .. ._ n.ai • .......,., ""' Tt111 111'-t .,,., tlW w1rll..,. c-. ,, -1111t11tttr •• ,..1tt1<.1111t. _ ,.,1• ,., CllfJ."' Ori 1t1 COUftf't' Mt MIY J, 1m enjoy doing,\ en 'in!n o --a-. fl)llllt • ... ·-=-. ...., 1v c1w11 "' Or•• County '" M9V 1 .. '''• JlMI t, 1tn. 111 ""' e-11 """"' """' co. 1 o.i 7= New York. where FreddJe the UH of her hands and feet, .. ,, .... ., 1m CMmllln. CllY Hiii, n F11r or111,, C•l•/:~~·~·~·~~0.!~....:~' ;....:~~,~-.. ~~~/---Piiiii:iC:Nm1cE __ .1 •!though 1he sUll .It-Jar; II .... S--= fC),.... _,.--., Pm'lt Mtl.t, C1ll!wftl1, tor !tit lllnllllllflll of I IY • • • .... ,~ .,._..., -,_ ,_, -·- Pllblllhlid Or•l'lll• co.11 o.u, 11>nof. cLosl!'D c111:cu1r Tat 1. v 1s1 o N LIC NOTICE PVJIUC NOTICE evidence of the arthrit . " It (lrt) '5' - M1y 22, "· •nd J1111• s. n, 1m IJll-n SYSTl!'M. PUB Many ol the nation'• 20 million Wlllltnl ~ ar.. ltllJ. ll:ot 11;;21_!' m .... Add111on11 fftl"" 1t11 •J1«lflc1t1ont m•11---=~==-===:---,~1r1eus eu1tN•s1 •• ~ ·-PUBLIC NOTICE " P1tt11w1 11 ""offlc•" ""' Purtri•t-PIC1'1TM>u1 1u11N•1s 11111...,.a STAT•M••T arthritics ha.ve 1sked her forWD••• Int A119"t, T1 F•lr Ort,,., Cott• M111, MAMa tTATIMIWT TM follow!,.,._ 1rt1 dol111 bull!llSI 11. h llMI IOI ---:,c1~,,o,o,c,..,'7::-::1c,.c,o,o•711:---lc1u,_11. lhh •flllWoll ti. rlf'llrM4 1o 1111 Thi t•Ltwtnt ""'°" 1, doing llullMt• ••: advice. She teLWJ t em : m...... ...,... .... NA.Ml ST&T•MIHT •tllnflOll °' "" City' a.r... 111 ..... td M: 0 .. II 0 Mill INSTALLATION, ms "Consult a rhemnatoJNri.t, I ·-... ,~ • -Thi tcillowll'lll pll'IClll 11 dol119 butlri.u ~ ldanllff.-cl °" t1'le llllbld• wlllt ...... CCIMMUHITY M A H AG I!' 1111 I!' NT N. E11twotd, hrrhl A111. CA f'Del ""&-~ 0Q &1 WI ,._ - II •ldll ...... NIHl'IWll'ldltllOHlllfl!ID•ll. Sl!Jl:VICl'S COM,.ANY J.,, N«>llC lllclllrd Gllll $all..,, n..o Cowt don't mean to denJgrate the .'-....... a. QIMIN: .. Sttlfl~J......,,.. (drs) . Mc c u LI.. 0 u G H GE 0 l 0 G I c l!'•cfl bid 1111111 "Pft.lfY ••di 11\d IYll"f l'IKI. or ...... C•1ltorni1 ''""'· ...... '· St1nlllrl. CA general -1Uoner, hut H W.I ·~ lt1y, Wlllllnt ltridl.c. F111111l1l11 V1H1y C1UI fT10I ' Aft't' •1'111 '" ftcfPI!-lo tti. a,,«:lllA• Or1ntt. C.l1ftrn11. 11.i., O•rdtft ~ CA wan. t help, aet ID expert." n,. liA.:I " SEllVIC:ES 171.JD Wlrrl'lrtllrry SI ltlm 1' Ml foftll If! Ille tpitCltklftMI, Jl:tOtrt lllwrDll, ll!f Htrdlt P'flCI, OOl'l•M' A. ()('hall, 16U1 WllOllNfY .,....,,, .1-,.. I"• --Q ... -....... i vki AACcllllOUlftl, l71Jt 11111'11 mu11 bt cll•r1y st1tw Ill "" bid •fld Sttffltfl A, h1rd. 7•n GIMI Gt,., llcMl'll v1n ICt/rwblfk. nJ s . T9!111d -,..., ll:IO D C1J _ , _ -~ ..• (CJ ~ wt St. Fou1111111 v11..., C.•UI f1U11r9 lo Mt forth lllY 11..., 1n Ille Slrlll1 ~lfltr" C.llfornl• St., hnt1 Ane, CA f'lnl' · ~-1'9r 'C N-CE -... ~ ,.,. '71DI • ' ' Nlldrlc•ttm. wn .,. "°"""" tw ,., Tiii• -l'IM I• coMlictM '1 •*" Tiii• INllnlll 11 ~w!W .., • tlMf•I .-... _ v •.a: di~'!,. Mii 11 C'Gflduc:twd by •n ,,.. 1~ ":d~Pll'fi'~ """'.,,.tun 11 • ..,., :!~' .'tljll\ln A. •Htd, • 0-11 """'"'~!:, ... ;A.. Ot1lttll ---,-1-CTc1T-10-.,--, .. =,c•c.,1c1:-c, --1 WB(I) .... (I) w.Jtw It enaM "'* MotPll...,,. (dr1) '51 - D N<CllHOUQ>ll lfld rlllc1.nct1 of 111 ~ ll'ld p1r1Ju -~ lll...,.11 Tl'lll II•""*'' wu f11M wilt! t111 COUii-NAM• STAT•M•Jlt llft'llll • OIClttlf wftll • ..,_. Allfl ll)'th, ,1111 ICtwntlll, Tiii• .,.,_, Wl l ",.., wt#! ,,.. COUii-lrit1r111'9d /ft "" ........ , •• "'1t1Cfrt1r1. /ft s"""'" A. tlMrd • ty Cllt'k "' Or•• COIJ.ftty °" 1111..,. '· ltn ""' ... i.wtft9 WIOll h .,.,.. Wllllllf llCl'tbty, ... thll trik .. .. • I a ID....., c.... tv--C.IWto.-.--Cll-Or LouAry on Ml ll. , ... °' CWllOflllOfl1, lftclllH ,,.. ... ,,,,.. OI Ttllt 1111-1 Wit ntld ""'" ttll Ceun-"291M ··~ .., ""'" k. . .... ,... 1m . MQI -'I' ""' """ldM+I, Sftt•l•tt > T-. Ind tr Ctwt of·Ortftci• Covnty *' Me'f-'· ltn. Dlltr Pll.'1 --.tH..:.Ol.tGltu.L YlllOlff_.JJ'.!.IJl:T"C"'O:lf"l---1t·1t • ~-.~m--.... ............... k-~ . PJU71 Mlll19'1f', "'""' ,,,...,. lJ, 22, 2'. Ind J1111t J,, Im , ... ,, IOJN Mtlll'tflflll om. Hiiiifl"' • .....,. \*1 UJl--------,.ublfsllld 0rtrq9 C-1 0.11y Pitel, l'tll Clry COUl>Clt ell 1"-City of Cllll 111-1.0C a..cfl, C11ll. n.... '2lr) 41• 111 Ylill J.. • ....... .. "Mt'l'lllt T1rpt" H1rry Mll'I 22, :n; •Ml J,,,,.. s, 11. 1m IJ1t·1J Mffl11 btd•-vn lftl rlttil lo ••!Kl •llY • "'"" M. 9""""" Arty. PUBUC NOTICE Jlflfl H. lurT, lo:J71 ~-· Ctr.. (dro) -_ "''* ... _ ..... "*'*' Mosts Cun11 ll'ld Albtrt I t. l141J t~w •IVIL HWttlnllorl htcll. Cllll . ......, Ill. _,, PUBLIC NOTICE D.t.T SO: M•y "· itn ,,........,. c1111fllnll1 '°" PltTll'IO\ll •US1•QI Ttll• Ml,.... 11 CMductld by .., Jn. lttl, L,... O., Gtor1., A ... s.11111 stat 11th• story of • dtttc:• P'ubltll!td Or•no• ,.... D•!ly P'llol, ,.lltlllthed Or1111• co.11 O•lll' ,.Hot NAMI ITAT•MINT "1~1 • ,.,., -.... ·--"" fl'nlldllti ti polkt he"'"'' llMy 12. 1,n un.n M..,,. 1, is. n. "· 1,,, 1.,.n '"' ..,...,,, -· 1,, o1olng jotvt "· •""' nAnM1NT o" ••A"OOMM•MT PUB N<m !Ml ..... ,,. ,....__ ™• 111~, ,..., """ wllll' ""c-te ., ..._ 111 ..... .._ ttrt wttti lib""' cun. ,..1CT1T108f ~~~1::11 NAN LIC CE PUBLIC NOTICE TttE WooosMEN. OLD WOJtLO "''""'., 0r.,.. c-ty • ,_,,., 25• •Mat hll hiltlftlero whldl Mil• •T•Ttlllll~ Tilt loll-Ing IM"'IPll hf• 11Jmndonld tt11 I" IH'llVINO ANO IM .. OllTI, AJfCIENT Tm. PMltl ,.UtJdn to Jtll. V~t of '"' 11c1111-bttllftllt "'"" JOY A ICTIOUS •u1111111•1s PICTITIOUI •u•t••s1 WOlll..O ,ltOOUCTS. JOIO< Htllrd A..... l"v(l.lll/lld °"""' Ctfft Oll/'y 1"11.t 0 Cll (j). ,.,,,,..__ IZJll. AIM ....... Pmtflfl JONE5. dbl AAA POOLS,, ,~12·11 o.rr.,. HA.Ml STATIM••T N.t.MI Sl'AT•M•H1' Wntmlnt1tr, C1llforN1""' 1 ' ,, -'"' 1212.,; --··-- o,1w, L11u111 Nlgu.I, C1lllor11!1 tU77 The following PtflOll 11 dolflll t VJlnnt Tl'll lollowlng Dlf'IOl'll 1r1 dll.. '""""""'' l!dw11d k-Mf Jr .. 11dl Mey ' ' ' -• (Iii) Dr, C..•/11lslllNfol'1111f· lltJl1-Th1 I/ct rl0ti1 busltt111 n1m1 r•ltrrld to •1· bu1lnt11 11· HIWl111d St, Allf. I , H!lllll11tton IMcn, O'l'ICE •bclY• w11 1111d '" Or•"" couniv on 11~E'f:~:.!£11 •T!.~VEL1•.•,•,Tou11s1• VEJl:GO •UILOING su,.,.t1ES, tslt u111or1111 t'H-17 PUBLIC N pttotltt 1it1H M IMuts at • hrft.. flhlw. It\ "Stttll.,t ftJ TlUt October 11. ,,,,, .. ...... • "1•"'*'Y ' H...., •l'ld .• No. •• Cotti Mttt. c1111. lllCl!lr't H•U LJ'Olll. ''" l"tll\Mtlll , potnwnt.I ttfllf'. ctllliri1 "m to"'' -, .... n,, T " ' II Joy A J-. 2'41'4 l•ktf'!tld, El NIWll«f tlMCtl, C:iUIO!'nl• m4iO '2627 ,._,.111 V•llt<f, C11Ftoml• n1Qf l"tcTTTIOUt IUlllll'aSI • "' _., -Oii~ n • ' Tw o. C1Hf fl'30 8•tly J• AU11t. "9 Vlthl Grtftdt, lliy G. Owrtvrf, :Hll H"'1IO"I l!Yd.. Ttll1 W1lnMt 11 ctflductotl by I 1en1r1I NAM• Sl'AftMlltT •Is 'IOIOL ..,..,. LllL Tlll1 t1v11"911 w11 conduclld Dy 111 111-t.rtwpOrt I MCI\, C•tlltrnl• f:IMO p1rtMrllllp NI._. II -IMlllNM -llilll'ltll: -,.,..., ..,.._ ID - -• _.._ t -~" dlvldv•L Tllb Dullftlll C'OnifUclld by 111 lndlYldu1r. Coeti M111, Ctllf. m21 Tlllodetl ll!dw•nr 1(11tntr J Tlw ......... "'"°" tm ,.,, ,....,, ·-,., .,...., ......,, (fOfil) JtJl<I A. Jon11 ••ttv Jo An"" Vffle""' E. 11'"'"· :mo NtwPOf"I ™ , '-' .,.... fOlld wuri 1111 t·-••i (~ 'f7-lt .... Wtlell, 'Sl-UM Tunit•r. ltlttrdo Monti\· 1'1'7JI 1, Cltrk f>I Oro"'o c~,, M II Tlll1 twl!ftfft 11 Con4ucled '1y 1 1tfl'tt1I ,·.,... Aw .. COfll Mtll, Ct!~. .-~ Thi• sl1t.ment ..... 11 ftlld wtlll .... ,..,,.,. llYd .. N•. "C(llll "'"'· C1Hf. n627 tr ct!r: !. Or~ CC!unly O'I Ml~ t ,.n LYLl!''I Oft N~T. , .. Oltnel 1--~ .... '"'ublllNod Or•~ CN•t Dilly Pu.,, on •r • perin.t-111rp ~ ... LYM f:\IWfttt \1111 ff W1lk•, m ..., -1--,.,.,., tt. 11. •l'ld Juftl s. 11. !tr.I un.1i lt7J ll1y' G. Owrtvrl PllDllll!ld 0!'1ntt CN•I Deity "u';j S.nl• J.M AW., N""" lllCfl. '-'llf. -------------•tom•lllld Wiii! 01lly P'llOI H= Tl•h llllfl'l'llftl Wll rlltd '111111 lllt Cot.111· MIY II, 22, "· •lld .111111 s. Im 1U7· .,... ......_ ,.,,... • , .... ·- PUBLIC N011CE i -.ct1, '"1fomr1, '"-r u . ;,, 1' _. IY cr .. k "'Or•no• c "'""' °" Msr. 2;.:::, PUBIJC NOTICE v1°!:!t 111111,... •• ~ ..., _. lfltl. 1-- ---------~llbl(llltd N""1'0M H••bOr Htwt ..,... ~ubllllltd Orano• CO.II O.!t.,. Pll•t. L. I'. VM .. Wlfbl' ·11 ....... ""'"" S:a 8 ll!Mt: CCl .... lfJ ltptls ti 'nu~~· .... ,c..~u., •• ' •,r& r,·.·. JUl\f I. l"3 ,,.,.,, ......... IJ, n, 2', 1'71 1US·n PICTrTIOVI •USllllS Tiil• 111111\Wf!I ..... flltd .... lhl c-~ ..... Mt1 I ......,. (Mlp) ·~n Da~. TM! .. coUNT"Y OI' "o1t.AHor: HA"'• ITATIMlltT " 1y c1.n; ell Or1nge ,_,.,.on .._.,11 H . 9MtN: (lllr), .,.,_ • • 1 ,.,.., eCIJ H• A.1.,.,1 PUBIJC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Thi ton-r,.,. ,.,_.. 11 d•lnt tv1fri.11 1m. ..,... ..... (jn) 'U-lOll -n. ~· flftl fllOTIC• OJI' H•AWIHO DI' P•TITION II: DfS•O• SION CO., ··-·C .,, .. ,, '"'llhtd Or-COlll Dt!"' l"lltl, 1'011 ~•o•ATI 01' WILL ANO 1'011 I JIOI l'IC:TITIOUS •us1•1,. -· •r 1JQ.,, t.•. M-MaM a.: ... °"' t•rra11 TISTAMINTAllY !ION• SUP'••tot: COUllT (I .. THI NAMI STATIM•HT ....... 14Ynl1f'lttol'I •Met!, C1UI. tu.If M1y '· 1.1s. tt. 1911 l:JI ............. (It) Vic MotfO'lr ~-....... "'"""" llltll(" WAIVl.OI STAT• 01' C:Alll'OllNIA ,0. T,,_ lollowlng Pll'lllll /1 doll'lg bull-lrytn ltll,.it MclHd, ~ (llN O'l'I 1*ti 11 t llflVUtl twrfst Who ,...._ E111tt at MAlllLYH w E ' GR G lNI COUNTY 0 ,. Oll&Nel ••: ltcHr1. ~ Mlf\ltl, c1111. PUBUC N CE ...,,..-..,, WINDSOR, •Ill known ll MAR ILYN W. ,. .. A-1W1 "TME M.-.lllC," HU I. S&ulll CH tl Thia ~111 .. 1 II ~lld DY lft lrto ...... -.wn'IM,icleN""-Jilt ...... ; (C) ....... 11ny WIS- WIN0$DR, DlcMMd, NOTICI OP HIAllU•O 01' P'l1'11'1otf Hwy., llOlll'll 8•1<tl, C1lllorto11 n•Jl .. lvtdltftl . I 1t1• Jlt nNMl 1t,,... tflltpl. ..... (dr1) '51.....fraH Sillltll. NOTICE IS HElll'tlY GIVE N 1~11 J'Olt l'ltOIAT• 0, WILL ANt '01 Hl111 ll. Sllfldon, 41S Niii $1., Lllllll• •ry111 ltitPfl Mcleod It!, .. C HOTte• ft C•8DITOlll WILLIAM w WlNDSOll. tit• 111«1 bolrelft LITT••• , •• T"""INT4tY BIK/I, C•llfonil• '1tU Tiii• •llll!'Mlll Wll n1111 wl 0\11'1· SU .. llllOlll cov•T 01' TN• • Ptl!Hon ,.,, Pf'obftl ol wfrl ana ,. ''"'' or CHJl:ISTIE MAit.iE CAllTIJI:, Thl1 bl.lllftll.I 11 tOl'llklctM lry lft 111-,., Cltrk ol 0..M'ltt C111mty °" A.,n 2S, 1TAT8 °' CALlf'OIHUA ... l11U1nc1 of Lett.r1 Tnl•mtnl••Y lo l't"· 1t14 kflOWn 11 MAR.II CARTEll, Otcti .. dlwld11•1. 1t7'. I I' TH• COVN'fY Of' O..t.MD• ti-(lond WllYH ) flllfllK• to Wh/tl'I Id Nll'IO JI:. Stlllfoll J6:11W .... ~Ml t1 mid• f(lt Ill!'! .... P11•lk11!1 ... •lld ™' NDTIC:E IS HEllll'tY GIVEN tti.t Ttll1 "•'-"' Wll ntld Wllll 1111 Covn· P'Ublllfllld °'..,;, COit! Dilly, PllO!i 1:1111. of MAt•L •• MCl.All;IH. , ... """ •fief pllCI of ""ring ,,.. •• ,,,,. Gtll!S IUGENE WALLICI!!, "'"""" '"' ty Cl.,k .. 0r • .,... CIM!ty en MllJ' '· 1m. M9y I, •• 11, "· 1 21S·TJ Die••*· "•• l>ftn i.et tor June n , 1•n. 11 t :oe '"' w111 11 •~ w111.c:1, "'' """ . l'Utll N MOTICI 1s HllllSY QtVIN .. ""' 1.m .. '" 1119 cour"OOl'll "' Dll>t•ltnflll Ho. "'""" 1 P11lt!e111 foor P'f'otl•lt ol win •1'111 '"'ubll1111d O••not COllT Deity Piiot, PUBUC OTICE cPlllfltoft ti 1111 •ltoYt ,,.,,..., _...,,, l"' H id court, t1 7tlO Civic C:tnltt Drive ,.,, lllUIM• of ltltlf"J Tffllll'lll'lllry to l!My •• IJ, n. 2t, 1rn 1211.12 !lilt Ill ~-· NVl1111 d1lt'lll tQllM1""' W11t, In Ille City ot S1nt1 "'"''· C•llll)f'n!I . Ille petll!-re!~r1ni::1 lo Wlllcll 11 mt"-PltTITtOVI IUllNlll •-hi' dKldtfll irt rtqvlrlid M 1111 !Mii'!. °"'" Mey 21, ltll. !Of' ""'""' 1Hrllc\H1r1, •nd Ille! '"' !!,,.,. rusuc NOTICE N ...... ST.-.TIMINT Wiii\ 11'11 111Ct111ry YUCllltll. Ill IM tffltt w, 1 1..l,.!,AM,, E. ,, JOHii Ind "4•c• of "'"""' "" ••IM .... """ Tl'll t.il-1ng PtrJCWI• •r• l!o!no """,..,._of ll'll lbnl '""".., COlll'f, Of' oun., trk 111 ,.., Jun. s . .,,,, 11 •:oe '·"'" '" 111e ,,,,,,,0 .. 1 1 .. 1,0111 11v11n111 ••: ,. -·11t ""'"'· '1111111 tt11 "'9C'''''" tlCMAllD T. IYKal courlrllOf'ft ol °'"rt""'"' No. l ol tt1d S.AMI 1"l'AT.MINf CYCLE WOftl($ l10,. IH2 N ... ,...I .,.,[,..;;:;, 141IMllflffrlltMll1t llw tfflet lsnt "'"'1111'9 hlll .... 1r.i (O\lrl, II 100 Civic Ct ft191' Otlw Wnt. In Tl'll following ptflO!ll 1,1 dO!f'lt ltvd., C11t1 M .... C•lll. '2i11 If 1111 .,,..,,.,..,.., N .... , ll ... n a ~l)~·~~ fl)I' 1111 City of 51,1111 An1, C1tlftrnl1. IW•I-•i: Sttlllf\111 0 . Klmbl1, 111 S 1 1\ OIYldt«\, Inc,. !tit Monti Mlitl Jt .. lulll Att!n.. IW ......... ,,,,.., ""•¥ li. ltn, SUCCESS MINO CYtllH'iTICI IN• ltrMl'dlllO A ..... NtwPOf'I 111(1'1, Ctlll, SI ' 111111 A111, Ctlltornll '1711, Wlllcl'I " ~11_.;., ' WILLIAM f , SI JDHN, StlTVTE, SM N, Cltt-. 0."'fl .,... f'1..o t1M ,iec• flf but1"'91'1f1M """"llflld 111 l'ublhllld Or1 .. o COO 1 Diii Pit• "'UNNCl-TY!y (;lwk J. T«rtlll Moot .. 1'°30 l.Ulll l"I.. J~ H. IClll'lbl1, 211, N•W1KWI IM., Ill""'""'' ~t1lt1lfll lo llM 111111 ti .. Id ' 'I' ' .... a l"LUHl[ITT w"""'"'"'· C1HI NfWP(ll'I l••cri, ''"'·..,.. t-Klftftl, wtltttft fOllf' '""'"" '""' 1111 Mty n. 2J, u . 1t7l ,,. •. n '1t OMw A ...... P'.O .... ,., ftldllrd "· v.ft.., "' N. <••rt. Ttlll llol.lllftlA I• t tn4UCIM DJ • , • ...,. •• ""' "'*'t•tlotl., 1111• Mfln. ".....,""" •Htll. e•1. ,,..., 0r.,... c1111. N tll'llrltllll. O•t..11 ~· u. 1m PUBUC N011CE T!'.!..!!!'' h6o#ll .. JaMl1I TMt but!""' Fl CIJ!d\.lr:Mll ...... OtlMfll $1epMn D. klrnbl• J""" w. McLtrWI. A .. -.... ,• ,_. ,.If!...., ,_rl!'Htl\lp T~ll •II""""'_. flled wltfl !M Ceun• IE•lltlllor' If lf\I Wl11 Df lilO'flCI 01' OISIOl.UT ION .. \ltlllllilld Or91111t Cllft Otll'I' ,.l'ot, Jl:lt~ JI:, \/ll'lly t'( (LI!'-ol Ori"" COWtly M A.prll ti, t1'le ...... Mmlld dlef'dMI, Of' P'Afl.THllllMI.. '"'' n , n . 21. ttn 1s11on JI"* ""'°"""' 1m. " ... IL. .......... DAVIOSO ... ""· Wednesday J;lt m 1t1 ..... i.,. ........ t•~l 'M-T)'ltlM hwt1, MturHn O'H1r1, wmtoM. .... IC) __ _ .r' (..., 11-4N"'1 P.a. t•(JJ~ 'V .... ot-." Port I (Hf) U--a.1rtte11 Ht1toA. ·-.... -~ .. ~ Jutr' r.tftd, {IUI;) '82-ltttl ..... , ... c.-. .... (q -.. ""'c.ti~ oat" lld·O) 'It-Mt....., H•I. 4:tl. -· ...., .,.. .. 1a1to• <"'l -......... "" ~·~ "ubHc notlc• t1 lllf'o&y t l""' lh•t JllM Ttlh t lll_.,,I W11 PU9d wllll 1111 CIVIi· · ...... , •v1 HM P'. ...... ,,, G. M1rt.uU1. 11111 Ml• c . ~rkull1, PVBUC NOTICE ty Cl«k., °'"'" Covnty Gii Ml'I' t, ltn. P'llbll1111d Otll'ltt CMtl 011ty ~le!, lilt...,... Miit! tt .. htto 11• JC.OCE, CHANNEL Jt htf'.iolvr1 llol"t DWIN111 11ndtr '"' lie-,.,_ M•1 J, I, U. 22, fm 11'4-n 1-" ..... C.IN. "1tt Son Dr•1•f•Y· ol ••-~"""~ !S•.I 962.2•11 OMW>WDOO Dlln NAllY 111 "iii• CN0101 C. IC1m HOSfl~)- 1111..,. ,.,,,,, ,,.,... t111 •¥• "' '°"'" ,.1cTmous 1vs1•n1 P'Ybll1111d Or1rq9 C1111 0e111 P'llt!i -.__ f111 rt1•1 ..,...., ~~unty'a UllF 1e1e~~00 ata"-K~TV ha• StHk M-. Md • .,, 11 1oou c 1rflM, MA.Ml ST'ATIMllfT ""'" is. n. 1'. •N J\1111 1. 1tn 1,qt.n 'YJJllLIC NOTICE "'*""'" 1w • .....,. '""" •~ ._,, V\.l:o6 • c11n1 E••!Wtod ,.flUJlfMn Y1lll'f, Coiunfy ti/ Or11111, lhllm '"' t111Lowt1111 ,..,_ 11 dolflf b\111,,._ 1'\11111"'*' OrliNs C.... 01lly' PIM,n tht roJlowlftc lptdal ptCICr811\1 today. 0ttl1J!d "Dtlll'Y HAftllY" !Jtl o1 c 1nforrll•, dkf Ml 1111 JOttt d•v "' 11: PUBlJC NortCE Mtf'1 I, L 11. n . fm 1-. 11 .. 11.-of Channel 50'• -am• 1 --~ In the h •• 1 J•nt FOnc1110Dri s1111'11•1-"°'" 1'72. b't lftoltull t_.,_., .il1'4!tft VILLA VISTA MOllLW ISTATIS. ,t(TfTJOVt lutlNISI ............ r-..-''"'ca,,_ AMI f kLUTI (II) lllt 11le1 -~ '"" lfl'~t\111 ltltlt 31113 l•ll C1rclt, C...11 M111. C11l~!a PIC'flflou1 1u1n1•11 Ml.Ml tTATIMllfT PVIUC NOTICE Pilot'I TV Wttk each SUnday, Mon .• ,.rJ. °""'' ,.. rfi•tl-" pem..n ther .. 11. ,,.,. NAM• 11'.t.TWMINT Tiie """""'"' ..,.,_ I• .... ,.,. ""''-·---------=~---··-:::--:::-"'.:'::--:::::'.:::-:-=-:--------------:-....JI·.;.-.";;"~':.:"";:;·~·~·~·=-:·--~ Slld bull"'"" In lf'll Mure win b.-con-~Id II , .....,, 0-11 ''"""· ,.,,. toOowl19 ~ ,,.. '"'"'Ml""' "' l'JCTITtOVI aut,,.ns Mt.-cl b• ,,_.,,.. o . .1Mrtvt11, •nd Mir. 3DP ... , Clr'tlt, CM,. M111. C•lllllrllll ••: l"E~llJl:A Alll:AilAHS, °'° ,,~ NII.Ml fTATllMallT ~"'t .. 1:.iSMA ·~ • 'Wit• M1r~un1, who _.II Pl'I' 1ftd "616 OllA .. GE COUNTY FUlllN lfUftl Ori"''· NIWll'ltf lklctl. Cllll(oo-1111 n'611 Thi toit....i"t f*'Hfl 11 tttffll "9111911 •t?.1 I • 1 t7 !_ 11 '~! ~~llfl I 1'f, "'"'"'r.9 Chr.f tf I dll~ •II ll1bllltttt lfld Cfltl.ll of 1111 T1'111 llllllnfft fl CGl!dlll:lld lly Yltll 111170JIAT10N CIN7f:ll, 712J Ft"wlck 11.1. P'«Jtl•ltA. ll'IC., a Clllltn!ll 11: Ml rrc 1'f1 I ' fwllrwll • Allto! If\ flNl'I Ind r1e11 .... •II ft'Wlllltt PIY•lll• ttv 1 '''r Maelll 11111", • l im i t •• ~ UNIA W..,,.,.ftll'tl' C1hl, ,.,.., <ClrJlll'•tlwo, 410 """"'' Dtl••· !Jl:VINI YITllll:INAllY HOSl"ITAI., ,,a~ .•••• 'f' Jr ', ... "'"" '"' ·~· iri. fir m, ,.Ir Mrlllt(I. 0-,. A, $1,..., J,, l, M•rv IC,, N1w'*1 8tflttl, c.tllon\11 •11t11. 4f01 MO\lllln '~"'" lt'YIM. c.trt, g · fW Y I iUnt'1':.:. Dilfk:-·,,. f'urltllr !\Ol!CI •• ""'"" .1...,, 11111 "" o.!lild II . """"· ,.,,...., .,, CwtllrY' Ck/It °''"'· , .. ,. T~h tMlllff• II ctfldW1411t " • «<· ntM I ! ~ .,..,..,. • , • [ii s I "'' 1:r..",• '·,, . vnHrli91'11d win not ti. r19"fltlbl•, ,,_ a._,, '"'""'' M"'' Cant, "'" ""'1"""· L ... ,._.. w.,,..,, l1rrllll, "" s 11 IT••.-r CCI Ii '°""' -..mi ... IOl'I tllll •• .,. °" for 111r Obl!Nlltf'I• ._..... Ttllt 1111'""""1 Wll lllld Wllll""' ,_ '"'• &utlnti11 •• C&fldliltfld by lft '"" 1 111 hrltr•. Inc.. Juniper. """ ""'-CL mtt. : thtl"9ii .. m11t1c".., ,, •.rClftl'll(;l'lll ., 11y (.!llrlft o . Mirkulli Jn tilt ...,,,._ Pllmt ly Ckrk of Ottfttti G-'V Of! Mly '; 1t7J. cll•~I WHll-l.. P'tttffl Tl'ltt MJ.-. I• ~ 11¥ 911 ..,_ RI ... ~ 'ALI or In fflf lle"ll al IM ftn'll TO#ltt• ...... ~. UIU Me,., K. llflflt' """'""' cllvi.u.1 •i ~· '3. 1.C I t i ~A l'I "~".'Tl' •. HouM Ne. M. • Wltlts11M1, ""'· ~A. S.,,._ Jr. T11!1 "•""'*" w•• fllM With tlw COUl!o i.""""°' yt, z..nttll, D.V.M. ' I ' Jt'Jtii~ I -c~~P.. ,,:.,.,""'"=':":..,.•~<"· i. .:.::.~~ tJ• ..,,Tt4i!r:'~'O::'i!.:'C~~ ~~~.7r:; 7,.,l~"" ., OrsllOt c__., .. Mey s. c1~'.r'3.!.':"c.2.;~~';m t: ,. ' l : ~ " =!!.!;;..;.~, tt1f.•':'•"• Jft o.. ~-'' 1-.« "2Sm l"·tJtn "'"'" ......,,,. ,......... M C.f'Y.. ''" AM••KAlf ••'Ill• fC> --~'""'° °''"" (011t O.ltf ,...... '""""""" Or.... c .. 11 D•fly ,.,,et, l'Vb!llMll Ors,,.e Cwt! Dtl!Y .. Flot, '""""~ °"""' c ... , O•lf'I' '11!11, "'-'"""' ~ e.m D~ ,...... -..... ""' ~. Jll'\I :l•I ftl!MCI ,,..., n. 1,,, ltd·7J Ml'( .. u. n. ,,, "" , .... n Ml'I' u . *2. "·I nd Jlll'lt '· ,,,, ·14),.fl ,,,,.... 1$, ». tt. ll'ld Jlll'll S, 1'71 ,.,,..n M•'I' \, •• u. tt. ,.n ,.,..,, 1:• OltA•• C:Owtrn" ... ,.. Jt(...W~tec'""*''-· CCI lf!llllWllf9 YICN ~ Stfl -~~" ~" ~ ... "" l Fot· Week:!nder Advertising Phone 6-124321 I - .... '!be Lil(una Af o u I I o n Playbowt, which has lbus far come up with It• mott ex- copl.lonal season 1n yeari. unveil! its cl05ing production too1ght when "Butterfl ies Are Free" opens n three-week engagement. Hap Graham, managing direct.or of the playhouse, takes the directorial reins for Leonard Gershe's co m e d y with serious overtones about a blind boy trying to get out from under h.is mother's wing and carve out a li fe of his own. "Butterflies'· J01ns UC Irvine's Survival Theater on the list of local openings this week. The UCI experimental drama "Cycle Three" bows in Intermission · Tom Titus Wednesday and plays through Saturdav , in the Fine Arts Village Concert Hall. Other attractions on Orange Coast stages this week include South Coast Repertory 's tandem world premieres ''The Clo.,..·ns" and "In the ~1idst of Life." the Huntington Beach Playhouse's ·'Exit the Body" and the San Clemente Com- mwilty Theater's cl o s i n g performaoces of "A Barrel Full of Pennies.'' Curtaln time is I o'clock 11t the Cooct.rt Hall on campus. d1rttllllg lhe Fred rormichael 1nyst~ry-com~-d\ Included in 1hc ltwumgton souru COAST J~pcrtory Beach cast are Ann Co.ssman, goes back ln Ume with a pair ltay Scott, Lauro Black, llclen LID 0 NIWPOOJ BEACH l .. , ..... ,.~·· ro LtDO t\ll •'!~)SO h's W-.ky, l.My .... Wlhll "SUTHER" ... '"'' ••rt leyHldt l•111tel W•k• ''FUZZ" of original music a I pro-Susm-.n, Bill Morelang, Grl'ta ductions -honoring An1brose Smith, Susan O'Conne)J, Colin Bierce with "In the Midst of Guiver, Dennis Crtcdon and Life" and the silent movie Gordon Sandy. Curtain Is 8:30 come d ians with "The at the Playhouse, 2110 l\tn.in liFnii~~~~~;~~ Clowns." St., Hwitington Be a ch . ... The Clowns." directed by Jicservations 536--44il6.. a I ~~~~d i~:fu;m~ho ,:~~ WINDING UP its three-[DJDJ llli.'1( nesday and Thursday with weekend run at 1hL• San -------- lttti pd NEWPOIT 541·1SS1 ENDS TONIGHT "THE EMIGRANTS" & "SLEUTH" Producer Recalls BlLL CULLEN, who won a Daily p I I o t Distinguished Performance Award in 1970 as the untouchable David in "l>avid and Llsa," takes the central role of Donnie, the blind youth. Michelle Broy:n portrays the girl from the apartment next door whose Unda Kostallk, Steve Pat· Clemente Co1nunity Theater is terson, Reginald Rook and John Patrick's "A Barrel Full Raol O'Riley in top supporting or Pennies,'' which gives its roles. "In the Midst of Llfe, "~ fina l performances Thursday written by former S C n through Sunday evenings. regular Ron Thronson. moves Joanne Applegett directs a in F riday and runs through cast composed of Paul Steele, Sunday under the direction of Doris Donka, l\1ark Razor, Martin Benson. Ardis Faith, Mark &lannlng Both productions will be and Sharon Todd. The show STARTS WED. life intertwines with his: slaged at 8 o'clock in the con1-goes on at 8:30 Thursd_!!Y "SOYLENT _GR EE N" 'Wizard' Became LeRoy's Rainbow Annabelle Quigley is the overpossessive mother, and Jack Bingert, a newcomer recently arrived from Puerto Rico, plays a cameo role as a "hip" New York director. "Butterfl ies Are F ree" will be s taged Tuesdays through Saturdays until J une 9 at the pany's Third Step Thealer, lhrouah Saturday and 7~ 1827 Newport Blvd.. Costa Sund:y al the C ;1 b r i 11 0 BARGAIN MAT INE! Mesa. Reservations 646"1363. li~P~la~y~ho~":'~'-:2~0~2:A:,~·~c~n~i~d~a~~~~W~E~D~-~·~·~-~M~-~~~ Cabril!o. Snn Clc1nente. ---"EXIT THE Body," whic~ opened last weekend at the Huntington Beach P layhouse and will be reviewed on Thurs day, enters its second week with performances Friday and Saturday, Howard Solomon is ~ Jbuth Coast Repertory By VERNON SCOIT HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -In all the history of motion pie· lures only two films can be singled out as ge n uine classics, standing the test of more than 30 years: "Gone With The Wind" and ''The Wizard of Oz." Arguments may be made fo r Chaplin's films and other landmark movies, but they cannot be released in theaters or on television and amass fortunes periodically. "'Ibe Sound of :J\.1usic" hasn't been around Io n g enough to qualify. J\lERVYN LEJlOY has been around Holl ywood for 50 years and produced ''The Wizard of Oz." He also was instrumental in hiring Victor Ffeming to direct the film that made a superstar of J udy Garland. It is a stroke of coincidence -and overdue recognition of magnificent talent -that Fleming also directed "Gone With the Wind." Both films, moreover, were released in 1939. "George Cukor nnd Dick Thorpe worked on 'The \Vizard of Oz' as directors before 'ft'e UCI Presents Organ Concert YolUlg An1erican concert organist David Britton wl\1 present a recital in the Concert }-fall of the UC Irvine 'Fine Arts Village al 8 p.m. Sunday. The first half of the pro- gram will be devoted to works of Bach. including "Prelude and Fugue in A Minor" and "Prelude and Fugue in C Minor." Three antiphons by Ma rcel Dupre and works by Gerald Near. !\I a I co Im \Villiamson and llugo Distler will complete !he re<:ital. play)lQuse, 606 Laguna Canyon went into production," LeRoy Road. Laguna Be a ch. recalled. Reservations 494-0743, GEORGE WASN'T enjoying "CYCLE 11-IREE" at UCI is the project. and Dick left described by director Ashley before we began shooting. I Carr as a "non-verbal ex- suggested Fleming to Louis B. ploratioo into survival, the Mayer. and then all of us at evolution and involution of f\:ICM began working on him nature and· man." to do the picture. Finally he Included in the Irvine cast agreed. are Charlie Butts, Randall "None of us, of course, knew Scott, Allen Garfinkle Harriet the picture would be a smash Garfinkle, AI Glover , Gary hit. Graham, Denise Da les, Blake AU Dhney Sl!ow "CHARLIE AND THE Afrf(;EL" •nCI "CIHOERELLA" "TERROR IN TH& WAX MUSEUM" • "THE CREMATOR S" "I asked Ed Wynn to play Hahn, Jennifer Hahn, Mark the role of the Wizard, and he _H~,t~te':r:_:a~o~d~H~ei:ni_rry~K~i~rk~e:i:r~J~r.;~!""!""~!""!""~~~~"!_I tumed j it down because he ,. didn't hlnk the part was big enough. We signed Frank Morgan instead. Wynn later told how much he regretted his decision." ~ DATE "The Wizard of Oz has earned more than $50 m on at theater bqx offices. No one has counted the money it has earned on network television. "I'd wanted to make the pic- ture since I was a kid," LeRoy continued. "The message is very simple -· there's no place like home. "I'll never forget our sneak preview in San Luis Obispo, where th~ audience sat in "Sounder" AND "Finion's Rolnbo~" (G) "The Sitt en" IR I ... "Plck·up On IOI" CRI "The ff'ench Coanect1on" •nd IRI "M*A*S*H" (R} "The Getaway" IPG l ... "Lady Sings The Blu0$" IR l si lence for almost a minute at ~-Tl!• MHt hPlltar l"lc,.,.,.. the end of the screening. Thatl:~~~~Z~~~~~~~tl~:~,S~~--~~,;·'.'.";Bl~ll;y"~J~~~~;k!'.'.!""~(~P~G~l~~~~~I can mean the picture .is ;;cry ----- -~ good or awfully bad. Then they broke into cheers. "AFTERl\'ARDS six of the MGM exeuctives wanted to cut out 'Over The Ra inbow' because they didn't think it was right to have that song in· cludcd in a barnyard se- quence. '' LeRoy is an amiable man who smokes large cigars and has as many friends as anyone in Hollywood. He is president -of 1-lollywood Park racetrack. But· first and last he is a motion pieture prcx:lucer-direc- tor with 75 movies to hi s credil. U. A. CITY & SOUTH COAST CIN EMA5-TI.lt!IOAY 5k> fl.Lt. lADIEs' & GOLDEH AOERS-OPEHINO TN. J:OO l".M.) Ac11d1my Aw•rd Wl~r! O. Hacll:nwon "FRENCH CONNECTION" Elllol Go11 ld "M.A,S.M." ·~ii~if~::···· UA ·:: Diil)' Soulll '11:4J o,m. Chis. l,.....Mn Coast Tilly Slv•ll• Cl ... ,.,._ ''THI!! 0.lly FAMILY" lofll ln Color l IR) !wtt. s.... • -t1!11s-________ ,,_,ti:·~1 Ltt M•rvln 1•M •.m. a.ri. HKll:m111 A ZESTY, VIBR ANT NEW MUSICAL "lli<l VE'J ll! WU CISV OF LIFE" Audience Acclaimed! Fri. thru Sunday "THE CLQWNS" A Slapstick Symphony of Mime, Musi c and Lau9htef' \Vednesdoy & Thursday 1827 NEWPO RT BLVD., at Harbor lntorm•llon/Rine,..ationl 646·1MJ I P.M. CurtJin MGM Presents "PAT GARRETT AND BILLY THE KID" _ --.-Stamng J AME!U)OIURN Bash for Nash Theater's Poetic l 1i j1istice • "P RIME Sl.00 V, CUT" · CRI '" ITYIMQt'fll•GtlNT l •O ANG~ , Mall, lilAN[~f$1llE~IT GG •S•,flWT U)i!/I O.ily C, Bumtll/W. Matth•u :~::~: "PETE 'n' TILLIE" -_,_;:: Ch•rle1 BnmMln "THE FAMILY" • KRIS KR ISTOFFERSON• BOB DYLAN And Also Slamng JASON ROBARDS Music by BOB DYLAN·1Nr11tcn by RUDOLPH WURLITZER Pro1!1Jced by GORDON CARROLL 01r!'Cl<'rl by SAM PECKINPAH 0 METROCOLOR · PANAVISION" i!!J:--,~-~ e] .:. Cll nl E11lwood Schetman, a juvenile we'd all 80;J~~~~~~·;01 :::~: ~ --•••• • Dwa " D • •••• -·~ better forget. Ry111 o'N"l'm-o. Jactno"""· 'Inch ~:i~: : : Ltt Ma,..ln-Gen~ l+•ckm•n "PRIME CUT" Color tR) Martin C arn1n t ug up DIN NER" "MARv,o uliEN o ' •I h . Jto ht TH IEF WHO CAME TO t "THE NELSON AFFAI R" :.'·.'·'.: • ~.;~~~~~., SCOTS" Boll! ln Colot :;:;_: : , o •• "•a T" • • ,, • PR!MIERE ENGAGEMENT STAl!TS WIDNISDAY "CLOCKWORK ORANGE" ••• "DEALING" Bath Color f~) K ids Like To 1 As k A1idy .ro<~ '5iiETHE'mR-~--"""'GlJ<lll) !ft I IRJ""o:r..t:llll~ ...... ~' , J Showtl"": 1:00 ••d 11 :16 -Ab.o-- s~~~ BLUES 1:45 p.1111. c.11 T...,_te, for s.111. Sched11I• Grand Re-Opening Wed nesday, M ay 23 presenting "SOTOS & MARY ANN" GR EE K FOLK SINGING M11y 15 . Z6 . 11 Ho'ft Atto11 •Ill ba appeafl ng Dinners se rv ed ni9htly from 6 p.m. GO L DEN BEAR 306 Pcci~ic Coast Hi9hway, Huntln9ton Beac h They'd never f~raet the day he drifted into town. l!:DWARDS HARBOR,:r.:.2 HA"ld« It.VII. AT Wit.ION tT. COl1l tHI• ... ,.os,a By WILLIAM GLOV ER NEW YORK (APJ -The quips of Ogden the rhymer are put on the line in Broadway's new show, aptly named "Nash at Nine." Five players took part in Thursday's debut at t he Hayes, pulled props out of word backdrops, sang and oc· casionally seemed in a daze . and directed thls wordsical, ll"GI •••• a•e -310 2 ••••• MAY 23 i'IA"eD• .lol .loOA""• C.O•T.lo •••• and hired Milton Rosenstock ~~·~-;;·~· ~··~·~·~·~·~···~·"~·~~ .. ··;.~llllllllll~~~~~~~~L~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ for a score that rarely seems musical. ------------------------_____ _ The cast lists f\.1arshall. E. G.; Steve Elmore, Bill Gerber. And best of all, Virginia Vestoft, who is one sweet '\\'arbler. Also arowid, \vith adenoids unslit. is Richie The quips are all there. and doggerel of snicker, including of course how "candy is dandy but liquor is quicker." · From firslly to lastly, moments are ghastly. A cabaret, let it be, for idolaters or Nash. All others may find ii just causing hives or a rash. ~-Her Decerrber: Thei' Sta'y. Sanething to Aemerrber. .SlllNE..Y" .p()lTlER., IN ~-ER. EOWAROS Cll'if:\1A CE\Tf,R fl ;.~a L)R AT AOAM\ <OS T -..(~A•~ T(CHHICOLOR" EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT STARTS WEDNESDAY MAY 23 JAMIS C08URN IN And BILLY STARTS -~·,.1" ,.y_'·• ·I. AROS,1 _, ...... ,~.~-· 1.:1:.:.f>!<" "PAT GARRETT THE KID" WEDNESDAY M~~~ ·~-t.t ====---· -------===== '!'J~/ ' '· ..,: · . ' CINfMA Wf SI 1 Wl~TMI N~lER ~~ii~· '.f,.4' ti1Nlti"'srwooo 1n STARTS ,HARBOR 91 tO\TA Ml \A ,<(HIG'i .-PL INS DRIFTER" w~~i'2°3AY coNEM• v1110 """"" '"'" \) .. ' ,----·--.-~iNDS TUISDAY'-. / THl ONl Y ORANG£ COUNTY I UN ~ . ..,,.,.. ...... , ........ .. ll .... 11• ,,. T-1llil!W .. 011.-...1•1•Dll'MJ .. --·--·-·--...... ~ .. ~ ........ PG 'I '! ,, 11 '.Ill! < • '"• •o• •m•cna • POSITIY!ll ENDS /U£S. it?IB1 l!E i;,.::::.·:~~~.:·.:::J ......... m ... "Travels With my Runt" r•, ................. · lAll 1• ....... •• ·~·-· c ...... ,,. sn3 ::~ ~::.~' .":'.:.· .. :.·.:,;:;:•::::-:. ~ 1~ "Hll TEA °"'"" .. -·~ ... "'" _..... lllLY THI IUD" ~I • ' .. • ... ' .. ,, . • ,, j ' • r ' )' • • JJ DAILY PILOT T-. Mar 22, 1973 -~· . ..,,..., . ' 1 I' I I A Bug to Start Life Car Dealer Has L1nique Wedding Gift SOUTHFIELD, Mich .. (AP) -Who wants ashtrays, towels and blenders for wedding gifts when. ' depending on l h e generosity of your guests, you couSd get all or part of a car? Tom Sullivan has establish- ed a bridal registry with a twist at his Southfie ld Volkswagen dealership. ,.No, nobody buys U1e whole car, he eXplained. "lnstef.td, the car in effect is the basic Beetle model and a rich uncle can go up to $839.80, which covers the cost of the a i r • c o o I e d , four.eylinder engine." So what happens if your friends and family buy you the radio, hU > caps, trunk latch, valves and muffler but can't afford such frills as an engine and frame? ..., IJOught part-by-part by a number of givers. For ex- ample, a kid brother who is hard-pressed for cash can shell out $1 .55 for a gas cap on NO BRIDE and groom will have to spend their honey- mooo putting their new car together, though. Sullivan ex- plained, "lnmead of delivering the parts to the bride and groom as they are ordered, we spare them a do-it-yourself assembly job by serxllng a certUicate for each girt. When their friends have purchased $2,317 worth -ol parts (in the case or the Beetle), the car is theirs." • Kissinger Won't Quit; Not Tainted by Scandal WASHINGTON (UPI) -associates as deeply disturbed Presidential advisor Henry A. by recent revelations on na· Kissioger has no intention or tional · security wiretapping quitting hU post, the Whlte which have been Jndi.rectly Hou.se says. ··1inked to the Watergate scan. Deputy Press ~etary dal. Gerald L. Warren gave the resjlOnses Monday to questions about reports that Kissinger had offered to resign In the aftermath of disclosu res that he at least acqutesed to the wiretapping of telephones of members or hls National Security Council staff a few ·years ago. "As far as v.·e kno\v,'' War· ren told reporters, "Dr. Kissin· ger has no intention of re- signing.'' The President's chief foreign policy adviser has been pictured by c Io s e AIRPORT BUSIER SAN DIEGO (A P) Downtown Lindbergh Ueld is CMJblu COll+u more crowded than ever Maru·cures before, m a n a. g e r Bud ti.1cDonald reports. & Pedi llis April repo~I shows cures 356.7n persons flew 10 and out during April. an increase of 644 1 ~o 20.3 percent over April of 1972. • / 1 24 Hour Sport & Fishing Phone Call 547-2545. GRAND CANYON BACK· PACK TRIP JUNE 18-22 s75 + $8.00 YEARLY CLUB MEMBERSHIP Neo/'s ... just obout the best place in· the world to buy your sport equipment. Alwoys the latest and always fhe best to +any sport effort poy off. • .. • Fit$f Class Air Fare •Ground Transportation •Guides "Shop With The Pros" CHfCIC IOI AU OUI or111 ,.,,s FISHING -HUNTING TENNIS -GOLF -SKIING eai FISHERMAN'S PARADISE • Fl Y TIEING -CLASSES FORMll-IG NOW -COME IN AND SIGN UP .. RODS AND REELS AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICES • All LURES 20'/, OFF UST PRICES SPORTS SINCE 1924 I , , "':" ~· .' ... ,~. .., .... ' :,~.,.· . . ....... . . ..... .: . ' ,•_,.. .. . .J. /J' ... ~ . ' . . . ~· ;,; • WAlfRGAIT Hf A RINGS .. J ·~· ... ... ' ·:~ ! Saccharin Not So Sweei; UFFELL' UPHOLSTERY .._,..w • ,.. .... Report Tells Cancer l,ink 1fU .......... c.n Mew -MMUt reported finding "mmsiUooal cell carcionomas in the blad· der tumors ol Urte rats, one male and two females. "'11\ese are dole-t'elat.ed aa far as we can see," said Richard J. Ronk, director of FDA 's division ol lood and col- or additives. No significant abnormalities were foWld., according to the preliminary report, in control animals including those fed cyclamate. The 1958 Delaney Clause in the Food Drug and Cosmetic Act prohibits the use of any food additive that induces can- cer in man or animal. WODICKA SAID the FDA is concerned, however. that the cancerous tumors may have been caused by impurities in the particular type of sac· charin fed to the animals. The Caloric Control Council in Atlanta , supported by sac· charin manufacturers a n d users, said that the type of sweetener linked to cancer in rats in FDA and Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation studies contains ortho toluene sulfanomide (OTS ). James Thieme. associate director of the council, said OTS has been ''closely associated with the formation ot blldde:r tumors," but added that there is no indication it is carcinogel\ic. . . 'lbe saccharin contalOlng CYl'S is no longer manufac- tured in the United Slates, the Carlorie Control Council said, but is manufactured and ex· ported l1y Japan in large quan· ti ties. Skyline Changing SAN DIEGO (Al') -The downtown skyline is changed Lyle's is NOW 16'0 ORANGI AVI. COSTA MESA. 64J..7JS7 fast, Tho,ou9h , Cuo1onre 1 d .. Real Estate Sal~s ond o' s,oJcl", t iceni(I' TRAINING Phone for F'ee Fo ldc' a ANTHONY SCHOOLS HARIOI CINTtl "" lt••llll• c ... ,.., Ctn" Mna, C1Mt1ml1 l'ta. f7141 979.JJSJ by a new five-story steel 1711 s. •l'llOll~urtt "· skeleton of San Diego's $36-AM~elm, c11. tUO.t million federal courthouse and Ph. C7t41 776-5100 its neighboring six-story office !·-----~~·-·--~11111 building. Sunday is rllllE>AY The concrete will be poured within three months for 1he new buildings located bct\veen Front and Union streets, a i project spokesman says. ' The work is expected to be [ L __ _:in~t~he'.'.'.._ll~¢~·li~Q!!ij!~{1~)j~ co1nplete by mid·l975. 'FASHION J ISLAND NCWPORT CCNTI:R ' • ... because we want you to have all the time you need for saving. And we want you to save with us, here at Great Western Savings in Newport Center. you can just zip in , make a deposit or withdrawal, and be on your way in a matter of minutes. Of course, there's a lot more th an convenience when you save at Great Western. Like free services. The highest rates you can find on insured savings. And that good feeling of strength. It's all a part of the Great Western feeling. The feeling that comes from knowing you've put your savings in exactly the right place. That's why we're open every weekday from 9 in the morning to 7 in the evening. Plus Saturdays from 10 to 4. On weekdays, our savings lobby closes at 4:30; but our drive-up teller window stays open until 7. So GREAT WESTERN SAVINGS so Fashion Island, Newport Center • 640-0333 Office Hours: Open Every Saturday 10 to4/Weekdays 9 to 4:30/ Drlve·Up Teller Window Open 9 to 7 Weekdays/ Free Parking Arthur P. Moore, Vice President·Manager · FREE WITH AccolJNTI OF $1000 OR MORE: 'i'raiveler1 Checb, Money Orders, Not1ry Service, Tn.tsl Detd/Not1 Collectlon. Al•o Fre• r.k .. r-~ 4~Monlh PftM. MEMS~ FEOEAAL SAVINGS AND LOAN INSURANCE CORPOAATION, FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK • A SAVINGS ASSOCIATION OF GREAT WES I E.Wf\ . II\ NLIAI. CORPORATION .. ,,,.~,, ........ -........... ..-- ' f , -~men BEA ANDERSON, Editar T1191de't', MIV ft. 1'71 ,._ 13 Parents Assigned A Lesson DEAR ANN LANDERS: This is the Lime of year when parents become an- n-0yed because .they have just learned that their child wiU not pass to the next grade. As a first grade teacher, many yoWlgsters come to me with no kin- dergarten. They are very inunature. Their parents have been told this but when they hear that their youngster will be retained they become angry and say they h:ad-lio Ide-a the child wasn't "keep. ing up." I am wriling not because I am irritated with the parents but •because I want a better break for the children. I've had parents refuse to take a child fol-an eye exam when everything pointed to a visio,n problem. The same goes for children who · are hard of hearing. (The mother says, "He's just lazy. Shake hlm -or punish him.") One child cried in school every day. The poor thing bad a mouth' full of rotteo teeth. When I phoned her mother she said, "They are only baby teeth>. They 'll f3JI out pretty soon.'' Another little girl smelled. so bad that no one wanted to sit next to her. She was not taught to take a daily bath. Her clothes recked with perspiration. \Vhen I notified her. mother. she called me a liar -accused me or not liking the child, and threatened to report me to the principal. This is not a ghetto school. These are not welfare children. They are from mid- dle-class families who don't care. Please, Ann, give us teachers a hand. Perhaps, if it comes from you, the parents will Hsten. -L.H. In Orlando DEAR L.ll.: llere's 'iihe band." Wllat some of those pareots need is a foot - kJcking them in the dlreclioo of a counselor. Such Indifference suggests in- credible ignorance. They need pro- fessional guidance. DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 agree with you that when bright end interesting peo- ple get together, it is not uncommon (or- rude) for them lo interrupt one another. Tb.is makes for lively conversation. But .,,,hat about the bores who interrupt just because they want the floor? We have such a person fin our office. No mat- ter what the topic, even when no one is talking to her. she butts in and takes over. More than once she has derailed a fascinating story to mouth some nonsense about her husband or her dog. How does one silence such a clat· tertrap? -BUGGED IN BOISE DEAR BUGGED: There IS a way. The minute she opens her mouth -open youn. Say, •1Please don't interrupt. We're all fascinated with thll story!" If ytu are determined, there's no way she can get ht. there with her husband and her dog. · . . .,. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Regarding that young man who didn't know how to tell his fiancee her neck was dirty : You said it could be her jewelry. Another possibility is a skin pigmentation prob- lem. I know because I have It. It used to be embarrassing when peo- ple stared at my neck. I knew they were wondering why I didn 't wash it. I was templed to say. "Look, it's a skin defect." but in recent years I've become accustomed to it and it doesn't bother me. • • Please 1nfonn your readers not to jump to conclusions. A disoolorecl neck doesn't necessarily mean the girl doesn't care for soap and water -JilGH COL- LAR HENRIETI A DEAR HEN: Right you art. la ''°' there's a two--blt word for the skin preb- lem. It 11 "polklloderma." (Some of my bt1t friends are dermatologbta:.) Ann Landers dl!cusses teenage drink· ing -its myths, tts realities. Learn the facts by reading, ''Booze and You -For 1'eenll11ers Only," by AM Landers. send 35 cents Jn coin and a iong, 1tamptd, self-addressed envetupe 1n care ol the DaiJy PiJot. I, • • Parties Cr Ow- The Mmes. Mich ael Mullin, James H. Heralding the 552 Club's luau, which will celebrate King Kamehameha Day, is Mrs. John l. Curci. Young, Meggs White and Richard John•on {left to right) will offer waitress services at the Art Museum auction. I 1 i •I ) I I ' I i ;t}1 l 'j' !I) ! 'I ~· I I i.Jjl I " '/ •· ' • ' * I . ,. \_ Wee.ken- s I II Stamina will be the byword !or p&rty-goen In June ii the first weekend Is 1ny lndlca· tion of the social whirl ahead. For U:iree outstanding fund-raisers will be staged that weekend alone along the Orange Coast. Newport Harbor Art Museum will benelll Crom the semi-annual black-tie auction, slated on Friday, June 1. in the Newporter Inn; while Hoag ~femorial Hospital. Presbyterian will be financially aided by the 552 Club'• annual luau Saturday, June 2, in the Balboa Bay Club. Also on Saturday, June 2, the Adoption Guild will stage its annual Tennis Ball in Irvine Coast Country Club. The ball tradi- tionally is g i v en the night before ten.nl s tourn:tment finals, which also are sponsored by tbe guild . The museum auction will feature bidding on many unusual and valuable treasures, trips, parties and services. A prize donation in the category of vaca- tions is a week's stay for two· in the Presi- dential Suite of the Hotel Finisterra at Cabo San Lucas. -Other trips include Mazatlan, Bry· an Head Ski Resort 1n Utah, Aspen and Palm Desert. Parties are being arranged in two ways. One is for the entire party ~o be'jiven and hosted by the donor as dinner an cocktails for 12 in a waterfront home during the an· nua1 Christmas parade. The other consists of party services pur· chased by the highest bidder. Services in- clude women serving as waitresses at any designated party and entertainment by the Bayshore Four, a barbershop quartet. Also being assembled for auction are oil paintings, porcelains. woodcuts and other works of art; airline tickets, cooking lessons, plants, art lessons, theater tickets, phot<r graphic portraits and an antique armoire. Chairmen or the $40-a-couple gala are Mrs. Gerald F. Madigan and Mrs. Allen T. Camp- Dell. -- KAMEHAMEHA DAY The trumpet triton shell, used by Hawai· ians to signal the start of a feast, will be sounded at 6:30 p.m. June 2 for 552 Club members, their wives and guests when they gather to celebrate King Kamehame·ha Day. Hundreds of anthurium ~nd orchids have been flown in from the Islands especially for · the event. and additional table decorations have been leased from the United Cerebral Palsy Workshop: Festivities will begin with complimentary hors d'oeuvres and grog, with a buffet luau, dancing and entertainment following. Six "wahines" dressed in pareus, designed by ~frs. Robert C. Miller. decorating chair- man. will serve as hostesses. · Serving on the planning committee are Or. F.. }.1. Ghern1an. chairman; Judge Mark A. Soden. president. Rudy Baton. Dr. Les Starnes, Harry Babbitt and John L. Curci. TENNIS BALL The Adoption Guild's annual tennis tour- nament will get under way Saturday, May 26, on various courts in the Harbor Area. Play will continue May 27 and 28, and finals are scheduled for June 2 and S at the Newport Beach Tennis Club. Members and guests attending the ball Saturday evening will be treated to cocktails, dinner and dancing, according to Mrs. James \V. Hines Jr .• chairman. Mrs. Thomas Doan, newly installed presi- dent of the group, also is serving as tourna· ment chairman. Mrs. John Elliott and Shelley Garner .eye • trophy to be awarded by the Adoption Guild. • i • j • ' I' ' .. • , ' ' ' • • ' '• .. • Reunion Propelled Horoscope: Aries Increases Income · WEDNESDAY MAY 23 By SYllNEY OMAJIR Some Aquartam worry more about bwnanJty 11 a whole than they do about their own lamllles. Most AquariJnl are p r o g r e ulve, lndeptndent ·thinkers and adaptable enough to perceive con,cepts ahead of their tlme. In June, many Aquartana will make ad- juatments in the borne and 01hen may change re1ldence. ARIES (March 21·Aprtl 19): You may have reaaon to be jubilant. Emplwia 11 on lrlendlineSI, oocl.allzlnl, lulfllJ. ment of some hopes and dreams. Income from prcr fe!sional endeavors increases. Business prospects brighten. If all this Is not enough, love la in picture, too! TAURUS (Aprll 2').May 20): Accent is on achievement, credit received fci'r civic proJ· ect. You expand horizons and make meaningful changes. GemlnJ, Virgo persons are in· volved. Your abillty to analyze and perceive is spotlighted. GEMINI (May 21·Jlllle 20): coacecslCllll. Profit ii Indicated rellllv,., oelpi>o<o. You are butyoumullootlrllhtmprllO-..,,.. active than usuo!. Get[~~~~i~;;;:·';;:;::-::::;;;;;;;;::~:.::;; pecu. Read between the tboughu oo poper. There ls no I ~~ ·;=-- Jina. Don't substilu~ for need lo be llmlted . Reach hlglt ~ ~ quality. Joint effort -111 In -break lhocldu crealod by ~ 3 Full Service financial aaln. lack of coolldeoce. 1:"D A 11.TCJS-Loceiloni In . LEO (July 2:1-AlJ&. 221: CAPlllOOllN (Dec. is.Jon. .[' ~, · Huntlnston Bead! Nothing occur• hallway, !J>. It): SpotUc!rt It oo ""'""'' 'l. ORR p ·' cludlog emotional ...._. 1peclal ccllec:tlool, ability to \a Q./ ' PRESCRIPTIONS Know it and don't plly lame.I· aft what you need. One bth1nd FINm STATIONERY e c~::=::;:...•,::_'j"- Stake1 are Jpt to be hJab and the ecenet CID aid. Know it •IMUAftON .,ncrl11t1"" h a v e long-range lnffu:ence. and don't be afraid to ask 01n• -CA•DS tlae ___ _ Questions concernlng mar-queatlonlbe -..:.~~t appeared to 11.-actAL .. ••..,•••,5 DR1GG15r riage, important relation.ships ao ..... w.w.ia to fear now•••=• are featured. turnt out to be mmethinl ..... 117 1"' ,.,.. ·· .... " .....,., VIRGO (Aug 23-Se cbertch JIU l..U.UI ... ,, 11'·1111 H ....... ._ H•,._. .. ...._. Health domlnale.. v:· ~~ AQuARrus (Jan. 20-Feb. ..... Mt IAI •c.Mrtmr ...... \ ~:*"""' & H•llllllM MMHt ..... practical steps to Improve 11): IAmar cycle Is at peak. personal environment. Ariel SOme of your fondest wtabes could play prominent role. You can be Mfilled. Key II to take find that It Is no looger inltlaUYe. Make new start.a in n..,...ary to carry km¢and' new dln!ct!om. You el]>Qlld. Ing bun!en. Situation Im-You do mono laugltlnc than provu. baa been true 1n recent past. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Pl8CE8 (Feb. !~March 20): WE HAVE ENTHUSIASTIC AND HARDWORKING A\IAILAILE AT MOST HOURS -FOR AS FEW AS THREE HOURS. OUR UNIVERSITY STUDENT EMPLOYEES ARE CARE. A.ILLY SCREENED, BONDED, INSURED ANO AR E COVERED BY SDI AND WORKMENS COMPENSATION. UNIVERSITY HOUSEKEEPING. CALL 61 ... 1100, MON., WED .. FRL ONLY: HOURS '9 A.M. to I AND 2 to O. Lov!• and creativity are .. You receive help from featured . You burst forth from unorthodox llOUf'Ce. Family shell. 'Rlere are new starts, situaUon Improve.. What bad contacts, projects w h l c b been somewhat of a dilemma stimulate and bring gains. 1.s solved. You may find Young people are featllted. youraelf dealing with person1 Leo plays important part in born under Taaral and Ubra. festive occaaion. Key HI to be fair, not weak. .~::~~===;:;::;;::;=:;~===~~::=:~ SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): IF TODAY Ill YOURI[ Emphasil ts oo home, prop-BIRTHDAY you are active, I Golden Needle's erty, the way you Jive and traveling, seeing more persons s~I ,,1 ( Aj ,,.L -/JIJ.iJ -_ .L,, domestk relations ln general. this year than has been true In • ~ ...,. UJe W~ Trust hunch. Intuition is apt to recent past. In June, you will be sharply honed. Look beyond round out project and find surface indications. Someone where you stand in special Acryz;,,. Kn;ts is trying to tell you relationship. You are a vibrant .,....... II A '.'Plane',' re~on is planned for members and guests of Clipped \Vings, Uruted Air Lines Stewardess Alumnae, at 8 p.m. Saturday, !\.lay 26, in Hang- ar One. Golden West Airlines. Los Angeles International Airport. Winding .up plans are Mrs. Jim Preston (left) and Mrs. h1ichael Smith. Highlight long.range plans. Emphasis Is on travel and the leanJ.ing process. Mate or partner makes valuable con- tribution. You have plenty to be grateful for -and In re- cent past you haven't realized it. CANCER (June 21.JuJy.22): One who is intrigued also is shy. Be open, willing to make something! 1 person who attracts many SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22· born tmder Gem1Dl and Virgo, Dec. 21 ): Gain shown through You could have unique talent idea, communication with for writing. Solid Colors -Mtd.lum Weight • 60" Wide Reg. Price 4.91 yd. Noiv Only 3.97 yd. Coast Clubs Closing Sessions for SU m mer rm Golden 'needle FABRICS rm.· y IOUTH COAIT PLAZA • CAllOUllL LIVIL ~ 1:::;;;;::~~~.,,;..,.::'.~"""""':::::~·~·~"""::;n:::.:_•~;;,;:~,,!:~;;;;:~ Secret11ries Orange County Chapter, Ex· ecµtivcs' Secretaries has sent 18 representatives to the an- nual convention in San Diego. NB Le11gue New officers of the Newport Beacb Assistance League and ' ' its auxiliaries have been 111- stalled. President of the league is Mrs. Martin Lockney, and serving with her arc !he Mmes. Phelps Meri ck 1· J. Robert J . Lucas, Wynnett ~~­ Bedall, John O'Donnell, Sam Gurley, Charles Ripley and Joker Left Out Of Dirty Deal By ERMA DOMBECK A small, unfortW'lB.te boy has wrilten lo me for help. His mother it seems, is a "Neat Freak." In his words, "If yoo step on the floor with an unsterilized stocking or touch the wall without surgical gloves she wtll let out a bloodcurdling scream. · "We must wash ourselves thoroughly before taking a bath so we will not leave a ring, and i£ we drop anything important on the floor she will pick it up., shove it under our noses and say, 'Is this yours?' "We are expected to fold dirty clothes, underwear and used nose tissues for washing. What can we do to get away from this crazy sterilizaUoo?" Signed, David (Last name withheld for survival), Mon· roevllle, Pa. David, asking me for help isn't the brightest thing you ever did . It's like asking "Jack the Ripper" to help you move the sofa in front of the door to keep you safe from bad people. You see. I can't be too sym· pathetic when I've got a prob- lem. too. You may have a mother who's a "Neat Freak," but I've got a kid who's a '·'Dirt Squirt." AT WIT'S END said, gently replaciitg the receiver. 41'The Dirt Squirt was looking for a deck of cards." I don't mean to burden you, David. You have your own grief. But I have the only child in the block who slept in his clothes and mildewed. Nothing lives in his bedroom . llis ant fann expired. His blrd died. His bean bag chair developed gas. Only last week we made a new rule. Any clothes that were found on the floor, we would no longer pick up and put in the clothes hamper. They would be stacked and placed right in front of his door. Yesterday, Dirt Squirt smil- ed at me and said, "That is the neatest idea you ever had. Now I can find my clothes without pulling open every drawer." I'd like to help you. David. I really would. But l 'm going in· to the home tomorrow. It's clean there. • l!is father and 1 came home --------- the other night to discover every light on in the house, every cupboard door and drawer in the kitchen open, the furniture pullci:I out from tOO walls; the contents of eVery closet dumped in the "' middle of ~e.Jlpor : the lids off JJf e.fcry1bo~or:i' 1c premises; spread& ~~~II . back. the freezer ~r o n', and the linen closet array. "We've been robbed !" said his father, picking up the phone and dialing the police. "We have not been robbed,'' " ~ t MAD ~\ofls tO~UNT1NIOTON llACH DRUSIS CAPIUS ILOUllS PANT sum H ob c rt U n g er , v ice Alljance presidents: C. P·eul Dubois F. 1 /t. 'r th 1 b · ma m,e1ng o e cu and Joseph Metcalf, -year for the Alliance Fran- sccretaries, and William W. caffie of the\~alifornia Riviera Dootson, treasurer. will be a banquet celebrating Mrs. Allen L. Goody is the the 10th anniversary of the new chairman of the Junior organization. Auxiliary. and on her board Members will meet Friday, are the Mmes. By r 0 n May 25, in the Outrigger. Tarnutzcr, David Barnes, Laguna Beach. Founders will .John F. Slaughter, Thomas T. be bonored. and entertaining Rousselo!, Jerry Parker, will be Marc Francois J;i incs F'. Croul, Schuyler c. Meunier, Christiane Meunier J oyner and Donald Koll. and Nick Oriondo. Laguna B e a c h Republican Woman's Club in the Woman's Clubhouse. PEO Orange Coastal Reciprocity Bureau, PEO will meet at 10 a.m. Friday, May 25, in the Bahia Corlnthlan Yacht Club, Corona de! Mar. New officers are the Mmes. Jean Studer, president; Mary Mackie, vice president; Win- nie Carter and Barbara Milkovich, secretaries: Janet Roper, treasurer, and Pat Russell. unaffiliate chairman. Forum OVERWEIGHT? 56 LB. LOSS IN 40 DAYS Under Medical Supervl1lon at the Democratic Women from the Southland will Join the Democratic Women's Forum at 2 p.m. Saturday, May 26, for a membership tea in the San Marino home of Ml'I. 0 c1· • Rlchard Keating•· mega lftlC AnT:m~: ~":~:~ • CALL FORUARN:APPoiNTMENT !!!!II featuring authentic works of liiii world-famous artists including COSTA MESA ANAHE•M s.t.HTA ANA ,..,1Jwhrt.uM•1tr• Dali atagall, Miro, Bragg and 1161 N..,.,.. 1"4 w. •tfWY. 1miT11•tlnA'tt 1H w. L•H•.,.• 11wd. Picasso will take place at a 646 1633 7711-4841 547-6329 17141 870.9347 • (2 13) 697-1791 I. Las Reinas officers are the r..tn1es. \.\1illard G. \Vadc , Robert L. BaCQn, Jule C. Ax· clson. Arthur Coons, J. Robert Lawson , Robert L. Lang, Robert L. Koehler, Walter J. Hesnault and B.G. Drum~ mond. Upsilon Omicron Members of Upsilon Omicron Chapter~ Beta Sigma Fhi and their husbands will man a cork gun booth at the Garden Grove Strawberry Festival Friday-Sunday, May 25-28. Proceeds will aid tht' Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, Orange County Servicemen's Center and the Stanford Kidney Foundation. Trygve Lie p.m. Saturday, May 26, in1l,,5'5'~5'5'5'5'5'5'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'~ Murdy Community Center, Ir i\1rs. Norma n Von Herzen heads the Virginia Castle Aux- iliary. and assisting her will the r-.1mcs. John Keating, J~obert Doner, Jack IJight. Ed""'ard Roletti and Frederick Grazer. Assisteens, high sch o o I daughters or league members. will be Jed by Jamie Bedall, assisted by Karen Schweitzer, Laurie Snyder a n d Debbie L-Oitz. Newcomers Fountain Valley Newcomers wi II present a fashio show and luncheon at I I a.m. Satur- day. June 2, in the Sheraton Beach Inn, 1-funtington Beach. Reservations are due Friday, May 25, with l\1rs. David Whiting. ~ t LB Gardeners A tour oC member's gardens is planned Cor the Friday, May 25. 1neeling of Laguna Beach Garden Club. Niguel Women Laguna Niguel \V o men 's Club will install officers at 7:30 p.m. Friday. May 25, in the Community Center. Incoming officers are the Mmes. Gene Lu n ds t ron1 . president; John Gibson. Greg Neibert and Jack Richardson, vice presidents; Ro be rt Pingatore aftd John Sauer, sec retaries: Rod ge r Bergersen. treasurer: Dale Murtey, parliamentarian, and Fred Armstrong, historian. LB GOP "Only the Strong," a film which compares d e f e n s c trends in the U.S.A. and U.S.S.R. will be shown at 2 p.m. Friday, May 25, for the Norway's Independence Day will be celebrated by tbe Trygve Lie Lodge, Sons of Norway Friday, May 25, in Irvine Coast Country Club. Huntington Beach. Lawrence Greenwald i s chairman of the e v e n t , sponsored by Temple Shoron. Festivities will begin with a1--------'---ll ncrhost cocktail hour at 7 p.m. Speaker will be t he Norwegian Vice Consul Knut Halversen and a special guest will be Ingeborg Sorensen, former Miss Norway and nm- nerup in the Miss World con- test. Following dirmer, music for dancing will be provided by the Jeanne Mayer Trio. Clipped Wings Children's Orange Coast Chapter . or Petti119 Zoo TWA Clipped Wings will host daily thru Sun., May 27 an art auction Friday, May 25, your yo1iiuJ•t•r will in the First Presbyterian be +flrill1d to"p•t •nd Church. Anaheim. feed th1i1 lov•bl1 Preview and refreshments enl1111I,, Ac:lmi11lon lSc: will be at 7:30 p.m. and the Hur.tintton C.11hr rn•lt. Be•ch SALE! GEIST SPRING SEPARATES 1/2 PRICE THIS WEEK I Some Anne Klein, too! I W111tcllff ,._ 17 .. I lrwi• N .. port IHctl auction will begin at 8:30. & Edln91r •• tfi1 Proceeds will beflefit tbej------:'.'''.:'~o'.><;''!'~'~""''.'.!!·11::,============,,:,,======:::I Human Growth Foundation, an organization dedicated to finding the answers con- cerning, and hopefully cor- recting. dwarfism in children. Beginning at 9:30 a.m. members will meet in the Cof-1---------------------I fee Garden. Corona dcl Mar and then view the Buccola gardens. also in Corona del Mar -and the James L. Gray gardens, Newport Beach. ~ SAM •·FRISCC"S . RTQORY FA RMS Of OHIO HAS A FOOP (ilFT PAK SAN rnANCl!lJl mu: SOUR DOUGH .,..;;KJTd>' Kit include• somdougb packet plus all instruo- tiom you need to make roU1, biscuits, cakes plDClkCI •Dd bread. COMPLETE WIT!I A .-emini~ RECIPE FILE ffitkd,, fCl!~S e SOUTH COAST PLAZA COSTA MESA Plan Your Portrait Photograph with John Graham Warford The man who uses his camera as an easel will be here to discu ss his ar t form with you. Showing you how he creates portraits that reflect you, your child ren, your way of life. See him. Set up an appointment Tuesday or Wednesday to discuss your sitting. Sta~onery 1.ma g.n1n 2 fASlllON SQUARE• SANTA ANA ,..,.. MtMt '' lrMfllMlnt minu1n tf'DI!\ c.o.i. M .. IN:! Ht'lllO«t ltt<11 O.Hr 10• Jllrldtr IH ' P.M. ., ... 111 FASHION J ISLAND FOR ANY GIFT OCCA· L•-C•iwMI M•ll SION. Sf..E ntEM ON •rl•i.t •IS•" Plttt 'WV· DISl'UY. 0Pftl ~~r;· 11~"'.'"~~~lltttll ifk. JXlllfJ'l JlJl/11 fill!. 111111 ~ NEWPORT CDNTCR P.cillt Co••I H19hw•y-8•twn" J•mbof" •l'ld M•cArllull ' ' ( • TUMBLEWEEDS WH'f, COLONEL! WHAT A Nia; SURPRISE! MUTT & JEFF FIGMENTS txJllT .JllST 5fAND THER!O ! RUN f'OR 'lOLIR ~IFE ! DI.VI~ COMIN6 AND HE'S 60NNI\ BEAT THE: HECK OO!TA US! NANCY ~ THESE GIRLS ARE ALL NAMED AFTER MONTHS I Kt.OW. •• A FA'THeRLY COOCERN RlR M'( INFallORS /IOlfS Me10 LEAVE 11i£ FOllT OCCASIONALLY 1ll fllP oor H~RE 11> VISIT "1llJ AND 'lt>UR Fa.l.CTN l'RIMA1l3 IN 'ltJVR QUAIITT, /FSIJMe-, WHAT SQU~ID ENVl!lPNMENf l we HAVEN'T ANY BCACK TYPEWRITER RlseoNIONIY '!>IE RED! WELi., GO OUT AND BUY.SOME! • by Dou~ Wildey Ht'lL-- ED6MLEFTI TIE TJ!l.CI< by Tom K. Ryan AND HOWARE 11ilN65 l1P.CK IN 1liE GHfTIO? by Al Smith CAN'T. BOSS! 1 1 THAi WOULC PUT US RIGHT BACK. 1 ~~'\. IN THE RED I AGAIN.' I I by Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller SPE'AKING- OF M ONTHS·-· ---MARCH .' ... PEANUTS DOOLEY'S WORLD SALLY · BANANAS I =me rrn.J.bQ . GbRDO ANIMAL CRACKERS MISTER ~00, WOOl.C> 'IOU • MIUD STAl.IDING> Uf.lDER A Jj Tl1Ee F~ A i!llllLc ? ~ 0 . f; • . I i ; by Charlie M. Schulz TODAY'S CIDSSWDBD PUZZLB ACROSS 47 Stare of 1 Beer pa1lor being away game 51 Cityol 6 Some pets Hawaii 10 Polish title of fl2 Dyers' addres.5 coworkers 14 Fool 54 Stroked 15 Assist lightly 16 Alleged !)8 Make leather force 59 "--· - 17 One-thou-chancel .. sandth: Prefi11. 61 Bil of work 18 fruit 62 At fi1s1 19 Forma1 63 Russian V1P p1ocedure of old 20 Satu1a1es 64 Very suange 22 Visionanes 65 let!ers 24 Back 66 Enabled to go 26 Fabric 67 TOlfOf 27 Claimed DOWN formally 1 Darkens 31 Clever &aying 2 Mine tunnel 32 Change 3 Make ang1y 33 01e. OI" Mass. 4 Fo1bearing city 5 Fixed sala1y 35 Man in blue: 6 Head Informal covering 38 Spanish 7 Sleeping painter 8 Signs of 39 Harmon1led sorrow In colOr 9 FJowed 40 Graf von ·-: 10 Allow German 11 One l1om admiral abroad 41 Tint 12 ··-Dame 42 Sor&eres¥fi 13 I.e., spelled Gr. M'(1h out 43 Hit hard 21 Not hilPPY 44 Forbid 2J Minute 45 Boor glass qu11nth'1' I ' ' • . I' " " " " i ~ " Yesterd<1y's Puzzle Solved: 25 P111nt new 42 Horace····: "~ U.S. 2:1 The 100 or educator the 220 43 Assuaged 28 Flightless 44 Coarse bud: Var. peopl(i 29 Bare 46 Part of the 30 Germans' body neighbors 47 Took ac1ioo 34 Remove 48 loud noise SQluble ~ Thatwhtch constituent' is sound 'JS Preposition 50 Jagged 36 Disuibute by 53 Man's measure nickname 37 Houseof SS Lacerated Lords 56 Assam member silkwOJm 39 Dime:2 57 Real estate' wo1ds paper 40 Less rough 60 Trade • 9 •• " 11 " " 2J c!:I ~ " 25~ ,,, rr " " lO '' " e ' I''\ ll • " " . ~ -., :,;, " r,~ .., .. " • I. !ii;; u " " -•• 1 1' '2 .. r1~ ' ~ ~ ~ .. t.: I , M IE " " I JUDGE PARKER NQ ••. 1 PEEL · 15 THERE RE5TLE5$! I'LL FEEL ANYTHING I 6ETIER IF I DRIVE CAN DO, 8ET5Y? AROUND FOR A ' I • t . 1 • UTTLE WHILE! MISS PEACH .!~A, WHY DIDm,( DO THAT UPON see1NG-'""? DICK TRACY by Harold Le Doux MEANWHILE THE TRUTH IS THAT I DIDN'T JUST HAPPEN INTO YOUR 1'4EIGHf30RH000, SAM! I CAME DOWN HOPING YOU'D 8E HERE! I'VE BEEN ACTING A LITTLE CH!LD!S-H! LOOK, I'M THE ONE WHO 51-\0ULD 8E APOLOGl!.ING, ABBEY! LET'S GO OUT TO D INNER! I THOUGHT YOU1D NEVER A5K! . l . l I ' ; by Mell :i: COLILON'T HEL.P rr, MArlllA . IT WAS AN ALITOMATIC fl'EAC.TION' .• ... • VOi/VE Gal' A JOB TO DO! CUT OUT TME SIGHT-SEEING. \ • 'jU? To.:;E'fl.i!Oll', ws1i:ce u"' A wel.l:OIJ.£0 MA<HINii:. ON!i AU1!>MAT1C. /CfiACTION Al'T/!11< ANOTHfl!: ... •I Tuesday, M~y 22, 1973 DAIL V PILOT l $ by ROCJer Bradfield -------~~ AA OW ~Y ... 6 by Charles Barsotti NoTADRoP WHILI: ON DUTY. "1 ~A-\ _I I LJIJ 111-lLl by Gus Arriola by Roger Bollen THIS SUIJI!> Sl'ARTit.lEo TO !SET TO ME ·' ' l '~ • "l don't know why all the bfU1 can't arrive on tbe first the way they used to-one da'y wa1 ruined and tbat wu It."' DENNIS THE MENACE ( • I . ' , ' • ..I_, iJA!l Y PILOT Tut1dry1 Mar 22, 197l Streaking Halos Bid for Top Spot Against Chicago CIDCAGO -Jelr Torborg, known as a ?atcher of no-hitters, feel! nwch malign- ed when he's called a no-hitter. The California Angels' receiver can't loot to Im batting average to stress his oolnt. In nine big league seasons, he hit a ioere .212 -as high as .2.40 in 1965 and u low as .161 1n 1968. He takes a .226 average into tonight's r.ame against the White Sox in Chicago. 1n tool.ght's tilt, the Angels will send Rudy May (4-3/ against Chicago's Stan 8abnsen (5-3). The Halos trail the White Secretariat Even Faster In Preakness BALTIMORE (AP) -Secretariat still hasn't run the fastest Preakness but an adjusted time Monday moved him up to JeCOOd in the list ol clockings for the second race in the Triple Crown. After a meeting Monday, the Pimlico stewards announced that Secretariat's winning time in Saturday's 9 8 t h Preakness had been officially set at 1: 54 Z5 for the 3/16 miles. That's three--fifths of a second below the I: 55 shown on the Visumatic electric timer immediately after the race, but still off the I : 54 record set by Canonero II in 1971. Lucien Laurin, trainer at the Meadow Stable colt who previously had set a Ken- tucky Derby record of 1:59 2/5 for the Jl/4 miles, had said he would request a review of the time after two clockers for the Daily Racing Form said they had timed Secretariat in 1: 53 25. Laurin said Sunday the matter was worth pursuing, since a record time "would have to help his value at stud." Secretariat, syndJcated earlier this year for a record $6,080,IXXI, is scheduled to be retired to stud on Nov. 15. The stewards approved the change after viewing tapes of the race, and being told that Pimlico's official timer, E. T. McLean Jr., had recorded the 1:54 2/5 with a stopwatch. Sox by just a half game, needing a vic- tory to climb int.o the No. I spot. The Angell! have won eigtit of their last nine games. The 31-year-old ex-Los Angeles Dodger doesn't lalk in lerms of hitting streaks. A nger. Slate '·SS p.rn. S;SJ P.m . ll;lt em. His _yardslick is a playing streak, which hit an all-time high Sunday -12 con- secutive starts behind the plate. Torborg !eels, apparenUy until now, he hasn't had the chance to prove he's a de- cent hitter -the opportunity to Sho\Y that his .571 mark for Rutgers -which led the nation's collegians -was no fluke. "Oh, without a doubt," Torborg said when asked if he's aware of his good- field, no-hit reputation. "But I've never believed it. If you believe something like that, then you're destroyed." Torborg, whose main claim to fame stems from catching the no-hitters of Sandy Koulax, 1965, Bill Singer, 1970, and Nolan Ryan last week, said ,hitting is "just a matter of playing, bein~ able to bat three or four times a game. I've never had enough at-bats to prove anything. In nine years, I've had a little ovt:r 1,000 at-bats. That's only two good years for some hitters. I've never had a problem making con- tact," said Torborg, who has struck out on an average of less than 11} times per 100 at·batl. A broken right index finger one year ago sidelined Torborg for 21 days at a time he was hitting .269. Ust week, he twisted an ankle sllding into second base, but refused .to leave the game. "Now that I'm playing, I don't \Vant any part of getting out of there," said Torborg, who said ,he accepled his seven seasons of part-time play with the Dodgers but was upset sitting on the California bench. Torborg said catching no-hitters - three in only 493 big league games -is pure luck. "Naturally, in '65, my second year in the big leagues, I was realty uptight. I wasn't aware that Sandy was "·orking on «perfect game, jU'St a no-hitter." At Senate Hearing Toomey to Give Views WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate to- lay began anew an attempt to solve the problems surrounding amateur sports in the United States. especially those ~~ the Olympic Games. Sen. John V. Tunney (D-Calif.), said in- adequate financial support. haphazard planning and jurisdictional wrangling between groups of what he called Wlresponslve bureaucrats s eve rel Y undermine U.S. participation \n events such as the Olympics. "All these factors have cootributed too frequently to the waste and overshadow- ing of the dedicated efforts of the people for whom sports are conducted. -lhe in- dividual athletes." he said. "Too often we have mounted a national effort unworthy of the individual excellence of these athletes." Tunney, son of former heavyweight OOxing champion Gene Tunney, n1ade his remarks as the Senate Commerce Com· mittee opened hearings on bills that \VOuld fundamentally alter the official structure of U.S. amateur sports. Witnesses scheduled for the first or three days of hearings, lo be chaired by Tunney, are Olympians Harold Connally, hammer throw; \Villie Davenport, hurdler; Donna de Varona. swimmer; Suzie Chaffee, skier; Tom McMillen. basketball, and UCI spike coach Bill Toomey, decathlon. Other anticipated witnesses include sportscaster Howard Cosell: Rep. Ralph Metcalfe. former Olympic gold medal winner; David Rivenes. new president of the Amateur Athletic Union. and Walter Byers. chief executive or the National Collegiate Athletic Association. The hearings are expected to address themselves to the Olympic program, the need for a national sports development fund and 1he practicality of a federal sports commission that might at last resolve disputes bet.,.,'ecn the Amateur Athletic Union and the National Collegiate Athletic Association. UPI T•~ltl Indian Scores Easily Cleveland's Tom Ragland scores from second base on a single by Buddy Bell to center field as the throw from New York's Bobby Murcer to catcher :rhurman Munson arrives "late. Cleveland won, 10-5. Female Injured Leads U.S. Gymnast Past China NE\V YORK (AP ) -Jeanette Anderson was the sole casualty of the first-e~·er gymnastics meet bet\vccn the United States and the People's Republic of China but was the biggest Y.'inncr. Miss Anderson, a 2G-year-old fro1n Seattle, Wash., who began competing four years ago, apparently sprained her ankle during her final event but \YOn the a\l- around y.·omcn's ti!le and led the American women to a 111.90-109.40 vic- tory ?vlonday night at tladison Square Garden. She .,.,·on the uneven parallel bars event and then capped her performance with the highest score in the floor exercises. She gave no indication of injury in the final event but limped off !he mat follO\\'· ing the routine and had to be helped to a chair by her teammates. She had to lean on two teammates \11hen she received her award and was taken off the floor in a wheelchair. l\-1iss Anderson compiled 37.50 points for the aJl·round crO\\'ll follo1\'ed by Deh- bie Fike of Lypress. \\'ith 37.20 :.ind Chiang Shao-yi with 37.15. The Chinese men, led by till-round men's champion Yang fo.1ing-ming, snap- ped a deadlock with a st r on g performance on the horizontal bars and ) edged the American men 164.4-164.2. "I don't think they would have agreed to come if they weren't ready and had a strong teain." Gene \Vettstone of Penn Stale, the U.S. men's coach, said prior to the meet. Yang led the men with 64.90 points followed by Marshall Avener, a fonner Olympian and NCAA champion from Leviltown, N.Y., y.•ith 64.70. Tsai Huan- tsung and Jin1 Culhane. a former rnembcr or the U.S. 1\lunich Olympics te:.1111 from J)cnn State, shared third place with 64.51} points apiece. The women competed in the vault, balance beam, uneven parallel bars and floor exercises. The men \vorked in the floor exercises, pommel horse, flying rings. vault, parallel bars and horizontal bar. Judging was on a scale of 10 poin/s or Jess for each event. Diane Dunbar, a 14-year-old sprite from Pleasanton, Calif., and the youngest athlete in the meet, received the highest single score when she garnered 9.6 in the vault. Miss Anderson had 9.5 on the bars and 9.3 for the floor exercises. Health Ins titute Launched Jockeys Need More Protective Gear-Shoe LOS ANGELES (AP) -'f:'ears ago, the death of a jockey brought about the development of a safety helmet. Bill Shoemaker says there should at leasl be a study if jockeys can ride with more protective gear. Sandy Koufax quit baseball because of an arthritic elbow, which even prevented him fron1 playing termis in retirement. The Hall of Fame pitcher says the new National Athletic Health Institute, Inc .. possibly can use cases of athletic injury to help anyone with arthritis. Anthony Davis, star football player at the University of Southern California, says "When 1 was in high school there were bad injuries that would have been routine with prOper care." Through the institute, which was formally launched 1\-1onday at a news con ference, Shoemaker said the research can be undertaken. "We know there's a need for it," the 42-year-oltl jockey said, noting 1hat broken collarbones are common in spills. "Maybe something could be developed that's light enough to wear, around the shoulders to provide some protection." Koufax said the institute is "not just for the pro athlete. The pro a1hlete crnms all lhe stress and straia of a lifetime into 8 tG 10 years. By studying an athlete with arthritis, maybe we can help poople who develop arthritis later in life." TI1ese are athletes, who along with coaches such as John McKay and John Wooden, fonn the Sports Advisory Board of the institute. Incorporated last Noveffibcr after three years of planning, the institute plans to have a library of sports medicine and serve as a nationaJ clearing house of information. It plans to provide fellowships for laboratory research. Ors. Frank Jobe and Robert Kerlan. associates in private practice and well known for their orthopedic work with athletes, serve as president and medical director, respedively, of the institute, headquartered in Inglewood ., Kerlan said an advisory board that he heads will compile a list of priorities. They will include pain-killing drugs taken by athletes. '' . . . there has been no objective research done" on such drugs as used by alhletes. Kerlan said. Of pep pills reportedly used by pro football players, he said, "We do know that using drugs purely for stimulation is non-beneficial and therefore should not be used." ( LA's Bats Help Boost Title Hopes 1 • LOS ANGELES (M'l -Pitching, not • bitting, wu supposed to be tile streogth , or the 1973 Los Angeles Dodgers. : But as it turns out the Doda:en have developed a healthy amount of Nrepower that has put them Into cmtention in the National League West. Second baseman Davey Lopes is leading the league wtlh his .371 average ...,ll ... , ,.,,,.., 2, Dodgers Slate and Manny Mota is third al .352. ''Jl •.m. 1; p.rn. 7:JJ O.tn. With catcher Joe Ferguson bitting at a .315 clip, the club has a team average or .272. At the same time the Dodger pitching staff has held the opposition to an ERA of 3.l}J and a batting average of .z:J:i. Pitching has been less ttan consistent while the off"'6e bu 'l"'rted leading vice president Al Campanis to say that "When the pitching becomes what we ex- pected we should be even tougher.'' The Dodgers host San Diego for the opener of an 11-game home stand tonight after a trip that produced six victories in nine games against San Francisco, Cln'f cinnati and Atlanta. Don Sutton, 4-3, goes for Im Angeles again.st the Padres' Bill Greif, 3-3. The lowly Padres, meanwti\e, have moved in the fences and improved their home record, but have been as bad as ever on the road. Last year the Padres were 32-41 on the road, 26-54 at home. Jn the off-season they brought in the center field fence at spacious San Diego Stadium a few feet and painted an eight-foot-high home run stripe across the 17-foot wall, hoping to tum some of their long outs into homers. The shrunken stadium may have helped the Padres post a 12-12 ret'Ord so far at home. But going into tonight's game 'filh the Los Angeles Dodgers, their road record is a dismal 3-14, leaving them in the National League West base- ment. The Padres' leading hiller, rookie center fielder John Grubb, is expected to play tonight after recovering from a bruised elbow he suffered in an outfield collision at Cincinnati Friday night in a play that cost San Diego the game. Right fielder Clarence Gaston. who was hurt in the coUision and lhen bMed a heel Saturday night, may not play in either game here. But he's expected to be ready Friday night when the Padres host Philadelphia in lheopener of a four- game series. LA Joins New Tennis League Special to the DAILY PILOT CHICAGO -Los Angeles \Vas one of 16 cities awarded franchises in the newly formed World Team Tennis organization, it was learned today by the Daily Pilol Joining Los Angeles in the loop are New York, Boston. Philadelphia, Cin- cinnati, Detroit, Toronto, Chicago, Min- neapolis, Houston, Phoenix, San Diego, San Francisco, Denver and St. Louis. Format will be 22 home and 22 away matches for each team \\'ith standings kept as they are in any other team sport. A men's singles, women's singles and a mixed doubles match will make up each competition. A player draft is expected from 60 to 90 days and the first competitions are due in May 1974. "'· Ticket prices figure to be somewhere . _ in the $5 range. ~~ .. There is a possibility two more ,'::; franchises will be purchased at the : ~ $50,000 fee and in that event the league _.; will split into three six-team divi.sions. ;,~ Heading the LA team, which will ;. perform its 22 home matches at tbe :~: Forum in Inglewood, are Jerry Buss,::,.: Jerry Fine, Freel Barman and Gary . ··: Davidson. The latter is also league presi· •":'":_ dent. :;: CorNnissioner of the organization is • ,~ George A-1acCall of Laguna Beach's :: Emerald Bay. r ~ TRO MP AS LEA DS .