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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-06-05 - Orange Coast Pilot• • .. •• '. . • • . . ' . • -_,,, 7 • • r· . . . . rea Oil a I'll are Mesa Chee/as Arrive • in • TIJESDA YA FTERNOON , JUN E S, 1973 YOL. "'NO. lW. 4 SECT.otrfS, M l"AOEJ._ • , I~ -T 1 ' • • I ·. • • • • • • • • • • • • ,r' Bail Denied Ex-Newport Attorney Bre~la1aev l'isit • -Soviet 'Advance'· • • Plane Due Today By JOHN V ALTERZA Of IN o.llY !"Met st•" A So\•iet airliner laden \\'ith tons or communications gear and an estimated 50 technicians was scheduled to arri\'e toda y at the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station -the advance guard for a possi· Measureme1its . E 1nbt;trrassin.g? ble 1najor visit to the Orange Coast by -Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev. · Several highly reliable sources have reported the impending arri va l or the Soviet delegation but orders of strict secrecy about the event at El Toro have causeCI base sp:ikesmen 10 issue a .. no comn1cnt" on the wides pread reports. The visit by Brezhnev has been men· tioned' several lin1es by \Vhite House spokesmen 001 the presence or the massive communications operation today reinforces speculation that Brelhnev ~1ill ad4ress the America n people on network television from the south Orangt: Coast. LONDON (UPI} -The metric system Brezhne v and President Nixon plan the All T -hose Automobiles°? Evidence Termed 'DaIDDing' By TOM BARLEY Of Ille D1ll~ l"llef St•ff Taped conversations descri bed by the prosecut ion as "absolut~ly damning evidence" led a Santa Ana municipal court judge Monday to rul e that former Newport Beach lawyer Michael Kester Remington be held in Orange ·eounty·jail \\1jth bail denied. Jud ge \Villiam Thomson made the rul· ing and ca ncelled the earlier bail figure of $.100,000 after listening in his chambers J..9.J£!lat investigators claim are highly in- -· ·-fu!:1~~~L'Qll=~~~~~"aiit··~~: ing~n and a poUce informagt_ coul d embarrass the bU:Iom ladies _oL main ·portion of their tal ks on mututal ~~. B1:1t not if gen tlemen ·of British matters of diplo.matic, relations, trade fashion can help it. and other Items on June 18 ei ther at the The tapes are the cornerstone of the prosecution!s.case against the lawyer on allegatl9ns that _he hir.ed killers to remove hostile witnesses in a number or civil cases in which he was named as i:le(endan[ ·· "' ... '" • ' ' ·..; '" ... "' ,, ,, ' .. -l • -A spokesman for the-Kn i t ti n g White House or the Presidential fetreat Indu.lJtri.C~yaliQ.1.1....said MondaY. that at Camp David. c Io th Ing labels \.\'OUld retain n (terwar s Nixon spokesman measurements in-inches as well as cen-said. the two leaders will fly we st for the dmeters when Britain adopts the ~tric stopove r at lhe HOuston Space Center system next June. and then another round of talks at La 1"\Ve cannot believe," said John Jtar-Casa Paci fica in San Clemente. rison , secretary"<>f the federation, ''.that a The White House has given. JW exact nubile female with \ital statistics of 36--limes or dates for the schedule during 24-36 inches can ever see herself as the westward journey. measuring ~90 centimeters. If Brezhnev ioindeed travels to the South "Metric measurements make women Coast he will be the most poy.·erful or sound far larger,'' he said, ''and, in our foreign dignitaries ever to visit the view, -pose significant psychological bar· Orange Coast. riers." Since NixOn established ttie Western Remtngton, 33, is charged in ei&ht --Le.l.o.n...y-c-o-u-a+s-filed-by-uie-<1istrict----,-t attorney's office of soliciting to co mmit murder. Judge Thomson set Remington's, arraignment for June 14 . Also charged in' the case is Gary Michael Rollo. 21. or Garden Grove, a karate expert who hail made a number of guest appearances id u11t1 ,......... the teJeviston series, ''Kung Fu." l\Wlo, -. • ·----·---:--·-·· ~·--r;e1d·oo 1100,000; wislif!JO arraJiriOd 1 .. anc(,added tl) .. t 14 rnill¥>n cars\ir.ould !lit' produced day before Judge Paul Mast. mJhe U.S. this year-at wb.tch the Chinese· leader Newport Beach attorney Robert Green blmked in amazement. ,,.. argued for Remington Monday that the Journalists frorii' Commlinist Clllna watch \Ute pro-.... ductjon line of Chicago's Ford plant. "Has auto pro- duction increased?" the leader of1.he group (not shown) asked. A Ford employe responded, "Yes," -~----------·-------~----$300,000 figure set for the Fullerton ' Thua, women with a 40..inch bust might \Vhite House he has played host to now· ·~usJh..HBr.rlson said, u tbe¥--hld...to-aik :etired-J:apami~miere-Eiseku-&tt. ... --~£-· ---... '5 -s--. . lilr a dress with its metric equi~alent of and South Vietnamese President Nguyen ' os' t -' , o· ci"al ecur.i"·l:y-.· j 100 cE!ntlmeterS. V!in Thieu . fr .• , The official reason for Brei hncv's trip Magrt1der'~ Llf e Th1~eatened By Go:rdon Lid~y? · lawyer was "grossly excesaive" and should be 111b&1antlally reduce<i. 6 reen. 1 e1n:hidl!d Jtntge-'l'h4"11l...-1h:ll!----j Angela ~\·Is wa.s· freed on. $100,GOO bell at a time when she was accused or belnl Orange Coast Weather It'll be lair on Wednesday, fol· lowing the usuat..)ow clouds in the. Jnorning hours. Highs of 65 at the beaches will rise to the row 70s in- land. Lows tonight 56-6$. INSIDE TODA\' 1i11ere11 a 11ew game iii \V Glll'6 -ington., Euer hear of the Lo!'~ Sp o n g-f'ong·ffong Kong-Ping Pong·Dino Dong.Bill? See stOTJI, Page 12. · L,.M .• ~f ·1· '" lervk1 t Ctflflr11lt J M~ i t C .... lfilf 2J•H Mtltvll '•rlfll JI CMMU ft. ,..,_., ,,_.. 4 C,.._. 21 0.--11,. CMllfY I ~ ,..._.. I SHrtt ••·11 •• ..,..:..::-' ''"* ~"' -.ti ·== I lt~ -~-1 p,;r ... .;..,., a. M • ..._. ...... 1J.IJ Neltfl:.. 14 Wlfllf ..... t Allll L.....,.. 11 I involved in thei murder of a judge Md ' JIJ&tl Corona had been rreed on bail when " .~ wps ace~ o( .~milting betwtt.n to the. U.S. Is based in protocol. The visit witl be a relurn gesture stem-Ch · · ming from Nixon 's trip to the Soviet . 'ec·ks Ar,r·i~ve i'":n· M ___ · .-n. gin Union where he hammered out trade ~ ~ ~agreements with the leaders there. 'the Q!lly ..otbq Rus_sian official ever_to visit the Orange Coast wa:i: Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynln, who ar· rived last year ror several da ys of in- formal discussions. I , Man, 28, Killed ' In Garden :Gro ve A man was found stabbed to death in a ·Garden Grove apnrhnen t 'late Monday night and police are look.ing for a .knov.·n suspect, they reported today. The v\ctim, who was stabbed several times in the chest wns Wayne Floyd, 28, or l258t Flower St., Apt. D, where the at- tack took place. Invest! ators said they have two -WI 0 S ilitfilil i\a-::Jiive a •dragnet QUt for the suspeCc. who ls aald to have ned the ·scene with n remalt com· ponion. • '. . 'f , Scores or retired Costa. Mesa residents today were expected to receive their Social Security checks which· had been missing in tbe mail . 11.S. PoSt.al authorities reported. ~ .. · • "They arrived this n10rnlng,'' said AssiStant Postmaster Marvin GibSQn of the Santa Ana ~t Office, •1nnd our mailmen will have them delivered to- day." The mis°sing checks wefc a mysltry to all Monday:• The, Social'' sr,e·u r It y lodmlhistrat[qn said they-fioab«n m•ll· ed. The Post Office In Costa Mesa re~lied that'\the checks hadn't shown up. And, 1,\. crea!i,lngly anxious 11enlor citizens were begirlntng to panic. thinking that perhops their sole source or income had been Jost or stolen. Th'! superintendent ol 1nalls al the Son. ta Ana Post Office cleared up the mystery today. cxplnlnlng thal the. Costa I Mesa mail sacks must have been sent to another area. ''\Ve're guessing tbaL the sic~s were l'nislabeteO,'' said Superin· tendent Don Cluca. A spokesman for the Social SecUMty- WASIUNGTON 1UPII nvlctea Watergate conspirator G. Gordon Llddj once threatened to kill Jeb S. ,Magruder, former deputy manager of the Nixon re- election ca1npalgn. teslilnony by ex-' presidential aide John D. Ehrlichman revealed today. Administration lQday apologlied for the Ehrlichman said ,.1agruder informed delay. '"It's theJlrsl tim it's...bappencd~ . him or the threat. He-did not--elabOrate in the tv.·o and one-half years l 've been on the circumstances .or the date, but ~P- ., . . parently \Yas rcJerrmg ~to some "°int here, said, Allen llildt,. asststanl before June !7, 1972 because h'8 ..Jawyer n1anagcr at the Santa :'11a 0~1ce.. did not lei him t~stJfy about events prior .~egardlt;Ss or.ho.w:'Mic .miXEP .. ~t~dJ lo the _break-in at the ~~ra.~· ~enior cilizcHs tn eoSt\ "tesa are'Teli ev-\Vat~rgntc ncadqua11ers. · • . r -, e<l lorlily · "Mr. Magruder told n1e.Mr.,Llddy had · th reatened . hlm -ba<l ·t.breatened. his Several hundred persons :a~ Bethe l life," s,ld ·Ehrllcfitn'ari;.,whO resigned towers, a Costa Mesa home for the April 30 as Nlxon1s top adviser on elderly, did not receiv~ their checks on dOmestlc affairs. time Monday and some were beginning The Ehrllchman ' testfmony made ·to panic -But Mr.s_Zenadt=:Davii 1 ~Uc tQday »:11'-.a:iven E.~anUY. ~1-a · · . ' deposition In the Oemocrahc National Bethel Towers secretary, ~aid happily Co n1m1t tae's $6.4 million suit. against the this morning, "\Ve hear there's oodles or Co1nmlttce ror the Re-election of thr. . check> at the post office!" tS.e TllRt:AT, Page !I . ~· .. --. . . . .. ~--~· ---- , 2$ antt ;if"tmli>ts'" 61 "itinerant !arm y,•orkera. ~ 1'Here we-have no murder;• no' death and_oo_lnjw:y,~Gtten commented.. ~do­ not oppose a settinc of ball. I simply pro- ISee NO B~ Pqe II Lo1igliairs ,tid -___ , - Polic e Caiise 7 • .. ' • • .rea on er ~ are l. •Lost~ Social Secu-rity --__ ,, ---------_________ ,..;;;;;;.=---- _Checks Arrive • ID Mesa TUESDA Y AFTERNOON, JUNE 5, 1973 VOL. U, HO, IU. -SECTIONS, iO fl.t.GIES I ' • • • ·• • . '-• • • •• • • Bail Denied Ex-Newport ,Attorney- --------· ·--· Bre::fataev Visit Soviet 'Advance' Plane· Due Today By JOllN \IAl.Tf:RZA Of t1M OMIJ' l"l .. t Sll ff A Sovie! airliner laden \\'ith tons of communications gear and an estimated 50 technicians was scheduled to arrive loday at the El Toro ~ta rinc Corps Air Station -the advance guard for a possi· M easurenie1its E 1nbarrassi1ig ? Orange Coast Weather· It'll be fair on Wednesday, fol· lowing the usual low ck>uds in lhd J'l'lOflling hours. Highs ol 85 at the beaches will rise to the fow 70s in· land. Lows tonight 55-65. INSIDE T~ltA \' Tliere·•s a 'iew gan1e iii \Va.sh· i11gUJ11. Ever Jiear of the Long-- S p o '& fl·f'ong-Hong Kong-Piug Po1tg·Dh1g Dong-Biil~ See storv, Page 12. '" 1411\'kt ' MtylM 11 Mllt11tl '''"" H .............. ~ 0r.,,,. (....,, • SNf'h lf-11 Sltdl Mlf'ttth •2' Ttfftflftll 11 ~-"" " ·°""""• ..... 1).11 W!(,_~ ~ _,,• •• Man, 28, Killed In Garden ,Grove A man wns found stabbed to death in a Garden Grove apnrtment late h-1onday nig ht and police are look ing for a kno"'n suspctl, they reported todny. The victim, who 'vas stabbed several tllnes in the chest was \Vayne Floyd, 28, of 12581 Flower St., Apt. D, where the at- tack took place. Investigators said they have tv.·o \\.'iloeues to the stabbilit and have a ·dragnet oul-for the suspci:t who is said to 1\a\ie Ot'!'d the scene with-irfcrna:lc com- pnn ion. All Those Auto111obiles? Evide11ce Termed 'Damning' B.v T07't BARLEY Of lh• D•lty fll191 St.if l •• ' I ·' \ ' , I -. ' .. I • " 2 DAIL V PILOT • 'Gemstone' Linl( Told -M~g·ruder Pciid Bil.l, Liddy Ai4e Swears Genva one hn·oic1'. i\lrs. l~3r1nonv said \VASlllNGTON tU l'I l -\\'atcrgatc conspir;ilor G. Gordon Liddy'~ forrn er ~ecrt tary 1cs1ifled today thpt Jeb Stuart ~lagruder -after the \\'atergute break· in -au1horizcd pa.yntent or a bill for the .,._...., .. ue.niston .. totliOJlCO'-Qfb... \rhich ...she_ typed the Jogs of tapped tel ephone: con· vers:itions. It v;as the first 1itnc that the name of ti.·lagn!dcr. \\'ho v.•as President Nixon's deputy catnpaign manager . "'as clled directly in the Sena te co1n1niUee's public hearings in to the \\'ater.r,:nte break-in and other political espionage during the 1972 president ial c:impaign. · Unanin1ously brushing off a r1.."QUCSI by the government's special prosecutor that the public hearings be postponed in !he name of justice. the co1nn1iltee que s- tioned S.1Jly Jac};son Jl ar1nony. Liddy's iormer secretary, alx>ut "clandestine'' activi ties carried out in Nixon 's re-elec- tion campaign. !\frs. Harmony testified that a[ter tlie June 17 \\latergate break-in , a btll ca 1n~ fo the Committee Ior the Re-election or the President for the "Gemstone" sta- tionel')' that she said Liddy ordered printed. Because Liddy already left the com- 1---tn~~of-Water.gat~I look the bill for Gemstone to-!1.1agruder," ;\irs. Har1no11y said. ''lie 1i\·lagruder l :iulhorized payment to II.A. Post Associates. and signed Jcb S. !l.lagrude.r to it." !\1rs. Harmony said she then disposed of the bill in a papcrshredder. Pressed by Sen. llOYlard !·!. Baker Jr. (R-Tenn.) as to \Vhy she gave the invoice to .Jl.1agruder instead of to 1he office manager, 1'.1rs. ltan'ilonY said. "I thought he v.·ould know more ;:1.bout it." She said she could no! elaborate. Asked later "'hy she shredded the ?i1agrud(·r asked her to do ii. · ",\Ir. ~lagruder asked n1e to destroy Jt ," she said. "He dldu 't have to tell n1e \\'hy." . l•'fJw:11 said. "HeC'<1ll S<' ~Ir. Lidd:-hnd b ec n <lischarj:!ed £ro1n the con1n1i1tee: because it had the "·ord c:emstone on it and I was fan1iliar \\'ith (!emstone and the y,·ay I h<id u::ied it." ~1rs. ~larmony replied. ··1 assuined that a lot of n1 embers uf the ct:rnn1i U('e 11·crc not a11·are of il." .\lagruder resigned as nssislant Coin· merce secretary-Oesignate.in April .:i.t the height of \Vatergate disclosures. i\'lrs. Hannonv. 1vh1 still 1rorks for '.\'ix- on 's lni:.uguri1l Co1nn1ittec. s a i d \\:igruder called her from the Co1nn1erce Department this spring and 1old her he assured John N. ?ifltchell. Nixon's.former can1paign manager. that "he (~1itche\I ) 11·ould not !lave ariything to wor.ry about from you r testimony." • "I knev<' nothing to implicate !I.Ir. 1\litchell. '' 11rs. J·larn1ony lestified. "[ said I y,·as not a1rarc of any v.•.ny I could implicate -him.'' lrs..J!armony.,_w.ho_appeaced .ner\•ous during her testimony and occaslonal\~1 11-rung her h.inds. sa id she did not kno11· the info rmation Liddv ordered her to tlpe had co1ne frOn1 bugged con- versations al the De1flocratic party's na- tional headquarters in the \Vatergate. "\\'ere you a\vare you ,1·erc typing in- formation obtained illegally~·· asked Sen. Daniel K. Inouye. (D-Ha1\'aii). "They "'ere telephone con versations,·· she said . "I didn't knov.1 the source ... "\\'hen did you first discover they 1\·cre bugged?'' Inou ye asked. .. \\!hen I r('ad the nc1rspa_pcrs on June QUIZZED BY PROBERS Secretary Sally Harmony 18." she replied. "Jn your n1i11d. none or the infor mation related to national securi ty?'' Inou ye asked. in a .reference to Nixon's state· rJ1ent that he did not 11·ant the \\latergatc investigation to interfere 1rith national security. •·No.'' she said. .. FrOl~I ra9e J NO BAIL ... po:;e thnt it be realistic and rcluted to the charges." Deputy District Attorne)' Orella Sears ursed Judge 1'honison to listen lo the scril!::; of tapes earlier sealed by Judge llobert Rickles "'ho set bail at $300.000 <1fter listening to lestiuiony allegedl y linking Rctnillgton and . Rollo to the asserted cons piracy. Distl'ict attorney's in\'estigators cla i1n !hat R-Ollo \1•as one of th ree men arrested _ ~-lll'"--:by California Higll)~'ay Paltolnlen 1vho ... rfild the s OppeO'fliel rlo's~ar ror a traffic infraction and found weapons in· eluding rifles and hand guns in the auto during a search. It is alleged that the 1 .... ·o men \Vith Hollo immediately confessed they were l\ired to dispose of Alfred Fehling of Yorb.1 Linda, one -Of a nuniber of plain- tiffs in civil 11ctions filed during the past 111\.1 ye:.irs against a \'ending machi11e co1n1><1 ny of 11·hich He1nington is presi- dent. UPI T111pM10 Green indicated in lhc courlroon1 .\lorl- cl:iy !hat the \11·0 n1cn with Bolio 11·ere Bobby Joe lfarl and Jack llc'<''ilt. Both n1en arc held in custotly and 1\·H! be used. the prosecution states. as \\'itnesses THREATENED MAGRUDER? Watergate .c;:onspirator Liddy f "1•11111 1•t111e l • THREAl'. • • aga inst Ren1i11gton and. if necessary, Rollo. Green also noted that information. given to hint by the district att.orney's of- fice ind icated that his client "·as charged \\'ilh llollo and 10 "John Docs'' of con- Prc.sidcnt resulting front the l\'atergate spiring to kill Ned DeLancy. a key brcak;ln and bugging. witness against Ren1inglon in a_ci\•.il..ir:i.al Earlier l.t1stin1ony fron 1 se\"ernl ii•it-scheduled to stnrt Jul,v 16. ncsSl'S established ba d blood bctll"('en He1ni ngton is president of Cal \'end ~l aprudcr nnd Liddy, 1rho both 11·ert• ;\\a11ufacturing Con1pany, a Fullerton \\'h1!e I-louse staffers transferred to th e concern that is no longe.r in business. He can1p;1ign co1n1niltec to organize for the nnd several other executives in the 1972 presidenti al can1paigns. 01>eration have been nan1ed wilh their ·ti.fngrud~r. \\ho uriginally hired Llddy, CQ.lllpany as def('ndants in rive civil ne- at one poi nt had him transferred fron1 u"bns. ll:e nHtin re-el<'c tion committee to the It is alleged that lhrcats ·made by can1paign finance comniittre and "·as He1ningto n led one plaintirf lo setlle his considering riring hint. c.asc for far Jess than it v.·as 11·or.th and ' U,.1 Ttlt ..... IG Jeu 'NCaissnr11' !)ecretarv of Slate 'Villian1 P. l{ogers, ·testifying before the llouse Foreign Affairs Com· 1nittee. says the saJe of sophis- cated arn1an1ents-reportedly including Phanton1 jets -to Saudi -Arabia is ,;necessary to promote regional security." F.hrlichman said he also teamed that led ~no.ther plaint if! t~ drop _his action., '.\lagnidcr info rnied !he \\'hite Jlouse at District attorneys 1~vest1~ators cl<1,11n Fl T S ll one.point lhill ··;in intelligence operation" t.h:it taped ~later~~ents 1n their pOsseSSIO!l op 00 JJ),(.l - , , - Coast Citize11s Respond h<td been established hi .. the re-clectio~p_port ~he~r cl,1.!!!!_ that ,..the three "m,.e.,n_____ co1nn1iltCt' to ubt;iin iiifornHllion about alleged ly hired by Hem1ngton v.·('re 011 ------- Dfon1ocrat.s. ' their way to Fehling's \'orba Lind.a ho1ne L I <Y Arrester/ Ile said he got 1hat inforination ;if\er "'hen_ !ht'Y 11·erc halted for the traffic i11--~ e,ltll(l,ll, ." ' lx·i11~ fl sSi"ncd b.v J)rc.sidcnt i'>ixon iii fr<1et10_0. • It I b 1 I I l A loin clo1h-cl:1<1 La~u11a11 11·;1s 1.1rrestcd Story oii Strike Jlictini P ro1npts Needed Douatio1is Apri.l of !his ye;1 r to investig:.He ei·C'nts ·: is 011 ~· Y c 1ancc. 1 u'll l\'e < u n~. lcn du1g ro U1e break-in. any poss ible ha\lc a n1urder eon1pla.1 nt here tuday, a.nd charged 11ilh indecent exposure n:s \\ll~ite llouse inl'oh·cincnt. and any -\lrs. Scars told Judge 1 hon1so11. he strolled through an Art Colony e1·1de11ce'lrbout a possible co\·erup. residential :irea ~Iond<iy afternoon. By JOJIN ZALLER Ot 1111 Diii}' "II•! 51111 On Sunday morning !\!rs. i\lary Cnrlson 11as greeted at her fronl door by a neighbor \\'ho "'anted 10 give her tv.·o ba~s (.If groceries and a $5 bill. Later another neigh bor brought three bags of groceries and 8 SIO bill. And alt day ti.-londay, !\1rs. C~rlson said her phone 11"as "ringing off the 1rall 11·it h 11·onder!ul people v.·ho ,,·anted to help us OU1." The hel\l ...,·as sorely needed. For se \"en \1·eeks her husband. Richard\Ca r\son, had 11---becn-r)art-uf-a-lfcamsters sl rike against the Sou thern California moving in· dustry. During that time, he st ruggled to keep !\1 ary. who is legally blind. and their four children fed on the $35 a 1reek he \\'as getting fr o111 1he union slrikc fund. .. \\'hy didn"t you tell us you y,·ere ha v· ing !rouble ?" one or ii.fr s. Carlson 's neighbors asked after reading a ne11·spaper slory about the fa1nily·s plight. "\\le would have helped out a !ong tin1c 8!!0 if 1\'C hRd only kno11·n:• "\'ou don't just go out and ask your neighbors to give you food." replied i\1rs. Ca rlson ... That \\·ouldn 't be right." After the 11e\1·spaper article appeared on Slinday. hO\\"e\·er, the offers of help e .. n1e Oooding in . "People 1\·erc driving by here all day and I roulcln'1 e\"en find out y,·ho all of them arc." !\!rs. Carlson said. .. Thcr ~aid they ...,·eren't niaking dona- tions 10 charity by helping us.·• she ad· ded . ''They said they \\"ere just he1ping out some hard-1rorking. taxpaying people. like then1selvcs until ire could get _past our rough tin1es." Oonalions to 1h(' Carlsons includ!:d everything fron1 fresh lo.n1atoes to po"·dercd 1nilk. And at leasl $25 in cash 11·us cha nn('lcd i\le111or ia l Opposed CA~!BR IDGE, !\lass . !UPI ) -Op- ponen ts of plans to construct lhc Ken· nedy !\len1oria \ Library near Harvard Square told a public heuring i\l onday th e con1plcx "·ouh.! draw too many to urists. OlANGI COAIT JT DAILY PILOT through the Daily Pilot office. 1'1rs. Carlson said she ~as used the money to pay off overdue bills, to buv food. and lo repnir a \\'ater hea ter lha"t had n1ade it impossible for the fan1ilv to take normal sho\1·ers or ba!hs for · the past sereral 1\·eeks. The Ca rlsons have also had offers of pa_rt·limc ullrk, although !\!rs. Carlson said i\1onday tha t her husband's union might soon be able to put hint back on the job. "He's out \1·orking right now," she Elma Robidoux Rites Wednesday • runerat services \\'ill be held \\'ed- nesday for Elma V. Robidoux. a resident of lfuntington Beach for 42 yehrS. \\'ho died Sunday. She was 65. lier late husband. Ho11·ard. \Vas elected chief of police in Huntington Beach in 1962 and died in office t11·0 years later. i\Irs. Robidoux, v.·ho lived at 1020 ti.lain St .. v.·as a member of the Huntington Beach Vt1omen 's Club and the Emblem Club. Se rvices 11·iJI be held at 2 p.m. \\'ed· nesday at Smith's Chapel. Burial \\'ill folloY• at \\lesLminster ~1emoriaJ Park: She is survi\'ed by her brother. James Shaffer of Santa Ana, three nephe"'S and t11·0 nieces. Surf er Dro,vns Despite Efforts An 18-yc.ar-old Bellflower surfer drown· ed Qff Seal Beach !\fonday night despite a1ten1 pt s by t olice lo resuscitate him on the beach-and on the \\'8Y 10 the hospi1a!. Dead on nrri11al at Los Al an1itos General Hospital 1\'<IS Enrique :\lorales. 13913 Regen1 rie11' St.. Bellflo"·er. The youth 11·as su rfing in chill y ...,·aters off the San Gabriel River jelly at about 8 p.nl. He 11·as pulll:'d ashore ll.v IY.'O other Bcllllo\l·cr teenage rs 11"ho hcardd1is cries for help before he bccan1e unconstious. They placed hi1n aOOard a surfboard and paddle:! to sli.Jrc, 11·ht·rt'.' life sn1·ing uttcnipts fai!ecl. police said. ~ said. '·but I don't kno11• yet hO\I' long it 1vitl last. ·c !\'frs: Carlson said her personal \'ie11· or soc..iety in1pro\"ecl grea1ly bl'cause so n1any prople guvc he r help. "\\'e h.:i.d tried ever,·one l\'e could' think ot and !he an s11·er 11·aS ·no· so orten," she said. "\Ve really 1\·ere ~\·ondering ho11' 1hc society could be that 11•ay ... Tv.·o agencies that did help her con- sistently, she sa id. \\·ere SI. John the Baptist Catholic Church and the Salva- tion Army. "But 11·e couldn 't get any money at all out of the v.1elfare office,". she said. "I still think that's 11Tong. "The help we finally got ca1nc from private groups. It came from hard-\\'Ork- in~ people. But th ose people had to pay l\\'ICe, because they had alreadv given their taxes to u'elfare and \vclfare 1vouldn't help oul since Richard 1ras on strike." !\·lrs. Carlson said the countv \\lelfare Dcpartn1ent did call ~fonday, offe ring the fa1nily food stainps. But the Carlsons, 30'l5 Garfield Ave., are not completely out of trouble. Today i\lrs. Carlson was scheduled for ar· ra fgn n1ent in Harbor District !\lunicipal Court on petty theft charges. She said the case resulted from ·a desperate effort to feed her famil y. Dru1ik Suspect Bw.1nes Shoes That 'l'as after Nixon said fl fresh in-"I gut'ss I 'll have to get a little bigge r vestigat ion was undertaken because of Reds CurtaiJP(] nap." Bru ce Paul Van \\lagncr told ar· nc\v develop ments ht' had lean1ed. ""\ resting officer Del. Sgt. Nei l Purcell. Ehrlichm an s:iid the so urce of his in· • · Sgl. Purcell said that ns lhe mlln \1·nlk- forrnalion 11'us Gordon Strachan. 1hen an !\!IOSl POW ~f.•ti'J ed. the front loin c[o!h nap flapPf..'£1. aide to \\'hite House chief of staff H.H. 11'• l' \'on \\'ngncr. 21. l1stl•d the Love llatden1an and the \\'h ite House polit ica l Ani1nals. Don·1 £at Th('m address of 7:J1 contact nu111 \\"ilh the re-election cont· i\E\\' OHL£A~S (Al') -The top Slate S. Coast lligh11·:1y as a rcsidcn<:c. n1ince. Dep3r!ln('n\ expl'rl on. prisoner of 11·ar lie 11as ;1rres1ed tll'<lr Thnlia and Ehrlich1nan s:iid he asked Siraehan II lh I II l."l"l i·na Sir-I' 11~· S"•t. Pu,-11 •·ho i·ust h h 1 1na ers sars at on y a s111a pcrc<'n-.. u .. L " eo L" ,,. et er ie had any personal kno1\•ledgc h d d haiipencd to he 1iass1n•1 b_, .. of ;iny of the el'cnts leading 10 the tage of the t ou san s or letters an ., \\'aterga tC' break-in. paeknges sent to the American prisoners . ·"~_fe !Strachan ) said that at some point or "'ar in Vietnan1 el'er reached the 111 time he had been informed by !\Ir. ~lagruder tha t an intelligence operation 111 fact had been established a~ the reelection group." Ehrlichman said. ''He did not equate that v.•ith electronic surveillance necessaril y." Clicirg·e Droppecl /11. Jet Attack ST. LOUIS. !\lu. I i..;PI 1 -Cha rges have been dropped agai nst Da vid Hanley, a businessma n "·ho ra1nmed his ca r into the nosegear of a jetl iner June 24 in an effort to halt the plane from being hi· jacked. prisoners. Frank A. Sieverts. SrK'Ciul assistant to SC<:rer ary of State \\lilli:un P. llogcrs. h('re i\londay said th11t most Arncrican prison('rs captured in South Vie1na1n or Laos .. did not receive or send a single lc1tcr during the entire li1ne of their cap- til·ity ... He added: ··A nd not just Americans. Others, too. such as l\\'O \\'est German nurses. 111·0 Canadians and t11·0 Fil ipinos. Their go \'ern1nent s tried repeatedly !hrough the yea rs lo obtain 11·ord of thc1n .'' So,-ict Boals Watched SEAITLE tAP\ -The Coasl Guard is Hanley. 31. of subu rban Florissant. sur-fered fra ctures of the head. ami and ribs continuing surveillance of thrC<! groups of 11•hen he drove his 1971 Cadillac through So,·iet fishing boats 30 miles off the fences surrounding Lan1bert Field and \Vashington and Oregon coasts. A into the m jetliner. spokesman for the 13th Coast Guard U.S. Attomev Janies !::. Reeves said District fn Seat tle said the ships \\'ere Natv. Ma}'b (L He Feels Better 1-.- Problerns \1·ith lhe telephone company arc nothing to laugh about and son1ewherc in lluntington Beach there's a n1un \\'ho isn·1 laugh ing. t The unidentified cus lon1er 11·en1 to the 'officcS of c;eneral Telephone at 735Z Slater Ave. apparently to straighten out some problem he \1·as having: linfortuna1ely. he arril"cd 10 ffiinutes after !he offices had closed for the da v. a fact that enraged him, acco rding to 0 lhc cnshier 1\·ho 1\·as in !he office. \Vhen he 1\'as unable 10 gain entrance !() the office the frust rated phone user sn1ashed his hand into the thick p\3te glass windo1v. leal'1ng a fist-size hole. ·rhcn he stnlked off. Stihwalker Beats 19 !\·Tonday the charge "'as dropped because .... A . h d b h •1 Ll~l.E DOll'NHA'.1. England (U'PI J I• h ui.:1ng \\'81c e y f e cutt er 1~ odoc. 1' " MEf..fPHlS, Tenn . (UPI ) ianley ad suffered through -Trainee farmer 1''raser Gilbert. Ii , Mthur Perry Jr., 51, was p1"cked up hospitalization and "we have determined dispatched from Coos Bay, Ore., as "·ell b 19 h eat . ot er contesta nt s l\fonday to Y/ln >n a d"•nk charge aiid appeai·ed this is not a pronPr matter for federal as ai rcraft from San f·rancisco. Astoria, lh 1· 1 1.1 lk" h , u ,.-e na 1ona s 1 l\1'a ins c ampionship before City CQurl Judge Joseph prosecution:· Ore .. and Port Angeles. \\'ash. over 500 yards. l\1cCa rtie l\londay .... ·caring new i" r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;~;.;;;;;;;;;;.;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;~ broy,•n and 11•hite shoes with tw1r I I inch heels. "I was not drunk,'' he told the judge. "This pair. of shoes 1vas ne .... · 10 nie and I \\'3S just trying them on. "I y,·as kind of 1t·ea,·1ng because I hit a rock and it 11'as hard \\'alking in lhem." Said Judge !\lcCa rt ie : "1\n\' man \1 ho cotn('s up here \1"ilh th.it kind of slory descn1~s a break ... "Case disniissed .'. THE NAME OF THE GAME • • • I Tiii Ortr>O• C:Oll! 0-'ILY '11LOT, wll!I -1<:11 '11 (O""'Tnt'd \Il l N,..f.:Pr111, lt~'b!lilled 11'1' m1 Dr•nat C•••• Pullli1'1int CofT1p•nv. 5to• ••If ..,ltk)fi1 1•1 p!/0!11htd, M<INl1y ttir~t! Ftld•'f · IOr (nl• M111, HtWPQrl Btact!. Hvnl\n~on ll11cn/F011f'lt ln Vtllt 'f, ll9"'11 8H<.ll, ltvlM IStd<lleMC-•n<f S.n (l9m•mt1/ Sin J111n C1pl1111no. A 11"91• •tvT~n11 l'dll'°11 11 publlihl'CI 5M11rdlv1 I ncl !11"41v1. T~I prllt(/p,il Plllllillt\"11 pl1nt •I 11 ):IO WOI Bl'f S!•H!, C'111t Mnl, C1lllornl•. tl'OI B11ildi119 Pe1·l1•it Fees 1· THERE IS A COMMON PRACTICE OF PRI VATE LABELING IN THE CARPET. INDUSTRY. LARGE DEPARTMENT STORES, CHAIN ---~-·STORES, ANO CONTRACTO~S AT NE.W TRACT~cHAVE FICTITIOUS · NAMES ON THE SAMPLES SO THAT THE CUSTOMERS CANNOT EA SILY SHOP BRANO NAME PRICES . ' loller! N. w,., l'r°'llltnl I N! P11Dll1~ff J•tk It Curl•v Yiet Pr11od..,! •!!Cl GtM"! M1n•t" Tliom11 1(•1•il Editor ' Thomet A , M urphin• M1.w9l~f [Ollor Cht1lt1 H. Looi Rithird '· Ni ll AH !lltnl Mt~ll'Q EdltO<t Offlc• Co1•1 M1l4!: 1:10 Wtll .. ~ Strttl NtwPOtl lNCll: nu "'"""°" BO\l .... ff't Lt !l'lln• 1111cfll: m """' Av•nw H,,.!il>oton'BPtlll ltl ll Bt~ 90Ylt••rl Sen CIHNl!te: JOJ NOnfl l!I Cem!no 11111 Tel.,..• f7141 641-4121 C ........ Alw.,tl .... '41·1671 ---~,,..._ ~1!11 Arfft Siiiiltl .. l ...... 1.ui 4tM4ll Prt,. Nortlil Or .. c.o.niy (Glll~llltl 14fol2Jt C..,.•lfl!I, I'll,. Ofll'lfG C•HI '°'*ll1h"'9 c ....... ~,. N• MWt 1'9ri.&, lll11tlrll~1. ..i11wi.1 !Ml~ ,, ...... 1ft,frr\Hl11 "'"Ill -'I' M ,..,.noif\11:..S •!lhOvl tPM.lel ptl ltt1111-91~•""4-~ ioctllf C:llll 'HtltM 11\ol 11 C•tt Mttt, <"•"'-"Ill· ~l.,iM &¥" e•rrle• 11.'9° -•il1¥1 Dr tNI! U lt "-""1¥1 ... 1111ert .... l.-.tiloM )),lot -lfl•1 ~1111tingto11 Beacl1 Aide · • G11ilty of · $8,000 Theft i\ 1\oman indicted by the Orange Coun· ty Gr1.11lrl·Jury on grand thell charges fll· ed ofter_ shr. allegedly pocketed an eslimuted $3,000 in building permit f<'es Y.'hllc 11·orking for the Hunllngto11 Beach cily treasurer'~ o(flcc has been found guilty by a Suptrior Court jury. The Jury in Judge l\lark Sodcn's courfroom ended tv.·o days of dtllbera- tions. ti.1onday by retum'lng the gulltY \'erd1ct . It could not agree on additional charges of destruc1Jon of public records. Judge Soden ord creCI f\lrs. Tol900, 55, of 15391 F'lorencc: Circle, 11unllngton --Be1lch, to renrrrr11>hlrcourtroom -July 20 for sentencing. She faces a possible state pri~on tenn of one to 10 ye3rs. U!spusitlon of the unre_!(l)ve<I pul>llc record chorgt'S 11•ill be made July '.?O. it 11·as stat('d. T~c J2£QS~Ulion could drop those 111legations in ,·icw of the guill y .'·erdlct on !he majar charge. 1 ~·l rs. Tolson was ttrrestetl aftt1r un Audit of the chy treasurer's division revealed thal ahout $8.UOO . In ca sh had 1 been .taken from applicanls ler bulcldin!l I permits .but h3d not befn dei>ositcd 1vith the lrea&ifrcr. , Charges or dcslroylng public rt.'COrds I 11·cre added \\'hl'!n It was further nllcgcd that !\trs. Tolson look ho1nc a numl>cr of files while on sick leave 11nd lat er return· cc\ lhem v.•ith many of the documents -rcmo~ fronr1h·cr'fold . , · It y,•as alleged that all the af!eclcd' fi les n::latcd to transactions earmArkcd for ex· a1nlnntion by the auditors. • CUSTOMERS SHOPPING AT OUR STORE FINO THE PR ICE OF EACH QUALITY PROMI NENTLY FEATURED ON THE SAMPLE BOOK, BECAUSE WE ARE COMPETITIVE. ALSO. BECAUSE WE ' FEEL THE CUSTOMER HAS A RIGHT TO KNOW WHAT HE IS • BUYING, WE NEVER. CHANGE Tl'jF NAME ,ON A SAMPLE BOOK. THE NAME OF THE GAME IS INTEGRITY. , IN THI HAllOl ARIA ·ll~CJJJS7 ' • ALDEN'S CAR.PE?S-e-DRAPES 1663 Placentla A••· COSTA MESA ~::64l-48l8 Mon.· nurs. 9 to S:JO; Ftl. 9 to 9; Sot. 9:JO to S • ( • . ._.._~ I ,. P ilot Program Success { ul • 'Dial' Bus Service Proposed DY JACK BROBACK problems in La lfobra," Clark said , "and 01 ,,.. 