=i OPEN Q UALIFYING :'.~ • San Diego's Greg Trompas shot a 4--;;~ under par 140 for two rounds Monday• !i:_ leading 30 players in the Southern : .. California U.S. Open qualifying at Mesa :z~ Verde Country Club. !;: Fountain Valley's Terry Ferraro also!·~ made the top 15 with a 143. Two strokes ~:r back at 146 was Rich Divel of Laguna::: Niguel while still another shot back, at : : 147, were Dan Barrile of San CJemente :t: and Dick MCCiean of Newport Beach. ::: -.. • • ... ~. Pa~ers Challenge Lakers ·:• • • .-. .. .;., ·;i :.:; • . ' . ~ ' "41>1' ~t ; • • Nailed at Hmne Plate - Boston's Orlando Cepeda is tagged out by Balti- n1ore catcher Elrod lfendricks after Cepeda tried to UPI TtlHllO .. sc·orc fron1 second bas'c on a g rou.nd out in action i\1onday at Baltin1ore. Bo~ton recorded a '1·1 victory INDIANAPOLIS (AP ) The American Basketball Association cham· pion Indiana Pacers Monday challenged NBA 1U1I1er.-up Los Angeles to a pQSt- season showdown. 1be Pacers earlier issued the same challenge to the New York Knicks, whQ dethroned the Lakers in the NBA final s this year, but the Knick~ declined. Monday's.offer from Pacer vice prcsi· dent nnd General Manager John \Vei~sert cnme after NBA all-pro Jc1Ty West of !he L3kers \\'As quoted as tcllinR a .. Charleston, W. Va .. audience there is no co1nparisoo bct~·een the rival leagues. \Vest, a forrner West Virginia Universi- ty AU-American and veteran of 13 NBA seasons with the Lakcn, sald, "None ol the ABA teams could beat our best teams." Responding to West's assessment. Weissert said, "I understand hls problem as our champion Indiana Pacel'8 didn't chnltcnge his No. 2 L-0~ Angeles Lakers. "We challenged tho New York Knicks because they're winners," Weissert said in a statement released from the Pacer ·;: otnce here. "Uofortunately, they decl;n-r·:: L•-ed to play us, so I guess we would play ~!,: Los Angel~ if they feel up to lt." ;~~ Weissert said the Pacers would blive ·: • everything to 1... and nothing to plJI "- playing a nllll1enip, but It might. be lun."3 "If Jerry and his teammates decline, 1 r?! guess they can continue to m11ke UtllUP" l~i ported claims and probably fl few wtur:.: still believe them. Jf they accept, we'll be .~ ready," Weissert said. i;; .. ; , • San ti on ble di vi B this F lanl B and B T s lo as nex Ma hia ove ' ' Coaching Vacancies Galore at SC What with the impending gasoline shortage, and talk of a possible food shortage, it's not too surprising that san Clemente High school is now facing a coaching shortage. M the 1973 season draws to a close San Clemente has a dozen coaching pos~ lions open, and it's going to be a scram- ble in the nei:t few months to find in· dividuaJs to fill those spots. By sport the lilt of needs goes llke this: Football -?"e varsity assistant, one ~ assistant, one freshman assts. tanl Basketball -junior varsity, freshman *...------.... )l ------' HANK WESCH and sophomore coacbes. Baseball -junior varsity and frosh- ""ph coache!. Track - a head coach, one assistant. Golf -a junior varsity coach. Tennis - a head coach. In addition, there's lbe need for an athleUc trainer. Filling the spots i!ll'I going lo he easy -there are very few teaching positions opening at San Clemente. And the prere- quisites for filling those open positions aren't generally can'ied by the type of people who like to coach on the side. San Clemente principal Darrell Taylor is hoping to fill the most crucial vacan- cies within the next few months, and hopes lo fill. tho opening for a head track coach from within the present athletic department staff. But as Taylor says, that's not a toP priority item now -not with the basket- ball and football O()l!llings amoog other things. One solution is the doubling up of coaching duties. something that may become couunonplace next season. Swimming coach Ben Cummings is a forerunner of the trend: he's going double as the school's head cross country coach next season. And baseball c o a c h Marshall Adair will be ending a one-year hiatus from football coaching to take over the head sophomore coach job. Another possibility is that the school may have to cut down on the number of learns it llelds. Adair a staring at the possibility of fielding only IW1> baseball teams next season, varsity and junior varsity, rather than the three team set up most schools follow. Of course there are other possible iwlu- tions, such as recruiting ex-coad1es from among the non-coaching faculty and making use of college physical eduation majors seekjng roaching experience. Whether the gasoline crisis pans out or not, remains to be seen. And the same can be said for the San Clemente coaching shortage. But the present confusion, at a time when the school ls on the verge cl. en- tering play in the Orange league - a loop where the Tritons might be athletically successful for the first time in the school history -can't do anything but hurt the overall program.. It'll be a miracle if it doesn'L I• ... . . Sports In Brief ' Bobby Umer Get,s. Nod As Indy 500 Favorit.e RENO, Nev. -Bobby 11ostr 1" a S-1 favorite lo win the lndlanapolll 500 Memorial Day auto race In odds posted by the Reno Turi Club. Bookmaker North Swanson aald Mon- day Unoer, who hod lhe IOCClld futesl qualliyiag lime for tbe 500, 1" allg!ltly favored over Johony Ruthetfocd and !\lark D:ioohue, both rat.ed at 1-J. Gary BettenhaOJen. was an a.1 ~. while Marlo AndrelU, Al Umer and Swede Savage were all 10.1 xlectiooa. The odds rallied down lo ~I oo long shots Mike Hiss and David llobbo. Sheff Close NAPA -Foonlain Valley's Daw. Sheff fired a 75 to stand just three strokes back of ~leaders Len Studinger cl. San Francisco and Steve Taylor o t Carmichael going into the secood round today of the local qualUier for the U.S. Open Goll Obampionship. If Shell can maintain lbe pace in the 36-hole event, placing among the top 14, he will advance to the sectional at Mission Viejo Country Clu~ June 4. U he sutvives there as well, he qualifies for the U.S. Open al Pilbburgh, June 14-17. Brooks Back 'lbe California Angels recalled out· fielder Bobby Brooks from Sall Lake Ctly M~day, replacing Bobby Valenti.De on Meyer Pitches For Favored Rustlerettes Debbie Meyer will be well rested for her pitching assignmeat ln Wednesday's Southern califomla Community COiiege softball championship finals at Golden West College (3). Miss Meyer, the workhorse of the Golden West staff, ha> pitched all bul two innings in the first ~ games of the tourney to place GWC in the finals as the only tmdefeated team tn the playoffs. In Wednesday's action, the Rustleret- tes of coach Judi Garman will meet Pas- adena. If Golden West loses the game, a second enC0W1ter will follow Immediately to determine the tournament champion. Golden West breezed to 18-5 and 10-0 victories over E1 Camino and Fullenon then de.lenated. Pasadena. 4-2, to gain the finals. Meanwhile, all losing teams moved to the loser's bracket in an elimination al- t.Ir that wu eventually woo by Pa.s- ad"1a on Monday. santa Ana defeated Cypress, 11-9, then IDOi io Pasadena, 4-0. With Kathy Stephens back at shortstop £or the Rustlerettes, Golden West will be heavily favored lo cop tbe championship.· Miss Stephens suffered a sprained ankle and was out of action for a monlh before the tournament. She is the team's leading hitter with a .5lf average. Other starters for Golden West will in- clude Kathy Howard behind the plate and balling .167: Barb Ohler al firlll ba.se with~ .400 average; Brena Palmer at ae. cood at .245: Miss Stephens al short; and capl&n Sue Lehman at third hitting .367. In the oolfleld il will be Debbie Burlison in Jell (.•75), POj!8Y Milelson in C'enter ( .342) and Mel Henn.an.son in right (.404). the~ 1-teem'• raster. Broolls. %7, wu hitting .m with twr home """ and II nma·botled In for the Anaeb' Pacific Coul teaauo farm team. The fo<lllel' OUJand Alhleilc, who bat& r~ spent sprillg INlnJo& with Calllomla and batted m. Valenllne auffered a-.. rl&ht fq last 'lbunday nllflt when be ran into tile fence at Anaheim Stadiwn. Witness Dies DALLAS -Fonner big league pitcher Herman Webmelu, 4', collapsed and died oo the wti.... stand Monday white testJfying . in tbe U.S. D1s1rict Court embezzltment case. The Cincinnati native pitched parts of two seasons for the CJncinDaU Red! before becoming a regular in 19'8. He spent 61.-i seesOos with Cib!innati before he was sold to Philadelphia June 21, 19M. Fellows Named W ASIUNGTON -Fonner Army quarterback Pete Dawkins and track star Delano Meriwether were among 18 young men and women named Monday as 1973- 74 White Hou.se Fellows. ·oawk:lns, the 1958 Heisman Trophy winner as the natim's top collegiate foot- ball player, is now 35, and an army lieutenant colonel and battalion CQITl- mander of the 2nd Infantry Division in Korea. Meriwether, 30, is a -re11ow in hemalolot<Y at lbe Harvard Medical unil of 'lltomdike Meniorial laboratory in Bos- too City Hospital Allison Fails TORONTO -Driving against National Auociatioo cl. Stock Car Automobile RaciJW champion Bobby Allison, Nonn LeQlott of Toronto woo the featurt event Monday night at Pinecrest Speedway. · Lellioll, driving a hand-OOllt 1973 Camaro foe only tbe tblrd llme, l!larled second among 24 enbiea In lbe 7S-lap race but toot the lead quickly and held ii lo win $1 ,500 first-prize money. A crowd of 10,000 saw Alu.on, of Hueytown, Ala., laU lo qualify for the final in a 1968 Q)evelle, but be was given • guest spol In lbe starting line-up and finished lour1b. Samara OK WASIIl·NGTON -The National Colleflale Athletic A.soociatioo uid Mon- day that Univ.ersity of Pennsylvania decathlon star Fred Samara is eligible for the rest ol. the inter-collegiate track season. Samara, a senior, thu& beoomes eligi- ble lo C0011"'~ In lhls weekend's !OIA track meet at Rutgers and ne1t mootb's NCAA Championehips. Banquet Slate Laguna Beach IIlgil'• <Jranse League champion track and f 1 ·e I d ag- iregatioos will he feted with a sport& awards banquet toolgill al Top of the World School in Lquna Beach. Activity gets started at 8:30 and hl- cluded in the program wtU be the naming ol most valuable and lnspiraUooal athlete!:. ,,,, Dana Hills lllgh's !rad< and swim teams will be feted with a sports awards banquet toolghl in the. school cafeteria beginning at 7. Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit Ba!Umore New York Mllwaukee Boston Cleveland Chicago Angels Kanas• Cily Oakland Minnesota Texas Eal DM1loll w L 20 18 17 18 18 20 17 19 15 19 17 23 Wert Division 21 13 21 H 23 17 21 19 18 17 II 23 _,,,,_ Bolton '· a.1trmcn 1 Ci.wlanO 10 N-Yortl: S OMiand S, .C1nN• Cll't t Qnry tlmtl Khedult!d. T....,., ...... Pct. GB .526 .486 II> ,47' 2 .472 2 .441 3 .us • .61! .600 1/i .575 I .525 3 .514 31/i .M3 91> C~tlWICI !Tldrow 4-S) II it*lll'l'IOl'I IMcNtltr 1 .. 1 Mllw1utM (Colbclrn ).1) ti lor.ton ICunla 1 .. ) Ntw Yortr. (Stoll~l'll M) M DtfrOlt !Frvm1n .. , ll:1nw1 Clh' 1$1mPIOft ,_21 11 MfllnMOlt IWood- IOft f.1) A-I• t~'I' ~l -1 CMCffO ( .. llnM!I Wl TMat (8!'0bef'9 Ml It Oefllal'ld (Holtlmll'I .. 2) ... ......,..._. C""911!'1d 11 .. ltlmon MllwM" at '°'*' Ntw Yort; at Ottl"Olt .. ,..,.. ti ChkNe K.mttCltTllf~ TbM If 0.-llfld NATIONAL LEAGUE Eall !Jhotsloll w L Chicago 23 18 New York t9 16 Pittsburgh 16 17 1.-tontreal 15 18 Philadelphia H 24 St. Louis 12 24 Houston Wesl Dlvlllon 28 16 rr 11 23 16 San Francisco Cincinnati Dodgen Atlanta 23 17 16 22 15 28 San Diego • ---Clllwoo •t ManfrMI. ,..,,. Plttr.burvll S, Phll".iPl\la ' $1. LOul1 H Ntw Yortt, ,..111 S.n Frwoc:llCO t. ~twl .t Ollly ''"'" ldltdulfd. TtHy'1 OtntM Pct. ,5911 .513 .'85 .45S .368 .333 .819 .614 .590 .575 .421 .366 GB 2 4 s 81> 9°1'. II> 2 8 101> PllltbllrOh (Ell!• ,.4) If PhUMltllll'lll (TwlfdMI! 1·1) Chic"° (Jtflklftti .WI 11 Mont""' (MCA.Mlly 1·1) !ii. Loul• (WIM 4-2) ,, N-YOl1t (ic-n ~1) Sen Fr91Kl.CO (M8-ric;:MI <Ml .t Al1flrrtl tOoblon ,.., Hovttofl (It~ '-11 ,, Clnc1""9TI 1C1rroll o-n Mn OI"° {Or.It '41 Ill Deffr1 ISIJtton ...:.1 w ........ .,.. ...... II. LOllls .t Ntw Yor11 l"lttllllo.I,..,. "' ,,.1 ........ i. Chk:eto 11 MOrltr'MI s..-i Ff'lftdtct tt Attalnf9 ttowtan .. c~ ienDltM1t...,. ; TutkUIJ, M•r 22, J91l Springman Sparkles Dana Hills Lauds Jt,s Three-sport Phenorn By HANK WESCH Of tM Olltr Pit.I Sl .. 1 Bill Springman is a member of an alhleUcally endangered species -the ijree.-sport star . In an age ol 1pedallzaHoo, which rarely sees players participating in more than one sport, Springman has beefl a standout Jn football, basketball and baseball for first-y,ear Dan$ Hills High School. He was aU.league in all three .sports, playing quarterback: in football, forward in basketball, and a number of positions on tbe baseball team. Not bad for a jun!«. He bas so bnpressed the Dana IIllls coache!, lhal they hardly can say enough about him. Says football coach Tony Leon - "There's nO doubt, Bill was the heart of our team. He's a great paSser and run- ner, and e. team leader. OUr season would have seemed a lot longer than it did without him." Adds ba!kelhell coach 'f'tl1y Slill900 - "He was really a great surpiise th i s season. He hadn't played any basketball U>e year before, but he was our leading scorer and most valuable player. ''He's a good jumper and a fine shooter." And aa)'I baseball coach Demls Nespcr -"lie was the only player we had with any varsity experience; so we COWlted on hlm as our leader. He's a fme hitter, bas good poi,yer and there's no doubt tn my mind be wu ooe of the best .infielders in the league." Spriogman's SUcces! hasn't really been all that surprising lo tbe Dana HUis followen. Aa • sophomore he led the san Clemente sophomore football team to a tie for the Crestview League cham- pionship, kicking a 4$-yard field goal ln one game. And be was the starting third baseman on the Sa n Clemente varsity bueball team as a sophomore. As Dana Hills' quarterback, Springman was the team's leading rusher (205 yards), scorer (28 point.I) and passer (62 complelioos in 15:1 attempts ror 757 yards and elgbt touchdowns. In buketball the statistics were a team-leading 2M point&, !0< an 11.9 per OCC Girls Win BILL SPRINGMAN game average. And in baseball Springman bll ,:1(16 in the Oranfe League, led the teem In hlta (19) and secood in runs balled In (9) and wu ne.ar or at the team lead ln f!fer/ other category. Beyond the cold staUstle1, however, and off the field, Springman lll¥>ws just as well. "They doo'I make many people lll:e him anymore," Stillson says. "He's the pure All-American boy, a real gentleman. Anteaters Foe Makes Winning Way of Life NORTl!RIDGE -Winning In baseball Is traditional at Cal Stale (Northridg<) and the Matadors will be participating in their fourth straight NCAA regional tournament at UC Irvine Friday in quest of a third trip to the nationals ln Sprina:· field, Ill. June 1-4. Coch Bob Hiegert 's Matadors won the SoCaJ Swimming national cham~ionsh.ip ln 1970 and latl • year, after w1[llllng the regionals in- <> __ ,._ 1 .-1.~-'>r-~~ _ eluding a 10-1 shellacklng of UC!, went lo memoers o •m Soil...,, wlllOmla -t!ie fliiafj el Sprffil!leld be!~ losing lo champl...iitp girts swimming and diving eventual champion Florida S.Ulf1em. team from Or~e Coast College will be HJegert has a veteran Uneup·Usat CM· honored along with other sports awards siats of six senior11, one jUnlOr, a reclplents Thursday nlgbt at the annual freJhman and three senlar hurlers All bitnquet for women athletes in the school but freshman shortstop Shawn NOonan cafeteria. have been involved In NCAA compeUtion In the recent swimming and diving oo the regional and natlmal level champion11hJps held on the OCC campus, The Matadors have a reputation for the hosts won the team crown with 229 wiMing the bl11 ones and wtll be gunning polnls to 139\1.a for second place Ventura. for No. l·r&ted UC Irvine Friday at noon The medley rtlay ttsm of Pat Shine. in the opening salvo of the regjonal Joyce Dawson, Unda Johnson and Nancy tournament. Northrldge ls 6-0 agalMt the Stungls won In 2:04.0. The 2CM> free relay Anteaters, winnlni four games In 1971 tum also woo in l :43.8 including Ann and the regjonsl affair -. year qo. Hall, Kathy Dolan and the Misses Shine Northrldgo won lb foorth strolgi!I and Stungls. CCAA title with a 32-o15 seuon record. Mis.s Shine plJCed second in the diving Probable starter for the Mtitadors is with Jo Jo Perrin fourth and Starla right hander Eddie Miiier. Miller posted Meeks nfth. Miss JohruJon was second in a 7-S uason record and sports a t.54 the 200 free while Miss Stung.is was third, e.r.a. Miss HAii fourth and Miss Dolan 11 lh ln Ready to move ln a reserve role will be the 50 ,free. Bob LoPresll (IG-2, 2.65 e.r.a.) and Jeff Mlos Joh,_ pl>ced fourth tn the 100 Cherry (&-3, 3.51 e.r.a. ), All are right individual medley while Miss Dolan was handed and aU ere senton. sli:th and Miu Dawton elghltl In the 50 Pat RUS1ell, the team's sbort stop Is butterfly. MiM Shine waa fourth, Mias the leadi~ tirtter with a .1'1 average. •!all flfttl, Sandy Gomei seventh and Chuck Mandi;\ will play flnt base, MJM Dawson 11th in the 50 back. Lou\lJ Diaz is at &econd, Noonan at short, Mfrs Johnson was lhlrd In lhe 100 free •nd Rand R.asmusaen al third boso. with Mba Stuogls fifth and Ml'5 Hall In the oolflekl will be Bob Canfield, elghl'h. Marty Friedman and Craig Ryan, '· I I Singer Puts UCI Golf On Upswing By HOW ARD L. HANDY ot ... ~ '""' '''" Jerry Hulbert ls a happy man this spring when hia UC Irvine 101! team is tile subject ol coovenaUOn. "They came and jelled •s a team In the Stanford toornam<nt (UC! llnlshed thlrd behind Stanford and san ~ State)," he says. "The kids knew lhey had to do well in that tourney to be considered for the col- lege division tournament and they went out and did it which Is the e:a:cltfnl thing about the whole sea.90fl," Hulbert says. Another faoet of the upswing in UC! golf is the future of the team according to the coach. "In the past we have had to go out and get the kids to come here. "Now they are coming to ua and askmg about the program and showing inluest themselves about playina: at uct. .. One of the big reasons for the upawtng Jn UCI goU fortunes is Gary Singer, the No. 1 player on the team and a junior classman. He is in school on a Tony Lema schotarship grant and Is one of the most con&istent golfers around. Two transfer students from Golden West College have also helped the Anteaters to move up ln clau. Steve Robertson Is a sophomore and Steve Ryan a junior. "Gary and Steve (Robertsoa) have been our team leaders all .season. I have exempted them rrom qualifying for the NCAA toumament with the other four players ln a series of matches to determine tbree other places." Of Robtrlion, Hulbert sa)'I: "He haa the potential to he a sroot -He 1181 given us a great shol In tbe arm. "But the big thing about hbn 1" that bl Jeno"' he can do even better. "Now that he has been throuah one season of play with us, he knows wDll he has to do to improve. He ls also more famillar wilh lhe COW'SeJ we play." Turning lo Ryan, Hulbert continue• 111.t"' praise in superlaUves. "What a pleuant surprise he has been. He has played ""conslstenUy all year." Others ,..klnl a place Oil tbe leom for • PoSSlble shot at tho NCAA coUece division team Utle when the event ll slqed at Quall Lake Country Club Jn Riverside June 12-15 over 72 holes include freshman Joe Gerard and jllllors John Brizendine and Dennis Foster. During the regular seuoo, six pla,.... are used In dual conrpotttlon. -'lllo nationals limit teams to five players, caqsiDg ooe to be dropped fer lhal l<>anamenl. The only UC! ployer "Uh aodJ u- pertance It s1ngor· who ... nt to Ille eat coaal for the nallonals a year aao alt<r qualllylng for a •pol In lndlvldllll com- petition. UC! has made giant strld .. In &oil Ibis aeaaon and althoucJ! an Invitation lo participate as a team hun't been .la:aued as ye~ II ls expected momenlarlly. UC! his .posted a 1U ...-recOrd with a spilt of dual malcbes against Cal State (l.oog Beach) and a very reapoc- table •h9wlnl qainsl permnial po...,. use 1n a 31-23 Joss. Hulbert alao announoed a propooed four-<Cbool toumamenl lo be rvtoted bet....,. tbe cunpeltn1 IChoolJ which will start next year in all probablllty. In addllloa lo UC!, the competlUon ....id allo Include UCLA, USIU and UC Rlverslde. USIU 1" an annual U.-.01 lo tho NAIA team lllle while Rlvenlde has been a leader In lbe collqe dlvl>lon lo< oeverat years. JERRY HULBERT ' Fish RePort I .. ~ " ., ,. ·. ., . • " ·. ·. . • . • .. . , •. I J8 DAILY PILOT Tl.16Clat, MIJ 22, 1'73 Harbor Ya~h1 Clubs Open Seasons . .. . Sli: Harbor Area yacht cit.lb! declared thtlr sealiOnS of- ficially 9pen Saturday in col· orful• cermw~s which in· eluded form.al nag ral.slngJ, yacht Inspections and trophy presentations. The tradilional club open- ings are a joint efforl of the Association of N e w p o r t Harbor Yacht Cubs and in- clude all except Newport Harbor Yacht Club which holds its opening day on Mother's Day each year. Qibl observing Opening Day Saturday were Balboa Yacht Club, Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club, Shark l s\and Yacht Club, Lido Isle Yacht Club, South Shore Sailing Club and Voyagers Yacht Club. Following the form a I ceremonies a boat parade was held with "dressed" power and sailboats cruising the en- tire harbor. I • F'ormally dressed officers and gaily dressed ships was the order of the day Saturday bc,.,;+++4'4,+,s-;+;.++.,.,.1 as yacht clubs in the area observed t he i r traditional opening day. Voyagers Yacht Club led off with a breakfast and fla,g rais· ing on the roof of their third story quarters on Via Lido, followed by Bahia Corinthian, Bayeide Drive : South Shore Sailing Club. Coast 1-lighway : l.ido Isle Yacht Club, Lido Soud: Shark Island Yacht Club. l3ayside Drive. and Balboa Yacht Clu b, Bayside · Drive. · In the a cc o m pan y i n g photographs: .!\·liss EI k a Herzberger leads members and guests in the National Anthem {lopl; officers and staff commodores stand at al· tention for salute to colors at BCYC (left): Old Glory flut· ters aloft from roof of VYC quarters (right l. and Com· modore Ted Hinshaw calls membership to attention ~ Lido Isle Yacht Club. • , ~ • • • ~ '" • KMPC Radi o Begins 16th Season ·of Chan11el Watching Radio station K 1\1 l' C launches its 16th season or service to Southern Cali forni<i boat owners Saturday. !\iay 26. when K~1PC Channel \Vatch begins it s annual ~1emorial Day to Labor Day schedule of wind and sea reports. Made possible by 1nore th an 40 participating skippers frorn the l'nited Sl:t!t's Power Squndrnns. K ~1 P (' Chan· nclv.;l!ch cffc~.; huur\\ rcoorls on wind. St."a and cha;1nef con· ditions l'Jch Saturday, Sunday and hul id:iy. The hourly ad\'1sor1cs to Southern C a 1 1 for n i a · s ·1 ·FASHION J ISLAND ' NEWPORT CI:NTCR thuu~a nds of bo:it 01vners arc broadc<isl as part of K>lPC"s on.rhe·hour newscasts. I !al Pruden of Redondo Beach heads up lhe K:\IPC Channelv.·atch this season. 11 covers an expanded area o[ the coastline fron1 north of S:inla ~1onica to the ~1exican border. plus frequent reports fron1 Catalina lsl.111d. This year's Channelw.'.llch rlect includes me1nbers fron1 the Balboa, Long ~ach, Cen- linela, Pasadt'na, Lyn\l'OOd. Santa l\lonica Bay, Santa Ana , Los ·Angeles. Rio lfondo. Redondo Beach. San Fernando Valley and Dan<t Point pO\\·cr squadrons. Broadcasts begin at 7 a.m. on each reporting day. utiliz- ing ship-to-shore r a d i o telephone hookups to provide listeners with up-to-the-minute n1arina. harbor, channel, sea anlf 11·ind condit ion s. P:1r!icipating skippers serve nn a voluntary basis. Beach: Flynorth Sacramento 4. times a day on PSA. {california's unofficial state bird} II • PSA wants to go north (or soulh) with your money. Other Grinningbirds to San Francisco and San Diego. Over 160 flights a·day connecting all of northern and southern California. Call your travel agent or PSA and let's migrate. PSA ghes you a lift. •• F'r•t PORC Raee . . Warrior· Wins Big Al CWel'• liO-!ool Clwlc .. deJjgned 1loop Wanior from Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club, JlrOVed to be a faster drUter than 43 other yachts in the first Pacific Ocean Racing ~erence race. I When all of the yachts had been accounted for Monday Warrior was the overall end Class A winner. She was the secood boat to finish the 113- mile race from San Diego to Long Beach by way of C&talina Island Sunday night and easily saved her time for top honors. First to finish the light air race was Mark Johnson's 73- foot ketch Windward Passage at 6:2' p.m. Sunday, taking 18 hours and 14 minutes to com· plete the 113-mile distance. SECOND OVERALL on 1han· dicap time was F r e d M a c D onald's Columbia-52 Tribute from Newport Harbor Yacht Club, and Tom Tobin's Ericson-39 Nemesis, San Diego Yacht Club, was third. The San Diego to Long Beach race was the first of the PORC that was designed as a West Coast copy of Florida's famed Southern Ocean Racing Circuit (SORC). The second race gets under way Friday al 3 p.m. from Los Angeles Yacht Club and wlll take the fleet on a , 246-- mile circuit of the Channel Islands, finishing near Arrow Point on the leeward side of Catalina 1siand. The fleet will have a few days to rest up at Howland's Landing t> e r ore returning to the mainland June 9 for the start of the 60-- mile Point Dume Race hosted - Ganbare Takes Lead In One Ton Regatta Doug Peterson's custom One Crisis (Ranger-37 ) Charles Ton sloop Ganbare from the Hope, SDYC; (10) 7th Heaven host San Di ego Yacht Club (Morgan·36) Andy Rose won the first race of the One (BYC) and Stan ri.1 i11 er by California Yacht Club, Marina de! Rey. nIERE WERE 43 starters in the first race and only six gave up the "ghosting." Finish.Ing skippers agree that it was a good. race in spite of the slow going. The third race is expected to have some 60 starters as the One Ton yachts will have com· pleted their national cham· pionships at San Diego and will join the fleet for the last four races. They will race as a class in the PORC. Class standings: CLASS A -(1) Warrior; (21 Tribute: (3) Interlude, Forest Olson, Nf!YC; (4) Robon, Bob Grant, NHYC; (5) Windward Passage. CLASS B -111 Ragdoll , Hall and Williams. NHYC; (2l Blackbird. Allen Puck ct t , CYC; (3) Drumbeat, Don Ayres Jr., NMYC; (4) Sum- merwind, Richard Mein e , LAYC: (5l Allegre, John MacAlister, San Diego YC. NEWPORT LEASES 2~00 W11t Coast H~•way Leasing all Vehicles 645-2202 Ton Class national cham· (LBYC). ___I~~~~~~~~~~~ pioMhips Monday. 1---------- The Ton championships are being co-sponsored by San Diego Yacht Club and Yachting Magazine. The regatta involves the One Ton, Three-Quarter Ton, Half·Ton and Quarter Ton classlfica· tions. The first races Monday in· volved on ly the One Ton and Three·Quartcr Ton yachts. The first race was a 30 mile. triangle off Point Loma, followed almost immediately Custom Tailor and Shirtmaker i • Se .. •nl<~nlh ~nd lrV.n~ • 6~5·107! by the start or a 150--mile ,Oi _______________ ...;;.;""'""'""'iiOiij offshore r ace. 11 Winner in the Three.Quarter Ton race was Bob Batcher's Morgan·33 from Southwestern Yacht Club. Standings after first race: ONE TON -(1) Ganbare (Custom) Doug Peter son, SDYC; (2) Robin (Custom·35) George Tooby, NHYC ; 131 Gama, (Ranger·37J Gary Mull and Tom Blackaller, NHYC : (4) Whimsey Tres (Yankee-38) Hugh Rogers and Ed Lorence, LAYC : (5l Dan de 1 ion (Eri ckson-37) Bruce King and Dick Deaver, BYC: (6) Wings, (Ranger-37) Taylor,.. Pattison and Smyth, Cabrillo Beach YC; (7) Bullit (Yankee·38) James Leonard. BYC; (8) Brunehilde. Ed Woodland and BOB PALEY ANO ASSOCIATE .~ INSURANCE e AUTO e HOME e YACHT e INDUSTRIAL e COMMERCIAL • BONDS ·~ SAFECC INSURANCE • BOB PALEY 474 E. 17th STREET COSTA MESA 642·6500-546-3205 Buzz Boettcher, CYC;'.;~(~9~)~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=° ''The best place to borrow $2,000 ... is where I borrowed s·2,ooo,ooo:' 7 Whern's the best place to get your peraonaJ lOan? Whn' . e busln8SSIT)an goes for a big loan for his company. W. make loans 'o some of Amerlca's largest companies. Miiiions al dollata at a tjme. For things like cargo ships. New factories. Power statJons. But for all the millions we lend to business. we lend Just as much to people like you. Because we feel the reasons you need money 818 as lmpottant as the reasons a big company needs money. · Need cash to pay off bills? To take a vacation? To meet some emer· gendY? Come se<1 us. The people who understand ·a11 kinds al money ' probtema. Coovn8rc/aJ l::redi~ • • ~Commercial Credit The bttt war ro botrOW a thouJand I& from tflo '*""'° who lend mHJfbns. .. ' ' • • 870East17tJ>. Stroot • Phone: 64.0:S700 ~ ' . . ..-ru.x-...~ .. Jma!Neloui>wa111'10IGQ .._ •.o ....... ,.,....~ • • ! ,_ I ,_ I , Safeway Cuts Back On Costs SAN FRANCrsco (AP) Safeway Store! lnc. has agreed to reduce prices $80,96S on meat sold higher than ceiJ... ing regulations, the COst of Llving Councll said Monday. Four of Safeway's 18 retail dtvisions reduced prices on up to 86 meat items, the government said. Prices were reduced by 240 stores in the Los Angeles area, 203 stores In the San Francisco Bay area, 57 in Phoenix, Ariz. and 53 in El Paso, Tex. The council said incorrect ceiling prices ranged from 1 to 20 cents per pound over the government-determined maxi· mum. -Regulations require that ceiling prices be set for all meat items sold a f t e r slaughter on the basis of transactions which took place in the 30 days before March 28, 1973. The ceiling is the highest price at or above which at least 10 percent of a meat item was priced during that period. Architect Set For Coast Talk Urban planner and developer William Pereira will address the Harvard Business School Association Wednesday on "The Role of the Master Planner." The dinner meeting will be held at the Irvine Coast Coun- try Club, beginning at 6:30 p.m. For reservations, call Lucy Eg!ett at 836-5181. Fresh Air Stgle Lady barber Mrs. Tony Prince moved a barber chair on to the roof of her penthouse salon in San Francisco, recently, and the customers enjoyed both sunshine and Mrs. Price's ministrations. The sunshine came free, but the hair styling cost cus- tomer John Greene $12.50. E. F .. Hutton Opens Office , E.F. Hutton & Company Inc. will cpen Its lOOth office in Newport Beach, Thursday. The building, in Newport Center's financial district, is at 600-C Newport Center Qrive. Walter N. Lynch will be manager. The Newport Center office will have 15 account ex- ecutives when it opens, with room for expansion ln the 5500 square feet facility. An open house for the public will be held at the office between 8 am and 4 pm on Thursday, 'May 24. ''INdEscnibAbly 8EAUTifu l'' • --.,.,...... _,.., ___ _ • Old (ashioned elegance sets the mood for intimate dining for lovers •.. and other people. Tum-of-th~entury artifacts accentuate visual interest in this excellent restaurant. Our attractive, perfectly costumed waitresses will spoil you, And, our . unwualty nne cuisine will capture your imagination. Once you've dined here, Seacli(f will call you back again and again. . 1be excitement or ;::=====:::::;::;;:::;:;::;:::;::;::;:::::.:;:::::::;; elegant dining We may bea ' little difficult to find, BUT. we're worth the effort. is a daily af[air, We take great pride in servtn1 a very provocative businessman's lunch at 11 a.m. Sunday Champagne Bnmch is an interesting experience for lovers and families '"""'"-'""' O;il;, __ ;:;:,J... __________ J between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Dancing • Entertainment 3000 Palm A•enue • Huntington Beach, California NO RESERVATIONS • CLOSED MONDAYS (714) 53&8866 CI·eanup 'Lagging' In Steel Industry NEW YORK (AP) -The st.eel iodustry's antipollution efforts lag far bebi.Dd what is Jegally required and technologically poaglble, ..,. cording to a study rcleued Tu,esday. '!be 500-page study by the Couocil on Economic Priorities, which took a year and a half to complete, names U.S. Steel's Gary, Ind. Works and National Steel's Weirton, W. Va Works as the worst air polluters of the 47 mU1.s studied. OF mE SEYEN largest steel companies examined in the repori, Armco S t e e I emerged with "a record far better than any other major firm on the basis of air emissions per ton of steel pro- duced," said Alice Tepper Marlin, execuUve director of the non-profit group. "No major steel producer emerged with an overall good reQPrd in water pollution con~ trol," she said. "Republic Steel, however, enlerged with a distinctively poor water pollution record, I a r g e I y because of its abysmal water pollution controls at four mll1s in northeastern Ohio." According to the study, abatement schedules or other legal action is pending or im~ minent against 40 of the 47 mills operated by the major producers. These mills . ac- count for 70 percent of domestic production, it said. A SPOKESMAN for RePublie declared "we believe that oor n!CU'd of spending at- tests to our concern with en- viromnental matters.'~ Over the past five years, the com- pany has spent $80.1 milllonoo air and water pollution, the· spokesman said. A spokesman for National Steel labeled the report "fUU of inaccuracies." Regarding the company's Weirton plant, he said that some months ego the company announced an improvement program which that yours may not ! 1 COMPlm OIAN•I COUNn COYllA.61 ........ , .... ... haC ........ MlnlMYlele DoMPolllt,•MI• IMdl-4...,ofLA • MONTH TO MONTH •INTAL Wll HO DEPOSIT 119UlllD ON APPIOYED CllDrT 4 ONLY 117.00 PU MO TOTAL COST , ..... ,. ,...., 5 NEW COMPACT UNIT llD ,,., ...... 1/.1} YOICI MISSAGI PAGllS AUO All AYAILAILI 7 FULL Flll MAINTINANC • OllANGE COUN7Y HADl07ELEPH0N[ SEHVICE '" 714 • IJS..lJDI cot SO, SANTA ,., SANTA ANA ram UtDll• a..eti, Mlulell 111 ""''· s.11 ci-ie, '" J •llbtr-. lfl ,..,.., ull ttll 4tW22J ~ Li will mate the mlll 1'one of the cleanest mllls in the country" by the time it is completed in De<:ember 1!174. TIIE !n'UDY also singled out Bethlehem Steel's Spar- ron l'<llnt, Md., Worts on Chesapeake Bay !or discliarg- lng "hundreds of pounds of arsenlc and cyanlde daily, over twice as much as any other steel mill stud.led.'' Bethlehem called the study "impressive,'' but said that much of its information was out of date. It cited, for ex- ample, a new waste water !reatment plant which began aperating in 1971 which it says was not mentioned in the data ORDER ' " YOURS TOD~Y! \ '"1itlful Stick-on LABELS nallnd • 5ryffsll • Efffdent -- • <) ~iii/-Order For YourJlr or • ;rlend· tiey b. us•d on env•fopes es return addr•sS le.bels. Al•o very he,. es :i~ntiflcatlon labels for m'e.rking pe"ontl 1 s such· as books, "record., -photos, etc. Lebals stick on 11111-an'd' ·may be usad for mtrlting home unned food ittms. All labels era printed Wffh· 1ty1istp.\'09u• type on fjn1 q111lity whit ... 1umm1d ptper. I -------------, PIN 111 tllll """"' ctlf tAI ~I wi. l\,lf te:i I P1111 """'"" 1..1w1 DI•., p.o, 1tr: 1161 I : C..t• ..... C•llf. ,,.,. I I I I I I I I L-~-~!.L~!~1~.r!~~----J ,, -' DAILY PILOT Jf OVER THE COUNTER NASO Lltllnp lor Monday, Moy 21, 1973 i ·' :I -! 11 ,II I \ • i •• I .11 .,, -· ,, ..... s C'11•Ull Ball Insurance Firm Studies Economy By JOHN CUNNlf••• "" ....... AAalnl NEW YORK -Sec.ause they must plan their in· vestments years ahead If lhey are 10 guarant.t..-c p o 11 c y payments years ahead, life ln- ti.nnce com~nles are forced to l.ook deeper lnlo the future than somt other companies. One of them, MelroPOlitan Life, hu juJt issued a fortcasl of the economy not just for next year bul for the ne~t five years, right through 1977. They foresee more good news than bad. But lhey also see what yoo probably knew Ibey would. INFLATION, THAT ls, may average about 3.5 percent a year ooce considered an una.~table rate, although lower than lhe 4.5 percent average of 1967-1972 . Unemployment Is expected to remain near 5 percent, which ls still considered unac- ceptable, although the number of jobs will rise sharply. The percentage will r e m a 1 n relatively high because there will be more job seekers. Regarding that other enemy of the pocketbook, taxes, the forecasters noted: "Unlike some previ ous periods, any tax cuts will pro- bably be negligible because or premu'u (or p u b I i c ex· pendltures in such areas as waste disposal, p u b 11 c trans por tat lo n , urban redevelopment and income maintenance.'' -IF YOU LEARN to overcome these problems, the forecasters suggest you might look Jorward to unprecedented prosperity, with increases in real income permitting greater expenditures f o r automobiles and homes and leisure. The projections on Incomes are likely to surprise even those Amerteans who, during the J960s, adjusted to steadily higher living standards. More adjustments are in store, because: -The proportion of family units earnings less t h a n '10,000, which shrunk from 66 percent in 1967 to 43 percent in J972, ii foreseen falling to only 26 percent by 1977. -Tbe proportfon of families earning incomes of more than JIS,000, wh.ich rose from 12 percent in 1967 to 29 percent by tm, will climb to nearly SO perctnt , or 29 million families by 1977. -PER CAPITA income, which was '3,800 last year, i! expected to rise to $5,250 in 19Tl. And famil y Income before ta.xe1, wh.ich .averaged '9.000 in 1967 and $12,400 ln tm, is foresetn risln.! to nearly $17,000. The disturbing element In these projections is that the figures like so mariy of those used by government and in- dustry, Include lnfialion as if Jt were something gained rather than lost. lt is added in when It shou ld be subtracted out. SUH, the Met forecasters estimate that pure has in g power should rise. Be(ore deducting for taxes, they say, incomes will be higher by about 8 percent a year. Sub- tract the 3.5 percent inflation, therefore, and you wiU have a better idea· of real increase in buying Power. BU'J' THE SUBTRACl10NS don't end there . Unfortunately for those who are accustomed to progre&& at a rate of two steps forward and o n e backward, the same situation prevails with taxes. The more you eam the higher your tax bracket. The forecasters failed to note, however1 that there Is an offsetting lax phenomenon in· valved with rising incomes. It is this: The higher the income the more likely that big deduc· lions, as for mortgage in· terest, are available. With more than 60 percent CJf Americans now living in lheir CJwn homes, compared wilh around 40 pereent SS years ago, a home is clearly a major goal of the newly af. nuent, and it is likely to con- tinue so. THE FORECASTERS estimate tha t the number or new housing units will average 2.25 million units a year1 whJch if attained wi!J m.elrc the period the most prolific ever for housing. Trade With Chi11ese Passes Expectations By LEROY POPE "'' IVIMlls Wrftlr NEW YORK -American trade with China already has substantially exceeded t h e most optimistic estimate! of a year ago and probably will ac- celerate, says David Bux· baum. Buxbaum. who speaks nuent Mandarin and Is an expert on Chinese history and law , heads May Lee industries. Inc., of New York. It represents more than a score of U.S. cor- porations in China nnd already has executed 8 trade con- tracts with the Chinese. the first year, he said. He .also criticized a statement by lhe author of the report that the United States: would not be willing to sell China large aircraft or other major capital goods. Buxbaum said Boeing Co's sale of aircraft to China alre.ady has upset that proph-- esy. Among Buxbaum 's most re- cent successes in China js Qb.. taining the right to sell there two farm animal feed sup- plements made by the Borden Co., Bospro. a protein·vitamin for dairy and beef cattle, and Fermacto, a simil ar "up- plement for pc>ultry and swine. AMONG llIS CLIENTS are such blue chip fi rms as Cham-SEOCO IS AN oil drilling pion lntemation_.I. M. Lowen-company and Vetco Offshore stein & Sons, Rctnnigton Arms makes offshore drilling equip- • 1 mC'nl. China ranks twelfth in Co.. Time, Inc .. Genera the world 1n est i mat c d Cable. Borden, B row n · Forman , Sedco International petroleum resources. and Vetco Offshore. Another new f\.1ay Lee cHcnt When a Family Needs a Friend. •• Sylvia Porter .. Do high food down on the costs c11use you to cut qu11ntity .and qu11lity of comp11ny dinners? Do you find yourself slighting your f11mily's nutrition11I needs in order to meet fin11nci11I needs? You c11n find help with these 11nd m11ny other problems of family fin11nces tn Sylvi11 Porter's column sever11l times weekly in the fin11nci11I p11ges of the DAILY PILOT. Yes, Sylvi11 Porter can be 11 friend of YOUR f11mily. Her n11tionally syndic11ted column, "Money's Worth," features im- port11nt ide11s which c11n relieve your concern over monetary m11tters. For ex- ample, she will tell you how to save a consider11ble percent11ge of your gro- cery doll11r despite spir11lin~ food costs. Let " Sylvi11. p11g es friend Porter of the drop ' tn on c11n you tonight. the visit from delivered you PILOT DAILY His deals range from large is Flue f\.1anufacturing Co. of purchases or fine Chinese rugs Se at t 1 e · ma k er o f to arrangements to export sophisticated eleclrical and whiskey to China and import electronic testing instruments. Chinese beer to the United &!Bini:: Anlerican goods to States. The rug s and the Chinese is not Buxbaum's chinoiscrie. both in furniture only activity. The Chinese still and bric-a-brac. arc his firm 's arr reluctanl lo buy oo credlt, bread a.nd butler so far. but he sard, so American traders -Buxbaum want s to Occome a "'ho v.·n11t to sell in China must major factor in big Sine>-arrange purchases or Chinese American trade something ~oods and hrlp the Chinese !Jke Ara Ozte1nars Sarra Corp. governnlCtl! effccl Utird nation is in U.S.-Sovicl trade. 1 liS dc11ls to fa<.·i!Uale trade and con\pany was the f i r s t fln;:111cing. American firm lo sign dirl.'Ct Il e s;Ud the Chinese hnvc tr3da eontracts with Chin@. -.m<1n.v .,,things tcr s£•LI tis. Flu Aftlr the 1972 " lhtiW' l"n-Sino-pig!;kin And pig bristles are American relations. two £'Xamples. The pigskin makes attracti\•e luggage, and lhe bristles of the Chinese pig ."ire superior to any olhers for making fine bn.ishes r 0 r painters. IN A 1\£CENT article. Bux- baum ridiculed pre<i1C'tions in ·a 1971 report rira\Wll for the American Social Science Rese~rch Council that U.S .. Chinese trade could hardl y ex- ceed $300 million b}' 1980. II has su rpassed $350 million in right to your home . You will get your mon ey's worlh from Sylvia Porter's col- umn and 1111 the other speci11I fe11~'ures in the fin11nci11I p11ges of the SPECTRUM TRADING 15 TRADES "Clll1\lf:SE TEXTJJ .. ES are certain to find growing favor in the U.S. market So will many food speclal tles and they have large. supplies of Im· portant mineral ores that we need.'' he said. ti f'r.tl11 lllK• ).l .. f) In !'Nl•Ool< •1---~·······~ .,, rrM1111. ~·"~ ''""""' ,,,llld,.,, 11 .. II"_,.. ~, on. ,_.., & H•r· i..-c;..Aut ... ,.. tf "T1!1 ComlMlll!y , ... ,... Tt .. lftt G111t11." flor tllttl lflf*""'Pftll Clll CLAYTON BROKERAGE CO. COMMODITY SPECIAUSTS • PRIVATt TRUST FUNDS AVAii.ABLE f0A AUL EIT A Tl: LOAMI lit 6. 2fld TRUST Of:EDe f l,IOO To 12&1,000 ....!JP TO 90%,L~NS ON 1 nl1$T DElO C0UAT£RAI. llft'WOftT IOUtn' IU!lloa N.-.poft c.,...., t:!'O N""'6rt Ceftcer °""" H--.ort h-cll, Calif. (Tl-4} ~ ' -DAILY PILOT THE ONE THAT MEANS BUSINESS • I "' N" N• "' N' N• N" •• N" "' "' No " "' "" "' "' "'· No N• "' "' No .. N "' NO N N N ~' "' NI; N,. ' N No NO NO N w NO N ~1 NO NO No No NO '" N" N, N ~~ N, "' N• N "" No NO N• N "' .. ., 1973 s Monday's Closing Prices-Wmplete New York Stock Exchange List Marl{et Suffers Another Beating NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market pnces, bu!· feted hard recently by Watergate and mternational and domestic cconorn1c womes, took another beat· ing Monday Analysts traced the decl1ne to a tanste of wor· r1es 1nclud1ng present and fu ture unplicauons of the Warergate case cont1nu1ng pressure on the dol· Jar 1n 1nternat1onal money markets, and unhap- piness and concern over inflation 1 hi'.! market is under a great psychological strain ' said Ne wton Z1nder at E F Hutton & Co •You ve got Watergate and the eronom1c womes, and there s nothing to offset them nght now 11 Co1nplete Closing Prices-American Stocli Exchange List S1f1t Net PE \1111~1 HIOI\ Low LaSI CrlQ DAILY PILOT . • ' '. I I • • / / 22 JLY PlLOT , lll'W1ay, MQ 22. 1973 ' ~', •. • ·"'°·Sl4 AIAut11UbMin • • • • • • • ' 950 • 990 ._..·a Marn1 ~ 900 • 9M lr1.,1nc11t . , , , •..• 700 • 799 The Biggest Marketplace on the· Orqe , ...... ..._,..s,m ... !1S·M9 DAILY PILOT C FIED 'ADS ~ .•••. , •.•. 51S-s.49 ""'ond .......... • •• ISO· "9 .... btol9 Gi.Nd. • • . . 150 • 199 financ.iol • • • • • • • • • 200 • 299 ~ '°' Sale • • • • • ' 100 -124 lme & fol.n:I • • • • • • ' S50 -574 _,_,..,._ ' •. ' ..• ooo .... You Can Sell It, Find It , Tracie It With a Want Ad (642-5678) One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval ....i .....•..... JOO-m Schooh onc1 1Mirue:1ion • • • s1s · m -ond ........ ' .600· ... "8nlpoftrotian. • • • • • • • 9lS -949 General °A<l4t£M-SMitl- ~ AllDASSOCIATIS REALTORS 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR.CALIF. 644-7270 e BUI LDER'S OELIGHT Ready and waiting for second unit on this large corner lot. 2-bedroom house, ca~pets, drapes, fenced yard, in Newport Heigh~ . . . . . . . . . . .. $33, VIEW-VIEW-VIEW Watch the boats by day and harbor lights by night from your living room. The ULTI- MA'fE in FEE ownership, luxury on-the-- water Jiving. 2 Bed.rooms. 2 bath condo in prestigious CHANNEL REEF a_rea. Pool, se-- curity guard, boat slip-available. CALL FOR appointment, $95,000. General General EASTSIOE 2 BEDROOM-$27,000 A-RARE-FINO , especially with features like these -beam ceilings thruout, massive stone fireplace, large bedrooms, beautiful bath & a large fenced yard complete with fruit trees. Owner moving to Oregon and MUST sell. Open this week end, Call us for details. MESA VERDE-HOT ITEM JUST LISTED, neat, freshly pa inted 4 & family on a quiet street -Huge enclosed, pooltable size lanai, no grass to cut only plants & shrubs to trim. First time on market and owner needs quick sale. Offered at $38,950 . ~•.P-HERITAGE • • REALTORS 546-5880 Open Eves. General IVAN WELLS -BAYCREST Lots of charm in this 4 bdrm., formaJ din- ing rm. J1ome. Bright farn. rm. overlooking pool. 3\'z Ba. Courtyard entry. $87,500. Va- cant. Mary Lou Marion BAYFRONT -FEE Spectacular view main bay & mountains, sandy beach -pier. Garden atmosphere. West Bay Ave. near N.H. Yacht Club. $197,- 500. Contact Bill Bents BUY OF THE WEEK EASTBLUFF 4 Bdrms. & den. Formal din· ing w/view o( gardens. 3 Full baths, Xlnt lo- cation. $67,500. Don't delay -call now! Paul Quick 5 BE DROOM HOME ' MagniJ-ice~~nivers!tY P.ark horn~ has absolutelJl'l!very' desrrable feature·"al!· ON. 'ONE LEVEL . , . just listed. $69,00o. Call "Chuck" Le\vis TALK OF TH E TOWN All the beauty of perfection. 3 Bdrm. Lusk ll.V.: lovely. fJ&rd~n & stunning inside. 1532 KEEL. Terr1f1c pr1ce $88,800. Jim Muller LAGUNA CONDOM INIUM PROPERTY Ocean views -pri1ne No. Laguna Ioc. at Boat Canyon. Develop 2.>-27 condos or apts. Present income $1500·$2000 mo. $265,000. Call George Grupe 644-2430 --Coldwell,Banker ~ IJU700 550 NEWPORT CENTE R DR., N.B. SUPPLY LIMITED. DEMAND GREAT! Twt1 tllr11 & lllf WrN••· 1ram$65,495 Froro Pacific Cout Hlatnny, ap Suptrtor A"nt.11 to Tlcond1ro11, t rid dlrtctlJ to #12 Robon caurt T-(714) 14Ulll S.ln Offla; epll dlllJ 10 ..... to IUllML Bulkler't Closeout w ..... ·-,., ww.i;••' PICTURESQUE SETTING $23,950. 3 b e d r o o m home on a very large lot. Beautiful mature shade trees. Fenced yard. Plastered walls. Picture windows. Large yard. Move-in condition 540-1720 J BDRM VERY IDEAL $30,500. Recently redec- orated. N e w plush carpeting. Lovely pic- turesque yard. 2 baths . Formal dining room. Built-ins. Fi r e place. Rear living room. Two patios. 540-1720 2955 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 540-1720 Gener ii General JlnJa .!Jdfe PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT LINDA ISLE WATERFRONT Custom 4 bdrm., 5 bath home with view of main channel. Soft colors, rich wood panel- ing & 3 frplcs., give a warm intimate feel- ,.ing. Waterfront mstr. suite has dbl. bath, sitting area, view deck .......... $295,000. For Complete Information On All Homes & Lots, Ple1se Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 MACNAB IRVINE A Ul'oll()lt tl()MI: SPLIT LEVEL ON SUMBA. A Unique home on a Unique cul-de-sac. Wow! It has class! A spacious kitchen overlooking a family-game room big enough for a pool table and already featuring a wall to wall fireplace. You should see the patie>-and the four bedrooms-and the formal dining roon1 -and the invest- ment. $61,500. UNlfjlUE HOMES Of MESA VERDE, 546·5990 A lb tl119 of John leyMNi CORBIN-MARTIN SPANISH STYLE EXEC. HOME Newport OUR 24TH YEAR Offering Service Only Experience Can Provi de EASTSIDE COSTA MESA Six 1 . bdrm. furnished units; one of the sharpest bits of brchitecture in the area. Al- ways rented! Located 2220 Elden Ave. Please drive by & call us for app't. $95,000 TW0-2 BDRM. HOUSES ... plus two l -bdrn1. units, over 2, 2-car garages. Located ocean side of hwy. on two lull sized R-2 lots. Lovely tree shaded court· yard. $126,500 ~.-HERITAGE ·'·. REALTORS General =-----SOMETHING SPECIAL IN COLLEGE PARK * A sparkling clean well main- tained 3 bedroom, 2 bath home with formal dining, family room, pool sized yard and inside laundry on a lovely tree lined low traf- fic :street. 675-6679. ONLY $33,950 Nigel Bailey & Assoc. REALTOR General ULTRA DELUXE HOME OCEAN VIEW 3 Jx.droom, 2 story home in Corona de! Mar, y,•ilh ocean vie1v. Vacant and brand new. P.iany expensive features, li ving room has vaulted ceiling • exposed bean1s. Fireplace . walls of glass . und balcony. All l'iectric built-in kitchen. Quality w/w carpets throughOut. Truly a great home al SU0,000. Call 673-8550. OPEN TIL ~ • rrs FUN ro BE NICEI THE REAL ESTATERS ~ WHY PAY HIGH INTEREST? \Ve haveJ5 homes available - ranging ln price from $22,950 to S40.000 1vith ex- isting loans that can be assumed 1\'ilh no quallfying and interest rates as low as 4\:r'Jr! Better chC'Ck on some of these. C WALl\[H & LH $490. Moves You Jn Seller pays an costs -live rent free 'ti! elose-of-cscro\\' tn this attractive 3 BR. all adult comnlunlty. Sale price inc all elec kit. custm drps, new shag crptg, olymplc size swimming pool, sauna & jacuzzt Fantastic value $23,500. T\VO-bedrooms from $21,000. Red tile root over spacious 1900 sq 'ft, 'J yrs new 3 Bed- rn1 home w/no n1aintenancc yard, huge living rm w/ ________ ..., ________ ''I "tloor·lo-cciling fireplace, for-It ' dla ge Re~I E st~te ·4471 ( :"::) 546-llOJ . -. . ....#i""!W NEW TRIPLEXES IN COSTA MJ!SA 3 Bdrm., 18.4 Bath 2 Bdrm .. 1~ Bath 1 Bdrm., % Bath 10% DOWN Orenge County Apartment RHltors 547-4791 ADULT DELUXE CONDO LOOK TO THE FUTURE Lovely 3BR Bluff home. Garage stressed for upper story & ocean view. Located on quiet cul . de · sac. $40,950. Lois Egan fl;H-~00. (R2ll , HARBOR VIEW -SOMERSET 5BR. 3 bath in lovely neighborhood. Form· al DR, large FR \v/brick fireplace & wet bar adjoins li~ht & airy kitchen. Patio & fenced ·yard w/room for pool & play. $79,750, Bob Owens 642-8235. (R20 ) TWO CONTIGUOUS BAYFRONT LOTS A U>tal of 54'8" on the main bay-pier & slip. About 10 min. by boat from the open sea. Tom Queen 644-&200. (R32J (Irvine J Mocnab-1rv1 ....... ,c..n •• ny J In FounlAln Vt1lley~ flnrst ron1munlty -near new City llnll. Model unit, gas BBQ with huge bonus (hobby) room over Is~ double gArflle. Only 1u1klng $30,5()(). \\'/\LKER &. LEE Jkaltors, t OI Do'nr Dt lve 142-1235 Scl6-0022. 18" M•c.Arthur f.f'·t200 Any day la lhe BEST DAY to d ,,.., Newport Be1ch,CllllCN"nl• t 2t&S run an Ad! Don't e...., .•. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .call today 64l-5678. _ mal din rm. family rm, kiteh, brand nMv blls & cup. boards galore. Close to heach, next to golf coursr. $43,!iOO, CAU. today 645-72'lt ~.-...;..-''' VJllU"' ~21 173.1 Wcstcli!f Dr., N.l!:__ HOME PLUS INCOME PLUS This Costa Mesa house with A bcautHul IO\Vnlt0use In n beamed reil~11 Md huge WHY PAY HIGH INTEREST? VACANT LAND "''"k ontt\n~ for only · al \Ve have 15 homes available. ,~ -.9 500 * back yard Is an Ide starter ran~ing: In iirlcc from Cfh.y :\ bedroom home and a * $ • home. Note the r HA S22,950 lo S<I0,000 with rx· small reillal or mother-in· 3 BR, l"'-' U/\. 2 Story with as:"lumable loan + R2 :ron-1.~tlng lofln!I lhat ean be ~aw uni! 1n th<' rear. Lot sun porch, near rre C'l'Jllcr ini::-. Priced at $25,StXl. For a."!umcd with no qunlllylng !llze \JI 100x100 on fl.fBJn & pool. Ohle gar., freeway details call 646-7171 · nnd lnten!!ll rates as low as Street to new (.'tvlc Center. Close! To 8ee just call OPEN TIL fl • rT'S FVN TO 8£ MCI/ 4 ~%! Hett er check on aomc Total prlee $..11,750. Call for 963·5Glt. 1 ~ ~ (lf these. m°"' infonnalm. 8'2-25.15. ~ ~ ~o"'11'"0 • '" '"" 10 BE"~"~ .,_,.,. im. h ',:,. l'roOI is attain«! wh.;, 1 Reo~' l'ltolcliff D:;;mi . ~ 17117 lfooktuolt -you sell throua:h rmill"'gtl· Ooen Iii 9 PM fountain Val~ Co. 92708 Ung Ottlly Pilot Cl&ssl!led The .. Yellow Pa&"f" of Sell !die Items . • . 6«2-56i8 •n!!!!4!!!!96l!!!!-!!56!!!!..,!!!!!!!!!!!! Ads.. 642-a678 clanlHed, ... 64i-5678. W-\~l<ER & LEE • '• TundJJ, M•)' 22. 1973 DAllY PILOT May 20-26 REALTOR ® [ HoulesforSAle ]~ [ _ ...... ]~[ _,,, .... I~ I _ ...... l~r _,,, .... I~ [ I~ I rL--_ .. ,_,, .. ,. __ J~ Classif;ed INDEX Ad\'ert1s1ng General General PAINT & SAVE DON'T LOOK AT WESTSlDC 3 Bodmom >'reo-THIS HOME cJon1 llunu' on 1111).(l' tr{'(' Unless you're ready to Jose s~u_d~._'\l lut · net>tls l1utc-your heart. It "·UJ f!il! Jove [~ and po.int. Illnc>ss at first sight ~·hen ~·e show forces SUJC' only You this super clean t11.·o $23,950 slOl'y ~auty. Impressive HORSES!! . , . allO\\('(J on llus 1~ :1r~ ranch wil h la1~c 1·ustrnn hon1l', fl'ni:erl t·orral PLUS a :! bt.•droon1 n·ntal at $200.1 1nu. Cus1on1 hon10• is va. cant . quick fJO:.!>CS::.io11. \\'Ill exchange [or liay-sidt• du· JJlex. $65,000. VACANT & READY r1·01u court yard, entertain- l'l'!l back yard, huge family dini ng art's, and 3 bedrooms tlown 1vith the besi party ioom 1n lmvn up. Yes it has a \.\'Cl bar, bar stools, and h bath 11lus cxira goodies that aren't usual\y possible for only $36,900! ! ! 847-6010. OPEN1fL9 • lf'SFLJNTO,BENIC£1 ~1 ~J THE REAL ESTATERS 2810 PORTOLA 01vncr anxiou!-.~ Hedl'(·o1·1:1tcd1LovC>ly_ 4 Bdrm. \\'i\h dining 3 l>cdrn1 & fan1il)' 1·n1 honic•· 1-m., in desirable .l\ies.a dcl on·hugt' t'Orr11•r 1,11 _ roo)n1 for l\lar. 2 Barhs, hit-ins, llE'\\"lY OOat or 11·a1h·1·. J\ing:-siz.e ~·11 n1ed in1rr. Nice earp. & l'OVC"l't'tl rialio & Jlrlva1C> urapes. F.lec. garagl' door :yard. Quick possrssion. Ut\\' o~nl'r. h1any other extras. lo J>r1ced to sell for $38,000 < 'vn. CULVERDALE $27,9 50. Bcsl buy in an area or lol'ely liumt's. Conv. loca1 ion. 5µacious 3 BR. & family r rn., bll-ins, carp. & drapes. l'\lrl• back yard for "Victory Garden" or pool. Offered fc.or $37 ,500 MORGAN REAL TY 67 l-6642 675-6459 ARTIST RETREAT Coron• del Mar Corona del Mar ----LUSK HOMES Exciting· four bedroom home wit.J:i beautiful landscaping and treinendous view. Only $89,500. J,ike new 5 bedroom available for sale or lease-large backyard with great pool and patio potential. Good quality carpets and drapes. Fee land and only $110,000. Big beautiful sLx bedroom in Spyglass. A tremendous view and very lovely landscarr ing. Fee--0nly ~135,000. Sharp four bedroom, l \VO story \Vith breath· taking vie\v and sparkling pool. Wonderful loc ation-Fee. Only $129,000. CALL 675-7225 Fountain Valley F.V. !ST OFFERING Plent y of roon1 for the kids 10 play around this snug 11.ell bl1 family hon~. Sparkling C"lean, forced air heat, 4 BR, Modern Sqllal'e plan. 60xOO rear yard w/lrg patio. Seller will help wHh the closing cost. for Pcrfor1niUle(' 963-5621 HY Owner, 3 BR. 2 BA, lgc finished bonus rm, antlqlJ(' g:\ass entry. wall paPf'r, 5~4 GI loan, $35,900, aft 2 pin 839-7895 Huntington Beach Huntington Beach PONDOROSA \, h'l1lc to btoach . tluge yard. l patios, formal dining, SIS. yard !hick shag, magnif1- cl'n\ Jdscpg. Onr--0f.a-k1nd. 10'~ dol\·n . only $34.900. CALL 961i-4456. La CUESTA- El CAJON Huntington 8Nch Huntington Beach FRANCISCAN $390. l+O~UI !~I ~•tr FOUNTAINS "" ,. ..,. •. ,. .11\U\~'j ~!"l 1:0, MOG~L•I >' • lh1 I! Html\ M~'"•t N~h\C• l'or l•lf , '·'I '" ' jl;\V' a~I ulh1·r !'1•-.1 ... l'tl~;l\I ... l.llJ .. "" ·:· 1~. ••I• BY THE SEA $'!'.r.i, l)('I' '111' i11,• t.''' · -r:u e. .• •·n I' _,.,Y •, '. •) l 'fU \-' I I I Co m•,tOo y LO'• C Y~h r.lost luxurious hon1t•s 111 ~•k · · uu 1" 1111 ~ l'111 '" ,,.n""'"' , PooL • .-1, 1.- ltl'tX\ • l\\.'O srory, I I~\-::r1n ~I I.\, ;ill ~·11•1·1 hl\1.1 ,,,11~,11 . ,,,,_ j~• ·~-r 1o , .... 1 Ill ,, f:/(l 11/1. •'l'Jll'-,\ .tir• DuD<•••U.,11 • •• ' l'OOlllS, ·' m.1 IS, Jlt'O { !M:Pl,;. <! 'l'itt 11!1r· ... dl'll •111 ~ y j'.... Ho •• 10 br "'11•1.Q I. I s prinkll'l'S, 11·111C'r suftt'lll'r, ;1~1 \\'u•ll l.i-.l ~ l ' dt 1 com~ l'rop••tv :"" 1ll'{'Ol'alo1· drnix•s, up~ratlt•d ~r0~~11;~;1 1:~0ii•••Y 1 th1·uout. Too nu1ny xl rns to ll ,o.·~b·•• t<om.,fro1I•• ''·"•' r list. lkk11v 111 11 r kt' ! .tt I MJu.·• ·~ 'le1•r1. Re•0'1 1 ' 5 Bedroon1s, formal dining, 150~ C\Ll Sl'l 1-1·1 r ,62 ,.71 ( ~ .. 546 8103 01 '' ~ Cn Prnp••ly : 'u_, ~, .. ,.,._ Customized ,;,,,.,. I • ~-J 0 --.... J • OUI "' Sl,tt Prbpf•IV ' 1~ '" -,.. 54• -0-15.'I I R•· <II~•. P•rm,, (lrqvr• thruouL 3 Car gar, rorner ::> • Ji.· 1 Cot.<tt E•clunq~ 'J lot, park-like S<'t!ing. Gov't WE PROMISE YOU Pl!RCllASE OR I YR LF:i\S!•: 1.~··1 £ 1 '• w~n:,d \ill transf<.'r. 6 ttionths ne11·~ A ROSE GARDEN 1·l·b1·, 2~~ b<i, :~ c:\1• ~<Ir •. :: CALL 968-4456. l''Oll BONUS! Plush S & S .-.tol'y, Nr:. B1•a•·~1. ,,,•1.11!-. ! J[ • l ESTATE SOL VISTA• l . JS' 'I'' ,. f'RJl !}GR-(llJ.,.f) :tfl lp111 flllilllClill a I elCi·tr11·. x vi p:1 10, 1 ---- SALE NO DOWN GI 11 lnq;:c 11u11ily, lds...·pi.: is Sll·I LITTLE RAN CHO ~----- • purb. Close to eollcgc & I 011 thls 111.rg\' J11l 11•n•·1I 1.11· ' ' o"'""''" v Sweeping staircase 1vinds lo APPROX. 1/3 ACRE li1oodway shopping. S2000. 111111:-1 lhl'T'(' s11s ;1 1'UI•' !1ll!t• 1 , 1,,, .. ~··~;:O,tu•·•tv mezzanine halco11y! I-luge Country living in IJ1C' city. 4 below n1kt at only $37.500. :.? BH hott~C'. ,\n\1Hl•' •'iP1 1 • .t "'"' Wa11it0 adult party room on second ~lroonis, huge Jiving & CALL 842-t'151 01· 5·15·015.'I, 11u11lHy. !'ip1'l'11l.11u1·-. <(1· ... 11~11 i.,0 .~~ !Z~;~~n floor, dbl doored l'ntry ro family. Bt'st H.B. )()('.load-ATIENTION rr1 ·..oo M •• tq ·~Cl. Trvll D•' masrer suilc-, very formal c-d w/frui! close 10 Broad· -· f;ir PEl~rn 1 \1.\:"\('1·. dining, sunken living room. \l'a.Y shopping. Only UJ,900., YOUNG sr;-:(.~,'~--- :• t I , ' ' ' .. Renl~ls fircsidl'.' conversation pit, CALL 968-4456. I TIVES I · banquet size l"dcilitics in EXECU l -';v;';";:;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;. -~c:.;.:..;..;c:.:;; ______ 1 prof kitchen. Gii::antic danC<' , Br-auriful GREr::NBH.001" • -.area in HUGE FIESTA G A h l I YOU'VE Country Kitchen Looking for a 3 bcdnx>nl i;:astsidc hon1e \v1th an alley and large yard? Call us to- day, 1ve have it. $32,950. e CALL ANYTIME e w.-me or Eve. 646-4543 lachenmyer Realtor SEASHORE COTIAGE ONLY $1300 DOWN Clean & sharp. 2 & den or :I bflrn1s, 1 1~ bath. Seller will pay $1,000 of buyers closi~ costs. Hurry! $26.000. Call 0 WA L KEH & LEE RANAD I rcr 1'\l' on "'''"' ,,,r,.,111t11 ROOM. maid's 01' g:ut'SlS quiet cul·dC>·SRC hal'k!ll~ tn JAL WAYS WANTE O .. ' +-1oule1 11ntu r11. quarters on fu·st floor. All . l . 1 . l l , , · H~u·.•1 •u•·• o..-.. ~1urn dt'COtator extras installed. old eu~.i yptus rer-s. Ill;• I ,\ hu~r 1nai;tcr bdrm 1\1111 \ con<111m1n1tim• ,,.,.. Exec takes ne11.• position and fan1ily 11.•ilh \\"l"I bar 11lL1 !> fiiTpluc(' an•I vit,1 or pad,. con11am .... ,.m1 "'·'""' 1nany morC' fine fl •tilUrl'S. Dritnialil' h\"<~stut"' .L(\.i.;s· I c,• •• •~a,.,,'',','·,,•,•,.1111111r11. must have fast sale! BKR " ,. 96255U CALL 842-t·l51 or 5·l5·0·15S. 1\·all~'1l 1•1\h'y. Fonnal d1u1ng-\ 111wnrio11M ullfuHt. -. ' I""'"'""'""'""'""'"""""'""'""""" l'UOlll, [trc·plaef' 1n h\"hlA . Tcl ... -~ou••· llll"n. or u~turn. . l" l I Du~1e,•1 "'"'· . S • I N morn \\'Ith patio at ,t01 n 11g DllP•~"' untij•~. , A · Very peCIG BARGAI 1-·;unlly roon1 .Jci1eh~·n corn-I ~~ilt\''; '"'"·or .. ~1u1n, ',',.',.I. Home hined, Sf'l\'ltlg-uri~ily \'Cllllll, Apl~· u··'i .. ~n. 4 BR + 30• den + 111·0 l"Hr ~ar;iJ:!''· Sur1'0undl'rl ·1.i.pi.., /urn. ar wnlurn. !1~1 On A Very Special hy ll<.trk :-.tiorr sl 1.11I lu llaam1 ~~-. • . .. , .1 _ J Raam & ea,rd " , Street D' + 40 ft pool [)\)()ls, tl'tltliS, l>j,...:l' l!al ~. tlo ttls. Ma1011 H" TERRIFIC 'MU-LEVEL $43,50.0. Cute l"OLY 2 BH, tucked a'vay 1111 a quil'I str<:'et on Balboa •-ii_;;;-ii_;;;-;;;;;_;;_;;;;;_;;;_ii_;;;_ii_;;;o-A E , in. • l'1(", Call no11". •1sk a1Ji1t1l 1111• Gu~ 1 Hom" •111 R'al\0 ,.,-"'"9491 *SIMPLY LvV L'\ * B h ............................. ':'I 1 .. ,"' Su•nmar Rtnl~ll •10 ~ 3BD, 2BA. Formal dining eac .,, hdrni. Yule at li.I,.)(~,. V•< ;,,on Renl•l~ •II' Open eves. 50 x 155 lot. Alley l'ntrance, $27,950 e • V'15"1on-P.~"'·"' to sn~r' '"'' 1,t•ninsula. min a cu I a t ~ DEVELOPERS ! t'{)ndltion. Step s a \!.Of CRES ti h Buy FROM Gov'T 1;·1~9111 •a~ R.,.,. ·'"I T\VO A pnrking for Hit rec ve . or . 0111c, .,,11•1 .,~ 111ode111 kitchen 11.>ith liull1-200 ACRES CLOSE TQ A quali ly Lyons buill hontt' ins. 1-·orn1ica splash hoards. IDYLLWlLD, waler ,..,ell and 1vith hard11'ood I Io u 1· s, 2 patios. Outstanding bright tank. Four types of trcPs. located less than one niih.• to livin~ 1oon1 ,vith fireplace. Price $4200. per acre . open beach. 4 f3 !:: O RO O h1 , Asking S:JS.500. EZ terms. 10 oUers. Large open & flat FAMILY R00:\1. FOR;\1AL Call 673--85.50. areas. $450,000. 675-4060. ~ ~~~~:!oo~'.·Z~ ~'t s1!J~~~~~n st, i·1un1.~~~4 J~:tB~~~~~~J~~;rn~:! ~~ow~1s~~;~,e~~1argrs • 1011 ~red h•111 1 f;~tf~!:!J:~:~::~.,, . ., ~~jll of C-2 zo~ -land . at, OWNER df'spcralc. Brick & Moclel'n conveniences. -t Con1ing up soon. . . J Newp::>rt 8. $5. sq. ft. tlcar 11.•rought-iron accents. 4 queen bdrm's. Hugr-panclf'rl VACANT 1. 2. 3 nnd 4 hdrnl RF".ALTY c 1 -------, of ~wnto~~ CM:. -an ~x-lxlrms .. 2 baths. Dining rm, fam. rn1 . '''i!h rnan1n1oth house and condos. L<:t 011r I I I[*']' DJN!NC ARJ.:A. <I II a in I OPEN11L 9 . rrs FUN ra BE ~ICE• PETE BARRETI llrick pa!io anJ bt>au1 iful [ ; ~ l•••• ' Qu1n•nn" S•.....,1al I •··•· f u ,,,,. l'·'' k C1•nt11, lr\·111~· Announc,men I c...,.v .,,,.u ,,.... ·built-ins. Boat access. ireplace. ovcr..,.,l'\s an-specialisls save you Lillll' You get free -6 Slo~ -.6 Patio. }>'orccd-air heat. brk tastic 40' pool. Dclux<' and nloncy. Cull An,vt1n 11". jJ:J.7"l(Jtl ~ I ~------~ Offices & 8 Houses. Min. bid $33 000 l{46....0604 buillin kitchen. Bar. F'ull GINNY lt10RRISON Olfit.·1' l!Uurs '~ ,\l\1 to «i p.,i Arraurc•m~ll s~ S405<Xl0. cash -all 9 ' ' . size dining rm., n j e c C. HI ft! T11enh1/I" Mtmnrium S•'. par~ls. Brochure at 1871 OWNER leaving area. Large carpets, boat access wilh *** ·REALTORS· MODEL HOME Leqal N~llc•• s11 Harbor Bl., Charles Quin-rear yrd. _!Avel~ qccor. 4 separate storage, nf'ar !hr-./(IM** lSffi Meu • Bl' 0\\':"\ER • tard Re a 1 tor exclusive bdrms, F am 1 l Y rm. Jlt *Verde Dr. East, landscaping. 1\fovc ITI and ~' 'r __ -__ R_E_A_L_To~_R_-__ slar! living in this pride-0[-642·5200 01vnership ho n1 I' . EX- ISTING 51:', LOA:-/ r-un lX'1 ::=-=:;:::::;;;=;;::::: assunicd CALL for;. dc1a1ls. Jerry Wolf co: rs WALLACE REALTORS Open Evenings • 926-4454 • LAST YEAR'S PRICES! LA CUESTA VERDI:: 110:1.IES in L;igun11 Hills has 2 ho111P::. back on the n1arket bccausr- o( credit rcjcelions. Both 2271 Placentia Apt. B Costa Mesa \'ou are 111~ \vinner <»f Qnr-free pass Gooil for a ,1·hole carload to any of 1hc PACIFIC THEATRES {Subjt>et to small service ehatge at theatre l. Plrase caJJ 00..5678 ext. 314 to claim your ticket. (North l"nu ntv toll.free number is ~10.12'.lOI. WATERFRONT DUPLEX- $170,000 Back Bay ag•n't. 642-2991 ' l_irepla_ce. Dining rm, built-beach. E·Z terms. NO GThi-'' BH. 3 BA + bontts 1111, ci--------11, I --,--~-::-:-~~-'.-"'~·'.'.'.:$~2;;5~0:""~RE=~Nf=--ins. Nicely lp.ndscaped. brk MICKS. IT'S FOR REAL~ ~ .. -;;.'";/ Co~~':....:,sa. parqUC"I Hrs, shag "rp1 , 1-ov Persorltl• BY O\VNER, 3 br. frplc, $3S,950. 842-66.'ll. Call early 962-5585 patio. autos pr i rt k I l' r s .. t.-overed patio, new kilchcn, S !Open Evenings I S."17.000. 1'1 Hll'l1';1l:. only. ' I 64fJ..-OHi6 or 640--02'17. 1TILL YOUR 750 • i SJS-:l616 11. .. ,e 1r1r~po111..... .n1 Balboa Peninsul• 3 Bedrooms ineluding guest $ •. • B~OAUMOUR • ~:~;·0:1 i1~<b• ~?~ racilHy, cozy den. Gourmel ••• moves you in, seller l'URTLEftUCK T1a .. e1 , i•o TRIPLEX 3 & '2 BR..$125,000 kitchen. Banquet dining. pays all coslS. $23,000. ~· SUPER SHARP 2 STORY, 4 br, sl'P· din nn, DUPLEX ............ $57,000 Used brick fireplace. Rug-3 BR 2 BA, all elect blt1n ram rrn, rriilt·, :1 ba, :~cat· I If ~l MARSI-IALL Realty 675-4Ei00 ged beams. Huge rumpus R/O, rcfrig, FA ht. \V/w ----------CALIFORNIA CLASSIC gai·. nr. S4,.hool.~. p.1rk~ & 1 lost and found ~ BAY Front duplex. Pri. room. Dance P avilion. crpts & drps, en.cl cov'd WALK TO BEACH Thick shag und custom 1,0 0 1s. J.ndsepd·s.>kll·s. _ . beach, Pier priv., $198,500. SPARKLING POOL. Agcn! patio, walk lo ma1or shop-drHf>CS. Less than 1 yr old. Sho11•n by upfJll l. SJ9,C~11J. I ~-------I · 1 Evc-o>•c a l * \Varm and friendlv 3 BR , >>• Offer. -O\vn~r 673-8786. 6~5-0303. ping ccn er. 'J Cl . 0 -J de<."Oraror w11llpa])l'l'S, :{-bed-.'(lJ-2'.l~fi. ,.., • .,,ll !I rr~ <ds> ~~-~-:-=,-c----1"'-'i-i';'C':=-::c:-;;;:c;o:=-1 Hies for FHA assun1pllon. 2~!: BA home, I al"" -S-MOG_F_R-EE-IRV-INE I Lot • U!I Corona dr>I Me r -H6neymoon Cottage Payments less than rent. * PanelC>d & Solari·1n floored , roorns 2 baths, orn1 utn· Sl.250 do"'"· llugc rumpus I' fan1ily rn1. ' ing & real parly patio. Adult 1n1n11u·ul :.i1c 2 e1t !11\1n!uK1~1· ~ DUPLEX $66,500 roon1 \V/irplc. Nice yard * Builrins, Jorced-air heal, occ ·Assume 6~4',~· CI loan. in \\'alnu! Squan•, ;111· 1·1Ji.I.. I ~ I SOUTH OF HWY. Wllh fruit I recs, llagstonc * ··pl'icle . of -o";nership" Only $34.500. CALL 893-SJ.33. 2 BA. $29,00t.'J. HPd c.u·pcl Instruction . ,........ I On prime "wider" street in patio. All this + valuable 962·4471 ( =::::) 546.Sl 03 neighborhood ELEGANT H.eahors. s:i:~:t-.'lill __ _ "Quiet neighOOrhood ." 2 R3 lot, for only $25,000. *A ·Boat gate if desired COURTYARD UN IVERSITY P.1rl\ -:: Bil "'11a11.11 a. 1~s!•11dla111 , 'TJ BR., 1 ba. & 1-BR., 1 ba.; "'iiiii0ii0Biiik':.i536-iii255iii;liiO"""""i .$23,500 FULL PRICE * SJ.8.950. Asking price ENTRANCE & ,\triurn. l::.x11·a ~;1rd , .ow111(•1 !><I~ l·sty. Picturesque setting. • Call 1101\• to hear all its Comn1. prh·l 1~1·1n('ip:tl;;. have a cozy k1tehrn and Jneludcs h\'O boat docks and family rooni plus 3 liR's & arl1acent vacanl lot for ad- 2 BA. One has a fireplace. d111onal building • or for QuiC"k possession, CXl'l'lll'nl just plain privacy. Just convenuonal financinR avail. lister!. Quality constructed & 11.·ell * JUST LISTED * 3 BED RM, 2 car gar, <."Orncr ooc1· 3 Patios, fireplace, t•xlr11 nice only. By 01\ rll'I". :,~2-~JO:l.1 niaintaincd. Open beam lot near schools and shop-g I ies.. It . landscaping. Close to Hunt. 2 BR. borne on Eastside ping. Submil your terms. arwin rea Y inc. Harbor. Health forces sale . -By 01vner 3 BR, 2 BA, pool ccils .. heavy shake r o or' Zoned professional CALL . 9684405 (24 hrs) pniy $30,500. CALL 893-8533. & 11a1·k priv. 21 2 Yrs old. dbl. closed garage. Call for $2'7.500 846-l3Sl or 847.8531 S.15,500 * 552-!1'17•1 [ ServicH and R•!Nir• I~ able. $31 ,000 & $31.500 0 WALl<EH & LEE Rl'altors 646-7711 ~Q.13 \\"es\c\1ff Drive Opl'n ·111 9 Pi"vl app"I. lo see. G w ·11· O\\'NER moving. Beautiful EASTBLUFF Rlly. 644:-1I33 ~~~eo~r~g:e~~1 ~·:•!m~so~n~;l!§~Cflll Deane 4 bdrn1. Heated & Laguna Beacn 464 SERRA DR. Realtor 548-6570 filtered pool. Family rm, d. · li•·•place Built CUSTOM BUILT I l~h wa .. 1e11, M•l• Beautiful 3 BR .. 1* bu., in inrng rm. ... · · Jo:. WJnltd, ~11n•te hland H. hi BY Owner, sharp 3BR, on ins. Shag carpets. brk Bv reliable & 'lualifiL'CI (''I:· Jan• W•r.ted, M&F Corona llig s. ig Y \V-t S•"dc. l-lo1, f-·,·1 "2.950. 962-i:;"'""· ' H· • "'"'' ••• Ser•..:• OorlKfOry •. "'1 '"' /r,: /<!4 "' Cull J rn-y !Jardin upgraded with new plush '"" • ., '." '':'.=:=:::::':"':==:==:==':! ~ "'JUOJ pt•rls. Distinctively designer! • ~' · or JO<'\\ ilhil<:' carp., nc,vly painted exter-trees, quiet street, princ. I· O\VNER anxious. Prestigious I Uv ~·idt•ly koown design<'r. 71-1: 544-8012 ---ior, massive stone lrplc. only.~S2S,900. 953 Union Ave, VERAfONT FARl\lHOUSE. area. Choiec 3 bdrn1. Posh i'"'"'"'""""'"""""""""'""'"" Pnvnlc but not secluded I IL§J '""'"""""""'""""'""" ___ CRYING for a POOL! I Poolsized Jot ~·ith view of 642-7501 \Yhite wood trim, huge old interior. Fan1ily r n1,, ·---------• tu•ea \\hit fanlas!ir• ''.ll'\V ?I 1 Merchi!ndise A.. I' • \\'ESTCLIIT DOVER AREA Catalina. $62,500 & You OWll 4 BR -Sharp! Exec Home ~s. ~·inding staircase fireplace. Secludecl living I' occ;in & l'nllyon. A11·1un1 111 . . V Neglected Giant large t'Ol'TlC>r lot 'v/largc U-the land. "•/many extras & nu leads to maslcr bedrm with rm. Formal dining rn1, $215. PER MONTH entryway !or a dramala· 1 ~------~ 5 + G t 2 St shaped hon1C>. -1 BR 3 BA, MORGAN REAL TV carpet. By owner, anxious. paned glas.'I doors to 1er-deluxe kitchen. brk SG5.000. inc. taxes & main!. fl'l'S, touch. Beanu•d ceilings in 1 , :~~~~~:e, UeS Ory forn1al dining, fan1ily rm. 673-6642 675--6459 s;i"4,790. Princ.ipals only. (1) race. 4 &-droom, separate 846-1383. $390. moves you in, sell er all rooms. This 3 bdn11 . A•Jcr;o1 $34,500 Needs a pool (has sidf' yard 82&-56TI or 828-5200. library. KeHle kitchen has I ~G~O~Y~E~RN:=;;~M~E~NT;;;;-----pays all olhf'r costs. ~BR honH'. fully lan<lsC:l!h>d & 2~~~1~~u. ~\ ... 1 "•"' c•ntrancel. Beaut. patio. SIDE BY SIDE College Park Sacrif. vic1v, and gas co PP er OWNED 2BA deluxe ndlt corfdo, new cnl.'hisC>d /ur your .. on1fo1L I F1,1rr•'iiri Exclusive rolling grl'l'tl hill· Fo•· ."'le undoc $95,000. For 2 a,·., bcaut>"ful new duplex••, 2 fp buillins plus a co z Y 1· h l l k"lch IG-'"'O c~rac e " "·· k B ·• N rt ,.,.. "' ""' 3 BR, fam rm, 2 Ba, , •4 BR 2 BA, betfC>r than nc1v. "' w s ag. < rp.q, rg 1 J.w . u•••"-•·-· , , sidl'S of ·•Ul:l.c· ay. 1 f'E' 8 inforniation eall -60 ft. high corner lot, some rcdcc in & out, cov'd patio, breakfast nook. Ranihling No closing costs_ Jmv down w/all rice hltin appl's. ~ J':w.,i';°Y • w de<.-oratini;. but a fan1astic FOR All vie\\', below Coast J.lwy.! 10 ... /, dn. $34,T;.iO 0 w n e 1 rear Jot. r moving to 250 Drivl' by mo<lC>!, 6Jl S. !. I M.c 11, 1ry value. 5 bt'<lroon1s. llu~c 2 3 Bd 3 bath homes 979.5618. Sagus. B R 2-5511 · Only $27. · Fairview (2 blks N. ol .,_, ._,,JI-. M11c1tt~ruo1u . ranch kitchl'n 1virh eating AREAS pl~s 2 .n;i··bdrm., 2 bath J!:~~,.-,,-;-------lis~P~A~N~!iflHilJiA~C:'ii~E~NNcOl.A' * 4BR6tJ.A·~~,Sj(). McFndden) OPEN DAlLY REA..,L ES~:J~E :~~1.~:~f~~~~u":::111H arl'a. Pondcrosa parly 1oon1. apts. \\'e have the plans. Dana Point ll * C R I 10 to 5pm. CALL R.16-4200 IM oi ucc. Fur~11urt/E<1ulp,. '. 1 ,,. 0 ''look -----------10espe owner must SC rest eo ty 00 Cl I Pi1ro110.,a.1 .ntei a1nt'rs pa 0 v · $102,500 Each 9 STEAL lhis 2 BR home! immed. 3BR, 2BA. like nc\v I' 11 ennryrl" scwlnt Ma,nh•n . .. ln't grN•n IA\I n. loircring l~===~;;:;;: I University Realty Fantastic view of harbor. carpets, drapes, hi tins. 5 S 4!!4·!.1473 :.19-0::J6 I SPGr11nt a ... 11, trees, <..'01Tal and 2 IX'dnx>m l• 3001 E. Cst. Hwy. 673·6510 niin lo beach. Large y;cll f?EPOS::tESSION J ( .... J SPANISH BEAUTY-~~;~ llr.1~ur~n1. err guest facilily. Brnnd nC>iv on NEWPORT ISLAND e1321~950FO.UR·PLEXES, $79,900 kept lot. fenced ydrd. :·or inform:ilion anrl location 53 "'5800 •••t 531 .. 5800 ., TV. RMlicl, Ki·FI, s11r.., market. Better hurry! Call 136 ~ EZ Terms or ''···•. 0 ,.ll•' & YA hom", B i~ oce:in v1c1v; n1•11 .. w -~' ... ,,, -!Q~ ... llf "' • I" ' Ill • 811 • l!f • 120 "' . !it . 81• -· 12' •• . ·l~ "' ·~ <« "'"'· Duplex. 2 BR., 2 ba., fam. ca ·"·""· ~ · ' .... lklnn .. 2'.·-· ba!h~·. overlook I ..,...,....,._, ' JACK ROBERTS for PERFORMA.'llCE co:·::i.1•! - nn .. frp!., sunporch & sun-847-35M K/\SABIAN e FIXER UPPER e in i:: the city Qf Lagun"J ~ ------1 ~ deck, priv. yard + Jge. 1. CdM Duplex REALTOR r•-1 nc ir dlll ~ 49:Hi039 FANTASTIC 4 BR tri-levt'I. 3 Bdrm home in :otlnt <trca , :...·al'" :un « 11:· . · Pets and Supplies BR. ar11. \\·/c:.,r_,port. Good Cute 3 BR, 2 Ba front house ----=-~~----1 Colors galore! $55.900. 19272 Real Estate 962·6644 outslandinJ: schl s.. near frpl<· .. 101-. ol \l,'l)(Kl. Spar,11sl1 . . Ol\"llcr·s unit. .W.500. w/fncrl priv patio & yarrl. Fountain Valley \Vo-he''"' Ln. 962-0686 Beach & Edinger. ZonNJ for Iii" & glass. Privott· hit. ·, ' ' lllRISI l 01.SON" R c A ','"'roRS .. ·J. Call: 673-3663 673-8086 Eves. lmnl-'. occup. 2 BR. 1 Ba ,._ '" PRESTIGE tract. 3 Br., 2 iiil!\L l;\Vitn JJOVL A rca c':,•· Gener• ~ .d 42. . O\VNER, save $3{XXI. 2 story, Ba. Boat dr, 51A ';0 assum· rriplrx. Subn1it £111 1rrn1s · je\~el l\* ~"7 500 I 0 .. rear house. xlra w1 e OWNER m~vlng. Park-hkc 4 becJrm, $42.000. Days able Joan. By owner. Ph. Huny! S24 ,500. Rl7-G06!. ' · · "91 IRVINli TERRACE dining rn1, fireplace. Built-1~~::::::2·~2'~'.:::===~~=========~===o;=:=o~....:-.==-'"-= ~ L1v1~1ac~ associated · .. 1sn .• IJ? ... "' .), ••• GRUB STAKE lot. Call 675-6900. yard .. Fanuly rn1, formal 642-fifi67 · Eves fiT,,....(16.11 846.53.13 K1\l'ELLA Rl::J\l.TY. 11.B. mfiwblF& ~:!~\t< AVAILABLE Great fan1fiy home. 4 Br, 2',f.i ins. 3 bdrms.. 2 baths. TO. VETS Ba, fam, new crpt, remodel-Custom interioc. brk 134,500. dt)~ ll'BifS" ' r-------,~ ed kitchen. Large comC>r lot 962-1373. $© \\. ~ -494-51>71 499-'llOO Boats andiijo -, JR BROKERS-REALTORS 102# W Balboo 67J.J663 I ~:,::;:""'i'--,.,::c::::--.;::::;:;:; Marine Equip nt tC.. and boy iR thi:ot one gruhby! w/2 fenced yards. Prin-O\VNER anxious. Beautiful Zoned M ·l $23,950 But all it \\'ill t:lk(' is 11 lll01) BLUFFS CONDO C'ipals only. 6 7 3-3 0 0 7. interior. Decorator's patio. That Intriguing Wore/ Game with a Chuckle Old l'J' 1-BH . Y.'hlli' rlu11~>cn1rd and broon1 and a pail of y t & R d (}.vner. Boat access. 4 lxlrn1s., 3 -------Edl-.d by CLAY l. POLLAN 1•11,tui:;e iv '~hhiglt· 1·~1 0 f , soapy \Vll!cr to n1akc i! inloc acoln f lh eoood l..,f • SACRIFICE. baths. Diningrm,l_f~replacc. 0 11eorrang11 letters eof · th11 ... :::--..... ,,,.-..... n1•stlrtl lllldl'r tn•l'S Ill !hl' the littlr-drl'am h 0 m r ct rca< Y nr e g 1 e. 2 BU .. ; pool. 2.car gar. ..ijuilt-in.s. ~ar ivmg rm. feour tcrambled words be-1 lllai::e utcl11~trial l u n 1•. you've \:x-<!n v;aiting rQr. II f'?rmcr model, some bny R-2 Lot . Only $56,500 ln-k $4.1,950. 42-256L Jaw to form feour simple words. (;rent poicnrial' has a beaut Hui floor plan vieii', 3 bedroom, 2 bath Oceanview Realty 673-8500 O\VNER leaving. Rich panel-l\tJ Sl.iJON R! :AI.TY 4'~1 ·07:;1 c..,e.i1 . / DOiii, M1tr.1.tsJ:vlc1 aa111/Mui11a E11u1p. 00111, Power So•ll, ""rl/Cllar1er •• BNli, ltll ~0·11, !HIOl/Ooi:to• 8NIS, 1"91111 & Ski , • . , llNI&, ltl<llt to: ·~ "' "" ·~ ..... .. •' uo ' •.