0.1,,. P'li.1 11111 il is solving air polllllion pro blc1ns." 'fh,c The experimental Dio l·A·Ride bus 17-passenger mini-bu se!> operate 011 pro- scrvice in l~a Habra has been enough or a pane fuel. not gnsoline. success that Supervisor Ralph Clark The su1>ervisor said Ills proposed study Monday got Orange County Transit or establishing sirni lal' service in other DI.strict IOCTD 1 approval to begin plan- cit ies \\•ill undoub!eclly result Jn adding destinalion. Other passengers boa rd o.nd gt'! off along the \\HY as c:1lls arc rccciv· ed viii rudlo br the 1lri\•cr fron1 the cen- tral dispatcher. I!. n1uy be con1pared to a ··~hnrcd 1in1ousi11c'' se rvice and is opcratlog ln Ca11nda nnd Europe as well .is the sluden ts \l'hich has been called "an outstanding si.iccess ... -Subtnitted a project budget for 1973· 74 to the Southern California Associatlo11 of Govcrn1n ents (SCAG ) calling for ex- 1:ienditure of $6.520,6.10 of Io ca I transport.ition funds. These funds are derived fro1n the sales t..'lx on gasoline. ,,. I ·Tuesday, June 5, 1q73 s ning similar service to ot her citips. ·~·--'1'<\C"-veral more o~ons such as that in 1-----·cta'rl:r, lffiirman orihCOOarifOlt hc (a llabra . .....__._ ·--. eastcnr v:s. • ~ -A)lpf-OveO an-ag-r~nr"Wtttrthe Orange County Flood Con trol District to reconstruct a drainage channel which bisects the transit rustrict's Park·N·llide facility in Fullerton. Undcrgrounding of th channel to increase space at the facilit; \\'Iii cost an es1i1nated $226.000 of "'hich the nooc1 control dis1ricl will pay 15 pen-ent. \ dl&lrict, urged. the studie s saying, "The "Eventuallv it vdll 1ncan suC'h service pu blic response to the La Ha.bra opera-for nil or 01·/-inge County," Clnr k ndded. lion has been pheno1nennl. The Ji1nit of .. \\'e kno\v !hat the Di:il-A·Hlde concept capacity of our six buses will be reached lends itself to t"·o types of service - at 600 passengers a day and on a.lay 31 short haul loca l trips and as a feeder we carried 586' passengers. syStl"!n1 .io fixed route bus service OCTD was Inc first such ngcncy bel\\'een cities." ' to etsablish Dial-A-Ride in the Y1estetn Dial-A-Bide buses are radio dispatched. Unflt.>d States. A similiar service has They respon d to lcl c:phone requests for been operated in New Jersey by the service and 'A'ilhin 20 nlinu tes one of the fed eral government. srnall buses picks up the passengCr at his "Dial-A-Ride is solving congestion door and delivers hiln lo his req uested UPI Tei.pM!e AIRPORT GUARD LAWRENCE MISHLER AWAITS MEDICAL AID Securi ty Officer Wounded While Diiarming Would-be Hija~ker Security Guard Wounded A onC:\vay ride is 50 cent s 1vlth children and under 12 riding free when acCTJn1pa~ed by a fare paying passenge r. In other business l\1onda y, the lransit district dir ect ors: . -Passed a re~l ution supporting. t\\'O bills in the state legislature \\'hich wou ld permit community colleges like Oranre Coast and Golden \Vest to sign agrec1nenlS \\'ilh· transit district for stu· dCnt bus service. 1'he district has 01>cr.ited such a ser\'ice for UC Irvine - The Park-N-Ride racility is designed to encourage comn1uters fro1n northern Ora nge County to park their cars and ride buses to do\\·ntO\\'ll Los Angeles. Town.house .Plan, Rejection Urged Thirty acres in San Clemente proposed ror 213 tO\\Tihouses should be lert in open space until a coastal land use plan is developed, the South Coast Reg ional Zone Conservation Commission 11•as told ~ton­ day. Commission Execut h·e Director l\1ell'in CarpentN' rec01nn1cndcd denial of a permit request by l~obert H. trant Corp. of Ne\\'por-t Beach· to build llilira Costa Villas_ -Located in-an area bounded by .Camino de Estrella. San Diego Freeway, San Clemente and bluffs, the :m.acre site was recently annexed to San ~le1nerite from Ca pistrano Beach .. ·Much of that area is stil\ undeveloped. Grant Corp. officials said th e project's density \\'Ould be 7. r units per acre. They proposed to build a mixture of t"'o to loU r bedroom tov.'Ilhomit> and a priva te recreational area. Action on the request for a coastal pe rmit \ras continued until A1onday. 11·hen a full commission might be present. Only nine or the 12-member com· 1nissiOn created by Prop. 20. the coastline initiati,.·e. y,·ere prl!sent. A proiect must get at least seven voles for appro1'al. A fe11· con1missioners last ~londay indica ted they agreed '>l'ith Caf)ll...~lcr·s recommendation. lessening the chance for seven voles. Carpenter said construction of i\lira Costa .,.,.ou\d lead to overburdening streets. se\ver lines. schools an d other I services; could cause cliff erosion from seepage and irrigation and "'oold mean an "irretrievable commitment cf coastal 7.0lle resources" prior to completion of a tnaster plan. The new coastline commiss ions are charged \\'ith developing a coastal management plan by 1976. Until then !hCy have per mit Po'A'ers----within l ,000 . yards ofmeari lligh tide 1me.- Allowing f.1ira Costa to be ·bullt could be setting a precedent for more medium denSily housing in a now largely open area, Carpenter said. If "those big hunks or land" arc developed, Commissioner Judy Rosener of Newport Beach said. "Ther.e will be nothin g left for us to plan. If thi_s one goes that whole area goes." --- Grant representative Fred Annstrong said the co1npany would build a parallel sewer line nOrth or Camino Capistrano v.·here the current one is inadequate. That step would prohi bit seepage that could damage !he cliff. he said. Armstrong said COWlty z on in g . although no longe r applicable. \vould have allO\\'ed 420 units. \\·here Grant "'ants to build 213. Tony Allen, Grdnt Corp. president, said at one tin1e the site had been propo.sed for single-family homes. 1be Orange G:ounty Planning Commission denied it, siiying that wasn't its "highest and best" use. he said. Seeing Eye Dog Fatrick, a prized shepherd, wears prescription glasses and his eye- Sight 'is no longer a bone of contention. l"atrick, owned by actress l\1aray Ayres, started bumping into things and running the wrong direction when chasing a st ick. His 1nistress took him to an optome· trisf who spotted the problen1_ The dOg accepts the glasses and-the hat. which keeps them in place. and doesn't try lo paw the1n off. -- Homeow11ers Oppose Avco Plam1ed Beach High Rises ~gh rise and high densit y planned by · Avco Community Developers. Inc. on beachfront land north of Dana Point have develoi>:ed opposition among adjacent home invners. Jn a resolution passed Sunday 11ight. the boa rd of directors of the Laguna Niguel llon1eo\\'ners and Con1munity Association voiced opposition to proposed beS,:hfroot condominium to"'ers up to .12 stories high. Excessive density, Joss of an ocean viC\\' by residents above the tO\\'ers, prob- able traffic jams on Pacific Coast Highway \\'ere cited as reasons for the resolution. r ..11 ·s about time the rights or the com· munit y arc ta ken into account," an amendmen! to the resolution said. ~ "This 1\•ill. not be compatible with the adjacent sin gle residence area of ~·lonarch Bay. Seaward--Isle, and Breakers Isle. This does not conform to 'open spa ce' concepts," the action stated. iiiiilliiiiiiiiiii Foiling Airline Hijacking· ! I ''Our .salesmen are PORTLAND, Ore. jLJPl l -'rhre e poliC<"men \\TCS!lrrl a high·fX)\\ered rinr av•ay rron1 n 1nan clcn1anding a plane :11 Portland Jntcma tional 1\irporl ~1 ond:1y. One poli CT'man \\'US \\O'J;;dcd in 1he ll•g 'A·hen the \\'Capon firrd. TilC n1an . identified :is Gl'rald I .. Bellach, 3~. of \V illits, Calif .. n·as charged \\'ilh attempted a1r priacy and rirst- degrl"e assa ult. Bnil \~as set al $55.000. Authorities said he carried a 30-06 rifle . to a Hu ghes A1r"cst ticket counter and tol d C!n agt'nl he 11·an1rd 10 11,\' soml.'\\·here. The\' said he hnd several ro:ld n1n ps vd th iou tcs marked on the1n. In the stn1 gAle for the ril lc. the \1·capon discharged four 1 i1nc~. I.I. Larry :\Ush lrr. 52. \1·as 1\·ounded in thr leg. lie \\·as trcal('d and released. ~o one else \.\<is hu rt. Airport officiaJs·said Bella ch appeared agitated and thrc"· a billfold on the cou nte r. .. You can charse it. but I have no c1edi1." he told a~l·nt Bi ll Sundin. • Bill to T 011gl1e11 Abo11io11 Laws U11de1·goes Analysis . SACRA~fEi\11'0 ~AP) - Legislation ain1ed at stiffen ing California aborl ion la1\'S and curbing "abortion mill '' prac- tices has been sent lo legislali\'e li mbo at a lengthy night committee hearing. The Assembly Hcallh Comm itt ee look the measure under sub1nission ~1onday after hearing almost t\\'O ho u rs testimon y. The bill by Assl'mblyman Robert Burke IR-ltun1 in·g1on BcachJ. \\1ou\d re- quire doctors to infor m 1.,.on1en 'flllie1us in 'A'rlting or the possible! consequences or an aboft'ion -;i pen!Tu1nshrp'-'effor1 ·one spokt:;sman said'1 could rWl as long as I Tolsloy·s "\Var t'lncl Pc;i.ce." l . .inn Phel.in, president of the Nat ion al Associat ion to Rcpe<1l Abort ion l,a\\'S, made the Tolstoy analogy when she told the con1miltc'e such a bill shouldn't be pu t into state codes. ~ But Richard T\1rner, an attorney and spokesman for the Pro Li fe group, said School Cliie f's Salary Boosted T1141nan Bened ict, superintendent or tho Capistrano Unified SChool Board, was gfven a $3,000 raise and a year's extension on his contract Mo~ night. -. Jn executive session, the bba rd of tn1stces voted to ra ise .Bencdlcl.'s salary from $29,000 to $32,000. The contract ext ension; a two-ye ar agreement, comes after the first year or a two-year agrce1nc11t sign· cd lasl Juna. ' ' I he Burke 1neasure \\'Ou Id n1ove toward curbing practircs of "abortion mills'' th&! perform lhousands of abort ions each year. Da la released by the 5iatc Department of Public Health last \\'CCk sho\\·ed that 136,584 abortions 1\·crc perforn1ed in California last yea r. Orie hospit31 - Avalon in Los Angeles County - pcrforn1cd 12 percent or those abortions. The California 1'1edical Associalion op- posed tbc bill on the grounds court · -d<.'tislons-alrcndy --require doctors-tcr mtike sure the patient has given her "in· fnrmcd consent" before an abor tion is performed. Several comn1 illec 1ncn1bcrs 11·cren't convinced or the need for the bill and .iskcO Burke to go to the lcgl slalive counsel's office for 11n opinior!"on \\1hethcr cciurt decisions nlr'cad y do what his bill i ntend s fo do. Burke agreed and no vote "'as taken on the n1easurf'. Another '''itncss backin g his bill, Deborah \\liggi ns. told t~ committee she :ind six young girls ran an expcrin1cnt \.\;here . they tole. hospilflls they "thoui:ht lhcy 1\·erc pregnflnl " and then :i.hnost reached the point \\·here they "l:1y on 1hc operating table .. , Offending Autos Yield Cache of l1o t SAN )'S IDRO (AP) -Police se urchcd toctny rtw !he O\\'neri; or three cari; round blocking dri\'C\\'ll)'! O[ hoJTICS \icnr the J\.texic Hn border. An officer lit> Ill to check I he \\'ee k end complalntiound a total of 1-.810 pounds of n1Hrijunn:'I in 1he cn rs. police snld . I ' PETE PELUSES HUGH MYNATT your kind of people'' P ETE "T he Greek" P EL USES Sales l\'la11age1· We have on 0111· sales staff the ty pe of 11.1e11 you'd like for neigWJor s. Some of them are. You"Jl p1·obably r ognize Hugh, Ch adie o r H.B. 'fhcsc 1ne11 a re p art of th differ ence you'll find at Johnson & Son. Cou1 e in and le! us offer you a fin e Lincoln or l\1e1·cury to suit you needs a t a lways a f ah; p r ice. ef'fli '\,i)-~ ~ CHARLIE THOMAS ' H. B. PRICE --.~-----=-5fECIAL Conti11 e11L1l MARK IV 's • • Outstanding Se lec t.i on l\ow in Stock • Best T itne o r the Yea 1· to Buy ! • All '·Go ld en Touc hed'' & l~cady to Go ''Orong-t Cou11 !y'1 r ami/y of Ti ne Cori" -Harne Of The New C3r • , • •'Golde•• 7 011ch.'' ohnson & son ' Llrl.COLN , COlJ(J;\f~ Ci\Pl~I 2t2f HARBOR BLV°', GOSTA MESA • 540.5130 , " llome Of The New Car., • -''Golden Touch'' I - . - ' -· -1 OAJLY'ILOl .Ju11i • ' -130 Die in Heavy Battles Near Saigon -""' ' with Tom urphine ~ '':::.! .. , From "'ire ~n·lce• ol de ad and' 1\ounded presutll31Jly \11i s 111c battle"" S>!1gon's rice route CCUI· d I d ,,,-11 ,, ..... , 111 .. ~ 111ar•. c1dcd 11"1t h :1 barr.i;lc ol mou.• to.an IW GO\'emment spokesman to ay repor e .,... ... '\J\l f I I JI< 11 .. ·,,1 sai·' , . ., c0.-,.:nun1~t., und 21i rou nd~ o <.1rtllll'r)o 3Hl morl<1r ~ ic the bloodiest flgh(lng in south \'iclnam .. u . .,. l ' tha11 '" -.--,., ... ,,,,,, .... , ""ldr"rs di ••d 1·n the Sund:1i :iga1n<;t governn1ent pos1 1Qns cs . ~ since lhe Jan . 28 cease-fire. a 1"..,..,.uy .. "" "V ... .. f s t """ ' lh I f'"hlr"11g and that '13 \'ie1 Cong and '"o n1ilrs ro1n • ai gon. It \\flS f esc111,l\.-u ;1 ballle 50 rnile5 south"A·est of St:iigon . a "" i. 1 ~1 d lh:.: closest Comn,unist shelling lo Saigon killed at least 130 persons on l)oth sides . go\'crnn11.'nt soldiers died ul I le i on ~y of the ei1Hre Vleinam \\i'tir r.lllitary sourC'es said the Viet ~ong fighting. Anot~r. n~igh~ go\:~nlmcut In Can1bodin, an Anleric~n pilot \\'US $lartcd it by trying to cut ort Saigon soldiers "'.ere misstn.,. • 1 Ill kfllcd today "'hen hl.s s1>0uer plane from its rice supplies. . /\ ivell-~nfo~m~d go.vCmtnctll n.t tary crashed authorities reported. CAMBODIA l locNinh Jina~ Clashes along Hig~ivay 4. aboud 15 50 51urcf~~dth1~ &n~l~e~~~ 1~:cn~:~~~; Qbser~ers sn id 1he plane had scarcely m!le_s_sO\Jth\\'e.<SI of Saigon , erupte un· ti sts ~ . ., • . __ ,Ji.fted,_,,oCLthe...rwiw.af oLtba...alr_porLJn_ JH~ ar an con ·~UC lorida¥d go~·e1:~rJr~~;td m~~:e.gT~~~~~('ih~tft~~;\~~~ Phnom Penh \\'hen i~ cras_hcd and bUfSI P[NH ml itary spobatesm1_ en 1 sa i '1 , 1(;rrlntry ihus cutting off Saigon froin the rice-rich u110 fhunes . 'rhey sa id 1vh1te ph~phorus goven1ment ta ions rom \\O 1 ' rocket s anc! machine gun a1nmun1t1on ex· No Thanks divisions a~d four batt~lions or rnore ~l ekong Delta. ploc!ed. making rescue attempts impossi· from tv.·o Viet Cong regiments. TllE If EA \'IEST single dll)'·s de:.ith toll ble. The rockels arc carried to mark LT. COL. LE Trung J-licu, spokesn111n pre\•iously recorded since the Jan. 78 targcls for jct fighter·botnbers. for the South· \'ietnamese comn1and. ceuse-firc came f\lay 16 near Phu ~ly in OFr AND RUN1''1NG DEPT. -Okay. !-o it 's snn1mertime. and the zany stuff ha~ already started happening. You ha,·e 10 hope that the recent travels of Laszlo Jo~arkas \\'On't inspire any of our coastal kids. \'ou n1ay recall reading about titr. Farkas. a 32-year-old Balboan by resi- dence, electrical engineer by trade, and knyak paddler by hobby. listed a total of 102 Communists and 26 Binh Dinh province. along _the Ccn~r1.1I government soldiers killed and 52 govern· Coast. Fifly·thret Co111mun1st soldiers ment trooper~ "·ounded in the I"'~ died and 1v.·o go\•ernment soldiers "·ere clashes between the district tO\\'nS of Cai \\'ounded in that action. in Yl'hich the Lay and Cai Be. There "'as no COW\l of govemn1enl had al-t11!cry support. Hein \\'ounded Viet Cong but the casualty toll said. AUTJIORITJES SUSPECTED I h c crash "ras caused by a loss of p:iwer. They said the plane had tust retracted its landing gear 1vhen it plunged to ea~h. ,- The fire and eX"plosions. they said. started \Vhen the cr<ish ruplured the long· range fuel tank fixed 10 the plane's belly. Jt "'as the sec!lnd cra sh of a U.S. n1ilitary aircraft in C;imbod ia l\'ilhin two 1vceks. On ~tav 23, a l,; .S. Air Force jet on <1 bo111bing -n1i.ssion near the ancient 1\ngkor \Vat ten1ples crashed, killing the pilot. . !\1ean\\·hf!c. in Par·is. U.S. and North Vil'tnan1ese tec hnical nnd ttiplon1atic ex· perts 1net again for another round of preH1ninary discussions leading up to REDS HIT "POSITIONS NEA~ SAIGON WITH MORTAR, ARTILLERY • Heav iest Fighting Since Cease·fire Reported in S. Vietnam enforcing the agreement," a \Vhite House .... statement said. In order to reHe\i c the tensions of the · times. ~·Ir. Farkas has been known to ta ke his kayak out of Newport Harbor af19. paddle around a bit. He did this just the other day. And as he paddled away, he noted that si tting ool there On the horizon v.·as Santa Catalina Island : big, fat and inviting. ~Wednesday's lalks bct,ve~n Henry A. shori11,g up the fragile Vietnam cease- fi re. The two men Who -negotiated -the Jan. 27-cease-fire-agreement hope to-find foolproof methods of ending the truce 1'iolatlons and stabilizing the situation in Canlbodia. The___presence oLZiegler in the party for the first-tiffie roused speculation Nixon nlay be grooming him for a larger White Apparently 'Laszlo had one of those days like v.•e all do C\•ery "°''' and then . Thus it v.·as that Ca!alina looked most in- viting. SO. SINCE lT was Sunday. 1\lr. Farka~ decided he'd just paddle his l:J..foot kayak on over to !he island to "·ork up a good •---app.;(ite toi'1unch. -- Kissinger and l·laooi's Le Due Tho. U.S. deputy assistant Secretary of St.ate '\."illiam ll Sullivan and North V1et- 1111n1cse deputy Foreign r.1inistcr Nguyen Go 'I'hach rnct shortly after tec hnicians from both sides argued across the 1abll' in a Communist villa in suburban Gif. Sur-Y\'elte. KI SSINGE!t FLE\\1 to Paris today to start-lhe ne\v aegotialioo.s ,1·1t~ Tho about Cre 1v of Burning President Nixon·s press secretary, Ronald L. Ziegler, left with Kissinger for Paris. "The President and Dr. Kissinger ask- l'd Ronald Ziegler to attend these · 1neetings to increase his understanding of !his particular series of negotiations on House role. , Sullivan and Thach have been meetlDg in Paris since Sunday to prepare for the Kissinger-Tho talks. They go~ together again at 3 p.m. when technical experL"< ended a meeting which began at _ID a.m. Sullivan and Thach met for six hours Sunday and more than fi\'e hours Mo'hc' day. Spaceavalli Approved Trouble is. of course, it's some 26 miles fro1n Newport JfarOor to Avalon.Sort of as the crow flies. Laszlo nlade il. ·in !he process, however . he missed lunch. Also dinner. Also at home he had a fairly angry v.•ife. ---- Uni ted States O>asl Guard people, who had spent most of Sunday afternoon searching the Gatali1ia Channel for ~·Ir. Farkas and his kayak, "·ere also slightly disturbed by his \\'hi1n for paddle tra vel. Anyway, all's v.·ell tl!at ends well. Co1iple Sl~itt TllE COAST GUARD people. ho1\·ever. and others kno"•ledgeable about ocean- goi ni matters. consider the Balboan mighty lucky just lo be alive. They note that folks get these notions about 'eatalina Island and lake off in that di- rection in almost anything that will float. Chi cago hon1icicle detecti\'es sear<._11 for !'lues near the_ bodies, ?f Doro- thy Cerny. 25. and Jan1es Schn:idt. 2o. both of_ Chicago. I he pair were to be \\•ed s~rtly. 1'he bodies \vere found 1~11ng on the .shoulder of a road by a passing n1otorist Sunday. Sta.te poh~e are ~eek1ng three rnen in connection \vith the shotgun sla)'l ngs. No molive has been determined. Mr. Farkas' passage via kayak is the first with such a vessel in nic1nory of various rescue departments. You ha1•e to give ii to him. He must be a pretty fair paddler. ------- Bu1 other people, particularly inland folks fron1 !he natJands. ha\·C been known to launch themse]l'eS IO\•:ard tha t happy island in the sun under all kinds of less-than-prudent circu111stnnccs. Failing Health Forces JUS'J' A FE\\' years back. it was all the rage for prospectil•e \\'cckend sportsmen to drlve into their friendly local slore <ind get complet£'ly outfitted "'ith a new boat, motor and trailer hooked right onto their aulo wh ile thev 11'aited. Pompidou to Stay Home Thus equipi:.ed. they 11·ou ld buy fh·e gallons of gas , race lo a ~e1rport Harbor launching ra1np, fire up and be under "''ay to1vard Catalina Island before the ink was dry on the con1rac1 for 36 easy OOal payments .. :\lost of these flatland sailors "·ere found out of gas and hopelessly adrifl in Catalina Channel. Others, less lucky, just drifted off do\\•ncoast until they ran aground at Salt Creek or San Onofre or PARIS iUPl 1 -President Georges Pompidou tod:iy cancelled all official social cngagc:ncnts for the coin ing 11·eeks 10 rest after 11 bout of influenza, fueling still further the narion's anxirly over his reported !~· failing he~lth . The Elvsee Palace <innounccd the president.· "bec11use of his obligations. has not had the possibility to lake the rest necessary by recurring grippe fron1 1\·hich he has suffered !his \vinter. He h;Js deci ded to renounce all social ap- pearances scheduled in the coming "'eeks." son1e similar spol . Still others. e\'en less TIIE CO~f~IUNIQUE 11•as the first of· lucky, "·ere ne\'er heard from again. ricial mention of Pompidou's health since ' reporls that he u·as ii! began circulating CATAl..lr\A CllANNEL looks inviti!lg. last ~larch after he suddenly gained But the currents often gel wicked, the ""eight and developed a puffy face . 11•ind and S\\'Ctls can come up withoul Government ol'ficials recently confirmed 11·arning and abruptly, you're in trouble. Po1npidou "·as taking cortisone for Jnsraslnln:~-seasonoo-satlors. ~:rheumatism . · · Thu s you hope the saga of kayak pad· Pompidou cut his official pu_blic dler Laszlo Farkas won't set off some engagements one day after Gaston Def· 1ic11· craze "'here youngsters start taking ferrc. mayor of i\'larseille and Socialist oH for Catalina on surfboards, wa.ter-deputy in parliament. demanded the 11·ings, rafts or old inner tu bes. president inform the nation as to his One luck\· IJreak a suninler is about all state of health .. l\'e can cxPccL "The French have the right to kno\v cxac!l y \Vha1 is go1 nt:: 011. 1'hcir fate depends on \~_. ., ~cffer~e "·rote . in ~~e ne1r~papcr he publishes 1n :'ll<1 rse1Ue: It is nol a inaner of a priv:itc ;i!fair but of 1he des1iny of the nati on. "THE PRESlDEST has the duty to in· form us. The national interest is at stake.·· Premier Pierre i\lassn1cr said he refused to reply 10 Defferre GO\'ernmcnr officials <;aid I he engagements cancelled by Pon1pidou in· eludes official receptions given June 6 by Senate President Alain Poher. the No. 2 man in the government 1\·ho \\'Ould replace Pompidou if he resigned . June 14 by Nation11l Assembly Presirlent Edgor F'aurfe, ancJ June 19 by the C6nstitutional Council. 1'he health sybject. smoldering in rumor since r.Iarch. broke into prinl when Pompidou Cfid not appear \1·ell dur- ing 11is sumn1it meeling in Iceland last 1veek "'ith President Nixon. THE !\fAGAZINE !'Express said Porn· pidou 11'as hospitallzcd st!<'retly hefore he fleu• to n1cet Nixon. ft said he \\'as given cobalt treat1nent as 1\·ell as cortisone. Rains Wash Middle U-;S. v ·oze1ii of Tornadoes R eported Ac~oss .. P lciins Coastal Weatlter \ down~wri Ln~ A~qfle' ~~!I !He JOw ~' In !lie S•n Gabriel 1no Stn Ferna~clO v.11lcyJ, 1n !he rno11nT~ln rtsor!I. u1~ 1110~ i~ prftlltlt'<I •I 81, wlll'I ta In Ille upper dftfrl• -n.d 10oli In 11'111 IOWtl dt•lrl>. Tho Wlt!/'IOr i~rvlte 1,1111 !owt Jonlglu wut ronoe 1rom so 1n11nct to t.O In t0~$tal ar~••. ~7 I~ the mount~ln> 1nd 1!9twttn 61 lrtl'I 1J trrme c1e1efli Te11111ernf, ••r es Lo• " " " " " " " " " ,., .. " • h " ,, .. • "' .. .. " • •• " ~ " ~ • " ,, ' .. 1.1 " " ,, .... u. • ,. tlly ,i; ~ " .. " ~· " .. " " .. " " .. " .. '" " .. " t, P•ul " " " ,,,,.., .. r. • ~ 'il n• C11Y " ~ frl'lrtql 10! ""' II " " " "' .. ~ ·" , Ort " .. ' " II ,, " 1,M• kl tlld K O ~ ~ ·~ " " " J! esse l 'Safe' A fter R es cue HOi\O LULU !AP ) -1"he <'aptain or a fire-gutted 111erchant \'CSSel reports all 31 of his cre11•1neq al'e accounted for aftt'r rheir rescue by he lit·opters sent from the :'\a vy's nu{'l ear 1:011·ered aircraft carrier E111 rrprise l".000 1!lites 11·f'st of ht'rl'. a \r1\'y ::.poke.sn1a11 .sauJ. Bcpo rts fron1 the earner said all !hos{' rescuL-'d ll'c re 111 rxcel!en1 healt h 11·ith the cxct!1>!lon of the firs: rna lc "'ho suffcrctl ( I N SHORT ... ) second· and 1hird-degrce burns on his Ufl- per right arm. l::11rlier re ports had said 33 i:ersoris 1rere aboarrl lh l' stricke n St. Constantine . ;i ~ti-foot Bri liS.h-ll11 ned nicri.:hant ~hi [) under Li~nan regist ry. e N Y 1•rimnr11 NE\V YORK tAP I -Cily Complrotlr.r Abraham D. Bcamc. a 101v-kEiy cam- paigner \vho empha sized man:;igeml'nt expertise, fini shed first' in the fou r-man Dt!n1ocratic primary for 1nayor bu t "'as forced into a runoff. Beamc. \\•ho lost the race for mayor in 1965. failed ~londay to get the 40 perccn1 necessarv to a1·oid a runoff June 26 \\'ith Rep. Hern1an Badillo. "'ho placed second . Badillo took 1he most liberal stance of the mayoral candidates. e 1\'11cle 11r Bln•l LAS \0EGA S. :\t:'v. fU PI) -The Atomic Energy Crrnmission '\\'ill explode a nuclear device 3,490 feet below the desert at aPhute 1-1esa, Nev., \Vednesday. requiring the removal -0f people for miles ar.QY.lld,___~ _ ----~---. The AEC said the blast. code named "Alendro." will produce a force bel\\'een 200 kilotons and 011e megaton -the equivalent of exploding a mill ion tons of TNT. e Crash T /ae or!I NASA Rejects Extension Of I 0 Days for Skylab 1-IOUSTON Sky la b's ;1stronauts 111.1te told today · ho1v to perfonn a risk~· space"·alk to cul open a .!.nagged power 11 ing 1'hu1·sday but 1\AS:\ ruled out an extension or their planned 28-day mission. Project director '\"illiam C. Schne ider sa id a review of the problems and poten· tiats of the earth-orbiting lab "has resulted in the conclusion 1ha1 there is no justification for auy ex-tensio11-of the n1ission at this 1in1c." Officials had con- sidered lengthening ii 10 days. 1 At 8: 15 a.m. t PDTI. Skvlab com- 1nander Ch.1rles "Pete'' Conrad. 11·ho "'ill le ad the space11·alk, ;1skcd to speak prh·atcly tqi Christopher C. Kraft, diret"· 1or of the l ohnson Space Cenler. t:nder Sitspicious Fire At Re-election Office Quelled \\1ASl-f!NGTON IUPfl -District of Columbia fire officials say f\1onday nlghfs fire in an elevator shaft of a .building housing the offices of the Com· mittce to RH!lect the President (CRP) \ras suspicious . fl took firemen more than one hour to clet!nguish the smoky blaze from the shall and a hallway on the same noor as the commit.tee. \\'hich is located in a 12· story building one block fro m the \Vhite 1-loui;e. . · One fireman "'as slightly injured dur- -ing the resnov.al of rnor&-than-2~pel'80fl from the upprr floors of the building after smoke poured up~ through the elevator shaf t. Fire marshal Inspector 1'-1urdo l\lacleay s3id the fire was "of suspicious ignition" and "right down the halJ" from the CRP offices on lhe second noor. ground rules established before launch. secret' 1alks could be requested only in cases of operational emergency. but theer "'as no indication Conrad had prob- le1ns. ..\\'E'\IE SEE~ OXE -Other situation }\·hen they did that and there was no emergency," said a NASA spokesman. On flla y 29, Conrad requested a private falk fO discuss Skylab's heat problems. Conrad. Joseph P. Ker11·in ·and Paul J. 'reilz. received permission late Monday to µroceed \\'ittl the bold spacewalk . They 11"Clcomed the nc\\·s. saying it \\'OU\d break the monoton): of space station life. The astronauts offered lo give up two d<lys off to nlake up for the experim_ent tin1e lost by the repair "'ork. After a"·akening the astronauts we.re told !hat some member~ of Congress had sent the space agency a congratulatory message for th e way the mission ol Skylab had been handled so far. The hand-over-hand excursion down a 2>foot long makeshift handrail at the side of the crippled space slatlon was more dangerous than any spacewalk yet auempt~ by Americans. But project of· ficials said the potential gain out-weighs the hazards. .NASA SAID all spacewalks involve risks because a man ooly has one spacesuit to protect him from the vacuum" ot space. Thursd1;1:y's repair operat ion is even more hazardous because lhe pilots haye not rehearsed ii on-the -ground. the:r -handt0'1tls -m •·-- makeshift and they 1vill be moving over a damaged surface. Firemen at the scene said !hat the PAR IS (UPI1 -A\·111tion sources said blaze slarted from burning trash in the today the pilot of .a Sovi et supersonic shar1. Conrad, described by Schneider as "a pretty smooth and cool cat," will lead the extraordinary attempt to repair Skylab and boost it.s failing pol\'er supply. The extra electricity is needed lf Skylab is to be able to support t"·o full 56-day missions later !his year. Tupolcv 144 jetliner that exploded at the l\lacleay said he 1rould d.iscu5"' the case Paris Air Sho"· may have given his life 1vith Qle ?.1etropolitan Police Department Flight directors sent ste~by-step p~ cedures for the repair operatkm up to the crewmen early today via a radio teleprinter aboard Skylab. They "·ill revietv them with the ground tonight and ~!ta;~r~hour_ ipsjsjc .re~J tv fl\·oid a crash landing into the Spee·_ today, as is routine in cases o! suspicious t.ilor stands.' fires . As :in estimated 300.000 persons looked He refused lo say, ho\\'ever, ~·be.ther 01~. the-big-plane went--11\li> 4h!ileep-tUml>--1 he-fire--m1ght-hftve·bccn·a case-otanon:- but exploded and plummeted to earth in a ball of orange flame in the Paris sul>urb or Goussainvillc , killing all six trewmen and eight villagers. Sources suid ·today 1cchnical failure could not yet be ruled ou! a11d might ex· plain why pilot r.likha il Kos\ov throttled the Tu polev i11 lo the climb. The n1aneuver put lhe plane elear of the air show grounds at Le Bourget Air Field on the Paris outskirt !!. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE 0~1mo.,. ol th~ O;uly Pi~l 1\ 9u11ran1ttd- "''ft<I•• F"l•r: " ... .. "" ll••t ''"' ''""' ty l:M 1.M,, c.il lf\<f Ytll' <t~Y ••II t t trt\ltolll ft )t\I, (IHI lft lt•tft lflll1l IJllO 1.111, t1l11rttY tftf 511ft~IY1 It )'Ill dt 11111 ot(llvt ''"' CIPY "' I ...... ••tu•••r .••• '·""'· \~l'ltay, ti!! •~• t t11y WIM k tr•~tlll .. Ylll. Ctlh lft lt~lft llf'lil 11 I .Ill. T tltphonts • Mtll D"~ (fU"IV . , .. , . .., .. ,, . Ntrlllwnt l41110tl10fltft •••ti! ... W1.imlrlll1r 14t>l1>1 ''" Cltmtftk, Ctpll!,t"ll llet1ft. s ... J.~ .. (1111111 ... , 0 1 ........... ' t"'l!'I L~\.I~ NJfVel--4t1·UH Tango Terms Bra1ido, 3 Others Sentenced BOLOGNA, Italy (AP) -The movie "Last Tan~o in Paris" has been rated obscene by an appeals court here and its stars, Atarlon Brando and Maria Schneider, have been sentenced to two months lo jail. DIRECTOR BERNARDO Bertolucci and producer Alberto Grl- 1naldi Va lso also received two.month jail tenns, Be1tolucc:i and Valso were in cou rt, but Brando and Afiss Schneider were not known to be in Italy. The court president, ap- prox imately the equivalent ol chle! judge, said the se nten ces wlll be stayed pending an apl!"al U> Italy's highest co urt . A lower cou rt last February had cleared the film or ob.!tenlty charges brou~ht alter two private citizens complained about several sexually cxphcit scenes. The state prosecutor appealed the decision, THE MOVIE, WIDELY praised by fore ign and Ital ian critics, concerns a physical love affair between an American widower an d a _young French.&lrl In Pa.ria'. _ I • • J Tutt.da~. Jul'e S, 1973 Scuita Barbara Clu1nriel Reagan MediCal/ud8ment Asks Quiet C . I Dftll Y~5 Les Cra 11e I u H osz1ital 0 S d I ould Be Highest n cm1 a Oil Slick Discovered LOS ANGEL€S (APJ - T'lcvislon pel'JOOaUty Lea Crune hi in satlsl'aclOry condition suffering from pn~unlOOia. a spokesman nl UCLA ?.fecUcal Center said. SfATEL!NE, Nev. (APJ - Calilornla Gov, non a I d Jleagan says It's llme tor all public officials "to shut up'' about Watergate and let the law take its course . To do olherwise might _____ jco a dlze_Jhe chance or ully prosecu mg ose wJio may (. BRIEFS ) have committed cri{lles. the Jtepublican chie f executive told a news conference A1on- day. · lie had particularly harsh words for the suggestion o! Democratic Gov. Patrick J. Lucey of 1Wi9COOSin who sug- gested President N i J: o n resign "for th e. good of th e country," and was no .kinder to California Congressman Paul N. AfcCloskey, the maverick Republican who an- nounced he would introduce an impeachment resolution in the house. e ·Builget OK'd SACRAMENTO (AP) -The $9.24 billion state Senate version of the California budget has been sent to the Senate noor arter a quick committee meeting to legalize an earlier approval vote. Monday's 9-3 vote by the Senate Finance Committee sent the budget one step closer lo the tv.·o-house coriference committee meeling ~'here the state's_ ~(!