• , tll ... ,, and is loculcd in a !'lean Dolorrs model. Extremely ing. Corked entrance. 4 · 1·-TC_E~E~~V-.-A_L.,.__,I and pre1ty neighborhood u1>-grarled thr:oughou!. Own-NEW l)UPLE'X -yreat bay bdrms.. fa m i 1 y rm. ~-\ 1 \ \ \ 4 • * * OCF:AN V 11:\v * • * near gulf cuui'st•. The pricce er ~·anls ac1.1on ~ Just . re· vlew plus ~t~ns!ve green fireplace. Rear Hying r1'"!1 l1 N••\\' :.? BR. 2 !~.\. «h111: iJ l'f'fiPi'ls the need for soup ducc:d t3.~ lllJll'lCe.·Pnma . \lelt--$100,tOO: PrUr.-ollly. Built-Ins. "Numerous fruit . • . . . _ throouf, tiu~C' kltcl1C'11 ,r. , _______ _,) ~ at omY" S3l.500. 847-00JO. l'nd unit locatio.n. * 673--9239 * tree•. t..uge yard. brk ~.-.,,-~--.--,---;! ~i,· 1 rl cllning room. huil1i11«. :z.rar Tr~tation ml OPEf'IT1L11 · 11sFuN10B£.MCE1 ~. F. Colesworthy Cost~~Mesa $37,"462. 96'2--MGO. I Ty FA F . l f ~%_.~~-s..19.500. IS-1-750~. ~® Realtors 640-0020 A1sum1ble 7.2°/o Ln I \' \ \ [ · ,:::O'-='-"--;:N;o.-c-c:-;1---I A •tr•1t . THE REAL ESTATERS ESA VERDE I Laguna • 1gut c~m11tr1, Soieo11t1nt M Prime Fountain Va Icy flt'('a. eve~,. •lkti. S<"''" , ' ', * LOOK! * Vacant 3 BR. 2 BA, block clO&' to schools. parks, CONDO. 2 Br~. '.!PA on \,nlf Elirclrlc c~·~ 1i,•all yard & 1,alio, quiet shopping centers. 2 BR. 2~ I I ; t-oUn;f', tlltn~, ticnu1 \'"· !•"l· ~!~~~' M~;::";:' $32 500 re1ildenllal arta, 10'/,. tlo11.>n, BA TownhouSf', cust tlrps, T 0 K U N ! nis ('iuh. 10',0 <In. ~.900. Tr•Hff,, Tr•~•' FOR THE I • S31,000. * 962-8668 ~fg'~~BQ:~r\~~8~'5 I j I I Always be kind to little old R:)l-ffiiS TrrHtr1. u111o1v SWINGING BY OWNER, 3 BR. 2 BA, w/gu !pie, 2 car garage . . . . . ladies. The dorndest people l\BI cn~rt~ IA""' Stl ~IC• & PA•ll 1 -FANTASTIC-cr pts_. drfs, patio. w/elec door opener, 11Uunn. take -lessons, nowodoys ~u~\;.D~·~ !~~r j " •is .. ' •• '"I .. ••• SINGLE c!uhoobhoul ~~8038• clOllC 10 pcJOl, ll?nnJ.11,Aot lot. I P I LT E R I J·ll d. \l -.. ! AutosforS.I• L::irgc 3 Bed.rm, 2 bath home csco="-"'7·7~~"-::-;:-',..,-=:::-c: SOUTH BAY REAL TY .-~~~~-T-T__, 0 Complete th• chuc:kle queo!e . $ 16, 900 -with fn.n11Jy/dlnln.I{, g&n1e MESA del 'Mar, by owner, lg 962-3002 * 968-7177 I' I I I J by f\Ulnq it'! the mluinl word TIA lmftlW G lJ1 fl $136 PER MONTH f'()l')rl'I, 3 mas.<dvc tlreplaccs 4 BR, $39.Ml0979-. 118542 Corona eves: 968-4004 ~_,._..__.._.._ .... ~ you develop lrom $lttp No. b1low. ru i'"l UWI DlJ 'J Otneru .... ,. and a dl.'<..-urutor's delight. La., 1 1 e 1 •~ttqwt•/Cl•i•lci •s f"ot n condo. <'Ulf' &. benutlful Just Ustl'd • For 11ppoi.ht· "'. BR, •. BA with fBnl rm., • VETERANS A PRINT NUMBERED tElTERS IN ~ . lhtre 1111<1 ~•· • tif ]§] t' & llC' LL 5 5 8424 " ,} ~ THESE SQUARES WANT A l !paih, ••c•, Riii) '" -neii• ca.rpc ini:: 1 n1cnt CA 4 • • • 10% Down, $39,950. Assume J.ICblCd IS'x40' custon1 pool. 4 rnict1 .. .. ~ (\lrnlro:hlllSit!I ren1aJn with lhlft SouthCo Rt'ttltors. rHA, no qualUy\~ 540-2562 be:drma. 2 bulbs. Only ' I I V•~'. ., '... . .. -, .... 'home. Pl'rfretly ~i\untt'd ""1-----------'AL ft UNSClAMBlE ABOVE lETIERS I \ I [ I I Aut<t LHliNI .•.... "'4 p ltu~•e lot p. Ill<' g11;rdcris F•t P-flt Is atl•, ·,-• w•-.n BY Owner{ lBR, 2BA. bltint, S:J2,500. NO down. Rt, V TO GEt ANSWElt 4 .t.110 S.noltt & Prm ·•· nre 'iovciy. '\IALKF.:R Gt ~u ~jl through"~~lt.;'t. frplc, utl porch, qulet st. ESTATE FAIR, 530-2551. . . . . . 6 2-5678 :::~ rr:=-.... : .. ::· '" LEE Re•lt""· 541><Xl22. lln< Dally l'llot Cla""lled 430 Elthe" ~12•500• '37-6417 Fas\ ...Wi. are Ju.I• phone SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 _________ ::::::: :J::, · : ::: Sell idle Hrma ..• , r .. 12-ffiiB c'~'~'~· _64_2_-Cm~_s_____ Sell 1•11e J1r11111 . &t:! :-1678 call awAy • &tl-5678. ---'--'----------------------(------- • \ l I I D~lY Pll,OT llST l•YSI c L A 5 5 I F I ·E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 SAYE CASH! b •• _ .... -... -l~l ~-I~ I l ~I nax=• l~I -·-I~[ -·-I~[ -·-I~ Hau ... Unfum. 115 HauNt Unfurn. 115 Hou-Un"""'- 2201-0.-.no-r_a_I _____ f ountain Valley S.n Clemonte ';;;;;;~~! Lido JIM NEWPORT HEIGHTS Condominiums Lott for Safe ln--t I BR. • ,....,. room. 2 Ba. for safe 160 I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;~;; Opportunity 170 -----"'----1 * £XO.USl'iE * f"rplc. Co.mer Jot. Dbl 1:11.r. ---------COMMERCIAL LOT 4 l!dmlJI., phis den; 5 belb.I. Vacant. $44,900 Aswrnabfe 7.2% Ln Oo New-BIV<L BE A 6 BDRM 00 cul-dwac jua1 EXCl.USIVE l'al"""".,.., 50 Ft. Nord c 0 r n • r ' --.. GEM Prime f•ountaJn Valley anoa.. in Newport ~llch usnrrnwAY'' North ot Mlle Square P&l"k. onlk lo beach, I 0 v II! I )' MaplHcent, CUltom home. W C t H N B close to achooll, f,111.J'ka, whb mian llht.'li ru.u Oowft1UJri W 4 br trpl. custom built 2 br, 2 ha. $110,000. REAL1610TO.RSou ""64• ,.·..;..... •hopping cenu-rs. 2 BR, 2~ _._ It' Down REHTM.S utJJ rm. Overalud -~-I: w/91 cpt, drpe, frp)c, bltl111, _..._, BA TOWl'\hou&c. cust drps, ' it p •--... •..u. 496--103S r ~ RENTAt.S: Swnn1er, wl.ntcrr * 2 UNITS * upgraded. crp~. priv patio $14,500 S ONSOR Apartmenta fent..'Cd ylltd. Lee all elect _...... or & Jcues. Plua full iiu R-2 lot. 1~ Blk. w-gas HRQ, a:>JC22 tam rm H RBOR Invest in I.he hottes1 IJ()Ort in DuPw ~leh • di_n rm.bonUs-ta}n Condominiums -LIDO REALTY 10 ocean. $97,500. w/j,!rui: !pie, 2 car ~aragt' Soulht.•rn California -~ as lge finillhed 113 rm, Unfvrn. ,.4" 3317 Vta Udo,_fipt. Beach * ALS~ * w/elcc door opener, sauna, SPEEO\VAY P.fOTOR · 744 aq lt includes 2 br f-....:;;;;.o;,;;;.. ____ _ 67i.7.JOO 1 Sll.5000 pool, tennis, lot Jo4. CYCLE RACtNG. Exper-433 W. 19th st .. Co.la Mesa l'\oeels, sink, eupboardl, Alsslon Vfeio -l new dup exrti , ea. SOUTH BAY REAL TY COMP. ANY ienced rider rW'eds financial 1854 s. r.oa.iit Hwy., Laguna recreation area. Xlnt tor lJJe OUR EXCLUSIVES BAlBOA BAY PROP. = .. _._ • =0 7177 •--Id Exe u t adv~-1Pkcadlllo Cin:ual family. $350 mo. 556-8"97 !BR, :IRA condo, enehed at- TRIJ>l....E.X. $165.~. Shldio * 6n.7420 * -,v~e,'·. ""o~• REALTORS mu; ng. e en oe•ua-J FOR LEASE FV 2 • 3 tac gar, crpts, drpl, d/w, ~ SINCE 1944 Ing and promotional op-• · ·• • .. -•t cleanina oven, ""'Ho, 2 BR. & IM> 2-bdnna. SOME"'SE'T mod J Ju.rho portunity. Busineueii or in-COSTA MESA OFFICE BR Condoe encl 2 car gar -·~ rl I """" l Sl'ORIES, baytront, ocean Vil"N ffome11, bye Owner. 5 ~D~an cg~~~~~~ 6 73-4400 dlviduals call tor details. Sttvhi&-Costa Meaa, N~rt 20x22 fam 'rm, prlv patio: ~pool p v. •-· view. 4 Bdmui., 4 baths BR, 3 BA, braut dttorated, ctn. 1'l-fA loan/or will lease Ph. Steve, 675--3085 after 6. Beach, Huntington Beach. Pools, tennis, sauna, childf,;:::.:::;:--,,--:::---;;;;;f $225,f'XIO fee land. $83,00>. M4-5309 w/opUon 10 buy. 67T7-£706 EXCHANGE 1 t t S!IO • FURN. Bad1elor w/ play area, Soulh Ba.y Townhoute Fum. 330 LIDO REAL TY al 6 k da / liine .,.,.k nWves meedn 230 l.'OOking. All Util Pd, Car-R.e4lty, 962-3002, OWnerf.:..;;.;c;;.c.:..c;,;_ ____ , J.377 Vla Lido. N'pt. Beach Newport Heights t w y1 any . R-2 LOI/will take 6 Units, ant port, Agent General 673-7300 ·.c.c.:..S:.c.EA--8..:R:..E-EZ--E-·ICO~•o:~oo~'°'· ~---,,Par-· "'"•""'-1"°;ke--::,,-:::-,,.. Huntington Beach. CAPITAL WANTED t"OR spa -l r. DUPLEX. Ya.rd 3 BR, 2 BA. 2-car rarage,1;3;.;;;.B:.:R.:.:;_B_ue_na--P-arlc.--..,-1 LIDO ISLE BEAUTY Pl"•·"-·· ol -•n & bay roundlngs-poo1,NB,3BR.2 FOR: 10 to 15 Unils Jn fl.1AR1NE ORJENTED PRO-s1~~BR~~PLEX.Oilld/ llkenew.Di1hwa1her, treew~s schOola $2 40 Chamtlng 5 BR. &:. family ..., v..:w ......... BA. $43,0CKl. Bkr. 673--5221. Orange Cowtty. DUCT. pet ok Gara.ge fireplace, pool, $255 mo. d 55i.s161 eve' 64.5-76.2o' ,. >' lot • --J trom upstturs famlly rm. 642-'"'"· Sparlirtg Investment 1'.1R. 1'.!URPl-IY, 5:<l-""'1l s'"• -2· BR HO.USE, Chlld/ . Agent 84J..4421 ays, • I ' rm. ..., '-· L.UV'C Y Charming 2 BR, 2 liled vv.... ~ 1) I Unf 350 garden 0(110· $l05,IJOO bathl. lge. dining area; Income Property 166 Corp. Money to \.oan 240 cat ok. Garage. Yard. Huntington Beach up exes urn. LI 0 REAL TY t11>lc. w/tieato!ator, F.A. -~-6_38-_566~2-~--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 SUMMERCALLREJ!!!~ ALSO 2 BEDROOM, 1 n-~, Balboai Island 3377 Via Lido~-~pt. Beach heat. Extra Jge. kitchen & WANT BIG RETURNS Golf course R-1 Lot •1 TD L ~= ~m 673-7300 brldllt. area, wa1k-in pantt')', at low, tow rents? 158' on 15th Tee, of Mesa st oans -beautiful UP 9 r • d-LEASE, waterfront, pier. birch cabineta, & a11 bit-Ins. Verde C.C. Fantastlc view. LAGUNA BEACTf OFFICE ed townhouse, inc. r• New 3 BR. 2 Be. all elec. .N_;;ew:.;:.,po;;;.;rt.;._Bo;;..;.•_c"h ____ 1 Extru Jg('. Dbl. garage on A pcrfet'.!t set-up for the fu. S46--3000 / 545--19".li UP TO 95% Serving Laguna, Dana Point, frigerator w • 1 h _ $42). ~. 214 Grand -STIRS THE alley & 149.,,500tra nArkin". tur•. Eight ; !lR stucco 2 D L ~ San Clemente, Caplmano • d r 'di h h Canal. ,,.... & Ho~f'S ;a)' apar1. 105'x300' SAN Oemente R-4 Street lo nd T oans $65 -SUMMER GUEST Cot-r, rye , I w•• •r.1""'="-----,.-,-:,,.----IMAGINATION CALL G) '46·2.tl4 M·l Jot. 100'xl05' Yurd in ~~~efti~~~·~;,~·Ji!::~ g~: tage. Avail weekly. Cornpl. like new, tood loca-Coron• del Mir $31 000 PRICE ,,'•A~• rear. Apts and homes on all 64&--0228 or~-Lowest rates Or.tnne Co 1Furn1= . AOCdUEANlts. VIEW I B tionl, $??5-mo. Ask for VERY Nice 4BR, 21,Sba, , .... ~ sides. A t'aclory man's ;i • ..,... • r. Da e, -,u2-4471 Agt. trplc, dbl oven, dsh/wsh, •--t with X1ALTY paradiS('. Whllliur Ave. at Ranches, Farms, Sattler Mtg. Co. Over garage, Crpts, drps, 4 BEDROOM, 21L Bath, crpts & nu drps, gar, 4 blka lfea\')' aha.AC" roo · Noa• Nowpo•t Paot Oflloo w 18th St CM $101000 642-2171 545-0611 stove, reftig. "1'Z to ocean .. ~o; mo 644-6833 towering trees surround this ' · ., . ' . Groves 180 $180 SPACIOUS 2 2 PRESTIGE AR EA, No ~ts.·~ ' ,. 3 bdrm doll hou&I!. Well * SPANISH * Ca!.il to a 10% loan com--'-'--'--------Serving Harbor area 21 yrs. • Br, Ba. J -"-'-'~='-------l . m>'tm<>n! Owner ffi"" lakf' NvEo CASH• !I 000 r Furn, Near beach. Avail pool, $350. -r mo. planned st)'le wlt.h you •n Swi88 chalet w/Spanl5h motif. ... · """ 40 A~ Navel grove in "' · ' • 0 up 6/10 K Ith 5 d ~96 •• C M mind. Used brick fireplace. 3 BR. 2 ba, remodeled to a 2nd TD. A grea,..' tax saver' Riverside. 20';1> dn. Buy at to $3,000. $10,000 and more. $225 : LOVELY 2 BR+ Den. • nl er, 2.._71 1-•-•_I• __ .,. _____ _ Loll of paneling. Really and perfection! Extra lge. yard. and. will ~am 11 i'o NNN on subdivision price S7000 ac. Remember Avco Thrift for Encl gar. Yard. Teen/Pet Agt. EASI'SJDE 2 br, shag crpU:, truly a lovely home. Seandller room for pool, Hn.....,! equttyr1'· P1~,k up htl set·Up at This grove has pnxluccd a a Real !Estate Loanth . Upon ok. BIKE to Bea"h 3 nr !'°" dra refrlg & •love ·~ •---~ t U F"IA _., my o >ee • you ave money 1 1 ood 1 "t R lt approva. u"". e money SUMMER RENTALS ALSO .... P ' ......, • • ~· •G=I, -wha,~t mooresc -~·'.'d you BALBOA BAY PROP. · · 01 0 g rui · ea or ho"·cve' you l>ke. Al"" ask CALL '"'9491 frplc, gar. Also Walk to, .::Ca::li::...::64,,>-c.1::5::.17c._ ___ _ l.V<U to invest !or solid income. 714: 683-4740. Eves 494-1288 " ""' ..,..... r· ask for? Call now to itee lhis * 642.-7491 * about our u n secured * LANDLORDS * Beach, 2 BR. ulll pd, kids . LTV 21,2 level acres betwl'en J)C'rsonal loans. Avco ok. Agl. Fee. 979-MlO Dani Point one. 4 BDRM., 3 BA, lge !iv rm. 2 LYTLE REA C11 pislrano & Lake Elsinore. THRIFT. F'REE RENTAL SERVICE NEARLY ne1v 2 BR home, , .. ••• ELEGANT MANSION ••• 4 bednn, l bath rondo. 1850 Sf ft w/master suite 22' i<>rll:, forml din, den or fam rm. flrepl in front nn &. lrg Jdtch, 2 car att gar, huge rec area w/Olympic pool. Only $32,950. l' 1llage Real [sla te sty, beam clngs in every 583 W. 19th, CM HY><; d 2 BR 2 BA 25 li room. Also att. 2 BR apt r.aa 9493 $3,920-Acre . .µ•" 011'11 pay-620 Newport Center Dr. LANDLORDS' 1% ba. 2 car gar. Nr. school ·• • vmg ~ ;J"tO" ment, easy tC'rms. ~3223 Suite 101 • & .shopping. Avail now. cau garage & laundry area . ..-. w~se:uirs~ rt~· CO. 40 GAR DEN Ne\vpart Beach !tl3-341\0 We Specialize in Newport. for appl. 213 :431-9644 nto. 494-5275 wknds. REALTORS Real Estate Wanted 184 CASH IN A 1-IURRY! :e:~~! Corona det Mr..r e 3 BR, 2 BA, all appliances, Huntington Beach 2863 E. Cst. H'IV)', Cdt'1 * Q . k C h * Borrow on your home, paid . .a..<15w•a. Our Rental Ser-c;1P~t'~·~d~rp~'·~~S200t'.).~!m~oL.I ~~~~~~~=~;! 675-7080 u NI TS UIC as for or not. Use fund s to con-vice Is FREE to You! Try :!_st/\a11t mo req'd. 968--8111 * POOL * Will buy your property. All solidate bills improve your Nu-Vlew! I I NEW 2 BEDROOM b cash \vithin 12. hrs. can honte, buy n~..,., property, or NU·VIEW RENTALS ;";;";;;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I' Bath, encl08ed pvt g•--s BR, fam. rm., rc-c. rm., Y \Ve ean substan!iale P & L 962.°""l f ood Co s-•••• '"'3"8 ---O'An""" "A" "550 oo;i or any g purpose. n-•"'111JU or ~ "" in duplex buJJ..l:~ .... $195 ...... -o_wn_"~·~~~·~-·-~--L---t figures on this one, as wr 1·d 1· I I t · · 2 285 -~ ' ~ 1 1 en 1a , as service 111 3 BR w/w shag patio FP BR. 1 Ba ............. $ mo. Al!IO 3 Bedroom, 2 n1anagc it. Beautifully main. ~ m ~ your home or our · oUice. eah8.na Club P3c Sands ai 2 BR. 2 Baths ...••.... $325 bath $250 mo Manager at S0•;;.n;;....C;..l_•._.m_•;.n_t-'•----I tained in every resp<!{:t. (I I SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO. 8341 MunstCr. Cali c2131 2 BR, deo, 2 ba, air cond $a>S 313 ' O~ego. · Huntington $49'j,000, Princi1>als Only. (714) 556--0106. 794-1027 3,BR. 2 baths ••••.• $265/275 n~-eh OWNER must sell or trade 6 Sparling Investment ~ • unit ocean view Io I . C 3 BR I ha Uo FP 3 BR. 2~-ii ba. • · · · · ••• •· $350 536--U52 Int:luding plan. $ 2 2' O O O. Corp., 638-5662 BROKERS IN • Ca~ C{ ~ /· P8sai;d i 4 BR. 21/r ba, •.•••••••• S450 49'l-8264. RESIDENCE or units San 2ND Trust Deeds 8341 trun~~r. atan <~~l 4 BR. &: fam. rm ••••• $475 *42 Un.Its* Juan, or Dana Point. Prine. PRIVATE FUNDS AVAlL. 794-!027 \Ve llave Summer Rentals ,---------, Westminster ~~~.~8Z7 Morn/late eves ' Any Amount College Park Vision-Apartmtntt forftll'lt HARBOR vu HOMES FORF;~~ING CENTSRA4L85COSTOOAOMESA i ~~~~~~~l[~~,1,.,.* .... C .. • .. ll!!!!6!!!!7'"5-'"44'"9'"4'"B'"k""'R"".I F.?i:c.-127-.~-·;,,.-"'-~-.-.-c;,-.1-~-ts i d h·11 Montego 4 BR. 1 story Spanifih Villa. This yOl.lng F'inancial • • I' 0 OK. $7-9234 re I Apt1. Furn. 360 See VlP's golling in Big Can-well planned home offers r ~oney Wanted 25 Corona del Mir 1--''---------yon from back yard. Lrg. Jots or living space, Jrg Liv I ~------~ ~alboa Penin1ul1 cul-de-sac lot. prof. Rm, Dining Rm. eat in Ed Riddle Realtor 646-8811 1 r..10NEY wanted. Secured by _ 531·5IOO < ::::.J 531·5100 1------ landacaped, eov'd l:,":tio, Kitchen, s BR, Rec Room DELUXE C.PLEXES Bus;ness 1st T.D. on printe Ne\vport REALTY $25 WEEK & UP d F ta" all Rlt 675 '700 A Company With Vision boat Pa • an c Y w/prl office & a 3 car Only 3 Left! Best rental area. Opportunity 200 {.'Omm. prop. r. ,,..... Univ. Parle Center, Irvine • Sleeping Rooms upgraded. Island kitchen, garage, X1nl cond in nrea. All units have frplc's, dsh-Mortgeges, Call Anytime, 552·7500 • Housekeeping Rooms vaulted beam ceiling. Del Sole R. E. Agents "'hrs, forced air hea1, air/ Trust Deeds 260 Realty Company Office hours 8 AM to 8 PM •Ocean View Ap~ Piso tile, foil paper, all 963-5621 cond., closed garages. Pool NEW-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ICdl\1. Ocean view home -3 :=:i=:i=:i=:i=:i=:i=:i=:i:=I BALBOA INN tinted glus, pnl'd garage ~!!!!!!! !!!!~!!!~ hi DISTRIBUTORSHIP BR 2 batl dbl w/wall of cabinets, laundry avail. \Valk to shop·c, sc s . i; . garage, If.6 Milin Street Bink, and 80 much mot'(!! I l{t*Yj & park. Part -'r i1ue, retired, PUT .YOUR MONEY pool, refrig/wusher/dryer. 4Bl;t2~~ba .•.••••..••• $435 675-8740 0pez.~t & sun 1-5. Owner. llallltHomel Sparling Investment s e n1 i-r {'ti re cJ ml'n or TO WORK FOR YOU! ~ hlO/~i:.sii r-:rsrlR. 3 BR. 2i,; ba. Deluxe Costa Mff• 644-o~ 1 :~---;;·-~.: Corp., 638--5662 'vomen. Custom S'vaii; Kit Earn 101:~ interest on well-erman. BluUs, N.B. •·•··•••·• $4751----------1 ER l --~-'--'-~=1---scf'ks responsible persons In sreured 2nd Trust Deeds on 4 BR 2 ba avail 111 •••• $385 C d 0 BY OWN Cannery Vil age S('rvice high traffic retail Orllnge County real estate. 4 BR 21Ar: ba avail 8/1 •• $425 GSG 9 fO ~a~hiJA {~le~~·10: Mobile Homes 2 C·l lots accounts for the ne ,~, SIGNAL l\.10RTGAGE CO. 642-82lS 644-620Q 4 HR , 2 ba. T.R. Hillfi •• $475 ALL UTll.JTIES PAID indoor/outdoor l!ving. Pr1c-For Sale 125 1h blk from cannery, rf'st· Cu.o;tom S1vag Kit, your (TI4) 556-0106 ~~:!""~~~~!!!!!!!!! Compare before you rent ed _ sell ,.7 ~ 2591 --'---------1 aurant, nu high-rises. bay. honte, 10 hours per \\'~k. 4500 Campu:;i Dr .. N.B. 1;:;200 S Custom deslgned, featuring:' eresMew Dr .... ~9009 or Mot ff R ntal Wlll sell scpara!e or togcth· No sf'lling -No vending. \Ve ,..,.,...,..,...,..,..,..,..,.,1 -mall 2 Br House. e Spacious kitchen with m. 644-'13U Or ome 8 $ er. Havr. house w/prking. \\'ant people that \\•ant a $12.500 2ND TD payable Sl.25. $235 -~edec 2 Br .. Duplex. direct lighting Call owner. Earnie Ball, good solid continuing in-per mo. incl 9-;;, on 1 com. Gar. Nice deek. Child ok. • Separate din'g area THE BLUFFS SALES & LEASING 646·5076 anytime, t..'Ome. Prod u ct rf'COni· mereial acre near o[framp $500 -;-Lrg 3. Br, 2 Ba, 2 • Home-like storage 2 sty, 4 BR condo, 1675 sq rt. full service f11clllty SIX UNIT -apartmenla with menrlC'd by the S n1a11 So. Orange County. Value frplc s, 3 patio~. bltns, gar. • Private patios I N ~~ m••y xtras Da M t H Bu sinei-s Adntinislralinn. d bl .. ,...,, beaut. ocean view!! Pool. "SINCE ,0 ,0.. 0 Closed garage w/stor ... n u ~""''• .... . nmar Dor omes OC<'Un breezes. SpacK>uli 3 r.1oderatr investment. !OO'fi OU e cncum.!ra.nce·~· ude NU VIEW RENTALS MM<> $52,oo:>. By owner. ph eve-t BR. 1% BA, bltins, crpl'd, buy back guarantee. Write 21(: years. l::i'to d1scounr 67 • 1st We11tern Bank Bldg. • M.arble Pullman & wkends. 64()-0549 or drp'd. 65' x 300', close to !'\fr. Bill WiS('man, 7250 (7141 830-8660 3-4030 or 494-3248 University Parle, Irvine • King·sz Bclnns 64().-0228. Principals only. 531-6800 grammar school. $1050. in-Franklin Ave .. L.A. goo.JG ~~~~~~~~~~!*OCEAN Vu Home. 1'Ully Days 552.7000 Nights• Pool ded-Barbeculth 1es111-1•"' CHOICE vu, Big canyon lot I 'iiiiiiiiiiiiimiiii co1ne. Asking $125,000. but (include phone. nuinberl maint'd pool, 3 Br, 2 Ba, 2 ~~"!"""~~"""'!~!!'I roun w Pu an., in Newport Beach, tor sale 11 n1:ike an ~r. KlNGAARD William Long ~ frplc, \Vasher, dryer, re(rig, FOR lease Unlver. Park, scaX~i.11. No Pets. by O\\'ner, 11,100 sq ti, on I {JJ] _R_.E_-_. _64_2-___ ~~= 252 Palmer HouNsforRd I te-gar w/elee. dr. Crpts. drps. Lux .. 3 br, 2 ba twnhse. LARGE 1 BR $185 Bmiiing Tree St, S90,000. ph rt~ln~r' ''HOT TRl-PLEX'' . Lsc SJOO. 673-6635 Premium Grecn-belt Joca-365 w \ bo 642-l!m ~or 213-274-7073 Costa Mesa ";;;;;;ii;ii;ii;ii;;;;;;13 BR, 2 BA, tront house, tion. Close to pools & tennis. · ~~ n -· OCEANFRONT POTENTIAL! F'ixE'r house You are the \vinner or • renccd patio, kid.o1/pets ok. Beaut. decor, lovely patio & LOW WEEKLY RATES plus duplex. l'\foney to be one tree pass Houses Furnished 300 S3Zi S. ol 1-hvy. 675--6900 atrium. 552-7681 Executive Suites 111111.le here! $39,900. SUB· Good for a v•holc l'arload LUSK 3 BR, den. 21~ BA .• 3 Laguna Buch 2080 Newport Blvd. Duplex, o w"n er I agent Acreage for sale 673-9266 150 Duplexes near the oeocan Mtle1 Larson. Realtor •673-8563* DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST'S leading Marketplace BUILDER'S AITE1,;,ION l\1IT . .\LL TRADES! V. E. lo any of rhe Ray Finkle VI •= C M Howard & Co., Reallo,.,, PACIFIC THEATRES car ga<agc. cw. -I 60 . oste •H Choice location, 1\ls n. Ap-&l').8400 5702 Kingsford Tarr lease. Owner. 499-3638. 1 -1 BR in 4--plex. Ney,• 642•2611 P-·-" for A~ unit!! · lrvlne 3 2 c,.,.,ts, "' ..... s, bltns, 2 blks "'""" ...., · · BR, BA, lrg living area, i,;." h "-'t' STUDIOS & 1 BR'S DAN*A .,~~-p'*CO. SHARP triplex, N ' P 1 · (Subject to small .~ervicc You arc the 11·inner of .vrd & gar. S350 mo leue. 1,.,,,;_1c ! 2 I FRE "-----'-~=~-=·~~---Heights acea. $&f.500. Drive charge at theatre\. one free pass 644-73U/646-9079 .. ...., -BR comp redec. • E ......... ns , by ""-' l th p er. P\t>ase call 642·5678 cxl. 311 Good tor a whole carload Costa Mesa $400bcaut ocLean ~vie\\• aFpt. Deck .• • ~El EKl~tilh. ltie11 Commercial Proparty CORONA DEL MAR 158 Build v.·hat you wsnt on this rare 126' parcel. Good cor- fl(>r location South o f Jligh\\'lly. CRll Io d R )' ! 675-7225. nro adjoining income prop- l'rties, cent('J' C.M. S75.000. by owner. 64.5-2m0/642-6560 10x50 1 br. Mobile home w/10x20 cabana. Xlnt cond. Fum. 548-1632 l0x"50 MOBILE Home w/10x30 Cabana. built on, COV back patk), beAUI tndscw. lots of xtras. R!lO ...,.. £ t.A '" · k IN th ro MY of the ' -rg .. + am rm. u c en Then ca!l owner/broker, ro claiin your tic 1'1 · or H T ES Frplc, bltns, gar, yard, • Heated Pool Gundy Gundersen 556-8559. County toll-free nun1ber is PACIFIC J EA ff GOLFER'S DELIGI-IT! Stl'ps child/pet. e Laundry FaclllU" \Vill consider small T.D. or l -";.ro.:.:..;1c:;220~).~===--to Mesa \'erde Country NU·VIEW RENTALS •TV & maid serv avaJL small home near 17th St. as PARTNER Club. Gracious & mOOem 673-4030 0, 4,._3,48 • PhOne Service (Subj('ct to small service 2 BR 2 BA condo part down. ACTIVE \VITI-I $12.500 CASH 1·hari,:r at theatre). "'/PRIVATE courtyard & Lido Isle $30 WEEK & UP E-t'lide CM -Six 2 Br units & MGMNT ABlLITY Please cnll fA2·5678 ext, 314 pool. Lease S300 mo. F'or e Studio &: 1 BR Apts. w/cl'lCI gar. $.'nO inc per Starting Salary 10 claim your ticket. (North appt. CAlJ.. s 4 5 _ 8 4 2 4, LAR. I br. Xlnt location • TV & A.fa.id Service Avall mo. O\\'Iler. ~7,500. 54&-9695 of $300 per wk County toll·fl'ee number is Sout.hCo Realtors. frplc, priv. patio, 2 car gar, e Phone Service-Hid. Pool Industrial Property 168 1 1.1 540-1220). MESA del Mar 4 BR. $350. yearly. 642--0306 • Children & Pet Section 4. ACRES \Vell located corner. PresC'n1 income $1400. per mo. Great polential . \\rill divide. Ap- prox $1 .25 sq. ft. Roy McCardle Realtor lSlO Newport Blvd., C.M. 548-7729 plus N:J.Ual share o pro 1 !'. e $120 M thly shou!rl easily Tl('t party Laguna Beach Bltns, new crpts, new paint, Newport Beach on CM selected owr $30,0CXI ls\ . fncd yard. 8.19 Santiago. 2376 Newport Blvd., y<'ar. Infornintion t~ pr~n· S175 -Uhl Pd. Small Cot-Ref's. S290 per mo. By * NEWPORT ~'HORES * 548-9755 or 64>3967 cipals only in conf1dcntial /age. Pt·iv. patio. Pool. Appl. 54:,....7359 1-STY. 2 BR, conv. den, cpl. Ad Good For S5 on Rent · l · Rcl•rcnces ex Ideal m;1ture. . dms, bltin11. PaUo. 2 car * SUS CASITAS in ('1-v1cv.·. ~ .. $205 -Ulll Pd. i ....... Ocean· " BR, 3 BA, overlooking .~~ Avail June 16th ... 125 ~~~~~~·. 9C~~\J ~~ -5 6 8 5 front Studio. f~; tll st ic pdarhk, new \V/w&cplndt, drpl!l, Mo.', yearl). lease . .,.., FuMrnodBaehel• Oel~ &:DlallyBR.'S. V'·,,v•. s wr, range scpg. 4 BR I ty l"' ha bit ~ .. • L S 28" + $350 !100 d ' ·s . ·i4. ' ns, 2UO N rt Blvd CM iquor tore M gr $25S -N.ict• 2 Br. Ocean View mo. sec. ep. Cpt/drps. Patio, Av a I I . ewpo ., • Electronic Mf/A\mbl Apt. Nr. beach. Deck. 642-3158 soon. $325 f.1o. Yrly lse. BEAUT. FURN 2 BR $175. e Coffee Shop beer/ NUwVIEW RENTALS 1t SHARP 2 Br, 1 Ba Mesa CAYWOOD REALTYil48---1290 Bit-Ins, w/w, Hid pool. ~ St. spc 28, N.B. I,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.,.. YOll don't need a gun tq wine e Piiz:.t, try $3000 down HOL LANO Bus. Sales fi7~""1030 or 494-32.:IR Verde dTownhouse. Pool/ AVAlL June lst: Custom Adults, no pets. (infant i*) R ho I gar, 1shwhr. $Z5/mo. 4BR & fam rm. on lrg64 ·~H\-~>'.l----~--CllARl\flNG g B me, 833-8974 ...,. I.ilk lo beach. Fully Jurnish-· cul-de-sac lot, rm fQr boat IBR, lrg tastefully furn, MUST SACRIF1CE "Dralv Fast" when ycu 12:<£0 'TI Champion. Shown place an ad in thr Daily by Spare 54. 193.10 \Vard St. Pilot Wa.nt Ads! Call now l-1.B. 846-9663 aft :I. -&12-5678. • 645--4170 or 540--0608 l'vt". 1716 Orange, Costfl Mesa •Barber Shop· <.ft.IOd. choice ]()(·a1ion. 2 chairs "·Ith possibility of 3 n1or('. Owner leaving:. f''uU prirC' S-1500. J•:D RIDDLE, REALTOR . 64&8811. RE:AUTY Salon. i\nnhrhn's Lovelle~t! U 11 u s u a I Op- rortun!ty fcir msh off<'r. 67,-,....1819 or TIS~!tll !'MALL shop 1n nice area ready lo go. Q11itt 1ng: to go back to i-chfiol. Ca l I : 673--0IT.l nr &14-1"'528".'--- l'd extt'pt linen. Heatt"d $225. Mo.-Business use or trlr. Gal'dner pd . working adults only, Sl!i.5. pool. June 23 1o July l!l. alfowed in this 4Br, 2BA $450/mo lse. 556-&868 or 1004 El Camino, ~704 sooo. Refcren<X's & deposit home on W. 19th St, C.M. 642-4387 NICE l Br dplx. Quiet. Sep requin>d.194-4876 eves. 642-22Zl (Msg. 646-9666). NEW Bluffs 3BR 3BA. den by garages. Employed adlllt VICTORIA Bch. 1 BR hsc + 2 BR house In court, cpt!'I, w/fpl , custm df'P$, crptJI, over 30, no peta. 548-1021. sl'P rm w/balh on 2 lots, drps, gar., 2 small children, wshr, dt:yr, refrig. Pool &. 2 BR. Trailers, tum. SW view from patio. $250 yrly. no pets. $155. mo. 2007 yard maint. $475/mo. Ph: mo. Util incl. No chlldren 642-1Z72. Wallace, apt 6, 64&-52Z.1 ~or~ no pets. ~3855 or 64f>.UIOO. Lid~ Isle STIJDENTS or Families. 2 \\'ATERFRONT -Newport LG l Br $160, -2 Br $175, ideal Br home, $125. ear, focd, I!lland. 3 Br, 2 Bl ,upper for bacbeJor adults S/paol D1':LUXE 2 br, seckl. patio, kids/pets. Agt. Fl' e. duplex. No pets. $295 lse. 1993 Church: 548--9633. uril. pd. 100 ft from beach, 9'5-8430 673.--2256. NICE 1 &: 2 BR Ttallen. $15 Avt1il July-Aug. $900. mo. l\1ESA VERDE 4 brlrm like 5 BR/3 Ba, lg FIR. DIR. 2 k up. 133 E. 16th St., C.M. Adu\L~. no pel1i. 67:>-3609 new. Avail . May JOth. '$315. frplcs, nu crpt + drps, 642-1265. month. £73--4706 comm. pool. $575. 67'.J-4899 H'7"-,,11c--:--:8:-oa-c"'h---I Nc;;;•;w;po;;;;rt;;;;Bo;;;;o;ch;;;;;;;;;;;;;I SllARP! =R, 2 BA. dbl 4 BR, 2 BA. FIR. DIR, un ngton • gar. D11h · r. Condo. Pnol. frplc. Harbor Vu Homes. $145-$16lli Macnab-Irvine Re<: ctr. mo. 673-4891 644-5471 or Cl13) 79>-4824. BACHELOR l l BR., patios, LARGE 2 Br. Encl. garage $490. frplc'1 prtv. garage(' - avaJI. 1 Child ok. Call EASTBLUFF condo, 3 BR, Dfvlded M.lh &: lots ot Investment DOVER SHORES 6U-1656 or 979-7976. 21h ba, tam nn. shuttered closet& Rec. ball, pool &. Opportunity 220 4 BR .. 4 ba., view home. 3BR, 2BA, family rm , windows, frplc, comm pool, pool tables, ~1u1na blltha. --'-'-----'------Dining r~. June 151h lo fireplace fenced yd quiet S400 mo. 67l-7252 See for yourself. 1'1301 YOUR RUSThlESS Aug. 15th-. l\!axhlC' Wllll anu $275 2459 Norse waY CM . HARBOR Vu Hms, Carmel, KeelllOn Ln. Cl blk W. of Marill(' oril!ntrd fun-1noney &\~ (n..001 . ' 3 Br., Fam, Br, 2 Ba, Near Beach, 1 blk N. ot Slater>. niRkcr In h1·ort of Ncwpoi·t. MESA Verde 3' Br., tam. rm. Pool. $425. 640-1768 1142-7848 l-:nd of 1st yPar ~hov.ing Adulta. No pets. ROO Ba STUDIO condo. acroaa st. 1 $1M monthly n!'l . 111i~ $~n1 Owner/agent 64~ 3 BED M, 2 th ~. from Beach. flrplc, bltln., husine!ls inVf'5tmf'11t h11fl 642-&235 644-6200 5 BR. ~ts, drps, bltll\!I, c.ll!le Cpt. Drapes, bit. Ins. limit con versa ti 0 n p It challenging ho rt z 011 !I. 1 BR. hou&e, $I.CS. Partially to everything. Swim club 3 children. 968-5877. Zl3-782.-M59 Afl 6:]) pm ' Information by nppt . only, furn 2 BR $175. Also walk to avail, $295. 5«HI05."i 2 BR. Home. Stove, ~triK. $140 _ ULTRA NICE Apt 6 THI<: BLACKllURN CO. R ldd gar $175 vacant klda oft. · !8.'II \\'P~lc!iff. NB &45-lSOO bri..ch. 2 Br &: 3 BR, 1-f.B. I B house, m le age cpl. • , Poo\1. 4 ~arden1• Sauna. 'sl~les or famH~. Ag I. No chlldren/pet.s. ~ dbl. Aat. Fee. 9'7'9-8430 "Fennl!'I. Prlvate pat Io. Fee. 979-8430. gar, $150 n10. 548-4030. !~ARBOR Vu Hm.s, Cann.el, Adulla. Ph; ~. "Make Room For Daddy" You don't need a gun to Sharp. 3 BR, fam, nr pool, Newport Bueti CLASSIFIED ADS -.. clean Olli the """"' ''llrnw FMl" .,,...,, you Inc JJvd<nor, 1475. 644-1'191 l-""""------1 •.• r1.1m that Junk into cuh place e.n ad in the Dally MODERN Waterfront 2 Br. 2 BR turn 1-bklck«:ttn DAILY PILOT 642-5678 I with a Qajly Pilot Cl&Wfied Pilot Want Ads! can now Comp! remodeltd w/mrw $23.S )'liy adulls no pN ad. Call &t2-5678. -642--5678. dock. 673-4335, 675-2354. 128 t68I' 9H-4..l40 av1 611 " • -. . . . • 1--- ~~~~~~~~~,~~~~~~~T~"~"•~r.~M~~~2~2,~1~97~}~~~~~~~~~DA~IL~Y~P~l~LD~T~-~~ ~i l lrtJ I ......... -lltl ~I -~ ... ~ ... ~l~~I -~ .. ~-~l~~'~I..._~ _~-~=!~~.,,,. I -l[j] I -..... I~ -~ I~ 1-... -1[51 ~--~1~ ...... --~--~~1 ;--~~1 . j Olflc. Rontol 440 Po"°n•I• 530 Set-ls & Set-II & HouNcloonl"I ~ -P-RF.STl--G-E_O_FF1_CES__ VETERANS -;;1;;"';;';;ruc;;;;ti;;;on;;';;;;;;;;;;:;;5;;75;;;;;;l;;n;;llr;;;uct;;;;l°"~';;;;;;;;;S;;J;;5 1 * • 1.ADIES -Need• bond I 1~A~pfs.c.......F_ur_~~~~-360~ Apt.Unfum. Newport &..ch Co1t1 Meta ·-· Fum. or Unfvm. 1711 ~;;._ or Unfvm. 370 $29.50 per Wk &. up. 1 BR. 2 BR & Brlct»!lora. Color 'LV , m1tld serv, pool, The MHA, 415 ~. Nev.·port BL, NB 64&-9681 OCEANFRONT -Open June & July. Former owners Unit. $200 & $225 wkly. 675-8531. 1 BR apt, upstairs unit, otillti,. paid. Call '33--0121 or >48-"355 0 C EANFRONT decorator tum, 2 br. Avail July, week- ly, 213:27I-5<1!8 Apt. Unfurn. 345 Balboa Island • ~ P INECR EEK ' LIVES UP # TO ITS NAM E ..• Over 500 tall trees and 10 s~anu wilh wnterfalls create a relaxing setting for yoor, spacious new l-or 2-bcdroom apartment. Small pets ok. From $165. 1''urniture YEARLY lge modern 3 Br, z availabic. Models open 9:00 Ba flt' d~ "I'-· 1"'" lo 6:00. 2300 Fairview Rd., , S, .,..s, u u"'. _..,,.,, '"'--·-M Phoo "'"230fl Pearl 75--0158 .........w. esa. e: ~ . Balboa Ponln1ul1 TWO BR DUPLEX Eastside. Crr>ts. drps, en<: Newly de<."Orated, upstairs 1 garage. Adulls. no pets, BR, lease yrly. no pets, Avail June 1st. $160/nio. adulte only. Ref req. $160 6424387. monthly. 673-5990 aft 4:30. $165-2 BR. 1 1~ BA. Studio on 3 BDRM, 2 BA, bltns, $325 cul-de-sac. Priv. patio, pool, mo. Avail June. crpts, drps, bltns. Nr. 675-3308 shop'g. Olildren ok. No Capistrano Be•ch pets. 735 Joann St. CM. 1.:;;===;;..;=c:;;--· INEWLY DECORATED I 3BR, upper. duplex. ocean bedroom, utilities pa Id. vu. $250 mo. Open Sun J().2. Fireplace, $200. mo-t~mo. 871--0666 eves. 34443 Via Realtor, £44.-7270 Espinoza, Capistrano Bch. * SHADY ELMS-.POOL Corona dtl M•r • Adul!s Poolside $145 up. • Children dead-end st. ... ~!!! ON TEN ACRES Apts. furn./unfurn. Lease Fireplace / priv. patlos. Pools Tennis Contnt'l Bkfst. 900 Sea Lan, CdM 64"-26ll <MacArthur nr Coast Hwy) 2 BR, din. rm, frplc, new crpts & drps. $285/mo. Call 1'1r. J3eals, 556-8790. 2 BR. $265/mo. Crpts, drps. Gar. Crpt. drp. Call Mr. Beals. 556-8790. LARGE DELUX 1 bcdrm, one . block from beach. $2'§/Mo. cau Agt: 644-7210 NEW 2 BDRM, family ·rm, crpts, drps, bltns. $350. mo. Avail Sept. 675-3308 177 E. 22nd St., CM 642·3645 Ea1t Bluff --------e DELUJC.E • 3 BR, 2 BA At't for lease. Jncld spac. master suite, din rm & dbl garage: auto door opener avail. Pool & Recreation area. • $287 . 865 Arnigos Way, NB Managed by \VILLIAtt WALTERS CO. Huntington Be•ch WAITING LIST OPEN !or 1.2or3BRApt at the VILLA YORBA l{untington Beach (714) 842-9622 New pro~I b I d In a:. Earn $4.~ to f1.00 Pt'I' hour • W/llftiog, movin&. 0 d d Fow.tain Valley. $250 ..,. CUAJ'&ltlHd by udng your ORANGE COUNTY lo""' Call Sam; 67>"'100 M'). l.ldd• receptionist rm, C.I. OenefiU; wbUe" &t· t:\"'1J, Costa Meu EL PUERTO MESA """""°""'· an • w • 'i • • tending Santa AM eou.,... VOCATIONAL Cupot Cloonl;:l. 51.."l"Vice, crptimc. drps, util, 54Cal1_~w -F loor Care & WI w1 ... • janitorial "rvloo. ~· Ext 370 TRAINING SCHOOL Secr.tarlal service. Avail . D"teh Maino S<rv. 537-1508 FULL).' LJCENSED Ph: 847..s989 or 962-41955. * SPIRITUALIST * LEARN Xlnt l touseclf'<&nlng 1617 WESTCLIFF Spiritual reud lngs 10 1tn1·tO By l>a>« 0\1.•n Tratuiport.ation II * ll:l&--0648 * 1980, 1924, 156 Jc 540 Ml· tt pm. Advice on a matten , FOR BETTER· ~ Ample prkg. Utll. 312 N. £1.Ca.mlnoReal, San AUTO TUNE-UP Painting & Bawngardne.r No. l 0 4 . C I em en t e. 4 9 2-9136, Paperhanging 541-5032 492-00.14~ Ot~FICE space -444 Old PROBLE~t PregnAncy . Con- Nev .. port Blvd. 3 blks No. of f id en I , 11 y tn pa lb e t I c Coasl 1-lwy J. 3 drafting nns pregnancy rounselln(:. Abor· .. s wn a f.1 JHTI NSIYI couas1 ' 't No WMrilV; * WALLPAPER * ..._ ~ --lilil!llll ~ ADULT . LIVING FOR LESS & I recept. nn. AJI for lion & adoptions ref. $300/mo. Ut!I incl. 2nd fir APCARE &12-4436 w/oooan view. 54 8 -5 300 PREGNANT? Thinkin g e \11)'S. abortion? Know aU Ulf' fa('IS Oi<""FICES AVAlL NO\V. Vic first! Call LIFE LlNE -24 17th St. C.M. 2-3 Rm suiles. hrs, 541-5522. cpts, drps, $150 & $l'f.>. 1-5 YOUNG COUPLES 18-35 + Rm. $300. ample park P arties or meet cpl to cpl space. Suitabel Dr. Dent. call ··Leah" 2·8pm. SS!r3344 * TUmoN FINANCING J. AYAIU.ILl ~ * MOINING AmRNOON I. D I NING CW SH ~; j;j * WODl lN DIAGNOSTIC 19UIPM I NT * PllPA•ATION H>a CU.SS "A" SMOG LIClN!il INCLUDED '\111~n l-'OU call "Ma.c" MB'-14-1'1 e\'CS. PAI NTING & ttpair, 3.1 yn ~'Orkmanship guar. Take advanta~l' of my exp. i16-1056. PROF. painter. honest .,.,•orlt. rcas. lnt /l'xt, !rel' t:lll. l~C'fs. 5-t~-2T.>9. • I Mi. to Beach e Sun Decks & Patios • Carpets, Drapes • Lo.1ds of P•rking e Garages -Pool • Rec. Room 714/646·6505 5130 &UP ALL UTILITllS PAID 1 & 2 BDRM'S. Furn. & Unfurn. Avail. Rltr. Med Lab. Account. etc. 642-1272 ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. Phone 5-12-7217 or write i<--ULL SERVICE P .O. Box. 1223, Costa 'MC'sa. * J ob Placement Assistance Ava ila ble * Cle11a1 Forming Now * Special Courses for Mechanics who need Class ''A'' Licen1e Interior.E xterior \\"all C'OVf'rinl?S •••• , &15-5925 Patios Wutcllff Building SWINGING SINGLES FOR INFORMATION Comee W0<tclill Drive & Call "Leah" 2-8 pm. 539-311'l I CALL 7l 4/646•5065 I WOOD Patio Covers, Ct-i" Irvine Blvd., N e wport -----~----I Cross Lnttict\ Ga rd f' n Beach. Mr. 1-1 ow a rd Socl•I Clubs 535 &.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_. S1n.irtu1"f's. For .AP pt . 1959 MAPLE STREET, COSTA MESA 645-GlOl. 2120 PLACENTIA AVE.-COSTA MESA 649--221J.l Tiu• Good Guys. 3 RM deluxe suite, adj. t.DVE WORN ~ Plas.ter, Patch, Repair Also Gar•ges fo r Rent :~~erFu.lro~~rv~c~~c: Discover DISCO.VER~ ~ ~ * PATCI{ PLASTERING Apt. Unfurn. 365 - N·"."".,-p"o-rt_B_o_a_ch ____ I ....., l{__.s ) ••-1 01.,.., PROFESSIONALS m a field I Ilg] I 1[51 All !ypcs. Free mrthnates """/ft., no ease req. ~ ·~ o1~_ A1.n1t966at~url. Matchmakers. Lost .wt FOLlld s.Mces and R9Pllirl c_ all 54~25 DuPont, Rm, 8. 833-3223 £-<> • • • _ PARK N'EWPORT APARTMENTS on the bay I.uxury apartment living overlooking lhe water. En- joy $750,000 health spa, 7 swimming pools, 7 lighted tennis courts, plua miles of bicycle trails, putting, shuf- fleboard, croquet. Junior l's from $189.50 monthly: also 1 and 2-bedroom plans and 2-story !own houses. Elec· tric kitchens, private patios or balconies, earpeting. dra- peries. Sub!en,anean park· ing with elevators. Optional maid service. J ust north of Fashion Island at Jamboree and San Joaquin Hills Road. Telephone {TI4) 644-1900 for rental information DESI< space available $.iO (TI41 8J5-.6885 (213) 387-3393 ,P_l_u_m_b_o_n.,s,_ _____ 1 mQ.. \Vil! provide furnilur-c 1· at S.1 mo. Answering service 'PARTNER. INTROD. Found (frff •ds) 550 Babysltt\ng · L.B.. 0 1'IS PLUf\1BlN G available. 17875 Beach Blvd. Personal Service. Low Fee --'--.;:..-----IR<'tnortels & Repairs. Water Rooms 400 • Huntington Beach. 642-4321 548-1479 or 836-1271 Wl·lITE cockapoo _p u pp y , MATURE \\'oman ,,·ill care heatt·rs. rl \spoaals, futnacL·s, SHARE wl g OFflCE SUITE, 1750'. lliiiiiiiiiiiiii Fou!1tan \'alley a r e a , for yOln' ho1ne .~ children d~h\\'ashrs. 642-626.1 l\t/C & Adu.It Condo. th Ci-pt air d _ PARK-I.= al 531-:rm while you vacation. Xln't B/A. Con1plete Plumbing owner. Private room . fNG -18c ! roMnl Ind p k I I . rc·rs. Drives. &1:;..oc,74 Ol'•.c""::"'.:::'':_':.· ------Kitchen p1ivileges. Color · • t. · · . a.r lost Ind Found SMALL black kitten \Vlth 1-TV, Pool. $90 mo. 548-3738 nr. Newpt Fwy & Edinger . . flea collar on. A\'ocado St, 1-o"c:"*oc::::"::;O·c.....______ JJLU!\fBTNG REPAIR .It 7PM 6Q.:sil. Costa l\tesa 645--4124 Builders No job too small ----------• * 6-t2-J128 * * ROOMS $18 wk up w/kit $30 EXECUTIVE office for rent Found (frH •d1) 550 r-.tA~Y 13th. Irish 8<'1tcr. ~-"c.;:'-"-=..o="-"----..., up apt•. Children & ,..,,1 in offices of Laguna CPA. 64.l-8997 \VTU. bulld or r epair Sewing/Afteretl'X'I• " " -~ $75 lh '"'-9751 1 '7.=-"~-,.,..-.,,.-....,.7."-anything your honte needs. ••ct;on. "376 Newport Blvd., per mon · .. .,.... ; FOUND large a tered male F"ND. Shutters ~--st JI""· ~ ' • 71' s~ •221 ped Se '-"-'tt J Gene t:nnc.<>, 547-18.l~ Altor1tlon-"2..5845 CM. 548-9755, 64.'>-3967. ·•: ,,,,.., • cat, grey stri , 4 asons <l!l2-6657 ~ OFFICE -~ for -nt Mobile Park, Costa Mesa, -----~=---Business Service Nt"at. accurate. 20 ye81'!1 exp. ATrR.AC. rm; ba w/ or Spb .. ., ·~ · L 555 w/o kit prl. Bus woman or Newport Beach, \VestC'liff ~.,6!.41· N~peerts P !Ji::~ -"'-'--------BOOKKEEPING &: Account· Tuto_rc;l..;ng.:...------teacher. Non smoker. Cntrl area, l.000 . sq. ti., sharp, Fl h ·• loc. $95fmo. 646-l979. call Gene Hill, 642---0200. h('re! Jeanette I er l~g Setvice, s~ms ~e-* Concrete & Asphalt Saw· ~ueit Home 415 1 OFFICE SPACE FOUND Siamese ki t t e n 7662 Rhine Dr. signed for~... keeping ing. Call Dale After 5 pm. v vicinity Shakey's Pi :z z a Huntington Beach ~,,"',.~!'.ree Est 1 ni ates· 531-7968 ~ NeW)Xlrt Beach. Various size Parlor, Newport Beach. You arc the winner of ""' "'" PRIV & semi available for .suites; prime area. Call c Sh-"-· I · C S . ontact "'-""'Y s or m-one free pass arDet ervlce ambulatory guest. Lovuig manager GTh-1220 fonnatign 673-9301 Good for a whOle carload · I lllJ! care & nutritious meals. FURNISHED & unfurn. of· TR I red ma1 B to any ot the JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery ~;•It 54<>-2562 1;-•w'tes. ~--y ac-ss, l-co o e asset D . Sh ! Seo •co = co Ho"nd wearing heavy black PACIFIC mEATRES ,.,. runpoo . cee tch· ._ ____ ~~ Summer Rtnt•ls 420 ~. & $65. mo. Zl33 E. leather collar with broken ~ard (Soil Retardants). • EXCLUSIVE . Coast H"''Y· Cr.:IM. 545-316.5. rope vicinity Bolsa & De-greasers & aU color J b W ted Mail 700 BIG CANYON CORONA del Mar 2 BR, _._.5 ' B <><><> .,o.,, (Sub'ect to all rvi brighteners & 10 minute O an 1 e 2 BEDROOM' 1 bath, family rm apt, 1•-. 1 blk Business Rent1l -Springdale, H. · ~·~. l '"' " " ..... charge at theatre). bleal'h for "11hlte carpets. RE c ENT Ly a rr Ive d Costa Men builtins, fully carpeted. Luxury Golf Course from ocean. June $200. wk. Balboa p · 700 tt d'-FOUND -Young white Pl<'ase call 642-5678 ext. JJ4 Save your m_oney by. saving Japanese student wanta job DELUXE I $ July thru Aug ""Im \vk erun. sq. · 1 female kitten (Must go) · • IN h w JI 1 Ch ldren OK. 145. per Apartments · ..........,. vided into g rooms, lots of Vi f Albert & 0 to claim your ticket. or~ me extra trips. 1 c can as live-in hOuse boy to APARTMENTS month. Call DALE, NEWPORT BEACH 675-3308 wall space. Suitable for art C ~·sf a Mes a ~: County toll· free number is ll\'ing rn1.. dining rn1, & share American family lite. Air Cond • Frplc"s • 3 Swim· 962-447J. $475 _ $730 SECLUDED New Por t gallery, antique shop, ar-9am-645-7557 54{).12'10).. hall $15. Any rm. $'1.SO, ¥.»-6005. ming Pools • Health Spa • ~~~~--~~-Phone 714/644-0509 Island. Summer rentals, chitect & draftsman. Near . REWARD! for any in-couch $10. Chair SS. 15 yrs. ,::==-~~-~1~7=02 Tennis Courts • Game wuJ *MOVE IN TODAY* available now. 673-6210, Cannery Village, rent set FND -<;>range long .hai:red formation regarding the exp. is what counts, not Job W•nted, Fem.• Billiard Room. Spac. 2 & 3 BR. $149 & -. Mike. (213) 377-4640 collect. ac~ng •~ tenants remod-cat. Vic. Marquente & d;""ppea<-·-of a l•~e method. I do \\'Ork myself . • .....,., NEW Bayfront·priv Bch & \.Vl'\U l.U c t H CdM M le ..... "''"" -o Good ref. 5.'J.1--0101. NEED help at home'! \Ve 1 Bed.rm. 1'~rom $165 Kids \.\o'elcome. Pool. Gar. Pier 3BR. 2BA, $550 mo yr. LIDO Isle, 4 BR, 3BA, home eling needs. Aft. 4:30 ph. oas wy, • a • collection of skin diving C have a.Idell, n u r 11 e 1 , 2 Bedrm. From $205 17?.Gl·A Keel.son Ln Cl blk ly. 979--0631 or 644-4SlO, July $1200, Aug, $1400, days 673-5990. 675-4944 aft 6 gear. Special Sampson-Hall •rpenter h 0 us ekpn, companions. MEDITERRANEAN W. or Beach Blvd., oU Slat-962-1356, eves 675-8766 "The Factory" has Shops CLUTCH purse with spear guns &: prescription Homemakers up john, VILLAGE erL-847.aiD. 1700 Wl;STCLIFF DR •. SML 2 Br hse, 2 blks bch, Avail. Ideal for booksmre, prescription gla&<Jes.19th St. mask, trom 1rvine Terrace ~~h. ~~~~~· :r?!: i .54c:7:.,-668;oo'oclc.·====--.,-I WALK To BEACH 2 BR. 2 BA. Blto appliances. T n~•Ma. $390/mo. June thru lealh·· •hop. etc. Starting Costa Mesa, 54&-9387 aft. hOme. 675-6270 .-: Pool 642-6274 ~''" ~ 1 oo homes etc. Custom \\'Ork. HOUSE CLEANlNG, wl.n-2400 Harbor Blvd., C.M. · · Sept. Connie, 499-1397 from $110/mo. 425 30th St., : p.m. LOS!' Adams & Magnolia Licensed. !l62-I!l61. rlo\\o'S, carpets shampooed. {714) 557-8020 N_,eswhw•h2• 8 1!:;1 Crp2051/drplSths, Apts., NR ocean, & channel, 3BR, N.B. 673-9606 FOUND medium small red H.B. area, sml black maJe GENERAL CARPENTRv call btwn 9 am A 6 pm. RENTAL OFFICE " '• .... · · Furn. or Unfurn. 370 2BA. $250-$275 wkly. Days CdM, 17c/tt. 2.4M /fioor x 3 female puppy, 1h golden dog w/white chest, chin It .. 1864 OPEN 9:30 AM to 5:30 PM 847-39-:>7. 6/:r-5366, aft 5, 548-3226 ttl. $1.WO. 675-7651 (24 hr. retriever. Vicinity Corona frnt feet. Med. length hair. ~~7~A:; co:,:e:!y"si".;.,,'-N-G_li_t_e~boo-uae-- Park-Llke Surrounding 2 BR,. 2 BA, $210. Adult Costa Mesa No.) 24ll Cst Hwy &: del Mar 673-0363 $25 reward lor tttum. , Poolside Garden Bungalow. Vac•tion Rent•ls 425 MacArthur, CdM SPAYED fem dog, ?inos.,962-31 -~=•=-1~~=-"'7-., Cement Concrete wock in your homt. Avail· QUIET DELUXE Near ocean Frplc Ll'g THE EXCITING ~ ' able weekend<; only, pl.ease 2 & 3 BR API'S. tlo 6 Pool. Sa . T NORTII Lake Tahoe Dollar CUTE AOOBE HOUSE, 1000 fox terrier mix, wh w/blk FEMALE Standard FOUNDATJONS -A•tlstlo call after 6 ~• •••-1. pa · 11• una. en-PALM MESA APTS. face & ears, vie Arch Beach Sclmauzer, 11"""'.....i, .-oy or • .rJ•i V'Y"~ Pvt Patios * Htd Pool nis 846--0259 Point. Modem 4 Br, 2 Ba sq ft. adjoining busy comer, l"'.I'~ ~·~ Planters, concrete & brick W -~ M • F JlO Nr. Shop'g * Adults only ~-· =~"------MrNUTES TO NPT. BCH. chalet , sleeps 10. Tennis, Costa Mesa. 645-2020/642-6560 Hts, Laguna. 494-9815. salt or pepper coat. 35-40 patios, etc. Lic'd &14--0687. H_ tla ant-, • • • 2 BR. Newly decorated. \\lalk Bach, 1 & 2 BR. trom $150 pool & beach. For info c4151 FOUND Duck, 3 or ol mos lbs. Name, Hester. Last -r;;. Martinique Apts. lo ocean. Encl gar, Bit-ins. Adults, No Pets. 1322-2177 or wrile p. lndustri•I Rent•I 450 old. vie. Garfield &: seen Pegagsus St. tn SA PATIOS, walks, drives. Saw, ACCOUNTANT. eicp'd, for J " \ ,, ' i ! • Jm Santa Ana A\'e., Cl\1 S195/nio. 5JS..fil55. 1561 Mesa Dr. Petersen, 65-K Redhill Cir· Magnolia, HB. Call 968--0886 Hgts. 54}:3659. break, remove & replace local Newport Crnter CPA Mgr Apt 113 646-5542 * • BRAND New 2 Br, (5 blks from Newport Blvd.) cle, Tiburon, Calif 94920 NOW LEASING bef. 8:30 am; aft 9 pm LOST black & wtilte cat, a]. concrete. 54&-8668 for est, firm. Muat be CPA can- * RENTALS * frplc, gar. Walk to beach! 54&-9860 LAKE Havasu City, 2BR, Huntington Beach BLACK fat puppy _ curly tered female. Last seen May PATIOS-PLANTERS dldate or CPA. Recent local 410 21st St., H.B. * CASA VICTORIA * a/c home, fully furn, % black hair -ma1e. Nortti 6th, Cameo S1mes area. Alt Concrete work. 894-3533. firm exp deslrable. Nu poai· YEARLY DELUXE 2 BR, drp/crpt. 1 & 2 BR. Fum & Unfum, mile from lake by day or NEW M-1 end of Costa Mesa, Monroe Please call. REW A RD! lion due to arowtb. Salary From $650 Month $150. 2718 Florida St . Carpets. drapes, DIW. TV week. aft 5pm, SSfr.2543 H ~ Sq. Ft. & Up \Vay. 546-4426 615-3362. I :c;:!.•:m~•::n~t,~C:::•:::•::•:;rot:::::•:..._ __ 1.:::•P<="c..· -;i644-<i~i;lf;56i;n:rn.':--1 SUMMER 536-4'76l or 586-02'12, Bill ant. Pool, etc. Come by in-Rentals to Shera 430 =f::. =~ FND: blk & tan Shepherd FEM. Shepherd & Iiuslcy CEMENT & Block Work. ACCOUNTING From $1200 Month LRG 2 Br. Studio, 1% Ba. qAlolire about525olll'VI 1M?ves·in t """""'""'""'""'""'""""'""I mix. Santa Ana Ave. & pup. 5 mo. old. White, grey, Wall, pa.Hos, sidewalks, etc. TECHNICIAN $157.SCl/n-.>. MatTied cple, I owance, c ona t. LOOKING for a fe. room-1 · Pegasus C.M. 546-7308 Dr black. Flea collar. Vic. 18th By hr. or job. 646-6915 CITY OF · BILL GRUNDY child ok. No pets. S42-45.fg, at Harbor, C.M. 642-8970. mate. Ava.it June lst to NEW Bldg, ideal C.M. Joe, 675-1739 & Orange. OWners Frantic! SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO Realtor 67$-4161 Laguna •·a-lBR iBA tum $190. share 3 br Twnhse. in Costa ::tr.tr;"'Pti~ofZx,& ;:: 1fo~ FND: Med. large red-brown Reward! 642-2Tl5 aft. 5 cC..;o;.;n.;.tr..;•;.;ctoc;.;.r;_ _____ ,s!1;·:i7:·p~b!l~~ut~~ M R L M -'" 2BR IBA "-•·-~~ M-·. Plea•• call for inte-•. d --• t 1 -ore oom-ess oney "'u"'" .,_,_...., ~-"" • • 0/H oor, EZ entr & exil. male dog vie. Harlx>r CHOKER su·m..., o pear 11 JACK Taulane _ Repair eounting work. Maintain COME see a real garden LAGUNA estate living on 151:·~ ;.M. iayT 8.l3-9410 ask for B. llOO sq.(t, Sl.15. Days Hi-School, 548-8372. Jdentify w/gold clasp, vJc El remod., addit. 20 yn exp. financial and <.'Ott account apt! Like livlng in a home a cres or gardens. Wide ==-7'-=::.,o=c.::.=--ee · 675-8733. eve 673-.1417. collar. Rancho. Reward. 644-2635 Lic'd. My Way Co. 547-0036 records, typing, t I l 1 n r , for $162.50/MO. 2 BR, 1% ocean views. Lge., custom NEW· 1 BR Furn $190. Unf WANTED! Female roommate cM--l..,..130fl=~sq-. -11-, -lro-nt-ol_fi_ce_, FND: OH-white poodle mix "'voe"~· -~-..,..77'-,-Electri"•I purchaslng and re I ate d BA. 2 prk'g places, priv decorator apts. F rp 1 cs . , $170. Adults, no pets. 114 E . age (22-3:;) to share 3 BR, 2 lrg rear door. 1240 Logan Santa Ana Ave. & Pegasus SM.AU. white teddy bear. ;o.;.;;..;c;;..;.-:;;;______ ~'Ork. Two years experte~ patios & rec areas. Wil90n close to beach. Swimming 20tfJ St., 548-0137; 646-4-095. BA apartment on Newport SL, $180 mo. 646-5033 deys C.M. 546-'lB or 675-7'739. Lost 5/13. Reward! in bookkeepin& or related Gardens, on Wilson St., W. pool soon. 2 BR., 2 baths. H . 8 Beach Peninsula 'vi th 646--0SSl eves. 842--5061 EL ECTRICIA?<;, licensed, field. High School Diploma of J.Iarbor. No child./peL Only 3 apts. at $450 to $650 untington each same. Call 979-1976 after ="'-"'-i-'-7",C-,.-,.---=-o• IF'OUND bike v I c in i I Y 1 bonded. Small Jobi, maint & or equivalent reqlll.red. Ob- 2283 Fountain Way East m 0 nth I y, incl. utll. LA QUINTA HERMOSA .5::;'00"'-'p'"."m'-. ----,--_R_e_n_ta_l_s_W_a_n_ted ___ 4_60_ Sandcastle & Se acres t , LOSf 2 pearl fnger ring. repair!!, 548-5203. lain application from 3MXl 64&-2846 Considerate adults. 494--4653 M-ATURE gal 10 ,hr. 3 bdnn Corona del Mar, 644--5579 Vic. or Fashlon Island. G•rdening Paseo Adelnnto, or phone Spanish Country Estate Liv-RESPONSIBLE adult wants Reward 493-2558 ----"------! HARBOR GREENS or your broker. ing & Spacious Apt.<t. Ter-hse w/same, els. to bch. rea!IOnable summer rental SMALL girl's brown glasges · ·· 493-llTI. Deadline May 25. Fr $13() LARGE J bdrm. bltns, raced pool. sunken gas $140/mo. H.B. 842-2929 July l -1\!iddle Aug. or care found in Corsica Park. C.M. MINIATURE Beag\('. feml, A Prof~ional, uniformed ACCOUNTING CLERK FuBarnch'. •,, 2U&nfurn3 BR's. Model~ Sunset Terrace, % blk to BBQ. Unbelievable Livin<>, Prime Prop. for house, pet,·, exchan"'e Friday nite 5/18. 540-1049 recently bad puppies. Vic gnrden1ng team. Se.rvtng . 1~1 .. ~ ' ~ beach NB Ph· 645-8806.. 0,;y lg ostateo. apt & Ag_gross1ve, young e .....-uuu cs 0 -10 'Ill 7 pm. 2700 beach. Panoramic ocean 1 BR. UNFURN $16.5 SHARE Apt or House & for rent. Retcrences. B. FOUNu p....ana.nt cat. Vic • · · 1 •--1mm~•-te ~1ng .... i 1 u -~.... •·· Indus complexes. Free e11t. irm ,,.... ~.... ~ ....... Peterson Way, CM. nr. Har-view. $275. mo. nc ut • 1 BR. FURN $185 SAVE $ $ $ HOME Salsburg, 5538 Gr a pe, Santa Esabelle & Santa Ana GRAY /blk/v,oht 3 nto. ...1t-Custom Landscape Mainl for sharp lndlvidual with ex· bor Blvd. & Adams. Eve {TI4) 982-7821 2 BR. FURN $215 PARTNER Lie. Business Houston, Texas 7 7 O :i' 5. Ave, Costa A1esa. 548-1729 ten, male, Mesa clel Mal', {714) 531_7280 pcrlence .tn varied account- 546-0370 Mesa Verde AU.. UTILITIES PAID Call 836-1194 or 548-1479 TI3!661-2393 OLDER Great nan e Please call M0-9136 "A 1'"'rank M. Nelson Co." 1ng functions. • Adults. No Pets 1 I Fnd 1 ••75 to ••~ ATI'RAC. new, J,.,,., 1 & 2 BR . ..i 4 blk $75 will sbare my ove Y SINGLE lady requires 1 Br Brindle f('nt. V c. . .,.. . ..,,,.,, per mo. ·o OLA 2 & 3 Br., 2 Ba. E ncl ( 8 S. of San Diego Frwy quiet home in C.M. to refin-furn apt. CdM , NB area. Irvine & Mesa Dr. 557-7fl61 E'XPER. Japanese Gardener. 892-55.11 Westminster apts. Crpts , drps, bltns, gar. 1165 "P· Rental Ofc., on Beach, I blk W, on Holt d 1 d Ref' N k' Call ""•=• aft 11 AM I 11 I• J l<no\Y how. Tr l m ming . · Adults. no pets. $135 up 30951\ilace Av('. 54&-1034. to 16211 Parkside Lane.) t" a y. s. 0 l'l•no ing. ..,.......,.,... · FEMALE Great Dane -Vic. ln1tr11clion Clean-u11. Sinall Ja ndscap-AD TAKER 64&--0176. (71_4) 847-5441 $8.5 w/priv. bath. 540-TI9S. Santa Ana & Del Mar< . . ing 968-.1486. EnjO:( deallng \V/thl" public? VALUE _ quiet _ 2 Br. Newport S..ch 1 BR Del Ad 1 1 . SINGLE LADY will share 1 ~ r~awn. 549--0223 liiiiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiil;;iiiiim; ''XPER J pancsc Gacd nc , Join the Pcnnysaver tel;lm · wee. u t poo side lovely home, CdM, \\li1h I d PIT build al I A\' II "-'• · a !-1 · ol t·11lhu11iutlc, progreA!l1ve ~T8~ ~~its~s~~~·s mJ: ''Rent A Piece garden bungalow. near SAME. Pvt bdrm ,'?,, ba. . ~· •• Beach, ~~t:;1 i!~. C:.1fi Schools & Complete yard srv. Reha.&: rt'fHlr.r ad sales gal~ who 22!1; Pacific Aw. 54g.ss1s. of • Palace*' ~rs~· ~J~~:· t~ni~~ti$iro~ 51;..,.1230 ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,:;;; Palm Springs, n4: J:s-8535. instructions 575 nent. Free "'-642-4389. love their jobs. F/tlm~. Co. ' GARAGE apt. Prime 846--0259. APARTh1ENT to share. Male • 500 WH''°'"IT'°'E"rr~a-=n~pood=:.,c:,-. -:v:c,,:c, 1----E-b-·o-0-,.-.----1 Haul Ing Pbcn('flts. ~pl1~.5inNpenoont, · ' OCEAN and 22·30. I n~•~n . lkean Vi("\V. Announcements H ·11 """1129 ' ennysaver, .,.. ewpor Eastside Joe. 1 BR unfum, Newport S..ch '""'!§"'"' arbor Vw H1 s . ......-Y AllD, garage cleanups, Bl vd, C.M. S165mo. 675-4630, e ves VIEW OwnBr,Ba.Ulil.incl.$130.1----------425678 TutorlngCllnic R 1 ift . .:::,'=c=c~~-~-~-1 6.f&..IOOJ Owner/agent HARBOR OCEAN VIEW: modern, all l .OC"a"U..;•ccf..;t...;60-. ..;494-"=884-:1~~= ALLEVIATE an.~il'ties, feat:§.. CALL 6 • READING e~novc rees.. Jr • ivy. AFTERNOON yard teacher lgned guilt. Be healed through· Drtvewys, gradmg. 847-2666· for Chr\."ltlan Pre-School. l ** SPACIOUS z BR. crpts, Elegant apartments des el1><:tric, crpts, drps, bltns. Garages for Rent 435 suggestive meditatio n. Call DAILY _PILOT SPELLING GBN Hauling. Tree/Shrub Call &1&--7ll7 ' drapes. $140. Married pref. wirh a Master's touch, su-.'"ialcony, pool. 1 BR., tum & MATH 1 . G & Yd 1 673-8145 alt 6. perb house security, exclu-unfurn. Lease. Adults only. ALLSPACE 5":»-2529. CLASSIFIED ADS nm. a~ c eMup. ALERT girl for general of-/ slve VersaillC's Club and MaiTai Apts. !SIO W. Bal· Self Stora•o FrN! Diagnostic Testing LOCEst.AL5.11-6377, 557-6004 1 · lice work. Good typist. Ex· l 2 BR. Adult&, no pets. BAY '-n-·""" • For that lten1 unde.r $50, Icy 6Q.5678 9791626 . & ha l b 10 ,_ ddlng MEADOWS AP'r. 387 W. pool'<With unique Aqua....u·, -..._ N.B. (TI4) 675-4230. Mini Warohouiti .. p Pl ,___ • n1ov111g u ng y J>P.r. (Jn ,.,.y a fountains and formal gar-\nc ('nny ncite1.. EXCELLENCE lN atudeot. Large truck. Re""· n\llchlne, \Vllllng to lef;.'. n .... St. CM. 646--0073 WINTER, Summer, Yrly, V · ~ $7 50/ 53 2 ~ ~ dens. All part of the South Anita's Rentals, Bkr, 2005 RrlOUs ~ues from · mo. SUMMER DAY PROGRAMS 4-1846 or 5J4... HM . bookkeeping ntachine. . 1 $140 up. 2 Br., 3 Br., 2 Ba. Coast's finest apartment w. BalbOA Blvd, 673-2>58. 0u lci:<=1k tt • U k~~.!h: key. , Enrichment Days, Beach 32· FURNITURE van for cM1a,kk.t .,';~~llllvro'L'.doLNBI do 1 Pool, bit-ins. play yard. community, n si e mgrs -~ '" · .. ccess Oays. All ,nay Fun Trips, local furn hauls &: gen'! ar e • ,,...}>, ia 1 . I 1996 Maple. 642-3813 1 Bedroom/studios from $1% No tnove In . No move out fee Trader's Parad"1se A . . D ... h 6 hauling. 548-1862. AN s w ERIN G Servi"' • Nr. CX:X::. Freshly pntd, ,-Hamilton&: Newland St., i.m 675-4022. Pre-School All \\'Ork. Concrete, asphalt Exp. pre!. or w lrau1 • ' f. . 1 ' I 1 I I I I I I I 1' , 1 ' I • ' ' " t I I I I ) $305 ~ Serurity Palrollerl ' ctivity ayi1. ..., t ru lh Co M LAR. 3 Br, 2 Ba, crpts, dras, M~e~s~n9 r:: til dusk I lt.ntalr I .& Open Daily far Inspection· grad('. ENROLl. N 0 w ! SKIPLOADER & duinp tn.ick operator, sta eur are~. I upstair8. $179. 557--0350. ~ ~-----~ 833-0519, If no an!:, 646-0697 11· nes Year, lxiurs 7:45 AM--0 PM. sawing, breaking. 846-7110. 540·1777. I NE\V 7BR !BA. carpets & Offic• R•ntal 440 , Housacle•nln9 * * ~ I ; ~' drapes, ,builtns. fl85. Roy Rooms 400 GIRLS 7-l5, Swim. surf, APARTMENT r McCardle Realtor, 54R-T72'J ON THE BLUFFS t"I me·s volley ball. arts &-crafts. &: Linda Donahoe MANAGEMENT ll UNF. l BR, 11,i BA. Adultii Andrea McCarty PRESTIGE good vHie i1. 5 morning~ a 23221 Vt• Reina CO UPLES ONLY only, no pets. $150/mo. AT NEWPORT 5201h Marguerite OFFICES C~~k5.;t11~2.' Complete in!o Mission Vitio MAJOH. propmy tnveau.n1ent filO..C Joonn..St,. !ij!iffe73. Frorh Newport Blvd., lum flt COrona del Mar Fountain va11ey •• neaull· dOl lars You arc lhl' winner ot firm 11 ow lntervlewtnJ;t SM.AU. I Bt. EaStsld~. -mn Hospital Road (1 block You are the winner of ful new bulldlng, ground • one tree pe.ii11 ,;.... ,~• for Management Pd. 1 adult. no pet. Yrly. above Pacific Coast l·lwyl to on~ (rec pass floor, 3,000 Rquan! fl!(!!, I 1[51 Good for a wholc ·carload ll ng pr:: gr a T. E~- $140-$145. 6420 642-85~ entrance. 900 Cagney La.ne, Good for a \\'ho!(' ca rload , ... 111 d1vlde into smaJlt>r '----------------..,.-'! -.., _ PACltFolaCnyTffolEAtheTR. ES ~n~~~~t~ N~n cinrl:n ao•: ATIRAC new. lrg 2 Br, Newport Beach, Ca. 92660. to any of the offices. 50c per aquare PRIME 1.'0mmcl'('lal Mont-l-lAVE 24 nr. choice l~d on1;;;;;;;iiiil;;iiiiiiii1~;;-""ls. 40 + yeani, No ex· 11 AduJ T I-'-~ (7141 645-0060 PACIFIC THEATRES loot, includes carpel.<;, ,,. crvts. dljJs, ) In!!. ts, no c "'V'""'e: dra~. nil utilities, jani. i:'l(\ir t.'Orn("r, 5.3 acres. Free Van Buren In lUverslde cir, pl'riC'nce necessary. Call tor pel.9. $l.1.';. 646--0176 THE NEW tor !lft'Vlce. Call Marilyn ,~ l'leilr. Equity, $350,00J. ($240,000), wAl<'r . Cle<: .. gas. Babysitting ISuhjf"ci lQ small serv\te i n 1 t'1· v iew sppolnlmcnt. UN1'1JRN 1 & 2 Br Garden BAYWOOD APARTMENTS (Subject IQ i;mall !ICrYlcc Stovall tTI4l &12-5440. rradr for Beach area coin. WANT ~\l..'llna ln«.'Ofl'IC prof)d--'--...:.-----rhargl' at thealrt•). &JS-2.WI. Apt11, ,.~rplc, 0/W, priv In New-pc.rt Beach arc chllrJ{e at theatre). 1netcllll or !! 714.644·4579. Mr. ,..~. rutr. 494-1288. Cllt!.D CAJl!: In my hon1e, Plcu.'Wl <'1\11 642-5678 cxr. 31'1 A/Payable Cl('rk. Rllpidl,y patio. SlM--fl90. 557-2841. ready. The Sl).)es. ottlce ls Plea~ call 642-5678 rutf, 314 SHARE beautiful 1200' WANT clear late mod. mtr. o .C. ranch clOSf' in, 47 ac. rlepen6tlble &: relit1.ble, Child-lo claim ynur ticket. !North expanding development co. 1 lBR, 2 BA, nu crpts & nu open dally from 10 AM to to claim )'()Ur ticket (North office, fully carpeted hm, Trade (4) l'A. ac. fll IO Nat Forest gateway, prime 1,•n from 2 to 5. 546-4145. County toll-frl'C number 11 In N.O. needA exper. in· paint. Sl65. aldts. 1 child ok. 6:30 PM. MacArthur Blvd. County toU·Crcc number 111 •nd furnished. Grea t 1c pa.reel Yucca Val /Jo«hua rec area. Ideal holding synd EXP. mother would like 10 a.10.l2'20J. 11ividual th.ii r11Joy1 a vurll" no peta. £162..()670, avail Isl A San Joaquin Hills Road. _540-~_1220~)_. ------for CP~ Insurance, Tr area. VsJ. S15M 673--3472 group, un.Jim . a.pp, take part hflb~11.lt tn hrr h o m r LM COl\lPL~E Ho U S E ~rt~;~ty ~~r~rk)\..'!:j!.n ~~: 2 BR. Carport. Nesr !lhop-644-ffi55 ROOM w/bath. F:i1n1. or un• ;;>r ml Kewamee Dr, CdM. trd boat. dsrt or 1 838-4661 anyflme. Call 847-8633 CLEANJNG SERVICE. reptlonRlly qutlllfled ll.C· Pint. IJllllUes P ft Id · 3 en.. 2 ha. Nr. beach $350 fun1. Kltcneng. M•nvf. R•p., or Seer .. !ll ac. No. San Diego Cnty OWNER detrlrcs exchange BABYSrITING Anyllme • * 646--$.t3 * 5''8-~ * l'ounllnr sturt. Salary $S2S $155/mo. 53141SOS 2 BR., Peninsula. ...••••. $250 • &t7 • tarf•I Service. Contact 15 ml. • RMcho Calif. (val. 2.4 unit butld11'lK1J \n Sell for LlcenM."d, hot me11li1, 111-l.Al)Y w11nti1 hou8eclcaning tno to start. Ai=J"R.AC 2 BR, !rpl. patio, MAASllAU. Realty 675-4600 \\IANT lady for i:m & priva lc Ginny 557-4130. $tl5ll pt'T ac) Will trade all l oi-4 lbr. house tn T~ur\ltng-tr nlion. Ph. 968-0887 l~.B. "'·ork. Expt>r. Own trans. lk'ard Oevelopmenl Co. ~· uOI. Miii, no pets. $180. OCEAN Vu Yr\y 2BR 100 Ba In lovely N.B. home. Kllim ~"""" .. "'."'11". "o"'F~l"l=c~E,.....w-/~ll~v-·g i:>r par{ for O.C. property or ton Ikh, Costa Mesa area : PROFESSTONAL teacher 841-3631. • ·s.t()-7434. ~ 26S2-A Orange S43-1674 dui>lex, ~nturn'. $ 2 7 5 '. priv. Car nee. $Th 5"1ll-628R qlrs S15.1. A18() 600 sq.ft. ? • 548-55zii or 548·9710. Call Zl3·86'9-8346. will ('ar~ for t"hildren. Niies For that Item under $50, try Daily Pilot Want Ads hn\11 CLA.'5SITTEO ...... 642-5678 644-6780 or &42-3639 Want ad result. ..... &lz.5618 STORE. $1!'"5. C.M. 646-2130 I ••••••••••••••••••••I ~day~•:..· _:w".!k~•~rnl~ao_. _!645-~1~057~.-the Pe nny Pineher. harp.ins p}o.te. I • • ' I I I ' ii .. ' ' • . • 1· • 1 I I i DAILY PILOT s at s a :·e 7 mi=1 ~ ... ~1 ~. ~,[jJJ~l~,~.~1'1~•~l~IJ~l[~~.~ •. 1~1~j[jJJ~IJll 'e's 1 l[ll)I '•'s · D1J t: s W ....... M & I' 711 Kolp w.,,Nol, M & F 710 HalD W""'llL M & F 710 Help Wat1o•,M.& F 7lO ~ W......._ M & I' 711 lt!'e WMNcl,M & F 1:1.-Wanltltl, M & I' 71 ...._ W.,.,... M & F 710 Help W.m.d. M & I' 71o , : COOKS -..,.,• _.....i.. ~...,,.,..... .. c-•or JUNIOR SALESMAN : 11tA1D ,,.. LAGUNA REEF N..--Puhllc --SA• ES GIRLS ' YIJ I OJJI .__ _ .... _. ·__,ILm I APPLIANCE BANK ...... :n • ._;coced. Ao111Y "di ...... '"" -ovw· ..,.,,, Pl-"" a>tt _. llWl'EL. .. s. em.. RN-t.~DE p I · ·· - TECHNICIAN ln .,........ :!flSI) E. 6'0il ~ ..,:<"' ... -~ -.,..,. -&Del Hwy., Lquna B •a c b. ll·T • olhtt lhllla. 111p ...., ~riflnced ln ~ ' pa.tform S.C:nt•ry liwy CdM al• A ~e dnk. oo Saturdays · &ttlh'l "MW -...-. dt:ICy Pl¥· hmned. Pl& b • • Full time, Some llltet 4 ~t-a. Good OJmpuy. Sh le typing knowled&'e of COUNTER Girl, hra 11·7 Mr. JllP nrning• ean Jean ct11tonm'S tor the Qaily MAID • MOTEL. Apply Elt· floor duty. Count>' w l de EXEC. LEVEL weetenm. Manager Poll· F'rinac benefits lnclUdln& R.£. rom~1 & ~ )oen llHl Ocaner'•, 2939 E. Brown ~ Coutal Ptlot Th.ls 11 1'°' a J».Pl'I' ttUlivt" Suitn, ml Newport lntrvwa. lfoo..Fri 9 -5 . We ..U ~ .ales lion ()pen. boratl program & boirii'tall-doeun\enta.Uon. Pa)'it1i 4 Coast Hwy, CdM P~l A¥.mcf 2700 Har-route and does no1 Include Blvd., Costa Mesa. 1.acoul~ Nur.ea Rr&J.ruy, oritftltd \ad,)t tor our Irvine I uUon. Exper1cnicd only ~lv\ng Tcllcni, Colitc· bor Blvd C?of ' dtUvuies or collectl~. 3151 llomplt.a.1 Rd. NB CWO. ol.Htt. Ideal U reaulta APPLY need aJIOIY. J10<1 T•ll•r. Full or p/dme. e CroH country " · W<h•veopenlnplnSOOth-MAINTENANCE by Parl< UdO B f dli -ll!d, .,..,.., mlndoo, HELEN GRACE DAVIS-BROWN Expt."r. only. Drlv•rt £.XP'D Truck drivtr to ~·est Costa Aki& and South &n.9955, M0-995'. ~U..-e woman who likes tt> TV & APPLIANCES Cont•cl Mr. W•loh e Foremen =i::.~1.t&~ ~;::t,,..,,,:, :t.i:'.1. only. MECHANI~ NURSES orun~.'"r°·;.;:;,::: 2300 H~'RN~:sBLVD. for lntonnaOon: Mr. Webstl:!t Bank of Cotta Mff• e Man•gett 9-5, Moo-We<I. &tU686. We have 2 opcnlo£1: ODe for LVN 7-3, p/li1ne. NUJ'lle'I poaltlon offering peraonal COSTA MES~ CA MS-XIO 979-4200 • AIMmblers EXPER. fire & cuuatHy in-J, W. Robinson a man w/5-J.D >'" expt'l'. in Aide, 11·7, exper. ~·d. growth w/So. c8.ltf's fa8lC8l "'!!!~"'!'!!!!!!!!!~~'""I Apt Manqement Al1l1t•nt Resklent Maineg•r Or Send Reaume To P. 0. 8oJC 2380 Cos1a Meisa, Ca 92626 F.qua.J ()ppor. Employer e Molde the . main le nan e e of Mesa Verde Cmv. Hosp, growing Temporary Help ::;; rs IUJ'ance aecretllJ')', precudon ma.chiJw t oo I 1 G1i1 C.enttt St, C.M. 548-5585. Service. Xlnt starting sa18J)' Sel•s R•p $100+ e lnsJ)9Ctor• 61'3--489IJ Newp0rt Bett.Ch w/knowledge of 440 Volt, 3 + exp. acct + comnt + Plant Meint $950 e Ge( ReP-lrmen EXP"D women for late even-llaa OpenlJli: For phase "I e ctr I e It Y A ~ Aidea, Exper. req. auto allow & loads of All 3 Shifts Ing Caft 10 pm) janitorial SALESWOMAN 11upervi90ry background. ~lB /time • 11-7 f/t.ime. benefits. Can Dot I i e • Pen!~~c~~ncy \Ve WUI TnlD work fr auperv1'k>n. ~ The other position requires · · aree. 842-5.5fil.. 540-4450 for COnbdenlial 1651 E Edi S A _; Ne\lfpOl't Beach firm .seekA u.lstant re a I d e n t manager tor large-apt com- ple"X. Ability to dl'!al w/lhe public, relate well to children & keep accurate record.I. The individual \ltC it"ek must II~ at complex & be willing lo v.'Ork weekends occaskinally. Salary + ttductlon In rent. Excellent co. benefits. MacGregor Yacftt Corp. Experienced • F/time 3-5 years of genera I 2 OFFICE GIRLS appt. (M~ 111 n~~iter0) • 8Jift!"~ :;;i~etv;:or:n •""l"'63"l'"P1~""""111..!! .... !!' ~c,..>1."'!""' E~~rE5RJENCEfRY For Better Sportswear maintenance e,q>er. NEEDED TEMPO ~~R.\RY 542-8836 llam-2pm. Little John'• L. CRET S -• d ·•" ~. 1 Radio telephone di..patch SALES & installation. Full or Inn, 2.007'2 No. Santa Ana DAY Kllchen MM. Day Bua aclive officl'! requlre:R legal Appl.yin Jlel'Mn lG-5 pm le<AUy, ay "'IL&t wo ... n 8 Must be 25, able 10 drive P6t1 tlnle. Young company, f~~rSan~~ A~~ghtl ~~; ~iii!!. No. Tustin ~=~i:r~~tt~a~~ ~~ ~~ i~P~r cleanp=~P~~~~t: YE't_Pl~n a&nco. PurchasiftfJ Clerk r:~!! r Tu!!vat'i:in1~: Brl"1011 DELIVERY HELP ary open. Dependent upon Yard Newport 186 E. 16th, Costa Mesa The Irvine Com~ny beh~·. 6 & 8 p.m. Home BARTENDER, Full or P/time skills, exper. A ability to KEYPUNCH 3314 W. W•rner Ave OPENINGS for Truck Knowledge of A/P hmctJon Safety View, 909'2 Talbert, EXPER. For Chamber of Commerce handle responsibility. Pleas. Santa Ana Driver, Mailer Ir. Receiving as related to ~ivlng dept Suite 9, Fountain Valley. Coupon Book. Good knowl· ant office, Newport Center. Clerk Start $2 per hour. helpful. Typing 6.5 w.p.m. & SALES, Office products & Coll 644-3389 Betwn 9 & noon Only Top Pay. Apply in person only, The Derby, 1262 S. E. Bristol, S.A. BEAUTICIAN needed part time, also lx>oth for rent. 548--2412 or 545-5180 ATTRACTIV E girl to model privately 3 lo 4 hra per wk. Day or evening. Great pey. BEAUTY Operator, cllentele No experience. Strictly for pref. U11e Iron & blower. tun! Reply In conlidence to Employee benefit11. J o e P.O. Box 10516, Santa Ana, Forre!ltcr Ltd. 64&-5370 ,977=1-'-1-....,,==,,----I Boat Manufacturing AUTO Cnblnet Shop Ilelper&, Sanders, Trainees SALESMAN Only th.,.. willing to worl< & learn net'd apply. Good \\'ages & benefits. Need 1 selesmen, ex.· perienced, Sell BMC. Fer· rarl, large inventory of used can, Frtt demo. exN:'llent workln& conditions, See Bud Ryder or Tom Aikin at NEWPORT IMPORTS ERICSON YACHTS -.001 BUSBOYS -Day & Nile Ex- per. only. Apply in person, El Niguel C:Ountry Club, 23700 Clubhouse D r . , Laguna Niguel. edge of Westminster area 1 1 ,.644-0023!!!!!!!!0,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ OPERATORS S45-7154 Dependable, thinking in-use of 10 key calculator. marking. F'ull or p/time. own traruiportat.Jon, Above I' Equal Oppor. Employer dlv!duals. Apply tn person Call 644-3389 Wonien or re!ire<l men. 270 averaee eamini'S· paid ~~ iboott':';~,&: ~~ We are seeking ex p e r . MAN to work lull time in ~~'ri~ St~~3:30PM 940 Betwn 9am & noon Briggs (cor Redhllll PM dally. Ptck your own hoUJ1I; trial bal. Must type, answer kt>ypunch operators Io r I rental yard Neat in appear qnly. from 10 am·8 pm. Apply 315 phones, one girl office. Hn daytime & swlngshlft. 4 .Pm· w/neat haJidwriting. will OP~INGS for machinists & RAPIDLY ' growing boat co. Sales Girl Frklay ; 3rd Street, Suill'! E, llWlting· g..5 daily. Send rHUme or 12:30 am on the . Univac train. Apply moms, 1930 dnll press operators. T~p-seeks exper . A/P Clerk. Salary p 1 u 5 commission, ton Beach. exp, education a.nd state 170~-1710. We are w1lllng to Newport Blvd CM matlc Corp. 1851 Kettering Irvine hxlus. Park location, good phone personality & train on the tab pwich ' St., Irvine, m-6080 Phone 493-4586. l DELIVERY Men, permanent salary needed. W r 11 e veririt>r Location of the key MANAGER wanted. Small Ou b d M M h . typ ng required. We need part time for early morning Classified ad No. 674, Daily punch 'dept ln the near recreation club. No ex-t r otor ec •n1c REAL ESTATE SALES you now! Call 979-3lll } newspaper delivery to Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa future wll i be Fashkln perience necessary. 536-8091 Summer or permanent. Move SUCC~ CAREER (Irvlnel. , ho~s in Newport Beach. Mesa, Clll. 92626. lslarxl Newport Beach. lo beautiful Lake Ar-New. o~ expenenced. Join the SARAH Coventry Jewelry. Must have dependable car I: FEMALE factory packagers. ' MANAGEMENT rowhead. Call { 714) Wort~ a largest and fastest No invest, dellv or collect. be reliable. ph 642-4800 $2 pr hr to start. Merit Please call Mrs. Rose TRAINEE 337-250L grow111g resale organization 894-7733, 645-5946. DENTAL Sec'y, 1 girl office. raises. S48-Sl25. for an appointment PANTRY Man • 2nd Cook, with a network of over 300 1 '°sE°'AM'-"~sr=R~ES°""s"'.:.:::.n:.1_os_t __ b, Exrvor. nt>eess. Send resume {n4l 547-7571 Our home office is sit· nites . ...._..._..r . ......,.d. Apply ofilCH and become a ,~ 1'"LORIST, min. 5 -yrs. exp """P"'" ·~.. member of our Millionaire exp'd. Must be able to do • 10 Classified ed no. 871, c/o w/fresh flowers. FuJI time. GREAT WESTERN uated on a bluff O\ler-betwn 3&5. Cyrano's, 600 D Club. Multi-million dollar own rt!pairs & maint. 4 Day •: Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Top pay. designers freedom looking the Pacific Ocean Newport Center Dr, N.B. advertising program. Free \\'Ork week. Apply Trabaca ' Costa Ml'.'M, Ca. 92626. 6'JS.6291. SAVINGS & Newport HarOOr. If guaranteed licensing school. Products, 8.17 w. 18th St. DENYER MJNJNG CO. ~D ~=s su~i:'; ;~ 1418 N. Maln St., Snnta Ana ~ ~~~~·~~o~:i= PART TIME ~~en~ ~~:aT~:~ I ~£~.M~. ------- 1M.tpervision to be responsi-An Equal Oppty Employer ment & 8 challenging NEW ACCOUNTS 835-4811. Secre!.7~'!!i;!·~· active ble for the operation of the Kitchen help, S:W.1:30 THE profeWonal opportunity. CLERK RED CARPET , Realtor's oftic.-e. Beautiful School cafeterias to select & PENGUIN Laguna Bch we are seeking an in· 50 W.P.Af. tvning. sh prefer-Realtors new ofiice in Newport train pel'SOnnel to assist in . 494-1353 · d' 'd _, / · 13 ~·· · Center. Con-ntal stafi of planning, remodeling &. ~~.-.,,;:==---lVl u .... w min -yrs red. REAL ESTATE .. ~ taking applicaHons for: WAITRESS Those experienced in food & equiping cafeterias. $735-Ladies Spa Attendant Business Exper. Clerical SALES MANAGER ~~~ =~:~I. .!u~nngt AUTO SALES cocktails only need apply. $898 ...,r month. Send "Tit-Prior cxper. In spa pro. Supervisory exper. prefd. -UNITED-·~"' 719 w 19th St CM ,,._ o;,~1~~· will be In ac~-CALIFORNIA BANK Resale Office needs manager good telephone \'Oice, SH & Experience preferred, will Average range $500-$750. Top · " · · ten resume to Saddleback cedure. Must be over 21, ;;;v/exper. & q~fi-with 2 years of Real Estate IBM Exec. abilities. Real 3100 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. 642-"405 Career Secretaries conalder shal'p 1rainee. New s. NO FEES. N.B., c.~1.. •..illeiit;iw;icei;nioi10ioiAMii;;-4i;i;PioM'-• I Valley Unified Schoo I knowledgable in use of cations. For considera-201 Avenlda Del Mar experience. Newport Beach estate cxerience not es.sen· car dealahip offers good Irvine, Orange & S.A. Call District, 14736 Sand Canyon whirlpool & sauna, Contact Sa Cl area Ex•"'"..i;~ """'mpan tiaJ, bot helpf"l. ~,,, --•--•-and ... _ I De rt t St E · IJon pie""" send resume n emente · t""......,'5 .,,..., Y· " r- 1 ·"' cpnUTilllaaln ...,mo f, .o.n. Immediately. · pa men ore Ave, ast ll"Vlne. Personnel Manager, & salary ~history to: 492-5123 Excellent opportunity for local resident. For interview Good co.Mbcne~ts.1A~:n • pp S J. W •. Robinson FRY COOK, EXPER. Balboa Bay Club professional growth. Apply call Mrs. Duhl. ~Har~~ s~!~ .. Cos~ • • • · Newport Beach Full Time. Must be clean & 1221 W. Coast llwy., N.B. Classilied ad no. 872 Equal Oppor. Employer in confidence. Send resume Wesley N. Taylor Co. 644-4910 Mesa. P•ciflc Personnol Jlas Opening For neat. Xln't working conds. c/o Daily Pilot to Classified ad no. 638, c/o & pay. Apply, Surf & Sir· Leasing Hostess P. o. Box 1560 PART Time, Exce ll e nt Daily Pl1ot, P . o. Box 1560, e Secretaries A_1!!?_M0TIVEh. 1 P8 1 ~ ma.nh,':~ Services, Inc. Wig Stylist loin. S930 w. Coast Hwy., NB Costa Mesa, Ca, 92626 '.f'YPlst, knowledge of spell-Coma Mesa, Calif. 9~. i • Typists ,.,_.......,. mac in 8 .. mac .. .., soo Newport Center Dr. 1ng & grarnmar 4 hr day 5 EA ES opr or man w /m e c h. S . 900 NB Must Be Experienced FULL or P/time The Irvine Company Eqool Oppor. Emplnuer day wk. Per~anenl en' 11 R l TATE SALES 1 • Trne Assemblers background, wishing to uile • ' · Full Time Kitchen Helper. mature "!!''!'!!'!'~'!"'~!!!!!!!·~,"!!!il,!"~"-~1884~_!'be"'tc.'8!_:&~9n~m~--1 FREE LICENSE e Gen'I laborer1 leAl'Tl the machine shop 24 C •-6401 T·l970 0 woman, Dishwasher, eve Sec.ks exper. leasing hostes.o; ;.lARINE ENGINE PART Tim• Sales G1'rf ~. TRAINING . VOLT trade. \Ve have pa Id enua O\\'er, range Apply in person 11).S pm shift. J anitor & Laundress. to show & leaSe apts in the " •i=u holld .. 1· "' 1·-, 547.6446 No 2 Fashion Isl NB Mesa Verde Conv. Hospital, Irvine aree. P 1 ea s ant !\IECllANJC ed. exp not nee. Call Pat, f'.atnOUJ'. Real Estate Li.cens-ln1tant Per1onnel ays, ~aca '°" • " · F.qual Oppor. Employcr · · ·· r.'f l be e & t 673-£250 1ng °'urse now available pension plM. Call 642-7391 I !!!""''"'!~~~~ ... ,..., Equal Oppor. Employer 661 Center St. c.r.t. 5:18-5585. personality. Typing 60. r.1ust u1' x00pcr. cu&rred~ on th T bell R 11 Fr Temporary Service forapplforintervieworap-CASHIER GENERAL OFFICE be \\'illing to \vork pe~ure at~.· iescl Part Time Oflice Girl Don rn 8! ea.ors. ee 3848Cam1>usOr.,SuitelOO P ly at 858 Production PI., ~ \\'cekends. en~nes, transrynss10ns, out-the Beach be ,.;,l E Pla?f!~ n1 Service. Free NewPorl Beach 546-4741 ATTENDANT Beautiful modern office in dnves. etc. HiQ:hest wages com r_ J<70J • Tra1n1ng Program. Earn N.B. Mon·Frl S..:>. DIA~ A JOBf Irvine complex. Great Excellent \\'Orking contls & in indusr~-Hrana ney,· Coast llwy. CdM. "1hlle you learn. Call Al Equal Oppor. Employer AUTO.GIRL FRIDAY \\'e will train mature, well • co·'NOI'kers. Good benefits. co. benefits. . facilities at nset Aquatic PB..X Operator. ans. serv. Sloan (7\4) · 832-5440, on EXPERIENCED groomt'd indlv. lo "'Of'k as Start $450. Call Gloria Gray, Call 644-3389 Park. Call st or appt. TI4: Relie( shift. H.B.. Weekends <714) 832·7000. SECRETARY P/tlme. All desks. Good cashier ln our new high Liz: Reinders Ag•ncy 540-6055, Coastal Personnel BetWC('n 9am & noon 846-4125 or 2l3: 592-1645 Call 536--8881 Previous secretarial exper typist. See Mrs. Slaughter, volume Coin-Op service sta· 4500 Campus Dr. N.8. Agency, 2790 Harlxlr Blvd,''"!!!!'""!!!!'""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' anytime. REAL ESTATE SALES fi'<f'd. Some college pref'd. Mon thru Frl al Countywide tlon in CostaGoodMesa. A!f.n 557-3401 cr.-1 I: r-.tATURE person wanted to POSITldNS OPEN Resales In Newport Beach Skills -Sh 80 w.p.m . mtn. Rambler, 12222 Garden shift open. starting LVN, Utime 7-3. Charge Type 60 wpm See P e sltl '" !benefits. Apply in ~~~~~~~~~!!!'I GENERAL Help, p/llnie Nurse. See Mrs. Taber, care for elderly lady, C.M. FOR NEW BRANCHES area. · · · t'SOll· Grove Blvd, Garden Grove. person, behl.·n 10 am & 2 ~~ eves from 5pm on. Drivers Jl.B. Convalescent Hosp, 8-2, Mon thru Fri. $2 per hr. HARBOR VIEW nel Manager, AUTOMOBILE exper. only pm, 295 E. 17th St., CM. DISHWASHER. e,·e shift. & Kitchen. Over 21. Apply 1S81 F1orida, lf.B. Refs. 547.2394 after 6pm. • Tellers HOMES Balboa Bay Club need apply -Service Ask ror Russ. Wed thrn Sun . Bahia in person, Men Eda, 410 E. 847-3515 MECHANIC • New Accounts 1829 Port Sh•'"-fd Place im W. Coast Hwy., NB cashler, bookkeeping. Sal 1,c""'°..=c,cc=c::..~~~-Corinthian Yach.I Club, 1601 17th St, Costa Mesa ~ * S t R * open. Dean Lewis l mports, CERAMISf \Vanted . 2, Mor Bayside oi·ive, Cororm de! LVN-Charge & Med. 3·1lpm Experienced in lawn inO\\·ers e loan Proc. Sec'y •wport Beach 833-0780 ecre ary-ec.ept. 646-9303. F. Sanford D. Buster, lnc. Mar. Sre Cher Debus. GENERAL Office \Vork Jn f/time. Immed. H.B. area. & turf maintenance equip-. wk-days only Slf. not l'eq'd, Gen'I. real P 0 Bo• 7 8144 H m rest home. P/time. Must 842-55.'il. n1ent. J\.1ust be able to conl· Savings &. Loan Exper.I~ estfltc exper. desirable in Nl'ia"d Ca 822"7 "'0 -0 1 •·-~ pletely run maintl'.'nan""' re · . Apply Jn Person. aclive, p1 ·-ressive office. AVON SAYS . . .... ' wy • DISHWASHER -FuH time. ~··~~''ll!''~~~~~·~· N~O~ ·~~~-~ !............................. p f d ''Be Your Own Bost'' CHA~GE or a ~~~~ook ~~C:~ ~oi;·~~~-sJlJP~ GIRL FRIDA y shop. Salary open. Benefit~~ Mariner~s Savings & RECEmONIST I Fo1· intervi~~·- Eam an income of your own, needed for retirement home. 562 w. l 9th St. Cl\! Mature. sharp. Small ofc. MACH IN E Sanla Ana are a. 71 4-loan Association GENERAL • Call 644--4848 right in your own neighbor-Pleasant work.· x t n t ""~""'"'=~:..:::::,.-_~-J>ayroll, heavy phone, Sonie 5-16-7975 1515 \VestcliH Dr., N.B. · ORANGE COAST hood. Be an AVON Repi-e-benefits .. 540-7095 DISPAT'ClfER. Under direct ix>okkeeping. 642-5267. s 0 J\1ECHANJC £.'Cp'tl, 0 w n 642-4000 OFFICE ~;~a !fl'~~ 9enfat1ve: Call 00\v: ..::""c"R".""c.;.H,;E;cC""K~E~R~-supervision of transporta-Ho ME CONSULTANT/ H p tools, 5 days. Busy shop, . . 546-5341 or 540·7041 tion supervisor (X'rforms nil CUSI'OMER SE"RVICE For paid . insurance, 174 7 PRESTIGE Newport Beach Looking for bright, pleas_ant SECRETARY BABYSITTER for 2 school Beautiful modt>rn bank net>ds clericul work ttquired for Capistrano Villas in San Anaheim ave., CM. publisher 01 Chrisllan audio ~voman t!> be ~ rece~t~on-Join the exciting -.rorld of ad· indiv. "'ith Jite exper. This the operation of tht> school J uan capistrano. Exper \Ve are an Orange MECHANIC A•"i•tant for products has key ...,_ning 1st, do life typmg & f11ing, _ ve111sing. Good skills + girls. Good pay, 7:36-11 :30 ro. promotes trom "•ilhin. bus scrvlce & other related County bcarinu man· """ ~""' sw tel......_ & t k I · a.m. & 2-6 pm, f\.fon thru Start S400. Call Linda Ray, duties as required. s5rn.S702 preferred 'but not necessary. ..., golf course. Call for in for good lypist with light an er el""'"~· . a e creative ab~li!y & outgoing Frl in my home. Cdl\-1 area. 540--0055. Coastal Personnel th Scnd .It Call 639-1000 r or ap-ufecturer \\'ho has tervie\v r-.1on thru Fri, bkkpg. \Vork with president ~e of the !11a1L. L1bc.ral persona.lily. Start $600. Call 61>-8076 77~ H bo Bl d ~!um~o~ Sad d 1 e ~T~ ce~ ,poS:i"::'m"-"'en:;:<::.· ---.,.~--immediate openings 64t-0502. & exec staff. Xlnt oppty for fr1n~e ~efits !nclud1ng &i.l lv Hart, 54()-6055, Coastal Agency, "" ar r v • -H k I/I' for the following personal & spiritual gro"1h profit sharing. Xln t oppor-Personnel Agency, 2 7 9 O BABYSITTER. live-In, 3 Cr-.t Valley Unified Schoo I ou1e eeper, 1me posilions . MEN & WOMEN 18-27 Call Judy ~IZlJ . tunity for advencement. Sal-llarbor Blvd. 0.1 children, xlnt conditions. CLEANING T .. •rson otrire District, 14736 Sand Canyon :>49·3061 Earn to $342.30 salary ""r ary o-. Call 963--3963 (I 6 .. ~ Ave East Irvine ..-. .. ~. SECRETAR~gen'I ofc for ~ or a · • N.B. 2 hrs. in eve. &>nd " IF YOU e • e • FIRST SHIFT. ltlo. while we teach you a PRINTERS Calif. Injection Molding recording studio. Good ofc 64 resume, Classified ad no. DOMESTIC J~clp Grorge Are Young-Flexible-Neat job skill in Electronics, Me-200 Briggs Ave. skills, sh helpful. Shipping, BA'BYSIITER needed ~Pr.t. 639 c/o Daily Piiot. P.O. Allen Byland Agency, 106-8 Have pride of "1orkmanship TOOL & DIE MAKERS chanics or Administration. Irvine Indus. Complcx in voicing internationally. my home, vie. Bench & Box 1560, Costa ?i1esa, Ca. E. 16th SI .. S.A. 547-(l'l%. \\'ork without supervision After training, earn $45-60 ~Ve h~e 2 openings. One Costa Mesa Telex use, good phone man· Magnolia, lTB 92626. DRIVER, Part 1'in1e. Male liave transportalion *** GRINDER per mo. for 2 days work. am pm shift, & one ner. Mr. WA.!lick, 979-2600. 536--0.l41 or fc1nale over 21. Clean \Ve offer steady pan-tinu~ MACHINISTS Call TSgt Young, Calif. Air 3 day, 12 hr shift. Must RECEPJ'IONIST, Ma I u re * SECRETARY * CLERICAL cut, economy car, 11ust Cleaning prestige homes National Guard 97'9-Ll43. have expcr. on tlte 2650 lady. TaJte reservations. BANK ESCROW OFFICER Intllllitrial-Commrr.:i11l Loen Processor for Orange Coun- ty. Top salnry. State Mutual Savings Call 521-l'.\OO, C".t 264 Equal Oppor. En1ploy<'r BANK ESCROW CLERK Newport Center Branch We have an open- ing for an individ- ual with pre vious experience fyping escrow documents. StMting s a I a r y c.ommensurate w ith ex:perience. Pl1•1• Call For Appointment Midge Bonds 644-4113 SECURITY PACIFIC BANK Equal Oppor. Employe1· 642-5678 9UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD * TEMPO * knoiv Orang~ c 0 u n t y 596 \V ]9th, CM Bet 11·1 pn1 HEAT TREAT Multilith, 2000 can1era & Some typing, no sh. Operate needed for Newport Beach il1.h1140. INDUSTRIAL ~ f~~rnl~g~1!.;~iJ;; 1250 press, stripping & Xerox copier. Simple book-Brokerage Firm . E X Mo G OPERATOR 1 t A 211 masking on negatives. k-p;"g under S"pe-•si·o .. Responslbilities inc Y Now'' 1rn tra ney EN INEER au o rou es. pprox hrs ...... u• " ••• " 1 f · rl · NEEDS Ou · 847 8979 of CPA. 5 Dave, !Oam-<;pm, r Rn s erring secu ties, •• \\'ork frorn your ho n1 c -PACIFIC TUBE CO. has an • SECOND SHIFT • per morning -Apply 9 am-12 noon \Ved rthrn si'.i~. $500 mo. phone work & filing, etc. Chooi;e your 011•11 tin1e. For imn1ed opening for an In· NOW going through planned Monday thru Friday Send resume Classified ad Must be sharp & willing tQ FILE CI~ERI<~ sr:c·y JR & SR 'rYPrSTS inrr1view, 540·0928. rlusfrial Engineer. i\ilus! GRINDER expansion. Need ex per. PACIFIC MUTUAL no. 873 c/o Daily Pilot, learn insides or exciting I\ ave a degree & 11 1nin 2 MACHINISTS finish cabinet n1 a k er s. 700 NC\1'port Center Dr. P.O. Box 156{1, Costa Atcsa, business. Type 60 wn1p. ACCTNG CLERKS 1'~/C BOOKKEEPERS DICTAPllONE OPRS l{EYPUl"Cl-1 OPRS ASSEl\fBLERS IDEAL WAY TO EARN XTRA MONEY WORK F/T OR P/T TOP1$$$ ELECTRONIC ASSEMBLERS Ar• You Looking For A Permanent, Long Term Position? \\'I'.' have ln1m<'diAtc opening11 in our n1edlcal insl run1enl dept. for electronic assemblers. I You will be \\'Orking on printed circuit boa r rl 11. lu1.n1es.c;cs, :<.u!)..11.SS(!n1blics & lrvitw-5-i()-4450 final components. 17~1 f'ky Pa.rk \Ve' can of(1'1' yo1I e good NF'.VE/{ A F'EE AT TEMPO slArtlng salary nn<l ex· 1 rn1po Ten1por11ry 11el p cellcnt company b<'nefits. yrs exp as an Jndustri<1l f>.10-2860. Newport Beach c l'f 92626 Scnd resun1e to P.O. Box a 1 · • 2070, Ne\\'por1 Beach, 92660. Engineer with 8 hackgrot1nd TURRET LATHE RECEPTIONIST in \\·ork siniplificalion or NURSES Equal Oppor. Employer Attn: Personnel bctlt>r methods syslems. MACHINISTS I========== AAA fimi in Irvine oon1plex .. SECURITY guards full or plant layout, job evaluation 0 .PPORTUNITIES Handle busy phones & hf> p/tlme in Costa Mesa area. & nc1~· equip justification. PRODUCTION FOR Product"1on assistant to president's ke-Phone 17141 540--8571 ext 73 1r you fN'.'I you 1neet 'theS(' MACHINE OPERATOR retary, Lite sh. Salary to or Room 223 3151 llarbor qualifications. fo1,1·11rrl a STAFF NURSES $500. Call Linda Ray, C.11. • ' Exrf'l\enl fringe bent>-54().6055, Coastal Personnel resun1e & salar:v requirr-Ag""Cl' 2790 Harbor Bl"d SERVICE Station rull time I t I Iv P P fi1!1 including com· T ~· • ml.'J\ .<; o: ' . ayne, CT· 'ORANGE est CM. . ., salesman & mechanic i\lust sonnel !\tanager, PACIFlC pany pnid group in-='=-='====~--~. -! have serv. sta expcr. & be TUBE CO., 5TIO Smith \Vey surance. COUNTY RECEPTIONIS.r !or animal qualified in all lubrication & St .. City of Commerce, Calif, A 1 Pe "1 1 Dept MEDICAL hosp, N.B. Fri & ~t only. minor mech. duties. Xln'I PP Y rsci.,1 e . T h Send resume C!ass11•~ ad 90014. e • · . "'" earning polential. 2 Openings equal opportunity empk>.\"cr LSI CENTER ec n1c1an no . 639 C!O Daily Pllot, avail. Apply in person _ P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, IOam-3pm Gerry Parham ~ Calif. 92626. Mesa Verde Shell Scrvi ' ID\..._r Transport Stimulating University RN f/Ume. E n1 erg ency mt Harbor Blvd., c.M. ce. """~" f'ER.SONNEI. D • Full &E~j~i:onm~n!.. •Top SSS ' Dept. ll·7 & 3-11:30 shiftll. SERVICE Statton Salesnien ' SERYIC£S~rr.._ irv ynamlCS 1me ositlons • At least 2 m elec. exp Xln't employee benefits. full time eves. Lite mech. , -~~I 3J31 \\'. ~gcrs.tro111 1 • Crltrt·I Care • Solid Irvine Co. Contect Emergency Dept, knowledge. Also, p/time FEE PAID ., __ ~ -B. Roache, RN.&osta Mesa & knd .;31uiln Ana e PsychMtric .Hbr1ing Ca!! lmmedlateJy Memorial Hospitjil, 301 Vic-e~s w s., Neat in ap-" gj~~ ~1~h.~~gr ~~~~ Ec;ufll Oppor. Emplriy~r m/f e General Care tort&, C.M. 642-2734. Equal ~~~·B~~d.1Yc~:nis, 2500 ; • M • p p S Opportunity Employer. CLERK TYPIST ALL YOU NEED "lanuf. anag~r $25K N I • • • SERVICE sh1tlon attendanl ' l'nrl !lnlc. 1 11m to 5 pn1. TO QUALJF'V IS: Snlei;/Mktg Engr SlSK MACHINISTS ~~:~1~;1r0~ye~~tt's!:~~ft~1:1 RN!I 11-7 rellef·2 days per for swing shift at Shell Sta· • .!\ton-Fri. $2.50 hr. Billing, Comn1/lnd Loan Proc S&"JO P•clffc Personnel v.·k. H.B. area. !Ion & Hertz Rcn""A-car in I •. I · • l Yr 1'~1f'C1ronics ns.c;en1hly Managen1cri1 Trne •sno Mu11t do owh lnll1<' & mill Transfer to days.. Xln't Sorvlcos, Inc Call 842-5551 ...,,. La '' -lypin·~. fili11<>, t•lc. Must 1 .~ • · f I be 1· S fl ' •N guna. F/Hme, penn '"' "' "''~ ex1X'rif'n<'1' -Duties may F/C Bookkeeper to $700 setups & have own toolri;. r nge nc its. ta ROOM Cl k Mid Ref · b If · ') =-~1 \1•pn1. rfli;t ~ro,1-inR Co111a ''''" ,·,,,, .. ,,, n1cchan1·c-• C NITE FOREMAN clevr.lopment prnonun. er & a s. s. JO "' n nge benefits. 32342 I 1\t o•?lifl r.:le c tronics "" .. ' w ost Acrnl Clerk to S680 •Ye 500 Ncwpo11 Center Dr. reqd. Laguna Beach. Mr. Coa.'lt Hwy. , fJ1~tnhu11lr. Coulcl lead to :l!IS<'mbly. Gii·I 1'~rl/Constr to S6SCI 5'>conda.ry opcra!lon Call for intervic\\·s: Su.ite 900 Newport Bch Taylor, 494-9436. SERVICE Slallon Salesman \ I II .. ·1 d · -• 979 01'3 Sec.retarics lo $625 S<'tu p "per ,_,'d for not<'h· "'"1970 ,", 1';'ne 1 1 es1r~1-·Tu· 1 1 , 1 • Knowledgt' or colCll' oocle. Asst. Bookkeept'r 10 S600 j ..... , tapping·,··• drill!""· de· Direc!or of Nursing tl'f\1" SALESLADY, 21 or over for & Lube Man. Ei<p prefd. ~ i• omings p rase, "r. f' R 0 . .... '"' (714l 633.9393' • dress «hop, no nltes. Send Top N\Y· Full & """" lime. ' e Thl' tleslrc tor permanent C<'C'pt/ ictaphone SGCIO burring, broa,rhlnft .~ other po 1623 N 1 ..._.' t e 1 rok LL_! .. <;J'OR: 1s1·1n~U unit f'nlploynlent A/P Clerks to 157;-i niachlnE' o~raUon!!. Ext. 3:r> or 640 Prod. Control G. Mgr $20K ~~umcl e ,.._;,1-"""""' ewport A1>P!liy •N1B SHELL, 17th & •! l r~ , C1l-i11t or co cc11011 l'.'X• Scc'ys, no ~h 10 1570 DAVENPORT lOl City Dr. South Sa]cs Engineer degree Sl8K LK'O. 1' >.A.IJ ' ,,_,. rVlne, ' , llt'I', pn:r'..<1., hut \.\•Ill trnin tf lhis Is th<' poRition ytiu've Girls Friday to S56.1 Sel-Up ~fen W~man $520 SALESMAN & Atgrs, ni/f. SERVICE Sta. All~ant • rifiht penion. Conlad Mr. betn lookirw for, conll! in Rec<>ptktnlst 10 s.;oo BROWN & SHARPE f~:t}!~ Denial Fmt Ofc 10 $600 $800 &. up monthly guam. lf f/tlme, d11y11. Snlhry ~ : (;ht)!! al G.12-1+13. tor a pcr90nel interview PBX!llect>pt to $550 Sr , Med. frnt ofc $550 qURI. No exp nee. Mr. Lee, Appt_y In pet!IOT\, Earl S •COMPANION _ Prefer P.1onrlBy through F'tldl\y Free & Fee 'f"r)!lltlon~ Good • t·Up ~tett [ '~~A~e~t»"n!!!!E"m~ploy.,,;,.',.',..,..1 1 nven. Clerk •A= (213) 77o-8543 WtlllAms Texaco, 169 5 dow L-lx•h\'t'rn 9 11m & I pm. CALL TRISH HOPKINS \\'agc.<t:. St<'ariy eniploy· ..,.,.. Superio A CM wi gosfwffn agH 1 1 1 • 2 Nun•sES A;•-. 7.3 ~111 ,,. Seeretaries uUI SALES1>1AN full & p/tlme. r w, · . JERRI WHl'M'Er.10R.E mcn. s Ill'. nd shift open-,.,._ .,,., ,.,, _..., ~. Care for bed pa~ r·or ;idditiol'ltll lnfornu\llon 4s11 F:. 17th St. (at Jrvini•l Cl\1 1ngs. per. pt'('f'd. flunfuigton Recept/Typist $550 $2.$) hr + comm. 18 or SERVICE Station Att<'ndant tient-llve in. Room & Plra5<' Cnll Suite 224 642~1470 Beach Conv. Hospital, lR8'1J F.~row orcr $700 over .. Call l 0 .. m -2 Pm full or p/timl.'. Over 18. Ap-1 bo I !71'11 557-1960 F;xe<'llrnt frln.gc til'.'n<'fits In· f1ork1a, 11.B. 847·351S. Clerk Typist s«J(I 534-308'1 ply Brwn'" Shell, 990 E. 1 ard, sa ery open. """ "U'\I"' -1ri1o•"'''._'ll'li cludlnR: rompn.ny pakl l{T'OUp Kcypt.11'l('h to ~$!l00 QUICK CASH COUI llwy. NB 644-4131. ! ~1;;rces r.equired. ABBOT SCIENTIFIC JANITORIAL work p/Hine. insurn.n~·xnord inc ~~~~~c:r ~,F.eKPQr. Stat Typlit ......., SHIP & RECEIVING J Expcr. couple Iman/wife I Specialty Festener Div. cy1'~/tlmc. Call 640-t6.50, NM. ~~~,cc~;kClrk to $&00 THROUGH A ""11·rm' 10n~lsmot~,n~ ... ~~11 ! COOK, EXPER Scientific Products Div only. Plush ores tn Newport. 3130 W H d 'T' v"5" u .......... .. BROILER MAN 3975 Birch St. Top pay, steady. Call 12131 ' arv•r NURSE -Psychlatric exper. !fJ•~;~~gmd = indiv. 10 help l'\ln the Wlll'P.-l ·rop l>flY· Apply In peraon Nl'wport Rf'ach, Ca. 92660 927--0115, 10am-6pm. S•nta Ana p/tlme. Per10nnel de p I Sec' IC ~ house. Should be able to 1 011\y. 111e Dt'rby, 1262 S.E. An Equnl Opportunlty You don·t ne«1 a gun 111 ~!:6~1{:r. emJ~;~~~f l lllog Hosp, N.a. Y N~WPORT ,, ....... DAILY PILOT ~[8~~.~or~~~ta~. j Brb11<>1, S.A. En1ployl'r ''Ornw Fl'lst" when YoU NURSES Atde ~eel for Personnel Atenct Constal Penionnel A~: .i. Any day b the BEST DAY lo I plru-e 1Ul acl In ttw-Da\1.y MACHINE T I Sera conv, h()sp. Apply tn pel'80n 133 D D N zroo llat'bor Blvd., CM. I run an ad! Don't delay •• Dally Pilol '\'Ant Ad11 have Piiot \\'A.nt Ad11! Call no1v 00 r;r, 340 Vll'torlt1., C.M. ' 0 64,,.2' .;.7'0·• ' • WANT AD -· "Yellow ~-,·· ol i, .cBlltodo.y642~. ! hllrgalns1:alo\'e. -612-56i8. ~~~~~.~11~1~~~ le w d .._ inc .... ., ant a tf'sults .•... G42-."i678 cluslfled .... 63-5678. \ --- YuttdlJ, ,...._., 22. 1973 DAILY PILOT I ;I J • l[Il] I lllll I.___• ;1,_,-.Jllllll~ _. ,.,_.-.Jl[ll] I I :1 lllll I ·-~1~~~1 ==I ·-d·-· · ~'~~11 -~Yiu Ill ( ~ l~ ;~;; IMlp Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & ~ 711 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help W1nted, M & F 710 S h •rp A lert Girt VE'T"F.RINARY "-lltant tcr f~°" d1vttaifi«i otc W<ri,. a;imal tapital, N.B. will MacGl'l!IW Yacht Corp., train mature persm. Salary 1631 Pla.caitJ&, C.M. open. Riswnc W claaWed SNAOC Bat Cook. Memorial ad no. &!!& c/o Dally Pilot, w Id y L"k T B .,.,, ·u1 Labor Do.Y. Bahia Po. --· eo. .. """' ou ou 1 e o ecome c.ortnthlan Ya('hl Club, 1601 ~C.=li'=· °'ll'l6l6""':·,,-.,..~-,­Bayslde Dr, CdM. See O>ef WAITRESSES I: Bu1boytl. Debua. Exper. on I y, Interviews Tuea t.hru Sun Sam-Uam. TELEPHONE Sales. Work Sf'e Mt"ll. Maklot or Mr. from your own home. i--::varts, Mesa Verde C.OU.n- 1-lla:hest commiuiooa. Ex-try Club, 3000 Oubhouse perience n o t neeeesary. Rd c •1 N ho -" -892-£84 , · IY • 0 p tle Ctulll please. TELEPHONERS WAITERS-Wai_.., Exl"•· Fern.a.le. For Ch.amber of req'd. Day &/or eve. Apply C.Ommerce advertising pro-betwn 3 & 5. Cyrano'.s, 600 D motiili. PJac your ov.rn hours NewpoM. Certter Dr, N.B. 10 run.J pm or 3 pm-8 pm. WAITRESS, exper. over 21. $2 pt'r hour + bonus. Exper. Clean & neat. Ji\ill or not necess. We 'Ailt train p/tinw. Apply Egg & ~. from our ottice. Apply, 315 640-8120. 3rd St., Suiic E. Huotington WELDER NEEDED Beach. Cali 536-2100. GENEREL p UR p OS E TRAINEE, yng man u OP· \VELDER. Must be able to tical instrument r e p a i r read blueprints. layout work man. req: Xl-20 vision & have structural certillea· without glassea. Mechanical tlon. Ph: 548--2106 tor ap- sklll &: apptitude. Machine plication. shop 6P desirable. 546-0606. "Wll~O~W-AN~~TS~TO~~W~O~RK=?· TYPIST!Receptionist, for DRIVE A CAB! Newport Center CPA office. CHOOSE your hours, lllr'Ork Prior financial/statistical for yourse1f, be your own typlng exp desired. Position boss. Men or women. Can open due to growth & pro-be slightly handicapped. motion. Salary o Pen. Neat-Clean Appearanc~. f>«..6156 Vts, retiree!. Age 21 to 70. UNSKILLED ASSEMBLERS Female No fHs-Top $$ Call Immediately Weekends Included • P.P.S P11clfic Personnel Services, Inc. 500 Newport Center Dr. Suite !m, N.B. 641}-197(} 24 Central Towe., Orange 547-6446 215 E. Commonwealtlt Suite F Fullerton m-1833 Equal Oppor. Employer The fastest draw in the West. , , .a Daily Pilot Classified Ad. 642-5678. -- Supplement your income. Drive a c.a.b 6 hrs or more a day. Apply in person, Yelk>w Cab Co., 186 E. 16th St., Costa Mesa. \'VIG Styll:rts -Exper. $2 - $2.50 hr. Sal + Bonus. ~ Edinger, Hunt. Bch. WOMAN wfsom.e secr:etaria1, lxlokkeeplng & invoicing ex.p to "mil: FULL TIME at LeaH~r Gypsy, Inc. Salary will be rom- nlCnsuratc w I e x p & abilities. Plse call 495-576J bet8&5. QUICK CASH THR~UGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD CALL 642-5678 FOR ACTION ••. iiiiliiiiiiijjijjji 11/~q#~ · :::"!' ..... e A COHVDftENT 8HOPPINQ AHO -<¥ SEW\NQ GUIDE FOR TH£ . ~ONTiiEOO. ii}.---11!!!!!11 For an •d In Wom1n·1 World Coll Mery Both 642-5678, oxt. 330 Whirl Out! Crochet or Knit! ' .IP , ~I \ ~I 9221 10l'i-18Y, . l .. ,\ i., 11f t.oi..., 1lf W. T ... WlilRL OUT l oo king v.'Onderful in this • yonnJ.::, smooth, ~ftly Dared dress. You'll love Its feminine flat- tery In care.free Dacron- cotton blend. Printed Pattern 9221: llalf Sizes JO~. 12\h, 141h. 16~ii. ™9. Slie 14~ CbuSt 37) takes 11,i yards 60-inch fabric. 8EVE!'l"n·FIVE CENTS for each pattem -add 25 cents for each pattern for AJr Mail and Special Handl- ing; otheJ'Wise third..c:lass dellwry will take three weekl or more. Send to Marian Martin, the DAILY PILOT, 442, P&.t:tetn-Dopl:, 232 We!llt 18th SI., New York, N.Y. lOOU. Print NAME, ADDRESS with ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NtJMBllR,. SEE J\.fORE Quick Fashlons and <;hoose Ol'le Et~m fr'f?'C f'l'om our MR.Summer Catalog. All I I Only !IOc.. INlrrANT SEWING BOOK sew today, wear tomorrow. $1. INSTANT f~ASll ION BOOK -~ JJundreds o r fuhion facu:. Sl- Fat Pmftt Is ettaioe-d when you lfll throu$(h re1u1t-ge1. ting Daily Pilot Cluallie!d Adi. 642-fi678 • , ' ,, " " " ' , >·.·· -,;ii;~ J7{f·~~ '-J I · l 7315 '"""" ,, . }J Get into t e fashion swim wllh these 'bare beauties. Do your favorite thlng - crochet or knit INSTANT BIKINIS to swim or sun in! U!I<' 110lid color or scraps of w or s!Nl-wcight synthetic yarn. Pat. 7315: sires S, M, L incl. • SEVENTl'-FWE CENTS for each pattern -add 25 cents for ench pattern for Air Mail and Speeia~ndl· tng· otherwise t · <lu3 dedvery w\11 talce three weeks or more. Send to Alice Brookll, the DAILY PILOT, 105, Needl~ft . Dept., Box 16.1. Old Q)elsea. SteUon, New York, N.Y. lOOll. Print Name, Add.reel, Zip, Pattern Namber. N E E D L ECRAIT "72! crochet, knit., etc. Free· dtttctlons, 50c .. h1111tant Macnnno Boot. Balllc. fancy knots. p.o.t· 1en111. $l.OO. lo1l&nt Crochet Boot - Learn by pictures! Pat· !ems. $1.00. ~111 tutut Gift Book -more than 100 .2ifta • $1.00. .......... ....... --$1.00. J.f Jlf'3 Ras Boob • Mc. Book ol lJ Pri.1111 Af1hau. lOc. Quilt Book 1 -16 patterns. '°"· Mnl!lfJIJn• Qltlll !kW; S .. lOc. Qnltt. for ToclaI'• Llvhq: • ~ heautttul peatterm. 50c. A Par1 Of The Exciting Compuier Industry? VDM Varian Data Machines Has the following immediate openings Marketing Coordinator 2 Yrs exper. Must have exper. in sales order administration & contracts. Background in engineering or production scheduling help. ful. Blueprint Machine Opr Must have exper. on duplicating machine, engineering files & engineering documenta- tion procedures. Computer Operator A minimum of 3 yrs computer exper. w /l yr DOS. 2nd Shift. operations Electro-Mechanical Inspector Required to inspect computer systems & lower level assemblies for workmanship, completehess documentation. Must have re- lated exper. Second shift. • Inspector Min. of 3 yrs ex.J:>er in a receivin~ inspection activity testing resistors, capacitors, pulse transformers, transistors etc. May be re- quired to assist lower level inspectors. Calibration Technician Jr. collej?e or technical schoolinj? + 3 yrs exper in calibration of oscilloscopes, VTVM, pre-amps, differential volt meter, digital equipment & other electronic test equip- ment. 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. \ II you meet any of these qualifications & are interested in joining a growing Orange Co. company that offers xlnt benefits and working conditions - Please Apply In Person Monday Thru Friday 8:30 AM-4 PM To The Personnel Department ' Or CQt: B. Kratka 2722 Michelson Dr., Irvine 833-2400, Extension 336 An Equal Opportunity Employer A -.... 112 ...... I Llno1, l Tl-., $2.DO Bo ~ -• Help Won19<1. M & F 710 ,..,.,. -Pl1noo/Orvon1 126 •I•, r uwwr ~ • W"""'OMEN{N kr tllloe ~· ""'· p-~-°""',, r~!.. G~~~ ORGAH HOBBY ADORABLE killeOI. 6 wks, 2 27 ' O W • N S C A 9 l N --·) .._. .... ., ._._" ~ fe, 3 ma., &rey, bUt t•·ht, CRLllSER, Two l~ Jl.P. • 0 -...-....,. • Prioea. Mtn'a. •<HIM!n'a: I: blk, nuUy. Nt-ed lo''' t'nKLnt'.'~ 111 exce:Urn1 ron Mao u fact u t et. ch1Jdrm•1 dotbes lhorl Don'I btzy any r-&an until S..lfiCH dlfk)n Pl•nked !lull. Lanoo Monrovil:, Ne-wport SN.ch. b a&:•, a cc ea a'o r I e • '. you ran pta.y! Non-plJ,yen DARLING llttJe puppies, .sh1pyurds has kept the \VOMAN pftime. A~ after )f()U$(:h01d good le a . Pie· welcome 10 attt"nd he work l>f•glc/poodle. 6 Wffk.'I old, ''ON> Dl~" Hull In good 2 pm daily, Foster 1'""rffu, IW"Ta. akalti. aultat A aew· shops. f'or lnfomu1.Uon looking far homes, ~?-40'T1 condition and 1 n st 14 l I c d 89S W. 19th St .. C.M. lrw mac bl n e. 41'i7 Conll\et: Tom Oiclerlch itft 6 pm 1·11i.:1n1'~. Sleeps 4 tn w1:ll ~=ter Htg~~s)C d l~h 642-2151 -rREE ho~less black P\11~ r:~:I . OJl~~t\ny<;llc~~ ':: '1 WORKING Aa11lstant MMB.get, nltes, over JO, Ap- ply In per90l"I, La Petit, HunUngton ~ Milli , HB Uiro 27th. Ca.st Music Service py. l n10."i. malt". i.:-myhound i.:nUt·y. S.S. Swim Step, ***SOFA &. LoV('seat, Nl!"'J>Ort Blvd. at llo.rbor inlx. llealthy. Io v 11 h I•'. D !{., Con1pass, Only $4,7$0. I m-ver used, both for $1!)5. 1 iiii0ii0iiCiiosii1iiaii•iit'ii'"ii0ii0ii0ml S31-02·t5 J."lrn1. Owner moving, lTI4l Usually home, 968-7910 I ' f"RF.;}-; -soottie, female. ·192-7-159 Boat in Dana Point • • [ II"'" I sq ' bi 0 d BABY GRANDS AKC. MOri!i...-IO """" Slip. ,; •d• 'ss V r~:~ OS:n:'s.!:r. e. p I~. Now :-JI.I\'!' up 10 SlOOO 011 '''r-~!:!':it;11ovcs c h I l d re n . CL.\.S.SIC Bay Boat, Nice 18' !' L.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimm;;·;;;;1 675-:ll85 after 6 ta.in floor moclt'ls, Otht·r · " &\. Coast Lapstrakc. $1995. I '""-'-:C'--="-~--.,1=15 Cr.111(1 J>!arm fron1 S7:.!'J. GERi\tA.~ Shepherd. Colt1,.. &1&00c-·-'co.1°'0'°'e"'w"•"'·-,,.--,---,,, Antiques 800 lewelry These a.nd many more al: Cornho. pupp~·-N~d~ ~ct Hi' t-TSHJNG boot with I --'--'------..:.:-"IGENUINE Indian Jewelry Walli chs Music City home \l>/lrK ~· Needl: gd. tnuler $Xi>. 3'r.llP m1r. 1' David Oliver Choice pltteS, x.tnt price", rnn>. E\'C'S, ~9 \\l)t"ks good $j.j. 979-13-11 17661 Willow Tree Line 16389 Bolsa Ollca, H.B. South Coo.st Plaza 54()...:?gJ() TO ~'OOd hon1c, 2 feni rup-Boat s, Sail 909 ! t rvone Phone 846-8080 . 1ues. 1:\11>.ctl bn-•N:t, L>ox· , Ml II 818 HAM~IONO org1u1" Su~rtflt'f'. iC'/Terrlcr hi; t' b r u kc n . W' 'J'Rli\lAR,\.i'll -Jj',, I You e.re the \vfnner at see aneous lrruna. rulate Spln<'t ""'Llh rx· 1,,._,_1,,18 1 1 i 1 1 o ,., ". 1·1•n1p elf'• inc 1 s p .111s, " one tree pa.gs tras uicld car pllOnes. Only -:-:-. ~ , 1 11 -"" \ 1 1 Good for a who'-cn-'oad •C"">5. fl(•ady m p I ;1 y. h:l I rENs, rnlxed COl•)l'S, ,I Ill S, ··i., ... ,,..rn S, ) f' ~ I ~ ~· * AUCTION * ~· k f 1 t 1nRtf'r1ati;, rnust sell. $1150 lo any of the 646-A.~ days, ~l~-S09--I eve's. \\'C'f' s n.•r to g°!"' 1omc11. ~ ,., PACIFIC THEATRES FRIDAY 7:30 PM BHEATHTAKING Au"""" Cu!o & pluyfui, 53&-2358 .-c''~"·'~"-,.,',,.,,,1,.,1'c:~,--""""--I MAY 18TH Baby Grand; ebony, xlnt lli\PPINESS is a playful kit-'12' s,\ILBOAT 'A'/trlr, very ! t 1 ~ k Id J..'00(1 l'Ond. $150. 4!D-1029, , (Subject to 51nail service REPOSSESSED, like nl'"', conrl, Sa!!! $7!!j. 96S-l300. l'll . ,,. s 0 • 29f1!l6 Orinda Rd., San Juan , Color TV's, Stereos, Maple Sporting Goods 830 :>-ID-l68J Co1p11. ? charge at theatre), Plell.M:' ('all 642-5678 ext. 31-1 to claim your ticket. {North County toll.free number is 540-12'.ll). Dining Sets & Hutch, Di· * f"REE KITTENS * LTOO 14. Fully t'qllipped, \ vans, Lamps, CoUee Tables. GOLF Clubs, MacGregor. 1 Calk.<o, 3 black. I Slnm<'se. l'O\"t'r & tni\ler, many ex· I Washers, DryC"rs & MUCl1 nr11" Nicklaus Herllagf'. Call 962-3.t.(17 tras. SlOOO. or best offer. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS MORE!! L'01nplcll'. Crn;I $-lj(). Seit 5:~4-..'"i2t:I WINDY'S AUCTION S>oo. ,,,,,_,,,.., S48-2-142 I ,-~,,~oo-t~l ~c-,.,.-,,,~1-w-,-.,-.,~,., 1 1 OLD H&R 2'2. S 1 5 · Ptt1 aind !kipplff 11 °L..i l S950. 1t{' Anza B.'"lysirle COME BRDWSE AROUND 2-CamptraUs peck frt1me1> ~ Stora~t· or ('all { 7 14) NO. 601-M, $12. 380 AtnnlO '""' ·~•"" 2075% Newport Blvd. sri. R-12-5901 .~·~="o-··~~~··"=°"'"7.'--c---,c:- Cl€'avc -Taffy -Knout - Behind Tony's Bldg. Mall's. JAG UAR B . G Pets, General 850 h:lTt: IOO.i. Yellow & white 1' Costa l\tesa * 646-8686 1 i:: -8 in e hull. AU attached equipment. Tnple -KARATE l""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'I Sl)l•argun. N.~~r used <S7~· f\TTENTION PE.IS? Sf.00. 6r.1-2300 J new). Sac11hce at $35. l.fomc av.•ay from horn~. ' Always 'be kind to little old ladies. The darndest people take KARATE lessons nowa-WANTED 496-4123. built just lor )"00! CATAMAHRAN Shcar.i.·aler • Store, Rest•ur•nt, Boo.rding/Grooming 546-2848 Bar 832 Dogs 85 4 TICKETS TO MOVING SALE LED ZEPPELIN Pat Roberts e PUPPY WORLD e FRIDAY&: SATURDAY CONCERT 2909 Chestnut Ave. 100 1\1IXED PUPS. O!X"n May 25 & ~.June 1 & 2 Cost• Mesa I::v1$. liish Setl{'r, Dl)h<>t'· Antiquities et Cle PleUe caU You are thf! ~'inner of n11ln, 1--ox Terriers, Huskle, days. ltKJS Algooquin SL 5"8·7881 oric Irce pass Bull Terrier, T·Cup Poodlr, lluntington Beach * For Cost Only * Good for a who](' carload Chlhua.hu11, Lab.. Boxer, to any of the Cockapoo. SW AP Shepherds A_,,_PP:.,.l_ii_n_c_ .. ___ _;;8.:c020 1':,';;:.;';'"Th-I,,~· ~~"':;.:; PACIFIC THEATRES ~·~:? 53~~27 Serv moot LADY Kenmore auto washer desk $l0.75. Bdnn sci, 00 . SAINT Bernard -male, $75. Frigidaire auto washer mattr. $70, metal cupboard !Subject to smnll serv1c1• i\KC, 3 yr.1, good with $40. Kenmore, 400, auto $7_.50, 1 floor scrubber $4, charge at theatre). . chUdren. Make o Cf er . u;1 ~· Cwnplele w/trailer. ! $·1.:ll. S.10-1633. ; HOBIE CAT 14 ' ~ ('Ollfl. $600. * 6'ffi..n62 ~ Boats, Sllps/Do<kl 910 ! N. A . Ross 1236 Wost Boy. Newport Beach \'ou are the \I/inner of one free pass Good for a whole carload lo llllY' of the . PACIFIC THEATRES ~·asher $50. Guar & deliv-trk:yc e $4 .50, 2 whe<>ler PlC'ase caU 642-5678 ext .. ll·1 5'L~9797 erect 54&-11672, 847-8ll5. $ 7 · 5 O · in is c · USED to clain1 your ti cket. (North =="'°='"· -,--..,--,-,-(Suhjrt•I to small servlt"f' FREIGHT Damage Sale on USABLES, 2560 Ne"•port County toll-tree numb<'r is OREDIENCE class lo start i·harjlC' at theatre!. new Hotpoint & Whirlpool Blvd, C.M., Tues thru Sat. 5'10-12'.!0) June 20, \Vcd 7:JO pn1. Pll'nse ca!l 642-561S eXI. :l1.t I · I -c--* AUCTION * T d.I H"F" N{'wport Beach/Irvine area to clailn your Uckel. INorl'h r e r 1 g wa l>Ul::nl/dryers V, RI o, I 1, 5-16-49'l8 545'--0780. Ft Ste 836 --=--~--~--County toll-free numbc:r is KENMORE W c •• G &n~ ~lute reo HLACh: ,i;, Silver German 5-10-12201. asu1::.1 yrs; PP iances ,73 'IODEL 1 Shep. Police pups, 4. "·ks ='cc:c-=-c-=--,---:-- Electric Dryer 1% yrs., Auctions Friday, 7:30 p.m. Rei..'&. Zenith ~~~re!~ Sl>S~. No papers, 646-7G62. SLIP av&.11. LB marina. June Both$~ 644-W indy's Auction Barn Lowest prices ol the year at MINIATURE Schnauzer, ~~~~:~~take up to TlG3. 2075% Newport CM 646-8686 Orange County's largei!it bcauLiful AKC pcdi"1'ccd MAYTAG washer 18 lb load Behind TonYs' Bldg Mat'!. d ea J er . zenith 19 •' f(•n1ale. 774-3106. lyr$75.,Searsdryer,heavy ONL Ch I .,., ~"co" duty. 6 mo, $75. both white. Y AUTHORIZED romaco or oW1 • _,.;, • SAINT Be1·nRrd pup p i e 11 BOAT SLIP 3.S'. $10 per n1onth {OO 1111.il!il Ca 11 1 5<S-+l71 I ~--s Kl ~. v .-.:... ..... . sole remote $598. RCA 25" AKC reg. $150. ' uo...-10.1 ru;, acuwn ..... -.nuutOl" in Solid State consoles from 557_7148 I>rivate 65' Boat Slip ' S f D E b y s i d e Costa Mesa -Will be happy $525. lB" Solid State S..189. 3 _ . Negotiable I Refrigerator-Freezer, small to a.n-angc a ho1ne dl:'mo n-yr pictul'e tube, l yr parts & 01:?. l'...11g}1sh Sheep Dog ~up. 21:1.5!)2.:f.l0712l3·592-231 1 i' size. O'Keefe & Merritt stratlon. s<'rvice. Cash 90 or lerms. p112s, Al\C, xnlt blood line, range. 543-4~ Call 9';9-5222 90'll Atlanta., H.B., 962-5559 sho\vn by appt. 962-7441 1 Boa t s, Spffd & Ski 911 I $80 1 YR. guarn, de! & imlall. or 979-546!t or 19M6 Brookhurst, H.B. DOBIE. 6 week old puppy. 171!.t Chris Craft SS runabout, Late mod. Kenmore washer. MOVING .:. must sell. &>ars 1 ii963-3329iiiiiii'-ii0ii0ii0ii0ii0iiil $15. Boy me's cute! 138 E. 327 V-8, mahogany buJ\ I 636-2840; 839-Im. radial ann saw & shop I' 181.h CM 548-448.5. w/rrallcr & skis. Only 300 RECOND APPLIANCES va.cuum, $100. Ma Y tag RENT TO OWN PEDIGREED Collie pups. 6 hr. since new. .A ttal Delivered ~ guar. Dunla.p's, washer 18 lb ioad, 1 yr $75. TV'S & STEREO ~·eeka old. Call ~ 11tiowpiece! $2500 Priv. Pt,y. l 1815 Newport CM 54&-7780 Sears dryer, heavy duty, 6 Sl 0 Kef'Shound AKC, 8 mo'• o!d. 544-7901 I ' mo S75. Contemp coudl $20. 50 e DISHWASHERS, washers, 6'&78IR $1 . Beflul,iful dog. MUSI' sell 15' Sabrecnft Sid I dryers, reblt, guarn & 3"M'°"'o"'-"i"d~S~~-~~~ Call ,642-1205 bollt, 85 h.p. Mere o.b. I delv'd. 839-7620; 546-5218. · 0 'Deluxe Ge~ Top No Credit Check•No Deposit SILKY AKC n1otor & trailer. Great cond. -:c-~~i-'-i"'"-="-"'"'--1 Camper shell for PlCkup F Del' F R · 6'12-8680 I Rent W•1hers/Dryer1 perlect shape, original cosi rec i\lery • ree epalt female. $150. !~~~~~~~~~I l $2. Wk. FUll mainL $350. Owner sacrificing for Monthly Rentals Available 962-8717 * 639.13)2 * $285. 646-6581, 4 pm-8 pm. Open Eves. 543-4444 BEAUTir'UL AKC Beagle I I~ ':' 14 cu. fL rer.,;,,..rator. Frost POOL table, $75. Mahog. Quad Puppy, 10 \vks. ma!e. $50. Tnnspcwbltlon .... "'.. STEREO: 1973 S)tstl'.'m, * 833-1526 * tree, 4 yrs. avocado. $149. desk, $50. Vacuum cleanen, Garrard model, full size j Call 557-1519 fire extinguishers, lounge cha.Dier. 4 Quad speakers, Horse s 856 AUTOMATIC washer, elec· chair, rugs, misc. Must sell! AM /FMIMPX receiver, . Campen, Sale/Rent 920 ; Irie dryer. Excellent con-m-J:l09. tape deck plug in jacks. PART Arab1ah 3'1\ )'T old, l dition. $90. 646-5848. B"AR=.-,-w-.. -,-1am-,.-,-,7h~aino~.-. Was left unclaimeCh still 15H gelding. Gentle but 3 MO. old. 8' Oelux~ Gem EXCELLENT Ma 1 ofcdeak,tables-many brand new tn box and spirited. S"·eet personality, Top Camper shell for washer SlOO Call J a f ~tch~n, household &: cam-guaranteed. Was $260, now pack Included. 552-9217 pickup, perfect shape , 1 • • er ping items 640--0169 $125, or take over small A.Q.H.A. 1959 ch es 1 nut original cost $350. Owner 1 I •""0''M546-:I R""'5A L "·fri-rato•, TYPEWR~ER -· .. manual pymnL~. 893--0501 Broodmare w/foal by Sier· sacrificing for $ 2 8 5. ~ •· ' port bl i *SPRING SPECIAL* ra Buck, bm:i to Jiggy Bar. &J&.6581. 4PM-8PM. white exceptional condition a e ong camage -u;;.. $:)() s48-95TI · ed only one ribbon. W/casc. Rebuilt-Picture Tube 645-6935 3 mo. old 8' Deluxe Gem Top I · Phone 596-1003 ew. ~21,, or 25,, Color HORSES Boarded, ridi~ Camper aheU for pickup, . Building Materials 806 Triple dresser w/mirror, * 2 YEAR \VARRANTY arena & traJls. 3)271. Acacia perfect shape, original CO!ll -entry. prov. S3S. I r g lnstallalion Available St. S.A. Heights. 644-5.m $350. Owner sacrificing for • Surplus.Building waterfall wfpurnp, $125. Rice's Television Service MATIJRE boaroers wanted. 5285· 646-6581, 4 pm-8 pm. j ltfATERIAL • 100J's at NEW 54f)...6174 forml'rly Mesa North Centt'r Box stalls & ell rac. Have • CAMPER Shells for aale i ITEMS! Doors, l~ber, ply.IA''°uro-:=OCMA~T~l~C~G=uag--,-Doo~, ~l~B~i~ck~S-~o!f~Ba~k~.r~546-600~;'~l~~"~""'~··~I ~oU~'~'~· 96~2-8679~~~~ or rent. All makes A J wood, _alum sheeting, mold-Opener. Reg $3'.XI. Special-open 9-5 (6 days) models. 2941 Grace Lane, I lng, windows, etc. Lowest Price ever, $l29 Bldg G, C.M. ~ BUILDERS SURPLUS rnstalled. 213-430-795.'l. ·STEREO: l9TS-Z40 Watt I II•*} MAJORWAY & Ha1r Pint I 2406 So. 1t1ain St .. S.A. Garrard modei, prof siz~f Mei!:'~ 1'. CRmpers & 91ells at fac . Mon thru Sat l0-5 (2) 6' Metal tool boxes for changer, Jensen air . lory prices. 858 W. 18th. PU truck. $50 each. Also suspension speakers. l'.Jiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiim;;.;iiiil~ n 4: 546-lll32 manual operated lift gatf!. AM/.FM/MPX receiver, 811 C.M. Cameras & $75. 546-8672. 847-8115. 1rack deck, orig $410, now Bo1ts, Gener1I 900 '6!t VW CAMPER. w/'72 Equipme nt 808 STOVE, Ref, & tank type S180. Was left unclaimed. engine, $2600. or best oiler • -~~------'-"-"! vacuum. iso takes all. Will Still brnnd nevt in box. and e FISHING BOAT e 637-4182 NEED camera w/in-separate 138 E 18 CM guaranteed. Cash or small 151,i }~t .. 40 H.P . Evinrudr, CAMPER & trailer repairll & •,._ terchangeable lens. 400mm 3'18-4485 pymls. 893-0j()t Tilt Trailer Large Wheel. supplies also van con- tel:-lens. ie, Pentex, Nikon, 2 CLEAN Ortho twin size boK CLOSED circuit 1V system. $550 or best offer. 871·95Zl vcn;ions. 858 \V . 18th, C.M. : etc , after 5, 673-1000. & Mattress. $!'ii. 138 E. 18th Jncl . camera, tr l pod, or 63&5208. Cy cles, Blkn ONE Pmto Blowup Caniera st. CM 548-4485 mon~tor cables. $295. Al.§0 w=A~N~T=E=,o-, -50-._~70-.-.. -i-lboa-1. Scooters w/12· track bed & 24." ll"!Tls · l'lallicraften S-J20 $ 4 0 · Sultable for sm. family lov-925 i for silk screen o k WATER Softener, Refiner, ~ it1". Wilt ""'Y cash. 6~3401 540-286() w r · (an1 u. Lifetime trbgls. Sell .... ··~ '" · · cheap. 543-7581 24. hrs. 23" Motorola, all c·hanncl Eves. Furniture 810 COUCH, $25. Baby itell18 & co1or TV, w/nu picli!rc lube B""o-at'"1-,'M'"o"'"ln~l~./.,---- ----------I BBQ. chair $15, TV, xlnl conrl. $ISO. 64.'J..S982.. Sarvice 902 NEW condition • gold & Clothing, & misc. 549-1357 BRAND nu General Electric while 90fa. solid birch Mr. Miscellaneous 12" por1able blk/wbt, Must UNDERWATER hull clelln- & Mrs. dresser w/mltror 7 sell! SM ri-49-125.5 In~. inspection, ttpair, and ft, long half wall ~m Wanted 820 CAQ. Stereo tape cartrid~P Slllvage, etc. d Iv Ider w Is tor age. player, theft proof. Still In 548-125.5 decorator fireplace w/man-WANTED canoo. 644-8938. MARINE mecJianic -Fl't'e ti~-554--0142. !!" CXJJ..OR CONSOLE TV, f'Sf. with1? Newport proper. BAR. 11wag lamps, chairs, F1JRNTTURE & $75. Good picture. Call Burr~ Manll<', 675-M'n ofc desk. tab I es-man Y APPLIANCES * 645-6864 * Bol ts/Marine ~lchen, household & 'cam-l PIECE OR A 1-IOUSEFUL ~~~~~~~~=~1 :~E~q~u~if~· ::=----~~4 pong il•m•, 6'0-0!'9 547 5721 ~ CUSTOM Made uphol!ilCl'l'd • [ II s PUROfASED $150,000 in-chalr, Early Amer I can ''91 to You . ventory of new marlnc ~utch cabinet w/stereo blt ICE box suitable for !ITTlRll hard"·are for Sailboats. No. in. 645---0IS.'! camper. Outside rn('k for 3 Lines, :2 Time s, $2.00 1-2·3 winchf!s & hnndle~. DECORATOR Cante Table spare truck tire. &12-3963 alt ~lnlnless lllltnrhiu11i1 & ntMt w/4 chairs, yellow & wtilte SPM. Weekends aft. IOAJi-1 I an I.: 11. pulpit hardware, pd . $42J. Sell $200. Like OLD ORIENTAL RUGS. Di\RL.ING, fluffy )rittrn!t, 7 ~cnoo cnrs & ~lides -''ou new. 673-8886 Will ""Y ~lO'ft. niore callh \\'CCk~ old, grey & 1vhite. name lt~?? All Items pr\C<'d Gar•g • Sa le 812 than fop $ paycn;. Evcs. Nl'f'd }:tood hom€'s. 6'\<Hl9tl1. for im n1ed. Mil'. Minney's -;;~':;;;;;;:;;--;::::;;-;;;:~L~~~· ~~70~--0---~~~ T\YO cute. p I a yr u 1 . Ship Chandlcry, 2537 \V. Cst n · ~ . llwy, Newport Beach , o~:r!m~r? t~ll~f1e<~1b~ WANTED to buy. Tral~..al ~o;~~~ksk!~!t"~~e 548-4192 Open Sun IQ-:'{ hl'd, 6' hldea~d. misc. orsm~ll molorcycle, rcll80n-fo'REE lo good home, black Boa ts, P_o_:Ner.~~-~~--!06 kitchenware, Jots ot patlo able. a-1<1·3417. f11rn ., m!f<.c..• chain. Much ORIENTAL RUGS. Privaf{' Irish Setler. 14' WOODEN Runabout, out- more. 243 F1ower SI, Costa party will pay cash !or all 642-6Zt5 hrd ~tt·•·rin~. controli:; In. f\.frSA. S.'"11 & Sun 9-5. 1111.es. 644-5.126. 3 BEAUT kittens, long haini, $170/brst orrer. Call S!Cvt• l\tay 24.Ul, Zilh. 26th Musical Inst ruments 822 ~~!~ctnie2r.~i~6cy<'s, 2 cc•;,;ll.,:3c,· c,..,._,,,..,c:._=,.--~-,.--~ OJK'n all day. A wondcrlul 20' SKlP Jack, les8 than 2 .,...<\.V 10 hPlp tht! animah1! DAVINCI elf'ctrlc accordlAn LAH/lri.11h Setler, 6 mos. Y" oltl l-'ull l'Qllp'd, lr~ hp The Anin1aJ Cert Cenler eold new ft)r $1200 C.00.-1 1-"<'mnlP. 110; lnt'I trlr $6500 . 12!11 I ll1111;tt>r, Carden Grove condltlon. I\ lake or re r . e 543-J:l96 e &1~µt280, f>l8-9383 GARAGE s a I e. MlBC 968--0677 or 899-8561 * l\I'ITENS -free to i;,'()1)11 C.1.A~S rc So. Coa.111 I R hnuitehold & garden Uems Ir CONN TRUMPET hrin1 <", 1111 black. Ca 11 l..ups1rnk<'. 6 ry\. Haulrd & YAMAHA 175 Enduro, like new with fork brace and ex· I pan~ion cha1nber. Excellent running condition. Phone 1 Kl(}.f,697. $400. I llARRY Quinn 10 spd, full t'O.mpy, Phil \Yood h u b s, I Cost $700, 3 wks old, aelJ $525,~ ~~-~~-~----· ' '65 llonda., 250 Scl'llmbler, cng reblt, nz>. 675-3971 or 642-0072 USED BICYCLES All Types * 642-1272 CZ 250 1\1.X, nu Dec '72, ~ed 3 races, 81lpct like nu, 673-2828 or 547-2595 'Tl llusqvarna. 125 CR Good ronditlon. $715 or best offer. Must sell 545-7216 * 1911 Trlu1nph Bonne.villi'!, 650 CC, SHXXI. • 557-1485 .. h~~!c-~~~t,~i1;1a(c .' $795. * 196--1909 "fi9 NORTON 750 SS COM· 1\1.ANDO. New clutch plat€' & 1uneup. $850. 4!1-1-0050. * • '72 CB ·l:iO • • LlKE NE'\V •* $800. • • CALL 492-7156 ** '7r\ HUSK,. 400. $:iOO In· j Vl'l<lf'rl 111 rng1ne .~ trans. . ST.JI or bco;t otJer. R.11--0257 • 16" Boy's bicycle: also !\Ten 's lQ..!'lpe<!C.i. • 64()..-016!1 * I'll) forth. Priced to st'llf 1949 m.. * 675-8237 OOR-~7 evell:, <'n(t. rt'mfg. late '72. $2Zi0 Port Ramiigate Pl. • N.B. Olli F It I 12! BL.ACK kiltenii 8 wk!i. I ,_,G-1.,.•_-8'&1"°====,,.--;;-,;: 11970 l·IONDA SLOO Scn11uhlf'r May 26 A '11. 1()..6. Cl u rn Uri t\of, 1 I', wea.nerl & h!w.l)rkn. 24' TNBOARD/outbrd. Bait IJ("rfect CQndl., like new. MOVING or c 1tan 1n 1 Equip. 824 l\1nlh<'I' Rui:;s Blu 642-77G8. tank. radio, d(>pth nnc1er & $195. 962-7AA9 1 gllJ'ftRt? Don't throw away. EXEC I h Sl>2S f.('(-Don'! J::lve up the ship! trlr 6.19-93.'n llt7'2 HARLEY David800, 6:i Gel money for Rood cond. chn isi'32 ~k! $Jl[95 'ou "Ll!if" It In clusifl ed, Ship Nred a "Parl "~ Place an arl! CC 15 ori~ mllPS, branrt nu. iimall l~m1. CAlf &0--7009 Supt 86'1 W 19 0.f 6'2.-3""8 lo Sho~ Rnulls! 642~5678. Cell 612-~ili7ll. $275. Under \.\'amln. &W>-Om . - . 1 I I ' \ j I ' • , ' ' I'< I j ' ! I \ .t - " ~ i • 1 \ I I \ I I I I •I i I . I f I I I I. • DAllY PIUIT 1§1 --l~I llil ;;I· ;;-"';;-~ cyc1... ..... ---' 'T!!n~11<~o1ra~-~--~~r==;:;;;;~...:~:.;70;;:; ~ 1 .. , .. -. Scoot.,. 925 S.lo/Roftl ..., I llil I --I bl!liM !-'=~"-----===;;:,_ ___ "°FORD\; ... P.U.,' cyt,1----'----TOYOTA BE A 21' TRAVOO 3 l(ld, !WI, 18,..., ml on lm'13 wt .Wini AIR --------. ~ Slln • Setvb "" c•CJl))V'1lER !&ct. r<bll eng. New"'"'· MAGS 'EXHAUST TOYCJl'A Corolla Cpe, '71. IMI RIVIERIA '!la<EVELLE Malibu,""" DODGE VAN • , OLDSMOBILE ''SPEEDWAY" !'l'-22' CONTINENTALS ~ ~t~t'""" SYSTEM'. WHITE WIRED R<!d, AMl>'M, ndlala, LAHDAU ;TOP """· .,.._ w/blk trim, ·n -300. !Maxi w/ GMC TR UCKS :10' r1t111E a: JOYS • lNT ~ mags, mint -$1250. Bt-1. 5, 4,000 ml'a. Full P'l'T V'~. , 4 ,llld.,1 fa.ct aJr, ~. Auro wfalr, like HONDA CARS VAN L'ON\t-dlSl.)NS Vans 963 . . 8%11640 aft 5:30, 673-fl.iOO fact. air, am/fm radio ,AMJ'nl,l PS/PB, bacbt 1-'...,=•c:·:;-:;;!,· ;6«Ml169;;;~·'--$P0NS0R '' ; • Se1vice • Rent.U .;..:;.;;;.. ______ 1 ·~.~:::S.'!::. .. .' ·,,!;r~." ·10 roYOTA O>n>na. •tick, a.1-Bl.,. Boole aeai., .,.. mile" Vecy FIREllRD UNIVERSITY OLDS Invest in UW' hottc•t sport in * Danmar Inc. * WANTED Many t-xtru: i6,(D) mi.: (aharp! I $1395. Mo v l n ii. -.aM ~~· 5o;,~ otttt. 28."J() HSJ'bor Blvd. ~~~~~A~" 11 ~ ooT iO R -. 1:;."o• lla• •. ·~,r~.~~lvd., G.G. $.'.llOO ~ must llC!TVR· IPUh.M· 962-9683PH ·12 ESTATE Wlli9Q, andqu. 1.B69 ~Of4 ~.ooo ml,_ e~•. 1968 nru::pmi:) 400. Low Costa Mesa M0.9640 CYCLE RACING . Ex1,er-.., ~ 1973 DA TSU NS gold, low muei, loaded. nu tirM, 'mN whLa, $U75. mllelm age. condP/1. ~iot. Etc. '72 TORONAOO, very, very N<'ii:t lo G.G. Datsun Better than ne\\'. Save 1$$ Xlnt cond. tw).0172 mac. · """"' o ·~ clean. All options, inc.. lt>nced rider nl'l"ds ftnanc1a..I S TICKETS TO ALL MODELS TRIUMPI! TRA 1964 ~38 preciate? $1.j()(). 331-1314 or stt"re'O. Absolutely m us I bad<ing. """"'"' ad>Orti•-MOTOR HOME LED ZEPPELIN IN sroc' K oonvert., reblt ....... =~ =="------1 CONTINENTAL 830-Mfil, .. 11, 640--0169 ing and prornocional op-ApQllo, PacHettet, Baron, CON 1 CERT body work. $350. or beslof-CADl.LLAC..: -~~-~~----1 FORD J9t18 __ 0_L_D_S_D~E-L-M~O-N-T~4-d~r-.1 portu.nity. Bu!!i™'sses or In· Jamhor1•e, Robinhood -BARWICK IMPORTS ler. m-4121 before s PM 1-----"-----4& s S995 Ph dlviduali!I call for details. \Ve've got 'em al Pie~ call '67 CADILLAC 4 "dr, -nt • air, P88/ ' Pl~. . : Ph. S>eve, 67>-JOl!S '"" 6. KENDON 541-7881 33.175 C=Ulo Caplatrano VOLKSWAGEN "" '61 MUSTANG ..._., 1971 SL 350 HONDA. Top * For Cost Only * San JIW\ Capistrano ~ve \ru~· &Uing!ll,,....,75 Callier-• 6 cyt., 3 speed stick, Radio, '67 OLDS Cutlas, a/c, p/s, rondilion. Only 2,000 miles. MOTOR HOMES 493-337S gr 831·137S VW's aft~r a & w~s 847-~7 Heater, MF.cHANlCAU.Y p/b, Needs shoQ block & No dents. Perfecdl I '11Thapl'. 707 N. ltarbor. S.A. ·~!ct 00~~.V~is % !°::·g ~ OAT '71 240Z/I . Mint.I . Alir, '70 CAD Conv. A ron-'70 LINCOLN MARK Ill !:'~.!.:'..E~~·Li°~e8 .~b body v•ork. $175. 546-6009 Never bef'n in lh1' 11 . is 554.(1()33 GEORGE H. 64~7 or mag11, am m mu lip ex NEW & USED ""'"''"'6" PINTO bike ia heller 1han new. ~--,,,;:::.:..::=---821"-8970 stereo, tpe <leek, burnt 2 Big L.oc.tton1 depreciating model. Ex.· V.S, automatic ltansmisglon Mn.ES! new radiator save yourself S..150 10 S400 Rent A Motor Home orange. 18.000 mi, $3795. 5 MINUTES FROM ceCndptionai. Last Kettering radio I. heater, eower steer'. $550 :;;--RUNABO-trr----,-,-,-_1 off new price. Only $650. for your Vacation "67 f'ORO Window Van firm, pri pty, 673-2700 COSTA MESA · 673-5507 or 644-4839 ing, power brakes, power Call Jack at 5~8-0469 lO,fOl mi, 200 cc_ $2lOO or e 556--8597 e * 531 6800 * Can1per. pop IO(!-lo mi, '72 DATSUN 510. 13,500 mi, 2 2114 E !ST ST SA '68 Cad 4 dr, Sed de Ville, windows, pov,.e:r seat•. white Between 6 & 10 PM be•t otte• "" ~~ • g?OO _ cond. $99;,. Ca 11 dr, hi performance equip-· ·• · ' xJnt cond.., all extras. Very ~ldewaJI tires, air condition· PRIVATE PARTY ~ John's Racing Cycles Trailers, Travel 945 ~2-852i ment. 645-0244 835-6531 lo miles. ?riv party, after 5 1ng. (ZSN408). '70 FORD GaJaxie 500-VS-2 PLYMOUTH * BUL TACO * SMALL CAR 0 W NE n S. 1969 f'ORL>, Van. S2300 or .69 PICKUP. Inimac Int. :. ~~ ~i~) pm, 846-6864, $2350. $4889 dr Hardtop. R/H. Fact. air. l----·~-----1 -•EADQUARTERS FOR Looking for 8 roomy, CO!\.i· Best Offer. Before 2 Musi sell Sl.200 or best of· '68 CAD. Conv .• white w/Red GUSTAFSON P/S-P/B. Owner Musi '71 SATELl.lTE Sebring. DESERT, MOTO X 'IT PACT TRAILER! llead for 5.16-0134; Alt 4. 968--'1860. fer. 1WO-t346 15 MINUTES FROM leather interior. Ex c : Sell, lea.Ying U.S. $1565. p/sm p/b, auto, a/c, 12.~ Accessorle!'!. a full size camping vacation Autos W1nted 968 ·"°11"=o"A=T=su"N~t200=-. ~,,~.-, -e.-n~d., MISSION VIEJO Cone!. 979-l907 Uncoln·Mercury ,:55='2-9659'"-=='=~~--~~ ~s~~n°~:J· :;Yd~~,~~~ Harbor at Wil!IOn, C.!\.f. 11.•ith the Ladybug-desigrK'd INSTANT CASH! new tires. 24,000. $1250. Ph. AREA M CAD. 500. DeVille, fully 16800 Beach at Warner '67 FORD Country Squire ivould charge. 833-824~ 646-4655 or 646-242S for small cars. Specially 1 96-S·0669. 442 SO BR e<fu'd. Slereo. Vinyl top. Huntington Beach Wagon. PIS. PfB. · Alr. YAMAHA 90 Entluro. Good priced thru Ma" only. $324. 1 · ISTOL, S.A. $1850. 675-2733 6i.S-2872 842·8844 * (213) 592.5r.a• R.H. Ju.st tunea. S/B. tire11 '67 FURY Ill, good cond .. buy for th,.. s.mRll guys. 493--0711, 32981 Cant' Perre~-. RAT 546-0220 ''Home of .t~ .V4~1~~ ~1895="::,· o:l!39-=9942='------good tires, nu !'!hocks, Fork brare, hi~ rise to, San Juan Capistrano I WE ARE IN (S.A. Frwy. Eut on . CAMARO '70 Country Sedan, 8 pass. S500/best offer, aft 5, shockJ!. This bike ls in great Chlefta11, sleeps 6, deluxe. OF GOOD, CLEAN spd, xlnt cond. $2700. or '68 CAMARO SS 396, air, lite blUe, 673-5.!11: '67 PLYMOUTH 2 Or ll.T. fender, adjustablr rear FOil rent 'll' Winnebaim DESPERATE NEED 1971 FIAT, Sport Spyder. 5 1st St. 14 ml.) 4& p/s, p/b, air., JUgg. rack, 586-34.~. mape. Phone 830-6697. S300. ,64-0--0=.="c::•=~~~~~ FOREIGN CARS make offer. call 586-2813 Commonwealth ~~1rl~'ti1 BeautUul Car. • •67 FORD Convertible. XL $575. Good con di 1 1 on. BICYCLE SALE '69 NIMROD, camelot delux., TOP DOLLAR-Paid '72 FIAT! $1900 Moton Ltd. 500. Power, auto. Top con· 642-9503 or SST-3088 eve NEW 10 SPEED ITALIAN sips II, Stove & ice box, For Or Notl ONLY 4000 MO..ES '69 CAMARO, yellow, au10 '72 MARK IV dltion. S795. 84fr13Z?. PONTIAC 548-6592 642-4381 after 4PM S t A trans, small V-8, xlnt run-BICYCLES $59.95. Beach ='=c:C'=-==---:7. Call or c:o nie in to sec us. an a na ning cond. $J300. ;,48-2854 V·8, automatic transmission, '70 J'i.lAVERICK, auto, radio, Bicycle•, 800 E. Balboa Trailers, Utility 947 NEWPORT 1 ____ M_AZ_;;,D_A;_ ___ I972 VW _7-pass. bus, under •69 CAMARO 228 one O\l.'ner radio & h£>ater, power steer-good tires, xlnt cond. gold. Blvd., Balboa 675-7282. .:,c:;c.:;c.;:_.:_:.;;.;.:..._-C-1• ~ mtles. Immaculale! . • ing, power brakes, vinyl lop, $1450. 5.51-5111 S~IALL CAR 0 W NE RS · IMPORTS * Meula '73 Rotary * Stereo, camper conversion, hke new. ntaJ<e offer call air conditioning, white side: '68 FALCON 4-0, xlnt '71 350 HONDA CL. than 5,(JOO ml, slight end damagC". $3j(). 549-2724 Motor Home• Sale/Rent Less Iron! CaU 940 Looking for a roomy, com-.. 00 \V Co H NB $66 MONTH many extras. Must !IE'll! :6c:"':..::23::.7c.·------wall tires. 19GSEHS). mech., below book at $845. pact !railer? Head for a full .)I . 64:s9l40wy5 ., . . o$3r1!~8699r best offer. 962--07911 CHEVROLET $7489 can 540-7215 size camping vacation with --~~~~=.:,;,..=~~ 36 P.fO~THS OPEN LEASF; J.1fr h I.art b d · cd I 'VE JlAY TOP DOLLAR \Viii accept trade-ins GUSTAFSON '67 GALAXIE, 4 dr, p/s, 1 e II y ugS. ~ilgn · : f'OR TOP USED CAftS CAU. MR. FRY 842-6666 '71 V"\V S;qbck, Ye 11 ow, '68 CAMARO, P /s. auto., pfb, R & H, good rubber. snia cars. pet•J y prlC Hunt. Beach w/blk, High mileage, but vinyl top, low mileage. Ex· Lincoln-Mercury Best offer. 545-3441 thru May only, S 3 24 . If your car is extra clean, ve"" good eond see at 1931 493.071 1. 32981 Calle Pertee· see us first. ·J ·• cell. running condition. New 16800 Beach at Warner JEEP 1n Grand Prix Power Slee!'ing:, Po 1v r r Brakes, lilt wheel, Air Cond, Bucket scats, ;\l\1/FM. 17.000 miles, Rallye 11•heels (1381'\VO). $4695 DAVID J, PHILLIPS BUICK PONTIAC OPEL, inc. 546-1975 '72 EXPLORER Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. tires. \Viii sacrifice for Huntington Beach lo. San Juan Capistrano. BAUER BUICK AZ 646-8981 $1500. can wk days between 20' 1\LUM utility tr!, 15" 2925 Harbor Blvd. M DA 1970 VW European Camper. 3-5 p.m. 897-2472 842-8844 * (213) 5f2..5544 v.·hC'elsfnew tirrs, propane Cos.ta Mesa 979-2500 Swift heater, nu tires, top .72 CARRYALL, 8 pass, * ''Home of the Viking'' "62 INTERNATIONAL Scout -~=~0~--~-4 whl drive, wtv•orn .bub & BUY R LEASE MOTOR HOME stovC', y,.·ater tank, $175. IMPORTS WA~'TED co~d-$2250. or best offer. Ton, 350 V-8, rcldiO, auto, ps, '67 LINCOLN Continental, big tires. ssoo·. !HG-9605. ~~ ~~it~~s5 MAVERICK PONTIAC Fully Sl'H Contained, dual ~&~1~4-~l~l6~2~~~~~~~ Or:inge County's 17331 Beach Bl. 842-()666 pr1 ply. &14-7428 pb, frnt dU!;cs, ajr, hvy duty xlnt cond., all extru. $1500. overhead bunks, armc:halr TOP S BUYER * '65 VW Sq u are hack eqp. stabili7.er , 20,"000 mi. _64=>-4..=280:::.!..' o:54.::8c:·9:::383"'----BJLL MAXEY TOYOTA MERCEDES BENZ bl .,~ 64>-4178 seats, disposal ho~ and l§J 18881 Be h Bl . 1500-S, re t eng, new tires .,.,.,.,.,. · COUGAR '72 ?ltAVERICK 2 DR. V-8, Auto Trans. P/s. Dl>ltL'<e int. Priv, party. 642-4124. carrier, roof rack and lad· Wfarlllli r":!. ac v ~· & Battery. Very clean. $675. 1967 EL Can1ino V-8 air ----· -------der. . .-r H. Br:ich Ph. 847·85.55 50 USED or best offer. Tina 675--09~ auto, pfs, pib. 's11so'. $6495 Autos, lmportllel 970 M' ~RCEDES '68 VW Sundial Camper. 962-7307. Call afteT" 5. '71 COUGAR XR7. Super buy Y Ou Id d al $3195. Xlnt rond. to t.1ERCUR Recreational e THE FINEST IN ON DISPLAY 43000ts e ca_nopy. '.'-·l 1 0017"50· '71 CAPH.ICE ntileage, nc\v tires fully -----'------, ong. mi. · Air, p111r, ant/fm, $2800. 1 d d AM plus lax & lit'. 10% DOWN $104.54 PER MO. Vehicles 956 USED IMPORTS e 646-5696 aft 5 PM * 846-8003 * oa. e · /FM stereo, tilt 1970 MERCURY Marquis e THE FINEST IN Sharp New Car wheel. p/sleerlng & brakes, station wagon, air, p/b, '73 NEWPORTER VAN CONVERSION IMPORT SERVICE • Trade-ins '69 VW Fa.s11b995ack. Automatic. LIKE nu, 1969 Iinpala, 4 dr air cru1i.1., deluxe interior &. p/v..·, p/s, radio, $2900. C · I E D vinyl lop, p/s, nu 1ires, lo ronsole, lime green w/black 540-1502 Do ywrself a favor and come oming n ~ery , ay • 544-3417 • mileage. f\.tust sell. 837-7266 vinyl roof. Call original see us firsl. Open Tues. Ask About Our Uruque '69 BUG, new Ul't'S & brakes, '67 CHEVELLE-SS396. 4 spd. owner TI4-557-1Sn weekdafs MUSTANG and Thurs. Iii 9. Sat.Sun Used Mercedes Lease ~ cond., clean. $995. Bucket seats, mags, reblt 9-6. ---------- Iii 5. Plans 545-06..10 eng $850. 673-7564 COUGAR X'R·7, excellent 1969 MUSTANG, V-8, auto, 2400 llarhor Blvd .. al Fair Drive. Costa Mesa 5-16·8017 '69 CATALINA, air cond. Pis &. p/b, radio: 4 dr scd. Wht vin top, maroon, spoke y,·hls. Whsle bluehk $1050. Sell $800. 96,000 mi's. Runs vcrY good. 641-1!132. '66 PONTIAC TempC'st Sta. W;ig. \IS. Auto. Runs good $275. 673-7413 RAMBLER tor 84 mo. f'ull c:ash price in1·tuding tax & Ile. S~22.75. Deferred paymenl prire S!HJ0.86. A.P.R. 10.64. (937· Fl.Zl. EXPLORER ~i Ton. 318 V-8, Power Steer- ing, Pov•er Disc Brakes, St0\'1', Ice Box, wardrobe & dincllc. Q :\ H f I VW b radio/heater. p/S, x I n t B 1R01 EAN AL/TO; OU58 0 mports 1969 . us camper . many '69 EL Camino Air Cond, condtion, low mileage '68 95 '63 RAMBLER \Vagon, p/s, ,s.i. (~' .s...-6862 P.fanchester, Buena Park xlras private pty, 496·19!13, ~!AKE OFFER w/vinyl lop, radio, factory cond. S14 · 673-3690 p/h R&H. air, nu paint. · '.-" 832·883-1. 675-6237 air, lop-af-the-line interior '67 MUSTANG, 2S9 V8, xlnt $2j(J. 842-29l9 :lllOHortx.-...,_O-_ IM5·"'411 on the Santa Ana Fn\·y cka $2700 rood, $800. or best offer. =~~~=-----OF Huntington Beach ALFA ROMEO 523-7250 '66 VW BUS, 8000 mil., on '6' IMPALA. Air. R/H. New P' ge. 54,_;G;; Call "'"' 64JH181 T -BIRD * SPECIAL * rebuill e11gine. Needs tires. lire<, brnk.,, good eond. plu~ 111.x & lie. S%0. 49-1-!l989. $900. 67~100. DODGE '69 MACH I SACRIFICE S4395 I ~' DOWN '69 \LPJ IA R S I r 4 speer'!, mags, lo n1ileage. v 10 · ' · oniL'O pyte '67 VW BUG, $699. '64 O{EVELI..E Sla!ion SHARP! Offer673-0507 '57 T·BIRD, xlnt Oody, mags, rehlt 312. nu upholslery, auto, p/s, p/b, $1575. 640--057~ $79.27 PER MO. Veloce.11~is 'JO MERCEDES BENZ or best offer. 968·3226 wagon. VS-Stick. P/S. Runs '65 DODGE Monaco 2 dr ht, •67 MUSTANG, auto, 6 cyl, for Tl months. 1''uU cash price.I----=="----'68 V"\V. NC\ll tires, paint. good. S2S5. 548-4967 4 sp, r/h. air, good tires. SUJOO. or best offer. inclurting ta'< & lie. $4675.75. CUITTOM made gn>en, !11r~ Very good cond. Clean. $995. '64 CHEVY Impala 2 dr. $~. 894-3938 aft. 6 pm 646-5990 DeleITed Payment prloe '°' '12 Alla Romeo. 642-3""! 280 SL CPE ROSTER 963-1405 V•cy good rondition . .,.., Sell tho old stui/ Buy lb• new I----'-'-="---- '67 T·BlRD 4 Door J..andau, full pwr, ain/fm rad. $850. 557-1579. $6146.94. A.P.R. 1 O. 3 7 .,:af::lc.:5::.P,;:M:..,.==~---I VOLVO Call 646-~1 stuff. Need a "Pad"? Place an adl (#ES2Xl5)p, LOR·ER AUSTIN Sparkling polar \Vh i le· 1 --;vclt:vc)SiU:E!-1.A~ut;o;;•·;;;;U;;•ed;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:990:::A:u:•:o:•·:U=·"";:;;;;;;;;;;;;990;_;;:;_;A;u;to;•;;-;U:•;ed;;;;;;;;;;;;;990;;;;;A;;;;"t;;o;•;;· ;U;•; .. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;990;;;1 18801 Reach Blvd. 842·8803 1-IUNTINGTON BEACH e SALES e auto1natic. power steering, • SERVICE • e RENTALS e AUSTIN Mini Cooper S. 1275 air e-0ndltioning, lx>th hard VOLVO SALE! OF cc. Rebuilt eng. Xlnt cond. ,;:, soft tops. All accessories. Huge Sav'ings $1800 or ofrt:r. 64~2'..lll l:.o\v mileage. Call for an day11; 213: 431r7022 evts appointment to see this CX· '72 & 173 EXPLORER OF ccptionally n1 a in ta in<' d Huntington BMW o''""'""' Ao••mobil•. ONLY !tJS-.1200. <695-Bls. Dir.) 12 Beach oRANg~D~~~NTv·s JIM SLEMONS piil0.f,.n HUNTINGTON BEACH 18801 Beach Blvd, 842·l!803 HUNTINGTON BEACH 18801 Beat·h Blvd. ·842-8803 JIUNTINGTON BEACll SAND Buggy, .Xlnt cond. Recently rcbu1lt engine. ILLNESS in fan1 ily causes .1::900:::.., ::96S-4=::883"'------1!8.h' of 1972 Luxury Balboa -1 r-.101or Home. Purchased 9 73 DODGE "'° ago; Chevy v~• '""· 1 SUPER SUREER P/S, P/B, !"'ho\\"!' r , Monomatic loilet a i r VAN lun1ace & f'"-lras. Xlnl Mll<I. Still under "arran!y. Pri1..-cd to sell 1"11..1111 at $8200. \Viii a.c- c,..11t lo"' do1\•n & existing long: tern1 financing. 1624 AntiquB \Vny, Dover Shnres, Ne\\'J)Ort Beach 642-99RO GET your 111otor hon1c for r-.-1PtnoriA.l Day \\•knd . Hy 01~r "70 Paef! Arro111, 22" all :stras, roof .r.c f'nglnc air cont!, gC'nC'rutor, ~ Irk 1111 Slf'f'C'O, sips Ci. $7 950. 646-81102. 1911 i)is,-overl•r and Sundin! Mn1or Ilon1cs tor t'cnt, make rt•servations for Sum1ncr llOI\". Phone l\-liss Bennet at BoU 1.()n~prc P o n : 1 a c , 89'l·fi651 or 6.16·2500. ·73 21 ' 1-~IREBALL on \-ton Dodge t:hassis, st ill undt•r 1 ... arr . 5.;()() n11 . Prit't'<I ru sell. M5-37fi6 r:ve11. =---LUXURIOUS :;:)' i\·1 o I () r Honie. Cuslon1 built, &>If con1a1 ncd, r-.1u11y ('.'(trfts. Best offt·r. (TI~ 1 774-R927 e ·73 Wetinic M 1-t Zl/25' "plush" free n11!cagc & insur. Pri. pty. RlR--0;;11 '6 7 ISLANDER 22' MOTOR HOME Fully Sr!f ContainM, miles. runi; l1k,.. new, drive thi!! one to<la~. $4495 !csl /\utn Trans, PO\\'C'r Disc Urakes, Radio, fully c&r· pC!t'd and paneled. foothall 1l'indo111s, paint stripe, n1~s und til'eli. . $3995 plu!: 1a.x & 1i1·. 10°/o DOWN $83.67 PER MO. for 60 mo. Full cnsh pricl.' in- r luding tax & lil· $425.175. Deft'rred Pilyn1l.'nt prii'I' $5419.70. A.P.R. 10.93' ,., (Ser #0162.161. EXPLORER OF Huntington Beach lSSOl Bl'a~·h Blvd. !t4i·RS03 llUNTfNGTON BE/\C.'JI Trucks 962 '6)1 OIEV. ~ Ton "'ilh t"HtlllX'r shrll. V·ll, stick shif!, 1·ndio. Camper shC'll lt11!y p11nclC'd ,f.t insulatC'd. V1•1-y ~00<! 1·oncH1ion. has only 42,000 n11lc.~ nr ig. 01vncr. !''44-Rln·I. '72 f''ORO 1-·100, P.U. V-11. lna<led, (ISSUJllf' $ 1 Q !) •1 !"J payn1n1s. + S:xl sales lru<, plus 13)( & Tir. ll-l!>-2529 10-/o DOWN J9SS:"-'=:E=Lc.C~.~,M=~~-O~.-P-/'fi-,-air $96.35 PER MO. (Y)nd, st,..J"('Q/i:adfl'J, rape, tor 60 niO .. full 1·a.~h 1i1·11·e 11uto trans. fiberglass stw!ll. includinJ.": lax & lir. S•li1'l 7:i, ~2209 · !-~-------~ Oefcr;,P(f p.'lynlf'n} pr1r(' 1 ·~fl DODGE 1':1 ton pli·kup $6230.50. A.P .R. 12 J!I fUBE-$221 891 ~. • 544-:1417 • EXPLORER 'l>i FORD '•'"" pkkop, :j52 V-8. fl fl. hcd, F.:xC"Cllent con· dH1on. 64$.-1930 OF Huntington Beach • "5.1 Ford Pickup v-11. VC'ry good condition, $400 fim1. 645-26S8 '72 RANQ-IERO, 500 model, 3:11 V8, hanu•s! golcf, wldc IU'es, Jo mi. $3650. 642-t176 1963 OIEV. PICK-UP ~1 Beach Blvd. 842-88(}3 lnf\£ bed. Good running con- llUNTINGTON BEAOt dlt\on. ~7 Need a "Pad"! Pi.a-an ad! Clat';til!Pd Ad1t , .. 642-~78 • 0 IMPORTS DEVALAUTION MERCEDES BENZ PRICES! \\le n1aJ<e overs.r-as cleliveries AUTHORIZED I SALES & SERVICE See It . You'll Buy t sALEs-sERv1c>:-LEAs 1NG Jim Slemans 9"'•• .. ltW. OVERSEAS DELIVEH.Y lUWA ROY CARVER, Inc. ~~,~~ . YOLYO 234 E. 17th St. N~·-t 0 -oo!• 1966 11'"001· C '1 l "'"9303 Co~ta l\.lesn 5-16·44 ~I '"""83'3-9300:· ..... ' ' ·"'" · ·1 • • U'tU"" LEASE A 1973 BAVARIA ENTER FROf\.1 MacARTHUR '72 VOL VO 4 dr i;edan. Sacrifice $200. t.o.p. Pvt pty 960-107'1 aft 6. OPEL e '69 Opel G.T. Tires & engine in .R:ood c o n d . Reasonable. 499-3275. PORSCHE Autos, Used 990 Peter Harwick 325 Hill Place Costa Mes• CREVIER BMW Snle11 • Servic<> • Leasing 20S \V, li;t St .. Santa Ana 835-3171 ---~~;,;::__ __ 'f"l8 SUPER 1600 Porsche. Nu BMW lacquer, Pirellis. reblt eng:. You arc the winner or one rree pass Good for o. \~·hole carloatl to any or the Bob Mclaren, Inc. sunroof, nu pholstery, xJnt PACIFIC THEATRES Slllt'."S, 111'rvicc·lcasr' body, $1975. 6-ID-OJ75 Lr'ase a 1973 llav11rl11. A/C ==-'T~O~Y~O'-"T"A"---­ & r\i\1 l"r-.1 fol' $137.86 per mo ,open end. $50 No. Beach ____ :__:_;:__ __ Blvd., La Ila.bra. TOYOTA SALE (SuhjC'l.1 to sn1all service charge a! theatrel. il4-522-5.U1 AT Plcasc rail &12·5678 ext. 314 to claim your ticket. fNorth Countv loll·Iree number is ~H0-12201. CAPRI 4& NOW OWN THE FABULOUS 1973 CAPRI \\'1th 2,000 1 eyllnflc-r or V-6 rnginf', \1·ith or \1•ithour dCC"or ~TOUJl. SOtTI(' with sun roof or lanrlnu tnp, power 11i"e hr11krs, style !'1l'f'l 11·hcel, ra,!inl !Ires, but"kcl Pr•Devaluation PRICES BRAND NEW 1972 Auto. trans .. radio, fa.ct. air ('Ond., \V.g..\V lires, tint. glass. (TE210061507). ... $2563 SAVE NO\V AT .PWtlewiA W TOYOTA BUICK J~9 nurCK Le Sabre 2 dr, 350 V-8, auto trans, PIS, P/B, radio, air, tinted glass, vinyl top, 33,000 mi, I s1795. Ms-s103 1!170 BUICK Elecb-a 22:i, full 11"rr, a/c, xlnt cond. J\1ust sC'e lo ap~ciate. 5'11--0725 s1 •111~. ORDF.ll YOUHS 1966 !-!arbor, C.llf. 646-9303 Like to Trade? Our Trader's Paradise: column Is for you! 5 Unis, 5 days !or S bucks. arl. Call 642-6678. NO\\". $2789 Oil JI' Y<lU l"'RErER '71 CAPRI j2:\7ffiR> $1789 GUSTAFSON Lincoln-Mercury 16.~ lk-11.ch 11! Wnn1l'r 1!11nling1011 f~1·a('h 842-8844 * 1213) 592-5544 "Home of the Vlkhlp" CORTINA '68 CO!l't'INA, tlC'ed11: engine "'Ork. Bci!!I <>ffl'r. 968-7450 DAlSUN '71 PU l\"ilh ulr, chro111t' rin111, nu tires, SI .~. 496-4123. 1969 2 DOOR JIO D11l!lt1n ~t>rl11n. Necd11 SOrrl<' "-ork $600. or mnke offer. 968-6391 Autos, Imported 970 "A _______ _ utos, lm~rted 970 MEWPORT DATSUN 'NbUY"• YOU CAN STILL Grf A HIW DATSUN 111 AT THI OLD PllCI NEW 1973 DATSUN 240Z SEVERAL TO CHOOSE FROM ALL COLORS-IMMEDIATE DELIVERY BUY OR LEASE . ---..................................... -............. -----................. .. f Nr111l11111 D~1t~~111 l i f -. '1 1000 W. C1JJ<;I Highway \ : --> Newport Beach 645 · 6400 : . ' -.. _, __ .,. ....... -............ ~ .. -···------........ _ .......... - • SPECTACULAR SAVINGS ON ALL 1973 CHEVROLETS NOW!!! • Monte Carlos • Novas • Lagunas • Camaros e Caprices e Impalas f~-" e Station Wagqns. • ·• Monte Carlo Sunroofs e Laguna with "Coach" Windows e Vega Hatchbacks & Kam::=~: Waqons rs . ~::--!RECREATION TIME AT CONNELL'S BLAZERS • 112 TONS • 'I• TONS LUV PICKUPS AND LUV BAJA • SURFER VAN • EL CAMINOS-READY FOR DELIVERY CONNELL CHEVROLET 546-1200 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA • I 17 • • • • San f;le1oente • T oday's Fhuil EDITION N.Y. St.eeks lfOL. 6b, NO. 142, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES .. ORANGE COU TY, CALIFORNIA. TU£SDAY, MAY 22, 1973 TEN CENTS ' CUSD Summer School Budget Cut by $16,000 Capistrano Unlried. Scllool District tnlstees fl.!onday night ordered a '18,000 cut in the proposed $78,000 budget for up- COJlling summer school sessions. Board members also made it clear they felt summer schoOI should be detlgned for remedtal work and not recreatioMtyle classes. Trustee George White said the '$78,000 pipgram was "pretty an1bitious" when li!C district is faced with paring more * than $450,000 to balance next year'• budget. "There's a lot in the budget ... I'd rather see summer school cut than a lot of other thlpgs," said White. Gordon Peterson, acting chairman of the board, said the board should stick to the $62,000 figure for sum mer school written into the preliminary budget. That figure, however, should · ha ve been $71 ,000, but came out lower due to a clerical error in the accounting of sum- * mer school teachers, said Sam OJ.icas, assl~tant superintendent for business services. Despite the error, Trustee Robert Hurst said "the district staff is more than capable" of working wiU1 a $62,000 budget. The $78.000 proposed program, as outlined in written material presented to the board, would have offered courses at all grade levels. The repcrt projected 2,300 students would attend summer school -up 4.00 students from last year. A' total of Tl teachers, three ad- ministrators and five secretaries and clerks would be employed. Trustee William Enquist, reviewing the propcsed curriculum, said he was. particulariy opposed to such courses as ceramics~ bicycling, welding a n d gourmet foodll. "I'm 100 percent for basic courses. We don't need kids ·going out buying sirloin * * * School Boundary Issue Tabled by CUSD Board f'ield Strung for Beans Long Debate For Nothing On 2 Plans By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL Of tM Df!llY f'li.t Staff Capistrano Unified School J?is:trict trust~s MonClay night went round and round the m•tttt of high school-boun-~~~.!i~"f-.~~~ ~-"JI. .. ~~~~, .· \ ' $cores ol Jl'll'l!ll who ~ bolrd meetlni-~ . ' a recorn- n\llJdatlon fr<inr 'l'nmlan Ben•dlct, Eel superlnttlldtn •• ' I high school nts now II~ f~ Viejo be ed to comj)Je1e .tUdles at Dana Klis mgh ~ , · ,· t .~;:~::~p~ ~ay nor.lh .ol ·~: 'lJ• be llelit io.a.n Clemenle llJCb . ,._~Trustee R~ Hum; • ' la! op- ~ from the •• \ _, lflnt SU(i<J.ttd ·lill -Viejo st-• be tent to Sin Cli!nlente IDlh, hut with all oenlQn at•m .the Glltbl. 14 remain at Dana ltUlJ U '° deltrfl .. Interesting paUerns of strings decorate Ranch acre- age along Culver Drive in the city of Irvine. Gene Kawamura's Western ?.tarketing Company leased '" ·the parcel near Barranca Road. Kawamura grows pole beans, a vegetable crop not unlike string beans · except that lhe beans grow on the strings and do not bave strings in the beans, an Irvine Company spokesman explained. Machines thread the atr{ilt in crisscross fashion on poles. Jr:inese farirung tech- niques produces a greater eld of high quallty beans, ranch spokesmen note . RW'lll said Dena RIU3 a~ ia operallng at capoetty, but thet San Cletnftlte Hlg)I wU rumlng 11 lhret- fourti\s Clpo<lty. Wh11e -m<mhm "' the -sup- port ~·· pion ..... -·· ...... gesttm, thOt voted to-bOjd · Gii °" a decision unlJI Jupo 4 14 olloW' ...... 11\1111 CIA • .. Coverup Try Blasted and c1u..n lnpot -putk.,wly lrol!I. r•sldehtli Gfl.aidfta Ntcud· "I think we illoukl II' alone wltll Mr. Benedict'• -,., -yean unUI ii -hlRb :ICbool lo bulli;" comnu•11tM Tru9tee Fred Howhart. . i. McCo rd Says W hite House Acted in 'Hitler' Style "I'd rather aee tbt oiudmll kept together thin ~ID& arWrid/' llie added, a c.omment which btougbt another round of 11pplause from the •udlence .. WASHINGTON IUPll -Chorgjng the events ''smacked of the situation whic h H1tler's intelligence chiets found themselves in." bugging conspirator J1mes W. McCord Jr. testified today he was convinced the While House plotted to blame the CIA for Walergate. :McCord said during his 21/a hour mom- iqg testimony that he wa!. told that Coast • Weather Moslly sunn y Wednesday. follow· '. ing the usual low clouds in the morning hours. Highs of 68 al the "'11eaches rising to 75 inland . Over- 1 night lows in the 509. INSIDE TODA\' 1 A gun bottle, which began after the Indian army mutinied • and tried to di.Bann 1t4te un.iti in northern India., Left 15 men dead. Ste story, Page. 4. L.M • ...,. t fHlhtt II CtllJonll• S Cl"1illlMI• tt·21 Comlr1· ti cron-it 11 Ottl~ Ntl!ffl t l•ttrl11ol ,... ' ... ,.,.,~ lf.11 'llMlllCe lf·H ,-.,. ,,. ·~ . ......... 14 .r.1111~ IJ Mn Mot 1"11 Mvt .. I ''°""' Jt Mtl191\ .. N.., ~ 4 Or~ C-Jy t '"°"' 1 .. u Jloc• Mtrli:tll ,..tl f Mevbl11n 11 n..im •tt-11 '#....... l 4 N-·· N.-. U-14 .......... ,\ Richard M. Helms was fired as CIA director and replaced with James R. Schlesinger, who "would go along" with the White House plans to blame the ClA. Presid ent Nixon recently nominated Schle:Singer lo be defense secretary. Reading fronr"~repared memos during his second day of tesiimooy at the televised Senate Watergate hearings, McCord also ,...1d :, -Co-co~iratQI" G. Gordon Liddy told him in Jan~!t:y~·11.~72, of a plan to break into the safe of Hank Greenspun, publisher of the Las Veg:; Sun , and that ":i Howard HuRhes pljpC: would be stan- ding by to fly thl!'m Into a South A1nerican country ... ·• It \11as the first time Hughe s' nan1e has been n1entioned. -McCord . who was a CJA agent for 19 yea rs, said when he beard of efforts to put lhe Watergate blame oh the CTA. he 1 wrote John J. CAul(ield, a fqrmer White House aide and A fri~d, dttlOUncing the "ruthless attempt" and warning that 'If officials wanted the Watergate alfair "to Motorcycle Crash ~ Marine Sergeant A 21 -year-old Camp Pendleton Marine sergeant was killed about ,;, miles eouth of Hemet when his motorcycle went nut or control lat e Sunday. the Caillomia l~ghway Patrol has repoi;ti!U. Sgt. Mark S. Taranta. 21 , originally of Cortland, Ohio, wa.s found alter the ac-. cident on a st.retch of Highway 79, offi- cers said. lie reportedly died instantly. Hurst nld "the majortty of our corn-blow," that was the way lo do U. munlly lln't repruented here tonl&ht." -Mrs. E. Howard Hunt Jr., late wtfe He also attacked 1 suggerUon by ol a fellow Watergate conspirator, lold Nevl'hart to keep atudenta at the wne him that ber hlllhend had dfclaled a let· --•--1 11 it t •-•-••• ter which reportedly thfeatened "to blolt :io.;"'""' even mean 10 .. ,. ..., •~· •-Wh' H 1 the •• gered o< double ,...Jon. tuc tte ouse ~to water. GOrdon Peterson, aettna cbalnnan of -Mn. Hlllll said durlhl the .. _the boord, 11ld "oo motttt •bal -Is •ersatioo last Noyember that her hU• taken, Jt can 't be lhat good .•. we can't band , a fonner White House consultan~, ,crystal bl.ll lt for that kiog'.11 "had ln!onnatloo which could Impeach The parent ol ooe hiih ICbool otudent !See McCORD, !'qt I> tS.. BOUNDARIES, hgt IJ Clemente Employes Asked To Conserye Ga s Use age . ·-~ Sail CJ&meote city emplOyes have tieen asked to conaerve gu every way tbtJ can to avert a sltuatlon City Manager Ken Clrr <:alls "tantamount to I crlllS." City ollldala learned last -they would no iu,,.,. be 1 pall ol the" county'• pool l)'llt!n of foal pw-dlaaal --"' shor!aa .. ol lhe ~ Unim on. Aftl>Ougli Ibo '111 latild 1nother aup- plitr, Shell Oil, the ntw eonlract ts on a montb-~month halls and a high in-crease over prevtous payments. ·· "There hu to be grea& caution ex· erclstd with the ""' of elly equipment," Carr uJd Monday. ... All dty department hoada wert noUlied ol the problem at • Monday ' monilni 1tarr meeting. tJeperlmtnt heads and 80m• other city of'Odab, as well as police And fire penonnel. t11e: city fleet vehicles. Olle mlfir. mtblck will oome In the number1'1'1i•"cor.town ·tripe_ talon, carr .. kl llUmness ·trlpa to ' 'Senta Ana, Anah<lln and Lot Ang•lea, IOI' lnltance, wOl be curtailed, eliminated or wOl have to Mr'Ve several purposes at once. All such tiMI &:city vehicles now have. to be cleared through tho city manager'• office. CaTT 511Jd city offlciall are dolnl: their "UtmosC' to .....,.., add arti-.till too'\· Ing for wa)"I t -tdowa. { !...ll ' Bui· b!o doef> ·· to "pull .., rab- bits out ol ~ steaks and cookJng them," Enquist declared . He suggested arts and crafts courses be sponsored by city and county recrea· lion departments rather than the sc-hool district. Superintendent Truman Benedict, said students who are loaded down with basic subjects during the regular school year use su1nn1er school to take elective courses, such as art and music. Trustf'e' Stephen Smith, noting some Candy N ot So Dandy Capistrano Unified Sc ho o 11 District Trustee A.. E d w a r d \\'estberg is a dentist. And he made it quite clear Mon- day night that he doesn't think the school board should allow student candy sales to raise money. Faced with a request to approve a candy sale for Marco Forster Junior High School, Westberg ca.st the on1 .. • 1 \'Ole. 'Candy, be said, is bad for "health reasons." "I'd like to see every one or these voted down," he added . "Well , you 're right," agreed Trustee Fred Newhart. "But until something ·else · is arranged that they can sell. ('[! go for the candy sale." Methadone Dos e Stolen 14'· -p :.. . -.,..;,J;.(lnl ru.ien t _ -\~~II ,bor wl1h i leth.tl ·c1oat or nie~:i. tho objoe\ of a police I~ a1ttt belpk stolen from a car 1n Sin Clemente. · San Clemtllte police have ·iswed a plc1 that lny.oj,.·nndlng the 8 by 4 by :I-inch ~ CorU•ct ttrem Immediately ,\ San ~nte man on tile methad.::nc trtttmenl,J>rO&ffm, a substitute drug for b<n1J1 adlllcl•, 1old pollot he wa• shop· t>.l!W ilo, Ibo. Alpha Beta Mar~et at 9113 S. El·C..lno, when tj>t box WH taken . ..::.. i;:.~~,~~-:a:.is~ dtbllt Ill jwo plutJc botUes. Both were aeelld with metal and m a r k e d '1ne\badalt. '' ,,,. bhi .... k•t lock. Police lllve wlil'llld Ibo ~· in the boltl11 Ja i!ddly lo ehUarei or 1c1u111. AlthlW1b metlladono la used In treating ldcllets, It i.. U1t11I ll!lleea preacrlbed. ' . General Plan ' . U~ Slated For Capo Valley A IPtclil meeting to dilCUSS what relideii{1 want In an updated Capistrano V1Jley~rea general plan will lake place at 7:30 p.m. Wednttday at Dana Hills Hilb School. The pliWllng session is sponsored by the Oruae County Planning Department and t6e \Jnlted South Coast Communill~ A .... latton. The Orange Coanty BOard o f SUpervi10r1 bas t.old county planners to give top priority to revising pl1111 In the South Oran.le County area, where most ge~ plans were orlglnaily dralted in 1947."" ' • Tht Capistrano Beach Community Alaoetatlon m .. tlnl recuJarly scbtduled Wedntaday ni1ht ba1 bttn postponed to allow Its members lo attepd the general plan ses.slon. · Ju meeting has been re1et for 7:30 p.m. Thursday al' the Pfa:a Realty office at 480 Camino de Estrella, San Clemente. Topic the.re also will be a new general plan lij>d , Poulble rc-~ir'lg in the area, an aasoclalion reprt3Clltatlve .said. Al:;0 on UM l!leoda-la-~ -I'll· the ln-stallatfoo.' of. !IJfPI!& ~·in -f'tnt's PMkin-c.lplililiio . · The i>fpea . baV< been donated by the C.plAlaoo Bat Pub aod Recreatton ll!stril:I. -lion membal'I ba•e been installlnJ the mcem aod bave llllutd a requoo11o< Sltlrrda1, mom1nc help on th< projocl from ~ .... - Crop Duster Killed REEDLEY CAP) -A "<IP duster pilot WU killed Monday when biJ plane ct..i..d mt of here, tile ~ County 1herllf'1 office salll . r-1: ·w1-alld Ibo silaoe cllppOd the top <ii I fir tree, """' jil&linmet<(I ~l-l ttnoilbt down Into a peach orchard. high school students use summer sessions lo gain crcdit.s toward tarly graduation , said: "Tn light of this, perhaps \\'C should cut down the pro- gram ." As the clock approached midnight. tr ustees accepted a motion by Smith to slick vli th a $62,000 figure, 11·it h remed ia l co11rses gi ven prin1ary consideration. S1arf n1embers ind icated they would rework the program and present a report ta trustees at an upcoming meeting. * * * House Fee Ques tioned B_y Board Questions of legality delayed action by tht: Capistrano Unified School District board on a resolution demanding state legislation requlrlng developers to pay $1 ,000 for each house or apartment unit constructed within the district. Aeling on a request rrom Trustee Stephen Smith. the board tabled the item Monday night pending a review by Orange Count y Counsel. Sml!h, :in attorney, said the proposed n1eosure n1ight violate equal protedlon under the \av: guarantees. The resolution, ask s the Callfomia legislature to enact emetgency legisla- tion requiring developers to pay the district $1,000 £or each new dwelling unit to offset the cost of school construction. School districts included in the pro- posed legislation would be those ex- periencing annual student growth rates larger than ftve---pereerrt. Unlts occupied solely by persona over the age of 18 would be exe-mpt from the fee NqUftment, The pl'9amble of the mo!~ llalea l~at new constnietlon Is creatllll uttvere fi nancial problems'' for tehool Cl1atncta. II asserts there Is a rislng tide fl. com~ n1u11lty sentln1ent ror those who move in· i') nc,1 d"·e\llng units to make a s:ubs:t.an- 1 i»I contribution toward the cost of new . · 1<.l I lncllitics. 33 Pendleton Marines Recover From P oisoning Thirty-three Camp Pendleton Marines who suffered !ood poisoning Monday were all scheduled to be released today from the U.S. Naval Hospital on the base. Samples of the food all the Marines at~ in a mess hall at Camp San Onofre were still undergoing laboratory tests today. Medical officers said they suspected slic· ed ham as being the cause. Camp San Onofre is a training area for basic infantry unHs. The 33 Marines af- fected Monday were only a portion o! those eating breakfast there, a spokesman said . AU the men were listed in satisfactory condition early this morning. They had been taken to the base hospital by helicopter shortly before noon Monday . Actor'i; Mo1u Mugged LONDON (AP ) -Actor Pele r O'TooJe's 74-year-old mother is in a Lon- don hospital w:lth a broken ·arm and a di&located finger she suffered as the result of a mugging . Child-biting Dog Locked Up A shaggy white dOR; accused of biting a three-year--0ld San Clc-- mente girl is being confined until Orange Cou nty Animal Control of· fice rs rule out the possi bility or rabies. Maryann Pinon or ld Estrella was bitten on the hand iMl week- end 'fhile playing in front of a ba- bysitter's house at 72S Prtsldio. '!'lie dog disappeared and ,_1_.ry- ann's mother, Sylvia Pinon, put out a request that anyone seeing Is call tile pollco. Eugone Burke of 3C17 Calle Rica saki lbe description of a »Inch- high, whHe with black sp:>ts, very dirty shaggy dog flt his pet. Mary- ann a.nd the ~bysltter later Iden· liCicd the dog . Burke voluntarily secured the dog, which wlll be technically "quarant ined" ror about a monil waiUng period. If no s.lgns of rabies show, Ute girl won't have to have any shots. ; I ' . ' , ' •' I I • i· , , .. . I I ., I I I I. I I 1 % DAILY PILOT SC ,..,..,, """ 22, 1'173 Bosio.a Reseattla Pot Predictions Prove Accurate? BOSTON (AP) -Researchers say they have developed a method to tell in ad· vance which teen.agers are likely to use marijuana which ones will go on to hard drugs and which ones will remaln noousen. In a report from the Department ol Psychiltry at Masaacbu~tts Ge0'1'al 4 Hospital, the researchers said today they Schmitz Back In GOP Ranks Former congressman J o h n Schmitz has rejoined the ReplibUcan party. analyzed data from 2,222 junior high and high school students Jn the Boston area. In that computer analysis, drug use In 1971 was predicted from five nondrog· related factors -Including academic performance and cigarette smo~g - measured in 1989. The researchers said the analysls was 68 percent accurate in predictlna: the noodrug users who went on to marijuana alone and 77 percent accurate in showing what nonusers v.·enl lo both marijuana and hard drugs such as heroin. stimulants, de preses s ants and hallucinogens. The data were also 72 percent accurate in predicting what nonusers eventually u~::I and type of drug and 67 percent ac- curate in predicting which new mari- jLana users went to h.ard drugs. r Roosevelt Denies Any Vesco Link By L. PETER KRIEG Of lfll DllllY P'lle! SlilH Former congress 111 an James Roosevelt . now a Newport Beach resi· dent, is wanted by the Swiss government on fraud charges Involving an alleged l $224 million swindle also -involving New J York £inancier Robert L. Vesco. f' Roosevelt told the Delly Pilot today he >' has no intention of responding to the war· l rant and says he doesn 't know what he'll do witil he confers with his Swiss lawyer, ~ Daniel Guggenheim. Roosevelt proclaimed his innocence, a_dn:titting only h~ may. have ~n vi~· 11m1zed hy placing his trust m t~ management of the Investors Overseas Fund (!OS), of which he served as a director from 1967-1971. The one term representative who was defeated In the Repu blican primary last June by then Orange C'.ounty assessor Andrew J . Hinshaw, was later a presidential candidate for the A m e r I c a n Ind<peodent Party. The researcher: said that In comparlng data from nonusers and those already us. ing drugs at the begiMing of the fltudy in I~, the computer was able to sort out the two groups with 81 percent accuracy Reservoir Repair The lJ.S. Securities and Exchange Commission also charged .Roo6evelt \\'ith looting the $224 million from the Fund of Funds and other IOS glamor funds. . j Roosevelt , ho\\•ever. said he has en· tered a consent decree on those charge11, agreeing to abandon all dealings with the fund. Schmitz, 41, said Monday he had returned to the GOP to give it ''moral, principled leadermip'' dur- ing the present crisis. He said Watergate had left a leadership vacuum in t h e Republican party which he hopes to fill. Impact Report For San Onofre Now at Library A draft environmental impact ltate.: ment (EIS) on the proposed issuance or a full·term operating license for San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station is av1Uable at the San Clemente Library. The EIS has been issued by the Atomic Ellttl!Y Cornmlsllon (AEC). The nuclear generating plant near San Clemente is jolnUy operated by Southern California Ed1'on Company and San Diego Gas and Electric Company. 