(n_d_ing plan is tradi· tional!y hamznered out. e Slfe Fo11ghl SACRAMENTO '(AP J Caliromla should build its new governor's mansion somewhere other than the site or an ancient lndi,10 village and . burial grounds. Indian sJ)Okesmm say. In a hearing !\1onday by the Senate ad hoc Committee on Indian" Affairs, Indian v.·il· nesses said plans for archeological excavation of the gravesites -dating from about 1,000 B.C. -should also be discarded .. Archeologists said recent evidence indicates the mansion site Is the loca· lion of a former t.1aidu Indian village, including a cemetery. e TV Co.,eraJ'e SACRAMENTO (AP ) - Virtually unlimited television coverage or Assembly~-Ooor sessions and committee hear- ings is guaranteed by a resolu- tion approved by the lower house of the Californ ia Legislature. A 61).3 vole ri.Jonday ap- proved the nev.· rule -an ac- tion that D e mocrat ic Assemblyman John Qu imby or Rialto said "proves once again the Assembly is the superior of the two bodies or the Legislature." e BIH on Floor SACRAMENTO (AP ) -A • •backup·• legislative-con· g r essional reappo:rUon·mcnt bUI has-been sent to the A.ssembly noor on a 7·2 vote or the Assembly Elections and Reapportionment Con1mlttee. -Democratic state Se n . George Zenovlch of Fresno sa!d Monday his bill will be kei:K in reserve on the Assembly floor "ln c a se .something_~ppcns" to an --Identical P18n0n the noor or the Senate. The Assembly Elections and Reapportionment Committee sent Zenovich's bill to the lower house noor ?i.1onday after it \vas criticized as an attempt to gerrymander in favor of Incumbent lawmakers at 1he expense of minorities and women. POMONA (AP ) -A three months , then 11,3!0 a SUperlor Court malpractice month actornpanlect -by a 7.75 rullng on n sull brought In percent Increase annually for behalf of 11 thfee-year-old the· rest of the child's Ufe. ni e n t a 11 y r e t a r d e d otfleial5 ~timated that if quadri~pleglc boy could bf.. the child should "ve to age 68, come the highest judgment the payments could amount to ever awarded ln the United $21 mill ion !iince compounded States, court officla.ls said. annuully al 7. 75 percent, the SANTA BARBARA (AP) - EnvironmentaJlsts, battling to banish oil drilling acti\•ity from the Santa Barbara Chan- nel, have zeroed Jn on a tour- mlle·long oil slick a s evideni!e of their concern. The latest oil spill lo slain ---11e atinel wa!'"~ted-M da y afternoon about IO rniles uP;.-U.ie coast Crom here, the Coast Guard said. uct,.~i'irth~nied---m·ontht1 deposits w o lFI d l\fonday . that t~e Glendora amounl to $3,500 in JWIO and Commuruty Hospital and Or. '41.000 a month in 2013. ~::!~~~~':n~~J!t! !'!e suit, filed by Attorney u,.1 Teit.llor. to show 1he state land.11 Com. m_ission ·that they had OO!ter reconsider opening oil drilling in the state tidelands." beaches. "Agencies of both t h e federal and state gov~rnments will continue to monitor the si tuation and \\'ill take .ap- OIL INDUSTRY represen-propriate action s h o u Id tatives and the Coast Guard ~·Udlile or cri!lcal beach areas v.•er lo become endangered,·• n Coast Wlder,_wa<1ci:__..>.Jo.a.r..c.Jl.._;'1.....Guanb.spo~esman.__&ajd._.----. daybreak loday in a bid to The so-c!lled upwellioc:. n locate the source of the ooze. bubbling stream or gas and oil Officials said the search y,·ould hitting the ocean surface, v.'as Crane. 40. was takt'n to the center after being found unconscious in hi.'i \\'e!'it Hollywood apart· ment on Tuesday, :'.I. ~····\>--:'~-,-~~~~ Crane formerly hosted a Ir.le nighl lalk show on ABC-TV. a savings account for Larry W1!ham Shernoff of Clar~ S to••itlf' 1•11t Mledama because of a delay: m~nt, cont~~ed . that the u :I in treating him -When he was' child, no,w hvmg in ~ foster l"or health and security ~'I'm very alarmed but not surprised,'' saKI Alvin C. \Vein· gand, member ol the board of Get Oil Out, an ecology group founded here after a massive oil slick played havoc with area beaches in February 1969. "Our ocean rloor is very fragile and anything can hap- pen. lf this was caused from an old plugged oil well, it has got IJe conducted toy hclicopt~r and oil industry div<'rs. said to be some 25 yards \\'idc L..----------' No. reports of j njurr. or. and more active than normal. eight weeks old: home. faded to be adf!11tted by reasons~ Juan Corona Remke when taken to the ~ TllE RULING set payments by the h05pltal and Remke at $400 monthly for the f1£st ·hospital nearly three years wiJJ rernain at the Cali- ago by his mother .. Judy fornia Medic~al Facility Miedama. at Vacaville. serving a 1be suit stated that when life term for the slay· brought back the next day in a ' ings of 25 farm work· worsening condition. there was __ •_rs_. _______ _ danger to rish or other w1tdli (e have been received, but the state Department of Fish and Game said it intend s to check lo determine possible injury to living creatures. Authorities said also that there y,•as no ilnmediate danger to area OFFICIALS SAID it scen)ed to be coming from an un· der~·ater source that could Ix; either Crom a pipeline or a Nude Arrest Ban Fougl1t Supermarket a two-hour df lay befOre the child was examined by a pedlatrl.cfan: . natural leak. The nearest oil IA>S ANGELES (AP I -Al· production platform, Atlantic torncys for lhe city :ind county nichfield's Holly rig. i s ha ve asked a Superior Cou rt Pioneer T'a·x· Li.en fo· r· $1 63 085 !~(J~tcd a mile \\'CSl or the ~~n:t~=~r~~:n:~~~i:~:;;l si:;~ 'l1IE BOY suffered a . ' · ' ~ Th~ lalest oil spill revived bo" featuring nud;ty. cardiac arrest !rom which he men1orics of the 1969 offshore Judge Davis A. Thomas Dl·es at 91 recovered, but the suit 'con- -tended that he suffered ir-~ oil 1ve!J blowout w h ich denied a similar· motion on _ _rev.er.sible brain damage ' SAN FRANC ISCO i APl -he adopted the name Paul period frQm Dec. 31, 196.'"i, blackened beache s and !\1ay 16 because 3 stare LOS . ANG,EL~S (AP) --wl.!ich resulted in mental City records sho\v_ former ~taris in l970. through l\1arch 31, 1967, \\'hen created an 800-square-1nile oil Supreme Court ruling that F'uneral services are scheduled retardation -aiia"1jUadriplegia, fashion--executiYe-Pau~aris _E~ral . agents b e.g an · hlnu100w· ~a.s_'llllder --in-.slick. _ local antinudity laws are con ... ~~ednt'sday for <:'flarles T. 1he paralysis of his limbs. tias been-accused bY the :~~~r~h1~%s~ s:,~~mh~sec:;:Z vestigation for-a 11 c g e d 1 y Thal spi lJ spenea doom for slit:Uf1onal--was-not-then final . \on Der Ahe, .chairman and In addition to the n1onthly In ternal Revenue Service of t . '" 46• 000 . thousands of birds. most of The decision becaine final last founder of Vons G"?CCry Co. payments, the. hospital and lloyce automobile pending the ransport1ng 'I'll. a, 1 n . theni \vestcrn grebes, Y>hosc 'fhursday. and a pioneer m ·th e Remke, v.ilo has since moved owing $1 ,763,085 .31 in federal oulcome of pr ocee d i n .gs stolen bonds and securities feathers 1ind ,vings became U.S. Supreme Court Justice supermarket field. who died In to San Francisco have agreed taxes. a~ainst him, the San Fran-and $404.000 in counterfeit douS'Cd with oil when they di\'-\Villiam o. Douglas Friday his Los Angeles home at age to pay $25,ooo' to Mr s . RCC()rds filed Friday showed cisco Chronicle reported. bonds across state lines. He ed into the waler. The spill declined to stay the ruling 91. Miedama and $240 ooo in at· the IRS placed a lien on prop-later v.'as granted immunity in also brought com 111 e r c i a I pending a federal appeal. Von Der Ahe, lYho died Mon-torney's fees. ' erty against federal Mafia in· THE TAX LIEN notice gave return for testimony lhrcc fishing to a halt because nets Judge 'Thomas did not ~ay day, opened his nrst. market in Shernoff said. that the set-formant Martin Zelmanowit.z. no details except the large years ago against the Mafia in became fouled \Yith the oily when he would rule on the mo- 1906 at 7th and Figueroa In tlement is unusual because in-Earlier court documents said amount allegedly owed for the NeY.'ark, N.J. mess. lion to cancel the injunction. downto"'.n Los Angeles. ex· . stead of ordering payment 0r·l----------------.:;--'--'------'-'--------_:_='----·------'=:..:::..:::::::::.__:::::_:~== panded ti to 87 s tores b)'.' 1929 Used sum lo the child, who ~ · and then sold lhe chain lo expected to requir e in-'.\lac111ar~ £ood S.IDres. which____stitutional cate....;tei::manently, later merged ~·1th Safeway lifetime payments are to ibe Stores. made . THREE YEARS 'later. Von Der Ahe opened the fll'st Vons supermarket in s u b u r b a n Lynwood and since then has extended the Vons chain to 115 supermarkets in seven Southern California counlies. A native of Copenhagen. Denmark, Von Der Ahe \Vas a former president of t h e \Vcstcrn Association of Food Chains, Southern California Grocers Association, the Los Angeles Breakfast Club aod the Jonathan Club and had served as a director of the \Vilshire Country Club and St. John or God llospital. Women's Chandler· Resigns Board Post . 1 LQS ANGEbES (AP \ -Los Angeles Times Publisher Otis Chandler has resigned as a di rec1or of two San Francisco companies named in a civil suit by the Securities & Ex~ change Commission as hilvlng violated federal securities la~'S. Chandler announced ·h I s resignation in a. letter to....Ed. mund n. Beckwith, board chairman' of GTR Manage-n __ Y_fl U, .J1 ___ ment Co. and G eotek· J:rd U~ R"esourcts .Pillla Inc.. a Chandler spokesman s a l d SACRAMENTO (AP) -An Monday. all-male Assembly committee "Chandler indicated that he has approvl'd :.i 1neasure call· decided his resignation was ing for an annual salute of necessary, be c a u s e the C a I i f o r n i a w o m e n • s Securities and EJl[dJange Com- achievements. m!sslon had singled him out or A!lSCmblyman Julian Dix~three-dlrectors-as---a-defendan (0.Los Angeles)', authored the in its civil suit," the resolution which would pro-spokesman added. claim Aug. 26 as Women's · Recognition and Equality Day. THE SEC FILED the civil According to the resolution, action against the two com· women are currently entering panies last month in federal fields. formerly reserved for court In San Francisco. men -such as medicine. law The commission contended and RQlitics . that formt'r Geolek president TAX MOVE IN SENATE John P. Butk ~had allegedly-· misappropriated millions or dollars of lnvestors' money for his own use. Burke was ousted us Gcotek president early Jast year. The SEC has askl'd I he court SACRA1'-lENTO {AP) to appoint a receiver to Part of California's gas tax manage the two firms. revenue would be spent in "Immediate grave decisions rapid tr!!.@it under legislation . are required to be made by clearing a key ~mmJttee on a -Ilieboard of CTR an<l GeoteK; s-3 vote. including but not limited to the State Sen. James 1'-Ulls (0-issue of what PoSition should San Diego) proposed the stale be taken with respect to the constitutional amendment, SEC request for the ap. v.•hic h would allow gas tax polntmcnt of a receiver," money to be• used tor capital. Chandler said in a statement. construc1ion on rapid traruit "Under the . circumstances, systems or even bicycle trails, it is apparent to me that l along with highway con-must not. participate in that struction. decisioTI." he added. Big interest at the Big M PSA wants to go north (or south) with your money. Other , •. ~"'::.~~ Grinn ingbirds to San Francisco and San Diego.· Over 160 flights a day connec ting all of northern and southern California. Call your.travel agent or PSA and let's migrate. _PSAgives you a lft. • You can earn this high interest on $5,000 minimum two yea r certificates. The first yea r yo ur $5,000 -cert ff!Catewi1l earn $309.15, ~-ndl11ore·fon:irch ci1n'secutive-yeM"-that interest is added to.the account. You can earn $59.17 oil $1,000 minimum one year certificates, and as much as $51.26 on a regu lar passbook savings acco unt of $1,000. • More interest than banks ... more certain than stocks Plus-free services ... safe deposit boxes, notary I , Plus personal service ... experi enced and competent sav-· in gs co unselors in each office servii:e, travelers cheques, trust deed and note collections, and many more free services arc avail· ~ able when you have the required minimum balance in yo ur acco unt at THE BIG M. ' ... ~~ ' :ill THE Biii M to assist you in planning your savings program. MUTUAL SAVINGS ' ..-Id loln 1tl0Cittlon C:oronn del iUnr: 2867 Enst (A)ast Highway /675•5010 Cnpls trnno-SIJn (;lemente: 5:10 Camino de Estl't'Jlla/49:1•5651 Ot1:te1· OCClcc1 in CoYIM. We•t....Arcadla, 1'~ Clc.ndAle...Co.noea l!Atk-ChaUworth.and ,.housand Oaks. > . ' •' Robert D. Alton Vice f"'l'uidt:tt' Bmncli. 1\la11ugft' COron:.i dcl l\1ar - 6 .. . . ' D AILY P ILOT EDITORIJ\.L P i\GE How Far Can They Go? Cities along the Orange Coa st would be Y.'isc tu pay: clo se altcnlion to a current flap bct\vecn the ('ity of Ne"·port Beach and ·r11c South Coast H~gional \'onscr· vation Conunis~;ic)ll. 1\t stake i)j the extent to wh ich the L:on1n1issio n can intervene tn det;iils of local zoning. The fallin ~·out was sparked by the Co1nn~ission 's thal 1.klw·~r. But i£ the p~rking limitation argument is valid, one 1nust \VOnder whether it might be used to prevent, for cxan1 ple, the cuttJgg of a curb for a new driveway (ther& by rernoving a street parking ~Jot) or even the painting of curbside parking restrict.Jons to ~peed traffic flow. ,.. 'rhe coastal cities should seek c:larificat ion, in court ' ' dc111al of pcr1n1ts for 1hree proposed duplexes 1n \Vc:;;I, ------"1\1C\\1lOrt.1)cc·aust! thci -uittter]lt!'.l:11neff-1·0-provide anl'!...,,,,._ 1wo parking 51>aces for each b.uildini;. 'fhc Cunll11issiu11 if. newsitar..y of th8'-extent-to which the Gommi~sioft'"Clln•----1-..,..;0I>;' wanted four. l"-'O for each dwcthng un1t . -- The angry dc.vcloper. who says he will appea l lo 1he State ('on11111s:-;1nn. pointed out his pl::u1 confortned to 1·it~' zoning regu1alinns. This. was confir1ncd by ~l ayu1· J)ona1d J\. titclnni s. Equally irkect. the mayor cte1nanded . "\Vho's going, to run this city?" ('on11nissioner Judy Rosener. Newport Rea('h 1·e~1- dcnt. \vho Jed the G to ;) denial vote. toniended it is the Comrnission's duty to intervene if local authorilies l'er: mil any dcvelopn1ent that \''ou!tl have an "adverse en· vironnlental in1pa t.:t. ·· In this in stance. she n1aintalncd failure to provide suffi cient off-street parking \vould have the cffer t of li1niting public aC('Css to nearby beaches by overburdening available sl reet parking. The right of the Co1n1nission to override local zon- ing standards was upheld by a depi.1t y state altotney general "'ho tlahned that. barring a court decision to the contrary, it's up to the l~on11nission to decide what con- sti tutes an adverse environrnenta! effect. So the Co n1· n1ission proceeded to deny ty.•o n1Qre duplexes on the sanie grounds. ____ .llle.Jlisp.ute_ rai..~~~Q!filt i11t~r!l:sli11g _ queslions. During pre-election discussions on Proposition 20. _th e Coastal COnsCrvalion .Act, proponents assured us the la\V \Vas not intended to interfere \V ith 1he single house or building here and there. It s toncern. \Ve were tol d. would be directed tQ.Y.•a rd n1ajor devclop1nents that could gravely and pern1anently endanger the coastal environ· ment. So far it seen1s to have worked that way . indeed ovcrtide local zoning laws. Unfair to California As anticipated. U.S. ca r manufacturers are seeking a further delay in establishn1cnt of nationwide smog controf regulations. A few 1nonths ago. auto e1ni ssion standards set to go into effect in 1975 \Vere postponed· until 1976 at De- troit's requesL The argun1ent was _ that the auto-n1akers needed n1orc time to effect the change, l·lowcver, it was sus- pected they n1ight be more interested in us~g the ti 1ne to try to persuade the government lo relax the tight standards set under the Environn1ental Protection Act of 1970: Apparently this i~ taking pla.ce. fn addition to the deadline delay, it is suggested the standards also be relaxed. Unfortunately. California already has been sin gled out as the one state in tMe_nation where: tighter aon- trols. \clft:!