1be proposed e1tenslon of the plant has been a cootroversy to some resldenta and enriroomenta.U.tt. concerned about safety factors. AEC ii accepting comments on the EIS from federal and state agencies and members or the public. The library Is at 233 Granada St. Commen ts should be sent by July 2 to the Deputy Direct.or for Reactor Proj· ects, Directorate of Licensing, U.S. Atomic Energy Co1nmission, Washington, D.C. 20545 . other public copies or the draft EIS are at the AEC offices, 2111 Bancroft Way, Berkeley and at the Commission's pwbllc document room, 1717 H St ., N.W., Washington, D.C. Copies may be obtained by writing the deputy director for reactor projects. Rabies Vaccin e Oinics Slated A lowc.ost rabies vaccination clinic sponsored by the Orange County Health Department will lake place from 1 to 8 o'clock tonight in San Juan Capistrano. A similar clinic will take place in San Clemente from 7 p.m. t~ 8 p.m, Thursday at the Fire House on ~1iramar. Tonight's clinic will be at San Juan Elementary School. Cost is $2 per dog. Local law requires every dog lour months of age or older be vaccinated against rabies and licensed . A ceMificate of vacc ination Is required for licensing. OU.N•I COAST SC DAILY PILOT 1 '1119 Or...., C..•t OAH .. Y I'll.OT. wllll Wlll(J\ !• a>mll""° U•t NtM-l'roH, lo ~l-Irr -Or~ Co.11 l'W!""lt!O CO'"Pll'l'f', ._ r•tw lldlllll!IOI .,. """"""'• M""'•Y tl'lf..,.,. l'"riil•Y, POf (0911 M.,.., lol-110rl kl(ll, t<u~ll"lltoft hMIVF-!11~ Vllll Y, l,.lfllf\1 11 .. dl, ltWlnll584111lm.t~ 1"4 &In ('-It/ S1t11 J11911 CIJ11ttr1,,.;. ll o!ntlt .... IOf\11 felllltn 11 ll\lbllo"9t1 S.turfl Y• W S11r101v1. '"" Jll"l!!cl,.I PY~"IJ\lnt t~nl It 11 3)1) Wt1I lky Sfr"t, Co1t1 M.,... C.lllOf"n~. ttta. Robt rt N. w,,, '•nldent ,..., l'ubl!ol'I•• J1.-k R. Curley \llt.O ,ttllftoil .... G.iM•t l M<lntOtf Tlo.om11 Ko11<il EfltGot n.11111 A , li!urphi ~t M ..... lnf l!"!W Cli1tl o1 H, loot l.Jeli1rd r. Noll AHllllnt MlllOflftt f:fll.,I S. Clo aw11a Ofllke 305 Nortli El C1111i111 R11I, tZt1J --Cllll MIMI JllO """! ··~ !11"'1 N"'PWf •llCll: ~ N~ teut ... l<f HoMflflt'°" ludl: ln1J .M(ll IMoultYl t0 L....-lotdir m ,..,."' ,.._ Ttl ...... f7141 '42o4JZ1 Ci..t.11194 Aft.attf .... '42·1671 S.. C......_ -'" D.,alfw•e: To..,._. 4fJ-44JD c..,,,ltl'll, 011. °'•,.. C..•• l'ubll'""" '-"', r!Y. ,., _, •torln, lllu•lretlorl1 ., "''" -"" .,. u-11,._,,i. ,,.,,1,,; ""I' 119 · ~ Wltllovf 9"(i.I Pff" ,.....,, .. """""'' ......... . ~ elffe _, ... ,_ .. ti Cell• Mtw. C.ll"""lt· 11-.:rltM.... 11¥ C.O•l'W• 11.11 '-"""' ..... IMll U .11 -tl'llf1 IT>ll1,.,., ..... , .... 0 .61 "*'""ly, 11.: • ; only nondrug·rela:ed Information. The repo rt was to be presented today at the National Resea rch Council-Na· tional Academy of Sciences meeUng of the C:Ommillee on Problems of Drug r>tpendence held al the University or North Carolina in Chapel Hill. Construction crews are working feverishly to repair major damage to the walls oC San Joaqujn reservoir in the hills above Irvine and Newport Beach. The concrete basin was drained when cracks were dis· covered in the walls. The Metropolitan \Valer Dis· trict had hoped to have the reservoir partly filled before summer to handle peak water uses during the hot months but work may not be finished until August. "I've had nothing to do with It since 1971," Roosevelt said. Vesco. who is reportedly in Cost-a Rica, is also wanted in the United States in conhection with a secret conlribution to President Nixon 's 1972 campaign. The study was compl.led by Ors. Gene 1'.1. Smith of Mauechusetts General, Charles P. Fogg of Boston University, Herbert Greenwald of Bridgewater Stale College and Richard LaBrie, an in· dependent consultant·statistic!B.n. The five elements assessed in 1969 were rebelliousneSB against rules and authorities a1 measured by a ques· tionnaire, ratings of obedience, grade average, cigarette smoking and Un· favorable attitudes toward cigarette smoking. "Each or the predictors significantly discriminates between nonusers who will remain nonusers and those who will become users," the report said. "In addition, each predictor variable significantly discriminates between those who tA•iJI become hard drug users and those who wiE limit their drug use to marijuana taken only infrequently." The tendency toward rebellion and cigarette smoking I n c r e a s e d pro- gressively from the no-<lrug group to the marijuana"'11y group and was greatest with the hard-drug users, the report said. Better school marks, greeter obedience and negative attitudes toward cigarette smoking were highest with the nonuse group and decreased progressively toward the students who started drug use early. EIRs on Schools Win CUSD Oka y, Sent to County "Negative" environmental i mp act declarations for two proposed schools were approved Mooday night by trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District. Board members accepted staff recom. mendetions that construction of Del Obispo Elementary School in San Juan ~pistrano Bnd a junior high In Laguna ~1guel will not significantly affect the en· v1ronment. The declarations will be filed with the clerk of the Orange County Board of Supervisors in compliance with en- vironmental impact report guidelines adopted by the board ~fonday night. Trustees also supported a staff recom - mendation lo fil_c a f)(!gativc inipact statement for sale of the 18 acre Manzana site in San Juan Capistrano. recently declared surplus property. El Toro Sc hool Bui Acce pte(l All·d((y Study Session Pla11ned For City Budget San Clemente city councilmen are gearing down for whet may be an all-day study session on the 1973·74 city budget beginning at 8 a.m. \Vednesday . The ma rathon meeting will take place in city council chambers. City Manager Kenneth Carr said he expects discussions of the $4.6 million budget lo go until 5 p.m .. with a lunch break . The public hearing on !he budget will take place June 6. The session Wednesday will begin with talks of special funds, such as golf course, sewage and sanitation and water. A strong push has been on from some residents for a new filtration system at the waler treabnent plant whlch has been blamed for rusty water in hundreds or city households. Estimates from different city departments on cosls of fixing the system have ranged from a low $50,000 UJi lo $250,000. The council then \li'lll review budget sections of public works, streets, engineerings and parks and recreation. During the afternoon review, topics will concentrate on public safety and general government. The council must decide before adop.. ting a final budget this summer how to spend close to $300,000 in federal revenue.sharing income. From P"fle l McCORD • • • the President." -Former Attorney General John N. 1\-Jitchell and his wife Martha received "numerous threats in "-Tiling and by phone" about the time of the "1ay, 1972, assassination attempt against Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace, and one "greatly upset" Mrs. 1'.fitchell because it came throug h a telephone with an unlisted number. -Before the Watergate bugging oc· curred , the Committee lo Re-elect the President was deeply concerned about possible campaign violence. "Uppermost in everyone's minds, and certainly in my 1nind ," were the disruptions al the 1968 Democratic National Convention and re· cent bombings at the Capitol and Pen· tagon. -He made two calls to embass ies in 1\ bid of S5.5 niillion was aceepted \Vash ington -identified in published hy the Saddlcb3ck Valley Unified repo rts as those of Chile and Israel - School Dislric1 board or lrustees an d had conversations that he is sure l\fonday night, for the district's sec-11·cre ta pped. ond high school. ).leCord , security chief et Nixon's re- Berry Co nstruction, Inc. v r election committee at the time of the Upland 14o·a ~ hired to construct the June 17 break·in at Democratic national El Toro Hig h School eight·bt.iilding headquarters in the Watergate complex, campus 1vhich v.•ill accommodale 11·rote Chief U.S. District Judge John J . some 2.400 student s in grades 9-12. Slrica in March charging that perjury Building will begin !\fay 29 on the 11·as com"\jtled at the trial and that there site. bounded by Ridge Route. Ser· 1v11s political pressure for a coverup. rano : and Toledo Roads . ComP.~· . Discussing the alleged effort to blame 11011 1s St'hcduled Aug I.' ID74. ·Jt v ;: ·~ 1hc CIA, Me0ord said, "Among~ other 1'he bid ntl'ep!ed lov.•est of ..ff\'h ~hings. this also smacked of the situation submitted, \ras $335.000 lov.·er \ha 1\ •\ihich llit!er's intelligence chiefs found !he maxlm_un1 ~rn11ltcd hy sf91~ l!icinselvcs in, in lhe 1930s and 19~0s, aid reg ulation~. · \\·lien they '''ere put in the position of San Juan Film Program Slated A rilm study of San Juan Capistrano presented by two Dana Hills High School sludenls will highlight a noon lunc:hP.O n Wednesday of the San Juan Chamber of Commerce. The meeting in the garden room or ~:1 Adobe Restaurant also wlU reature: elec· llon or 11 of !S members or the board of directors. The other four hnvc already been elected. The students, Cabrini Gannon and Ter· ry Rymer, are enrolled in a local hlstory class at Dana HUis lflgh taught by P'Ted \lrwhart. having to tell him what they thought he . 14o·anted to .bear about foreign military capabilities and intentions, instead of what they really believed." A spokesman for Hughes tn Lo! Angeles declined comment on McCord's tesUmony. Shining Ne w Cycle Taken in Clemente A new Yamaha 360. cc motorcycle Vlllued at more than $1 ,000 was stolen Mtmday ln San Clemente while lls owner was Inside un ltallan restaurant, police reported. John Brian Devault 118.id he was at Granada and El Cimino, where his brown, 1973 motorcycle was parked outside 1'-tonday night, when it was taken. I Alleged New York Mafioso Faces County Porno Trial Roosevelt said Vesco \vas appointed to the IOS board in 1970, just before be, Roosevelt, resigned. Roosevelt, who moved to the Irvine Company's Spyglass Hill homes above Corona de! Mar last year, also claimed the charges shouldn't be labeled fraud. "The charges are mismanagement of the company. Under Swiss law, they call it fraud," he said. By TOM BARLEY 01/"'-0.llY Piiot Slltf A New Yorker identified in an Orange C<'unty courtroom Monday as a Mafia leader involved in the pornography trade was ordered to face trial July 23 on n1ultiple obscenity and conspiracy counts . Ettore Zappi, 68, one of nine persons indicted following the seizure last month of $2 million worth of allegedly pornographic materials in a Los Alamitos warehouse surrendered in Orange County Superior Court and ap.. parently took local lawmen by surprise. Zappi and his son, Tony, 48, are linked to the firm of Suki Incorporated of Reseda, also known as Pojo and R & M Productions and the sale by those com· panies of obscene materials which in· elude 49 different magazines. rt was believed Monday before the elder Zappi showed up with his lawyer that both men would remain in ·New York and right extradition proceedings. ft was learned after Ettore Zappi pleaded innocent to all charges that his S(ln will remain in Ne\v York and oppose Car Knocks Ou.t Cwmente Power A wayward car hit a guy wire late Monday night and knocked out power in 25 San Clemente homes and businesses until ii was restored about three hours later. Lights \vent out in the area of Estrella and Presidio around 11 :30 p.m. l\ilonday San Diego Gas and Electric crews went lo the scene. The fallen wires were fixed shor!ly after 2 a.m., a ~company representative said today. The area is mostl y resider.tial, but also has some shops and businesses which weren't open at the time of the accident. Company officials blamed the mishap on the car, which wasn't found. extradition. Deputy District Attorney Oretta Sears linked Zappi "to a very high place in the Mafia organization" after repeatedly plead ing with Judge Judge for "a realistic bail for a man who constantly moves around from New York to Florida and back to New York." But Zappi successfully pleaded for a reduction of his bail from $100,000 lo $20,000. Pretrial motions were scheduled by Judge James F. Judge for June 8, 15 and 29. Pretrial and trial dates have been set or are being set for eight other persons linked to the alleged pornography chain being investigated in Califomla and New York. The 49 obsoenity counts contained tn the Grand Jury indictment involve nearly 4,000 magazines under 49 dlfferent labels, investigators said. They said that recormi confiscated at- the warehouse showed the delivery of obscene materials to 270 JocatiQbs throughout the United States. 4 ' From Pagel BOUNDARIES •• told the board she didn't want her daughter "attending two different high schools ... it's too much moving around ." Resident Mary Thompson, whose son will enter Dana Hills High next year, said she was concerned he would be mov· ed in the following year. "\Ve have got to start with the un· derstanding that come hell or high water \i;e will let them finish where they start," df '1red ~1rs . Thompson. Gas Leaks in Phoenix PHOENIX, Ariz. lAP) -A 10..square- block area of southwest Phoenix was evacuated Monday night and more than 20 persons were treated at a hospital after pungent gas leaked from a tank truck. "I know I haven't committed fraud. They say we should have known that the cJmpany was not in as good a financial position as management leer investors to believe," Roosevelt said. He said he simply took the word of Swveral lop underwriting C1Jmpanies. "They thought the fund was doing a good job ." Roosevelt said. Roosevelt, v.·ho is teachlng a course on the Congress at UC Irvine, said he doesn't know what he'll do about the warrant until he talks with hls lawyer. "I have no intention of going to Switzerland unless there is .some reason to go," be said. Roosevelt and Vesco are arnoog six present and former IOS directors wanted . by the Swiss government. ' San Juan Plan Chief Lavagnino To Resign Seat Arthur Lavagnino, chairman of the San Juan Capistrano Planning Commission, has resigned that post effective June I. Lavagnino, an architect, gave coocems for family as the reason. In a Jetter of resignation to Mayor Roy Byrnes, he wrote he is "unable to devote the many hours which a conscientious planning commissioner must" because of a recent illness of his wile . He has served about five years on the city's architectural review boa.rd and planning commission and was elected chairman a year ago. Applications are being accepted by the city clerk for the planning commission post and a similar vacancy on the parks, beache! and recreation commission. No one has filed for either seat, a ciiy official said today, although about 1ix persons have picked up fonns. PRUDENT BUYING l Thro ugho ut our 78 years of carpet retailing, one fact becomes quite evident -that when money is less plentiful , people buy better quality. This is contrary to popular belief, but.makes good sense if you think about it. Wh en you have to concern yourself with value a nd performance, you are likely to buy better quality. At Alde n's in th e last four years, ou r per unit sale has been mor e exp ensive carpeting , reflecting this fact. Consequ en tly, we hav e th e la rgest sele ction of finer q ua litie s you will see anywhe re, all at competit ive pri ces. Th e end result is custome r satisfaction, pride a nd recomm endations which provide our overwhelmin9 source of new business. IN THI llA.llOR ARIA llNCI 1'57 ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Avt. COSTA MESA 646-4638 ' Mon .• Tbun. t to 5:30: Fff. t to t : Sat. t :JO to I _ ' ' I \ ) I ' . I I I ( I I ) ( I I I r I l I ) • • I ' I ; • I , -· Safeway Cuts Back On Costs SAN FRANCISOO (AP) Safeway Stores tnc. h 11 agreed to r<duco prlctt $80,985 on meat sold higher thao ceU.. Ing regulations, the COst of Living Council said Monday- Four or Safeway'1 18 retall divisions reduced prices on up to 86 meat items, the government said. Prices were reduced by 240 stores in the Los Angeles area, 203 stm'e8 In the San ........ ~ Bay area, 51 in~~ and 53 in El Paso, Tex. The council said lncorred celllng prices ranged from 1 to -20 cents per pound over the government-determined maxi- mum. Regu]atlons require that celling prJces be set ror all meat ltems sold a f t e r slaughter on the basis of transactions which took place in the 30 days before March 28, 1973. The ceiling is the highest price at or above which at least 10 percent of a meat item was priced during that period. Architect Set For Coast Talk Urban planner and developer William Pereira will address the Harvard Business School Association Wednesday on "The Role of the Master Planner." The dhlner meeting will be held at the Irvine Coast Coun- try Club, beginning at 6:30 p.m. For reservations, call Lucy Eglett at 836-5181. UPI 'f ........ Fresh . Air Style Lady barber Mrs. Tony Prince moved a barber chair on to the roof of her penthouse salon in San Francisco, recenUy, and the customers enjoyed both sunshine and Mrs. Price's ministrations. The sunshine came free, but the hair styling cost cus- tomer John Greene $12.50. E. F. H11tton Opens Office E.F. Hutton & Company Inc. "will open its l~th office in Newport Beach, 'Mlursday. The building, in Newport Center's financial district, is at 600-C Newport Center Drive. Walter N. Lynch will be manager. The Newport Center office will have 15 account ex- ecutives when it opens, with room for expansion in the 5500 square feet facility. An open house for the public will be held at the office between 8 am and 4 pm on Thursday, May 24. ''INdEscRibAbly BEAuTifu l'' We may bea ~·:::-::::.::'::~:::~'---:::,,-+_:::,f.-.. I little difficult to find, BUT, we're worth the effort. Dancing • Enttrtl:lnment Old fashioned elegance sets the mood for Intimate dining for lovers ... and other people. Turn-of-th+Century artifacts accentuate visual interest in this excellent restaurant. Our attractive, perfectly costumed waitresses will spoil you. And, our unusually fine cuisine will capture your Imagination. Once you've dined here, SeacUff w.tJI call you back again and again. 'The e:r:cltement of elea:ant dlftinc is a daily 1rrair. We like great pride in servlnc a yery provocative bulinessman '1 lunch at 11 a.m. Sunday 0,1mpacn~ Brunch is an lnterestlnc experience for loYen and families between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. 3000 Palm A•enue • Huntinfton Beach, C111romia NO RESERVATIONS ·-CLOSED-MONDAYS (71•) ..... 866 I NEW YORI< (AP) -The steel Industry's anHpollullon efforts 111 far behind "hat ii legally required aod tec:hnologlcally pooslble, ..,. cording to a study releued Tueod'1. Tbe IOO-page study by the Council on Economic PrioriUes, which took a year and a balr to complete, names U.S. Sl<el's Gary, lnd. Works and National Sleel's Weirton, W. Va Worb as the wont air polluters ol the 47 mills studied. OF THE SEVEN largeat steel companies examined in the report, Armco S t e e I emerged with "a record far better than any other major firm ob the basis of air emissions per ton of steel pro- duced," said Alice Tepper Marlin, executive director of the non-profit group. "No majo< steel producer emerged with an overall good record in water pollution con- trol," she said. "ReJllblic Steel, however, emerged with a distinctively poor water pollution record. I a r g e I y because or its abysmal water pollution controls at four mills in northeastern Ottio." According to the study, abatement schedules or other legal action is pending or tm. rninent against 40 of the 47 mills operated by tbe major producers. These mills ac- count for 70 percent of domestic production, it said. A SPOKESMAN !0< .Republic declared "we believe that our record of spending at- tests to oor concern with en- vironmental matters." Over the past five years, the com- pany has spent $80.l million on air and water pollution, the spokesman said. A spokesman for National Steel labeled the report "full of inaccuracies." Regarding the company's Weirton plant, he said that some months ago the company announced an improvement program which that yours may not ! COMPLm OIAN•I COUNTY COYIU.•I ...... : ..... .. s.. c ....... MlulH Y1efe D99Polllt,•w.ll• ............ fL.A. MONTH TO MONTH llNTAL IASIS NO DIPOSIT 119UlllD ON APPIOYID CllDIT 4 ONLY $17.00 Pll MONT tOTAL COST 1 .. 11 ...... ,.,.., 5 NIW COMPACt UNIT SIZI f11/••4•'h>• YOICI MESSA•I PA•IU ALSO All AYAIU.ILI 7 AILL FID MAIHTINANC ORANGE COUN1\ l!AfJl01fl [PHONE SERVI<.'£ 1~t 714 • IJl-JJOI 41'1 SO. SANTA II'•, SANTA ANA ,_ ~ ..... ltokfl, ..... .-v .. n;1-,..M, ,.,, C'-il~iM 1pbtr1tte, El Ttre, ~II tell 4fi-JUJ will mab the mill uooe of the clellJl<St milla In the country" by the lime It la completed In December 19'7t THE kunv ll3o llinlled out Beth\ebem Steel's Spar· '°"" ~ Md., Works on Chesapeake Bay ror clisdwg· Ing "hundreds of pounds or onenlc and cyanide dally' over twice as much as any other steel mill studied." Belhlebem called the stu<\)I "lmpreaalve, 0 but said that much of its information was out of date. lt cited, for ex- unple, a new waste water treatment plant which began operating in 1971 which it says was not mentioned in t.he data Cabot, Cabot ud Forbes, national real e s t a t e in· vesbnent and development fll"m, has named Edgar M. Secord as vice president of engineering. Secord joined the company in 1968, when the firm was opening ils i... Angelea office. Prior to joining cc&F, Se- cord served as chief eng- ineer for the Irvine Com-s&coflo pany for eight years. He resides in Newport Beach and is on the advisory board or Orange Coast College and is a member of the Balboa Yacht Club. * C. Michael Shaw has been named manager· ol. the Whit· tier office of CZocker But. Shaw, a vice president, formerly was assigned to the bank's San Francisco office on Mcmtgom,,.y Street. .He joined the National Bank of San Mateo, a pred"eeessor o f Crocker Bank in 1949. He and his wife reside in Balboa. TODAY! Penonallzed • Stylitli • Effldlllt Order For YourMlf or a Friend· M•y ba usad on envelop•s as return •ddrets 11.bels. Also v•ry h1ndy 11 id•ntiflc1tlon libels for m61kin9 per1on•I Items •\l_ch •• books, records, photos, etc. Labels sfkk on gle1s •nd m•y .f>t' used for m•rllln9 home • cenned' IOcd' items, All f1btl1 ir prlnttd with stylish Voque type on fine qu1llty whit .. 9ummed piper. DAILY PILOT J 9 OVER 1'HE COUNTER NASO Lbtl ... for Mondoy, May 21, 1973 I I ( I •• v. " Ii -..... ) . . . . ~ . . ' ...... -~ ~ .. ~. ·- ~MlY PILOT SC Tl.lttdillJ, M11 '22, 197.l Dean Subpoenaed Occidental Complete New York Stock List .:~•"''f'~\~~!..s~~ · .. .et=\.,.. ._ .... c:'::' ..-et=\.-.i....l.uc:' ,..~~u.Lftrct! ~·I,~~ HIClll ~Wt c':.:'. ':,1~ 'j II r ~ ar ~ =~ I, t i ~~ \~ rtht ~ 11~~ t • .; ~ t~ ~i ~ Ex-SEC Leader Chief Off _.. .,_ ,,.,.3 ! II • + !' t:: d I: f;;+ ~ I"~ .lo • ·~ 'I ,.. ,._ It To RWWQQ1·a ' ~l. ~JV '11 1' ni... :" ~llo +l\ro )"_;' • N ; 1 0 lf-'1..+ Vo .~::a1.. ~11. XIJIL!I!' 1 '1"" \.'o U.00 M 11 I .. li\'I 12.,., ~Mtl 1 I t " ., Jt \ii ln1n1111 r l:W "" \o LOS ANGELES <AP) -Ar-~·~'} "' ,:tt ,!S :ig ~ £ .;5 I rs ij~ ~ ~ '~ ,I l~, Hi + t !El~~ \~ ,! Jt a~ g~ ~i i: Gives Testimony WASHINGTON (AP) Former presidential counsel John W. Deon II' is being sub- poenaed to testily under oath ata congress tonal sub- commiltee:'s Investigation of disputed moves by t h e Securities and Exchange Corn· ml!sloo (SEC). COngresiional sources said Dean is to be questioned Wednesday about contact~ last year with then.SEC Chairman Willi.am J . Casey, shortly before SEC decided to send 34 boxes of !l!~ret International ~elepbooe & Telegraph Corp, peptrs lo the Justice Depart- ment instead of making them available to Congress. REP. HARLEY 0. Staggers ID-W.Va.1, chairman of the !louse Commerce Commilt~ and its investigation sub- committee, would not disclose the matters about which Dean will be questioned. G. Bradford Cook, who quit as SEC chairman last week under fire over the Roberl L. In Moscow MOSCOW (UPI) -The Chase P.fanhatlan Bank of New York has a new ad· dress: No. I Karl Ma rx Square. 1be bank, symbol of everything capitalistic, is around the comer from Red Square and the Krem- lin. II was opened Monday by David Rockefeller, 57· year-old chairman ol Chase Manhattan, the first American banking office in Moscow in half a cen- tury. ~ Vesco car.e , Wtified se<ntelY and under oalh for 21h. hours Monday. Later, St a g gt rs termed Cook a • ' v e r y cooperative" wllneSll. Stag- gers said questions Involved both Vesco and ITT matlers. U,.I T.......,. SECRET TESTIMONY G. Bradford Cook Staggers said he probably will want Casey to t~stlly before t h e subcon\rnltt.ee again. In an appearance last December, Casey, denying any wrongdoing, testified he con· suited Dean in October the---------- day before SEC dec.lded to dispatch the ITT papers to the justice Department. A L THOUGH STAGGERS sought access to what SEC collected regarding possible violations of securities laws In connecton with ITI's ac- quisition of the Hartford Fire Insurance Co .. Casey refused to let Staggers do so while SEC staffers worked to naish nll aspects of their probe. Eventually, the su~ commillee got a digest from SEC summarizing what was sent to the Justice Depart- ment, and, later, several l'IT documenls, including some an SEC aide had termed "politically sensitive." The released m a t e r i a I detailed alleged I'IT contacts with severaf top Nixon ad· ministration officials in a suc- cessful campaign to settle an antitrust disputt: wilh the Justice Department. T h e agreement Jet I'M' k e e p Hartford Fire Insurance Co. in e~c han ge for other divestitures in 1971. THE VESCO CASE, mean- • time, involves an SEC suit alleging Vesco and others con- spired to loot $224 million rrom a foreign-based mutual fund. All references were dropped concerning $250,000 delivered from the Bahamas to Vesco's ofice. Grove Firm Gets Order From Court LOS ANGELES !AP) -A federal judge haJ ordered Intematiooa1 Funding Corp., a holding company based in Garden Grove, to appoint a specia l executive to insure that it obeys securities laws and holds a meeting for stockholders. THE RULING 1)y U.S. District Court Judge Trvlng Hill also slated that the person appoJnted must be acceptable to the Securities and Ex- change Commission and be given the title of executive vice president in the firm, which owns four s m a I I brokerage firms and several hospitals. The action was taken Friday in response to an SEC suit which alleged there are in- dications that International Funding "may be insolvent" because the firm has IJeen hit with penalties by the Internal Revenue Service for failure to pay withholding taxes. mand Hammer, chairman or;~~ .',to ~ lff tit Jtl" i!~ lim'::J' ,-ti • n.~ l~ l~ ~t ~ ~-,• 11~ 1 ; ~I, 19~! •. i=~-ti '4,' 'l•' 1:-"' 1i1Wi 1 ~ !fa..,, Ob J ~~ ''" ' '' " =ll W':° -.. ' •o~ll&nr 1 j2I M lit HE Im 60ll -• A I n '~ • 4 -\.lo ."4 11 1t 1m No. + ,_.-Ne l~.\ 1j a • • \""" Coror1n 11 1H U"' llli ~ Occidental Pelroleum Corp .• ,,, rTrod 1 ~ Hu. ~:~ ~lv.;:: ~lnc1".A H ftt li'llo lo'f'I'!: ~:Ut~Q·~ 4' ti fl14 L~ i.5-: .~ .~n:, i~l 11_:~ ~ 11~ Jn:t \! will go to Russia soon to con-~ ~~,tr• • 1:: Jt: ~ ~ ~UJi 1f '}; ;,! W.., ~'1!.'rl. ;it 1117 ~ IB! 1·j t ~ J•mn p:: .u 9 JI 10• ... r' 19'"-i ~ tlnue negotiations on a pnr :r:~, 1.\t 1 \ 1Jl l!.'1 ~tl H .... -~ =., ":; •'I J 11,,., 1Ja it:+ 16 ~i~l'Y1,;i ( 1J fl"" ml 1 -v. J:;i'.t.,.1.,f • J l{"" ~""' 1 12rt -t ;: posal to export 11 q u if i e d ~t= oe'"~ It 12 f~ i."' :t+ cawnetl\ .111 "' l!:s 1.-1~t ~·P~p i .20 'i ~ n.~ ,. "'t \It. J .. iPLlol .t6 u 17' Y s~ 57\111 ~ " . '! IO ,.lf ~ ;it: l1,~ ~ g::~ f:U 1: ': . ~!t g.L + .. ,.:rJ":,J·~ 1$ u fm ,tiz 1l~-l? 1~::~ l;ll li ~ '= 1~ 1~== t: natural gas from the Soviet A "sel · "'• M ,... 2ttt i;;+"' ,_. , 11 , ,.. '6w. ,1;tt ~ ''"'r.l11. R' 11 • 11v."1111o~1111o+ J\mw~J'p16' 1 \'e rl\\ i5.\\o tt~tP • Union, a sPokesman said Mon-t .Ji".<•~ 'ii *" 21~ ~"" 1.12 " :w1 n =: ~·""I"' '·M 1! ti ~~ 41)\1, 1 j,:::~·1/ 1 .o '\i 2~ 1~ if"+1~ d .. /.Hb • x50 2:..., 21 21 -~ :,•.:. & \ ft 1:: '~ 1 ~ F -~-t ~ '?« I~ '1 + 't? J H•M ... \OSD 1~ 14\.\ ~~ 20'l+ ~ ay, Al mL .1' ' ~ ~l'(t :~ :::: i: hl:rr'V~ 11 41 ff"' n~ ~ El'll :.' l ~ l~YI I~ 11~:: 1::"~J,n ;~ J, 'fl I~ l~V• 1~~-1~! Occidental has an agree-~ll~fw1'1' ' 34' 1,.; 22 :n --. h ••ct Nw :if n n-!~~ !l' 11,~:: 1~ -M 16¥; 15'lll 1M1..t·11'o 1~~ l ... \.,·~ J Jt'" ~~ ~ _,a; I 'th El p N I AUQ LWPI 3 ,. 1 ~ 31~ '-,. ' .to. ,, ~ 4'111 4'\ ~ \l ntlr; pf 1 I 31 l' 2J + 'IO JOl'ILoon .to 1,1 'l JI 7'ilo "14-!I< men w1 aso atura ~J!'I Pw 1~ il ·~ '°"'!+ er.n "' ., 4 ,_ G; E coat 1 2 :u l tt . J°"" L 1'!; s itv. 1\4 91tf " Gas r., lo )Oi'ntly explore the ?l~~.r-.?•s, ·~ !I. •,,•YI 1~ 111,1. " !lrlt8of .20 1 11¥1 u· ~ E G ... 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J 'J 'j 33 -VJ !(Ct orel l'lot l '""" 16n 16yt: '• : .... :,," .,: ... ~ l).I o: ~~ ~:z ~:.;IV. g\~J!: l1: r u = n~ nrc t ~00115(1 • • 10 ;ll 'i'4 11y. ~'Z +:z ~:C7!t:1 1.~0 10 S K60S1:J01,!~"9~ 'l\30~1:·ti, 11 · l u'll 23"" 2l'h-V. Cflrltl.Sv 220 11 101 .14\'t O* Foot9M111r · l !'° " f -' kCPLof JllO 1.0 Jl 51 !1 Am~c ~ I :u '""' 91'< 9•!o-:i. Cl 'rSo 1.i50 It 31 4.Wo+ .... FoottMtn p' 1 1 I "' ,,, -"' ICCPLgl • J~ rm ~9\o't 59'/i S'f\.\-h possibilities of exporting gas :~~ ·.'.;: l~ ~ '20~ ~\'I ~:z-f:;: Cl~ 11111 .54 4 222 R"" ~ i3~+ .. ~~~~1 : ' tr. r.r: 5D~ f.:ttl ~~p~ ~!.ct'~ 1 ·~ ~ ..... ~ ~:!: ~; from eastern S1ber1a to the ~u tlo 1l lot :c:z ll ... SYI YI c~ :~: ;''l 1: ~ J:t J..t ll r P• 1.: 25 2: HHll ~ U'~-~u ICCSOll>OPI 1 1100 u•~ 1~' 41.lo West Coa!t of the United ~ti';'l~r':!i ~n 14 ii ~i'A 3"' {~lZ_~: El~~ es•o~~ 11 lJ IAw. 4~ &£ _16 ~°' ~ ,:.;: 15 1d 5~ ~ ~'~ ~:~t?a1 1 10\1111 l'll'J.-.~~wl}t·,, States and to Japan. AM AlrllM1o . .a1 1w. 141'\ 1s1A+ " E~c;I o,.~1 ;."4 11 50 201.io """ 1t:io.-ri. Fottr1w1>1 1 ~ •,'• lli'i::"~ ~rt.J ~ ~:r;'L1'oo1u!l' 13 1s.1 s 'h •:W. ~lll + •, 0 Amhk 20 17 •l'I 41'1 •11o-'4 m 5 t7 6\4 m 6 -V. Foxbo.-o ....0 2j 16 'Iii lO I( I I "6 42 1~ 17'111 17'/1+ •1~ "A detaileQ proposal in-Al)r•!ld 2:11 I N ~ 311'< ll'lot ChtClltf It:! 11 10 Jt'1t, Jt """' Fr ... ir.IM .20 l 19• 11 ""'k'a 1~ Ka:J;&°sr '1111 SM 11\a 11'11 17\li+ ~, Am8rca1 .'4 12 111 U 24\\ tsl't+11' CJtll El 232 10 '6 32,._ '2¥132+"°1"r1111klt ..0 1' 112 :UYI t 1 .. 1 IBIJI i\li 1 21~ 21'1i 21'1.i +. volving the immense potential Am a1ou .71 1 26 11'11 ia:w. 1<Wo c,t"" •,, P111 1100 14 1:1-W I• +1 Fr«1t~ ,.to 2i 11', i3"' Ji~+~ ~:~ir. , 11 60 1Vt 1~1 n.+ i, . Am C'1! 2.10 10 II' 31\o'I 1''11 31\o'I tvl II B i10 I I I -1 Frvth..,, 70 ro ?o 10'/o +'lo k R 60 j :1.1 1l 11't. 12\1'1-l1 reserves of natural gas 1nA C•nor1 ~ t 2•1.12•v.2•1,.,~•11oE1orox .s111 l9120v.19•.1.10 +'ll;F1.1C111•1n04l 5~1 ~ k:;~;, ·1011 12• l• l•-'• Siberia's Yakutsk reg•'•• has ~cCllM 1.16b 10 111 ?OW 1~ 1~ v. cf::Uf ,.,.90, • ", ',',Vi 12 1211i+ "'ltbl' ind1of 6 1ll 16 16 16 _'I• Keetiec11 10 6 611 5\io s»r+ sir. .• vu .. Ch•(l'I l.20 I " 21~ 20\'o 21\\+ .... c ... ll 13 c c 0 ' t\/, 3'111 l'h-11. kallif" In .., 0 31 lllJ. II~ 11~ been presented to the A.mc:V•l'I IV. 10 2SI 1J-. m;, ZIV.-""c~ i;t co IJ zu "9~ 21~ 19 -\.'I F !I' ~:a 6 111 l ~ ,,,. 1 \t ICtlloOO Co \9 91 161t 15\lt. 16-'I+ •,, ,t.DIUT.a AJ "l1 U)6 ~ ..S\lo ..SI'>-II) " .S. 6 Cl 1JV. I~ 13 + 14 AF 1 JO I YI lll'o 181'r+ 't. l(ellv·H 1.lO 6 J : 111'11 20\lo 2Ht+l~ V.S.S.R. II the s p 0 k es man Am[)~ "'" 13 ~ ' .,. I Yo--.... E~~ro. 1·1,0 . ... 17!\ 11\'ll 1n-.+ .... •m k I ' 9 76\(o ll 26'1. +1t. ke1tmrll ... 1 10 JJ~ 22 n -\.\ ' AmElK I IO ' 4ol 2~ UOllo ll'IJ..+ \\ J ,,. . ' • 2' )fl.(, 11\'J ll'lo+ "' Im.blot 1'\lo 1 17YI 7VI 27"'>-YI Keocon 1 • 8 .,, 2~ ""' 2• + ~ said. Am E~PDr1 ., 41 ,.,.. 1s-16 1 +1·16 c,1o1SGpf• ', 13 11 111.1. 11v. 211~ .... :.,. ·•mSpt 1 &0 4 2if,l 6'h 1t.V.-'" K• urn 1:1• t 4 Jt\'I 7•'!-a 2~+ ''• Am EKPt pl 1430 S\.'I ~ 5\.'li-•14 OC:•Col 70 •I 1701]4 IJl:V, IJ4 +2 lnntll JS 30 \11 36 36\14 + ~ kerr Mc 60 27 11\ oO 51 59!'1+2.\'o A Fln.Sv 110 t 11 1~ 161!) llH<o+ 'A COc1Botl .34 2:1 II It 11 .... 11Yt-.... 1rdDen "70 12 ., 'It lnlo U'4! +v. l(errMgl •'fl ll ri:o"' 116 110 +2"1 A Fin pf l\li .. 110 111'11 11'11 11\.\ COfdw8k .21 6 n 13 12 12'+--YI •rl(ICk It I 7 16'1> 1~ 16"'--V. ke¥51n !Sb 6 11 lt\li IJ 13~ \.'I • Dl.pute A Gt18d .IOb . • 94 26~ 25V. 15\, -'Ill c,otocofn .06 19 2$ 1l'A ll\4 llV·+ ).\ •• s ... c 1 12 ' n 1A'.i 14 .... lif.11.++" 'IOdl!W .60a s Al Im 17 1'111+ '. AGCvS .1.ii •. v 111• \Alo 18 .... +•• OfOalt 1 SI 21 22t tl~ 90 .... ~+" 11.wav In • " ~ ~ 5 :~ kd<l•W of. 1 $1 Sl Jl +'n A Gti ns S2 7 S.f 11 157-o 19.'o Olaalo WI t ~ JO"-:io:i..+ v. A Corp 11 91 6\.1. 6t\--.,. K\Odfill 2 20 2 .O"" .OV. .0\.\ LOS ANGELES (AP) A Git pf l.IO "' 26\lt 26'1• 261':1 . c,'"•p ol J'~ tJIO 53 JI Sl -3 emlnl C•o .9 1 lOV. ',r1-r· km Cl l 2 16 6llll •2!'1. •2"• 4F-o+ '• -AmHohl . .0 8 26 11'11< I~ 11'1\+ ... Olli Alk .56 9 J1 12'h 11~11 12 + '.!< tm In St.a S U U -'.• klnosDS ](I 1 4'I 71'> 1 1~ '' C 'la! Pia R S AmHom 60 31 667 •lli .ov:. tll'o+ !'t Collini Food 11 JS 10\\ 9>,0 10 en Am lnv tl IJ 12'h 12'1'1-"' klrKh c 12 9 21 21 19 19 -2 ap1 nntng esource A Homt ol 2 611J'1i 181 113:i.i.+n'> Collin Radio . 121 1a•1o i1o,;, 1a~'l' "A01 tjj 15 60 ~·i. ''"" 31~•-•r. IC L NI Alr1 30 36"1 36'11 Jt,v,_ 1'1-and Kaufman & Broad Inc AmHoso "211 3' 22l ..O\'o Jt :m.+1 c,o1 Penn .10 33 1'31. •2 .o ...,,. "' ATr 1. 11, rn1 1 ~, ~ ~ \ Kt1iol'l1 N 2a 19 69 Jt~• 38'• 3&~"" . . ' '' Amlnv'1 .SO 1 36 9.,., Mio 9'141--I'll otOl\51 1 0. I II 17.,., 11\4 IA-. \'II ..,,B•OC .7 1 • ! , ,: 1(091'1r<1 20D 6 11 13 12~ 11""+ '• have filed suits against each A M~lcl .12 12 31 111-. 111"' 11..,. 'c"•' Ind .10 1 s1 15¥6 u 1"' IS\li G11C1ble,.10 lf :~ ~~ ls~" ~~\·= \: Kot>Pfr 111 1 63 3.1\1 311"' n1-1•, h , h . . A M~lcorp • 113 5 •¥t .,_ V. lgl,I, I .0 S ~ 201'1 ~+ "-~n Cl" .20 1~· ffi 14 ..._;};, kotacoro In S 35 S~lo ,., S'-'• ot er Jn t eJr dispute over the A 1111etCK • ..,, 10 1u JOV. 79'n 30 + '" c,0~1"s Pl 1•v. 1 YJ so so ~n ~vt!OP : 1Jf 18 '14 17 11,, +' ~ Kraflco 1.11 13 23s •a•t •7:Y. •111o+ '' ff · S f 1.e· Ind • ..: AMrC Pt S\4 . 1 91!!1 91\n 91V.-"' " 12 1n J6"" l6 36"'+1'1' .en "":';. 19 795 581;., 56~ sr.'lo + '' Kresae 10 37 658 :iav. J61~ lh~ '• a air 0 ISure USu1e5, Amer MOlor 6 476 1'11 6io, 1 + \• C 8 5 prrl 1 2 1S 25 ts +lV. n EIK ll 1 1• 23\lt D'lo.-VI Kroehler 80 6 10 171~ 16~ 16'/o+ '• Inc a re<:reational land sales AmNGs 1 '° 9 51 a1v. ~ ~ +v. c~ 'j.~5 l.90 ' 1a1 291'o Jtv. 1'V.-Yo ~·nFcm ~~ 23 36n l/'11 1.,,. 15.,., +"' ic.-ooer 1.30 11 g.j2 16"" 1111o 1&'JJ+ '• . ' Am 5.e•I .72 IJ 16 lDV. '1'/"I 10 .... + "',., •"'•'" 190 SVI 5 s + \\ n Holl Co 10 so I l~t 11 +~ klllO• '" 60 6 :lO l!Wtl l ..... 10~ "" firm Am Shlo 61 1 49 11 16V. \1 -... h 92 , ISi ~ 26'4 26\IJ-..... I ,,. 7k ll lJO lS'l.t 14\.\o 1~· .. + Vi -LL-. -. Smell 110 9 Jl5 17~• 171/· 17411+ \\Comb E I Sl 17 Ill """ 65\.'t 6'\lt+ ,. ns 1 36'1< 36 .... ')6•-\~ LKlede 1'-'I I ' ~ 20'" )(It~-,. LeJSUre lnduistries is 80 per-Am Slnd .so 1 sa 11v. 11 11'4+'111 c,omSol~ .«! 14 ao 111'1 11 12 l!'.!:'~5!/ 1~ 23 10 2~•;, 2'\'i 2s1,._ 'lo Lemsn Sn 1 a I 11\:o 12"" 12111-~· AmSldPf 4>.li 36 62Y, 61 .... 62\lo+ 'Ill mwEO 230 10 I.SO 3:1"-32\.'o 32\.'J+ V. Ill "l 21 185 J,,,. 51 51\'ll+ \.\ LaneBr 6SQ 10 20 l(ll,'f '20 10 -";, cent Owned by Kaufman & AmSlerU .52 13 :U 21o,;, 20 20 -1\t CWEl.r 7.2• .. 16 97""' 91\.'t tT\lo ~uf'p'1'\i 3196'\I. 96\:o 96'\l.+1"4LarNll 1,lllb I 3.1 23-\t 21'h 21""'-'> Broad and 20 percent by :~~~~112'i.!. 11 1J1~ l~ 1~~ l~~ ~C~dg,l>lj_,k ·:. ~Yi~~ ~tt:-:itg;w:~P'-r,f ·, 9n = ~ ~ ttt:!~ ~ 11 .JI i ~~ 11~""-ll: Capital Planning. Kaufman & :w~r rg J '. '. \h~ n: i;r: mt'+~ c:!(d 1:, ·: 1~ 1~ ~ f~ ~ g-111~,,,r ~ ; 1~ ~t~ fr" W'.,..::1 v. t:!~0°f ~~ 4 1•1 29~ 1:~ ~ ~ Broad .and capital Planrun' g Am T& T wt 2041 61/. 6 6 -.... Com Ed 8WI 1( 10\\ 10\\ l!l% G p bU 1 ·60 ' SSS 20'.0 191\t 20 -v. Le•KOI 2 2 88 16 ... 26V. 26~ \'!-Am Warr .6' 7 3$ 11~ 11'1' 11'14-""ComwOU 2lt It Ill t114 B"lo 9 + 'hG""°!/Retracl 19 :n S'I• S'lo 5'14 Lea1wv .SO<! 13 269 XI~ 331'. 33"-'• are real estate firms AWt-r o riv. •. 1120 161'. 16\'o 16'11 c,w01101 1.12 1• 20..., 20 20!fl+I GnSla,,..1 u 11 98 •H'o 41 a1 11<a+"' Lff<ls&N ,)(I 11 16 12'14 12 12 -+ • . AW!r of 1 . .0 i200 20 V.10 20 --\It omwt .S6 ,. <16 ~ <16 "-\'o G" SI~ Ind •1 1*-2'11; :No--... Ll!elOlt• .• o 9 SI 1311• 12~ 1]~ \!) Amef'OI\ 6S ' 4 1~\.'t 13111 1~ ComPlllr Scl l.S 2'11o 2V. 2V. G T E l 60 !1 471 2!"1 11~• 21\1• Leh Pl C .60 1 1• ltV. l'W U~ V. AmHSI 100 I ' ..... ~'t t.~+ II, COfl•!lr ~ 7 4 l•'t. 14'.'o 14"•+'14GTE of 2111 6 J7 .... l7..,. 37"1t Leh VI! lltd 9 I~ I~ lloot+ lo • Good .. lah Amf'Trk 60I 9 21 12'lo 12'11 121-0+ o,;, CDMMI I 08 6 2• 1TI'lo 11"2 17,,.,_ l'o ~Fl of 1,4 l200 17""' 17""' 1Alo+ 'lolo Le~m l.42b 19 1S'1 ISO,:. 1SY, .._ AMF In 1 08 9 70t 26~ '»" 16\'0-"'COl\l'IMI .lllb 13 3 21V. 21'1• 21'A -VI /ire ig $ 12l ll'h 11 11 Lenoi 11'1 .SO 17 1078 ll'!-4 19 29' .. -ll.l. Amlac .6-1 7 ol6 16"' ISIN l ~t-YI cinr.i;C .60 1 16 l5'A 1""" 1,i.«+ ~ K ~ 121 9"' 9 rn Lev Fd Cen lS 9',• •~ 9'11-\o AKRON Oh., (AP) The AMP 11'1<: .69 40 173 lit HSW 117'h--\i. Con EO 1.IO 11 295 23=11o n 1\ :Ult-'lo ""°lier "70 9 19 16 15'111 16 -"'I Lev Inc .!Se 21 lJ 17!'t lJ, .. , 0 -AMP ll>C wl 38 lt\\ ll 3911.--~ ConsEd pl 6 . 2 ll!Vi 18 11 ~ I p ,.., J3 226 31"" 36>• 37~+ '"La~! ST'1 .48 1( .U 'I\ 32'11o l"'J-r..-'• strike-bound B F Goodrich AmPCOP 3d 1 J 1 ... , .... l.\'o CoouEO pl 5 . 16 "' 6:11'< 63\lo--.... 1"~a"c ioci 15 16S 32'1o:t 31'1(,, Jl~-.... Levlli Furl> 10 76S 7l'o 6VI 1 + .... . • AmpeK Co 799 3\li J•,. 3R-t'o ConE pl t .U J200 59\IJ 59V. 59111 G Pwof l.llO i7000 10'2 102 1C1 -It. LFE <.orori J4 4\o l'ilo 4""+ " Co has blamed the new AmreP C0<0 3 100 S'IO SYJ Siio+ o.:. Con1Fd 1 JO 13 n 3~ :1.1v. 3S 1~ G:Pwof 7 11 • uo 101 v, 101'1' 1011'1 LltltlYO 2.10 7 11 12~ Jl"lt Jl~-'t. · Am11ar 1 10 I 27 2S 2•''11 15 ConFoof ,,,., 7 910,., 911• n +v. Ge tier l lS · 9 21 1a"'" ll'i\ 18\t+ ._ LOF or 4""' I 19 11"-n.i.i.-'4 bargaining procedure of the Amstrpt i.a 2 '"' 8'14 &\!o-l'oC011Fr11t s2 1 100 13•.i. 11111 u •Ge;r 1iib 28 19•123 11&\">ll9'h--1•,.LIDDY McN1 . 24 •'h 4\• •\" · Ams led 2 60 I lJ 40'-I .011. ~ . :..onsNG 2 Q) I IT.I 17!!1 21•1, 2n1o+ ~ ~lly of 110 J 20 ~ 10 L!br1vCo .30 9 21 11 11 11 + "' United Rubber Workers union ~m1e1 In .20 11 20 •""' 4V. 4•-, Con1m Pw ) 10 1u 21 21113 27h GF ~u• lOb "° 80 6v. 6 6 -,.. LIDrtyLn so B 16 10:0. 10•0 101/o .. n.con .tlD I 121 211'11 1,-.. 11"'--It. COit P o1 4\.'I Jlj(I 60 60 60 PC • IO I I ll\lt l1~ llllo L!oer O! I'• 10 14W 14 1• -','J ror the present impasse in ~A~nH~f \IOI : ?~ 'flo ?!~ j't~-:~Conti Air Ln 12 la fl', tvo 91,(o+ \lo 81~1Flnl 'lit. $ zj 1 ... , 15>1> l~_..11'11 Lloo My 1\IJ 12 S6 l7'JJ 37111 l~..-'"' I t t lk n •v Oil •" ,.,,f '" en c1n 1 60 10 119 2111.o 27.,. 21 + "" Gkld L 1 _... 9 Jl.11 v.~+ "' L11111My pf 1 mo 101 101 101 i-1 con rac a s. !"CM"1c1 10 '' 1J 11v, 1 ,!At 11•1> 'fl con ctx>Per JI 5,,... 4,,. ·~-v,GUfHlll ~~ 1 5 1(>1;; 1,'-16;.+ \:. LlllV Ell 16 41 71t 141 e7''• 12:~+ •• "The union's pattern-setting &~'Ou 3~t ~ n liv. 1~4 l~~ \i ~r,~~0 0:2~ .~ 11i ~ .... "" ~~ ~~t ~ 8U?'ft1e•1 ~ J8 ~n L~ !~ 1~~t 1 :~ t:~~~U 1 1 109J ' 11~0 7:st. 28M~'· ~·~+: ~ T0C dure b •' the AorcoCp .16 12 301 •'lo l,,. l~~ \lo C pptB 21'1 6 «l'I• 'l)l'o ..o;;+ t ' O , 16,: ' Lionel org 1D 'IO l'• 3 3'11-,_ p e , W l C II Y APL Co~ S 19 tr. 9\~ , ..... ~ Y. ClftllRl 15D 10 :It 17\lo 1~ l 'h 81mbd rr l ls ff lr.! l.ttt 11'4-114 Llllon 21':11 10 314 1 6~. 7 Experts Make Study State Defense Cuts HILL ALSO issued an in- junction -agreed to by the lirm without any admission or denial of the SEC charges - baITing International Funding and others from future viola- tions of federal securities laws. The SEC complaint Said the defendants ~ a hscheme • . . to defraud" by making false statements and orhitting material inlormation. dctemtir:ed and publicized ex-=ri: 1N,o 1• zacro ~!\ IOO•'lo IOO•Y -V. Conllnvst 21 I Ill /,1' ~ ~:: oi:!'.on nc:n-16 lJ 11'~ 11~ 21~ \\ Lllln cv gf l 2 J7 ~'-'> 37 +1'1> · j · ARAS 1.21 2S 6l117'h.116 111 +2 Co1>Mlg .54b t 66 10\'o ~ IO .. + Y.Globe1 "'-r t 179 11~ l<Y-o 11 +Vo Lllln cvpf 2 · 12 11~ II 11\.11"-I"' tensive y JO advance of the An:ati"N ·14 1 11 6.... ~ 61'1+ ,1, ,'~,"~01111 ,1 .,.., 1 111 79t. 21~ 11»1o+ ,,, G1obeUn 60 1 71 16\lt 1~1 i11o'¥ \t Ll11on1n olA , •'• •,~ •,:·~ •,~+ 1~ t t t !ks 'th th Atc•I pf c 2 ' 21 2l'IO 2• on p 1 . . 2 .l!)h .av; .OYl-4YI Gok1W'1 Fcl 9 "" 1.iv. 1.W. 1•'1·-.... L<>CkhelO ,. " con rac a WI e com-ArcntrD .so 13 11 1Aro 21,.. 2rn+ ,,.. cont •• .111 13 6S 22:i. n 22:itt ~ GOOdrlch 1 6 %)4 :ll'll; 21 21'-'>+ i,., Loewsc 1 16 1 1so 2~"" 21 2S'14+ ~" · · ind•n•t"' · At<fl~ EnlP • 320 s 3:w, •l4--'"" Conrrt Diie 9 4S6 40\!o 39,,., ~ \II GoodYrT n 9 Sil ~ 15V• U \11+ ~ Loma•FI 32 9 11• 9\.\1 9 9 • parues m our ...._J• 1S Ariz PS 1.16 • 21 20V. 20i. 20v.+ ~COl'lwd l,«I t • lS\lo »'Iii ll-V.GorOOllJ :1, I 26 111'< 10¥. l<Rlo-l'o LomM 1l9b 12 •t •2'11o 41'• 12v,i1:'t largely re sp 0 n s i b I e for Ark BHI 40 • " 1V. 11"" 12 COOP'""' .IO It !e..-Vl'l--2' !hl ~ld"tne I 1 ... » lt .... 20 +th LonOon Mtg s JI l!Y, 11 111'> 'o Atltn RUOv 9 " '"" $'loo 5l'o--'A1Coap.rt1t pf $ 1 n n n I r1~W l\'J 10 19t 13\'o 2'.:I\.\ 22\l'i LOl\tSlnd I 1 179 lj 1 ... 1"'-"\• creating the present situation ~rm1011 Co 42 110 !'"-S\'11 S...-\lo ~C~~ 31o' •,• .. ,, ',,·~ •"·~· 11S\li 'II r•nb'f ·'° 1 12 JA1 17 .... 17\\+ \'o ~~ S1~G, ,1 .~ ?0 1 l~ w~ -21:W. r:~-. ~ . . . ..rmcos 1,20 9 n 7l'h 22\\ :nv.+ Vo .,.. 4\h V. rind U .IO I JP 12 11411 11-v. ._..,..,q.. "" .. Jn our negot1at1ons ,. a Arml>I 2 lo 26 '29'11o 2911) 79.,..__ v. -1nc1, ,n 11 20 19'1'11 i1 111\-\I r11nlv 110 5 94 1m 19v. "~f "' LIL "u a 12 1100 t031h 1112..., 1112........_...17 Goodrich k ' . Armurpt 4:W. JlOO '°°"' 60~ '°"' Ollll I~ '9 ~~ )~ llVi-+ \I) r•nt W \VI I 2J1 20'111 10'\it 101/o \'II LlL ot I $~ 4 l(P/J !(\/) B•'h--" Should Be Absorbed SPo esman $a J d Arms Ck .IO 1( 73 2t:V. ]; 2•:W.+1v. c::O~. IC i :: r. 2 'It 22 + \.'II ['fl!Or 1.10 I , I~ 16\'o \~ v;, Lor>llDllC .S6 lf 1~ ~ ~16 ~"" -1, Afonday. =,&' 13:1 ., rri "11~ M·~ u1~-:+:1tl ~DtnGJ•, \·1~ 31 3611 ~~ ~tt±tl 1'li~ 1f.: '1 ~ = 3!"1"" ~~tt-~ t:~ndE:'°r i; 141 J(o,;, :nv. 3.1~+ ~ Alo Cp .90!i I 7 I!) 15'n 5'h+ 14 ~C*~n •;. 11> 12 M Ml Ul\t 3"MI-'i\ ~rUtO 1 20I 24 "l1 ~ 2 ~ -VJ L• ~Kiffe 9 205 21 1°"' 26'1-+ "' Arvltilnd .$2 11 H lS •'It l•~~ -~ ,-•,• <.om 15 5' 6\.\ • 6 IN tr 1·10d j' " JO'h 10'+--v, LovGI• 1,IO 11 ( 3114 31 31 l A\A Lid I . 12$ 14 I I\.; 121'>-l~ o~ rd .b 13 14 22"'1 21'1• 22'JJt ~ INN~' ! " ' • 'I if! •:m+l~ Loweoul 90 6 27 1~ 15'111 15,__1 • Eq1C table A .., Lid w1 66 421\t 41 •l~l'i\ CPC1nrl 1 n 10 152 2fll> 28'1 ?9l1 v. N~• 160 )I n~ i.t trv corp s 111 .,,.. 716 7"' • SACRAMENTO (AP) Ca I l for n i a 's advancing economy should be able to <l>sorb defense cutbacks in the state wilh only a minor over- all eUecls, the Reagan iod- ministration says. Jn a bi·monthly report Mon· day, the State Finance D e p artment also said "employment lrends indicate lhat the California e<Xlnomy has been moving ahead rapid- ly ln recent months." THE REPORT, ca 11 ed California Economic Indicators. said c i v i I i an employment reached 8.468,000 In April, up 254,000 or 3.1 per- cent from a year earlier. ''A year·to-year growth of 184,000 in U1e labor force resulted in an unemployment rate (seasonally adjusted) of 5.2 percent. The jobl_css rate has averaged between 5.2 and 5.4 percent since last Decerri:>er," the report said. "Particu.arly strong gains have been re<:orded i n durables manufacturing, trade and services," the departmt'.nt said. 1'Tl-IE CURRENT strength in manufacturing reflects ri!'- ing consumer dl'1nand bolh in California and nationally. and provides a basis for expansion in other sectors," the report added. "The recently announced <'Uts in defense establishments are expected to have only a minor effect on California as a whole, although local read- justments in two instances may be difficult." H !'i11ys. \Vh llc the Ocpartmcnl of Defense said 5,803 mllilary anr1 4,057 civili3n job'I 'vould be Jost in Ca lif(lrnla between February 1973 and Jun!.' 196·1 because of th1• c u t s , "Information hy dt.'rense in- stallations sugi:iests thc11 these ngures. may be sl ightly ovcrslatt>d. nod thal I he rcduclion from n1id·i972 le\'cls will be 5,791 -and 2,824 respec- tively,'" the report says. .(II\ f'UR1'1JE'lf:""WITTT th(' cur- rent strcnglb of the economy. SPECTRUM TRADING 15 TRADES U ,1'91111 SIM1 J 16 1J In Rt.11·0.I· 1•r Trftllnf, ba1~ ""'''"' pr1rK•1><1h •• pniHllttd by Drt. TtwllM .. H•r· ~.,_wtltcor• o1 ''Tht Ctmfl*flty "'"""" Tf'91f""' O ..... .'' l'w "'9r• liderm1t10fl C1U Mr. J11!+11t •fltr 1 fl.m. It 114/t41Mt CLAYTON BROKERAGE CO. C01',11tf0Dn'Y SPf;cJAUSTS it will not be difficult to absorb those laid off," the report says. The closing of l~unters Point Nava l Shipyard will create "a temporary, severe 1 o c a 1 unemployment problem" with the loss of up to 7 .500 jobs. the department said. But it added, "Th.is will be more than offset by gains in etnploymen t elsewhere In the San Fran· cisco area." The Long Beach reductions, "involving primarily the shift· ing of vessels from there to a San Diego home port, are not expected to lead to major ad- justment problems." t h e report says. The SEC also contended thal some or the defendants u.sed mdhey raised in a stock of- fering in a manner contrary to the plans listed in the stock prospectus. DEFENDANTS INCLUDE August J. Marra and Ray G. Mootalvo, both residents or Castro Valley and both direc- tors of International Funding; the firm's fonner chairman, Eugene CUthbertson of Hun- tington Beach; cWTent presi- dent Stephen L. McElralh; secretary-treasurer Earl W. Kowalka, and Rodmar Hospitals of Garden Grove, a subsidiary firm owning ex- tended care hospitals in Visalia and CastrO Valley. AshlOll 1.20 I U9 2•~ 2A l•llot 11o,c'~!],".,l 6 21 16 IS"li 15\lo--V.G! ltl ".o .• D 1 l ... 1sv.+v. T:.J CD SDI 5 l2V. Jl'h Jl V.--\'f 1Uhl09f240 1 •7'111 •1¥1 •1'111+Vtr....,I.-I 301\ltl'l•IV. G f\.r "16 ' wt J L11Wliol.026lts3'lliloll\li3'1""t 1'1 SAN i<:RANCI~O (AP) -~~Z"1 ~;J: l~ ~ tt ~ ~~~~:'K 1 10 : n f6,,, li~ ~i~i:w:~·rn :: 'lA\'11 I~ 11::'~~~1~ '~ :: 11~1.r. 1 1°"' ~~I.Ii +!\ The Equitable Ltfe Assurance AstoK Trans i2 l'i\ 7'ill 11/1o Cr011••H, 54 ll 10 ''"~ u:i.r,, 11v. ...., G~n "b1rn1 ~ 1.0 ~ ~ :Ji.r. n •" , Luken so .!<l 9 1• nvt 2~ 21•s+ '• . th A!tl!Onl .Ml S tl l'h 11 11.\\+ ~Crown orllo ll 19311~ 20114 20h 1..:. Gt hO 0.C t 221 15"" I.WO 15'11+ f(I L V 0 C0<p 13 Ul ~·~ ' • -\'II Society of e us .. a New All~MI 1.0:Jb 1 .cl I~ 17 17 -...... ~""" z1 1,20 11 200 2ra 26lilo 21 +1\.'11 j~t~hnd 'wi 126 nit 2\lt 2~ 11 Lvke Vos!n 11 62 .,,.. • ..., l\!o . York firm, is investing $81 ::1R11~~J·•j J Ji l~Z: ~~ ll:!+ : 1"111"sP c!r~ ·6 ~ tf" ff' ~f~·~ G~~~-90 ·, Ji 1~1o 1~ 1~'11 "° t:~c~sv3·~ ;, 1~~ 2::Z 1iia 2 ; 14 + \~ II -k ff ' AIRc Pl J.IO llO ~ S5'11 U\lt 1111 P.'" .-14 10 12\.'l 12•~ I >\--'lo 'i...-· I 17 11f 21 20 101._. r. -Ht M-IDI ion Jn a s yscrapcr o ice A!IRth Prt l 1 137\lo llPolo 137>.i+~ c"ml~' :1 14 !M J1Vt N''" \4 g~~ '~.at~ , 11 JIV. JJ"ll 31 +1 M1cAF 01b 6 11 1~ 1ow. 1o:ii+ "'I complex now under con-:rt>'1r1t~: lr 1t J\\ I~ ~ ~ c~~1::wr ~ i; 7~ 2l~ 2~~ 1';t1v. G111t lfl ''° J m ' 2tlolo 21~1-~ ~~f::"ld 30 ~ tt ,, .. J~ ~ :: struction al the foot or Market Autom 0.111 • 138 66 .... 65 66V.+111 ~111rH 1.21 I $4 71'.lo nv. )'4+ \Ii g~I~ ~161.C~ ·; l n ~~ 2~1 "'MecMll .6SD 7 117 ,.,. ~ 6lol.+ '·• A11toml lltdl 8 .., 4'1.t ' 14 +V4 ClOPSCP l I 20 21\'o 20"lo 11v.+ ~ • Al>I .6Sc J 1 "" ll • \lo M(M 0 1 20 l 11 11 II street Awco Coro ' 1so t'!4 · m 9"' +'-' yor11t Mt I :n :21.,., 27\lr 7\lt--1 8J11s18 111 12 12 1""' 1 11~ 14 MICV R H. 1 I lll 2s,,. lll.li 7S\li+ Vt · Awo £!' w_e •. lOd :J 1.,.. 1 f ~ --0 D--G l" e ,., "'°Jl 60 •1 ""' Mcv pt A •\" aa 511 Sf SI · · . Equitable said Monday the ~~~Pr 1.2s l' A~ 38 ~Vi ~31"'+:1ll g:~r ~ 1; n ~ 31:: 3i :t: ~ G v S.OI _. • .tl2D 6' " ::1v. MllO FO -~ 13 2~ r~ l~ t:.±. ~ investment Is the largest Avl• •roe Al If o ~ JJ1.li '!'.-\.'II Danaco 1 3d ' .ss .'.13\ii :n .,,., 32'4>-I;; ~111",••w' -" ' 1" ~ 221~ 'J + tt :~1c~ .l"l , 9'1 1 11oa 1 · + "' single one it ever has made in E1~~1 ,~ fi i •ri: if , 'f,,,.,!1~ g:~l1 ~ P1' ~: ~ ~ ~ ~""+ ~ ~Jr::3 iii :; j ~~ ~sv. tt~+ v. ~:~; :~ 1l 1J' l1'11 l:J: ll11 '+ '"' real estate. 1--' o::~opf :.~ ~"° U !.~ k~,.,.. Glirron 1oos1 ll M •V. '"" •Yo ~:~..:; ·~ 'l ~ 1l 1Yf: il:t'+ !: B•bl..Wll .IO ll 161 261.lo 2S'h 251!) D•vllnl" .24 S lOS 9 IYI IV.+ V. H Ut'rt ta. ;-" ~ V. iw.-~ MatiPOW '.n 10 J 20'.i. 10''" 70\lo-"' l•chl! .ltt l• 109 s•.i. '"" .A't---'I• D1vtonH .S.. 10 5' 17'"-16"'• J.t.~ ¥o 1 · 2f 1 ~ 1~ 131V. ,4 M11n Hn 1 S6 10 16 30 79\11 :lO 1 >.i :~:r.Jn ;3~ ~t :.t llv. ~ lii.i.!1 ~ 8::~~1, 1::t 11 ff ~ 71~ ;;z.: ~ ~=~~:p lJJ tt 1t2 ll .... 11'~ 11,,..+ \'t ~:r.~~Ol'I :l!. 2} n ?$~ la\ n::-:+ :,; 1llG1s l.e6 10 ..O• n:i. n:i9 B\:+ -g:r1 1.0I 9 m tt"" "l:Vt ~'h+ till H•mdCo ·"° ' "4 I rn. I -Mar Oii 1 6Cl 10 lST 29'4 18"1> 21~\ R:~~ 11~ ~ ~ff ~'i; 21 ~¥:.o.t';.t~ l:l~ ; ll l:t? ,:~ 1:~~~=~~ ;~ 12 ft I~ 1l~ 1~.t~~:;~g;01 :a~ 9 ~ ~\;; ;;·~ ~~t·~ LOS ANGELES (AP) -Of-B•n11or f" 4 1()4 ~ 7-1114 O.U•Alr .50 11 in SJ lO"" 51 -l'!o H1ritsCP ,60 7 "l1 llV. 12'4 13 M•rem IOb 11 67 121· 11 v. 3"iv • .f1 f. -I f wh· k r. f 81n11•P p 1 . 10 251'· 2~+1 0.11 ' I 38 1 6"' I Min™' l .U 20 .n 4"'li 41 --"" . • ' 1c1a s 0 Itta er ...... rp. 0 B•ltCltPI 1'14 6 "'" 14V. 14'A-'"Dell~• "c~ ~ .m lo-\lo 9'1o 1~ :1. H•raiur1B 1 10 I 2ll4 2J'AI 23\IJ MN\at~}.~ 1.,B? ,: ,•!~:::~ill ~i:t,. Lo A I bl · · · i1tkO I NY 7 6 SS 3.1'° ll:i. llVJ + 'I'll 8: I '° < 1'' ~o Hiroett .16 15 &6 11,.. 10l4 10'°-~ 1rlo..~ · , s ngees ame r1s1ng m-a11kVe .. 13 16 30-loli 30, .. :IO'i\+t' enn1on · •2 v. 12\!o 22:v.-v.H ,, 120 7 61 2l'lt 19\.io 21~+2.,,.Mari ... t.1a 17 ":u.i,r,3• :u • . . . kT · , .~"" nnY• .ll• 16 97 10\fo IO'AI 101\t+ 1,\ 1'"' · . 1 1 l Mariele .•O 11 1 n.,., l31'11 331.0o-'Ill terest costs for their deciston '" r11s1 3 ' 71 Sl \4 ;,o,o\.'t !lJl t" Dt1111P1v ,68 13 :w 16>.li 1 .... 1~ ,._ H1rr•iu .22 15 ao 15\io •y. WI "" MarQt crm ss ''" 7\\ 11-"' llrberOI 2k 11 :zt'llo 29 '<o \'o DeSotoln ·' a 14 9~-. '"" 9,._ H1rr111n1p I 12 16 29'~ '8!.I> 71-\lo Marloll 2'~~ 37 tll Ul,r,, 2s-. 201-.t • to reduce by half a proposed •rd CR. .ll ~ 197 1P. 2• ~ o.•Edls i o&S ' 102 2!Rlo 10 20 ;..: H•rsco 111 7 ~ 17 16\'J 11~-~. MarshF 111 n 1• 27.,. 16..., "'-"' "~11 .7'/b 9 JO 25\1 ts 2S.,._ 14 o.•E , .. ,, 10 ' -• H•rlSMll ,II 10 «I 16'JJ 1$!'1 11\.'lt • · · t ' .frer to exchange debentures isle n ·"° 1• 10 6""' 6'h ,.,,._ •t. o . .. i 111 111 11 +1 H1r11H .10ti 9 JS 10 11' 101t 1~ ill MartlnAI .40 "' o 1"' 1~~ ry:-• !l$1nt1f,V. ?1011 :is 11 _~D11Eof7.4S .. J11099\'1199 99-'h H El•'6H ,121 16~27 1,Mor1Mrl.15 1 6016~16~18o +li> d ts f I· Ml 10 11 15 lo t''"" ,,.,_ Del E Pf $'It 1 ll!li'o 18\'o 71\._. -1-1' •w• · , MO Cup .!.o 1 "4 l7''1 1611 ll'llot" an warran or common :,::M Pi 1 10 lSYI is[~ 1sv. + Df•lrCo .2s 1s 2 1s>1oo 19111 1w.-111 ~1ver.1A1D 1 1 ~ ~ i:t? 1:11· If• ,,, MascoCP .20 Jl uc 4,.,, •1 •• 1.,, e Whittaker Independents Need Gas Too, Says U.S. Agency slock Balh ltld 30 1 •2 21"" 21\.{ jl'l<I +'t. O 11 Fin .5' 11 • 19 lllilo 11'4-\4 ~~ M":rt1n 13 .a 16,~ 16 16,~-;.,: M11sonl11 .a 15 37C 26~1 26"'" 2b:IJ.1 '' · k . euscnL '..12 16 231 ni,, 211'. l!fl DI• lnll 1.IO I 13'1 26!fo 16o,;, llll,r,, HtC~ tnt:: 12 10 10 ll .. 13 13""l ~ Mau~l .ISO ~ Bl 11\\ 1Mio 11 ~ 'A spo esman said the finn :~Ve~ ·~ ~ 31~ tf'I' mt; tt""!::: 8l:s~ ~ .~ 7l ~~ ~\It. ~~"' HtCllNln ~ ]8 31 17\'o 161' 11 r· :::1~, :~ 11 r, ~li:: rl•t. ~~ \: filed an amendment with the ar1 , :60 1l 52 ~" """ ~1 Ol•Shpr 1.20 11 16 1sv.. 1.v,-'Ito ~l;~ni_ 1·}! ~ lfi ~~ ~" ~~ 5~ M111uE .ub 9 s.:u :29 .. n 2t t"+ '• Securities and Exchange Com-:':tF~'Pi'~ 16 211t1ff lfi l v._+~\lo 8f.l::.i~"-Jg 1~ -\91 .\'~ ~ 4n.-I'"'+ Yt H":lf:;!1nfU~ 1s ~ 3~._,, ~ 3tl'1 1"" ~:~'tls ·fl~ ~ Jn J ,~~ Ji:+1~ • · M d ( Wh' eckmn :Ji lJ t 21\4 27lil O!Glorao .60 1 511 10 9""' l +:\lo · 1-• MaverOt .6S IS I 25.,.. lll.O 1S'h+ " mission on on ay or 11-ioct 0 • 2 97 ~ :is'JJ olcilt•t EoPt "' 1J1 11 """' ~ "" Htl1n1Pr .60 • 71 ll'I• 12~ 1 ••-May~Jw .so 1 11 ,,,.. n• r~-q . . Ar . l .. ~ 1~14 l•YJ+ v. [) lllnoh ·'° IJ J7 6.\1. ~ 6"'+"' H•lm Payna 11 to 11'• 20,'ll ~+I Nlll'lillCI 1.30 12 61 11 16'!. J6V.-'• taker to accept 2.5 million co et 2k ..,. 1 9\! 9¥i +'ho Ulnah pf 2 5 ~.... 22"'-.,... Hemlsp c1p . 12 2', • •, ', -v. MCA 1oc .M 1 $l'I 12•i. 11111 l2 +11. •• d d ·~ ~ • 5 10 a= • mllonC .llOcl It SS 27VI 2 •t. 11\4 •t. HIM 11'1 .XID 10 · Mc~O .81 1 3' 16'"' 1S''1 t'~ ti'' COmmofl ~118reS ten e r e t rm . . 14 19 I -• IMllW .12 'I~ 90 .... 17YI 11\.\:;:1 ti~(lllet .61 19 108 3411.o llV. 3'111•+ ,,. Mc roll 1.20 •'• S6 71~ 21.,.. ll ',--'i• d the d h fT>M 9 so 11 1 ..,_ v, 111oo 06b 16 13 l:M ljy,_ \la H•••hV 1.10 II 5l IF<o 1sv. 1~1•+ "Mc rmol 10 62 60'1'1 j -• un er propose exc ange, How is 9 30 . 71 211A+ v. .,1,.11ci 1n , 11 ,,,. 214 v. H&11D111n .n 20 l® 4114 39,,. •1 v.+i'l'l Mc0on10 co 61 9lS M'h 62~~ .+1'• SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The federal government is asking n1ajor oil ·com panies not lo s hort-change in- dependent stations in the distnbution of their dwindling gasoline supplies, a govern- tncnt energy adviser says. shortAge has hit the in-rather than live million of the 1i::1'if0 f~ 1' 2ff i 1 16'°"_ ~ ~~~~·~~ ~2 1~11~3 2h~ 2f~t l': ~;.'Voit E~ ~ lt~ 1 ::-; 1~""" 7!~+ ~ ~~~~ ,~~ 1f 1~l Jlt! ~~ ~1 '.: 11~ dependents the hard cs t,' • 20 million shares outstanding ""' co 11'~ ' "' F \It. Ml\ 1a 19 st •s•t. t:i~ ''~ :i. t-11111111or ,"3 12 ,. 21 10 20'4-'• McGr HI ."3 t 81 1i, ,,,. 1~1 ... -. . . :::gppf ·· la \'t FO ..t9D 11 1"' ill 1Vi HllfOl\Hll 1 9 111 11 21 11+·loMGHlpf1.10 t 19 19 19 -t Johnson told newsmen. as planned or1gmally Pl •· .. ,, l'>-1" ~u1J .12 • ' "" aiJt .,,; HMW 1nc1..., 16 •2 lYJ J111 l"~ McGr!'Qr o 10 11 31• J>to 3""-v. . 8 PPI 4 .• JI SI -nell~ .d I• l:zt 20•.4 19 lt~ V. HobflrtM .t4 I• 19 261'1 ts~ '6'1•-f I.:. M(lntvre P :710 S9 SI 51',)--\~1 Tenning them "a very lleriCluel tric ' )24 ll/4 2'A 3 I( cg .J2 5 ].( lt.\'o lj" 'I"' Hoer,,.,. .ti ' " ll~ 2S 25'"-,, McKee .JSb 12 2 101-. 20 2(1 h I ~111.Ye Pno 7 131 fl'lo 9\'t ""'+ \Ir r uver 1 .a t '4 v. \-'lo 111111 EIK!n 1 26 6~, 1!• e~.+ ~, M(Lt•n .l>Cl 12 1' tO•.-. l'/~4 00 -\IJ e prul competitive spur." he • Roe kt ef• Bt1'hs1 1.-1 di Jtv. 21'-' 2ni.+ "' MY .10 , 1. 6"" ,v, 6Yi-14 Hol '""' ..JO 15 2• 20'.lo 20 20"\i" '• MtLovin su / 11 14'• u~ 1•"'.i '• S.' .d. "We do not want to see V .. e1o J 1nc1 .s1 20 o .tSlll. .w.-. ...,~_,.a rCo .... 12 K5 31~ Jt~ :111:i.--'' Holl1t A .1st1 3 Jl '• 11 •4 31 •.+1•. MtNei1 .n 1 • 11111 11 1• 12•t + ·~ 'IKICS.Ok 1 .:I 1S3 IOl>'i4 9ra 100*n'I OowClll-m 1 14 SlS SB• ..,.... 511'+Jl'o HonMltk .60 71 11m tn. "'~· •1'1-', Mrw Co "° 10 •l 13'to lll\ ll!I.-•• lhe Independent sc t f EL SEGUNDO (AP) B•lrJn A 6 63 1YI""' 1 "'DPF l!ICP 111 S'-'> sv. Jl'l Honrw• 1 . .0 22 11110dU.1111'4lo:J _1 .,Me~ooi 2.ao • J11" J7 ll • 91u-t61U .6S 1 , .. 11\li 11 17\~+ v. m of 2.20 .. 19 ' J9V. 3'9 Hot11"l1I All , 5~ 9\.'I 9 9 -ME I Corn 9 2l J 2\!o ~I-I~ gmen 0 -8!111Lohl 10 1 11 ll>io II~ 18~ • ~revo 11'1 t l l6'!• 26 16 1100 .... r 1.21 8 17 2111.. 17"• 2111,_ II!, Me~o•B 2.10 19 31i'N J~:ll. lw.-•• the industry driven OUt 0£ Rockwell International Corp B~HR ,24 12 U ""' l\l!i IV. resser 1."8 13 ~ 31\t 31 3 7u+ '° Horl1011 Co 2 117 1'1• 11/o 1\lo Nledu•11 lt• 8 J( 22',I} ~ 2 V.--'~ business." has announced plans for a ten· Bobb!• er•a s 110 "' ~ ~ "" rffir. pt 2 •• 21 :i.i~ 3'I l4 + 11t 11os::J.lo .C6b 10 4!5 '~'"' 11\i. 11v.-'~Met Sl'IOCI .•l 21 SI 1s 2~ u + ·~ Wf!Ll .. IA Jhn d . BoeLl'IOC.4012 2671t141N1111o+\1'Dr•• 1.200 . ~20\lilt'lloltho-V.HOlrinll 3611 491l ... 12~121,-•,M~mofti 9 S'IV l\\ '"" 3"9+~ • n.n • o son sai Until the gasoline shortage, der offer to buy one million ,. Cited • ~ .,,, '"" 91-'J+ 1t. o ... ., usep 1 s 9 P.i 1 iv-.. HOUC16ll• :'° ' ~1 n•A iott 11 + 11 MtnaKO 41 s s. I'll 1~ 1•1• •1 lh go l I J h d 'nd I"' "'"' ll ....,., ...., ~+\to Duke P 1.40 12 is n ~v. 22 + :lfo HoUOI pt 21-(o 1 ,., 19 ,. Nitre ~1 1.llO 20 1u1o,;,1•1W. 1•111o--1.i.1 e vernmen w s n s o nson s a i 1 ependent shares of Its own stock. 111111Mo 1....0 1 ~ 20 '°v.-,,., 8"k• 01 1.10 •• '''° 109 1a1"' 1~ + ~Hough M . .u • ... nYI 12 12 _'"'Mere~ 1.11 •l m 191'1 11!f.. If +H• gasoline distributed equally refineries purchased surplus The firm also said Monday B::'W t~ 1i ~~ lltt ~ ~~+ .._ D~~:~~ 11~ :. ,~,,~, 1~~ ,,, +1 ~=F~·~ I~ 1!t ,J"'-2!~ ,~~it"" ~~~ft~h_Jg ' 26l 1~'(; l~,.. 11~-1• over the entire industry to crude oil from larger com-it plans to nnrchase an Italian 1orman1 '" 1• 34 "" l'-' ,.. 0111<, nr 1~ . 2 t2v. tll'J tn~-t HOUtt Pl :i'llo 6 56 55 56 1 'M~s.Ptt .10 11 1» 60 s• 59\lo +t 'd r""' osl EO 1 .... 11 1' XW. ~ ~ \4o D11119r0 .61 26 '' 11V. 1\14 101Jo HOVtFpf 2Vt I 4'I _.. _.. 'h Mes Sgt 110 • 1 121 121 121 -I avo1 any more of the nation's panics and marketed the sewing machine company and aos1EP1 1.• 11101~2 1H.11t 111"'-v. 011p11n Cp 12 61 t\6 ~ "'+ ~ !l!iLP 1 40 11 .., •1~ .i•~ ,2,, i) Mes.111 .s..b 11 10 '~ '"' t11t-+ " ._ llOI) • 1eums lno;: 7 8 11¥o 10"4 11\olr+ -011P011I 1'1'D ll UO 114 1 ll'O -YI NI~ 'a.t 17 12! 2'I 2'it. 76~ I Me:s11 Mich 11 121'1 12~ 12~ i"' vu, Independent gas stations refined gas at loower prices three subsidiaries of a British ••1111A1r JI 10 Sii ,.. 9\.lo ,,..-~ g11Pn 01 '"' • • • tm· 66 -"" oNG 0, 2v. 5 "'" " 53on=.v. M It.... M ~ 10 21 15v, Jj 15•:·~ ' from going out of business. He and with fewer promotional firm for prices totaling as ·~~vl.~ l: 1:8 ~ ~.,. uv..:l v. D~~E' .~j} i6 ,: ~.,; ~ ~-t ~ H=~r:t ·;3 1: 1~ \~ I~ l~t ~ ~~· :19! • '™ !i~ ~~ Nti ~ said that 3.000 independent frills. much as $22.S million. R~I~~ 111ni :12 1~ ~ ~ 1=+ .. 8:tt: Jt1t2 : :l fno.. bVi i~ ~ ~bf!v ·{~ 11 ~! ~!~ ~~ ~~· "M~~G~"1:~ ~ 3{t tt~ tt~ ~~11t: ,; stations :ilready have shut ---BroO ~ .10 11 n 32\11 n l2'!o+ .-ovmo '" .20 • ss 1~ 1• M>oro+1 uvtwsH ·40 1 1 7;~ 1 1 -, M1,ns tub 1 1 12 1J \/o U\ro 1J•• bdwYHlf" 1 I " 54 U ~ -SI!-ll!lhes TOOi 20 30 -4 1\ollcnxlol .4'1 ' 44 12\'<o 111.io ll'o ~ ~. down r--------------------------~t Broc~G .. 15 6 163 1No 17 ~·· EMrlePI ·'' t 1$ ~ 2m l~'tt 11nlCh 16 12 ~ 4,',~ ',"',, ·.·.~"·MiOCtl .•6 11 61 11''1 111'11 , •• ,.. ...... . brUnG& l 12 l() I 71'/e ~ EIK'1C .lOb 1 14 12~ 121'11 12•111 · .. '° ·"~ 14 MIOSoU 1.10 11 192 13'11 11• ~· Johnson a Trc11svry Depart lrwn cofn & v 1\.11 1v. -~•"'If" Air 79 413 ll'tll 1~ 10~+ (., uttoocE ·'° s .. av. •~• i'h M0dMl11 .BID 9 1 n1o1o 1 \'I-1s,., • -rGreuP !YI ' ,, ,,.,,. 1$\to ~ \4 E•11G1•F 31 11 lll 2l\.lo 2l\to 2-l\.1'+ "' 11,~~!_~ ·1,· •, ,", 251'> 15\~ 1,\_ 11, MldROli .ao • 3t 12 ll"r 11 +-'• mcnt energy advise:r~ also said h D .1 Ir" Stiro 2t1 w. • n~ t""° "" ., E•11v1r1 1v. 1 s 1m ""' ltv. ...... · 1 ,,., s ; 1 .. MllttLD 1_21 1s 62 "'" ~ ~1\-o t-'• 'fonday thaJ on•. Or lwO or the t rFerrls :oe JI Stt II 11 IM+ Y. !Oii KO I.Oii lll 4M 130 llt"* 111'to+1~ ICN Plwrm lSlo0' '-,," MMlllonBr .l6 1( 41 19''1 \~ 19 .... .. " e 81 s !'""•wk ,4 • 210 16'\ N '"'["" l:'.•tO!ICO 1\1!1 I 11 .. :io\.\ 2t¥I im "' lcl .. I .... f '• ll'lnM&M 1 l6 Ml II nv, ~2 .. lr • 100 Ind nd I r111~W :.I!) 1 7 rt 2~ 21""' "'E(nllnM ,n 19 n1 f.I" 21'11 2.._1\lo •hl!P l ,7, 10 It 29"" 79"• 29v.+~M1nnPL 141 1 16 10•1, 191,. 2Q coun Y:;: cpe en ' ev<v E t.21l 12 1w 2"" ~ 2'"'9 v. Eckd J1r; .10 J1 1 1~1 31"" ,.,,. 1w-tt"1 ~::18~1} .~ • 1ll ~r1 12..., 12'' ~1nnEci .24 n 11 11 10\/J uv. re.fineries have shut down and AuOd co ·'° 5 u n~ ~ 11Y1 ~ Ecko NC ,24 11 u u.,.. ''"" U""-...., •cte•I 'JV •I , ,01 14 n1.1 12l.:. t v. Miu A1~ .90 10 16 1s'A 1'1.1t u, ~ ~ l uOOCo llf St J10 ..... 6""' 6""" §OH19r l.OI 9 U 71'111 21 l!\'t--1 ""' IUS A l S 4't l o P~c A J ' 2 t•lO 1~ 711 -the rest have ctti!" ck pro-~I Ind 1 12 "' ·~ ~-t~ fiG . G .ID IS .,.. 11 l°"' ~ +11o 111-1' ·,",,' ', ...!.! 1'" ,.~ , ...... 1. MPCtm 1.60 I Kll 1S 24\11 2•1'>-• '1"< • G • I A I Coof 60 15llO .-~ t.':'O 6"t l;;IKI A•llOC 11 -.,. 4 N 31• ... n · ""' It II'• It j • .. Mo PubS t.e 10 19 l.f',.. 11~ 1s1<1 t '• duction. t t ts u fO 1·20 11 1 f :II\.\ 20Yt , eos '"°"" 31 :it l™ J1Vt llht"" '" 01A 6 .. e 1• 1111• it 1 Mot>1101 28Q o 4n ,,..,. St!•~"" H ~ lh ro1ee ive11 lC c ,~ldlV l.57b 10 IO tt""' ~, ... _"' Elin:! ~ I 141 J"" J 3 -.... 111c,ri ~, '3~ ,, 21 4S\ .. (S\1 ~·~ Moll1to I 2(1 I 2(1 It~< 'I"' I '?--,, ere to·ll ·r :.t!re Society ~::;w R<: ! !!'' \'\ ~ ~-~ i\11~ Pl ... ~ :· :: 1= '1~ ~ ~ lfl~~I 1:Js z: ~· .. n"' n~, 'lio =:.":.~Rb0l 5 261 1f" 'ln 1 '•+ '• of lnde en v o so I i n e """'DI 1\.-\ . . ,,. 1"' 1,..f ~ EllKlr 4""' ' 101 l'o .,.. '-""-y, :,.Ptl'1v.; t' l~ 11 ,,~., 25 1s -1 ~1y11 Coro 12 'I 16',~ 1 '"' 't + " Marketers or A m c r i ca LANCASTER, Pa. (AP) -I.C vou are a con· 11r1 '" '"'° ,, · .-. n 1v. ·•P•IPH ' • H IS\tt 15v. ~Ji... •NA ~P ,,: 1 W '14 lh 9 + ·~ M 1 "0' 1.iic Jtv. '1"" 3 i. · b < l~~IN":r 1.n 1 ' '111 ,... 3r: ~: :::.-:=1, i~ ~ 1 g: ~l: = 1~ 1,NA1nS .30b 1~ ~~ RI? fl:r+ :;: MonoQMonar~:m 1>CJ '! ,.J 11"" 1fi! 1~+ ·~ (SIGMA) Jnhn5nn said the tract.or planning to SU mlt a bid on paving the urricwc -~ 1 ·~ :n\.'J tt~+"" mrvA'lr M • J :fl! ""' sm 2~ nwrne C•o 25 ~' 6\lt 6""' __., onroeA -" 10 "' 11" 1ll,,, '''• current demand for gasoline ~rk.ing lot at the new Pennsylvania Railroad !"""'"' ..t0 ... ~ "' •1~1111 n\el"Yln .11 / 'II 1 1\'t i=H•19d, ,·",, •, "• 11"" hlll' 1""'t" ""'• 'j'/"' ';'° 11 l6j ij" ~ J 1"'•1 '4 ult> Ul'llvr .a t -Vi rnNt1 1.20 l~ 20 + 14 G · '1S'lt 's:t, 2S'llt ·~ ons 11. »" " it." can Jc met by Jncreaslng Im· useum at nearby Strasburg you'd better bone up •bLT 1.120 11 c-1w. 24~ 2h6 + " ~~1,·°t'.I: 1_ ~ 11: !t. ~+"" ·.,~.'.'· f:,.il ,! "li,, ;ra ntt ;~~ f \llJ =.-:.~ l,:U 1,.,1 1 " .1 ll pc'lrt!l of crude oil. But long· on: 1bOtCp .'4 , N 2"i\ itJ\t v. '""Fin :k 4 n 1Y1 t\.\ ~'lot """ · ~ JO Xl''"t !.\ .... v ·~ •~ range demands mu.'lt be met '"°'~ ~": 1' i1' ~ f4 fi?+ ~ "'111';:. C..t 16 ~ 1~ 1r"' 1lt:: ~ '::i,"41tR::1,1l:'l1 ' ~.' "', .. 14 ~;: ~ ~r-1-J,4 ~,:"Mc 1 6 3 4'1,',~ • 11i U1~111}~ by ln-•• ,,·ng domest1 THE ENDANGERED s~• c u ~11 Fllltl\C '° 4''° 1 • -"' ~.In...,~ .se sa ..,. ~ -' I lO'AI 1'\lo ~it!: .... ..,. I "1· "p· · .. , c -yc: .... es onserva on tllihln '~ 14 ,. 9h * ·~ ~-. ~;1~,td'I ,, 30\'o 2tlAI ~·-;:i"'l"':.1' . ~ 1 112 ,,,.. 1 7"+ "'Mor1e5t.1 l uv. i 11t 1 , 1-~ capacities. I Act ol 1969. •me 1.11b 10 i2 21 ,.,. ~ \i Qlllmrk~ ,,. '! 1sa 1, -"••" ,· .. 1 * 10 9 9•1•+ "'Mll!fr , ,_ J • ,1~ ,~-,4 6mRL ,'°3 41 7' u~ ~ -"" t!Y%!• ,40 • 2 :na ""' ~ "' J 16V.. I''"' 161• '" ·"-!" ~ ·-, -The Federal Power Act. ::;"Pa~..:..·' 12/ ~ .2tVt +r11o lit\'.:: 1 • 'l sa = is "'t ·~U:r ..0: ti l' rz~ ~~ r t 1 ~ii~ ._M Jl. ~~ 1: ~ ~~:: "TOE PR£SENT gasoline T I E 1nPK .l!I 43 11t 1f.l l + ~ Eam1rk wl . "L Wit,~ + 1" , ... 1 !8 t ~·to ~. ~~DI· ~ ' n" ~ ' ~It~ -he Atom c ~nergy Act of 1054. •n11 R 1 10 • 1'"" ~ i -v. Ell'!l11 •flf: .J'.I s , ~ •• l"iwto .a o u ,.~ i1-,..,..., • MtsrV:I J• lj ] v, i'" ..---... -----The Great Lakes Basin Compact of 1965, •o Clllll c !l IS '2 ~ '14 4 --.... E1M~1"1 ... • $) 1 161"1 ll'llli • , ...... I·'° .! Jil , • .,,. ~3'' '~ M~L ," u• \.!o f," '1''' -.• 10H1110 ,'ff 11 ln :i; 1t.1•-.+ ~Els' of 2.... 14~ 42\lo .Q1,1, (;; M .. .o -J)l)~:IN\o't.HO t J11.Mun1 d I -TheBl.ackBassAct. ••b CO l."411 '" ,-~,.""'"" .3011 • ~(\I)~ "'l'MCPWI 2S'1p.l!!\li)l) .... 'M11nt::'g1 " "J"" ··-'· PRIVATE TRUST 1rll1ilf'.J I 10 11'~ ttiv•C'°"' I 1 ll """ 2''.lo 26\4+ ~ .. nFllvr .n.-71 • l '"' "''* ti f 11t NIU"l/J'il ,·l! 1 ,f I ~i '• l'" •1• Ir Cl z20 H -I 11'1¥1PI 1-IO j «IV. >f'h 40Yt+l1" l"tHtrv 1 . ..0 1 .36.a 21'-1'''> Mu•PC~c C f j , •~ ~ '• ••ofl'f . 1 s. '1<'1 "' Pio-"" ..,,.,,~ .m 'i ' Iii! ... /lYl+l\t nHold I.Jib J JYJ-13'A 111,;_ Miit . , .. "' .. FUNDS ava1••au A LANCASTER CONTRACTOR complained •raPL 1·11 I ... 2$-14 E '~ t.· • 1110 .!WI 12 1 16\.\ •1' nl«n•t Intl '" 1>.lo ,.,, "'+ ~M11r:"1 .. ~ 1; g b ~,~ i·ra~" Ll'I •ro Ttoth 7 37 ~~ l " lll'<o-¥t •lnfC•rt 1 1·~ t*-lh Int lndvt Ill 1! S '"" \'>-• M11tOm Jn: l l > • fOA REAL f:&TATI LOAMS that the eight-page listing of state and federal Jaws •rrl9"' .• , 11 121 .,. •~-.,.. •Kon ·'°' 12 s: ..,._ '~ n-.-"" 1 ~h .411 " 191 H )1\(i ~~ .... t :" Mv•" L · ~ 11 ' 1 "' 1rU "°'" ·• 1111 & Jnd TAUIT 0£l08 •rr.,Gn Ill 1 14 I "'° lj+ ~ ,__ lnl .C Pl ~ l 'It 501'1 SGVI • N H not only is confusing but Will virtually double the ••1 w• ,..,. • 11 I I + • ~·~ ·" ,. lll •• ~ ;i" 1" ''""1~ 1~ H"'i 11"" -'<'Ill/Ko 130 1il~ f."' •1" ~-ti'> l1 ,600lo1'60.00CI •1t11Ck 1'° • .a ·~II cl I 4$ft; ~ ~t"l UI l , ',. .. Ml.II 26'Mo+ .N.ico~~-26 •I! • 'l 11tt•:>1 VI> To eo'!I. LOANS DH cost of the work, from between $20,000 and "25,000 ... , Tr l'I 11 uo " f'--1o1o • r1~. • 'I t. "' . 1111 1ci..11 '• ''' ~ v11o--,, N•rC"O . n ,._ i ,, 1•" 'fl'IVST OIEEO COLLATCl'W. 'f' I') ~oroi.. c,. ' 111 ~ ~'' ·""-" 1 rml . 1 1 · m ~! 1p l'"'• U JIO j ~ J7\'0 • N1th11a lO ~nto 4t~ 4fl 11' NIWPOlllT ICXllTY ~ 1.o about $40,000. ?: / c corp . 71 J'h '" u.-"" I 1· r (\.. ·~+ "" ~ ~~p ff' • 1151) 61\'o M .... -~·. Nftt Air . 6 3l! ~~ l:l'i' 1)11 t :: ttoJ!!.:~:'om. A state officiaJ who asked to remain anony-::cp'-l/ : 1: !ti I,. 1t,._ ~ ~=~,..1· ~ i' t lf:= ~ ~r'I ~~ ~~ 1; ,.~ J~ ,!~t ~ ~t~1:~~-i' ' ; f\'o ~'::! ~~t.J: ~...,,onhlth,cir1t.111~1 ......_. mouscaUedlhelistin!j"crazy." ==~~ 'I l"'fmi"',i"" 1 il1o11+"'\ 14~ • 111'~if:ttY1_.."~.~.:.~ s1~ rt:~ .. •L _______________________ J•1Err~"lo..a 11 i; 711'11 J: W!!~., : 1: , u un wr~, ~~·· ~4~~'-\~ .H,\'!t,·.~ '1~1';'jL,~ "i l!1 41r: !~ '1~.¥! '' "'N•i01!11. 1 }j 14\'o ll" :1 ,.·Ii ,. r ·~· • SC Tuesday's Closing Priees-CA>mplete New York Stock Exchange List Stocks Gyrate, End With Surge NEW YORK (AP) -One stock market rally falt~re.d Tuesday, but a second carried prices to their first general gain in a week. ';J'he averages swun g sharply upward at the opening, withdrew at midday, then su.rged again in the afternoon in what anlysts described as prlmar· lly a technical reaction to the i..ilspin of the past two w~ks. "The market got into a very, very oversold condition," observed Alan R Shaw at Harris, Up- ham &Co. Brokers said the market's behavior continued to show the effects of concern among investors over the Watergate case. international monetary uncer- tainties, and the domestic economic outlook. Co1nplete ClosiPg Prices-A~erican Stock Exchange List ' DAJLY PILOT Jl • .. . ...... -.... -...... ._ __ , .... .. ·--·· --..• ro ••~-r I ..il,Y PSlOT ~ .••••• 500 ·514 The Bluest Marketplace on the· Oranp Coast ,,....._ .......... 12S·W9 ..... & ...... _900·914 DAILY ....... ~ .••••••• 950. 990 """'..,..., __ • • • • • • • • ~. 799 Pl•Ci 1 CLASSIFIED ADS .................... S2S·~ ,. ... ~ •• ' ••• &50 -199 .... -Goooo>I. • • • • l50 • 199 .............. ,3)0 .. 499 ~ ••••••••• 200 ·299 -for Sale •••••• 100 ·12A LW & fOliftl , • • • • • • SSO • 574 Mad1oudiae •••••. , •• 9JO • N9 You Can Sell lt,.Find It, '( 642•5678 J Trade It With a Want Ad ' One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval Sthooh: cat MsiNC.tion • • . 575 .. S99 s.w.. and ......... 600 .. 1119 liOiwpoutotior;.. ••••••• 9IS .. 9t9 ' ,, £t\'#~t.-St#id ~ AlllASSOCll!tS REALTORS 21128 IEASI' CXM8T HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR.CALIF. 644·7270 e BUILDER'S DELIGHT . Ready and waiting for second unit on this large corner lot. 2-bedroom house, ca~pets, drapes, fenced yard, in Newport Heights. .. " " " .. " " " " . . " " . $33,500 ..... VIEW-VIEW-VIEW 1 Watch the boats by day and harbor lighls by night from your living room. 'The ULTI- MATE in FEE ownership, luxury on-th~· 1 water li ving. 2 Bedrooms, 2 bath condo in prestigious CHANNEL REEF area. Pool, se- 1 curity guard, boat slip-available. CALL FOR ~i appointment, $95,000. ' .< ' General General EAS'l'.SIDE 2 BEDROOM-$27,000 A-RARE-FIND -especially with features like these -beam ceilings thruout, massive stone fireplace, large bedrooms, beautiful bath & a large fenced yard complete with fruit trees. Owner moving to Oregon and MUST sell. Open this week end. Call us for details. MESA VERDE·HDT ITEM JUST LISTED, neat, freshly painted 4 & family on a quiet street -Huge enclosed, pooltable size lanai, no grass to cut only plants & shrubs to trim. First time on riiarket and owner needs -quick Sale. Offered at $38,950. <0 p,,,, HERITAGE • • REALTORS 546-5880 Open Ev11. SUPPLY LIMITED. DEMAND GREAT! ._.. Cmt CoDdomlllfu11 w.-·- PICTURESQUE SETTING $23,950. 3 b e d roo m home on a very large lot. Beautiful mature shade trees. Fenced yard. Plastered walls. Picture windows. Large yard. Move-in condition 540-1720 3 BDRM VERY IDEAL $30,500. Recently redec· orated. New plush carpeting. Lovely pic- turesque yard. 2 baths. Formal dining room. Built-ins. Fire place. Rear living room. Two patios. 540-1720 • A. U'°"Vl:JI: fi()Mf: SPLIT LEVEL .ON SUMBA. A Unique home on a Unique cul-0&-sac. Wow! It has class! A spacious kitchen overlooking a family-game room big enough for a pool table and already featuring a wall to wall fireplace. You should see the patio-and the four bedrooms-and the formal dining room -and the invest· ment. $61,500. UNIQUE HOMES OF MESA VERDE. 546·5990 A U.11119 of Joh• ...,.._ U llllW l()U I: tlUMI:§ OUR 24TH YEAR Offering Service Only Exporlen~ Cen Provide EASTSIDE COSTA MESA Six· l ·bdrm. furnished units; one of the sharpest bits of architecture in the 3l'ea. Al· ways rented! Located 2220 Elden Ave. Please drive by & call us for app't. $95,000 TW0-2 BDRM. HOUSES .. '. plus two 1-bdrm. units, over 2, 2-car garages. Located ocean side of hwy. on two full sized R·2 lots. Lovely tree shaded court· yard. $126,500 Homa. dust•rtd •bout htncbomt CDIUtytnts. OCCUPJ °"'or the fN' fltnalnint Ltrp• 111------------------REALTORS pnipertles In desirable NewPort "!!!!!!!!'!!!!!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!ll!!\!'1!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Buch. EuctlJ rilM for pem11-TWO SPANISH G I General ~ '""...,..""""°Qdoybom• FIREPLACES! 3 BEDROOM enera WATERFRONT CONDOMINIUM SUndtcks. flreplxes. wet b1rs, WITH BOAT SLIP -New 2-bedroom. 2lf.t ~~·,ut, ,. '"""'""• -.... ,,,., STparkling <: o ncdilltion. $40,800. Very sharp. 2 * * * *. * * baths. ready for occupancy. Full price ......, e Pl'l&es. eat sw m· op area in o ege baths. Screened atn·um ••7 500 mini pool, lifhted t1nals c:aurts. Park. Large covered 'f<I ' • .,,..,,.,,...,.,.....,,"'~ patio. 3 bedrooms. with wet bar. Dining * TAYLO·R co. * QUALITY BUILT EAST SIDE . rlo< m1lntHHce "'"'""·A Dining room, modem room, built-ins & dish· CLEAN, SHARP 3 BEDROOM, hardwood = experienCI ii llorioaa kitchen. Family room. washer. Family room, .floors, fireplace, enclosed patio, new carpets 2 baths. Trailer dock & fireplace. Quiet street NEW EXCLUSIVE OFFERING! and fre$h paint. Wide, corner lot -walk to gate. $36,500. 540-1720 Lovely decor. S40-l720 Love at first sight when you see the beauti· shopping. Just listed at $30,750. Tn, tllr11 I 1 .. ...,...t. hom$65,495 _,...HERITAGE .-. REALTORS fully landscaped grounds of this exceptional 2955 HARBOR BLVD estate-like home. The front approach is only 54Q..1151 • an indication of the exciting interior & lavish Open Eves. 1-""'t ......... fl-"'I FRiii PICifk: Coast Hl1hw1Y, up SUl*for Avenvt to Ticond«Of1, 111d dlrtctlJ to -#12 Robon Court. T-w. (71f) Ms.1141 ,. .. -.... ..., 10 a.a., to sunset. COSTA MESA 540 1720 furnishings which ARE included. Call to • see this Big Canyon 3 bdrm classic (incl. 2 General General J!;nJa .J6/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN 'BY APPOINTMENT LINDA ISLE WATERFRONT Custom 4 bdrm., 5 bath home with view of main channel. Soft colors, rich wood panel· ing & 3 frp!cs., give a warm intimate feel- ing. Waterfront mstr. suite bas dbl. bath, sitting area, view deck .......... $295,000. For Complete lnform•tion On All Hornes & Lots, PIHH C1ll1 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Or., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 General General mstr stes). Unusual pool & jacuzzi. ''Our 28th Year'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Read "Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club" NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 General General '"OWNER CLIMBING WALLS'" . . • has bought another house; this is your chance -owner wants offer on this elegant, lge. bay view home; 5 BR., 4 ba. Complete entertainment center around Ige. htd. & filt'd. pool; locked wrought iron gates. NOW $159,000. Land available. AVAILABLE Carmel model, Harbor View Homes. $72,000. CORBIN· MARTIN General SOMETHING SPECIAL * IN * COLLEGE PARK A sparkling clean well main· table<! 3• &dioom, ~) balh hotne will! formal (lining, family room, pool shed yan:I and inside laundry on a lovely tree lined low traf- fic street. 6'15-&)79. ONLY $33,950 Nigel Balley & Assoc.- REALTOR --ba-t1rtc111cJ;;:;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;:; _BE_TTER ___ H_O_M_ES_ REALTORS c.11 Anytime 644 7662 N.t,ltc.1--";.~~-FORMAL DINING • OWNER tra"'. 3 bdrm• .. 2 --& GARDENS ~!!!!!!"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!'!"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!! baths. Boat &: camper ac· · Sc-e 1his 3 bedroom HALE-General General cess. Dining rm, built-Ins. • 1171 ,_.LC., I& ,CREST home. Most popular should see the completely ---------Fireplace. \.~~rk-like yard. fio<" plan wHh 2 din1og modemizod and upgradod 12 APARTMENTS SEPARATE Large •lorage area. b'k General ULTRA DELUXE HOME OCEAN VIEW 3 bedroom, 2 story home in Corona del Mar, with ocean view, Vacant nnd brand new, Many ex p e nsive features, Jiving room has vaulted ceiling -exposed beams. Fireplace -walls of glass " and balcony. All e.lectrlc built-in ~· kitchen . Quallty w/w carpe ts throughout. Truly a iireat home at $110,000. Call 613-85511. Ol"EN TIL 9 • ff'S FUN TO BE NICE! WHY PAY HIGH INTEREST? General • General G} 1------------1 • $17,~0 MORE * 16 APTS * areas. Hard-to-find detached kitchen in this lovely 4 bed-$31,950. 540-1720. garage provides !better ac· room home. The beautiful Many alternatives to financ· TRAILER AREA cess and extra recreation landscaping in both the ing and ownership. I Pri ed t onJ • May Trade Down for you'•U want to see this one Verde. 4 ~rms., 3 ~!fis. :;-;;~~; area. c a Y ~~is ~yre~i~s h~~~ Sn1aller Units. it's better than new, The in-Forn:iaI dining rm, built·ms. Q\VNER leaving. In Mesa We have 15 homes available · ranging in price from $22,950 to $40,000 with ex- isting loans that can be asaumed wHh no qualifying and interest rates aa low as 414%! Better check on some or these . C wALl\lK & Lll ---Very clean 3 hr/den & work ' ••--. shop in ttnr. Lot!J or 7 BUILDINGS privacy with chain.Jink INCOME $24,540 Located on one of the best • May Trade for Land suit-tcrior of ttiis new home is Family ml:• fireplace. Huge Realtors 646-ml streets in Mesa Verde. Do able tor 3 to 5 Units. so clean! It's heavenly! 3 Jot. Beautiful, brk $42,950. 2043 Westcliff Drive • COATS 1------~1 & fence around this chann· Out of Area Owner ing home! Price is firm . Anxious yourseU a favor and call • Atay Carry 2nd Trust bedroon1, 2 baths down, =-54{)-~l'=~="-. -~~co--,-, Open ill 9 PM on this one. 546.2313. Deed. large family room upstairs OWNER anxious. Elegant 4 --1=a="'R°"oo'""'""'-'""'- buf easy financing. FORTIN CO, ! =R & LEE Realto~ REAL TORS 642-5000 " < ,. General IVAN WELLS -BAYCREST Lots of charm in this 4 bdrm., formal din- ing rm. home. Bright fam. rm. overlooking pool. 31\i Ba. Courtyard entry. $87,500. Va· cant. Mary Lou Marion BAYFRONT -FEE Spectacular view main bay & mountains, sandy beach -ID.er. Garden atmosphere. West Bay Ave. near N.H. Yacht Club. $197,· 500. Contact Bill Bents BUY OF THE WEEK EASTBLU FF 4 B<lrms. & den. Formal din· ing w/vie:w o( gartf P.ns. 3 Full baths, Xlnt 1o· cation. $67,500. Don't delay -call now! Paul Quick 5 BEDROOM HOME Magnificent University Park home. has absolutely every desirable feature, al! ON ONE LEVEL ..• juft..listed.--$69 900. Call "Chuck'' Lewis ' TALK OF THE TOWN ·All the-beauty of perfection. 3 Bdrm. Lusk H.V.; lovely ~arden & stunning inside. 1532 KEE L. Terrific price $88,800. Jim Muller LAGUNA CONDOMINIUM PROPERTY Ocean views -prime No. Laguna loc. at Boal Canyon. Develop 25-21"condos or apls. Present Income $1500-$2000 mo. $265,000. Call George Grupe l33-0700 Coldv..U,Banker M4-2430 .......... 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B. MESA VERDE PAK:ESETTER 4 BR + POOL 1!iage Rea l Esta te Any da,y '6 the B~ DAY to run an ad'! Qon't delay, •• .call today 642-56711. . WALL.ACE REALTORS -546-4141- OPEN nL 9. fT'S FUN ro BE NICE• All Units Furnish.eel. Good with bar and 'fireplace. All j bdrm. Breakfast bar, M ~II ~ Rent Schedule. Heated and carpeted \vith nylon shag. !~rmal dining n:'1• dream (0ptn Evenings) fll Filtered Pod!. $172,800. Call Corner lot with separate kitchen. F amily rm, MANSION anytime, 646-0555. 32x40 boat or 1railer area. fireplace. Jleal living rm. RENTERS SPECIAL Prioo only ~41.500. Gall Now Near tho plaza. b'k 138,500. MACNAB IRVINE LOOK TO THE FUTURE Lovely 3BR Bluff home. Garage stressed f9r U0Jer story & ocean view. Located on quiet cul . de· sac. $40,950. Lois Egan 6446200. (R21) HARBOR VIEW -SOMERSET 5BR. 3 bath in lovely neighborhood. Form· al DR, large FR·w/brick fireplace & wet bar adjoins li~ht & airy kitchen. Patio & fenced yard w/room for pool & play. $79,750. Bob Owens 642-8235. (R20) TWO CONTIGUOUS BAYFRONT LOTS A t.otal of 5418" on the main bay-pier & slip. About 10 min. by boat from the open sea. Tom Queen 644-G200. (R32) -i-·------- [Irvine 1-b·I,., ..... ltyC...p•ny I IOI Dover Otlv. M1·12SS 1144 M•cA.rthur "'·1200 N.wport IN ch, c.11rom11 1211s 842-2535.b -;;,'ko.o.97!;-"'-'2390"'=.7.=-==~ Large 4 Bedroom Home with -: HI 2 Baths & Fireplace. Fl't'sh OPEN1'LP•fT'SFUN10BENK:Er WHY PAY GH paint New Hot Water Heat· ! ~ INTEREST? 5 + DEN + GUESI' Wrought iron :ence protect· ing hUge estale and park- like grounds. European ar. chltec:ture teatiirmg l'lln! craftsmanship and stalnt!d glass windows. Banquet for· mal dining. Step down den with ceiHng high fireplace. Garden view master suite v.1th 6th hath, sundeck. "BAU.ROOM" with dance floor. 2 bedroom guest houR with kitchen & hath. Great for entertaining. C a I I 645-0303. er. \Valk to Schools & Shop. ping. Cul-de.sac Street. Low We have 15 homes available Maintenance Yard. Space : . • ranging in price 1rom for Boot Storage. All for $22,950 to $40,000 with exist· $25,600. Call a n y t i m e , iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ing loons that can be as- 646-1>;55. 51114010 LOAN •wnod wllh no .... lilying l ~ /C and interest rates as low as 4\io/r! Better check on some or thesE'.I SPANISH STYLE EXEC. HOME Red tile roof over spacious 1900 sq 1t, 2 yrs new 3 Bed· rm home w/oo maintenance yard, huge living rm w/ 'f\oor-t<>-<:ellihg fireplace, for- n1al dln rm, family rm. kitch, brand new bits ~cup. boards galore. Close to beach, next to golf course. $4.1,500, CALL today 645-7221 O wALl\[H ,o, 1u 4 Bedrm, 2 bath, with large family rm & extra shop for ''the Master-Of-the-House," a bright, cheery kitch. for the Mrs., and a large 16' x Realtor-s 64rr77ll 38' Hl l Blue Dolphin pool 204.1 Westcllff Drive for the kids. Would YoU be-I ........ Oiipeiiniotiiilii9'"PiiMiii;~~ lieve all these 1eatures in J • No. eo.ta Mosa for oo1y HOME l !BUSINESS IOHl\I I. Ol\11 \ $33 950 4 Bedroon;J.~ 2 baths, double ' • garage, ~.000. • Best of --------- lonnsi DEAL FOR 4 UNIQUE UNITS ~ ' A • ,, Newport ., Fairview 646-1111 (1nytlmt) f.:,; II GOOO\\'I N ,/ '•P.\'<V GUEST HOME $6300 . 5 Bedroom, 2 baths. Close to down gets you Into gross fn. shoppi..... ..~ ... 500. come ot $7680. We have .. ig • ..,., $50 400 loan oommittm t. Roy McCardle Realtor Ex::.euent condition and en 1810 Ne-wport Blvd .. C.M. tentia:l . Jdttlly located. ~ 548-7729 exchanize. $'63,000. .i\ CT NOW! 646-TITI. N 11L 9 • IT'S FVN 10 l!IE NICE/ WHY PAY HIGH INTEREST? We have 15 homes available • r&Jlaing In price from S22,95() to $40,000 with U · lstlng loans that can be llUUmed with no qualifying and Interest rates as low as 4%%! B~!ler cheek on som(' C)f lheM!. Q W~U<f.R & I ff Ree.Hon ~1'Tft ~· till b. Fat Pn:itit la attalntd when 3143 Wettclllf Drive 17187 llfoolchunt ~ you seU tlu'ou,gh re~--get· Ot>t>n til 9 PM -\Wov C.. 92709 ting Dtlll,y Pilot Oualtlod The "Yellow p ...... el 714 963-5611 S<U ldlo nrurur ••• 6CUG18 1.,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!'"'-1 _A_ds_._6U-5611 ______ • _c1_.,._111<d_.;...·_·_.-__ 567I. __ , • 7 • I Lag1111a Bea~h Today's Fl al N.Y. St.eeks EDITION VOL. 66, NO. 142, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFOf\NIA TUESDAY, MAY 22, 1973 TEN CENTS New Data on Dope Reveals Potential Users? ·BOSTON (AP) -Researchers say they hfve developed. a method to tell in ad- Vttnce which teen-agen are likely to use ~ijuana, which Ql)es will go on to bard dtugs and which ones will remain nonusers. In a report from the Department of ~y~hiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital, the researchers said today they analyzed data from 2,222 junior high and high school students in the Boston area. In that computer analysis,· drug use in 1971 was predicted from ri ve nondrug- related factors -including academic perfonnance and cigarette smoking - measured in 1969. The researchers said the analysis was 68 percent accurate in predicting the nondrug users who went on to marijuana alone and Tl percent accurate in showing what nonusers went to both marijuana and hard cjugs such as heroin, stimulants, depre sessants and hallucinogens. The data were also 72 percent accurate in predicting what nonusers eventually I used and type ot drug and 67 percent ac· curate in predicting which new mari- jLana tJSers went to hard drugs. The researcher_ said that in comparirlg da ta from nonusers and those alrea.dy us- ing drugs at the beginning of lhe ~tudy in 1969, the computer was able to sort out the two groups with 81 percent accuracy· 11~' ~only nondrug-rela!ed information. The report was to be presented today at the National Research Council-Na- tiorlal Academy of Sciences meeting of the Commit.tee on Problems of Drug Dependence hel d at the University of Nor1h Carollna in Chapel Hill. The study was compiled by Drs. Cine ~1. Smith of' Massacbusetts General , Charles P. Fogg of Boston University, Herbert Greenwald of Bridgewater State C.Ollege an;:J ' Ricbard La Brie. an in- dependent consultant-statistician. The five elements assessed in 1969 were rebeUiousncss against rul es and· authoi;iti es as measured by a ques- tionnaire, ratings of obedience. grade average, cigarette smoking and un· favorable attitudes toward cigarette s1noking. "Each of the predictors signlficanlly discriminate• between nonusers who will remain nonusers and those \Vho will become users," the report said. "In addition, each predictor variable significantly discriminates between those v.'ho will become hard drug users and those \Vho wil! limit their drug use to ouse • l' esco Ties? Roosevelt -Nixes Fund Misdeeds By L. PETER KRIEG Of tllt DallY .. lllfl Stitt Fonne"r con g res sm an James Roosevelt , now a Newport Beach resi- dent. is \Vanled by the Swiss government on fraud charges' involving an alleged $224 l'nillion swindJe also involving New York financier Robert L, Vesco. Roosevelt told !he Daily Pilot today be has no intention of respcnding to the war- Laguna Crews /1epair Two Water Lines Repairs on two broken water mains in Laguna Beach beneath South Coast ifighway was completed early this morn- iJlg by crews of the Laguna Beach Coun- ty Water District. An 18-foot crack was ripped in the bot- tom of a 12-inch water main in tbe 200 bloCk of South C.Oast Highway. The gushing water lifted the eight-inch thi ck concrete pavement. The road was closed for .several hours Monday morning ;u crews jackhammered through the pavement. The second incident occurred in the 400 block of C.Oast Highway. Temporary pavement has been placed over the roadbed. Joseph S\\•eany, manager of the waler dtstricl, said the cause of the incidents still has not been traced, but noted that a sudden drop and then increase in water pf.essure took place ea rly Monday. Sweany said the water district has spent about $4 ,000 repairing the two bCeaches, but, that more expense will be ittvolved in fixing the roadway. He said the district has bee n ordered by the state division of highways to rip oot and repour the concrete pads of the highway, portions of which may have been undermined by tile Oowlng water. He said the district will begin pumping grout into spaces beneath the blgbway surface, an operation similar to one several monlhs ago near the Hotel Laguna when a broken main washed out a section of the highway. Investigators determ1ned that an slammed shut for some reason about the time the water now changes took place in. city lines. · • rant and says he doesn 't kno"· what he'll do until he confers with his S"•iss lawyer. Daniel Guggenheim . Roosevelt proclaimed his innocence, admitting only he may have been vic- timized by placing his trust in the management of the Investors Overseas Fund (IOS ), of which he served as a director from 1967-1971. '1be U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission also charged Roosevelt with looting the $224 million fro m the Fund of Funds and olher !OS glamor funds. Roosevelt. however, said he has en· tered a consent decree on those charges. agreeing to abandon all dealings wilh the fund. "I've had nothing to do wiCh it since 1971," Roosevelt said. Vesco, who is reportedly in Costa Rica, is also wanted in the United States in conaection Y<ith a secret contribution to President Nixon ·s 1972 campaign. Roosevelt said Vesco was appointed to the JOS board in 1970, just before he, Roosevelt, resigned . Roosevelt , \\'ho moved to the Irvine Company 's Spyglass Hill homes above Corona del ~tar last year, also claimed the charges shouldn 't be labeled fraud . "The charges are mismanagement of the company. Under Swiss Jaw, they call it fraud," he said . "I kno\v I haven't committed fraud. (S.. ROOSEVELT, Page II Candy Not So Dandy Capistrano Unified S c h o o I District Trustee A. E d ward Westberg is a deatist. And he made it quite clear f\.fon- day night that he doesn 't think the school board should allow student candy sales to raise money. Faced with a request to approve a candy sale for Marco Forster Junior High School, Westberg cast the ooly no vote. Candy, he said, is bad for "health reasons." "I'd like to see every one of these voted down ," he added. "Well, you're right," agreed Trustee Fred Newhart. "But until something else is arranged lhat they can sell, I'll go for the candy sale." .. :o· t .. ..../'.~ '~ NEW LOCATION IN LAGUNA BEACH MEANS NEW HOPE FOR ARTISTS OF ART·A·FAIR Watercolor by David Solomon Shows F1c1de P 11nned Between Hotel L1~un1, SIHpy Hollow Art-a-Fair Ready to Go New Grourids Mean More Roo~ for Laguna Artists Art-A-Fair, Laguna Beach's summer art festival for traditional artists. now has new grounds, a new facade and ac- cording to backers, a new spirit. All it needs now is artists -more artists because with Art-A-Fair's move from Gallery Row in northern Lagunll to the Uplands oceanlront bluffs, exhibiting space increased greatly. Art-A-Fair can now accommodate between 00 and 100 exhibitors, said Jean Spiry, past president. Currently there are 60 Art·A-Fair artists. Jurying for new artists will be held June 2 at tbe Laguna Beach Boys Club. Artists should drop off three examples in one medium for jurying between IO a.m. and noon . Jurying will begin at l p.m. with results available alter 4 p.m. that day. Art-A-Fair selects 60 percent of ils ex- hibitors from within 18 miles of Laguna Beach and 40 percent from within soothem California. The Ju~i~es Nonna J<Jy, Mabel Speciale, Cellene Carr, Gloria Williams and Miss Spiry. Art-A-Fair is the third and smallest of the three Laguna Beach summer art festivals. Its artists are largel y tradi- tional painters, who specialize in "representational" art. "That means, when you look at it, you know what it is," quipped Miss Spiry. The grOup was given permission to use the ocean bluffs between the Hotel Laguna and Sleepy Hollow recently by action of the Laguna Beach PlaMing Commission, after Uplands Industries, owner of the property gave its okay. The fair earlier had sought pennission to use a portion of the Main Beach Park property . Art-A-Fair withdrew !ls applicatioh and charged lhat the Festival of Arts was pressuring the city to withhold use of the park by Art·A·Fair. In a statement to the Planning Com- mission when it sought pennission for use of the Uplands property, Miss Spiry cited "a slow erosion of the Art Colony image" of Laguna Beach. Miss Spiry said permission to use the oceansite gave new hope for growth and $5 Pot Fine Doomed? ANN ABOR."Mich. (AP) -This city's $5 fine for smoking marijuana apparently is on the way out. T~ Ann Arbor City Council voted 6-J Monday to rescind the law but a publfc hea ring and another vote will be necessary before the ordinance ls repeal- ed officially. • success to the group, and ror traditional art in Laguna Beach. Further information r e g a r d i n g membership or jurying is available by calling Miss Spiry at 494-4433 or Vivian Ca ldwell at 8.10-4557, or by writing to Art- A·Falr, box 547, Laguna Beach. Director Blasts Healtl1 Panel's Hospital Denial By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 ,,,. Otltr "lltt lt•ff Two classes of health care, one for the rich, another for the poor, are expected to result from Monday's denial of a i182· bed hospital proposed by Western $.Sf~ Medical Foundation, director Burroughs charged today. Burroughs, a C.Osta Mesa businessman and vice president of the non-profit foun- dation which hopes to build a community hospital in Irvine, criticized the unanimous action by the seven-member State Health Planning Council. The action, Burrou!is c o n t e n d s , "meana onl y that our pltat,will not be reimbursed for Medi I patlentS. It ~Laguna ~unning ·Out of Gas Schniitz Back In GOP Rariks Former congressman J o h n Schmitz has r e jo i ned lhe Republica n party. p.~n't stop constnictlon or our hospital . ~""l'/e have every lnt'ention of proceeding 1'flth the hoopital," he added. "We!tern World Medical Foundation wanted the poor peclple of Orange Coun- ty, blacks and Chicanos. to get the same high standard of care ~t will be available to the wealthy dr Newport Beach and of Irvine." The city or Laguna Beach will receive ill last gasoline delivery Friday under a citrrent agreement. "That deJlvery will fuel the city's vehicles for aboul • week, but after that, Llguni may well be out of gas. . 'It Jooka kind or bad rlgh~now," Clydo Sweetser, public works superintendent said. . "We tried to get ii from Shell, but they 16.id 'no,'" Sweetser said. He said the ci- lf ls searching for someone to meet the • gallon a week requirement or the municipal fleet . :Jbe cit.¥ had an agreement with Shf!tl OU which wa1 cancelled by Shell sevtral month~ ago. 1'1e ci1y then entered the I • county-wide cooperative buying contract with Union Oil. Union snipped Laguna Beach out along with several school districts a n d municipalttiea when it cut -the, countY'• . allotment ol gas by 15 percenl last week. "We'tt: tryng everything we can to cconomlr.e on lhe use or gasoline," SwcetJer said. He explained that' low priority jobs such as garbage and trash inspection had been curtailed and 11n inspection of ci ty stop sJgm and no J>'lrklng areas was terminated. In addition, lwo more vehlcles wert.: converted lo propane, a Uquld natural gas kept in pressurized tanks. The city's bUSft, several pickup trucks and iJUmp trucks -Jf vehicles in.all -have been converted to the tleao burning propane, S-said. s-taer ~Id that th~ city will begin buying guollne at commercial station11, and paying cornmetcial . prlce8, for the vehicles assigned to department heads, fire department pickups and some police units. The Fire Department's big trucks run on diesel fuel as does the sewaa;e plant's sludge truck, and diesel rue\ is not cur~ renUy being cut from lhe Union Oil con- tract. SWttt.st:r said. The one term representative who wi s defeated in lhe Republican prim.,..,, last June by tMTI Orange Cou :isscssor Andrew J . flir 1yas later 11 presidential can:· • for the Am er I can lndepc.:denl Pa rty. Schmitz, 42, said Monday he had returned to the GOP to give it "moral1 principled 1111dership" dur- ing the: present cris1.-, lie Stli(J Watergate blld left a leaddrahtp vacuum ln t h e R<puHlk:artparfy -:bich he hopes to rm. The Western World proposal to build & ".seed" l'mpkal of IQ beds on land near UC Irvine was originally turned down on S.pt. 21, 11712 by ll>e Or8llll• County llealti. Pl11nnlng Council. Later the Bay Area Heallh Planning Council -the autoinatlc appeais panel for this cou nty'• hospital reviews - overturned the Orange County decision and gave Western World 1pproval for the hosplt111. When mort lh~n 50 percent or the 63 mAmberJ of the county body appealed tht Bay Area panel's decision. the nutt· tc.r came berore the state council for (See DECISION. Paa• ti nlarijuana taken only infrequently." The tend ency toward rebell ion and cigarette s1nok1ng l n c r cas ed pr(} gre ssively fron1 the no-drug group to lhl' mari juana-only gr9up and was greatest \1'ith the hard-drug use rs. the report said Better school 1narks, greater obedience and negati\"e attitudes toward cigarette s1noking \vcre highest wilh the nonuse group and d e c re a s e d progtessively to\1•ard the students who started drug use early. e McCord Hits 'Hitler' Type Blame Try \\'ASll!NGTON (UPll -Cha rging th e events "smacked of the situation which Hitler's intelligence chie fs f o u n d themselves in," bugging conspirator James W. McC.Ord Jt. testified today he \1•as convinced the White House plotted to blame the CIA for Watergate. McCord said during his 2Ya hour morn- ing testimony that he wa!: told that Richard M. Helrm was fired aa CIA director and replaced wtth JlmH R. Scblesin&er, wbo "would 10 alonJ" wJlh the White House plans to bl11t1e Che CfA. PresJdent Ni.Jon recently nominated Schlesinger to be defense secretJiry. Reading from prepared memos during his second day of testbnony at the televised Senate Watergate hearings, ~:cCord also said : -Co-conspirator G. Gordon Liddy told him in January, 1972, of a plan to break into the safe of Hank Greenspun, publisher of the Las Vegas Sun, and that "a Howard Hughes plane would be stan- ding by to fly them into a South American country ... " It was the first lime Hughes' name has been mentioned . -McCord, who was a CIA agent for 19 years, said when he heard of efforts to put the Watergate blame on the CIA, he wrote John J . Caulfield, a fonner White House aide and a friend, denouncing the "ruthless attempt'' and warning that if officials wanted the Watergate affair "to blow," that was lhe way to do it. -Mr1. E. Howard· Hunt Jr., la te wife of a fellow Watergate conspirator, told him that her hu11band had dictated a let- ter which reportedly threatened "to blow the White House out of the water." , -Mrs. Hunt said during the same con- versation last November that her hus- band, a former White House C<Jnsultant. "had information which could impeach the President." -Former Attorney General John N. Mitchell and his wife Martha received •·numerous threa ts in writing and by phone" about the lime ol the May. 1972. assassination attempt against Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace. and one "greatly upset'' Mrs. Mitchell because it came through a telephone wilh an unlisted nwnber. -Before the Watergate bugging OC· curred. the Committee to Re-elect the President was deeply concerned about passible campaign violence. ''Uppermost in everyone's minds. and certainly in my . . (S.e McCORD, Page I) Orange Coast Weather ~1ostly sunny Wedneaday, follow- ing the usuul low clouds in the morning hours. Highs of 68 at the beaches ri sing ~o 75 inland . Over- night lows in the 50s. lNSlDE TODA 'l' A gu1t battle, which began afttr the Indian army muti111ed attd tried to disarm state 11nits i1t northern /11dia. kft 15 meii dead . See ato111, Page 4. L..M, ••fd I A"" L_..,4'°' " ... , .... 11 MWlel U•11 (111'-llf• • M'1'IMI '"""" .. Cl•Mll.._ ..... ............ frl••• """" .. ~-CWll'Y ' ·--" ._.,, , .. " ,,..~ Nell<•• • llD<. M•r~tt• "'" ............... • T!!l•'fitl'N'I " '"''"' ....... 1•11 n.111" lf.11 .. _ It.ti 1¥1111••• • ..., , ... ·-· • ,,_.t "'"' 11-11 -... .. ,,wlC Kt-.\ • - • • I • .. .. -.. ..... -·· ... • DAIL 't PILOT LB TutSday, Mat 22. 1973 CfJSD Actima School Boundary Issue Held Over By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL Of l'ltt a.i!Y l"li.t ... II Capistrano Unified School District trustees Monday night 91·cnl round and round the matter of high school boon· da.rles, but ended up where they started. After one hour of debate on t"'o separate proposals on 111:h.lch bigh school studenu should go where, the board tabl· ed the matter to its June 4 meellng. Scores o( parents who packed the board meeting loudly applauded a recom· mendaUon from Truman Benedict , district superintendent. that high school Methadone Dose Stolen From Patient A gray metal box with a lethal dose or methadone Is the object of a police 5earclJ today after being stolen from a car ln San Clemente. I San Clemente police have issued a plea lhat anyone finding the 8 by 4 by 3-inch box con~ad them Immediately. A San Clemente man on the methadone treatment program , a substitute dru g for heroin addicts, told police he was shop- ping in the Alpha Beta Market at 903 S. El Camino when the box was taken. He has 'a prescripllon for the drug which was mired with "Teng" breakfast drink in two plastic bott les. Bolh we.re sealed with metal and marked "methadone." The box hes a key lock. Police have warned the d<M1age In the bottles la deadly to children or adults. Although methadone Is used in treatbig addicta:, it is illegal unless prescribed. High Schoolers Take Advantage .of Adult Oasses 1'Adult" education may be something of a mlsoomer in Laguna Beach. Recent stBtlltlcs on the adult ed. pro. gram show that about 20 perc:eot of tbe students alao attend hlch ldlool. For the spring "triad" 18 high school studenU were enrolled lh the much ex- panded night program . A year ago, only 10 high school students took adult educa· tion courses. Statistics show 468 persons are enrolled in adult ed this spring. During the winter triad r:.42 persons were enrolled. A tot.al or 389 persons attended classes during the fall trimester. Other figures show 107 persons are ta k· ing more than one class; classes average 14 students; •t.615 was collected in fees; 33 classes are being he:Jd, and 21 students are using adult ed credit to obtain Uleir high school diploma. Laguna Slaws Clean Up W-ee k CJean Up \Veek , this week. in Laguna Beach provides residents with the op- portwtity of disposing or castoffs nonnally unac:ctptabli? ror pi ckup by city trash collection, said Clyde S"·eetser, public: works superintendent. lie sakl ite1ns such as old '~'ater heaters. furniture refrigerators and rugs, normally not acce pted for collection, may be placed out with regular trash for pick up. Bundles or tree or brush trimmings mxi!d be cut into four foot lengths and tied. The service runs through. Friday. OU.N•t COAST 1.1 DAILY PILOT ,Tri.°'._ CO.II DAIL'!' •II.OT, Wfltl wllidl '-'9mllll'llld "'' N..._·•rnt, 11 PllblllMd b'f fl'le Of•ll09 ('Mot l"ll&llolllng ,.........,.,, '-· nN edl!loM •r• l'Wli.r., ~ • ., ttwouoh Ftld1y, fOf' Collt M.,,., N.........., 1 ...:11. HIOllll~. ludl/F-Nlft V1IWr, l- a..dl, lrvlM/Slddltlloldt -S.n (ltftl9nla/ kt! J~ f111l1lr-, A 1l110lt 1'9111GMI edl!lon 11 1>ut1111!1ed S..tunlt'f• •'Ill Sund.tin. r,.. prlnc:1p1>1 l'Ubll.1111r10 it!Nlt Jo 11 lJG wn1 .. .,. SltM!, Co1•1 Mtt,t, C11l~rnlr • .,.,., Roa1rt N. w.,; "'"16"'' ..... ,.wllll'1!ilt J1cl1 R. Curl•r 'vk;t ,.rnldltll 111!11 Gfllotr11 Mt~•tt• T111rn11 IC11•lt EdlNr Tli011111 A. Mu•phl111 ""-,...'"' e•11o> Chtrl11 H. l101 Rich1td I'. Nill A11/1t•n1 MtNtlnt E<1!1'1"1 ........ hedl Offlq 2J2 ·For11f A"'""• M1ili"f Acldr•••~ l'.O. lo••••. t 1•si ...... __ Cftll M-1 Ill W..t .. (,lf"l'tt =hfdl, aw "'"'°"' ... ltYu• •..ai: "'11 IMctl ....,.,.,. NJ as Hof'tfl II ClrnlM llMI ,.,.,.... (7141 '4J-4JJJ a..1....i .......... '42·1•7• '--··--· , ••••••• -4t4-f4U ' <:.erl"•IOht, tt1:t. Or•~ C....t l"Wlltlll"'I ~. N1 -"°''"· !!htt!rdlltto, ., .... t mtll• ... "-ti.tmtntt ,..,.."' .. '"'91 ... • ........ ~ wl"*'I ..... -· ""'-"" " ~lfftt -·· a-.. cllu ,..., ... "'"' •I t.11 M41N, e.~11. .._....,.., 1111 cariltr u _u ~I 11\1 INll U.11 -ltl~J flll!!hrY .... """*" OM ~IY. students now livi ng in Mia.t1\on Viejo be ullowcd to complete their studle.s at Dana ll llls High School. The recommen dation also stipulated that any new students moving Into Mission Viejo eut or Marguerite Parkway north or Oso Parkway be sent tu San Clemente High School. A second proposal, mede bv Tru stee Robert Hurst, received substanlial op- position from the parenls. Jiurst suggested all fliliss1on Viejo students be sent to San Clemente High, but "'Ith all seniors given the option to remai n at Dana Hills if so desired. Hurst said Dana Hill:; already i!I operating at capacity, but that San Clemente High wa s running l:lt three- fo urths capacity. Whil e most menli>ers of the board sup- port Benedict's plan over liurst's sug· gestion, they voted to hold off on a deci~ion unlit June 4 to allow more study and citizen input -particularly from residents of Laguna Niguel . "l think we should go along with ~1r. Benedict's recommendation for three years until a new high school is built," commented Trustee F'red Newhart. "I'd rather see tbe students kept together than moving around," he added. a comment wtucb brought another round o! applause from the audience. Hurst said "the majority of our com- munity isn'l represent ed here tonight," He also attacked a suggestion by Newhart to keep students at the same school even i! it meant going to stag· gered or double session. Gordon Peterson, acting chainnan of the board, said "no matter what action is taken, it can't be that good ... we can't crystal ball it for that Jong." 'f'.he parent of one high school student told the board she didn't want her daughter "attending two dlllerent high schools .. .it's too much moving around." Resident Mary Thompson, whose son will enter Dana Hills High next year, said she was concerned he would be mov- ed in the following year. "We have got 10 start with the un- derstanding that come hell or high water we will Jet them finish where they start,'' di '1red Mrs. Tilompson. FrottlPage 1 DECISION .... final appeal. That body ruled Monday against Western World. The decision has no relationship to or bearing on Ille UCI.c.Iilornfa College of Medicine teaching hoopital. Health planning councJJ approval for a 350-bed teaching hospital has been given. Last week a legislative committee urged the legislature to approve allocation of UC Bond fund s to build a smaller ZOO.bed teaching hospital on the UCI campus alongside the first perm~nent classroom and laboratory build ings for the UCI medical school. Both hospital and science building allocations are being considered for the 1973-74 UC budget which is now before the legislature. ~fov.•ever, \Vestern \Vorld's hospital is plaruJed to be buill on 150 acres of Irvine C:Ompany land reserved !or a med ical complex. The land at the intersection of ll.1acArthur Boulevard and University Drive in the city of Irvine, abuts 150 ace rs of university land set aside for the development of th e medical school cam- pus. If deveo!ped in tandem wit h the medical school. \Vestem World official s. notably State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter (R·Nevlµort Beach) who heads the private organization. believe a "Mayo Clinic of the \Vest'! \viii result in Orange County. Carpenter and Burroughs rcaffinned their sup port for the UCl teaching hospital and medical school development. The remarks countered !estimony by Dr. Elbon L. J•'oltz or the medical schoo l facil ity that the \Veste rn \Vorld hospital should be delayed unlil the UC I teaching hospital is developed. Fullerlon attorney John ~1cDermotl SPoke for the appealing n1embers of the Orange C:Ounty health planning council. fie said the Bay Area council did not substantiate the need for a new hospital in Orange County and acted arbitr:i.rily in reversing !he local council's ruling. Pron1inent Republi can Victor C. A~ ol Laguna Beach , chairman of ~St Community Hospital's board or affeciors, also opposed the Western World propasal, citing currenl overbed· ding situation in Orange County. Sen. Ca r,J?Cnler agreed there arc too many hospital beds in the county. Hut. he seld, "The beds: are of the \vrong type and in the wrong place. The university hos pital (teaching ) is very important to us: \\'e don't want 'to compete but to compliment them ." Western World pro- poses a community hospital. Burroughs told the state council, 0 You can'! train adequate physicians by just letting them see colds and bellyaches. You h:lve lo let them see exotic diseases, too." Western \Vorld would provide ad· diUonal opportunities for study of such unusual diseases by faculty and students of the Adjacent UCl-CCM. Restri ctions suggested on the spending or the UC bond funds for the campus teaching hosp itaJ suggest an emphasis by the med ical school on primary ca re -famil y prac- tice -training of physicians. Even without the state approval, Western World may procl't'd with OOn· struct.ion arter Sept. 21 or this year, Bur· roughs said today. The exact dale of groundbreaking depends on renewN:I pledges of private funding . ' i·--------·------... -·--·····-~ ......... _..,, __ ..... . Hous e Fee Questio ned By Board •I I Quostlon1 of legality delayed acUon by J tht.: Capistrano Unified School District board on a resolution demanding slate I Jeglslallon requiring developers to pay I $1.000 for each house or apartment unit ' constructed "'ilhin the district. Field Str11ng tor Beans Interesting patterns of strings decorate Ranch acre- age along Culver Drive in the city of Irvine. Gene Kawamura's Western Marketing Company leased the parcel near Barranca l{oad. Kawamura grows pole beans, a vegetable crop not unlike string beans except that the beans grow on the strings and do not have strings in the beans, an Irvine Company spokesman explained. Machines thread the string in crisscross fashion on poles. Japanese farming tech· niques produces a greater yJeld of high quality beans, ranch spokesmen noted. April Living Cost Leaps Prices Eas e Slightly, Still Up Sharply, U.S . Says WASHINGTON (AP) -The Cost of Living eased slightly in April but the in- crease still was extra-ordinarily high, the government reported today. Sharp ad- vances were recorded in the cost of food, clothing, used cars and gasoline. The Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics said consumer prices rose seven-tenths of one percent last month. following a nine-tenths-of-0ne·per- cent jump in March. April's jump match- ed February's increase. March's jump was a 22·year record. The bureau said food brought in grocery stores rose 1.6 percent, less than in each ol. the preeeding three months but considerably ltigher than usual for April . Fruit5 and vegetables were higher than From Pagel McCORD •.. normal and beef prices continued to climb, but the government said the in- crease was much smaller than in recent months .. Prices on a broad range of consumer goods other than food moved up sharply in April , reflecting recent wholesale price increases since the Nixon Administration dropped price controls in January. The jump in overall consumer prices pushed the government's retail price in· dex up at a seasonally adjusted annual rate oC 9.2 percent over the past three months. The administration has set a goal of reducing inflation to 2.5 percent by the end of the year. The April consumer price index for all item!I showed a climb of 0.9 index points from March, up from 129.8 to 130. 7. The index figure, based on 1967 prices, means lt took $13.07 in April to pay for the same "market baset" of typical famil y goods and oervla!s that coot 110.00 six years ago. In a separate report the bureau said average weekly wages in April rose four· tenths of a' percent, to $141.72. The rise resulted from increases or 0.5 percent each in the average work week and in average hourly earnings which were partially offset by a seasonally adjusted 6/!0th of a percent increase in consum.· er prices. The administration has said it expects food prices to begin tapering off later this year and has resisted any further controls. April 's figures, however, were gathered before the administration 's ceil· ing on meat prices was put into effect and thus did not reflect its effects, the government said. The report said the price of meat, poultry and fish bought in grocery stores rose 1.6 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis, compared to a record jump of 5.6 percent in March. Th! .. was 2.3.4 percent higher than a year ago. mind," were the disruptions at the 1968 Democratic National Convention and re- cen t bombings at the Capitol and Pen· tag on. From Pagel ROOSEVELT CHARGED ' • • • ' -lie made two calls to embassies in Washington _ identified in published They say v.·e should have known that the reports as those of Chile and Israel _ company v.'as not in as good a financial and had convedations that he is sure position as management led investors to believe," Roosevelt said. v.'ere tapped. He said he simply took the \\"Ord of McCord, .security chief at Nixon's re- election committee at the time of lhe several top underwriting companies. "They thought the fund was doing a June 17 break-in at Democratic national to allow police to detain the six men for questioning in case they return to Switzerland. Vesco wu arresled in Geneva more than a year ago on a private criminal complaint. He was freed by a m8glstrate court when the complaint w a s withdrawn . good job," Roosevelt said. headquarters in the Watergate complex, wrote Chief U.S. District Judge John J . Roosevelt, who is teaching a course on Vesc.o has been indicted in New York Sirica in March charging that perjury the Congress at UC Irvine, said he along with former Attorney General John v.·as committed at the trial and that there doesn't know what he'll do about the Mitchell in COMe<:tion with the secret v.•a s political pressure for a coverup. \varrant until he talks with his lawyer. Ni xon's re-election campaign. They were Discussing the alleged effort to blame "J have no intention of going to acc:used or seeking to block a Securities the CIA. McCord said, "Among other Switzerland unless the re is some reason things , this also smacked of the situation to go,'' he said. and Exchange C:Ommisslon Investigation which Hitler's intelligence chiefs found Roosevelt and Vesco are among six of the handling of IOS funds . Also named themselves in, in the 1930s and 1940s, present and former IOS directors wanted in the indictment were former Com- \,1,'hen they were put in the position of by the Swiss government. merce Secretary Maurice Stans and a Acting on a request from Trustee Stephen Smith, the board tabled the iten1 Monday night pending a review by Orange County C:Ounsel. Smith, an attorney, said the proposed measure might violate equal protection ~ under the Jaw guarantees. The resolution , asks the California legislature to enact emergency legisla~ tion requiring dev elopers to pay the district ,1,000 for each new dwelling unit tG offset the cost of school construction. School districts included in the pro· posed legislation would be those ex- periencing annual student growth rates larger than five percent. Units oceupied solely by persons over the age or 18 would be exempt from the fee requirement. The preamble or the resolution states t~at new construction is creating "severe financ ial problems" for school districtl. It asserts there ls a rising Ude of com- munity sentiment for those who move in· to new dwelling units to make a substan- tial contriOOtion toward the cost of new school facilities. EIRs on Schools Win CUSD Oka y, Sent to County "Negative" environmental im p act declaraUons for two proposed schools were approved Monday night by trustees of the Ca pistrano Unified School District. Board members accepted staff recom· mendations that construction of Del Obispo Elementary School in San Juan Capistrano and a junior high in Laguna Niguel will not significantly affect the en- vironmen t. The declarations will be filed with the clerk of the Orange C:Ounty Board of Supervisors in compliance with en· vironmental impact report guidelines · adopted by the board Monday night. Trustees also supported a staff recom- :~;~:1 ~r 1~ea oirg~ve 18im~~~- Manzana site in San Juan Capistrano, recently declared surplus property. Crippl,ed Craft To Dump Water LAS PALMAS. Canary Islands (AP) - The crew of the raft Acali , limping along at 25 miles a day, is expected to dump an estimated 18 tons of fresh water to in- crease speed, the news agency Cifra said today. The Acali, with il!i experimental living -together crew of six women and fi ve men, was reported about 300 miles southwest of this Canary Island port from "'"hich it sailed May 12. Dr. Santiago Genoves, the Mexican anthropologist in charge of the ex· pedition, told an amateur radio operator in Las Palmas the water would be dwnped from the Aca!l's two laleral tanks. He said the raft has enough other drinking water aboard. Troubles continued to plague the steel pontoon vessel, Genoves: said. A wave Monday destroyed cooking fixtures , and the outboard motor on a dinghy carried by the raft refuses to operate. having to tell him what they thought he The Swiss warrants were issued Feb. l New Jersey Polilician, Harry Sears. wanted to hear about foreign military ,.----------·-------·--------~------------------­ capabil ities and intentions, instead of whal they really believed ." A spokesman for Hughes in Los Angeles declined comment on McC:Ord's lestin1ony. Under close questioning by Sen. tlerman E. Talmadge (0.Ga.,) ~fc:Cord ncknowledged that he had learned or \Vhite House pressures directly only from 1-lunt ; Hunt's attorney, William E. Bitt· man; arfd Gerald Alch . whom McCord J;iter fired as his lav,ryer. Of his letter to Caulfield, ~lcCord 1estified: "The letter was couched in strong language because it seemed to me at the tlmt. that this was the only language that the White House understood." He said.. the letter stat : · "Dear J · am sorry tQ have t · >"- write yo 1 er. If llelms goes and · 1he Wal t.t: ration is laid at CIA's feet whet'e ~&es not beloog. every tree in the forest will fall. It will be a scorch· cd desert. The whole matter is at the precipice right now. Pass the message that if they want it to blow. they arc on exactly the right course. I'm $0rry thnt you will get hurt in the fallo~t." ' Powe1· Con1 pany Aide 1'o Address Cbamher Alton Geiser, manager of the Laguna Beach office of the Edison Company will bt the guest speaker at the LagunA Cha mber of Commerce breakfast at 7:45 a.m. Wedne~ay at the Hotel Laguna . Geiser will speak on the "The Energy· · Powe r Crisis.'' He will tell v.·hat the Edison Co1npany has been attempting to do to cope with energy problems, and plsns for voluntary load reduction to pre- venL shortages will be d\scuued. J.~uture LL'IC of goo-thermal and nuclear energy will be ou U!ned. PRUDENT BUYING Throughout our 78 years of carpet reta ili ng , one fact becomes quite evi dent -t hat when mon ey is leu plentiful, peop le buy better quality. ~ This is contra ry to popular belief, but ma kes good sense if you t hi nk about it. W~e you have to~once rn <Y.F rself with value a nd perform cf. you ~re<iikely to buy· better quaUty. . ' At Ald en's in the la st four years, ~ per uni t sale ha s been more expensive carp et ing, reflecting thi s fact. C onseq uen tly, we ha ve t he l~s.t selection of finer q ualitie s yo u will see anywhe re, a ll at competit ive prices. · The end result is c ustomer satisfaction , pride a nd recommendations which·pi:ovide our o.verwhel mi ng source of new busi ness • Ill THI llAllOl AllA ltNCI 1917 ( ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MISA 646-4838 Moo •• Thn. f to 5:30: l'rt. f to ft Sot. f:~O to I • < I \ \' ~ l I I t Saddlehaek Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks ' • VOL 60, NO. 1<2. 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGE:i ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 22, 1973 TEN CENTS ' ' Director Denial of Irvine Hospital By GEORGE LEIDAL Of t1111 DAll11 ,.lier Si.ff ·Two classes of health care, one for the rim, another for tbe poor, are ~ted to resWt from ~1onday's denial of a l~ bed hospit;:tl proposed by Western World Medical Foundation, direet.or Walter Burroughs charged today . Burro1.1ghs, a Costa Mesa businessman and vice President of the non-profit foun- dation which hopes to build a community hospital in Irvine, criticized th e Reservoir Rep0ir unanimous action by the seven-member State Heallb Planning Council. The acJion, Burr0ughs co n t e n d s , ·~ ooJy that our hospital will oot be reimbursed for Medi-Cal patients. It doeSf\'t stop construction of, our hospital. "We have every intention of proceeding wilh the hospital," he added. "Western World Medical Foundation wanted the poor people~f Orange Courr ty, blacke and Chicanos o get the same high standard .of ca e that will be available to lhe wealthy of Newport Beach and of Irvine." The West.em World proposal to build a "seed" hospital of 162 beds on land near UC Irvine was originally tumed down on Sept. 21, 1972 by the Orange County Healt.,_ Planning Council. Later the Bay Area Health Planning Council -the automatic appeals panel for this county's hospital reviews - overturned the Orange County decision and gave Western World approvaJ fort~ Construction crews are working feverishly to repair major damage to the walls,of San Joaquin reservoir in the hills above Irvine and .Newport Beach. The concrete basin· was drajned when cracks were dis· covered in the walls. The Metropolitan Water Dis· trict had hoped to have the reservoir partly filled before summer to han~e peak water uses during the hot months but work may not be ·finished until August. Don!!t .Bare That Thing Defi1iition Elusive, But Mesa Laiv Forbids Display By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of ni. 0.1111 f'llot Sl.tf Experts don't know what Jt is but you'd better not show it in C.OSta Mesa. Display of tbe natal cleft is outla~·ed. The term, included in a recently enacted anti-nudity ordinance. became the subject of considerable confusion to- day. Is it a belly button that can be seen on any beach or is it something unspeakable? "I suspect it was just thrown in,'' said Councilman A1vin Pinkley, a ph.armacist by profession. He was one of five city councilmen Who approved the ordinance as an emergency measure. Cily Attorney Roy E. June, author of the ordinance. admitted that he really didn 't know what natal cleft referred to either. ''I took !he wording from the county ordinan~e1" June admitted. The Orange County ordinance, recently upheld by 4 to 2 high court vote, was us· ed as a model for Cosla Mesa's anti-nudi· ty ordinance. provide a definitioo. One referred in. quiries to the public library. It was discovered, however, that the term is not listed in any dictionaries, in· eluding medical volumes. Dr. Wendell Wbitte of Huntington Beach sa id he thought natal cleft refers to part of the female anatomy which the City Council definitely wants covered. "But." he added, "it isn't a tenn com· monly used." . Nor is it the official medical term for belly button wbch, according to Dr. Wit· (See NUDIE, Page 21 lloopllil. When .more than 50 "°""'nt of the 83 m<mben ol the county body appealed the Bay Area panel's decision, the mat· ter came before the state council for fin~ appeal. That body ruled Monday against Western World. The decision has: no relationship to or bearing on Ufe UCl-CaliforQia College or Medicine teaching hospital Health planning council approvar' for a 350-bed teaching hospital has been given. Last week a legislacive committee urged the legislature. to approve allocation or UC Bond funds to build a smaller 20().bed teaching hospital on the UCI campus alongside the first per1nanent classroom and latx>ratory buildings for the UC! medical school. Both hospital and science building allocations are being considered for the 1973·74 UC budget which is oow before the legislature. However, Western World's hospital is planned lo be built on 150 acres of Irvine Company land reserved fur a medical complex. The land at !he Intersection of ~1acArlhur Boulevard and University Drive in the city o( Jrvuie. abuts 150 acers of university land set aside for the dcveJopn1e11t of the medical school cam· pus. If deveolped in lande1n with the n1edical school. \Vestem \Vorld officials. notably State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter tSee DEClSION, Page ?l Clai1ns Innocence James Roosevelt Charged by Swiss Uy L. PETER KRJEG OI tM D•lt' f'llclt Sl•ff F.ormer congressman James Roosevelt, now a Newport Beach resi- den t, is wanted by the Swiss government on fraud charges involving an alleged $224 million swindle also involving New York financier Robert L. Vesco. Roosevelt told the Daily Pilot today he has no intention of responding to the war· rant and says he doesn't know what he'll do until he confers with his Swiss lawyer, Daniel Guggenheim. Roosevelt proclaimed bis innocence , ·f~by'fll~l~ lllf-6;. i,iifql'°':>·r~. ~Investors Overseas Fund (IOS), of whi~h he served as 1 director from ·~·19'11. The U.S. 5ecurities and Excbange ' ' " • El Toro School Bid Accepted A bid or $5.5 million was accepted by tbe Saddleback Valley Unified School Distri(!t board of trustees Monday night, far the district's sec- omfhigb school. Berry Construction, lne. or Upland was hired to construct the El Toro High School eight-building campus which will accommodate some 2,400 students in grades 9--12. Building will begin May 29 on the site, bounded by Ridge Route, Ser· rano, and Toledo Roads. Comple- tion is scheduled Aug. 1, 1974. The bid accepted , lowest of five submitted, was $335,000 lower than the maximum permitted by state aid regulations. Commission also charged Roosevelt with tooting the $224 million from the Fund of Funds and other IOS glamor funds . Roosevelt, hon1ever. said he has en· lered a consent decree on those charges, agreeing to abandon all dealings with the fund. "I've had nothing to do with it since 1971," Roosevelt said. Vesco, who is reportedly in Costa Rica, is also wanted in the United States in connection with a secret Contribution lo President Nixon 's 1972 campaign. Booser,.i! .. w Veiw;q 1!1"4._IPP.Oinle<I to tRe''IO~'-'lil'ild' In Jl'll!, . ]Ul!'lie!bri! 'lie, ~velt, resigned. -. • lloooeYelt, who mo.:ed lo Ille Irvine Comptiiy's Spyglass Hill liomu above Corona del Mar last yearl also claimed Tf'UStee Derision !he charges shouldn't be labeled fraud. '+The charges are mismanagement of : the company. Under Swiss law, they call it fraud ," he said. "l kno\v I haven't committed fraud. They say we should have known ttiat the c Jmpany was not ln as good a financial position as management led investors lo believe," Roosevelt said. He said he simply took the \YOrd of ~L .era! top underwriting cc.mpanles. "They thought the fund was doing a good job," Roosevelt said. Roosevelt, who is teaching a course on the Congress at UC Irvine, aaJ d he doesn't know what he'll do a)lout the warrant until he ta.lb with hi11aW)'et. .. , have no fntentton ot eolnf to Switzerland unless there ls aome reason (See ROOSEVELT, Pa&• II Mission Viejo High Band To Get New Unif onns For a group of cheering Mission Viejo High School band boosters, a long battle ended in victory Monday night. The board of trustees of the Sad- dleback Valley Unified School dlstrict voted unanimously to seek bids on 120 new band uniforms. What '11 more, the Oiablo Boosters may end wtth $4,000 to spend on stereo equlp-- ment and .music scholarships. ' The campaign for new unifonns for the band began several mooths ago. . purchased at approximately $20,000, the boosters should not pay for them . But a motion to return all the money lo the boosters was defeated. "Though we could find many uses for this money, ii was originally designated • for uniforms -. aod we don't want anything to jeopardi2e purchase of uniforms this year," Parry told the board. Valley Advisory Unit to Get Eye The Costa Mesa ordinance in tum serv· ed as a model for the proposed Santa Ana ordinance which passed its first reading Monday night, right along with the "natal cleft." But Santa Ana Mayor Jerry Patterson questioned the wording of the ordinance bec.ause he thought it simply meant belly button. McCord Charges 'Hitler' When the Tustin Union district voted to replace the 17·year-0Jd uniforms its hlgh school band was wearing, Mission Vie/'o High asked the district to approprla e fwtds to replace their seven-year..old at· tire. Funds were approved for Tustin and denied for Mission Viejo. ' The final motion, accepted unanimous- ly amid cheers and applause from the audience, authorized seeking bids and specified that i1 the boosters have to pay anything, it shouJd oot exceed $4,000. The remaining $500 will be used for t\VO rnvsic scholarships. Staff members of the Orange County ,Proposals to establish a municipal · · ~sl{ict .Attorney's Office, who came up advisory council (~1ACl for the Saddle-with the term in lhe first place, now back Valley will be discussed at 7:30 arei11t'sure themselves what they meant o'clock tonight at Mission Viejo High by the .controversial clef).S. School. "I would imagine the natal clen is the The Mission Viejo Homeowners . are divisiQn bet~een the portions of the sponsors of the meeting, With members · backside at the· lower botWm -if )'ou of' the Sadt;llebl'lck: Area Coordinating know what I.mean, .. ~said Deputy District COUncil (SACC), whiclt · lniti11ted the pro-Attorney Oretta Sears. posals, fielding questions from the noor. Laughing .beart.ily, she added, "But I A municipal advisory"1oouncil a"s pro-have n6 idea what it is. Sorry about PoSed by SACC would be a group of five !hat." to nine elected representatives from the Nurses al two Harbor Arca doctor 's of· Saddleback Valley who ,cdufd be·a. ltgally fices also declared theniselves wiable "to recognized advisory body to the. county ,..--·-· ----------.., Board of Supervisors. . SACC spokesmen said community in· put on the proposals is needed and all residents are invl1ed. . • r Ne'v · B11ses -OK' d · For Saddleback Come Sepiemboi, ·ui. 5addleback Uhl· fied Sdlool District will have 3S new 85- passenger dlesel buses. ;Trustees alltbori!OO purchase of the -. Monday nlibt alter Robert Mal·· • tbew, business manager , told the board if tbey waited any longer to make up their minds they couldn't be sure o( getting Ute buses: oo time. Cost of the purchase will be fl,eDS IJC1' bus, or '105,000 per )'ear om five years. Jluylng the bus Oeel is better than coo- U.dlng for charter buses becau.. It olfen more control and CQ!!s Jess In the long haul, the boon! decided . I I ' Schmitz Back In GOP Ranks Former congressman · J o h n Schmitz has · rejoined the Rt!publican party. The one term representative who w.u defeaied In the R~publlcan f)fimary blit June by th&I orange County assessor Andrew J . H.~lhaw Wat later a presldential caodida~ for the A m ' r i c a n 1ndependent Party. Schmitz, 42, said Monday ho had returned to the GOP to give it "moral, principled leadership" dur· ing the present.crisis. He sa.id Watergate had left a leade.nftlp vacuum in t h e Republican party which he hopes to rill , Tactics Over Coverup WASHING TON I UP!l -Charging the events "smacked of the situation which HlUer's Intelligence cltiefs found themseJves in," bugging conspirator James W. McCord Jr. testified today he was convinced the White House.plotted to blame the CfA for Watergate. McCord said during his 2¥.z hour mom· ing testimony that he wa:.. told that Richard ti.I. Helms was fired as CIA direCtor aod replaced with James R. Schlesihger, who "would go along" with the White House plans to blame the CIA. President . NLxon recently nomh>ated SChle1lnger tO be defense secretary. Reading from prepared memos duting liia , .second day of testbnony at the televised Senate Watergate hearillgs, McCord also said ; .... .:..CO...Con!pirator G. Gordon Liddy told him in January, 1m, or a plan lo break into the safe of Hank Greenspun, publisher of the Las Vegas Sun, and that "a Howerd Hu.ghes pJane would be stan- ding by 1o , 0)' them into a Souih ~ CCk1ntry •• !' It was the first time Hushes' name bas, been mentioned. -MoCord, who wu a CJA agent for 19 years, aatd •hen be beard ol errorts to pul the Watergate blame·oo !he CIA, he wrot6 'John J. Caulfield, a former White House aide and a frtend1 denouncing the "ruthlw attempt" and .. ming that If official! W8Jlttd the Watergtte attatr "to blow," that was the way to do it. -Mrs. E. Howard Hunt Jr., late wire of a fellow Watergate consptrator, told I him that her husband had dictated~ a let· ter which reportedly threatened "to blow the White House out of the water." -Mrs. HWlt said during the pmercon- ...versation last Novw:nber thaf lJer hus· band, a fonner White House oonsull&J1', •ttJad "information wU could impeach lhe President." T -Former Attorney General John N. Milcha!I and his wife Martha received ''nUmerous threats in writing and by phone" about the lime of the May, 1972, assassination attempt ligairist Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace, and one "greatly upset" Mrs. Mitchell because il came through a \e\ephone with an unlisted number. -Before the Watergate bugging oc- curred, the Committt\e to RHlect the President was deeply concerned about possible campaign violence. "Uppermost in everyone's mlnds, and certainly in my mind," vm'e the disruption!: at the 1968 Democratic National Convention and re- cent bombings Rt the Capitol and Pen- tagon. -He made two caUs to embaslies in Washington -klentlfied In publL~hed reports as those of Chile and Israel - and had c:onversations that he ill sure were tapped. McCord, st!CUJ1ty chief at Nixon's re- election committee al the lime of tM June 17 break•ln at DemocraUc national headquarters in the Watergate complex, wrole Chief U.S. Di•trict Judi• John J. (See McCORD, Pal• II I Th.stin Union is the controlling school district over Irvine and Mission Viejo un. til July 1, when the new Saddlebeck Unified board takes over f i n a I responsibility for the Valley schools. When Mission Viejo foods were denied , the Diabto Music Boosters, led by parents Ji m Parry, began a campaign to help ftnance the uniforms. • They rai~d $8,500 -part to be used for 80llnd shells and music scholarships. The rest, f4,500 was offered to the board. Trustee Dennis Smith said at ~1onday's mcetin.i: .that e~en If ·the' unifonns were l\f.' ~~ . 'rl.,. Death Ray Data Being Exchange~ LONOON (AP! -The BrlP•i>.govern· ment is exchanging inrormaUon with the United--'6tates on a laser "deat1" ray" both nations are developing to destroy aircraft and missiles at long .ra.nge, the Dtfense Ministry said today. A spokesman said work on a powerful. long.range laser gun bas been going on for some tilne. Scientific 90W'ces said the gun being develOJ)ed has a range of 70 miles and ultimately can be mounted in aircraft. But they said the first le!:lt wUI probably take place on ahipboard because of tl'IC electrical power needed. A lase .produces a beam ol Intense Ilg.ht waves concentrated ·along a very narrow line rather than 5eatlcring. as from a normal light source. Since 118ht travell at 186,000 mllel a second, a laser weapon's beam would reach its target alm011 INtantaneou•IY, \.~ Dani in Utah Bursts PAYSON, Utah (AP) -One of four dams in Payson Canyon burst Monday night, sending a wall of water rushing toward this central Utah town of 4,500. No injuries were reported, although an estimated 500 lo 600 homes were damag· eel by wacer and every store on Main Street was nooc1ed. C>range Coast Weather Mostly sunny Wednesday, follow· ing the usual low clouds in the morning hours. Highs of 68 at the beaches rising to 75 inland, Over· night lows in the SOs. INSIDE TOHi\ l' A g1t1~ battle, w1iich bega" after tM ltidkl11 ann~ mutinied and tried to disarm stace units in northen~ J11llio, left 15 men dead. See ''ory. l'nge -4 . 1..M ••• ,. t A.1111 L11MM1'1 11 INI.... 11 MO¥Mt It-ti C•Hfol'fll• S 11'1\llMI ,9'Mh l'f ClfltlflH !t-Jt l•llllan.tl H1wt • C9mlu I.I Ori"'' C-1'1' t c ..... .....-11 1,.rl, 1"11 0..ttl H .. lm t 1'9(.11 Mar'lllt ,.,,, •.it.n11 ..... • l91 ... lt!,. " •1tW'fll~, 1 .. ll 1'11t•I.., l•U ... NllC9 ,,.t'I .... w • "" Tht ~ ' #tl'Mfl't N"'I 1.J.11 .._.... ,. ..,... ...... . t ~· , ... ~.,. ·-...... ::. J. ,, .. ~ • ..\:.:.. .r .r~ --~~-__ , .. __ ,.. ... _, ---............ _ ..... .....: .. ~--,, • y •• .... ... • •• • ..... 2 DAILY PILOI IS Tunda1, May 22. 1'973 CVSD Aetion School Boundary Issue Held Over Bv t'REDERICK SCllOEMEl!L • 01 t1tt o.iw ''i.t ll•ff Capistrano Unified School District trusltt! ?i.fonday nl.:hl ~ent round and round the matter of high school boun- dar~s. but ended up wbtre they started. After one hour of debate on two separate proposals on which high school students should go \Yhere , the board tabl · ed the matter to its June 4 meeting. Scores of paren~ who packed the board meeting loudly applauded a recnm· mendation from Truman Benedict. dislrict superinlendent. that tiigh school From Pagel DECISIO N . • • students now hving in t.tission Viejo be allov.ed to complete their studies at Dana J1Hls lllgh School. The rec:ommendation also stlpul11ted !hat any new sludents moving into Mission Vle)O "east of ?i.1arguerlte Parky,·ay norih of Oso Park~·ay be sent tv San Clemente lllgh School. A second proposal. n1ade b~1 Trustee Rl'bert Hurst , received substantial op- position from the pa rents. liurst suggested all ~tission Viejo students be sent to San Clemente lfigh, but with all seniors given the option to rernain at Dana Hills if so desired. llurst said Dana llilf:; already is operating at capacity, but !hat San Clemente High v.•as rUMing at thrce- fourths capacity. D•ltr ,lltt Slit! 1"11011 Bral~es Foiled .UCI Hiring Of Women On Increase I I UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel G. : Aldrich Jr. Monday launched Women at 1 Irvine Wetk with the news that one.third of new faculty members being hired are women. (Related story Page 9.) However, Aldrich denied that any specific percent.age or numeric goal had been set as part of UCl's "affirmative action" program . l~e spoke at an opening day session of the week-Joog event. He noted that of 11 faculty positions recently offered ~ women, seven had ac- cepted. Out of 30 positions oUered to men, 15 had ae<:epted. '!'hat means seven of 22 new faculty wiU be women bringing the total for the 197:J..74 year to about six percent. Aldrich said a UC study will indicate what percentage of doctoral degree holders eligible for faculty status, are women. (R·Newport Beach) who heads the private organlzation, believe a ··~Tayo Clinic of the West" will result in Orange C.ounty. Carpenter and Burroughs reaffirmed their support for the UCI teaching hospital and medicai school development. While most members of the board sup- port Benedict's plan over Hurst's sug- gestion, th ey voted to hold off on :1 decision until June 4 to allow more study and citizen input -particularly fro1n residents of Laguna Niguel. "l think v.·c should go along \\'ilh Mr. Benedict's recomm endation for three years until a new high school is built," commented Trustee Fred Nev.•hart. This truck loaded with shingles was coming down the hill on La Paz Road at Marguerite Parkway in 1'.1ission Viejo Monday when the brakes wen t out. Driver Merle Wilson was not injured as truck over- turned. It blocked northbound lane of Marguerite Parkway until righted and moved. Such a figure would give an indication of are11s where more emphasis is needed in hiring women, he suggested. Aldrich's key contention was that numbers or percentages mattered less than communication to women that there is new opportunity in hiring and ad- vancement for them at UCI. Tile remarks countered testimony by Qr. Elbon L. r~ollz of the medical school facility that the Western \Vorld hospital should be delayed until the UCI teaching hospital is developed. "I'd rather see the students kept together than moving around," he added, a comment which brought another round or applause rrom the audience. Hurst said "the majority or our ..:om- munity isn't represented here tonight ," He also attacked a suggestion by Newhart to keep students at the same school even if it n1eant going to stag- gered or double session . Senate Group Postpones Frotn Page 1 McCORD ..• Aldrich said he recalled the day when no faculty position was "advertised.'' Now the "Chronicle of Higher Educa· lion" carries dozens of ads monthly for university adminlatration and faculty positions. Fullerton attorney John McDern1ott spoke for the appealing members of lhe Orange County health planning council. He said the Bay Area council did nol substantiate the need for 3 new hospital in Orange C<lunty and acted arbitrarily in revening the local council 's ruling. Richardson Confirmation Sirica in March charging that perjury was committed at the trial and that there was political pressure for a covernp. ,Most carry the added lines encouraging women and minorities to apply, Aldrich noted. • Prominent Republican Victor C. Andrews or Laguna Beach, chairn1:1n of South Coast Community Hospital's board of direct'Ors,' al~'O opposed the Western Wo rld. proposal, citing current overbcd- ding situalion in Orange County. Sen. Carpenter agreed there are too many ho!!lpital beds in the county. But, he said, "The beds are of the wrong type and in the wrong place. The university hospital (teaching) is very important to us; we don't want to compete but to compliment them." Western World pro- poses a community hospital. Gordon Peterson, acting chairman of the board, said "no matter \Yhat action is taken, it ca1;1't be that good ... we can't crystal ball it for that long ." The parent of one high school student told the board she didn 't \\'ant her daught.er "attending two di fferent high schools .. .it 's too much moving around." Resident Mary Thompson, whose son will enter Dana Hills High next year, said she was concerned he \\'Ollld be mov- ed in the following year. "We have got to start Yl'ith the un- derstanding tt'LBt come hell or high water 11·e 1vill lef them fini sh \Vhere they sl<i rt," d• · 1red Mrs. Thompson. Field Str111ag for Beans WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate Judictary Committee today postponed ac· lion on Elliot Richardson's nomination to be attorney general after questions \Vere raised about so111e of his S\\'Orn testin1ony before the commiltee. The commi ttee had been scheduled to vote on the nomination without hearing any furt_.tier witnesses today. But several had been scheduled to vote on the nomination without hearing any further witnesses today. But several Democratic members of the committee reopened the questioning Interesting patterns of strings decorate Ranch acre- age along Culver Drive in the city of Irvine. Gene Kawa1nura's \Vestern tl-larkcting Company leased the parcel near Barranca Road. Kawan1ui-a grows pole beans. a vegetable crop not unlike string beans except that the beans grow on the strings and do not have strings in t he beans, an Irvine Company spokesman explained. ?\1achines thread the string in crisscross fashion on poles. Japanese farming tech- niques produces a greater yield or high quality beans, ranch spokesmen noted. OI ANGI COAST IS DAILY PILOT ,. ... O<'&il\r. c!..." DAIL y PILOl', w•t~ ""h•(h 11 Comb•>Wrd !J>e i>l•WI P•en. 1, publilhf'CI b~ lilt O'ltige CO~I! P~bll•hl"'I Com1>o1nr. Se~8, r1!1 ..:lillon• ~'• 11UblfJlllfd, Mond•1 thro11o;1h f'rld1y, lor (0•1• Mt••· Ntwparl llN<ll, MUft!l~ot\ 9~.Chll'l>Uf>l••n V~llty, l&VU!\f I MCh. lrvllltlltddltblc~ ana S•n Cltmtn!t/ l t n Ju.,, Carlt!•-· .., 1ln~t 1eql011~I tcll!lon " P\IVll•htd S&l~•dtvl """ $u•ld•1• T"-P"lr<IPtl 1>Vbl•1hl"11 olan1 ol M JJ!I I'.'"•! Boy ~!'"'' C1»l1 M•M, C•llt0•1'1t, t1~l~. 11.obt rl N. W11d Pltt0!1n1 Ind Pu81,,11., J1 c~ R. Curl1v Vi« p,....111..,1 ~NI Ci~,..,11 Ml~ljlel • Tl>om11 K11wil Edi1or lllol!'lll A. M111pli1n1 Ml""lfl"9 lid<lll• Cli1,,11 H. Looi ll.tth•1d P. Ntll .AM!lt111t Mtl\IQlllO EdllO'• (ot!t MH•· JJO W1Jf ••v $"ftl N.wport I~: "u Nt"'l!l•I aou••~••ot L119...,.. ll11cll; tn "ort11 A•e.iw N....,ll"'llO!I ll"ch: 11tl$ llt1c11 aou11v1•d kn Cl•"""'" JOS Hoflll Et Ctmll'IO 11111 Teri ..... 17141 M2-4Jll Ca...JfW AMrt_J;I .. •41·S•71 s.. c.......,--A11 hfl•l'tMt""'i t ........ 491-44.ZO (OPr•lgl\t, un. Or•"" C.O..tt PPJl:ttl"'I"' ~""· No -tlerlotl, llhlfilflllllM, edllorlel -""" or "-""-'-lttrtln rNr bl ~-Wlltltlut tflt(ltl -· mi.11on "' """""' •-· hunf (llK .... , ..... 11 a1 CO.It ~. C..tl,.,,..lt. k'*'IMlol'I lw c•rrltr 11.ti -"'•v1 11¥ 1r1111 u .n ~1v1 m11u1,.., tittlll\olll .... .,_.. -"'''· Evacuation. Ordered SACR A~lENTO (AP \ Th c Legislature·:; rullng con1miUec today ordered !he C\'acation of the 103-ycnr-o!d \\lest \Vlng of the Stitc_f:;;1pitol by Sept . 15. The order applies to the Senate and 1\ssembly rhambers. state treasure's of- llcc. the secretary of stnlc, hcuten:inl. governor1 sevcr<1l offj~s ho us i n g lrgislalivc aides and lh'c Ca 1>1tol press corps. The action 11·as taken by the Joint Rules Con1mittee after it received two rl'ports in the last year declaring the historic building an earthquake ha1..ard. The cvacaUon will be for lhrct to five years, said Assemblyman John L. Burton <IJ..San Francisco), chairman of the Joint ltulcs Commillee. In the meantime. the Legisllture will decide either to build a new legi slative building or rebulld the old Capitol. Either project would cos t at least $40 million. In the meantime, the Joint Rules Con1- mittee must find temporary quarters for the SE'n11.te and Assembly lo hald !heir sessions. nurton proposed conversion of ty,·o large committee hearing roonis In the Capitol But ht said his staff sil!IO will loo k at the po~s1bllity of converting the gar<ige under the earthqu:ike-safc east \l'ing of the Capitol. The decision on tempo rary chambers v.·iH be made in about two \Veeks. Ma ssa ge Parlor, N udie Law Back · · 011 lrvine Agenda City laws reiulaling massage parlors and nud(' entertainment tabled two weeks ago for further study, arl! back on toni1Jhl's Irvine! City Council agenda with no councilmen claiming urgency in adop- tlng the1n . Councllmcn meet sit 7:30 to consider a lengthy agenda with items most coun- cllmen ngreed are more pressing than 111.ws regulat.ing "non-exist.ant nudle ba.rs.'' Other matten berore tbe council in· elude review of the perrnft! l&!ued thu~ far for the cutting of trees und~r the c11y·s law regulatlng removal of trees. \ after Daniel Ellsberg, one of the defen- dants in the Pentagon Papers case, challenged some of Richardson's earlier lestimony. The committee spent more than two hours questioning Richardson befo re breaking for lunch. He was scheduled tc unCergo addi lional questioning during an afternoon session and it was uncertain whether the conuni ttee would vote on the nomination today. Sen. John V. Tunney (l}{;alif,) opened the questioning by asking Richardson to describe once again the conversation he had on April 30 with .Tohn D. Ehrlichman, former chief domestic adviser to Presi- dent Nixon. Richardson said that Ehrlichman cal- led him to say that Krogh would like to see him and that he had what Ehrlichman thought was "worthwhile in· formation to give him." From Pagel ROOSEVELT •• to go," he said. Roosevelt and Vesco are among six present and former IOS directors wanted by !he Swiss government. The Swiss warrants were issued Feb. I to allow police to detain the six men for questioning in case they relum to Switzerland. Vesco was arrested in Geneva more than a year ago on a private criminal complaint. He was freed by a magistrate court when the complaint w a s withdrawn. Veseo has been indicted in New York along with former Attorney General John Mitchell in coMection with the secret Nixon's re-election campaign. They were accused of seeking to block a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation of the handling of JOS funds. Also named In the indictment were former Com- merce Secretary Maurice Stans and a New Jersey politician, Harry Sears. Discussing the alleged effort to blame the CIA, McCord saidJ "Among other things, this also smacked of the situation which Hitler's intelligence chiefs round themselves in, in the 1930s and 1940s, when they were put in the position of having to tell him what they thought he wanted to hear about foreign military capabilities and intentions, instead of what they really believed." A spokesman for Hughes in Los Angeles declined comment on McCord's testimony. Under close questioning by Sen. Herman E. Talmadge (0.Ga.,) McCord acknowledged that he had learned of \Vhile House pressures directly only from Hunt ; Hunt's attorney, William E. Bitt· man; and Gerald Alch, whom MCCord later fired as his lawyer. Of his letter to Caulfield, McCord testified: "The letter was couched in strong language because it seemed to me at the time that this was the only language that the \Vh ite House understood ." He said the letter stated: ;'Dear Jack: I am sorry to have to write you this letter. If Hel ms goes and the Watergate operation is laid at ClA 's feet where it does not belong, every tree in the forest will fall. It will be a scorch· ed desert. The whole matter is at the precipice right now. Pass the message that if they want it to blow, they are on exactly the right course. I'm sorry that you will get hurt in the fallout." P.1cCord said he told Alch, "even if it meant my freedom , I would not turn on the organization that had employed me for 19 years and wrongly deal such a damaging blow that it would take years for it to recover from it." Opitun Scarce in U.S. CHICAGO (UP I) -The United States is running out of legitimately produced opium and shortages are developing of morphine, codeine, and other analgesics derived from opium alkaloids, the American Medical News said Monday. While improving the ratio of women hired at UCI, Aldrich indicated a review of present administrative and faculty positions was also underway and had resulted in some advancements and , salary adju.stcmnls. ... 'The changes are possible, Aldrich con· tended, not because the university has been given new resou rces (money) but because "of reallocation of old resources in the personnel department." . He indicated all the affirmative action regarding women at Irvine had come about in the past two and a half years as a result of various campus organiiations concerned about the status of women as a minority of faculty, staff and graduate students at UCI. From Pagel NUDIE .•. te, is known as the "umbilicus." 'nle office of Dr. Charles S. Stevens of Costa Mesa, declared there was no such thing in the doctor's medical books. "Are you sure they didn't mean genital cleft? \Ve've got one of those in the book," said hls nurse. Costa Mesa police. who have made numerous arrests wider the ordinance, were also uncertain whether the nudie dancers had bared their natal clefts or not. LI. Harold Fisher said he was bothered by the Jack of definition but theorized that the natal cleft was hidden by part of a bikini. UC Irvine medical faculty members agreed today a natal cleft is at best an ambiguous description of a portion of the human body. A gynecologist and an anatomist con- tacted by the Daily Pilot suggested the most precise definition of a "natal cleft" is that "it's the area of the body the city attorney is most up tight about.'' The term appears in no medical dic- tionary consulted today. The gynecologist speculated the use of the word natal might refer to the birth canal -the frontal Renitalia of a female. PRUDENT BUYING • ' Throughout our 78 years of carpet retailing, one fact becomes quite evident -that when money is leu plentiful, people buy better quality. Th is is contrary to popular belief, but makes good sense if you think about it. When you have to concern yourseli with value and performance, you are likely to buy better quality. At Alden's in the last fo~r years, our per unit sa le ha s been mo re expe nsive carpeting, reflecting this fact. Consequently, we have the largest selection of fin er qualities you will see a nywh ere, all a ~omp etiti ve prices. The ehd" result is customer satisfaction , pride a nd recommendationsarhic • provide our overwhelming source of new business. IN TH I llAllOI AHA llNCI ltl 7 ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Awe. COSTA MESA 646-4838 Moo •• Tk,., t to 5:10; fr~ t to t: Sat. 9:10 to I I ,I • I I 7 Huntington Beaeh Today's Fl•al N.Y. Stoeks VOL 06, NO. 142, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COU NTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 22, 197l TEN CENTS Beach Council Mulls Condemning Golf Cour·se By TERRY COVILLE Of lfM 0.ll't P'llet ll•ff The possibility of c O.ll de m n in g Meadowlark Golf Course so the city can )'UY it, was discussed behind closed doors ?i.1onday night by the Huntington Beach Council. After a one-hour executive session, Mayor Jerry Matney announced that the council had discussed the ramifications of a condemnatiof) procedure, but said no d~ision had been reached . "We need community input t o determine how much the citizeoa will pay to keep a golf course," Matney said. 