_tQ o i_1110 effe_c_LbY._Ul~ originfil d~adIJ,ne. \VhiJe everyone would like to seo the eventual es· tablishn1ent of unifo r1n: nationwide auto en1ission con- trols. even the experts agree that the devices now ava il able are far from perfect. They are expensive, cut 1nileage and can da1na ge engines. / .. •' • It now appears the Com1nission feel s it has the right and wisdo1n to override loca l zoning on virtually any basis on any size project. And indeed it probab(y haS If the new delay sought by Detroit is granLed. it \Vould be grossly unfair-lo expect California 1notori.sts to subject their cars to questionable control methods years ahead of the r~st of the nation, just to see how they work. 11F YOU NMCS ~llK EV!~YSO~Y'S DOOR DOWN, W~AT WILL 1Ht 1.11.S. USE fOR Kl~OOLES?" Huma ns14-re Not Alway s Like Ani1na.ls " I don't know why thri researchers 11·ere so surprised. at the Ohio State University College of ~iedicine. when thei r study of "humi:in crowding" failed to yield one of 1 he expected result s. As reported in the magazine, "Huma n Behavjor," the researchers first n1oni tored the fr e e play of 60 averagf' youngsters aged 4 and 5 divided into groups o( six <.'hil- drcn each . First. the kids we.rt> placed in a large play area: I a I e r they were squC!Czcd into a pl;iy space not rnuch big- ger than a bathroom. \l'ilh plenty or ag- i::ressive toys scattert'd about . It turned out -contrary to expccta· tions -that there \\'ere fewer aggressive acts committed in the smaller spa~ lhan in the larger. This finding runs counter to the 11·ay many animals behave 11•hen they are cro11•ded : they ahnost in1·aria- bly attack one another. become rude, irritable, possessive and aggressive. OF COURSE, such a r a n d o m ex· pc rimenl is inconclusive -but it cloes l{'nrl to cast• doubt on those cocksure et hologists who prate about .. ter- ritoriality" and •·aggression" an1ong species. and throw the human race in • :i long '>''ilh all the ol hel'S. I have long in- sisfed that you can no mo re predict l\'h:lt a person \viii do frorn \l'hat a rat d0t•s 1 h.111 you can tell which humans \Vill desert a s111klng ship and \\'hieh 1vi ll try 10 sa1•c i1 Character and intelligence n1ake all the difft•renrc. An in1als nbviOtl!'ily in1crprct crO\l'ding ns being sonlt' other .:inin1al"s .. "fault .. : peoplt> can rcl·ogniZl' that it may be no nne"s raull. :.ind 1hus ada pt to the nc\v Dear Gloon1y Gus \Vould you say that the Nixon Ad- tTiinistration's theme song \VOS: I Did It l\'ly \Vay ? ~.:\.\\'. GICKlmY CiUI to-,imenl'l ire , Mlbmll!ecl bY •Ndtrl 11\d fo "'' ltt<H~•rlly ro!IKI fM w!tW~ ol lllt 11tww~•r. Send Your ptl OffVt to Gl-1!Y GUI, D•llv PUii. sifua!lon 1rithout ricrccly protecting their 1urr. \\'E CAN SEE lhe difference most clearly in those t1vo cro11·ded islands of human habitation, Japan and England. Here. where th!": people have for cen· turies lived in increasing densi!y. 1vith no continuous land mass to escape to. the rnost elaborate systems of politen ess have been evolved and en forced nol by law but by com1non consent.' l'he civility or the British. and the courtesy of the Jnpanese. do not imply an inht•rl'nt virtues in them. but sln1ply the tacit aCkno1rledgcn1cnt that they ha ve to lll·c together in a small spa ce. and th e most sensi hlc way is by lining up in queues. by refraining frorn shoving and pushing and gelling ahead of soniebody else. THEY HECOGNIZE 1h.1t the dense population is a force beyond their in· di\1idual cqntrot. and have adopted a code cf public behavior that lubricates the soci:il rrictions of so many individu"als r11bbing up against one another in a llniited space. t1\cl ually. in large and ex-pan.~1\'c territories. such as the AmeriCan \\"1•st during frontier times, th ere \Vas far mort• agJ!rrssil"eness and conrlict . even though ni;in could stake out aln1ost unli n1i tcd acreage fo r himself.,) E1·cn . ~·oung children. apparcnll y, quickly adjust to living in a more confill{!d area. and a('I less aggressively than 11·hrn they have far n1ore room ro sci:n1prr about 111. Obviously. their food supplil'S '>''ere not threalrnt'<l. as is the e:1~e 1\'il h many animals: but since it is a part of hurnan intelligence to be able to gl't food in diverse "'a.vs. the ""hole ;J11al41('~' bct1vecn animal antl hun1a11 "ter- 1'itorialitv" br('aks do"·n. \\'ar. as such. is a specifically human institution, and not a hcr1lag c or our anima l anceslry, If Y 011're C:aught, -CaU_lt Nntio1aal See11rity Law-and-Order-Through-Crime Plan \VASHI NGTON -By no1v President Nixon must wanl 10 do a lot more to Daniel Ellsberg th~n break in to his shrlnk's office. Just 1\·hen it looked as if Elliot Richardsoii 1rere going to slip int6 the Attorney Generals job '!tlthout any serious questions being raised about this overly s1nooth poli- ti cian. Ellst>e_rg re- leased information indicating Richard- SQrl, too. has played a shadGll'Y and far too reticent role in the-nebulae of scan- dals called \\'ater- gate. As a consequenCe he 1vas called back to the Senate Judici- ary Committee that had been "·cig hing his qualifications for Attorney General. That \vas a lovely scene. D1u·ing the in- termissions. \vhile the Senators marchecl off to vote. Ellsberg held forth lo the re- po rters in the back of the room, guidin.I{ them in his tense. lo\\'-votcc.d 1vay 1hrough lhe ant tunnels oi til is complex case. Then the astonishingly well·tailorcd Rictlard- son 1\'0t1\d reappea r to be questioned by the commitJee members. notably by Rob- ert Byrtf'(D'., \\'.Va .), "'ho is no man le,. play verbal games ~1th. On thi s occasion they didn't get into Richardson·~ fail - the ineffectual Archibald Cox. \\'ho has been cast in the role of the c!e<in. special prosecutor destined to put all the bad guy:r-in j11il. The Senators knO'\Y tha t by thl' best calculations ri-Ir. Cox. our cn1- sading nntional district attorney. hasn't laced a jury in 31 years. but they did drag out of Richardson that he kne11' that Nixon knew about the Ellsberg burglary at least by late l\'larch. AT AL!\IOST the sa me moment do\\11 at the White House, Ronald Zieg-liar, as the reporters no11' pun on his name. 11·as reading a Nixon statement saying i1 ·was not until April 25 !hat the President kne1\' that E. llo1va rd Hunt. one or the con· vic tcd .. crooks 1\'ho used lo be on his pa yroll . had broken into the office or Ellsbcrg's psychiatrist. l:lut thi s suggestion or eollu<>iQn bct\\·een the .f\t!orney General-deslgn ulc and his boss Was overlooked as 1 he reporters were knocked over by the • ( VON HOFFMAN J ta·rger admission -that Nixo h a d authorized. as he said in his own \\'Ords. "surreptitious entry -breaking and entering. in effect -on specified catego ries of targets in specified situa- tions related lo national security.'' These burglaries \\'ere to be committed wilhout a court order, under the 'Color of no known American la1v. in accordance with some sUll secret pl_an which \\'as bloc ked ond not put into effect because of the protesls of J. Edgar Hoover. Subse- qu ent t>l'en!s indica ll' Nixon is lying on that one tgo. Al1 hough -he denies knowledge of it, lhe breaking into Ellsberg·s shrink·s office follo"·s the plan he admits he conl·Octed. Bui more lhan that. we h.1ve !he C-01\insville, Ill .. case in 11•hich a 1nob of Federal narcotics agents smashed their "''ay inl o lhe homes of 11\"0 inoocent fan1ilies. destroyed their belong- ings a,nd terrorized thcn1 and their children. JF ANYTJIING, it DO\\' appears that N ix on ' s Jaw-and-0rdcr·through-crin1e plan \\·as-;exccuted and "·as not restricted to national security cases, "'hatever-that dangerously vague tem1 means. The trut h is a band of Presidential goons has endangered national and personal securi- ty by suspending the Bill o( Rights. Nixon begs us lo 1nake a distinctklt bl't11·cen-\\'atergate and the \\'hlte liousc·s Special ln vcstiga!ibns Unit, the !\!asked Plumbers. The Plumbers, he says, were "'orking on national security "·hite the \\1111erg111e ~ooks \\'ere naughty boys doh1g things he didn't approve of. The on ly problent is tl\.11 lhe Plumbers t11ld the \\'atergate crooks are virtually thf' same people. TilC modus operandi of these crimiNlb is simple: lf Yott get caught we'll'elll ir na tionaJ security and get you off. The Fate of the Mightiest Nation Once l1pon a 1in1e rhere "·as a country 1ha t 1vas ve ry sn1all and, on the \\'hole. Vl'l'Y good. Its citizens "'ere proud and independ- ent and self-reliant and generally pros- perous. They believed in freedom and justice and equality. But. above all. Uwy had faith. They had faith in their religion. their leaders, their country and the mselves. And, of course, they 11·ere ambitious. Being proud or their country, t~ey wanted to make it bigger. Fi rst. t~ey conquered the savage tribes that hem· med them in. They th ey fought in· numerable "·ars on land and sea with foreign powers to the east and "-est and south. They \\'Oil almost all the battles they fought and conquered roreign lands. It took many generations, bu t at last the good, little country was the richest, mightiest nation in the y.•hole wide world -admired . respected, envied and r~ared by one-and all. "\Ve must remain the mightiest na- tion,'' said its leaders, "so that Y.'e can insure universal peace and make everyone as prosperous and decent and civilil.Cd as l\'e are." AT FIRST, the mightiest nation 1\'as as good as l!s \\"Ord. It constructed highways and buildings and pipelines and hygienic faci lities all over the world. And, ( ART HOPPE ) for a11·hile. it t'l'Cn kept the peace. But being the mighties1 natk>n ln the \\'Orld. its leader '>''as the mightiest man in the world. And , naturally. he ac ted like lt. _ He surrounded himseir \\'ith a palace guard of men chosen solely for their pe rsonal loyalty. He usurped the powers of the Senate. signing trt>aties. "'aging "·ars and spending publ ic funds as he sa1v fit. \\'hen little countries far aw1y rebelled, he sent. troops "·ithout so much as'a by- your-leave. And the mightiest nation became engaged in a series of Jong, coslly, inconclusive campaigns in far a·11'ay lands. So ~ome disill usioiied sol·-.. dier·s refused to. obey orders and some sailors mutinied. even thou gh the leader raised Lhei r pay. And in sorne pla ces lhe mighl ies t nation hired mcrcen<iries to do its fighting. ANO BECAUS E it \Vas lhc richest na- tion. it worshiped '>''ealth and the things ~·ea lth bought. But the rich grew richer and the poor grew poorer through unfair tax la11'S. And Jn the ca pital one of five 1.r.;-re idle and· on welfare. \\'hen the poor Jtrumbtcd they \\'ere cntert..1incd by highly paid nthlctes and the fi ring of expensive rockets into the air "'hi cb sometimes fizzled. &It the poor often rioted and lootl'd and burned In thei r frustrated rage. ~Iany citizens lost faith in their old religion and !Urned to 0 r i e n t a I mysticism. And !he young, wearing 10QC hair and sandals. became Jesus lrealul. Bare-breas1ed dancers, le\1•d. shows and sex orgies \\'ere increasingly common. And the currency 1\·as debased again and ag.1in to meet the mounting debts. \Vorst of all, the ci tizens carne to Jeam their leaders were corrupt -that the respected palace guard was selling favors to the rich and sending spies amo ng the pco1)lc. creating fear and distrust. So it was that rhe people lost faith. They lost fai th in their leaders, their cur- rency, their roc kuts, their postal system, their armies. their religion. their laws, their mor;il l'alues. their t.'OWltry and. cvl'ntually. lhemselves. 1\nd. lhus. in 476 A.D. Rome fell to the barbarians and the Onrk Ages settled ol"cr \Vestcrn civilil3lion. ft10RAL, For what is a nation p~ filed if it shall gain the whole ~·orld and tuse its 01vn soul? Wh y .Germ_an~ Fears Extensive U_.S ~Troop _ Witbdr_awaJs BONN. \\lest (.:crnuinl" -1\s th1' c;cr1nan press belat edly t:iCg<1 n 1~ubhsh1 ng the \\'utergate rcrCl<ll1ons. high go\crn - n1cnt offici~ls 11·ere rubliely d1sd;ii ning interest in the An1· t·rlcan sca naaJ bu1 privately p I a cinJ!: · rr;.u11i(: calls to lh e IOP lcVt>I llL lhc i;.s embassy to ask lhi5 question : fio1v bndl y 1\·ill it hurl Prt>sidcnt Nixun ? That concern steins not frorn nbundant affcrt ron here for f.fr. Nixon but cqnl· plctc d(>~ndence on him lo keep :1 he11\·y roinmilnlf'lll of U.S. troops In Germany. tr pclltic11 lly 1TJa1n1ed by 1hc \Vater~alt' i;candal. the (;crmnns fear. J\·lr. Nixon rnighr not be ah!e 10 riiz ht off de111nncl" for mnssrv P 1ruop \\i1 hdn11\als . 11\lh friJ!:htcnin~ «inst:qucnccs for the la1c of \\lestern _Eu ropa. TlllS ..-~:AH of U.S. djscngag ment, not ov1;>rpubltc1zed reports of anli-YA nkcc c.di!l{L ;.rnong Ger1nan!o_is t.l)c m_!Jpr problem~re IOORy,.--\Vboltevcr pii&llc_u:· rltatton there may be over 212.000 li.S. 1roop!ll in Germany 11 generation afl <'r ll'orld \\'or II. lhc mte<>'C 11,.;rc b~ [ Chancellor Wi lly Br:andl's gnvrrnmcnl lo htcp every one of U1em is no! In quostiQn. The reason is an old one. Only Arnericnn troops~ !he Crrman official s EVANS ·NOVAK ) kn1111. pasc 1hc nuclear 1hrt:<lt !hat ~Ul .. l'l'S:-(u!ly coun!crs 111asslvc So v l c t mi!it(lry f>O\rCr In Ccn1ral F:urope. Even 1f !'{·p!arec! by ~:1iropca n troops t \\'hi ch 11ould hr doubt ful 1, 1/us Americ:i n deter· rCnl'C 11 ould he gone. Co11st'!JUt'ntly, 1he Hr::indt government l.li not only publicly np1J..1 Jled by con· i:rcssJon:il tnlk of a unll:Hernl U.S. troop 111t hrlr::iwa\ but privately 5kcplical of 11har mny cornc oul nr current NATO- \\'nrsa"· Pnct la1 ks 1n Vienna over n1u1ual troop reductions ·Iii Central Europc. "Quite frnnkl y," oriel German llOht·ymaker told us. "11·c fea r \Vhatevcr h:11>1)('n.~ in \liennri beca use any agrce- nicnl c,111 'only bC'neflt the f{u:.sians. l.r 'ft ll!: \'ll~NNA t~1!ks l'l•sult in even a rclatlvelv modc~l 11·ilhd.ra wal of U.S. troops (:tay. 10,000 to 20,000 1. the (;t'rmons \\•Ill b<> di stressed. Any such rcd.uction. they suy, !lhQuld corne out of -lotfliUc·a~ tr00f)M'altw-rihan1he 4'h U.S. Ar1ny comb.it dtvl slOllS tn r:urope -U l!!:n con~idcrcd hnposs lblc by the U.S. n11111ary. . \\'hat really terrifies "'Bonn. lio wcvei'. is 1he prospect that the Scna1c isoluHonisl, 1~ill prevail against a weake ned l\lr. Nix- on 10 force :l massive unil1Her;il u·ithdrawal of 100,000 trOO)>S or e\'cn more. A high ranking n1 i 1 r la r y pollcymaker in 1he German defense ministry has a frightening. h\'O-stcp sce narHJ of what quite likely 1vould hnp- pcn in the event of such a unilntcral pult- O<Jl. Phaso ooe, according to !hi! scenario. would be a Western Euroµean ef fort - proh.ibly under f'rcnch leadership -to build a Eu ropean defense csttibHshment "'ilh nuclear punch. Almost surely, rhis effort would nzile in a short Ume. li!llV· Ing no substitute for the departed U.S. troops. . . OUT or-· TllAT vac uwn would come ph1tse-two,-11c1..'0f'dl11g-10 this offici al : Ute "proce.!!lion to f\.loscow." Ile feels that the NATO nations, stripped or a con- ' I vincing n11li1ary deterrent. \Vould be sub- ject to the political domination of the Soviet Union. This lhreal of a bloodless Soviet conquest of Europe, while in- ll'ndcd as Ii chilling argument against U.S. tr0<ip 11•ithdra1val, is the honestly held opinion of many officials not only here b\lt elsewhere In Western Europe. Giving special point to German y.·orries i~ some apprehension over Y.'hat foJIO\l"S Brandt's ostpolltlk, his i m mens e I y popular policy or easing tensions with Com1nunist East Germany and the Soviet Union. In private, some ofOtials fttl the Communists are getting steadily tougher in neshing oul ag reements on Berlin and links between the ty.·o Germanies. Indeed. they fear the Communists "·ould get all the tougher in the absence or U.S. ttJ>Ops. Ostpolltlk, they say, depends on U.S. troops. AGAINST TllESI!: paramount con· sldcr:i11on~. Irritation.by the pros perous Gcrrnun public -0ver 212.000 American Gls Is trivia l. Lulled by ostpolitik. younger Germa ns see no reason tor the Americans being around. The Gls, lm· pov<'rished by !he develued dollar--11nd rev11lued mark, ore no economic at· traction to German mcrcNnts. I J\.1orrover, U.S. mil itary au thorities ex- acerbared the situation recently \\'ith an ill·timed attempt to purchase land for maneuvers In this c r a m p e d , overpopulated country. U.S. Ambassador Marlin Hollen brand immediately got the military lo postµone all such purchases indefinitely. Simultaneously, the military is trying hard to soften othe r an- noynnces. such as helicopter flight s over · populated areas. All such annoyan ces, softened or not, OUNGI co.1....---- DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed, Publit./tt r 1'11on1m1 Keevil~ Editor /Jarbara Krtibi.ch EditorWl Paue Edieor Tueiday, -June 5, 1973 I are irrelevant lo r.erman officials frightened over the Implications cif a U.S. withdrawal -a nightmare that must be vie'.'·ed as a poss ibility In the light of the poisonous marriage of \Yatergate and the new isolationis1n. To prevent such a c11tastrophe. the (termans and other Europeans 1nay have to do more than they \\'ant to make ll easier ec1momica lly for the Uni11:d Slates to continue its U.S. troop co1nmltmen1 -the su bject of a futur.~ coluntn from Europe. -... 11\e~ed'itDrial pago or· the Dally Pilot seeks lo inform. Wld 11lmulate readtt1 by pruentlf\I t)n thl1 PMle <liVeNe commentary on toplt.'t c){ in· ten!St by 1)'ndlcated rolumnlll• and cat"loonl~ls, by provldlnir • forum for r~a,dcn;' vitW.'t and by Pn'JICnllna lhl1 new~per"s oplnlon1 and ldt'1t1 on '-'llt~ot topics. '!'he cdl!oria.l opinion. .ol the Dally Pilo"-nppcnr only In ttre edhori41 colum'n at lhc 1op ot the page. Opln.,_ e.11pr<'5scd by the rol· umnl'°f' and c&r1.oonl1ts and letter wril~r• are thclr ovm and no cfldonle.. rnenr or 1i:1e1r v~. -6Y lht n.11.v Pilot should be infem'fJ, • • . • • • • -· .. ·: . . --· A Salem refreshes--naturaJJy! Natural Mentho~lend (means naturally fresh taste) ---~ , -Salem's. uaique. blend. feature$ natural . menthoLis na1ur<1lly_gto.wn._YPU'.ll ge_t a:_ •• menthol, not the kind made in labora-taste that's not narsh or hot ... a taste as tories. like our superb tobaccos, our naturally cool and fresh as Springtime. • r \ Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That°Cigarene Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Healtll~ 0 1tfJ .,,, ltl"IOl•I 10l•CCO CO. . . • ' • f· t .. I' t • t ~ ) i , .. a em t . A~~,,~, - A Salem is King or Super King. ~ - KING . t9mg."tar",1.3 mg. nicotine. SUPER KING: 21 mg. "te(', 1.5 mg: nicot ine.av. per cigarnne. FTC Ropo_n FEB. '73.. --- ' ' I · l - • • 8 DAIL v PIL'or -- Fo1· the Record He's a ' . ' f -• Goo1l -s~ou-t Wo••aet• Sa i d 'S111arte r ' , Aborti ons Decli ne: • :C.,l!!!>J!'!\ ~ :'u\o!:t ;\~ . '£ ~ -~ · 11ow-n:ll. DR. w11111m onc1 In tt;e C<MllllT Ill .... , llllri>- 1\en tn"c ~ 0 lt b ~ t I o !Tl lni· Tl\Q~n1 a · &Yn..,,logisJ of \iei' of 4bor~ ......... . il\elJt"l'tintl the i>l'Ol'•m at the The rate of therapeµl\e \h~ h9o11ital In P•!ll18•· th!nila I ed, plern regional level. The abor\11111 porfQflll•d In !lr•ll8• the 19'1 11111111 \1 Joo high, Ahnool i,000 !borllmil Ila., \\!'oin\111 lo now a comertlone ' Counl1 ~-fJOOl 1971 to Dr. ~,._ )lel\eves the been performed In °"'l'(e \\( !lcoqllng's desire to make ltl11"'~ Ille trend of 'f ...,... · C.,)I~' tftnl lo th• changing timeB. 111111 '11Vim11 iria\IJl![!S ref8-iecl.l!I! Ille J te tbs hlj8i>ll@l! ~ a~ehlng llberall1\ltl Jaw• l\'enl lliJO of· tllelr -ram for boys rel.. lliai.. · 1111111itv itale1'lde llJUres '"'11'dlto rate h~ ,;.1ed off l>ecpiiae Counly s In'' . ' -il!rll!..l!Qll'J>!!rll£1 te ac.~ie!r. Di> -ol Pubijcjlea1 .• tile dtm.itif Bl ll\e women feet tn ~ove~bef, 11!1..-Mort . ··m-.::xp10rer--:reve1-scout1n~ e • ....., r-.~-... ~eslilil('liifl s. ha '41 ,188 ~~)iUt., __ _ ·gral1\I, too. perlorf!lecl ln hQaplt~ls fri the He ·~Ii. •Jlifl\!\Elon erperl• been pt>rlormtd· )II l!i('~l!I~ · Ot1ier Deaths HWkenbotto.m became tle1m-Ctiunty ln 1972 was (!'lly 16 ~r-estimatf Uit ile · .IPtd is one within Ille ap~ ~Dd 1 of •y _1 ueeuti•• or •h• 1.os Tn•al s· .. t ,."'higher •hiln 1n 1911. •pm· 1i,pe~~~ @0011 .. '" ov••Y tlm•. :r ~, Angeles -area t'OUncil. in 1963 _ 17 m'lred lo an ID Pf!rccnt In· t live· births. The rale I~ 119\ ,,,.ii!iiiiiiiii![ii~ -n·nd ·cam·e-to Orange County in -crease from 1970 lifl97L 1. ~ higlJ -11t llii m~lca I 1967 a,s Scout Executive of the F S TilE Pft..\NGE c 0 u n t y center. '""lch )le esllpu1.te4 as I Orange E1npire Cou('lcll. The (lr uspect figures are compara~lc to 01\t! abortlPf\ for eyerf f(>qr ooumy ha~ two cou1\CilS then. statfwide ln.cre~ses of 19 per· live births. I but in 1972, the North Orange f 971 t 972 d 8 Counet .. t ""' .. 'led with the Or•••• J 8 R cen rom 1 0 1 • an 7 MR&, l~ll-~ft~ Cefyinteil ~· ..... n . opes pe-1 from 18'iQ lo lint. _,, I I Empire to roini the present -~as. p_lt'S in . the coo•\y l'lOQ<~ .-.. ·~~Lv "1'1-~-eou•cll l'iih tt1"ckenbotlom as " ., L!fleoln • Ynllf· "°'P ~I. o.itr Pllltl ,,." ,..... • 1• · • • SA~A ANA A 8 Id · · ! ~ therapeutic Ii _. · · I · "' r ds ftrst Se.ut Executive. . '" -•. II''." aborllanl 1q lm. In 1971 t~e Ql er,.. • .• •Niil fo.JISQ•1 or Hickenbotlom feels that It 1s Park tnan su~pec:_ led of eiglil 1·,~-"'' • 015· en~ In 1970 the ~1 · I rate. Sh~ feels. LIKIS HIS WQRJf Scout Hlcke9'bottom • lOcal council under l h e leadership o' the late' \Vill\am ~purgea,I\ lll of ~nta Ana developed a plan wh~re hi~h ~hool age youlh woqld W\ltk wit.h local penplc in leade{ship pasltions to gain vocationfll ex- pcrienc.-t . The counl'y progran\ began e-" "t ' '1 ' WOlflih -·. are .ia )qt Pf'Q~ I.bat-.there is pnly one Qran1·e and lo5 ,\nge}es Qoun· ~~ p~lilif ,was 1,870 sm.,rEt 11!1 ~ceJ11ing blr.th COWlCll 1n \h e cow1ty beeaule .1ty rapes has b1:!en ontere4 to -1'1AOY hilpltals int~ county uon~r-~oods. ol Ille oneness the county 1 · 1 1 1 J 1 23 . 0 :actuallv """rosed 1,)\lie pam· ,, ·•• 1 · .., residents feel . "The· couniy ace r a u Y . in r811!@ ~ of ~rtions rfOrg\ed 1· n . @'re . .lntv. RJ a~ •uan~ had just one oouneil llRy County Superior Court. -1m .. Tl[e lirJ:e Pl1lin Y 1111!'111'1'.L ii\iilli preri't com· years ago, then dlv\ded. II ·11 J"dl• l<enneth Lae aet the Medi••I eenlel-wite.-e d~lors log 11f Ji!;· ¥It """'"d~ tli!r~ fitr th t thl 1 • ~. · ' • ? 'Ill' f!!Wlll ! !'\IPn 11. !>lien •• mg_ .• on 'ann versar-r, trial date for Wllllim Edward perf!>fmod 11\• Ire~ I e I I tbey"N•"'.' ,"11 ' "1• said, year, 1t 1s O(le council a1Jain, h~nl~r of abortlOns In the ~ ~"" he add<d. Uerald, 18. lie la-ehar&od with county· 'llitod q7 allorll@i in · lllllmlN' !j 'i'lll! L!qcoln . Hiekenbollom hold• \he, to~ 1 er perv.,.sloo, kidtit~, Ji72, ~Rd !@ti In lit!!.' The . · .. J P!4'1, Bil•ll• executive sqpervisory ~t!:on . . .hoafital acooYn\'4 fof. 14 pe"' qrk1 · . , 57' abortions . in a council whose acUvlUes ~sault Wlth a de~~ly we,pan ciP of all i(t>Of1l011Sperf9Z'n1· I~ 11 •• oomflialld to 381 In and camps have tripled lq the &Jld assault. ed ln t~ couri.ty in 191•. • .19Ti, ~ _tal r!l11kecl set."" . last six years. and who¥l-c:=·c ~=-====-HinshaW-ASkS e1~ogrmn_;a'.@be~•1:000~' gone from -Despite the rapid rro:wth of 0. n· D1°abetes Re· sea· 1 ... h ~Tn~.° u ~~ i \~lck:bo·~~ . "' damental thing In scouting 11 By 0.C. lll!STINGS Of .. O.ltY •a.t .... tington Beach \Vomen \'olers. teaching the yq.1ng ~o use In- League of iJiative lq th~ hi g h1 y technical times. C o n g r e s s m a n ,Ancb·ew..... ..Ne\\' ollicers oLlhe League lfinshav: is tackling a "con· l\'Cl't also elected, with Mrs. troversial ·· s u b j e c t Ruth Finl_ey \Vinning her s~- diabetcs. t'OOd straight term as pres1· dent. · The Orange Co u n t Y Other officers t.re : ~~r.s, •·our -program toda y slill pms great empllasis on-the' young persori's use of his owp initiative in his advancement, 11 he points out. Initiative lo learn to do in life. Word8 of Wisdom froin a man who SO ye"ars ago found a job lle liked (Ind ,tayed with It fQr a~1hile. Republi can has introduced a Janet Emm&ru\, ;!first vlce bill, lfR 74-lO, calling upon the president; 1-irs. Pecgy 1\lcker, Nationlil Institute of Health to second vice presld~D\; ··r.irs. develoP .and_PffSent to_ Cm-~tty K en n e d y I !E!'cl<etary. gress a national diabetes pro-Bailey, l\11·s. Jea n Oiedt a·n~ gram. Directors are ~1rs. Ruth IA· ] J\•I ··11 also would provide for Bailey, ~1rs. Jean Oiedt and C~)l l Oll C l \11 expanded funding of cuirent Mrs. Joan Kai&. '-., · researcli acUvltlet and would \Von1en interested ln joipin11 A \\'a l•tletl Bond authorlie at least 15 centers the League, 'A-'hich serves Wun· ........_ for training and demonstration tington Beach, F o \l n ta In Francis Jason, &'lOO'W~er programs," Htnshaw says. Valley and Se~l ~e~c\\, s_~uld Ave., Huptiogtob Beach~ ~ His bill hSs been referred to con tact 1-trs. V1rg1n1a Whipple, r:eceived a f25 U.S. Savlf\lt .!~~t~~~ ,,. ,/1~1 JVliu . the House Committee on 846-1256. Bond for his suuestlon to akl US VEGAS (AP ) _ AM Interstate and Foreign Com· * * * General Te I e p h 0 n e i 1 l!h SaMUer, an executive of the rneree. * * * ~IAY01l. JOSEPH L. Alioto stallation and maintenance Dunes Hotel known as .. Mr. or San Francisco received a personnel in more ea1lly fill' Lis Vegai,·~ died ol 1 heart GROWl'R IN Huntington "A1an of, t he \'ear" award ding ltreet loc.aUQl'll. Jason ll Beach and the d ty charter Saturday il\-.A·na~illlrftgm lhe a n in 1-t-a 11 er· attack Monday while welcom~ have been picked \ as study Southern C&llfornla lodges of repairman l:n hte utility's ing National Footb.."1.11 League topics for 191~·74 by the ll uo-the Sons of Italy. Orange Division. player• to their oonvenUonl _.c._ ____ _c _________ .:._ _____ ....:_::::.. ___ -----11 here. NASHVILLE, Tenn. IAP J - An1a Boatemp1, ro, poet, a uthor and critic or Anlerican ....... UteratUre-;···died ·Monday. "fiis first novel, "God Sends Sun- day" wa1 publi1hed ln 1931 and later was dran1atl1ed on Broadway as "St. Lou I s Woman" ~·Ith Pearl Bailey. D"'" Notices ~uiu!#l~~cg/~ Promises To Pay You A Guaranteed Income On Certificati! Accounts At ThelL Highest Interest Rates In 38Years ! Maytag depe ndab ility b-ui lt into every rugge d inch! - this lawtr cast Mlrtal Wm . with fiaturas II t~u1: • 3 1utom1tlo w11h eyolell • I 1utom1t1a IHk oyclnl • Cholae of 4 w1ter level1J • Oholoe of wit h tlmetl • Ohfiloe of w1th1 rln~e ind IOlk w1 .. !r 11m11'r~•-~111 You namt the llunf prilltm.Jlds n1w M1rt111alY11 HI • 'r• ...... !It ._.., ............ hll\11111'1 ·11U~11c f?A" cra.e 1oo ..... llN:vy. •lubbonl IOI, Perfrect b 1161vy wMc Glelhl .. felnto Ill-- ' ..................... ,JUllMtlt\fl TIMED80AKdtll tf'ld NIK I YQUl'Wllet'Mn!PWlll\lt9. Combinn Mll"11 irtllli._ llMI Ml~ ol .;1111101\1 le l\etp ~ -~~ IPOI• .nd t\1!111. ., ................. ~ .......... , 8oaldrtg II oflen oaalrabla lo ~ Iha i.,.., ,,..nine poW1t of ptloeph1ie.traa ••1'9t" ... ln• !*fl' Ml.,.. ~•tic OMt You I dlolc:t ol two lllllofnttlc 8o4K CYCt.E8 • • YaW ~ .. liiiilllle ~ ... -.., JI.Ill: Plllll tlMI button• lo get th• righi Oomblnalloil olwi~rr.::m!)'lrn!ure. roa~ eyele. arod waYlina time, You llev1 lrouble kHPinD lfflohl color1 b.ighl7 Just $OI the !;Q!l!ro)s and you gel !he 1igh1 OOn'IOln•t•on ol Wlltllr tempe1<t!~and wnh lime:- Browning with cool microwave cooking Litton's exclusive · Micro-Browner1TM> Right now, while current hi gh int.ercstratcs prevail, select the certifica te account that best suits yourneedi! Start making the most of your money at Orange County's largest, .first and 1lronge&t Independent Federal .•. where your personal welcome is warm, your finan~security is sure, and your earning growth is guaranteed for the full tenn of your account. CALORIC GAS RANGE Now you c•n u'e your lit-" \ AllBUCKLE " SON WZ!ITCL!fF MORTUARY 411 E. 11th St.. Costa ~1esa tlG-4881 • -ftA'tTf.·BEROERON FUNY.RAL H0'1£ Corona del P.lar 673-9450 Cot&a Me11 148-Z4%4 • BELL DROADWA Y MORTUARY 110 lltoadway, Co1ta l\lesa LI 1-3433 • MoCOllMICK LAGUNA 11rJACH MORTUARY J7M Wpna Canyon Rd. "4-N15 • • PACIP'IC VIEW · MEMORIAL PARK CemtN'fi.,,:tortuary :t5lt Pulflc View Drive Newpwt 11.n, CalHonla 114-mt • PEEK FA~fiLY COWNIAL FUNERAL HOME 7801 Bolsa Ave. Westminster 03-lSZS • SMITHS' MORTUARY 621 P.1aJn St. llunll~tach P111~ Accounts In •ny amount $!500 minimum . held for 90 d•ys $2500 minimum . 1to5 years* $5,000 minimum 2 to6iynrs·• Certif~t11 Eamlna: AND OVER-p1ld 1nnu1lly on deposits lnqulrt•bout l to5Y11r 7% _ . of 1100,000 or more. Ad now! * . · ' Number of these eccounts limited. INTEREST ON ALL ACCOUNTS IS COMPOUN DED DAILY. PAID QUARTERLY •oo day interest forfeiture !or f!Rrly withdrawn! llOME OFACF.; 260 Ocean Avenue. Laguna Beacll. Calif. 9n Sl Laguna 1-lilb Branch ~24038 Calle de la Plata, Laguna Hills, Calif. 926.SJ Laguna Niguel Bra ncli : J Monarch Bay Pla:r.1, Sou1h Laeu na , Cali(, 92677 San lemente Dran<:h : 601 N. Fl amino Rc:i.I. San Clemente. C1lif, 92672 La\:e Eh1norc Branch : 600 Wei;." Graham /\venue, Lake Elsinore, Calif. 92330 • WITH CONTINUOUS CLEANING OYIN • ton microw•.,,• oven for 95 '"/. of your everyd1y cookin9 -without the use of your convention•I "' s3Q995 ... broiler or griddle • WKlt-tM-bat~rt-MicrO-Bro""'fter,...you'll· .. h.-... .-4lght,-+-- 9olden brownJ•nce kes end French to•st, crisp hesh browns, se1re ste1ks •nd chops --= foods with r•· :. . • O Cont inuo\11 •~t~fi19 9Y•~ •Ultr•-R•y® l ~ffi·~l4_ ~rtllPr/•••n o Tri-set burn~rs • Clock, lig ht, Ii'!'•• o Deluxe top-mo unted controls tvlt• (\•¥er before possible in • mierow•ve oven. Tft1 Litton Micr~·8row~e~ provides th~ c•p•bility for ~riw~lng, se1r1ng, gr1ll1ng , •nd frying -during "'1Cri'f¥•¥e cooking. ffiLITTON Litton Microwa ve Ovens Nobody knom mofe abou~ mic•Ow•ve cookln!I thin LIUon. Nobo<I~. davls~ row-n 1141 I~ Jf • TELEVIS ION o STEREO O Al'P LIAN CES e SAUS o SIRYICI e SINCE 1947 '• 26 Year• of l11 tegrlt.11. & Depen~abll l ty . m COSTA MESA O HARIO R AREA IL TORO e SADDLllACK VALLEY • i . • • • • , • • , ' i ' ' 1 ' ' 1 ~ ~ , , L , ~ l 1 ' , • l l ~r W~!llfl', +- ,RADf0 D!SP.ATCHED.fA CTORY-AUTHORIZID -TV &,Al'PLIANCl-SIRYIC~ r HGN I 548-907--. ,,_,,,,_ __ _._.... __________ --<·· Oaily 9°9, S1twrd•v 9·• 646°1 614 137-3130 \ ' • ~ . • r -PUBLIC NOTJCE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUIJ-NO'l'IGE - PUBLIC NOTICE •1cr1ous •us1 N•ss NAMI! STA'TIEMllNT l'ICTITIOUS aUMNlll l Tiit loUowlng pert.On 11 tlolng bu1lnt11 ... -!if 0~1:~·!-;.-c;.;-1;;; EWPORTElftlt"AvEf"i'NDIOtl•s, lllltln"I ···-. 11G1 J1mbore-t Rot!J. •I Hlghw•w 1, GIUMSiAO ANO HOOSE DEVELOP· NtWporl B1ath, C1lltornl1 '26'0 MEN'T COMPANY, 1751 L 1 n G I. y BtllW Jo Allen, "' v1111 Gr1f'de. A~tftl>I lrv11141 921'1l5 Ntwporl lltl(ll, C"ll!Ot'nt1 '1660 JOl!fl ' A~ Grlml11d, 17~ Langliy Thl1 bu.SIMll con~td by 1n l""!vl~u1t. Av..,...., Irvine 9271)5 t Beny Jo Allfll Cti.rl11 •· M-. 1152 L.tngliy hi• 1t1tcme111 w11 filed wl11! tht Coun.. AVtftUI, lrvl"' t210S I Cltrk" of 0••""8 County Ofl M•v 11, Thll bl.l1ln•11 lt belr.g UWldUCltd Dy I nn PUUI Otftl••I p1r1Mr111tp, . Cl\arltl R. HIMK• comblned W•lll 01Hv Piiot, Ntwporf Thi• 111ttm1t11I 111 ... wllti ,.,. Counrw B•1cll, C•lltorrtl1, MtY 15, 22, 2t 1nC1 Cll'rk IOI Of•llllf County on M•y ~. 1tn. Publl111td Newport Htrbor Nrw1 f'r1t1 WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, COUNTY J1.1t11 J, lt73 l•tl-73 CL.ERK, by Thtr111 M. W•rd, 0.pUly. F·111H f'ubllslltd 0••1\111 c ... 11 Dilly Piiot Mew 2t •nd Jl#le !I, 112, 1t, U7l 16'l1·13 PUBLIC NOTI CE '"' PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS •USIHISI NAMI ITATl!Ml!NT tollowl"ll ptrson 11 doing b1nlntl5 . ·- • In the I Ser vice -------"-------] •1: l'ICTlrlOUS I USINl!S$ MOOULAA PllOOUCTS, 1n~1 C•mlno U.S. Air Force Reserve NAM• STAT.MINT C•pbtr1110, L1gun1 Nlouel n•11 ea~· (Doc I St 1ey J Thi lollDWl"ll 119r'°"1 1r1 OOing b;,,IMis MOdulilr M1nui.c1urlog, Inc., I In tOr an • 11· • C1lllornl1 Co•PO<•llon, 2n61 C•mlnQ Hu r of ~I Swan Drive, . 0 &. II G MILL INSTA~L ... TION 2llS Colp!