'lbe 9'.5-acre golf course on Warner Avenue is now up for sale. The owners, Gomer Simms and Cecil Hollingsworth , have entered escrow with the S and S. Construction Company. A condition in the escrow, however, gives the city until July 8 to make an of· • I Caps1tle Council Actio.n Here in capsule· form are the major actions taken Moriday night by the Huntington Beach City Council: SURFING: Listened to a plea by local surfers for 1nore flexible surfing rules around the city pier and for a reduction in the Coast Highway parking meter. charge. No action was taken, but council-- men agreed to sudy it further. OPEN SPACE: Adoptf:d, without comment or opposition, a new recreational open space zone. The new ordinance was given first reading. MEADOWLARK: Received and flied a request from the city's environmental council to save Meadowlark Golf Course either by condemnation or purchase. A1ayor Jerry. Matney said the city is going to have to find out if the people \V<;tnt to pay the price to save il. MORATORIUM: Instructed the city a\lorney lo explain the legal ra_mif.icatipns of a total building ban to the city's environmental council, which had requested a moratorium. ll l &GAl LAW: Repealed a section of the planned residential development ord~ce which city attorney Dan Bonia said was not lawful. The section. a minor "elastic clause," allowed the planning commission and staff to grant exceptions to the rule without proof of hardship. BLUFF PARK: Approved the concept of a park on the old water tower site overlook.ing Huntington Harbour. Details of how to pre- serve it have not been worked out. BEACHES: Passed two resolutions asking the state to buy the 2.3 miles of private beach north of the pier, and also asking the state to clean up Bolsa Chica State Beach as promised. Beach Council Remains Undecmed on Surf PIRa This may well become the end.Jess summer for •lunlington Beach surfers in terms of getting a decision from city hall about summer surfing rules and parking meter prices. Monday night young su rfers packed ci- ty council chambers for the second time ln two weeks and. once again. they left Without a decision from the council. : Mayor Jerry ~1atncy agreed to ad- ditional study of both requests, but refug.. ~ to put a time limit on when the COliD- 'cil might vote on either issue. -Two requests were made by surfer spokesmen : . -More flexible summer surfing hours, particularly in the area of the city pier. -A reduction ln the 25-cents-per-hou,r parking meter charge along Coast Highway near the Bolsa Chica bluffs. Vince Moorhouse, city director of harbors and beaches, opposed bolb Sllg· gestions. from 16th Street south. from ll a.m. to 5 p.m .. June 15 to Sept. JO. There are no surfing restrictions at the bluffs. Moorhouse also said surfers can be ousted from the water before 11 a.n1 .. and often are asked to leave by 9 a.m. or 10 a.m. oo \varm summer weekends. Surfers. led by Rus Calisch of Interna- tional Surfing l\<lagazine. asked if the hou,rs could not simply be made flexible tbf otber way. so if there were n<l swim crowdS surfing could be allowed after 11 a.m. Richard ScCltt, a 20-year resident who said he was a surfer and a family man~ asked the council to simply try the fiex· ible rule as a test. "At least try it. See if we can't make it work," he suggested. Councilwoman Norma Gibbs suggested (S.. SURF, Page Z) fer for the old course. S. and S. is rtporledly willing to pay'$! million for the property which is zoned for single family homes. 'Th.is morning, Matoey amplified the problems the city has faced in negotiatlng for the life of the tree-lined country club. "We have agreed in concept that we'd like to save it, but the question is how do we pay for it? We could not pay off a Another l' ersion bond right now. ''.Par~ or our problem is that nobody will talk to us except their attorneys. We can't gef to the <lwner." Matney said the city may send a sampling through its newsletter, "The Sands," asklng people to send back com- ments on whether they are willlng to pay a higher utili ty tax or pass a revenue bond to buy the golf course. The mayor said he still supports a Caulfield Credits Clemency to._Dean BULLETIN WASHINGTON (AP) -A former \Vbite House law enfoR?ement adviser said iD prepared testimony today that hr offered executive clemency to Watergate burglar James W. McCord on the authority of presidential counsel John w. Deu mc- Jol>n J, ~elll:tlMlecl tlaat he.load .,. ed ~Prffldent 'NIIW't~name. Mtcml swore.'Ffklay ~ Cl;ulflelcl ba'll sald-tht Prealdt:lt\ WMf-.....te of plans to ofter 'Roosevelt Named In Fraud Char ge B y Switzerland . By L. PETER KRIEG Df Ille o.ltr Piie! Iliff Former congressman James Roosevelt, now a Newport Beach resi- dent. is wanted by the Swiss government ()n fraud charges involVing an alleged $224 million swlndle also involving New York financier Robert J,. Vesco. Roosevelt told the Daily Pilot today he has no intention of respondlng to the war- rant and says he doesn 't know what he'll do until he confers wilh his Swiss lawyer, Daniel Guggenheim. Roosevelt proclaimed his innocence, admitting only he may have been vic- t.imized by placing his trust in the management of the Investors Overseas Fund (JOS), of which he served as a director from 1967-1971. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission also charged Roosevelt with looting the $224 million from the Fund of Funds and <lther IOS glamor funds. Roosevelt. however, said he has en· tered a consent decree on those charges, agreeing to abandon all dealings with the fund. "I've had nothing to do with it since 1911," Roosevelt said. Vesco, who is reportedly in Costa Rica , is a!JO wanted in the United States in connection with a secret contribution to (See ROOSEVELT, Pag• Zl " ~ J\1cCord clemency, and that the Pre1lident 14:ould be Informed of McCord's reaction. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Charging the events "smacked of the situation which Hitler's intelligence chiefs, found themselves . in," bugging conspirator J,ames W. McCord Jr. testified today he ,•w.u'~.~teH-~ blame the CIA ror Watergate. 'Mc<fOrd la~. ~tlrillf his 2~ hour roam- ing fe!tlmony · that he W8!; told th"at Richard M: Helms was fired as .CIA director and replaced .,with James R. Sc hlesinger, who "would go along" with the White House plans to blame the CIA . President Nixon recently nominated Schlesinger to be defense secretary. Reading from prepared memos during his second day of testlmony at the televised Senate Watergate hearings, McCord also -said: --Co-conspirator G. Gordon Liddy told him in January, 1972, of a plan to break into the safe <lC H.iwk Greenspun, publisher of the Las Vegas Sun, and that "a Howard Hughes plane would be stan- ding by to fly them into a South American country _ . _ .. It was the first time Hughes' name has been mentioned. -McCord, who was a CIA agent for 19 years, said when he heard of efforts to put the Watergate blame on the CIA. he wrote John J. Caulfield, a former White House aide and a friend, denouncing lhe "ruthless attempt" ?nd warning that if officials· wanted the Watergate affair "lo blow," that was the way to do it. -Mrs. E. Howard Hunt Jr .. late wife of a fellow Watergate C<lnspirat<lr, told him that her husband. had dictated a let- ter which reportedly threatened ';to blow the White House out of the water." -Mrs. Hunt said during the same con- versation last November that her hus- band, a former White House consultant, ''had information which could impeach the President." -Fonner Attorney General John N. Mitchell and his wife Martha received "numerous threats in writing and by phone" about the time of the May, 1972. assassination attempt against Alabama Gov. GeOrge C. Wallace, and one "greatly upset" Mrs. Mitchell because it (See McCORD, Page Z) Don"t Bare That Thing I "Surfing causes injuries, and we found last summer that 3~ percent of the pcOple injured by surfboards, were not surfers." Moorhouse said. "J don't know of any other sport where so many non· participants are injured.·• "We don't reel the 25-cent parking meter charge is exhorbitant for the area. The meters make people move so more people have a chance to visit the beach." 'Mle .city currently prohibits any surfing Definition Elusive, ,, ' But Mesa Law Forbids Display Final Hearing Set fo r Budget Fountain Valley city councilmen have echeduled tonight for the final hearing and deba te on their proposed $4.47 'million budget for the upcoming year . · The budget hekrlng is S<:heduled for 7 . p.m. in the city council chambers at 10200 Slater Ave . The new budget is 1717,000 larger than th<i 1972-13 Cl· pendltures for the city. One of the controversial it.ems in the proposed budaet i.; a $18,0llO proposed e" ptndlQ,lre to hire an aasistaftt city manqer. t By RUDI NIEOZIELSKI Of ttlt D•ltr f'n.t Sl•ff Experts don't know what it is but you'd bitter no.t show it irr Cos~a Mesa." "' l>isplay of tht! natal cleft i.s outlawed. :rhe lmn, included in a recontly enacted anti+nudity ordinance, became the subject of considerable confustori to- day. Is It a belly button that can be seen on any btacb or Is It something unspeakable! "I Wspec\ it was Just thrown in," said Councilman Alvin Pinkley, a phsnmiclst by profession. He was one ol five clty councJimcft who approved the ordinance as an, emergency measure. ctt:Y Attorney Roy E. June, author or the ordinance. admitted that he rtally dJdn't know what natal cleft referred to ellhcr .. "I took the WordbH!'~COUnty ordinance," Jwie adrrdtted. ' 'lbe Drane• County ordinance, _,,uy • upbeld by 4 to 2 high C<lurt vote. was us- ed as a model for Costa Mesa's anti-n udi- ty ordinance. • The Costa Mesa ordinance in tum serv- ed as a model ·for the~ Santa Ana oi'dlnailct w · Its fir!t reading Monday n~ al g with the "natal cleft." But Santa Ana Mayor Jerry Pattdn questioned the wording of the, ordinMCf: becaure he tbooiaht It simply meant beJly button. ~ Slaff lftembenl 'ol..the 0ran1e County Dlfirlct AU6mel"• ~lice, who came up wilb the term In "the first plact. now aren't 81D'e them.'61ve1: what lhe.y meant by the controversial clefts. "l would imagtne tM natal cleft ls the diviSion bet~ the portions of the backside at the · lower bottom -if you know·whal I mean," uld Deputy Dls!ljct Attorney Oretta. Sears. 1Au1bing 'heartll,, Ibo ·llCided. "IM I •/ • • have no idea what ii is. Sorry-about that." Nurses at two Harbor Area~dOctor's of- fices also decla~ tbemsd.ves unabla 4G provide a .definition. One referrM ln-- quirie.! to ttie public library. It was discovered, however, that I.he term b not listed In any dlctlonarles, Jn. duding medical volumes. Dr. Wendell Wbilte ol Huntington Beach said he thought oalal cleft rolers to part of \he female afl8touiy which the City C.OU.ncll definitely wimts covered. "But," he added, "it isn't a term com- monly used." Nor Is it the official medical term for belly but&ofl wbch, according to Or. Wit· te1 la known as the "umbilicus." The otnce of Dr. Charles S. Stevens of Co.!ta Mesa, declared there was no S\Jeh thing. lo ttie d.,:tor'a medical books. ':Are you sur~ they, didn't mean genital t:left? W,P've &9' one of flhase ln the fSee Nl1DIE, Page !) previou s proj>OSal which would have the city and county join force! to buy both the golf course and ?.1eadowlark Airport ··You can get federal ·money for an airport. but not for a golf course," he said. "But other councilmen want nothing to do with the airport." t\1atney also said it is nol likely the county would provide money for a golf course, though it might for a regional park. I-le said the possibility of condemnation on UPI TtltDMt. WARNED BY McCORD Former Aldo C1ulfleld Researchers Say They Ca n Spot Dr ug Use r Types B~"TON (AP) -Researchers say they have developed a method to' tell 'in ad- vance whicn teen-age.rs are likely to use marijuana. which ones will go on to hard drugs and which one!! will remain nonusers. In a report from the Department of Psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital, ·the researchers said today they analyzed data fr<lm 2,222 junior high and high school slijdents in the Boston area. In that C<lmputer analysis, drug use in 1971 was predicted from fi ve nondrug- related fa ctors -including academic performance and cigarette smoking - measured in 1969. The researchers said the analysis was 63 percent accurate in predicting the nondrug users who went on to marijuana alone and 77 percent accurate In showing what nonusers went to both marijuana and hard drugs such as heroin, stimulants, depresessants and ha llucinogens. The data were also 72 percent aceurate in predicting what nonuseni eventually used and type Qi.drug and 17 percent ac- curate in preOlctlng which new marl· j1.-ana users went to "hard drugs. The researcher:.. said that in comparing data from nonU"llers and those already us-- ing drugs at the beginning or the study in 1969, the computer was able to sort out the two gr<lups with 81 percent accuracy t\~ · ; only nondrug-relnted information. The report was to be presented toda y at the National Research Council-Na- tiona l Academy of Sciences meetlng of the Committee On Problems of Drug ' Dependence held at th~ Uiliversity of North Carolina in Chapel Hill. 1 The .!t.lJdJ was compiled by Ors. 'Gefle M. Smith of Masaachuletu Geheral, Charles p. Fogg of Bol!ton UnivFSttY, Herbert Greenwald of Bridgtwater S~te Colleae . and Richard LIBJ'le, Jn 'In· dependent consultant-statlatlctan. The five elements assessed iD 1969 were rebelUousnea.a again.st rules and authorities as measurt!d by a ques· tlOMalre, ratings of obedience, grsde ave.rage, cigarette .smoklnc and wr favorable attitudes toward cigarette smoking. "Each of the predictors siinltlcantly discriminates between nonusers who wlll remain nonusers and those who will become users.'' the report said. "ln addition, each predictor variable stanlllcantly discriminates betw.cn thoee who will become hard drug l1ltn end lhoee who will limit their drug ,.. to marUllana taken only Infrequently." may be considered if Meadowlark is sold to S. tlnd S .. though if the city does ii, the city ~·ill have to have the money available for in1mediate purcha5'. f,ouncilman Henry Duke and City Administrator David Rowlands are still trying to meet with ?i.·leadowlark's owners to discuss a Jong-range plan, but. according to Matney, they aren't having any success. "\\'e're just torn apart, but v;e don 't know what to do.:' said lhe n1ayor . Telephone Bandit Eyed ' As Suspect By JOANNE REVNOLOS 01 lilt DflllY Piie! Sti ff ' A bomb exploded Monday night in a Huntington Beach restaurant was p-ob- ably detonated by the telephone bandit who held up the restaurant three f days earlier, police theorized today. No one was injured In the bla1t at tbt Sizzler Steak ilouae-'ILI&5U.S..Cb Blvd. Police said there were an uncounted DU!llber of cUJtomera ln the re1taurpt and five employes when the bomb U• P1-. al l:IO,p.m., b!O)l'lna I 11 lijr JI. lnm ·iiple In thi> -e.ulii1. , • Explosives •Jperta from the U.S. Treasury's alcohol, tobacco and flrurms division who have been called In on the case said "it wa11 a miracle" th'at no one inside or outside the restaur111t wu hit by the large chunks of flying shrapnel from lhe. pipe bomb. Detective Sgt. Monte McKennon of the Huntington Beach police saJd treuury agents have been called in bec1 use possession or a bomb ia a federal oftlDlt_ A note found taped lo the restaurint's back door threatening damage to·. the building ls what pollet believe to W: the link between the bombing and the holdup which occurred last Thursday. 1 In that holdup, the unaeen bandit made the restaurant the seventh victim of his robbery-by-telnphone technique. McKennon said this morning that be · believes that the bomb was planted sometime Monday and set off to show that the telephone bandit "means business.'1 The phantom bandit has netted more than $2,700 In the pi!t month by vie· timizing franchise businesses in Hun- tingtOn Beach, Fountain Valley and Costa Mesa. He usually calls the busineHes and tells the person who 11nswers th'e phone that he has a high powered rifle aimed at them. If they fail to cooperate, they will he shot. I I~ a Jew of the holdups, the callet has also told the vktlm that there Is a bomb plnnted Inside the bualness and II will be detonated If the buatnessm.an does not do as the robber aays. _,,.,, McKennon said !hit lo tho ...., when bombs wm mentioned, the Jftrnifff had been thoroughly oelld>ed and no bombs have been found. "We wlll be going back to the other victims to check for 1ny suaplcious ac- IS.. 801118, Page I) ' <:out l\tostly surmy Wednelday follow- ing ' the U$U&I tow clouds' in lhe morning hours. Highs of 81 at the beaches rising to 75 inland. Over· .olgfit Iowa ln tbe 50s. ~ . ... INSIDE TOD-'Y A gttn battle, tohfch began after the lndton armv muibiltd and tried to di$arm atatt unit.t i11 northern India, kit 15 mt11 dead. S11 1toT11. Page 4. l.M, .. ,. • •Mttflt •• C•ll...,_ t CIHtlllffl »-• Ctnlkt 1J CNUwtf'tl ll DMtlt Httltts t ••1ottta1 ..... ' '"'tft•llllfttlll , .. ,, ·-~ ,,.,.. hr TM lltttf t --..c... It All•.......... 11 M...,IH ""'ll JlflW'Ht ..... • M•tl•.i """ t °''"" c""ty ' ' .,..... , .. ., II.el M1tk1t1 »ti , ... ,,.,,!NI ,, "'"'"'' 1•11 .......... c #.-'I Ntllfl 1).14 --. • •• -·--... ___ ..,..,._ Z DAILY PILDr H Tund.q, Mn Z2. l '173 Coastal Plan Studied Commission Questions ~lw, Slwuld Do Jt By CANDACE PEARSON Priority must be g\\'en to quick develop1nenl of a coast.al rone manage· ment plan that largely reflects local in- put , Sou1h Coast Regional Zone Conservation CommissiOllers agreed Monday. But the commtJsioners couldn't agree how this 1hould be done. Some favored the state commls.1ion created b)' Prop. 20 taking over much of the planning elements. A few others v.·ere led by Los Angeles City Councilman Louis Nowells, who said "We should do It all." and wanted the state to stay out of lht! proces.s. The sl1 regk>ruil and one state com· rnlsalon created by the Proposition pa• "' wl November musl develop I c:oo1lal plan for 111bm!Ulon lY the le1lll11ure by 1!176, State Commission Executive Director Joseph Bodovilz has suggested a plan should lnclude decisions on elements of marine environment, co11:;tal land en· vironmcnt , mineral re.wurcrs, geology 1 recreaUon. design, tramporlation. 1>0v.·er plants, population density, powers and funding methods, and g ov c r nm e 11 l organization. ··it is cruci<1l the state provide a skeleton and !he regional commi ssion!! make it their plan ," Jack Schoop, a state planner, said ~londay. But Schoop told the commi!!ion which has jurl.sdictlon over Orange and Lo.s Angeles counties that because policies must be "agreed on from Oregon t.o Mex- Witness Names Suspect As Attacker of Sister A weeping witness today In Orange C<\lnty Superior Court ldentlfied cart Eck9trom of Midway City as the man v.1ho shot her and her sister in a Cerritos shopping center last Jan. 4 immediately alt.er he had shot and killed a young man who tried to help them. Trustees Deny Seventh Grade Srl1ool Req.1est Students at Golden View School in Hun- tington Beach who were allowed to at- tend seventh grade there will not be able to remain for eighth grade. trustees or the Ocean View School District .said Mon - day night . And a request that students be allowed to attend seventh grade at Pleasant View School was also turned down by !he board, which met with a bare quorum of lhree lttlstees. Both schools are planned for grades kindergarten through sixth grade. Lut year trustees permitted 28 si1th graders at Golden View to remain at the school for seventh grade since at the time there was room for the one-tlass expansion. "It's hard lo conceive that it is educa- HooalJy defensible to allow the ldd!!I to re- main there," said Trustee Ralph Bauer In leading the unanimous action . He said that a "certain level of !!IOphil'llicatlon in the curriculum" is need- ed to prime eighth graders for high school. which would not be provided for only one class of eighth graders. 11le board's decision ·went against the recommendation of Superintendent James Car\'ell, who did not argue the decision. Trustees voted to keep Pleasant View limited to the sixth grade, despite the ob- jection of Jim Swift, who served as spokesman for about 10 Pleasant View parent! at the meeting. Swift asked that the seventh grade be offered in order to preserve school and community identity and "emotional security," and to prevent the need of busing. He said 46 sixth graders want lo re- main at Pleasant View next year. Boart President James Shaffer argued that 46 students were too many for one class and that the school could not afford the space for two separate classes. Parents at Pleasant View have the op- tion of sending next year's seventh graders to nearby Westmont, an all-year school, or ~1eadow View, abot two miles away. ''The only cholee you give us 1s an all- year school or busing," said Swift after the decision ,,.,·as reached. ~st~e Robert Zinngrabe said, ··1 hope you d give Westmont a chance. I think you'd be pleasanUy surprised." OIANGI COAST •• DAILY PILOT 'Tl'l1 Otl nO• C..11 DAILY 1'1LDT W/111 wfll(ll I• <OfflblMd trio Nl.,.l•~'tll, 11 llVl!lllflm bY 11\0 Dftnoo Co.11 l'l'\l•l1hlnt ComiNnv. kDe· •••• tdllloot ••• ""'11111~. M"""•v through l"•'41v. "°' Co116 Mno, Nowport Beo<h, 1>1vn111191on 81f(1>/Foun11on v111~v. L•ouri• a..d\, lrvlnt'SO!ldlel>lcll "'' 5111 ClttnMMtf Son J\lln (f~'''''""· lo. l ll'IOlt r-al-1 tdl!ktn 11 P11bl•1tie0 S..t\lrdtv\ tnd svroaoy1, f~t prlr1d p11 Mlltl'llllO 111tnl II II JJCI Wnt Boy S1tttl, Cotti MIN, C1lltornl1, tl4,.. Cecelia Vasquez, 17, told a newly sworn jury that she and her sister, Rosemary, v.·ere returning to their car arter picking clothing to be worn by the older girl in a beauty pageant when Eckstrom ran up behind them. The dramatic te stimony in Orange CoWltY Superior Court today involved slayings of Rosemary Vasquez, 20, and Michael Jeffries, 27, in Los Angeles County, Eckstrom, hov1ever, is actually on trial in Orange County for the killing! or two Los Angeles Sheriff's deputies who later tried to arrest hJm at his home at Midway City in Orange County. Miss Vasquei, sister of the victim, was distressed as she testified today while seated. just three feet away from Eck.strom. She testilled that the defendant told tl>tm he had a gun and would kill them ir the two girls refused lo cooperate with him . "What did he want you to do," Deputy District Attorney Robert Chatterton asked. "He said he wanted to spend some time with us at our place and that he wanted to touch us," the hesitant witness replied. She told the jury in Judge William C. Speirs' courtroom that both girls then continiled their search for their car with Eck!lrom following close behind them repeating his warning that he had a gun under his coat. It was at this point, it is alle,aed, that Jeffries, 'J:l, heard the two girls 'pleading with Eckstrom and decided to go to their aid. Chatterton told the jury that Jeffries v•as shot twice aad died on the spot. I-le alleged Eckstrom, 2..1, then turned his 9 mm. automatic pistol on Rosemary Va squez and shot her three tin1es. He then sv.·ung around on the screa ming Cecelia, shot her six times and ran off through the parking lot v.•h!le olher shop- pers ran to the aid of the \vounded trio. From Pagel NUDIE ... book.'' said his nurse. Costa ~fesa police, who have made numerous arrests under the ordinance, \\'ere also uncerlain \Yhcthcr the nudie dancers had bared their natal clefts or not. LL Harold Fisher said he \Vas bothered by the Jack or definition bul theorized that the natal cleft was hidden by part or a bikini. UC Irvine 1nedical faculty members agreed today a natal cleft is at best an amb iguous description of a portion of the hwnan body. A gynecologist and an anatomist con- tacted by the Daily Pilot suggested the most precise definition of a "natal clert" Is that '·it's the area of the body the city attorney is most up tight about." The term appears in no medical dic- tionary consulted today. The gynecologist specu!Jl tcd lhe use of the \1·ord natal might refer to the birth c:anul -the rron tn\ genitalia of n h•mu!r . ·r1ie anato1nlst suggested ., •·nattil" might also refer to lhe cleft bctv.•een "cheeks of the gluteal region ·· of the human OOdy -the buttocks of either a male or a fen1a]{', Rob••• N. w.,d l'r.O~tnt lnct l'llbll1l>1• Used together !he 1vords na lal clclt ~re ,..not "con1monly'' understood in !he (•;piedicsl profession. both agreed ., Jt<lr R. Curlty lco, there wUI be -nwllnc lotolbot (of ........ )." • The state bocly will guide planning ol similar Issues, he uld, but WJ>O'l act by "dictation, not by Oat-ever." Melvin carpenter. South Coast e:z· ecut.lve director, said he would assign orie staff member to the plan now, but added he needed at lea!Jt four more plan· ners "yesterday," The permit load ia still heavy, Carpenter said , and the rive 1uthor1zed planners are busy with that alone. The commission said ils budget com· miuee headed by Dr. Donald Bright of La Habra \\'ould meet to study If permit fees collected were enough to fund four more planning jobs. 11le IJ..member commission dldn't act on Carpenter's additional suggestion that four ad-hoc committees of 1 o c a I representatives, two groups in each coun· ly, be formed lo begin lhe plan. Carpenter said the four rtgions would then be combined into two -Orange and Los Angeles coonty -and then into one. The director also said he thought population density questions should be handled early to develop some criteria during the interim permit process. Geographically splitting the counties failed to get early support from com- missioners. who asked for more details. The ad hoc commitlee idea also got lukewarm reaction. although all com- missioners said they wanted to contact local agencies and get suggestions from public, developers and environmentalists. Carpenter or tbe staff member be v.·ill assign to the plan will report back to the corrunission June 4 in Long Beech on methods of planning and on how state- mandated general plan elements coincide with the coastal elements. The Attorney General's representative also was asked to report on possible legal pitfalls in coastal plaMing that migbt r~ quire use of private property for the public. Commi55ion chairman Robert Rooney of ~luntington Beach Said he saw the plan as a ''cooperative process." He. Bright and Commissioner Rimmon Fay of Marina del Rey agreed local plans must be utilized, but Fay and Bright warned again~l a "re-hash" of inc:omplete, un- coordinated plans. Valley Urging High Priority For Bus Service A request by the city of Fountain Valley that two proposed bus lines in that community be given higher priority was referred to the Orange County Transit District's operations committee Monday. Ben Minamide, Fountain Valley city engineer. presented the request to the district board. He noted that Fountain Valley had been bypassed by the transit district in routes established to date. "We asked for earlier implemCfltation of the Brookhurst Street and Euclid Street routes in order that our reeidents may be able to get service to other transit district routes outside the city " Minamide stated. ' Transit District General Manager Gordon "Pete" Fielding sald lhe city had a vaUd claim for comlderatlon. But be said such areas have a low priority on the district's future bus plans because lbe bu!iest highways by-pass !Mm. Fielding also warned that if the district changes its priorities to aca>mmodate Fountain Valley then there will be similar requests from other cities. The Brookhurst Street route which Fountain Valley wants activated is plan- ned to run eventually from Com- monwealth Avenue in Fullerton to Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach , a distance of 16.1 miles. The Euclid Street route would extend rrom La Habra to Huntington Beach, a distance of 23.1 miles. Fron1Pa9el SURF ... the surfers only seemed to want "tll for tat." "In the past we've never had coopera- tion from them,"'' "'foorhou.se replied. - "I'd like to give it a chance and see v.·hat the cooperative factor is ," she ~aid. She said Councilman Donald Shipley seemed sympatheti.c to the surfers, but no one made a motion for: a vote. · 11enry Duke then said he could not vote either yes or no on the requests without n1ore alternatives. At that point l\-1at.ncy said he wnuld take the whole issue "under advisement" or ru11her study. \'ict l'rt11dlti1 •net o ....... M1nt01• Thom11 Kttvil E"ltor Tl!o1r111 A. M..rphi111 Mtlltfltli lil•IOI Evacuation Ordered Cfiefln H. Looi 11:;,11,,.i '· N.11!1 AHlt!tnt IMlltllif'ol Editor! T,,..., Co..il(. Wtlt Dl"•lllO C-tW l!~llM H ......... IHcll Offko 17175 Botch loult~•r-' MtiliRf M4r1111 ,..0 . lo• 7t0, 9264 1 ............. Lt,,,_ •-.tJ11· m 'O•ftl A...,..w (:o11t M-~ U0 Wt'lt .. y lt•NT N_,.,I IMdl! 1W NtwpDt! aoui.~t•d ~n Ci.m.nft; llOS No•fll l!I Ct'"ln6 ll:HI T ........ f7141 H2"4JJ1 Cl-'n.4 A4'Nrri~llf 641-5671 ,,_...,Ill o.. ... ~ C:t1n-111,. Mf..1111 C09'1''""'· 1'1l,, Ort,.. Cot11 l'!IOl!illlnf Cfmptny, No -1larlft, l!W..1111'- •1wi.1 """'-or Hwrtl1-11 1'1«11111 rnty bl ~tO WllllOlll IMC:lei Pl•• '"It .... °' COlll'fl'lflll -· • ltOfllli ClllN .. I ... Mid II C..tt Mui, c.1 ...... 1.. ~l~tofl ..., "''"' n." _,,,..., ..., rntll u..u: "'°""'""' fl'llW.,,. .,...,,.., .... .., ... ~. ( • SAcRAME~1'0 (APJ The J.egislature's ruling commlll~ today ordered the cvacation of the JOJ.year-old West Wing of the St.ate Capitol by Sept. 15. The order applies to the Senate and Assembly chambers, state trc~sure's of· ri ce. the stttttnry of stste. lieutenant governor, lleveral offices ho us in g legislative . aides and the Capitol press corps. The action was taken by the Joint Rules Committee alter It received two rtports In the last year declaring the historic building an eartbqu1kl! hazard. The cvacallon will be for thrte to five years, said Assembl)'nUln John L. Burton CD-San Francisco), chalnnarror the Jolnt Rules Committee. tn the muntlme, the Legislature will decide either to build 1 new legisl~tive bulldin& or rebuild the old Capitol. Either project would COit 1t least $40 million. In the meantime, !he Joint Rule11 Com- mittee must find temporary quarters for the Senate and Asstmbly to hold their se&.~lons. Burton proposod coover1lon or two large committee hcarlng rooml' In the Capitol. But 00 said his staff also will look •t the possibility of convtr1ln1 the garllje under the earthquakMa.fe east wing of the Capllot The decision on lemporary chambers will be made tn about two 7s. I ..,.,,. ..• Ul'ITtltfNtt SOUGHT BY SWISS Newport's Roosevelt Front Pagel ROOSEVELT .. President Nixon's 1972 campaign. Roosevelt said Vesco u•as appointed to the IOS board in 1970, just before he, Roosevelt, resigned. Roosevelt, who moved to the Irvine Company's Spyglass Hill homes above Corona del Mar last year, also claimed the charges shouldn't be labeled fraud. "The charges are mismanagement or the company. Under Swiss law, they call it fraud," he said. "I know I haven't committed fraud. They say we should have known that the company was oot in as good a financial position as management led investors to belleve," Roosevelt said. He said he simply took the word of s .. veral top underwriting ctmpanies. "They thought the fund was doing a good job,'' Roosevelt said. Roosevelt, who is teaching a course on the Congress at UC rrvine', said he doesn't know what he'll do about the warrant until he talks with his lawyer. "I have no intention of going to Switzerland unless there is some reason to go," he said. Roosevelt and \1esco arc among six present and former IOS directors wanted by the Swiss government. 'I1le Swiss warrants were issued Feb. J to allow police to detain the six men for questioning ln case they return to Switze rland. Vesco Willi arrested in Geneva more than a year ago on a private criminal complaint. He was freed by a magistrate court when the complalnt \V as withdrawn. Vesco has been indicted in New York along with fonner Attorney General John Mitchell in COMection with the secret Nixon's re-election campaign. They were accused of seeking to block a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation of the handling of lOS funds. Also named in the lndictmeat were former Com- merce Secretary Maurice Stans and a New Jersey politician, Harry Sears. Official sources said the four others wanted in Geneva are present IOS com- pany president 1'1ilton Meissner, former president Ed Cowett, former directors C. Henrj Buhl Ill, and Ulrich Stri'ckler, Swiss rormer director of one of the IOS banks and believed among the company's Jar1est shareholders. 'lbe warrants were issued by Geneva e1amining magistrate Pierre Christian Weber, whose office refused to talk to the .,...., Weber had ordered the arrest of JOS f0W1der and former director Bernard Cornfeld while he visited Geneva to see 1.feissner last Monday. Meissner has since disappeared. Vesco was head of the rntemational Con trols Corp. when he took over JOS. Details of the takeover are still a mystery. - Surprise Move Hearing. Re9pens For ltich~rdson WASHINGTON iAP) -The Senale Judiciary Colnmitwe today postponed ac- ti on on Ellklt Richardson's nomination to be attorney general after questions were raised about some of hls sworn testimouy before the conunittee. The committee had been scheduled to vote on the nomination wit.bout hearing any further wltnesses today. But several had been scheduled to vote on the nominatioa without bearing any fu..'1her witnesses today. But several Democratic members of the committee reopened lbe questioning after Daniel Ellsberg, ooe of ttie defen· dants in the Pentagon Papers case, challeng~ some of RichardlJOll's earlier testimony. The committee spent more than two hours questioning Richardson before breaking for lunch. He was scheduled tC' un~ergo additional questioning during an afternoon session and it W8! uncertain v.·hether the committee would vote on the nomination today. Sen. Jo~ V. Tunney CD-Calif.) opened the questioning by aak.ing Richardson to describe once again the conversation he had on April 30 with John D. Ehrl.icbman former chief domestic adviser to Presi: dent Ni:J:on. Richardson said that Ehrlichman cal- led him to say that Krogh would like to see him and that he had what Ehrlichman thought was "worthwhile in- formation to give him." Krogh formerly worked in the White House and headed a group known as the plumbers, which was assigned to run down and plug leaks of natloaal security information . Richardson testified that Ebrlichman told him that Krogh had information about "an aspect of the overall situation I ought to know about." Richardson, who previously had testified about meeting with Krogh on ?\fay I said that Ehrlichman in his call did not give him any clue as to what Krogh \\'anted to discuss. As he had before, Richardson said that Krogh gave him a summary account of his role in the break-in at the psychiatrist's office and was concerned about what disclosure he should make and to whom and whether he could do so From Pagel BOMB ... tivity since they were held up," he said. Those businesses include the Stop and Go Market, 18913 Magnolia St., Fountain Valley: McDonald's hamburger stand, 20362 Beach Blvd ., Huntington Beach· Burger King, 2015 Harbor Blvd., Costa l\1esa; Pantry Liquor, 21572 Brookhurst St., Huntington Beach and Farrell's Ice Crearn, 16301 Beach Blvd ., Huntington Beach. The explosion al the Sitzler is the first time that violence has resulted from the telephone bandit's activities. ''We will be working very hard on this case to stop him before he tries it again," McKennon said. He noted that all the evideoce collected at the scene of the bombing has been turned over to the Treasury agent! for analysis in their lab in Washington , D.C. Police are working on a theory that the telephone bandit Is actually more than one person because of the speed with which the money Is picked up. They believe one person does the telephone end of the robbery directing the victim to put the money at the back of his business in a sack. They think a sec· ond person has the area staked out and picks up the money and can leave well ahead of the airival or police. wilhoot violating national security mat- ters that were involved. Jllchardson, whose appointment to be attorney general had just been anr ! nounced, said he told Krogh that be couldn't advise hin1 However. he said be agreed with Krogh's feeling that the public interest in diSclosure outweighed the national security aspe<i1s From Page 1 McCORD ... came through a telephone unlisted nwnber. with an -Before the Watergate bugging OC· curred, the Committee to Re-elect the President was deeply concerned about possible campaign violence. "Uppennost in everyone's minds, and certainly in my mind," Y.'erc the di sruplions al the 1968 Democratic National Convention and re- cent bombings at !he? Capitol and Pen· tag on. -He made ty,·o calls lo embassies ln Washington -identified in published reports as !hose of Chile anc! rsrael - and had conversations that he is sure were tapped. McCord, security chief at Nixon's re· election committee at the time of the June 17 break-in at Democratic national headquarters in the Watergate complex, wrote Chief U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica in March charging that perjury was committed at the trial and that there was political pressure for a coverup. Discussing the alleged effort to bla1ne the CIA, McCord sa id, "Among other things, this also smacked of the situation wh.ich Jlitler's Intelligence chiefs found themselves in, in the 1930s and 1940s, when they \\'ere put in lhe positioh of having to tell hin1 what they thought he wanted to hear about foreign military capabilities and intentions, instead or what they really believed." A spokesman for Hughes in Los Angeles declined comment on McCord's testimony . Under close questioning by Sen. Herman E. Talmadge (D-Ga.,) McCord acknowledged that he had learned of White House pressures directly only from Hunt; Hunt's attorney, William E. Bltt• man; and Gerald Alch, whom McCord laler fired as his lawyer. • Of his letter to Caulfield, ~fCCord testified: "The Jetter was couched in strong language because it seemed to me at the time that this was the only language that the White House understood." He said the letter stated : "Dear Jack : I am sorry to have to write you this letter. If Jlelms goes and the \Vatergate operation is laid at CIA's feet where it does not belong, every tree in the forest will rau. It will be a scorch~. ed desert. The whole matter is at thei precipice right now. Pass the message that if they want it to blow, they are on exactly the right course. I'm sorry that you will get hurt in the fallout." McCord said he told Alch, "even if it meant my freedom, I would not turn on the organization that had employed me for 19 years and wrongly deal such a damaging blow that it would take years for it to recover from it ." Ophun Scarce in U.S. CHlCAGO (UPI) -'l'he United State!> is running out or legitimately produced opium and shortages arc developing of morphine. codeine. and other analgesi~ derived from opium alkaloids, the American Medical News said Monday. PRUDENT BUYING ' Throughout our 78 years of carpet retailing , one fact becomes quite evident -that when money is less plentiful people buy better quality. ' This is contrary to popular belief, but makes good s~nse if y.ou think about it. When you have to concer~ yourself with value and performa~c9 you are likely to buy better quality. ..) , At Alden's in th e last four years, ou~r unit sale ha• been more expensive carpeting, reflecting this fact. Consequently, we have the largest selection of finer qualities you will see anywhere, all at competitive prices. The end result is customer satisfaction, pride and recommendation• which provide our overwhelming source of pew businen. IN Tl!I llAllOI All.A SINCI lfll ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646°4838 M-. • T1lon. t to S:JO: Fri. t to t: Sal. t :JO to I • • • I I I I / f I J Top Forties Singer Vaughn Monroe Succumbs at 62 From Wire Services STU ART, Fla. -Vaughn Monroe, whose smooth baritone voice made "Rac- ing With the Moon" and other songs million sellers, has died at 62. Monroe died ~fonday in a Stuart hospital. His widow said he became ill and undenvent stomach surgery two weeks ago after returning from an engagement in Louisville, Ky., durlng the Kentucky Derby. Born in Akron, Ohio, he was playing with bands in western Pennsylvania at the age of 15. He formed his own band in 1937, and for eight years the group "'as featured on the popular radio program, "Camel Caravan." The band stayed together witil 1953. He \\.'BS on e of the first major en- tertainers to do television commercials and for 15 years was known as "The Voice of RCA." Monroe's hits included "Ghost Riders in the Sky." "There I've Said It Again" and "Ballerina." "We made no concessions to rock n' roll," be said in a rec@t interview. "It is foreign to me. I would be out ol. place if I ever tried it. "The record industry today is such that they put records out like popcorn," he said. "The young performers make one record and they are hot. They have never been through the one-night stand business -playing in barns. freezing to death in unheated_ be.llrooms." A private funeral was scheduled with burial in Stuart, where f\lonroe had lived for the past seven years. Although his career included a few mo- tion pictures. Monroe himself would have passed up his longtime association with RCA victor as a popular vocal artists for greater recognition as a bandleader, ar- ranger, and trumpet player. 1 It was. in fact, while playing the trumpet that he won his first professional big band job while still in hlgh school in his native Akron, Ohio. He had won the Ohio State trumpet contest while a teenager, and as a high school student he managed to work as a featured vocalist as well as trumpet player with professional swlng bands of the early '30s. "Don't think I like the idea of making all those voice records," he once sa!d. "We have plenty of good jazzmen in the band and I'd like tb do some in· U .. I T.-,tioto 'RACE WITH MOON' OVER V1ughn Monroe in 1947 strumentals, but RCA Victor tells me to keep right on singing. '1 .And while his band caiapulted such stars as Bobby Nichols on trumpet and lead trombonist Ray Conniff to fame of their own, his bands always featU£ed vocals by the conductor himself. In the '40s he was compared to Rudy Vallee as a romantic band leader with many female fans and hot·selling records. His musicians often joined in the .singing, and along with his own solos, Monroe featured the Murphy Sisters and the Moonmaids, among other groups. When the Dorseys and other bands declined, Monroe managed to hang on untH the end of the decade, probably due largely to his accent on singing and hls own personal draw. In 1950, with the new medium or television growing, NBC gave Monroe hls own show. There were also ,some ftlm parts, mostly Westerns such as "Singiog Guns," the "Toughest Gun in Arizona," and "Meet the People." He is survived by his widow Marian and two marMed daughters, Candice Wagne r and Christina Smith, and two grandchildren. County Transit Directors Reaffirm Bus Purchase ~ Purchase of 15 buses to be deUvered in la{e July was reaffirmed by directors of the Orange County Transit District Mon- day. by a 3-2 vote. .The 15 buses were a supplementary order urged by Transit District General M:an.ager Gordon "Pete" Fielding last February when he was informed that the Flexible Company of Ohio could provide the additional allotment. Opposing the purchase Monday, as they did in February, were directors Derek McWhinney of Westminster and Robert Battin of Santa Ana. They argued that the delay from the original deli\lery date in late June to late July cancelled out the need for the buses fot beach service as originally planned. The 15 new buses will oost the district $704,198. Hall of the swn will be taken rrqm the transit dlstrtct's $681,863 cash r~rve carried over from the 19'71·72 year and the other hall from funds received from sales taxes on guoUue. )latt!n alBO objected to using mooey ·!J!ilitary Bases . Jn Soutlila1~d .Cu.t Ga soline Supplies JllVERSIDE (UPII -The energy crisis hns reached 15 Southern C81Uornia military bases whl~ ha<e boen fon:ed to cut beck gas supplies at their post ex- change stations for servicemen and their f$lli... -'A spok'esrmlii at March AJr Foree Ba,. hi!'• sakl Monday that station• at March had pumped about 475,000galloos of gas mOnthly, but are now limited to 250,000 gallons. Ue safd the cutbacks have similarly af- fected 14 other bases. "With the current energy crisis, the on companies are unable to keep pace with 1ht rise in demand for ga90line and are bcln~ forced to hold sales et ap- prox1mRtely last year's level," said Lt. f'.ol. WllliRm S. llaU , chief of services. J-1111\ said the result has boon that gas prices at the st.aUorui have lnct'flalcd 2 centl a gallon, which ts still 2 to 3 cenUI a gallon less than what the public normally pays, and that working hours have been CUL • from the cash reserve funds rather thiin waiting until federal grant moneys are available for bus purchases. The district expects to take delivery on 63 other new buses beginning in February 1974. J. J. Dudte, western sales manager for Flexible, said lhe delay from June to Ju- ly on delivery of the IS extra buses was because of a large order the company received from another city. He added that the buses were now being manufactured and assured the district directors that they "'Ould be delivered in late July. Arguing for the reaffirmation of the 15- bus order, District Board Cbainnan Ralph Clark asked Oudte when delivery could be made il the board cancelled the February order now and placed It again later. Dud te said that move would delay delivery until December at the earliest. Clark, who owns a gasoline statk>n, pointed lo the cumot shortage In gas supplies and said the need for more buses was lmperaUve to provide Ille public with 1001e means of tr~lon as tht!"fuel shortage becomea more ac;u.te. He said he wOUld be happy If the district qould get an addJtlonal 300 buses rlght now "so we could really do the job as it is needed." Corm.ty Ta~an Sent to Prison On Fraud Charge Ji!arvln T. $tlnson, a tax l>r<P8r<r with Offices in Santa Ana and Anaheim, baa been sentenced to four months 1n prtaon and~on probalkln for 28 months for u 1n the prtp.arltion of a false tax rettlfll r • client end for falling to rue hls own lncome tax return for 1988. ~ Announcement of Stlnson's sentencing ""'' made by U.S. AUorney William D. Keller of Los Angeles. Keller said Stinson, 43, operated a tu preparation business known as Orange county Tai Service. The charge& upon which he was con· victed _Involve the preparation of a tax return which contained numerous false and oventated. deductlolu, the attorney SB id. t Liv_ing Cost.s Up For Month WASlflNGTON (AP ) -The COst of Living, eased slightly in April but the in- crease still was extra-ordinarily high, the government reported today. Sharp ad- vances were recorded in the cost of food, clothing, used cars and gasoline. The Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics said consumer prices rose seven-tenths of one percent last month, following a nine-tenths-or-0n.e-per· cent jump in March. April's jump match- ed February's increase. March's jump was a 22-year record . The bureau said food brought in grocery stores rose 1.6 percent , less than in each of the preceding three months but considerably higher than usual for April. Fruits and vegetables were higher than normal and beef prices continued to climb, but the government said the in- crease was much smaUer than in recent months. Prices on a broad range of consumer goods other than food moved up sharply in April, reflecting recent wholesale pMce increases since the Nixoa Administration dropped price controls in January: The jump in overall conswner prices pushed the government's retail price in· dex up at a seasonally adjus ted annual rate ol 9.2 percent over the past ~hree months. The administration has set a goal or reducing inflation to 2.5 percent by the end of the year. The April consumer price index for all items showed a climb of 0.9 Index points from A1arch, up from 129.8 to 130.7. The index figure, based on 1967 prices, means it took $13.IY7 in April to pay for the same "market baset" of typical family goods and services that cost $10.00 six yea rs ago. In a separate report the bureau said average weekly wages in April rose four- tenths of a percent, to $141.72. The rise resulted from increases of 0.5 percent each In the average work week and In average hourly earnings which were partially offset by a seasonally adjusted 6/loth of a percent increase in consum- er Jxices., The administration bas said it expects food prJces to begin tapering off later this year and has resisted any further control s. ... ------·~ .. ------ Tltttd11. Ml')' 22, 1973 Liza Switehes In Love Witli Peter Sellers LONDON (AP) -Li>a Minndli sald to- day that her engagement to Desi Arn:az Jr .. who is six years younger than she lS, is over and she's In love wlth comedian Peter Sellers, who's !() years her senlor. Laughing and giggllng, the !>le Judy Garland's daughter said her affair wllh Lucille Ball's son had ended slnce shear- rived in London 12 days ago and met Sellers, a veteran of three marriages. ult's all very simple," said the Oscar· winning American singer and actress. "My engagement -our relationship - had bee.a deteriorating for some Ume - pleasanUy, luckily. "We are no longer engaged. It's all called off. "I fell in love with this man and J am pleased to say he fell ln love with me. I am really terrifically happy." Liza is 27, Sellers is 47 and Desi Jr. is 21. Young Amaz told a reporter in Hollywood before Liza made her an- nouncement: "Something has gone v.TOOg, that's for sure. It all turned sour since Liza went to England." Liza, dressed in a black pants suit, was joyful and bubbly at her news C<Jn· ference, called after a night on the town with Sellers. ' She and Sellers had been seen together frequently since the Oscar-winning star of the movie "Cabaret" came to London. Tbe couple dined late together at a fashlonable West End o[ London restaurant Monday night, and even performed an impromptu duet for customers. , Pw:sucd by newsmen ~to the small hours of today, neittier Llza nor Sellers would confirm talk of romance. At the news conference sQc explained : "[ had certain obligations yesterday. I had to make a few phone calls to friends in the United Slates. I had to clear the boards." Friends of Sellers and Liza had said earlier the couple had known each other for a long time. But Liza insisted their friendship only began when she came to London less than two weeks ago, "although I have always been an admirer of his marvelous talent." Liza laughed aside questions about a marriage ·date. Sellers is at present separated from his third wife. The actress said she would be leaving London shortly to give coocerts Jn aucago. ''And then of couneJ shall return ," she added. "I suppose we shall live in London now." ..... 11110 SHE'LL TAKE SELLERS Actr•ss Lix• Minn•lll Council Hears Nude Ban Plan For Santa Ana Santa Ana city councilmen gave first reading to an ordinance banning nude and toples s dancing ~londay night but falled to get enough votes to make the law effective immediately . 1'~ive \·otes were required to make the ordinance eUeetive at once on an emergency basis. The motion to adopt passed by a 4-2 margin. The new law is patterned alter an Oranse County «dinance recently upheld by the state Supreme CoUrt. It ba ns nude or topless dancing in bars or restaurants. Mayor Jerry Patterson, an attorney, led the fight against ma.king the law ef- fective at once. He was joined by Cbun- cil man James Ward. Councilman Harry Yamamoto urged the emergency statu.. for the rlew law. Most of the city's nude ban are located in his district on the western side of town. H DAILY PILOT 3 .1 New Yorker 111 Co1111 Over Smut By TOJ\I BARLEY o·t I~• D•lt1 l'IMI Slit! A New Yorker identified in <in Or'ii.nge O'>unty courtroom Monday as a ~1alla leader in volveQ in the pornography trade was ordered to face trlal July 11 on multiple obscenity and c ons pirac y counts. Ettore Zappi, 68, one of nine persons indicted following the seizure last month of $2 million worth of allegedly pornographic materials In a Los .i\.Jamitos warehouse surrendered in Or3nge County Superior Court and ap-- parently took local lawmen by surprise. Zappi :ind his son, Tony, 48. are linked to the firm of Suki Incorporated of Rescda. also kno"·n as Pojo and R & ~1 Productions and the sale by those com- panies of obscene materials which in· elude 49 different magazines. It was bel!eved Monday before th e elder Zappi showed up witb his lawyer that both men would remain in New York and figh t extradition proceedings. : It was learned after Ettore Zappl 1 pleaded innocent to all charges: that his son will remain in New York and oppO~' extradition. Deputy District Attorney Oretta Sears linked Zapp! "to a very high place 1n the f\.1afia organization" af~er repeatedly pleading with Judge Judge for "a realistic ball for a man who constantly moves around from New York to Florida and ~ck to New York." But Zappl successfully pleaded fo r a reduction of his ball from $100,000 lo $20,000. Pretrial moUons were scheduled by Judge James F. Judge for June 8, 15 and 29. · Pretrial and trial dates have been set or are being set for eight other persons linked to the alleged pornography chain being investigated in C3Ufomia and New York. The 49 obscenity counts contained tn the Gnnd Jury lndictment'1nvolve nearly 4,000 magazines under 49 dif!erent labels, inyeatJ~ said. .. They-Safd that records conflscated at the warehouse showed lhe dell\lery of obscene materials to 270 locations throughout the Unlttd States. DEMONSTRATOR SALE! .. NOW on at Johnson & ·Son 1973's at BIG DISCOUNTS! LINCOLNS, M~RQUIS, MO~TEGOS, COUGARS, COMETS, CAPRIS, • • . AND • • • STATION WAGONS Chance of the year on our first sale of .the year~ You Know When Johnson & Son l1as a sale, it's a good one! Hin·1·y o~er to make ~ yom· choice 011 a Big Savings! HURD¥, Home Of ,,,e New Car • , • "Golden TOMcll-" nearly every mo.del i11 the Lincoln-MercUfY line at . ~ THOUGH, THEY WON'T LAST . LONG! "Orll?IPt Cou11tv'1 Totnify of Flnt Car111 ohnson&son Nome Of The: New Car ••• •'Golde " ToNc h'' 2626 COSTA MESA'S HARBOR BLVD OF CARS e S40-.!630 I • • " ... . .. ·• , ... .. • 4. .. ..._ • '-'loo • 1 India Clashes Bloody Armed Police, Troops in Pitched Battle It's Watergate . Time on Telly OFF AND RUNNING DEPT. -The Watergate Show went back on the teleYillon airways again today to race an uncertain Neilsen Rating. The star so far, John McCord, was back in the witness chair early, droning away ln readlnj from bb memos . For those of us here along the coastline, McCord Is really just a warmup. We awaJt the appearance of Mr. Herbert Kalmbach, the noted Newport Beach attorney who was formerly Mr. Nlxon's ooun,,el and anertedly keeper of R e p u b 1 i c a n puneJtrings. UPI T ....... NEW DEUII (111'1) -Unit. • of the Prorindal Armed ConstabulalY (PAC) In Prime MlolateT Indira Gllndltl's home state of Uttar Pradesh mutlbled tOday and foagJll pllcbed battles wilh army troopo In two dUes. Pll'IEEN PERSONS me killed and 3S othm ...,.. """'1ded in a two-hour gun bollle bet-the men ol the PAC and the·tzoopo at the rtate'a lndustrlal ci· ty ol Jtaapur, 300 milts -o1 here, -Sui>erin-v. 'K. Slnoh said. Tho ollidal said the .......iled' have bem lmpitalized but dedlned to disclose their Identity. The other battle oocumd at a PAC camping ground, 15 mites from the Hindu holy dty of Be!leres,wbere the constables batUed wilh · t)>e troops foe an boor and Soviet Union Travel Nixed 'Temporarily' So far, Kalmbach has proved elusive lo those members of the press and television corps who would like to whisper in his ear about certain GOP financial matters and have him whisper a few things bact. TWO OF FIVE VICTIMS OF A SHOOTOUT LIE DEAD ON STREET Gunman Killed Four Civilians and South Memphis Lawman MOSCOW (UPI) -Western diplomats said Monday that authorities have restricted all individual travel in the Soviet Union for a number of resident foreigners. Anyway, it Is anticipated that Kalmbach will appear on the Watergate Show and should considerably boost the viewer ratinp along the Orange Coast - and elsewhere too. Memphis Ex-convict Goes . The restrictions first became apparent last Friday when American, British, Canadian and West Gennan diplomats were told that applications for internal travel were being rejected for the mo- IT IS UNCERTAIN at this writing what the Watergate Show Is going to do to daytime television-watching habits. Berserk; Kills 5 Persons ( IN SHORT •.• ) Certain persons who have brieOy flick· ed on daytime television and shuddered at that vast wasteland of dramatic 3Creams and toilet bowl cleaning com- merclals would suggest that daylight teevee bas no place to go but up. 111US WATERGATE may prove a ,boon to tube-watching during those hours • when the sun is up. It may set a whole new / trend. The 1V people will have enough videotape or the thing to rerun hours and houra or it. Then too, if tJle Watergate Show proves really popular, the TV people might start 1e1evlsing other Senate and Congrets.lonal hearings. Can'i you just hear the an- nouncer now, a1 the cameras fade away from another three-hour Senate hearing? "Well, that's it for today folks. Be sure to tune in tomorrow for the next exciting :session. Will Senator Blowhard get over bis sniffles and cold and be able to talk again? WU! the lower San Joaquin Valley get its $500,000 for aUaUa irrigation? ''AND WHAT ABOUT that cute litUe secretary who wa.s sitting in tbe back row of the hearing? Will she be playing kneesies with Senator Grunt's handsome aide again? Tune in tomorrow, folks ... " WeU, all this may come to pass. Yet it has developed during the marathon air- ings of the Watergate Show that certain parties out there in teeveeland have call- ed the stations and even the newspapers to file loud and fiery protests. CLEARLY, THE.SE viewers do not c.are for the Watergate Show. They miss all that regular daytime drama. Shows like "When the World Spins on Your Sink" or "Slinking Around in the • Shadows" or "John's Other John." Whatever, It is clear that the regular dai- ly airings have some following and these folks resent senatorial Intrusions into their video habits. Which brings us, I guess, to one Gerald 1 Granville Bishop, a resident or Redding 1 in our stale, who was arrested the other night after watching a televised baseball 1 contest between !he San Francisco Giants and the Astros of Houston. The ~ Giants lost. I WHEREUPON MR. B~hop aU.gedly \ pulled out his .3().caliber carbine and I blasted the televlsioo screen with a \ fusUlade of gunfire. I This Of course gives you o~e way to ' V4!:nt your frustrations if, in the end, the 'i Watergate Show doesn't come oul the way .you'd like. •, Just pull out a dustmop and beat the .. C boob tube to death. ' MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -"I guess he just cracked," said William Edward Fanner Jr. ''He knew my father -knew him well. We had been children together." Fanner's father was one of four persons fatally wounded Monday by a gunman who sprayed rifle bullets without warning along a quiet Memphis street. The man also killed a police officer before he was forced from a house by tear gas and shot to death. AV'mORl11ES SAID the gunman, identified as David Sanden, 30, was sauntering down the street with a powerful rifle dangling In his hand when . he. suddenl7 wlllrled and ~ to deo.lli four neightiorhood residents. FaUr other people, including a federal parole officer, were wounded as f.b# gunman fired at passing autos. Witnesses told police the firs t to die W&S an elderly junkman, John Aldridge, who was collecting pop bottles and tos- sing them Into his two-wheel cart. folice said Sanders went a few paces past Aldridge, turned and fired a shot through the junkman's head. He then spun toward a liquor store and began picking off persons aroWld the door. THE VICl'ThtS were William Farmer, 73, a retired railroad man, Jessie Dooley, and Henrietta Watson, known as "Cai'ft!y Girl" because she worked in an adjoining candy store. "One of the ladies from down near the corner called me and told me somebody had gone crazy and just started shooting folks and that my husband was one of them," said Lendora Farmer, 60. Her 28- year-0ld son, William, said he and Sanders had been classmates together. Myrtle Mitchell, operator of the liquor store, said Mrs . Watson was hit once and screamed, "Oh, My Lord, have mercy," as she toppled to the sidewalk. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Otllvtry of \ht Cally Piiot is guaranlt!d ""•""••·l"•lf•Y• I! .,... H "'' ~•¥• 'eur .,.", ..., S:Jif "·"'" c•ll IM yevr C'tl''/ ••II .,. "'-9111 11 .,..., C:•lt1 ,,.. Ni1n wn!lt ,, ........ "' ......... ,, llMll ..,...,, ti ,.. • ,,., ,_,¥. W"Wr ,_., •'I f l ,M, SlhH'.l '/o er I 1 ..... SYndt'f, c.1n 111• 1 ,..., win M llrwlh• rt ,.._ C11t1 ••• ,,..., wntn lt '·"'· T !l!p~' -...d- _, 0••"9t ,.,,,.,, ...... • " .. " "'1-<lnT Jtt•ltow11t Mv~!lfttlM l t tcll .... W•1l'"ln11tr .. , ,. "" J.4 .. Ult S•11 Ci.-tllt, c1,htr1111 l t•cll, l•11 J••n c1,,i11r-, OtM l"ttltl, , ...... L ......... LlfVN NltlH'I •..• •n ·•nt PRICE SAID witnesses watched as Mrs. Watson lifted herself up and the gunman hit her with four more shots from his lever-action .30-.30 weapon. Police Chief Bill Price said officers ar- rived at the scene short.ly before 1 p.m. PDT and were told by witnesses that the gwunan had fled into a house down the st reel ·As one of the officers, Patrolman David Wayne Clark, 311 went to the rear of the house the gunman jmnped from behidnd the garage and fired a sOOt that struck the patrolman in the head . He then rae<d inlo another house. WI'l1I REINFOllCEMENTS on Ille scene, Price directed tbat tear gas be fired Into the bouB!O and as Sanders ap- peared at the front door and brandished his rifle as if to ~~-~ was shot to death by a volley of. sh• and pistol fire. Police said three persons -identified only as Sarah wauace, Bobby Lott and Willie Record -were Injured either by gunfire or shattered glass as Sanders fired on passing cars. None was believed seriously hurt. "" James A. Crawford, the ledenil parole officer, was struck by a bullet while driv- ing his car. He was listed in satisfactory condition in a hospital Mooday night. Price said Sanders had seven arrests on his record, including charges of rape, carrying a pistol, as.sault and battery mad disorderly cooduct and drunkenness. Price said records showed that Sanden served a three-year prism tenn m a 111&3 conviction of rape against a minor. School Of ficiaJs To Raid Campus YELLOW SPRINGS, Ohio (UPI) - Antioch College officials say they will enter barricaded buildings today and re- -0pen the school which has been closed by striking students for four weeks. Fire department officials reported three fires early today at buildings on th@ fringe of the Antioch campus. Fires broke out in two hooses used by the music department aod an experimental college building known as t b e "University Without Walls." Marge Freed. Antioch publlc In· fonnation diroctor, said damage was "relatively m.Wor." A fire department spokesman said the fires at the two rooslc buildings were . definitely 'af'SOn and that lhe third blaze \vas "suspicious." The state ti re marshal's office was called to in- vestigate. ment, lhe di pomats sald. The ban also applied to Western cor- respondents, but it was not known if it affected resident businessmen o r tourists. e Aussie Protest THE HAGUE (UPI) -Australia, claiming all its inhabitants including un- born babies have radioactive particlues in their bodies, Monday asked the lnternaUooal Court of Justice to stop France temporarily from atmoepberic nuclear tests in the South Pacific. The Australian attorney general, Sen. Lionel Murphy, made the plea for an in- terim lnjunctlon pending a final juclg· ment of the court when the world court opened oral hearings on $eparate cases filed by the AU8tralian and New Zealand governments. e LIU Auction STONEWALL, Tex. (AP) -Mrs. Lyn· don B. Johnson has thrown what may have been one of the last of the big LBJ Ranch parties to sell off her busband'.s prize herd of Hereford cattle. A total of 213 cattle were sold during the Cl! hour auctioo on Monday, bringing in $H0,5tl0. The highest price paid for a single head WU $2.650 for a bull, e Red Hero Dead MOSroW (AP) -A hero's ftmeral and burial beside the Kremlin Wall are planned for Marshal Ivan S. Konev , whose forces linked up with the Americana on the Elbe in 1945, helped take Berlin and captured Prague. The 75-year-0ld veteran of the two world Wlll'!I died Monday after a loog Ill· ness, Tass reported. The Soviet news agency saJd Marshal Ivan I. Yakubovsky, the commander of Warsaw Pact forces, is heading the commission arranging the funeral. Dollar Recover v ,/ Unlikely While Bugging in News LONDON (UP!) -Demand for gold eased In Europe today and the dollar ~ ground on most martets althoogh it dropped to a oew low In Pruis. Bankers said no marted recovery for the dollar is likely tmtll the Watergate affair Is cleared up. ~ Kansas Storms Kill Three ( . 1'THE LACK OF confidence in the ad- minl.stration or the world's most im~ portant nation has given rise to massive uncertainty in the markets which i'S going to penist until Watergate is cleared up," said a spokesmap for Samuel Montagu and Co., Ud., which operates the London gold market with fout other merchant bankll. ~'-Infant Dies as Trailer Overtun~; 2 Women Drown In London gold d>anged bands at a day's Jlflllk of $1ll.50. down 50 cent. from Moodsy's all-time price fmng high of $112. Bullion brokers linked the slacken· Ing demand f..-gold to the White House denial tllat Henry A. Ktss!nger will resign. JI I ll .n .. • e.r,·· •• ·" I ... ·" ·~·· .n t 1·~ .. ::.r • ~ .., t ·" I Oldalo"141 01)' ... ... ~ I PMetll• " " PIM1bv...::r.h " ~ Porn1 , Ort. " " ll:khmond " .. SK••"-lo ~ " St. Louis " " " S.lt Uk1 n u !'" ~'-~ " '" rlntlai;o .. 11n11 ., .. T1m111 It " W11hl119loll .. V.S.Summa~ Hl11h wl::;1•· hell 11'1d "°""' ti r1ln bttftr9d w d• ''"' ol Cll'llr.~ ll'ld l•Hlttll 1(111Hf aarfV IOdt'f. hf'M ptl'ICINI O'lld Ill !ht 1torm .. ,,,. 511!1 11~ , .. ,. ':1= two ot•MJl'tl O'• ~ ,.~ ~'·"-"''' ol • ~~~ ,..ltd M ttl9 of two ...,_ tt•lll ...... Ill , c.w wr,: It ~Id frWn hm rMtl:, It llld '-I • .,.. b'f Wlt.f rw.lno ~ "l ~""''"· Thi ¥le· II~ _.. OY , 'f''~· .fO, tilt Cl.':· ~15"' ......... ti.1~ '/,.,. ion .,...=1(1"'~'" ~~, ..... kll 1J:l ... tM J l1111r • • drtrlCMd wttft 1lmott f ll'ldlll of rein MMd1y t11Dftt and llalllofloodlnt .,.." '°"ec.11. E:ll'llllOtl,, IC•"·• w•• Mll<H with """" 2 lnCtl9t ef f.tlfl ..... GI"~ "tr~.9".c.;' =IMd 111 "'"' THE DOILAR gained gr<Mmd during !:i1:= ~~·=:. ~~' °""" •re•• the day in London, reaching 2.5635 Coufal 'R'e•ther dollan against the pound by mldaf. Maatl., _., fod.tY, llttit "'™* ternocn agabm Monday's closing rate winch nlOf!t and '"°"""' llaul'I bf-. and aJJ..ttme IO'W of. 2.5180 dollars. 1n ~"' _, Ill llDl'lllwltl 10 to ll f the doll ed knob 1n •"""-toMy •l'ld w_,._. Frank urt ar mov up to 2.7485 euiv. Hlllll todtY· mlil '°"· marks at one point from Monday's close co.11.i ~ r•noe '""" &s f ·-•-to 41, lnl#ld ~ Nft01 fl"Dt!I 0 2.7"fW tnarM, g to''· W•ttf """-"""' "· "CondlUons in the foreign exchange Sun, Moon. Tiiie• " market are no longer as hectic as they Tu•toAY have been in recent days " a Frankfurt 5eeG'ld Mfll ... " ..... 12i.,t-A .u d I id ' a...._ ........ •14 "'""' 2 .• ca er sa . wiroNnDAT "With the Watergate affalr damaging F1m "'"' ......... •1a ,.,.,, 1.J tho doll .1---6 ..r .. n., E•-" cur "'"' '°""'" ............ •~JS • m. -O.• ar lllJUWI• .-...,,, -..,.......... • l«ond kM • . . •:a. '''"' 2.t rencies will tttll move forward against """ ·-l i'7 •. ,.,, .... J~U "'"" "--dolla " ' --~ d I .d N""1ll Rllll n :lS 1.m. lttt lt;IS •• m. luc r, 8 u.,.1111\JUU ea er 981 , retreated alter airlpne troop rein· forcemeots anived. SEVERAL "UNITS ol the PAC In lndla'a molt popu1oua state mutinied ear· ly this ll10ming as h'oopt •wooped down on aewiral dUes and towns to seize the police armories. Officiab in the state capital cf Lucknow said the government ordered army trocp to seize the armories and disarm the coostables aila' a late night •J'*iency c:ablnet meeting Mooday . 'Ibey said government action came in the wake of reports that .several units of the PAC were planning militant adioo. Troops with lb<ed bayooets moved Into the poJjce barracks in Mrs. Gandhi's home state ol Allababad, disarmed the pollce sentries &ll!H:onstables, and took positions at important stieet',junctlons. . . IN KANPUR, the stote't ftt<ISI populous city, troop5 mounted guard . on the government-owned radio station, the main PoSlS and Telegraphs of~i~, the Relerve Bank of Jndia, the nations ex· chequer and the power house, the of- ficials isaid. They said several constables after a two-hour gun batUe with tbe troops fled with their arms. Severa) others stoned the troops from the city's narrow, win- ding alleys. 1be troops' takeover of police arms and ammunition depots in several other cities and towns was rompleted without resistance, the officials said. THEY CLAIMED the mutiny bad been quelled but admitted the situation in some towns was tense. Close 'to Peace, Brezh n ev States BONN, West Gepnany (AP) -As· serting that the world is closer to durable peace than ever before, Leonid Brezhnev flew home to Moscow tod8y to begin preparing for his visit to President Ni.%on next month, ' "Auf wiedersehen," the Soviet Com- munist party ·chief told West German Chancellor Willy Brandt as he boarded his silver·blu,e Aeroflot jet in spring sunshine that bathed the Bonn-COiogne airport. THE DEPARTURE -0f the Soviet Com- n1unlst party chief on the 'nrst an- niversary or Nixon's trip to Moscow end· ed the first visi t to West Geflllany by a top Soviet leader. During bis five days in Bonn, he said Brandt laid the basis for an expansion of trade, technical and scientific cooperation and cultural ex· changes between their two countries. Brezhnev said in a television address Monday night that improved U.S.-Soviet relations and other steps have brought peace closer. Vowing to bring the Soviet Union out of the Cold War and into ever closer cooperation with the West, the 66- year-old party chief said: "The prospects for humanity are beqoming increasingly more hopeful. The war in Vletnam is over. Soviet-American relations continue to develop favorably. "BY AND LARGE, one can say that our planet today has come closer than ever before to durable peace." The highlight -0f Brezhnev's visit was his signi ng Saturday with Brandt of a 10- year eConomic cooperation pact pro- viding a framework for West Gennan in· vestment to help boost the lagging "Soviet econ-0my. In a joint declaration M on d a y , Brezhnev aQd Brandt gave their blessing to proposed deals including German help in building a Soviet steel mill, expanding Soviet production of chemicals, machine tools, motors and raw materials, and other exchanges of West German technology for Soviet raw materials. Similar swaps of technology for raw materials are expected to be a main topic for Brezhnev's talks with Nixon. The Soviet and West German leaders, who clearly got along well, also paved the way for far-reaching cooperation in the fields of culture, tourism, science, transport, medicine and environmental protection. And they agreed to keep up close political contacts in the future. BRAND'I' lN A toast at a banquet Brotherly Kiss Brezhnev gave Monday night said their new goal was "productive coexistence," apparently a step forward from "peace- ful coexistence." On the minus side, they failed to resolve their differences over Bonn's at- tempt to tighten its'ties with West Berlin and over the Kremlin's desire to make the coming 34-tlatioo European Security Conference include a swnrnit session -0f the nations' top leaders. Skylab Expens Battle Radical Heating Clianges CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -Flight directors struggled 1o control Skylab's too OOt and too cold temperatures-in orbit today while gromd crewmen prepared to start the countdown for the launch of three astronauts Cll an emergency repair mission. The two-and-a-hall-day c o u n t d o w n begins at 5:00 p.m. PDT, aiming toward a blastoff at 6 a.m. Friday. Project of- ficials saJd they were confident they coold complete the Skylab n!p8lr tools and techniques in time to meet the scbedule. 11IE SPACE repairmen -Charles "Pete" Conrad, Joseph P. Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz were tn Huntsville, Ala, to- day for their final underwater rehearsal of spacewalk procedures they might have to use to shade Skylab. The astrooall1S fly to the launch site tonight. The temperature problem aboard the Skylab presented flight controllers in Houston with a dilemma . The gas in the Jiving quarters was an almost unbearable 121 degrees this morning while the temperature in the ship's shaded airlock module was 34 .2 degrees -dangerow:ly close to the freezing mark. THE FUGIIT directors fought to koep temperatures aboard tbe 271 -mile-hhdl space station under cm.trot by coostantly adjusting its angle to the sun. A mission control spokesman reported that the temperatures ' 'appea r manageabJe" by trial and error methods. Flight Director Milton Wmdler called it "me of the great juggling acts that's been around." UPI Tll ....... Theresa Rose Decorah is grooted by her brother, AUerd, 7, at Mitch· ell Field In Milwaukee. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Decorah flew home alter a doctor In Tokyo said the girl was too weak to undergo a dell· cale life saving opetation to COITI!Cl defective liver bile ducta. The family hoped Ille surgery could be done If Therese rngained her strength. ' ' l I I I 1 l --. ~ -·-•• • Today's Final N.Y. Stooks \ , ' VOL 66, NO. 142, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALli:oR!'IA TUESDAY, MAY 22, 1q73 N TEN CENTS • Newport Skeptical ·of ,. County Growth Policy Newport Beac:lf councilmen and plan-.~ ning com.missioners Monday formed a joint committee tO study and report on the proposed Orange County growth pol- icy. The ~ion to make an in-depth analy- sis came after a three-hour public hear- ing on the\policy which bl'OIJ8ht out an onslaught of criticism. Developers and businessmen were sharply critical and Councilman Carl Kymla voiced what he called "major concerns" about the plan. Kymla sald be didn't like what, he in- terpreted SJ a step toward ~k>nalized govenun.nt: A spokesman for the Orange Coast League of Womeo Voten said the LWV feels growth controls are needed, and so is the policy. But she said the LWV wants more time to study the proposed plan. She suggested some compromises maf be in order. K)'mla also said he feared presump- • lions by the policy that the oourts will cootlnUe to e~ · iqdivldual pniper1y r1gbta. Planning CommisliMer Joseph &se- ner said be thinks that.as Orange County grows more and more, more :controls are inevitable. \ "Inherent In an increase "In density is a fundamental increase ln confiJcts and therefore "!' lnheJ:ent buildup of property regu lations," Rosener saltl. "It's iU!t one of those things, if you are for increased density, you are for inc~ased regulation over private prop- erty," he said. County planning official Al BeU, who outlined the policy to councilmen, agreed that the courts will be paying more and more attention to the responsibilities, as well as the rights of property owners. Kymla said he is concerned about a balance between growth controls, home rule and property rights. "In this report and '"ecommendatlon. _x-a1 e ' Schmitz Back In GOP Ranks Former CC1ngressman John Schmitz has rejoined the Republican party. The one term representative who was deff.ated in the Republican· primary last June by then Orange County assessor Andrew J . Hinshaw, was later a presidential candidate for the Am er i ca n Independent Party. Schmitz. 42, said Monday he had returned lo the GOP to give it "moral, principled leadership" dur- ing the present crisis. · He said Watergate had left a leadership vacuum · in t h e Republican party which he bopes to fill. 1 Director Blasts Health Panel's Hospital Denial By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 1t111 oa11Y r 1i.t '''" Two classes of health care, one !or the rich, another for the poor, are expected to result from Monday's denial of a 162- bed hospital proposed by Western World Medical Foundation, director Walte r BurToughs charged today. Burroughs, a Costa ~iesa businessman and vice president of the non-profit foun- dation which hopes to build a community hospital in Irvine. criticized the unanimous action by the seven-member State Health Planning Council. The action, Burroughs contend s , ••means only that our hOspital will not be reimbursed for ~1edi-Cal patients. It doesn't stop construction of our hospital. "We have every intention of proceeding with the hospital," he added. "Western World Medical Foundation wanted the poor people of Orange Coun- ty, blacks and Chicanos, to get the same high standard of care that will be available to the wealthy or Newport Beach and of Irvine." The Western World proposal to build a "seed" hospital of 162 beds on land near UC Irvine was originally turned down on Sept. 21, 1972 by the Oran~e County Heallli PlaMlng Council. Later the Bay Area Health Planning C.ouncil -the automatic appeals panel for this county's hospital reviews - overturned the Orange County decision and gave Western World approval for lhe · hospital. " When more than 50 percent of the 63 members of the county body appealed the Bay Are::i panel's decision, the mat- ter came before the state council for final appeal. That body ruled Monday against Western World, The decision has no relationship to or bearing on the UCl-California College of ·Med.ictne teaching hospital. Health planning coUncll approval for a 350-bed teaching hospital has been given. Last week a legislative committee urged (See DECISION, Page 2) Clothier -Asking . Same Question A Balboa Boulevard clothier whole shOp named Who Are Those Guys'? was looted of more than $1,000 in a burglary dtscovered Mondity, today ls wonderlng Just who they were. Whoever it wns disconnected the burglar alarm in the shop at 1101 W. Balboa Blvd.,. and cleaned out c•sh .and checks taken during weekend business. Owner Ken Klu!I told Newport .Beach police Monday night after discovering the money missing thit ft.000 cash was In- cluded I~ Ille take. Roosevelt 'Innocent'· ' Of Charges By L. PETER KRIEG Ot ltl• O.llr l'llot Stiff Former congressman James Roosevelt, now a Newport Beach resi- dent, is wanted by the Swiss government on fraud charges involving an alleged $224 millk>n swindle afto involving New York financier Robert L. Vesco. Roosevelt told the Daily Pilot tcday he has Do iirtenUon of responding to the war- rant and says he doesn't. tnow what he'll do until he conlm with his Swiss lawyer, Daniel Guggenheim. , Roosevelt proclaimed his innocence, admitting on1y he may have been vic- timized by placing bis trus t in the management of the Investors Overseas Fund (IOS), of whieh he served .as a director from 1967-1971. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission also char~ Roosevelt with looting the $224 million from the Fund of Funds and other IOS glamor funds-. Roosevelt, however, said he has en- tered a consent decree on those charges, agreeing l-0 abandon all dealings with the fund. "I've had nothing to do with it since 1971," Roosevelt said. Vesco, who is reportedly in Costa Rica, is also wanted in the United Stales in connection with a secret contribution to President Nixon's 1972 campaign. Roosevelt said Vesco was appointed to the IOS board in 1970, just before he. Roosevelt. resigned . Roosevelt, who moved to the Irvine Company's Spyglass Hill homes above Corona del Mar lasl year, also claimed the charges shouldn't be labeled fraud . "The charges are mismanagement of !he company. Under Swiss law, they call it fraud ," he said. "I know I haven't committed fraud. They say we sbould have known that the company was not in as good a financial position as management led investors to believe," Roosevelt said. He said be simply took the word or &.:veraJ top underwriting ccmpanie!. "They thought the fund was doing a good job,'' Roosevelt said. Roosevelt, who Is teacplng a course on the Congress at UC Irvine, said he doesn't · know wbal he'll do about the (See ROOSEVELT, Pilge ZI Blast Hits Huntington Restaurant By JOANNE REYNOLDS 01 tlM M IY l'llot Sl1fl A bomb exploded Monday night in a Huntington Bea~h restaurant \Vas prob- ably detonated by the telephone bandit who held up the restaurant three days earlier, poli~ theorized today . . No one was injured in the blast al the I , ""'lftiW~ at-~~.,. --Pot~ ttrerrwqt:. an uncoun ted number of cuatomers in the restaurant and five emplofes when tbe bQmb ex- ploded at 9:20 p.m., }>l6Wing a 21 by 28- inch hole in the kitCHen ceiling. SOUGHl' BY SWISS ?ffwport'1 RooHvelt Beauty Rites For Bridge Out; It's Not Pretty The Women's Division of the New1>9rt Harbor Chamber of Commerce has canceled Wednesday's ceremony that was to have marked the completion of their beautification project on the Goldenrod Avenue footbridge. .., The reason, said project chairman Kathleen Crawford, is that the walkway over Bayside Drive in Corona de! Mar still isn't very beautiful. "The lights aren't up, the plants are too small and we'd hoped for more col- or," Mrs. Crawford sighed. "It would be a disaster to have the ceremony and take a picture of it now," she said. She said maybe the women tried to rush things too much. They wanted the ceremony the same day as the Dolphins' beautifk:ation awards luncheon at noon Wednesday at the Irvine Coast Country Club. "lt lake1 time for beauty to grow ," she sa)d. ' "I'm g'Oing to talk to the city about get- ting some bigger plants and more col- orful flowers," Mrs. Crawford said. "" Explosives experts from the U.S. Treasury's aleohol, tobacco and firearms division who have been called in on the case said "it was a miracle" that no one inside or outside the restaurant was hit by the large chunks of flying shrapnel from the pipe bomb. Detective Sgt. Monte McKennon of the Huntington Beach police said treasury agents have been called in because possession of a bomb is a federal offense. A note found taped to the restaurant's back door threatening damage to ttle building is what police believe to be the link between tht bombing and the holdup which occurred last Thursday. In that holdup, the unseen bandit made the restaurant the seventh victim of his robbery-by-te lephone technique. McKennon said this morning that he believes thal the bomb was planted sometime Monday and set off to show thal the telephone bandit "means business." 'fhe phantom bandit has netted more than $2,700 in the past month by vic- timizing franchise businesses in Hun- tington Beach. Fountain Valley and Costa ~1esa. He usually calls the businesses and tells the person who answen the phone that he has a high powered rifle aimed at them. If they fail to cooperate, they will be shot. In a few of the holdups, the caller has also told the victim that there is a bomb planted inside the business and it wUI be det(Jlated if the businessman does not do as the robber says. McKennon said that in the cases where bombs were mentioned, the premises had (See BOMB, Page !J Don't Bare That Thing Definitio11 Elusive, But Mesa Law Forbi<ls Display By RUDI NIEDZIEU!Kl Of ,._ CMoltto l"tMt ll•H Experts don't know what it is but you'd beti~r not sho}V it in 'Costa Mesa. Display of the natal cleft is outlawed. The tenn, lncluded In a recently ~enacted antl-nudlty ordinance, became the !Ubject of considerable confusion to- day . Js it-a belly button thnt can be seen on any beach or is it Jomethlng unspeakable! "I suspect \t was just thrown in,'' said Councilman Alvin Pinkley, a pbarmaci:Jt by profession. He was one of five city councilmen who approved the ordin'anct as an emergency measure. City Attorney Roy E. June, •uthor of the ordinance, admltt«I that he really didn't know wha t nntal cleft refcrrtd to either. "I took the wording from !he county ordinance." June admitted. 111' Orange County ordln•n«, recenliy I upheld bf 4 to 2 high court vote, was US· ed as a model for Costa Mesa's anti-nudi· ty ordinance. , · The eoSta Mesa ordinance in tum se:fv- ed 85 a model for !he pl'IJ¢!<d Santa ~ Ana oidintnc:ef whlch paMed its nrst reading Monday night, right along wtth the "natal cleft." I But Santa Ana Mayor Jury PatlcrlOn quesltonod lhe wordJoi of the ordinance because be thollgbt It &imply meant belly buttoo. Staff members" of tho Orange County District AttDmlY'• Offtce, who came up with the term In the. first place, now aren't ~ them.selves what they meant by the controversial clefts. 1 "I would bnagine the natal cleft Is the division betweto. Utt. portions of the backllde at the 10\ftr bottom -.Ir you know what I mean/''aa.ld Deputy Dlsjt Atlomey Orella Sean. l Laulh!ng h9rtily,-Ille odtfed. " I ' have no idea what it is. Sorry about that. .. Nurses at two llarbOr Area doctor's or· flee~ also declared tbemselves unable lo provide a definition. Ona referred in- quiries to the~public library. It was discovered, however, that the tenn ls not listed in any dictionaries, In- cluding medical volumes. Dr. Wendell Whitle ' of Hwitlngton Beach said he thought natal clelt refers to part. of the fema1e anatomy which the City Council definitely wanta covered. "Bot," he added, "It isn't a term com· manly used .'' Nor la It the oUiciaJ medical term for belly button wt>ch, according to Dr. Wit· te, is known u the •·umbilicus." The office or Or. Charlell S. Stevens of Costa Mesa, declared there was no such thing Int~ doctor's medicaJ books. · "Ar< )'OU 1Ure lhoy .lidn't meM genital clehl We"'e ROI °"" of those in th< fSee NUDIK, Page ti • •• I see an°'her level of government -re- gionalism -telling Newport Beach ho\Y to develop. "I'm conccmed that this type or policy could be the demise of loeal govern· ment," he said. Kymla said other regional governments aren"t \\·orking. He named the South Coast Regional Conserva,lion Commis- sion, the Southern California Association or Governments and the newly-formed Orange County Intergovernmental Co- U~I T1l10ll• CLEMENCY MESSENGER Former Aidt Caulfiald Board Refuses Off er to Share Cost 'of Study Orange . County supervisors today refused to accept a proposal that the county share the cost "of Newport Beach's trafflc study to the tune of $22,000. The proposal was referred back to the count Y • s Multi-Modal Transportation Study Committee for a recommendation. Assistant County Road Commissioner Murray Storm, said the third phase of the Newport study. not yet completed. would be useful to his department in car· ryfng out studies or a coastal transport· lion corridor. He pointed out tliat the coastal corridor had the highest priority because of pro- blems caused by the deletion of the new- deftmct Pacific Coast freeway . Storm said Newport had spent $63,000 on the fira.t two phases of the traffic study and wanted the county to pay the third phase cost of $22,000. Storm explained that the third phase of Newport's study would be most useful to the Road Department. He said the flrst phase was fact gathering, the secood phase an exploration or alternatives possible to solve Newport's traffic headaches and that the third phase was the one in which decisions would be made on future courses of aclion.s Chances of the $22,000 grant to the city being approved eventually look dim as some supervisors had serious objections. Supervisor Ralph Diedrich of Fullerton. ror example, sald to give the money to Newport would set a precedent. "It opens the door to olher cities \Yhich have done or will go traffic studies within their boundaries," he argued. "I ap- preciate the motive but object to the Precedent. We can't do this for Just one city and get away with it." . Oiedrith also wanted to know Ir the plans for a i:iew bridge over the Upper Newport Bay were In the studJes. Stonn said n was only one of many sugg'.estJons and that the Road Depart~ ment has taken no stand on a possible bndge. R. I. "Cubll" Morri5, chairman of the Multi-Modal Transportation Study C«n· mlttee, said he had ~rioua doubts that the committee would rtt0mmeond paying the $22.000. "~vt!ral committee mem bers are not certain that a study in one communhy would really help our overall studies and thC!y feel that to join in one city's effort could caust some problem!!," Morris said. lie said lhe committee would re-port ils de4?1!\on on the Newport sub!Jidy by June 5 ord1na11ng Counell Citing the city's O\vn efforts to deter- n1ine its future through studies and pol- icies like CflART . Newport Tomorrow and the new general plan. Kymla said gro\vth controls and policies "can work \1'1tho111 a massive infusion of regional- ism.·· He and vn rious speakers also accused the county planners of painting the bleak - i See GROWTH, Page 2 I •. Caulfield Says Offer From Dean From Wirt Ser\'lces WASH INGTON-A former White House aide swore today he relayed offers or f'xecutive clemency to Watergate burglar James W. McCord on the orders of John W. ~an III. But, he said, he was not authorized to say the offers came fron1 President Nixon. John C. Caulfield told the Sena\e Watu· gete investigating committee he aaked Dean, the former White House counael: "Do you \Yant me to tell hin\ Jl comes Crom the President?" "He said words to the effect. 'No, don't do that. Say that It comes from way up at the top." McCord , who flnilhed two days 0£ questioning t¢ay, had said when tie re- ceived the o1fen from Caulfield he as- sumed they came from the President - the only one who can grant execuUve clemency. Asked whether Caulfield invoked Nil· on"s name, McCord said he had not. "I specifically never spoke to the Presi- dent 6! the United States and have no knowledge of my own as to whether he personally had endorsed this offer or in- deed whether a!1¥ooe had ever discussed it with him," C8ulfleld said. Caulfield said "I viewed my role simply as one of a messenger," and added he actively resisted the role. McCord said during his 2Yi hour mom· ing testimony that he wat told that Richard M. Helms was fired as CIA director and replaced with James R. Schfesinger, who "would go along" with the White ~louse plans to blame the CIA. President Nixon recently nominated Schlesinger to be.defense secretary. Reading from prepared memos during his second day of testimony at the televised Senate Watergate hearings, ~:ccord also said: -Co-conspirator G. Gordon Liddy told him in January, 1972, of a plan to break into the safe of Hank Green.spun, publisher of the Las Vegas Sun, and that "a Howard Hughes plane would be stan. ding by to fiy them into a South American country ... 11 It was the firat time Hughes' name has been mentioned. -McCord, who "'' a CIA agent for l9 years. said when he heard of efforts to put the Watergate blame on the CIA, he wrote John J. Caulfield, a former White I-louse aide and a friend, denouncing the (See CAULFfELD, Pago ZI Orange• Cout Weather Mostly sunny Wednesday, follow- ing the usual low clouds in the morning hours. mghs of 68 at the beaches rising: to 75 J.nland. Over• night lows in the 503. INSIDE TODAY A gun battlt, which began after the Indian army mutinied and tried to disarm .tC4llt unit.t In narther1l India, le/C lS mtn dead. Sde storu. Paoe 4. l,.M, hYf • •1111 Lt""" " .N .... " Ml¥1 ... ,,.!I C•lllor'lll • "'"'"' ,. ... • Cll\,Ult" n-11 Mllttoo\11 HIWI C1Mlt1 .. O••• c-1., • Creu..,.t .. hlollt 16-11 D .. tll MO!IClt • Jlecll M.tl:tt11 ''"' a.i1.,,.1 "Hf • l"•'fhlto! " lllltf'llllll'jltlll ll·ll , ... ,_ 1 .. 11 fllll•MI , ,,.,. ... -• .. ..,. no. ll:MW'f • ......_., ......,, ll·U ·--.. ·--• , ' ' : • • I l'lell\P.,.eJ . DECiSION ... ) • • • ' lht letlbl•lllro "' approve allocation or UC Band fljDda lo build a lnl&ller 2'»bed ~= ll>lpital on the UC! campus Iha llr1t --d.-m ' .,.i lallanlorJ bolld"'81 for tile UC! modkal llCboo!. Bolh hospital and science building alloctltions are being considered for the tf73.t4 UC budget which is now before tile legislature. However, Western World's hospital Is planned to be built on 150 acres of Irvine Company land reserved for a medical complex. The land at the intersection. of MacArthur Boulevard and University Drive in the city of Jrvine, abuts 150 acres of uruvenity land set aside for the development of tile medlcal school cam· pus. . II developed in tandem v.·1t~ . the medical school, Western World off1c1als. notably State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter (R·Newport BeachJ who heads the private organization, believe a ''Mayo CUnic of tbe West" will result in Orange county. Carpmter and Burroughs reaffmned their support for the UCI teaching hofpital and medicai school development. The remarks countered testimony by Dr. Elbon L. Foltz of the medical school facility that the Western World hospital should be delayed until the UCI teaching hospital is developed. Fullerton attorney John McDermott spoke for the appealing members of the Orange County health planning counciL He said the Bay Area council did ~ot substantiate the need for a new hospital in Orange County and acted arbitrarily in reversing the local council's ruling. Prominent Republican Victor C. Andrev.·s or Laguna Beach, chairman or South C.oast Community Hospital's board of directors, also opposed the Western World proposal, citing current overbed- ding situation in Orange C.Ounty. Sen. Carpenter agreed there are too many hospital beds in the county. But, he said, "1be bedl are of the wrong type and in the wrong place. The university hospital (teaching) is very important to us; we don't want to compete but to compliment tgem." Western World pro- poses a community hospital. Burroughs told the state council. "You can't train adequate physicians by just Jetting Qiem see colds. and bellyaches. You have to let them see exotic diseases, too." Western World would provide ad- ditional opportunities for study of such unusual diseases by faculty and students of the adjacent UCI-CCM. Restrictions suggested on the spending of the UC bond fund!: for the campus teaching hospital suggest an emphasis by the medical school on primary care -family prac- tice -training of physicians. Even ~ithout the sfste approval, Western World may proceed with con- struction after Sept. 21 of this year, Bur- roughs said today. The exact date of groundbreaking depends on renewed pledges o( private funding. From Pagel NUDIE ... book." said his nurse. Costa Mesa police, \Vho have made numerous arrests under the ordinance. v.1ere also uncertain 'vhether the nudie dancers had bared their natal clefts or not. Lt. Harold Fisher said he was bothered by the lack of definition but theoJized that the natal cleft was hidden by part o[ a bikini. UC Irvine medical faculty members agreed today a natal cleft is at best an ambiguous description of a portion of the human body. A gynecologist and an anatomist con· tacted by the Daily Pilot suggested the most precise definition or a "natal cleft '· is that "it's the.area of the body the city attorney is most up tight about." The term appears in no medical dic- tionary consulted toda y. The gynecologist speculated the use of !he word natal might refer to the birth canal -the frontal genitalia of a female. The anatomist suggested "natal" might also refer to the cleft between "cheeks of the gluteal region" of the human body -the buttocks of either a male or a female. Used together the words natal cleft are. not "commonty" understood in the medical profession, both agreed. OUN•I COAST "' DAILY PILOT T"•.0!'1"9• Co111 OAILY l"!LOT. will! WfllC" 11 tomblned In• Ntw1.Pr•11, I• pVblllll..i bv '"• 0••"9• Co.11 P11b1l1l!ln11 Comp1nv. $<1>1 rll• ""fllclto1 .,. P11bl!1llld, MOnd~v '"'""II" f'rkltV, for Co!lt Mt••. N1wPort Be1cll. 11unllt111!0tl lh1cll/Fo11ni.!n V•lltv. L•1111n1 llllCll, 1 .... lnt/~l•IWKk Ind Stn Clsrn1n!1/ $In Juan C•Plllr1no A 1ln11lt re\)lontl ..i1Hon 11 Pl>OllV!tld S.luro1v1 •n<I S11<1<:1•v1. T"-prl11<l1HI PVblli.111"" Pl.'>n1 <I II llO W~tl 11'1' ltrHI, (;01t1 M ..... Cll1fOll'!if, flt)•. Robtrf N, W1•d P•toldtnl 1nd 1'11!lll1l1tr . J•,k R. Curl •v Viti "'r11lc:l1l'!I '"" Ci«wrll M1nt11f1 Th•rn•t K••vll Editor Tho"'•• A. Murph1n• M1111otn11 Editor L. '•f•r Krl•I NtWl"Orl hKll City Editor N_,... a..cftOfflce JJ)) Ntwport loul1v1rd M1lllri; AJJ,, .. , ,,0. lo• 1•1s. 916•1 Othf Offfc" (Oii• Mu.: 1JO Wiii l1y l!•ft1 L.1111n1 ••f"Cll : m "''"' "....,."' HllflllnOMfl lffClli 11111 •••ell loul1v1r.11 hn Cl1nwnt1 : )01 !Olot11! El C•r»lno ltttl , .. .,.... 1714) '4J-4l21 C ........ A'"'9kl1t9 64J.i671 Copyrltfll, 1'7l. O!'t"" CO>lOI l"ub!lll!lt>O c.mlNll'r. Ho -l 110t"i.l, m.,.tf1t10na. Mltor .. I ,......., Ill' <K,.....lll-h ... ,..rft IM~ lit f~ without HloKMll 1191' mltlltl'I of dlrf'l'lflll _,. Jecond cJllM ....... "If ti Gotta ,,....., Ctl!fomi., ~I*' ltr t.rrltr ft.&.I "'°"'""'; .., -11 IJl,)f fl'IOllll!lri mlt111.., .. lflMO•M •. 6' flltllffll'f'. \ Surprise Move • Hearing Reopens . For Richardson WASHINGTON IAPl -The Sen•te Judiciary Committee today postponed ac- tlcn on Ellk1t ltlchardson's nomination to From Pagel * * * CAULFIELD. • • be attorney general after questions were raised about some of his sworn testimony before the conunittee. 'l'he commlttee had been scheduled to \'ote on the ·nomination without hearing any further witnesses today. But several bad been scheduled to vote · on the nomination without bearing any fu .. ther witnesses today. But several Democratic members of •·ruthless attempt" and "'arning that if the comm}ttee reopened lhe questioning . _ .. <1!ter Daniel Ellsberg, one of the defen- offlcials wanted the Watergate affair to '\ dants in the Pentagon Papers case blow ." !hat was the way to do it. challenged some of Richardson's earli~ -Mrs. E. Howard Hunt Jr., late wife testimony. of a Cellow Watergate conspirator told The committee spent more than two · h h h d ha di ' hours questioning Richardson before hun t at er usban d ctatcd a let-breaking for lunch. He was scbeduled k' ter which reportedly threatened "to blow unC:ergo additional questioning during an the White House out or the water." afternoon session and it was uncertain -Mrs. Hunt said during the same con-wbether the committee would vote on the versation last November that' her hus-nomination today. Sen. John V. Tunney ([).Calif.) opened band , a former White House consultant, the questioning by asking Richardson to "had information which could lmpeach describe once again the conversation he the President." -Former Attorney General John N. had on April 30 with John D. Ehrlicbman, l\litchcll and hls wife 1\1artha received forme r chief domestic adviser to Presi-dent Nixon. "numerous threats in "'riting and by Richardson said that Ehrlichman cal· phone'' about the time of the May, 1972, assassination attempt against Alabama led him to say that Krogh would like to Gov. George c. Wallace, and one see him and that he had what "greatly upset" Mrs. Mitchell because it Ehrlichman thought was "worthwhile in- ca mc through a telephone with an formation to give him." unlisted number. Krogh formerly worked in the White -Before the Watergate bugging oc-J.louse and headed a group known as the curred, the Committee to Re-elect the plumbers, which was assigned to run President was deeply concerned about down and plug leaks of national security possible campaign violence. "Uppennost information. in everyone's minds, and certainly In my Richardson testified that Ehrlichman mind," were the disruptions at the 1968 told him that Krogh had information Democratic National Convention and re-about "an aspect of the overall situation cent bombings at the Capitol and Pen-I ought to know about." tagon. Richardson, who previously had -He made two calls to embassies in testified about meeting with Krogh on Washington -Identified in published May l SJ.id that Ehrlichman in his call reports as those of Chile anc! Israel _ dld not give him any clue as to what and had conversations that he is sure Krogh wanted to discuss. were tapped. ~ As he had before, Richardson said that McCord, security chief at Nixon's re-Krogh gave him a summary account of election committee at the time of the his role in the break-in at the June 17 break-in at Democratic national psychiatrist's office and was concerned headquarters in the \Yatergate complex, about what disclosure he shou ld make wrote Chief U.S. District Judge John J . and to whom and whether he could do so Sirica in March charging that perjury without vio!aling national security mat- was committed at the trial and that there tcrs that were involved. was political pressure for a coverup. Richardson, whose: appointment to be Discussing the alleged effort to blame attorney general had just been an- the CIA, McCord said, "Among other nounced, said he told Krogh that he things, this also smacked of the situation couJdn't advise him. However, be said he which Hitler's intelligence chiefs found ~ agreed wlth. Krogh's feeling that the themselves in, ip the. 1930s and 194-0s, public Interest in disclOSlll'e outweighed when they were put tn the position of the national security aspects. having to tell him what they thought he wanted to hear about foreign military capabilities and intentions, instead of what they really believed." A spckesman for Hughes in Los Angeles declined comment on McCord 's testimony. Und er close questioning by Sen. llerman E. Talmadge (D-Ga .. J McCord acknowledged that he had learned of White House pressures directly only from Hunt; Hunt's attorney, \Villiam E. Bitt- man: and Gerald A!ch. v•hom McCord later fired as his lawye r. Of his letter to Caulfield, ~tcCord testified : •·The Jetter was couched in strong language because it seemed to me at the time that this was the only language that the White House understood." He said the Jetter stated: From Pagel ROOSEVELT • • '\arrant until he !alks \\'ith his Ja\v v£'r_ "I have no intention of going lo Switzerland unless there is some reason to go,'' he said. Rooseveh and \'esco arr among six present and former lOS directors wanted by !he Swiss government. The Swiss warrants were issued Feb. I lo allow police to detain the six men for questioning in case they return to Switzerland. Vesco was arrested in Geneva more than a year ago on a private criminal complaint. He was freed by a magistrate court when the complaint wa s withdrawn. \lesco has been indicted in New York along with form er Attorney General John Mitchtll in con nee! ion n•ith the secret Nixoii"s re·c!ection campaign. They were aceused of !ice king td block a Securities .:aid 1-:.-.:change Cornmission investigation of the handling of IOS funds. Also named in the 1ndic!n1ent '~·ere former Com- rnrrc\' Secreta ry ,\1auriee SU1ns and a Ne'W Jt:rsey poltt1c1a11. Harry Sears. Offici<1 I sources said the four others \1 anted 111 Geneva are present JOS co1n- pan y president J\l ilton JVleissner, form er president Ed Cowett . former directors C. Henry Buhl Ill, and Ulrich Stricjtif:r. Swiss former director of one or thelIO's, banks and believed among the company"s largest sharchold Prs. The warr.ints \.\-'ere issued by Gen'e\.ra examining magistrate Pierre Christian \Veber, whOiSe office refused to talk to the press. \l/eber had <Jrdcred the arrest of IOS founder and former director Bernard Comfeld y.·hilc hr v1~1!ed (~encva to see ~1cissner last i\londay. ri..1eissncr has since disappeared. VesCo W<JS head of 1he Jnteniational Controls Corp. "'ht~n he took over IOS. t:>ctails or the takeover :~re still a my stery. The American finnncier is believed to be in Cosla Hica where he reportedly owns considerable properly. OfUcial sources there have hjnted Vesco planned to renounce U.S. citizenship and become a c;o,;ta Rican citizen. Rooseveh served six terms in Congre~ from Beverly Kill.I. .. Front Page l GROWTH ... est possible future if no new controls art adopted. "But current policies are changing by themselves." he said, "they are turning toward modification that you propose." Earlier, James Parker, representing the Newport Harbor Chamber of Com- merce, had talked to the same point. He said the county planning staff has "assumed the worst possible lack of con· cern for the problem by local agencies." He said the county is comparing a pes- simistic future without new controls to an idealistic situation with controls. "That's the start of your report," he said. "and that's suspect and it neces- sarily makes everything else in the report suspect.·· Parker was critical also of _plans for future development in southeast Orange County to be channeled mainly along planned •·transportation corridors." He didn't like proposals calling £or standardized low-cost housing in the southeast county. He questioned the proposed open space element forecasting that $1.3 billion should be spent by the county and cities over the next 50 years to acquire open space. He said he didn't like the recommenda- tion that property already in agricultural preserves under JO.year contracts should be forced to be left undeveloped forever. Gilbert \V. Ferguson, executive diret"- tor of the Orange County Council on En- vironment. Employment, Eronomy and De.velopment (CEEED), which represents builders and building trades unions, ac- cused planner Bell of only telling part of v.·hat the plan is about. ··Bell gave a 'bikini explanation.' " F'crguson said, "what he revealed is in· !('resting and important. bu t what he concealed i.s vilal." Ferguson said the policy says thnt lo- cal government is irresponsible and not able to deal with the problem. Ferguson said there is no explanation or support for the proposed limits on population in the rej>ort. Bell told councilmen that if adopted Orange COunty population would be held to 2.9 million by tbe year 2020. Wltbout it, he said, population would grow to 3.9 million. There are now 1.8 million people in1 Orange County. Bell said grow1h Jn the Newport Beaclr Costa Mesa-Irvine-Laguna Beach area will slmllarly be limited. There are 165.- 000 people now. Without · new controls there would be 525,000 and with his con· trols. the rt would ' be 430.000. Councilman Paul RyCkoff questioned the reasoning behind the growth policy. He said It would be better to detennine the caPabilitles to serve people in the ru - ture and establish population limits based on them. He said a study should be undertaken to determine the limits of electrical en- ergy _and road networks and the like . Bell said that approach would be aound, but not polttlcally laas!blt . I Reservoir Repair Construction crews are working feverishly to repair major damage to the walls of San Joaquin reservoir in the hills above Irvine and Ne\vport Beach. The concrete basin was drained when cracks were dis- covered in the walls. The Metropolitan Water Dis- trict had hoped to have the reservoir partly fijled before summer to handle peak water uses during the hot months bul work may not be finished until August. Pot Report May Reveal Potential Drug_ Users BOOTON (AP) -Researcher$ say they have developed a method to tell in ad- vance whicn teen-agers are likely to use marijuana, which ones will go on to hard drugs and which ones will remain nonusers. • In a repart from the Department of Panel Orders Capitol Wing's Evacuation Soon SACRAMENTO (AP) Th e Legi!:i8ture's ruling committee today ordered the evacatlon of the 103-year-old West Wing or the State Capitol by S.pt. 15. The order applies to the Senate and Assembly chambers, state treasure's of- fice, the secretary of state, lieutenant governor, several offices ho u s j n g legislative aides and the Capitol press corps. The action \vas taken by the Joint Rules Committee after it received two reports in the last year declaring the historic building an earthquake hazard. The evacation will be for three to five years, said Assemblyman John L. Burton (D-San Francisco), chairman of the Joint Rules Committee. In the meantime, the Legislature will decide either to build a new legislative building or rebuild the old Capitol. Either project would cost at least $40 million. In the meantime, the Joint Rules Com- mittee mu!t Cind temporary quarters for the Senate and Assembly to hold their sessions. Burton proposed conversion of two large committee hearing roorris in the Capitol. But he said his staff also will look at the possibility or converting the garage under the earthquake-safe east wing of the Capitol. The decision on terfiporary chambers \Viii be made in about two weeks. Psychiatry at Massachusetts General .Hospital, the researchers said today they analyzed data fron1 2,222 junior high and high school students in the Boston area. Jn that computer analysis, drug use in 1971 v.•as predicted from five nondrug- related factors -including academic performance and cigarette smoking - measured in 1969. The researchers said the analysis v•as 68 percent accurate in predicting the nondrog users who went on to marijuana alone and 77 percent accurate in showing what nonusers went to both marijuana and 'hard drugs such as heroin, stimulants, depresessants and hallucinogens. The data were also 72 percent accurate in predicting what nonusers eventually used and type of drug and 67 percent ac· curate in predicting whlch new mari- j1,;ana users v:ent to hard drugs. The researcher:. said that in comparing data from nonusers and those already us- ing drugs at the beginning of the study in 1969, the computer was able to sort out the two groups with 81 percent accuracy 11~· ·.::;:only nondrug-related information. The report was to be presented today at the National Research Council·Na- tional Academy of Sciences meeting of the Committee on Problems or Drug Dependence held at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill. The study was compiled by Drs. Gene M. Smith of Massachusetts General, Charles P. Fogg of Boston University, Herbert Greenwald of Bridgewater State College and Richard LaBrie, an in- dependent consultant-statistician. The five elements assessed in 1969 were rebelliousness against rules and authorities as measured by a ques- tionnaire, ratings of obedience, grade average, cigarette smoking and un- favorable attitudes toward cigarette smoking. "Each of the predictors significantly discriminates ·between nonusers who will remain nonusers and those who will become users,'' the report said. FromP09e l BOMB •.. been thoroughly searced and no bombs have been found. "We will be going back to the other victi~ to check for any suspicious ac- tivity since they were held up," he said. Those businesses include the Stop and· Go Market, 18913 Magnolia St., Fountain· Valley; McDonald's hamburger stand, 20362 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach; Burger King·, 2015 Harbor Blvd., Costa ' Mesa; Pantry Liquor, 21572 Brookhurst St., Huntington Beach and Farrell's Ice Cream, 16301 Beach Blvd., Huntington · Seach. · The explosion at the Sizzler is the first time that violence has resulted from the telephone bandit's activities. "We will be working very hard on this case to stop him before he tries it again," McKennon said. He noted that all the evidence collected ' at the scene of the bombing has been • turned over to the Treasury agents for analysis in their lab in Washington, D.C. I Police are working on a theory that the telephone bandit is actually more than one person because of the speed with which the money ts picked up. Candy Not So Dandy Capistraoo Unified S c h o o I District Trustee A. Edward Westberg is a dentist. And he made it quite clear Mon. day night that he doesn't think the school board should allow student candy sales to raise money. Faced with a request to approve a candy sale for Marco Forster JWJior High School, Westberg cast the only no vote. Candy, he said, is bad for "health reasons." "I'd like to see every one of these voted down," he added. "Well, you're right," agreed Trustee Fred Newhart. "But until something else is arranged that they can sell, I'll go for the candy sale." PRUDENT BUYING Throughout our 78 years of carpet retailing, one fact becomes quite evident -that when money is less plentiful, people buy better quality. This is contrary to popular belief, but makes good 'finse if you think about it. When you have to concern yourself with value and performance, you are likely to buy better quality. At Alden's in the last four year" our per unit sale has been more expensive carpeting, reflecting this fact. Consequently, we have the largest selection of finer ,qualities you will see anywhere, all at competitive prices. The end result is . customer satisfaction, pride a~d recommendations w.hich provide .. our overwhelming ~ource of new business. fN THI 11.AllOI AIU. llNCI ltll ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 M ... • n.n. f to S:JO: Fri. f to f: Sal. f:JO to I ' ' I l •• I I ) I , I " 'i I • -• ' Today's Fbud VOL 66, NO. 142, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 22, 1973 c TEN c~s Mesa Revenue Sharing Priorities The expenditure of $1.5 million in federal Revenue Sharing funds was ap- proved Monday night by unanimous vote ol the Costa Mesa City Council. lncluded in the pack.age are capital im- provement programs ranging from the remodeling ot city hall to construct.ion of sto'nn drains throughout the city. The figure represents the 1972-73 en- titlements to Costa Mesa under the five- year federal program. Specifically the expenditures are : -General repair and reconstruction of stn!ets, $100 000 -~Ction of six tennis courts at Te Winkle Park, $85,000. -Lighting for Estancia High School tennis courts, $24,000. -Ccnstructfon of the Velasco Lane storm drain, 1150,000. -Coostructiorr•of the Coolidge A venue stonn drain, $130,000 • _x-a1· Schmitz Back In. GOP Ranks Former congressman J o h n Schmitz has rejoined the Republican party. The one term representative who was defeated in the Republican primary last June by then Orange County assessor Andrew J . Hinshaw, was later a presidential candidate for th~ A m e r i c a n Independent Party. · Schmitz. 42, said Monday he had returned to the GOP to give it ''moral, principled leadership" dur- ing the present crisis. He said Watergate had left a Jeader3hip vacuum in t h e Republican party which he hopes to fill. Director Blasts Health Panel's Hospital Denial fl)'.. GEORGE LEIDAL 01 Ille 0.ll'Y '"°' ll•lf Two classes of health care, one for the rich, another £or the poor, are expected to result from Monday's denial of a 162- bed hospital proposed by Western World Medical Foundation, director Walter Burroughs charged today. Burroughs. a Costa Mesa businessman end vice president of the non-profit foun- dation which hopes to build a community hospital in Irvine, criticized the unanimous action by the seven-member State Hea1th Planning Council. The action, Burroughs c o n t e n d s , "means only that our hospita1 will not be reimbursed for Medi-Cal patients. It doesn't stop construction of our hospital. "We have every intention or proceeding with the hospital," he added. "Western World Medical Foundation wanted the poor people or Orange Coun- t}', blacks and Chicanos. to get the same high standard of care that will be available to the wealthy of Newport Beach and of lrvine." 'nle Western World proposal to build a ''.seed" hospital ot 162 beds on land near UC Irvine was originally turned down on 8ept. 21, 1972 by the Orange County Heallli Planning Council. Later the Bay Area Health Planning Council -the automatic appeals panel fqr this county's hospital reviews - oYertumed the Orange County decision and gave Western World approval for the bqspital. When more than SO percent of the IS members of the county body appealed the Bay ~ panel's decisJon, the mat- Roosevelt 'Innocent' Of Charges ... By L. PETER KRIEG 01 Ill• 01111• ~not s1111 Former co n gr es s ma n James Roosevelt, now a Ne,11port Beach resi- dent, is wanted b"y'the S\\'iss government on fraud charges involving an alleged $224 million swindle also involving New York financier Robert L. Vesco. Roosevelt told the Daily Pilot today he has no intention of responding to the war· rant and says he doesn't know what he'll do until he confers 'tf'itb his Swiss lawyer, Dat)iel,. G~llllJ ~aefelt proclalhled his innocence. adri.itting only he may have been vic· timized by placing his trust in the management o/, the 1nvestors Overseas Fi.md (108), of which he served as a director from 1967-1971. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission also charged Roosevelt with looting the $224 million from the Fund of Funds and other tOS glamor funds. • Roosevelt , however, said he has en- tered a consent decree on those charges, agreeing to abandon all dealings with the fund. "I've had nothing to do with it sinCi! 1971," Roosevelt said. Vesco, who'is reportedly in Costa Rica, is also wanted in the Unlted States in connection with a secret contribution to President Nixon's Im campaign. Roosevelt said Vesco was appointed to the IOS board in 1970, just before be, R()()6fvelt, resigned. Roosevelt, who moved to the Irvine Company's Spyglass Hill homes above Corona del Mar last year, also claimed the charges shouldn't be labeled fraud. "The charges are mismanagement of the company. Under Swiss law, they call it fraud," he said. "l know I haven 't committed fraud. They say we should have known that the campany y,·as not in as good a financial position as management led investors to believe," Roosevelt said. He said he simply took the word or several top underwriting ctmpanies. "They thought the fund was doing a good job," Roosevelt said. Roosevelt, who is teacblng a oourse on the C.OOgress at UC Irvine, said he doesn't know what he'll do about the (See ROOSEVELT, Page II -City hall remodeling. $112,000 -Construdioo ot the La Salle Drive storm drain, $275,000 The list reflects the city council's goal lo elim.ln.ate pe.DVasive flooding ln all areas ol Coma Mesa.and to overhaul the city's 20-year~ld street network. Although a tax reductioo was not in- cluded in the package, Councilmen Alvin P'tntJey and Dom Raciti both joined in the +o vote. n . SOUGHT B:Y SWISS Newport'• RooMvelt Researchers Say They Can Spot Drug User Types BOOTON !AP) -Researchen; say they have developed a method to tell in ad- vance whicn teen-agers are likely to use marijuana, which ones will go QD·1o bard drugs and which ones will remain nonusers. In a report ·from · lbe Department of Psychiatry at · Massachusetts General Hospital, the researchers said today they analyzed data from 2.222 junior high and high school atudents in the Boston area. In that computer analyslJ, drug use in 1971 was predicted from five nondrug- related factors -including academic performance and cigarette Sl1l<lking - measured in 1969, The researchers said the analysis was 68 percent accurate· in predicting the oondrug users who went On to l'narijuana alone "1Uld. Tl percent accurate in showing what nonusers went to both marijuana and bird drugs such a.s heroin, stimulants, depresessants and hallucinogens. The data were also 72 percent acturate in predicting what nonusers eventually used amt type or drug and 67 percent ac· curate· in predicting which new mari- ji..ana usen went to bard drugs. Earlier in the year both argued that a portion of the federal allotments should be used to cut taxes. Pinkley said he was ··bitterly disai>- poi.nted" there was no tax reduction but that he also felt the city's drainage and street improvement needs outweighed a tax cut. All of the items on the list, with the ex- ception af the city hall remodeling pro- gram had been discussed during previous Blast Hits H untingwn Restaurant By JOANNE REYNOLDS 01 "'-0.llr l'iltt Sl•ff A bomb exploded Monday night in a Huntington Beach restaurant was prob- ably detonated by the telephone bandit who held up the restaurant three days earlier, police theorized today . No one was injured in the blast·at the Sitzler Steak House at 18552 Beach Blvd. •1' Pdtce .. 'liiftt::'"ttMr&·-were iirf.~) number "Of cu~tomers in the restaurant and 11five itnPJ"oyes When the· borhb ex- ploded at '1:20 p.m., f>low.ing a 2.1 .by 28- inch hole In the kitchen ceiling . Explosives experts from the U.S. TreaSury's alcohol, tobacco and firearms division who have been called in on the case said "it was a miracle" that no one inside or outside the restaurant was hit by the large chunks of flying shrapnel rrom the pipe bomb. Detective Sgt. Monte McKennon of the Huntington Beach police said treasury agents have been called in · because possession of a bomb is a federal offense. A note found taped to the restaurant's back door threatening damage to the building is what police believe k> be the link between the bombing and the holdup which oct:urred last Thursday. In that holdup, the unseen bandit made the restaurant the seventh victim of his robbery-by-telephone technique. McKennon said this morning that he believes that the bomb was planted sometime Monday and set off to show that the telephone bandit "mean! business." The phantom bandit has netted more than $2,700 in the past month by vic- timizing franchise businesses in Hun- tington Beach, Fountain Valley and Costa Mesa . ' He usually calls the businesses and tells the person who answers the phone that he has a high powered riOe aimed at them. If they fail to cooperate, they will be shot . In a few of the holdups, the caller has also told the victim that there is a bomb planted inside the business and it wilI be detonated if the businessman does not do as the robber s.a)'s. McKennon said that in the cases where bombs were mentioned, the premiaea had !See BOMB, P11e l) ~ ' ' ter came before · the.state COlincll for fmal appeal. That body ruled Monda y against Western World. The decision has no relationshlp to or bearing on the UCI-Callfornia College or / 1 Don!'t Bare That Thing Medicine teaching hospital. , 4fealth planning cou1r.il approval for a ~bed teaching hospital bas been given. List week a leglslal\ve commhtee urged the legislature to approve allocation of UC Bond funds to build a smaller 20()..bed tellicbing hospital on the UCI campus a~side the first permanent classroom : (See DECISION, Pago l) ' .. So1ne(J1ie Starting •• : Own Paint Firm? Sign painter Ruuen 0 . Hawb came out of his Costa Mesa home Monday and saw the handwrtting on the wall about what1ind of a day it was going to be. H11wks, 2253 Avalon St.. com- .. plained to police that aomeone oad burglarized his statioo Wlgoll >I 60 cans of paint and thinner •orth $120, plus six bMbes. .. I ' Defi11.itio1t Elusive, But Mesa Law Forbids Displn;y By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI ' Of lilt o.tlr ttli.t St•ff Experts don't know what it is but you 'd bett6r not show Jt In Costa Mesa. Display of the natal cleft ls outlawed. The ten'O, Included Jn a ,...,..uy enacted anti-nudity ordinance. became the subject of considerable confusion to- day. ls it a belly. button that can be seen on any beach or ls it somethlna: unspeakable! . "( suspect lt was just thrown in," said Cooncllnliili-Alvln Plnkley, • pharmacflt by ptofesslon. He was one or five city councilmen who approved the ordinance as an emergency measure. City Attorney Roy E. June, author of the ordinance, admitted that he rully didn't know what natAl cleft referred to either. "I took. the wording from the county ordinauce,'', June admitted. The Orange Cowlty onllnance, recaitfy upheld by 4 to ! high court vote, was us· ed as a mode.I for Costa Mesa 's anti·nudi· IY" ord1nanct. ' ' The Costa Mes& ordln\nce in tum serv· ed as a model for the propojed Santa An& cirdinan<e . which pasaed its ~t reading MO<Mlay night, tight along with the "natal cleft." But Sant.a Ana Meyor Jerry Patterson quesuoned the wording of the ordinance because he thou&h( It simply meant belly buU.O. • Stall mtmben o'f the Orange COUnty Dl&trtct Attorney'• Office, who came up with the tenn 1n the firtt place, now aren't sure themselves what the.y meant by the controversfal clefts. · "I would imagine the natal aleh Is the division between ·the ~ ol the backside at the •lower-bbttom·-II YOll know what I mean," said Dep\lty District Attomei' Oretta Sean. · Lall,llllD&' boartlfy, she addtd, "But f have no idea what it is . Sorry about that." Nurses at two Harbor Area doctor's of· fices also declared tbermelves unable to provide a definition. One reterred in· qulrles.to lbe publlo library. • • • • lt was discovered, however, that the tenn ls not listed in any dictionaries, ln· eluding medical volume1, Dr. Wendell Whitt< of Huntington Beach IAld he thollgbt natal cleft refers to part of the fenuile anatomy which the City C.OUncil definitely want1 covered. ''But ," he added, ••tt isn't a term com· monly used." Nor Is It the official medical tenn tot helly button whch, according to Dr. Wit· le, 11 known as the "umblllcus." The office of Dr. Charfts s. Stevens or Costa Meil. declared there waa no.such t6lnit lit~ dodor's,medlc81 boob. 1•1.oti,ou aute they didn't m·ean genJUil clt:h.? We've got ooe of those In I.he (S... NUDlE, P ... !J council sessions. The remodeling was recommended by SUA lnc .. Los Angeles . a consulting firm hired last year to study the loog range space requirements for facilities housed in the civic center. In a detailed report, the consultants declared that the civic center. built in 1967, had inefficient floor layouts and that the fourth and fifth floors required remodeling to improve efficiency. cLEMiN~v M!U.;,r· Formef Aide tiulfltld 2 Charged After Probe of Mesa Car Dealership A all. months' investigation into sales.._ pro.ctJ.ces of a now~urict Costa Mesa used car dealership tw led to issuance of crtmlnal · complaints charging its staff with 21 count.J of wrongdoing. The probe of Credll Motors, 1941 Harbar Blvd., ao far has resulted. in the arre,t of.11 ~time employe·and brother of ~he owner, who is still sougtit along with a thircl suspect. Andrew H. Rodger&, 38, of 8ll2 Carnegie Drive, Westminater, was ar- rested at his home Monday by Costa Mesa Detective Sgt. Sam Co.rdeiro and IJ!ysses Thornton, special investigator £or the Department or Motor Vehicles. He and his brother Robert L. Rodgers, 37, of 6122 Sydney Drive, Huntington Beach, are identified in arrest warrants carrying $2,500 bail and accusing them of 21 counts of grand theft, conspiracy to commit grand theft and auto theft. A third principal in the bankrupt auto sales lot, Florence E. Cameron, whose last known address was in Los Angeles, is also wanted in addition to the other Rodg'en brother. The Credit Motors probe w11 initiated around Christmastime by DetectJve David Stem, whose consumer fraud detail be«ian being flooded with com- plaints about the firm. Department of Motor Vehicles in· vestigators joined the case, due to its nature and also to many alleged ir- regularities turning up in their files and documenls. "They carried their own contracts." Sgt. Cordeiro said today , thus allowing continued business and financial contact with customers, some of whom had been denied credit through regular finance firms . Police charge that the Rodgers brothers in some ca.ses called cars back to the lot, claiming they had to check something for the OMV, then"Tefusing to return them. r. lnVestlgators also clalm c a r s repossessed ln thia manner were aold several times over. • Inve1llgatoa also allc&e Cred1t Moton offmd var1ouo nnanclng methOi!a which allowed ciosts and lnterelt to be padded or othttwlse Inflated to fieece the unwit· ting customer. Opiwn Scarce in U.S. CHICAGO !UPI) -The United State• Is fU!U1lnll out of lcg1tfmat0fy pro<tuced opium and shortages are de"lj)pJni ol morplltne, codeine, and ot .. anal1'!Jics derived from opium &fbfoid1. the Arntrlcan Medical News said Monday. The fourth Uoor is currently occupied by the County Department of Welfare. The department is expected to vacate ita suite July 1. U was recommended by the con- sultants that some of the extra space becoming available be used for the purpose of housing the city auorneys of- fice and the fire administration. Both are currenlly headquartered outside the civic center. Caulfield Says Offer From Dean From Wire Servtce1 • • WASHINGTON-A former White H~ aide swore today he relayed offers of executive clemency to Watergate buqlar James W. McCord on the orden ol John W. Dean III. But, ~ said, he WU not authorized to say the offe1"3 came from President Nixon. Jolm C. Caulfield told the Senate Water- gate investJgat.l!ll co~ttee be ulced. Dean, the former White House counsel: "'Do you waol me to tell him II ...,,.. from the President!" "He said words to the ef(ect, 'No, don't do lhaL Say that It -lmn ft1 up at lhe top." McCord. who finished two days of questloning today, bad said when he re· ceived the olfera from Caulfield be as- sumed they came from the Pretldent - the only one who can grant execulivt clemency .. Asked whether Caulfield invoked Nil· on's name, McCord aaid he had not. •·1 specifically never spoke to the Presi- dent of the United States and have no knowledge of my own as to whether he pe~ally bad endorsed thil offer or in· deed whether anyune had ever discussed it with him." Caulfield sald. Caulfield said "I viewed my role stmply as ooe of a meuenger ," and added he actively resisted the role. (United Press lntematiooal reported that President Nlxon acknowledged for the flnt tlm.e today "there were appm-· entfy wld .. ranglng efforts to limit lho Watergate Investigation or to concul the possible involvement of memben of the administration" and his re-election or- ganization. But he insisted he knew nothing of such efforts at the time.) McCord said during his 21,ii hour morn- ing testimony that he wat told that Richard M. Helms was fired as CIA director and replaced with James R. Schlesinger. who "would go aloag" with the White House plans to blame the CJ..\. President Nixon recently nominated Schlesinger to be defense .secretary. ~ading from prepared memos during his second day or testimony at the televised Senate Watergate hearings, tt,1cCord also said: --Co<onspirator G. Gordon Liddy told hirn in January, 1972, of a plan to tnak Into the aate ol Hank Greenspun, publisher of the Las Vegas Sun, and that "'a Howard Hughes plane would be ltan· ding by to ny them Into I South '" (See CAULFIELD, J'a1e I) Oraage Cout Weather Mostly sunny Wedne.!day1 follow- ing the usual low clouds tn the morning hours. Highs of S8 at tbt beaches rising to 75 1n1and. OVtr- nfit>l lows·tn.u.. 50s. ~ INSIDE TODAY A gttn bcttlc, wl1lch btQO.• ofter the lndl<ln CIM7IJI muUnl<d and tri'.ed to dltarm atate vnlts in northern India, lift ZS mc"IJ dead. Sec stor~. Poat 4. LM. ..,.111 • Ann ~ II aMll111 If ~ 1NI C•ll•llfa f M•~ .... • Cl••tlNtf zt.a lilat"""'4 ...... f C-le• 11 Or ... CWl!ly ' CrtM.-.l llr '"""' '"'' 0..1111 Mafk• t illd M.,....._ JNI ... i.ri.i ..... ". ,....,..... " •l!Mrtat...... 1•11 fllNIW1i 'lt>U ....... """ """"'" 4. ""' "" .... t ,,._ .. ..,._ 1).11 ... ,,... , . ...,,. ...... . I • ( • I I Z OAJLV PllOT c \ l'NmPllfJel 1. DECISION ... 1nd labon1tory buildings for the UCI m<dlcal school. Both l>WllU Ind science bllOding aUacalloos •~ being C01111dmd for U.. 197)-74 UC budget which is now before the legislature. However. Western World's hospital Ci; p1aMed to be built on 150 acre5 or Irvine Company land reserved for a medical complex. The land at the interseclion Qf MacArthur Boulevard and Univer11ity Drlvt in the city of lrvlne, abuts lSO acres of university land set aside for the development of the medical school cam- pus. If developed in tandem with tbe medical school, Western World officials, not.ably State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter IR-Newport Beach ) who heads the private organization, believe a "f\1ayo Clinic of the West" will result in Orange County. Carpenter and Burroughs reaffirmed their support for the UCI teaching hospital and medlcai school development. The remarks countered testimony by Dr. Elbon L. Foltz of the medical school facility that the Western World hospil81 should be delayed until the UCI teaching hospital is developed. Fullerton attorney John McDermott spoke for the appealing members of the Orange County health planning council. He said the Bay Area council did not substantiate the net<! for a new hospital in Orange County and acted arbitrarily in reversing the local council 's ruling. Prominent Republican Victor C. Andrews of Laguna Beach, chairman of South Coast Community Hospital's board of directors, also opposed the Western World proposal, citing current overbed- ding situation in Orange County. Sen. Carpenter agreed there are too many hospital beds in the county. But, he 11id, "The beds are of the wrong type and in the wrong place. The university hospital (teaching) is very important to us; we don't want to compete but to compliment them." Western World pro- poses a community hospital. Burroughs told the state council, "You can't train adequate physicians by just letting them see colds and bellyaches. You have to let them see exotic diseases, too," \Vestern World would provide ad- ditional opportunities for study of such unusual diseases by faculty and students of the adjacent UCI-CCM. Restrictions suggested on the spending of the UC bond funds for the campus teaching hospital suggest an emphasis by the medical school on primary care -family prac- tice -training of physicians. Even without the state approval, Western World may prGCeed with con- struction after Sept. 21 of this year, Bur- roughs said today. The exact date of groundbreaking depends on renewed pledges of private funding. From Pagel NUDIE ... book," said his nurse. 'Costa Mesa poUce , who have made numerous arrests under the ordinance, were also uncertain whether the nudie dancers had bared their natal clefts or not. Lt. Harold Fisher said he was bothered by the lack of definition but theorized that the natal cleft was hidden by part of a bikini. UC Irvine medical faculty members agreed today a natal cleft is at best an ambiguous description of a portion of the human body. A gynecologist and an anatomist con· tacted by the Daily Pilot suggested the most precise definition or a "natal cleft'' is that "it's the area of the body the city attorney is most up tight about." The term appears Jn no ntcdlcal dic- tionary consulted today. The gynecologist speculated !he USC of the Y.'Ord natal 1night refer to the birth canal -the frontal genitalia of a female . The anatomist suggested "natal" might also refer to the cleft between "cheeks of the gluteal region" or the human body -the buttocks of either °" male or a female. Used together the words natal cleft are not "commonly" understood in the medical profession, both agreed. OIANlil COAST '" DAILY PILOT Tllf Qfw'lff Coell OAILY PILOT, Wll!I ..... l(h II mmblrMd ~ ,,..,...Pr111, II puDll"'" ... tht Or•,... C:0.11 Pullll1hlng eomp.ny. s.p... r•t• ""'°"' .... puDll,llfd, MOl'ldlY ltlrouth Frioav. for CO.I• M•... N...,.,, llfftl'I, HllflllnglOll 1.-c:l'l/l'ount•fn v~t11v, L-0""• 1-.dl, lrv!r>fJS.oddltbldl 1...:1 San Cltmtnltl $an J""" C1pl1tr1M. A ~l!>Qlt •eiilon1! l'Clltio" I• Dlll>litl'l«I klurl:ltv• •"" S.und•v~. '"• P•lnclp.1$ P11bll1tilno !)!•~' 11 II llO W~1! e1v s""'· co111 Mtw, ea111o•nl•. t1~1•. Robt•* N. W11d Pf•Jlanl Ind PuDl!lhtr J1~k R, Curltv \tit• P•lhldltll 9nd (O.e,,.,.1 M1111otr Thom•• K11vil !.dl!Or Tho111a1 A. Mu1p hJn, Mot ..... 1"111 IOilo< Ch1rl1• H. Looi Rl<h1nl r. N1H Aul•l•nl MIM;irlg l:Olk>" Celt9 ..... Oftk.- J JO W11t ltv Str11t M1Ul"t Mdr111:'P.O. lo1 ,ll60, f26l6 ...... OffkH HtWJIOf'I l+adl: mJ N...,,.,, Aovl••••• ~ llKh: m For11t .., ......... tiunll"ll'°" 8HCti: 1n11 ltt<J'I IO\lifV1nt S.n Cl-'-; lOJ Not"' fl Cll'fllfto 11 .. 1 , ........ 17141 64J .. l21 ClwHIH AcMrthl .. '42-5671 Cellt'rlgllll, 1'7>. 0 .. l'IOt Cot1l Publltlllfltl ~'I'. No -'"'''"' llluttr1I*"', """ .. I ll'llttW tr l'Ov,•·t1•1,,....1, ,_..,,. !!."!':!,.._ •· r9'1'0lkKld wltl'IOut tll«~I Mf>. -., ..... iltll p __ , ._.-Cl•• _.,. l•I~ ti ("" MfM, C.11'9rf'i... • "*""'"''~ llY Ctrrltf ft." -ll'llv1 W -II t),IS -ftll¥: !T'IUfl,., _,_.,.. "·" ~. I "" o • • TuesodQ, May 22, 197) Surp1i•e ltlo:ve Hearing Reopens For Richardson WASlllNGTON (API -The Senate Judiciary Committee today postponed ac· ti':'n on Elliot Richa rdson's nolTll.natlon to be attorney general after questions were raised about some of his sworn testimony beCore the conunittee. The committee had been scheduled to VOW on the nomination without hearing any further witnesses today. But several had been scheduled to vote on the nomination without hearing any fu~ther witnesses toda~( But several Democratic members or fl 1:: ·tr f'rom Page I CAULFIELD. • • American country ... " It was the first time Hughes' name ha!! been mentioned. -f\.lcCord, who was a CIA agent for 19 years, said when he heard of efforts to put the Watergate blame on the CIA, he wrote John J. Caulfield, a former White House aide and a friend, denouncing the "ruthless attempt" and warning that if officials wanted the Watergate affair "to blow," that was the way to do it. -Mrs. E. Howard Hunt Jr., late wlfc o~ a fellow Waterga1e conspirator, told him that her husband had dictated a let· ter which reportedly threatened "to blow the White House out of the water." -Mrs. Hunt said during the same con- versation last November that her hus- band, a former White House consultant, "had information which could impeach . the President." -Former Attorney· General Jolvl N. Mitchell and his wife Martha received "numerous. threats in writing and by phone•: a~ut the time of the May, 1972, assassmat1on attempt against AJabama Gov. George C. Wallace, and one "greatly upset" Mrs. Mitchell because it came through a telephone with an unlisted number. -Before the Watergate bugging oc- curred, "the Committee to Re-elect the President was deeply concerned about possible campaign violence. "Uppermost in everyone's minds, and certainly in my mind," were the disruptions at the 1968 Democratic National Convention and re- cent bombings at the Capitol and Pen- tagon. -He made two calls to emba88ies in Washington -identified in published reports as those of Chile an<: Israel - and had conversations that he is sure were tapped. McCord, security chief at Nixon's re- election committee at the time of the June 17 break-in at Democratic national headquarters in the Watergate complex "".~te ~hief U.S. District Judge John .J'. SJr1ca 1n March charging that perjury was committed at the trial and that there was pcilitical pressure for a coverup. Discussing the alleged effort to blame th~ CIA,. McCord said, .. Among other things, th1!1 also smacked of the si tuation "'hich liitler's intelligence chiefs found themselves in, in the 1930s and 1940s. when they were put in the position of having to tell him what they thought he wanted to hear about foreign military capabilities and intentions, instead of 'vhat they really believed." A spokesman for Hughes in I..os Angeles declined comment on McCord's testimony. Under close questioning by Sen. Herman E. Talmadge (D-Ga.,) McCord acknowledged that he had learned of \\1hite House pressures directly only from Hunt; Hunt's attorney, William E. Bitt- man; and Gerald Alch. whom J\1cCord later fired as his lawyer. From Page 1 BOMB ... been thoroughly searced and no bombs have been foun d. "We will be going back to the other Yictims to check for any suspicious ac- livity since they \.\.'ere held up," he said . Those businesses include the Stop and (;o Market, Jfl913 f\.1agnolia St .. Fountain Valley: McDonald's hamburger stand, 20362 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach: Burger King, 2015 Harbor Blvd .. Costa rt'lesa; Pantry Liquor, 21572 Brookhurst St.. Huntington Beach and Farrell's Ice Creatn, 16301 Beach Blvd., J-luntington Beach. The explosion at the llizzler is the first l!rnc that violence has resulted fro1n the trlephnne bondit's ac!ivitles. "\\re \\'ill be working very hard on this tase to st()p hin1 before he tries it -: again," ~1c Kennon said. He nntcd that a!l !he evidence collected at tht: SCl'ne or the bon1bing has been rurned o\'cr l() the Ti-easury agents for analysis in their lab in \Vashington, D.C, Police are working on a theory that lhe telephone bandit is actually more than one person because of the speed with wh icti lhe nioney is picked up. They believe one person does the telephone end of the robbery directing the victim to put the 1noncy at the back of his business In a sack . They think a sec· ond person has the rt.l'ea Staked out and picks up the money and can leave well ahr:id of the arrival of pol ice. Gas Leaks iu Phoenix PHO~NIX, Ariz . (AP ) -A IO-square· block area of southwest Phoenix ~·~s evacuated Mondiiy night and more than 20 perMKl.s were treated at a hollpltal after pungent gas leaked front a tank truck. the committee reopened the questioning after Daniel Ellsberg, one of the defen- dants in the Pentagon Papers case, challenged some of Ricl1ardson's earlier testimony. The commJttee spent more than two hours questioning Richardson betore breaking for lunch. He was scheduled tC" unc'.ergo additional questioning during an afternoon session and it was uncertain whether the committee would vote on the nomination today. Sen. John V. Tunney (0.Calir.) opened the questioning by asking Richardson to describe once again the conversation he had on April 30 with John D. Ehrlichman, former chief domestic adviser to Presi- den t Nixon. Richardson said that Ehrlichman cal- led him to say that Krogh would like to see him and that he had what Ehrlichman thought was "worthwhile in· formation to give him." Krogh formerly ~·orkcd in the White Houae and headed a group known as the plumbers, which was assigned to run down and plug leaks of national security infonnatlon. Richardson testified that Ehrlichman told him that Krogh had infonnation about "an aspect of the overall situation I ought to know about." Richardson, who previously had testified about meeting with Krogh on May l said that Ehrlichman in his call did not give him any clue as• to what Krogh \vanted to discuss. As he had before, Richardson said thal Krogh gave him a summary account of his role in the break-in at the psychiatrist's office and was concerned about what disclosu~e he should make and to whom and whether he could do so without violating national security mat- ters that were involved. Richardson. whose appointment to be attorney general had just been an- nounced, said he told Krogh that he couldn't advise him. However, he said he agreed ·with Krogh's feeling that the public interest in disclosLU"e outweighed the national security aspec1s. From Page 1 ROOSEVELT • • \Yarrant until he talks with his lawyer. "( have no intention or going to Switzerland unless there is some reason to go," he said. Roosevelt and Vesco are among six present and former IOS directors wanted by the Swiss government. The Swiss warrants were issued Feb. 1 to allow police to detain the six men for questioning in case they return to Switzerland. Vesco was arrested in Geneva more than a year ago on a private criminal , PllU'I' Pllfl $111f Pllfl9 Reservoir Repair . ' Co~.truction crews are working feverishly to ·repair ~aJor d~mage to the walls of San Joaquin reservoir in the hills above Irvine and Newport Beach. The concrete basin was drained when cracks were di s· covered in the walls. The Metropolitan \Vater Dis· trict had hoped to have the reservoir partly filled before summer to handle peak water uses during the hot months but work may not be finished until August. -------- Witness Names Suspect As Attacker of Sister · A weeping _witness today in orange C"un ty Superior Court identified Carl Eckstrom or Midway City as the man 'vho shot her and her sister in a Cerritos shoppfug center last Jan. 4 immediately after he had shot ana killed a young man who tried to help them. Cecelia Vasquez, 17, told a newly S\vorn jury that she and her sister, Rosemary, v;ere returning to their car afte(' picking clothing to be worn by the older girl in a beauty pageant when Eckstrom ran up behind them. The dramatic testimony in Orange County Superior f,ourt today involved slayings of Rosemary Vasquez, 20, and Michael Jeffries, 27, in Los Angeles County. Eckstrom, however, is actually on trial in orange County for the killings or two. Bicycle Riding To Be Regulated In Costa Mesa Los Angeles Sheriff's deputies who later tried to arrest him at his home at .Midv.•ay City in Orange County. Miss Vasquez, sister of the victim, '"as distressed as she testified today while seated just three feet away from Eckstrom. She testified that the defendant told them he had a gun and 'vould kill them if the two girls refused to cooperate with him, .. What did he want you to do," Deputy District Attorney Robert Chatterton asked. "He said he wanted to spend some time with us at our place and that he wanted to touch us ," the hesitant witness replied. She told the jury in Judge William C. Speirs' courtroom that both girls then continued their search ror their car with Eckstrom following close behlnd them repeating his warning that he had a gun under his coat. lt was at th.is point, it is alleged, that r.Jef(ries, 27, heard the two girls pleading 1vith Eckstrom and decided to go to their aid. Chatterton told the jury •that Jeffries 11·as shot twice and died on the spot. -~ '. rs~ .--. '" •" TONIGHT \J,t -'" • UCI LECTURE -"Evenings with and by Eugene Loring," Jr~ine Arts Village Theater, 8 p.m, UC! LECTURES -"Oral History and Japanese-American Experience,'' 178 Humanities Hall, 7·9:30 p.m. Admission $4.50. "Environmental Change ... "part of series on Arche<ilogy and Environment in Orange County. 104 Physical Sciences, 7·9:30 p.m. Admission $5. "Awareness t and Visual Perception," part of series j Enc,:,unter with Art, Little Theater, COM ~~~-School, 7-9:311 p.m. Admission , WEDNESDAY, MAY 21 COAST COMMUNfTY C 0 LL EGE DISTRICT BOARD -Regular meeting, I;J70 Adams, 8 p.m. OCC DRAMA -"Heimskringla" or the Stoned Angels. May 23-26, O CC Auditorium. 8:30 p.m. No charge. CONCERT FOR YOUTH -Orange County Philharmonic Society, Crawford Hall, UCI, 9:45 a.m. Information: 6.f8. 64tt. complaint. He was freed by a magistrate An ordinance regulating the use of court when the complaint w a s lie alleged Eckstrom, 23, then turned his 9 mm. autqmatic pistol on Raaemary Vasquez and Shot her three times. He then swung around on the screaming Cecelia, shot her six times and ran llff through the parking lot While other shop- pers ran to the aid of the wounded trio. UCI SURVIVAL THEATER -"Cycle Three," Fine Arts Village Concert HaU, May 23-26, 8 p.m. Admission $1. \Vithdrawn. bicycles and bicycle lanes in Costa Mesa Vesco has been indicted in New York was initiated by the city council Monday along with fonner Attorney General John night. Mitchell in connection with the secret The law makes it a misdemeanor to Nixon's re-election campaign. They were ride a bicycle outside an officially accused of seeking to block a Securities designated bike lane if one is provided. and Exchange f,ommlssion investigation Further, it makes it unlawful for or the handling of !OS funds. Also named motorists to enter bicycle lanes except Colorado River Boat in the indictment were former Com-for the purpose of getting in and out of Pa1iel Orders Capitol Wing's Evacuation Soon merce Secretary Maurice StMs and a driveways and for Crossing at in-T · E d • T New Jersey politician, Harry Sears. tersectiong streets. rtp ll 8 Ill ragey SACRAMENTO (AP) The 1 Official sources said the four olMrs A suggestion by Councilman Robert l\.f. Legislature's ruling committee today wanted in Geneva are present IOS com-\Vilson that bicycle riding on sidewalks GRAND CANYON, Ariz. (AP) -Na-ordered the evacatlon of the 103-year-old pany president Milton Meissner, former be prohibited was not enacted. tional Park Service rangers said Monday West Wing of the State Cspitol by Sept. president Ed f,owett, former directors c. CouncUmen did, however, support one man drowned in a boaUng acctdent 15. Henry Buhl Ill, and Ulrich Strickler, Wilson's request to prohlbit bicycle on the Colorado River. The order applles to the Senate and Swiss former director of one llf the JOS riding anywhere but on the right side of Authorities said a survivor, Tony Assembly chambers, state treasure's of- banks and believed among the company's the road, except on one way streets. Burdick of San Diego, told them he fice, the secretary of state, lieutenant largest shareholders. Wilson's sidewalk riding ban wilJ be managed to swim to safety after the raft govem()r, several offices ho us l n g The warrants were issued by Geneva reconsidered1 following study, at a later lhe men were riding capmzed, but he legislative aides and the Capitol press exan1ining magistrate Pierre Christian date. never saw the victim again. corps. \Veber, whose office refused to talk to the I r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;.i;i;'iiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; press. Weber had ordered lhe arrest of JOS founder and former director Bernard Cornfeld v.•hile he visited ~neva to see 111eissner last Monday. Meissner has since disappeared, Vesco was head of the International Controls Corp. when he took over !OS. Details of the takeover are still a mystery. The American financier is believed to be in Costa Rica where he reportedly owns considerable property. Official sources there have hinted Vesco planned to rcnounceJJ.S. citizenship and become a Costa Rica.it citi zen. 11oosevclt served six terms in Congress frorn Beverly tlills" Cllndy Not ' So Da1idy Capistrano Unified Schoo I District Trustee A. E d w a rd \\'estberg is a dentist. . And he made It quite clear Mon· day night that he doesn't think the ~chool board should allow student candy sales to raise mon•Y· Faced with a reque~t to approve a candy sale for Marco F'or11ter Junior High School, We11tberg cast !ht' only no vote. Candy, he ~aid, ls bad for "htalth reasons." "I'd like to see every one ot these voled down," he added. "\Vell, you're rlght.'' a.greed Trustee Fred Newhart. "But until 1'M!eth;ng else is aITlllged that th•Y CAn sell. I'll go for the candy sale." \ PRUDENT BUYING Throughout our 78 years of carpet retailing, one fact becomes quite evident -that wh.n money is less plentiful, people buy better quality. This is contrary to popular belief, but makes good sense if you think about it. When you have to concern yourself with value and performance, you are likely to buy better quality. At Alden's in the last four years, our per unit sale has been more expensive carpeting, reflecting this fact. Consequently, we have the largest selection of finer qualities you will see anywhere, all at competitive prices. The end result is customer satisfaction, pride and recommendations, which provide our overwhelming source of new business. ' I" THI HAllOI ARIA SINCI lf17 ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placetttla Ave. COSTA MISA 646-4838 ' " MOii. • Tliln. 9 to S:JD: Fri. 9 tv 9: s.t. t:JD to S • I } I I I I I I - I \I . I I