$1rlll0, L•aun• N!,11utl, ''111· t26l.1 Costa Mesa, attended-the re-N. E1slw0Dd, S1nl1 Anl, CA 97101 ' Th11 bvslnt11 11 coodocled 'by I (Of· 11.1cri1rc1 01.., S•Htn. Ht.!O courl 110t•l1Dll. • ceflt· Aerospace ~! e di c a I SlrH t, A.pl, f, St1nl11n, CA • MOOUl.Alt MANUFACTUll.ING. ) . Oon1lct A. Drl1co1L 105~1 Wooaburv INC. ,,., Association (AMA meeting Jn Rel., G1rcten Grov1, CA Johns. &lick, 111, Prfffdtnt Las Vegas, Nev. Richard V1n K1!r1~lk, 71J s. Tol~ll(I Tnls 1t1l1m1nt w11 llled wlrh !ht COVIi· f S1 .. S1nt• A"•· CA t 7707 1¥ Clerk of Or1ngt Cocmlr on Mir 1', C8pta in Huber, son 0 Mrs. Thi~ lW1ln••• 11 comluc:r9d bv 1 11er1er~1 it73 Stanley Ii. Huber of Parma, ~rtntrshlp · 11;w12 _ . .p0<11ld A. Drl1<oll Publlsti.d O••n;• Coe;t Delly Pllor, }i:{1ch., was among more than -Thl1 11•1...,tft1 w.,-IUed wllh ll>e C!llln-,_.,.y-tt, 7f,·-·J ...... ~r,t,, 1m ISD-13 -60() reseiviSts Wholl\et-with tr Cltrk ol Or11111t Counly en 1o,•.av '· 1tl3 ·-· I f h ,u 11' active duty personne or I e f'ubllsM<:l 0•1n11e co111 Dauv f'lloi. PUB LI C NOTICE tenth reserve forces medical M•r 15, 22, n, 1f'd June .5, Jt1l l4»7l - PICTITIOUS •USINIESS S)'mposlum held in conjunction NAMI STATEMENT wWt the a nnual M1A scien• PICT ITIOUI IUSINIEIS r.J.~11 ':':~JKI prrsoni 1'1 dOh'9 tJfjc m eeting. P UBLIC NOTICE -R e dlatads Honors Coast Graduat es Capitol-Nt ws Sen 'ice SANTA BARBARA -Three reserves in the Univer sity of Galifomia's-natural la nd. and water reserves system have Ileen dedicated at UC Santa Ba rbara. The system established In 1965, is designed to protect samples of California's diverse ecological hallita ts -in their natural state for teaching and res earch purposes. Tbe reserves are used as living _laboratories l.>y in· dividuals and groups. 10 R eceives Top Honors At College~ .. \ . ~Illy I'll•! 11111 l'lltto ¥ 01itli Se1•v ice Retvurde.d ~lycle llartwig~en . art and crafts d irector of the Boys Club of the Ffarbor .-\rea. poses wit h tl1e ha1t1· 1il'e r that earned hin1 the Cltib's Bronze~ K eys tone Award. l·lart."1igsen. 60. ·of Costa !\Tesa .• has taugh1 "'ooclshop for the Boys Club since 1956. His 17 years of service \vere rewarded by a plrique and 1nedallion fro1~1 the Orange (;oun ly :\rea Council of NAM• STATIMINT P IZZA MAH, 19'20 Kaorll« l lvd .. Co.I• Captain Hu ber is assigned to The folt.wlng P«Mlnl 1r1 Ooln; Mn1, m27 _.:i J------------------------------------------------------ tM.>aln"s 11: Jcfln How1rd Fry, t•1 J11m1ne c1rc11. the 42nd Medical Services Boys C'lubs. THE WOOOSMEN. OLD WORL D Cost• Mest. C1Uf. tu2• , Squa..i--n a t Norton AFB. SHELVING ANO IMPORTS. ANCIENT Anno G-Htlson. 1om Shtrrlll. ...y WORLD P•OOUC'TS, 1060-C H•11rd Ave.. An111r<m. C1Ut. W,eJlmlMltr, C1lllornl1 9261J 'Thli bus!""• 11 cOtlduc:led by 1 grner1J T~I l!tlwlrd K01rn1r Jr., 16111 p1rt,,.,1!'1!P. N""'11"" 51. Apt , 8, H ..... •111111on Buell, John Hdw••d Fry C1lllornl1 926"17 "ll\ll .,1t~enl w11 Ille<! wl tl'I 11\t COiin· • ll lcl11rtl Nfll LYOfll. flft Poln11rrl1, ty Clert pf 0••1111" County on Mly U. k-unl1!n V1llty, C•lllorl'lt t21'111 ltn 'Tiiis ous<nK• Is ceno:1uc1e<1 by 1 9ellt'r11 1'2SJ7t ptrtner1lllp !'ubllsM<:l Ortn.Qe Co11t OailV P.Uot, ~---· Theoclore ·l!ll'N1rd Koe!'htf' Jr. M1y n, 29, ind June S. 12. 1973 1$11·11 TM1 lllllmtnl w•s llJeod wllll 11\e Coun--------------1 ty C!trk ot Or1n;e Coun1y on Mly t, 1'1J l'UlM PUBLIC NOTICE Publl1llt<I Ott~ c.,.,, Dilly Piiot, ------- llMY U. 12, 7', •"" June$, 1'1l 1467-73 ll!CTITIOUI •USINl!IS T NAME STATIMI NT Tiit lollowlna perSOf! 11 tlolng Du1!neH 11: ---,--,=---,--~-----] McCU l LO UGH GEOLOGI C PICTITIOU$ I Ull NISS SERVICES, 17150 Wlnt..-berry SI .. PUBLIC NOTICE NAM• STATIMIE NT FOllnllln V1lley, C1111. tnoe 'Tiit folloW'lflt per.an !1 ckll!9 bU1ln111 P11rlck D1vld MC'Cutlou(lll, 17150 •1: . Wlnttrt>errv SJ .. Founl1ln V•ll~, C1llt. f'ERE IR ... ARABIANS, QM C1mpu1 9270l ' O•IY1, Newpor1 B11,n, c111tornl~ 92660 'Tiii• bv1lne11 11 conducted DV '" In· BILl P1!•11:•A. tnc .• 1 C1lltornl1 dhrkrut l. ' corporl!IOfl. •320 C1mi:>u1 Orlv1, P1trick o. McCv!lough Newport Btacll. C1lllornl• 92660. TM• 111tfmtl'I Wll flied with 1111 COiin· Tl'lll ""51ntu Ii '"""'UCl!'tl D~ I COf· Iv (1erk ol 0••1"111• Covnty on M"y 16. PQrl!lon. 19'3. 11111 P,rler•, Inc.. F?Sll1 YllUl1m L. P•"'"" PubH1M<:l Offll9f Co.i11! Diiiy f'llcrl, P•Hldtn1 Mey 71, ;>9, a"" Junt 5, 11, ltlJ 1516•1J ,~ ..... 1rme"1 W~I lllea ,..;,~ 11\f' CCII"• -- !'( Cler~ ot Ora"lte Coun1v an M1v 3, Advatice Pa y 1nents _J vail<.ible Advance paymen t of Sep- tember and October GI bene- fits are available to veterans a nd dependents \vho a re plan· ning to transfer to Cal State F ullerton .or are now at· lendihg the unive rs ity and plan lo continue. 1tt3. Under the Vietnam Era Beadjust111en l As~istance Act of 19i2. veterans and lhcir PUBLIC NOTICE d d 1· 'bl F-1so11 epen ents are e 1g1 e to Pl.IDl l111td Or•-Co.t~I 01ily Piiot, ~MENT 01' A•ANDOMMliNT r eceive the ad vance checks in Mey u. n. :it.'"° June 5. t91J 14'3-13 01' USE 01" I S b --------FICTITIOUS •USINlll NAMI! e a r y e p t e m er. P UBLIC NO'flCE The 1o11ow1"11 l*'llOfl 111s •hilndantd tr.e Unde rgrad uates must be -----_____ _...._ use of tht 11c!lllOU'!11 bUlitlf5* Mme JOY A. l'IC'TITIOU!I IU!llNESS JONES. dW AAA POOLS •• 26012·B Gerty enrolled for six or more units MAME s'TATIMl!NT or1v1, uoun1 NIQt>rl, cautorn11 92'17 and g raduate students must be Tiie lcllowlng ptrt.Ol'I• ••t dolllQ bv1lne;1 Tl>t fklltlou1 t>usl...u n•mt referred lo encoJJed for oe"en ·oc mor e "t: IDOYt WIS llletl In Or•ngtt COllnty ,,,, • ORANGE COUNT Y FUlilN~TURIE Oc::toOl!f 12. 1911.,.,---..=, c==~,J--unit •ES'TORATION CEN'TER. 111.1 Fr,,wlck Jin' A.. Janes, 2616 L.1io.tfleld, El --· L•ne. Unlr A Wt1tmOnJter C~lll 926.13 Toro, C•llf. '2630 -Advance p 8 }'me n t ap-Ctor~ A. SlnQtr J r. i. Mliy K. This buslne11 w•I canduttld by 1n In· pJiCa tiOnS must be completed Slt>Qer, :)!)79 (ounlty CIYb OrlYt, C°'ll dlVldUll. ,.1r11, c.u1. 91616 Jow A. Jonu bv veterans and retu rned to dl~~~1W•ln~u 1~ conducr<'<i by '" 1"' Pul>llill'l<l ori nge Co.i11t 01nv "~1~1'. the u ni\"ersity's \'eterans Ar- Mtrv IC Sino~• Georpt A, $Inger J•. M•v 21. tt, 1nd Jun• 5. 11, 1913 un.13 fai rs Offi ce before July 2. PUBLIC NOTICE Tllll 11a!emen! "'11 IUe<! wl!n the Coun. tv Clerk of Or11'ge Counly on Mtv 9. 191J 1"1Jlf7 Publ11hed 0••"9t Coett 01llv Pllo1.l --~---=-.,.-==~--I A. ... 1 ,\L2'l. 29. •nd June$.. 1913 1~7,13 FICTITIOUS •USINl!IS NAME STA'T l!MliHT The 1o11owl1>11 Pf''°"' art doing 1>u1ln1111 •1: -------------1 TUSCO COMPANY, l1S2 Langley l'ICTITIOUS I US1NEIS A~"ue, Irvine, 92705 P UBLIC r\OTICE NAME ITAT EMliN'T W1rml11Qton Dtwlopmtnl. I 11 c ., Tl>t tcllowl1111 prr1an1 a•t dcll'IGI 1 C1llfoml• cor"°'1n,,,., USJ L.1ng1ey bl.l1!ne•1 II: AVtl'IUI, lrvlnt 9'110S • SUCCESS MI NO CYllEi:tNETICS IN· Grlmt!ICI lll:l HCOl l Ot"91~pmf'lll .STtTUTE , J'.N N. C!~rk. °'"""1141 9166& J. ltrrt11 Moore, 1:icn 2111'11 Pl.. Ccmpany. 1752 Lal'IQtey AYfl1!11, lrYlnt WH!min•1tr. C~llt. 9210S • IUd11rd A. v .. 1ev S3' N. Cliik, T~lt 1>uslne1s Is btlflt conducled bv 1 Or111Qe, c1111. u-••I P"<lner1111p. ' •• , Cll1rles •. Hcos• • "'' bulltMllJ I conducted DV • ,.,,.,,. 'Tiii• 1 ' men! filed with 11\t Cou"IV p1rtner..,lp s • ' Rk~erd •. Vtrlev Clerk pf Or1ng1 Cot.111TY 111'1 MIY ?•. l~TJ. J1me1 Mcoro WILLIA.M E. ST JOHN, COUNTY "r1'111 '"'l'Mf"' .,.., llll!CI With .... Coun-CLERK ..... TherHI M. W•rd, Dt:IKltv. ly C~rk Of Or111111 CCll/l'lly Ofl M1y '· 1•TJ, ' ... -c ' ,,,~ ',',\'.~ • FJltot f'Ubl '" .... 1nge 011 ., , f'ubll1111<1 D••nae Cot•t OailV Pllo! /\\1v 79 1nd June s. 12, 19. 191J 16'11 -JJ M1y IS, n. 29. 1nd June s. lt1J u11-1:l0l----~-----~--1 PUBLIC NOTICE E nrollment fees for f a 11 semester m ust be paid before the checks u~ll be released . Checks must be picked up in person at Cal State Sept. 4. Additional information may be obtained a t 871)..3228. Camp Fire Girls Plan Open House PUBLIC NOTICE .• saMt An open house of th e Cam p 1 SUtJ 1i10T1c• 'TO c1101TO•s Fire Girls' Camp Yallani. in I Uf'l!•to• COU ltT 01' Tl11! su~••10• COU•T 011' TMI STAT• OP CAL.ll'OltNIA POil STATE 01' CALIFOANI ... l'OR the Ba r ton Flats are of the Twe:·couNTY o , o•ANGE THE couHTY OP M:ANO t San Bernardino Mountains. Ho. A-76'lt Ne ..... 1uo1 NOTICE 0, Ml!ARINO 01" Pl!TITION ES1•1e ct RAY MURPHY, •I~ knc:wn will be held from 11 a.m. to 3 ,0. f'RO•ATI 01' WILL. ANO l'Olt 11 RAYMOHO A. MUR PHY. Oe<e•1e<I. ..-.. d J IQ ~Enl!ltS TEITAMI NTAl<Y (!IUg· NO'TICE IS HEREBY GWEN to '"" p .m . '31.!n ay, une . l •lltll I Ol>CI 121.aoo.001 crt<lltors of the above n~me<I de<:l!<lent The camp, located about 25 '''"" 01 c H A A L E 5 LYON 1h1L111 Ptt•ton• h1v!ng c111m1 •11•1"!' !he m •'les !com Redlands, .,,11 CHURCHILL. aka CHARLES L. ul" dt<'ld<MI .... '*!U1rld to flll llM.m. ... CHURCHILL. Otcu>e!d. w!ll'I '"'' nKt•wrv v~c11ert. In '"' 011.ce open officiallJ June 19 for the NOTICE tS HEREllY GIVEN ltlll ol 1111 c1..-k ct lht 1b0Vt .nlltl ... court, o VlltGJNIA ELLEN CHURCHILL ,,,, llltd to ~1tnl lllt111 • .,....., lllt MCISltry 1973 season. It will feature a her•in 1 pr1111on for Protr.111 ct wm •lld vouchtr•. to 1111 unaer1lnn<'<i ~t 1~" nu •e ne\\' ligh ted and heated s~·im· fill Le11en T11l1mM11iry rtlertnee to ct 11\tlr 1ttornty•, MUNGElt, 'TOLLES, wl)lch 11 m•d• for turthor Ptrt1cul1r1. 1nd HILLS ... RICKERSHAUSER . 606 s. <il!I m ing pool, allO\Ving for nighl 11111 lhl llmt '"" l)lact of 11Nrl119 1111 Slrtt!, Los Al"\Ofles. C1Ulornl1, wlllCh ," ,,,,,·m m Jng, water page•ntC", ,,,.. pltce IOI bvllMH ol Ille undet$lpned n • y 1.1mt l'I•• -HI tor June "· 1973, 11 •II millrt"I pertilnl1111 to 11\t n11t1 ot stltl d di · "r 1.m., in '"''courtroom ct oe111rtment decedient. wl!hln tou• months itter 111e an v1ng. N 1 o1 u !d court. 1t 100 c1v1c c1n11r ""' Pllbllcttlon o1 th!• notice. Cost for the ca mp session is Drlvt WKI, In , ... CITY IOI SMll AN. O•ltd Jl>l'lt l, lt'3 11=:=: for members and ••• foe c.,i11or,.11. OOR.O'TMY OONLON MURPHY _.., "'°' D•ttd June 1, 1t11 1nc1 ADR IAN AR!NOT non·m em bers, and includes WIL.L.IAM E. ST JOHN, Elltcvtor1 ct !hf Wltl • County c11r-01 IM 1t>ove n1mea dtctd•n• transportation , craft!, s wim· •-1• "· "'"'""' MUNGlll. Tot.LIS. NIL.LS & m ing ~s. horseback rid· Atf91'11tY 11 L1w lllCKl•SMAUSl!t ~If Wiii ThlN S'"91 "' I . MIU s .... , ing. insurance and supervi· SM!ll A.111, Calllwlll1 t1701 LM A,....... C1Uf. · TtttPtiont: 1710 Ml-Oll Tri: 11U) IU.14'1 SIOn. ArtorMv for; f'11n1-· 1 A1torMr• '°" ••t<ulon Free brochures t1nd addi· Publ!tllfd Or•"'11 Co.ii" 0111y ~llot, Publlslltd Or1~ge c ... i l OtllY f'llot, ·r--~'""i;i;·~'~_..,iii;i"~"'~'~'l~' iiiii:iiiiiii:~"'~-1~,,,,~'~"-'~._,~•~-'~"-~"~._,,;:;:~iiiiiii;iii;~'m-~n~rtii~l ll)fo~tion can be ob-ta lnedfrom rn. Oiange Co1m-t:v Council Camp Fire office, 1618 E. Fourth St., Santa Ana, 547-5964. YOUR NEWSPAPER CARRIER IS A CREDIT MANAGER Mey'9 the .. ,........ a...t.H tl .. 't .... ._,..fwf te fff .... , .. ,....,,.,...._., ............ ..,_,._...,.. '1y Wll ht M"'Y ef.,.... ....,.,,,,ht DAILT PILOT 1.-Nni .... ht ---,., ........... ,.., ,,_ ,.. .. ,., .... - tMy '"'" .. ,., .............. •. ""' ....., .. .,. •• C1rrien .,. _....... te ltwt e.n.cthtt " Miif~ • ""' .. ... 11tfl ., ........... .,. ........., ~ ... JM. .. ..., , .... -'""' ., ..... ,.w lry ... -of ......... .... fttey .... te pey tWr Mk. If yM11 ,.., '"' ...... , Mn ..ty ft .. t Mly wlff ."' .,.., &•rtw ..,,.,, •at Jt wll ASSURE PROMPT COURJEOUS SERVICE. DAIL Y PILOT CIRCULAI M>N DEPART~ENT Dean's List Names Five F ive area students were honored fo r lh.elr scholastic achievements by being placed on the dean's list for the win ter quarter at California "State University. Los Angeles • Cal State dean's list re· q u.lrements Inc lude a m lni1num grade point of 3.4 in et least 12 units and plaCC!rnent in the up- per 5 percent or the recipient's ac.adcn1\c school. Orange Coast per!!Ons nam· ed were : Victor Higgins, Costa l\1csa; Sharon Koleslak. Foun- tain Valley; S u za nn e Sedlenlek, Laguna 8 eac h : Leh1nd Scot t and Lucy Seiber· •' Just relt lted: Gran Torino 2·Door Hardtop with new Luxury Oecor.·Package and WSW tires. High wire arUst demonstra tes Torino's incredibly ~th ride. ' It took a lot more than a smooth ride to make Ford Torino the best selling car -in the mid-size field . The closer you look, the better we look. Optional NA/FM stereo radio with front and rear dual ap11k1r1. T orlno's instrument panel. All g1ugn are e·asy to read, controls wilhin easy reach or d river. Behind Torino's smooth ride are better ideas in engineer.ing. Like angle mounled shock absorbers for increased dlrecllonal slabllity. Rubb er body/frame moun.tJ t.tJat __ _ Surprllfng luxury In a mld·slze car. P lctured above is the Interior ot the Gran Torino with Luxury Decor P a c kage. Front disc brakes are stan· dard on Torino. Power front · Optional electric re ar w indow de)!Olter.(Torino'o r!\G)O< compet- itor doesn'I oiler it.) • Torino otters op- tional steel .. belled radfa l· ply lires on ,an models. disc brakes optional. • A longer wheelbase and wider front and rear track than maJor competitor. for 1 amooth, stable ride. ' -help isolate the paSS-en~er campartll'lent from road shocks. And a coil spring ru bber- insulaied front suspen sion that helps minimize noise and road vibrallon. Inside you'll find expansive room up front. Plus th e kind of luxury you 'd expect from high priced aulomobil es. So take a good, close look al Ford T0tlno for '73. D.is~ver why il's become th e best selling car In the mid-si ze field. The solid mid-size car. FOBD TORINO FORD DIVISI ON - See Your Local Ford Dealerl .. , Ung , both of •luntlngton "Bcnch.·----------- -.. \ r • ''' DAIL'l ,.,_u ·1 UfSdlly "'ll'lt 5,.. l "r• _, ----------~-"'---J, QUEENIE By Ph il lnteilandi b ·~ ''The crab looks good , do11 ·t you ... er .•. , doesn't it?" L. /ti. Boyd Most Sl1oppe1·s • Can you recall your first kiss? !\'either. can I. ~laybe \\'e're none too romantic, \\'hat? Nevernund. a scholar 1vho undertook a lengthy study of the niatter says this osculatory amnesia is not unusual. One out or every seve n gro1\'llUps forgets the "'ho, v.•here and · \\'hen of the first amorous kiss. And it's also claimed by some men of science -that tht: beards o( the astronauts grow fast- er during the first few days after they get home than during a like time in space. , Are ·you a1~·are that 65 out of every 100 lady shoppers in supermarkets read no more than one \\'Ord on any package they ·buy. Italy's Ja1v perinits the Julicts there to marry at age 14. SPEAK ERS -Average listener thinks about four times as fast as the average talker. University research-- ers report their studies show that. Jt's ~id to explain in part the success as a public speaker of the late John F. Kennedy. lfe talked speedily. Analysts say most other presidents. tarlier and later. have. used such a slov.• de- liberate delivery the y've tended to lose audience attention. Particularly, in crisis talks. Q. "Ho\v many \\'Omen did Jack the Rippe r actually kill'?" i\. fi\·e. Nol nearly ·so many as numerous murderers of AiTierican girls. Still, none since has impressed the in· ternalional public more. Take the book about Jack. ''The Lodger." put out in 1913. \l.'ent through 31 editions. "'as translated inlo 18 languages, has been made into five mo vies. Q. "\Vhars the oldest fairy tale of·a"ll?" A. ''Cinderella." Dates back more than 4,000 years. Wol ves ha ve bigger brains than dogs, a lot bigge r. THE BLUES -\\lhat the poets call inelancholy, v.•hat the psychialrislS call depression. what most of the rest of us call the blue s, suc h be the ailment this feminine client too frequen1ly suffers, she says. Any cure? Don't kno11•, the query runs prelly deep. Still. do know It's no good to give in to it. Like rust and sand. it spreads. To squelch it. I try to instigate \\'hatever makes spontaneous noi ses. Put orr the percolator. Build a dry-wood fire. Tum loose the \\'indmill. And to deal with things alive. Count quail. \Yater the pups. ~1ovc lhe salt block for the beel'es. 1-Io'v do you hand]& il? Alight mention the Ladyfriend in- 1·ariably exercises a characterist ic compulsion in such mood. Feeds everything that moves. Hu1nmingbirds. Trop- ical fish. Kittens. And all human personages v.·ho pass down11·ind of lhe kilchen. Nobody has ever 1veighed a gro"'Tl blue 1vhale \\'hole. \Vhy is clear. But men 1vith long knives have figured out thal said sizable ntammal runs about a ton and a half per foot. That's equal 10 the weight of 2,267 girls in girdles. And can be broken down further to its equivalent in son1c number of hot enchiladas. if you'd like. Address ?nail to: t . ·''·Boyd. P.O. Box 1875: Ne 11.·- port Beacl1. C.'alif. 92660. Beauty Grad11al es As Pilot DALLAS (UPI l -Bonnie Tiurzi got a kiss and a hug :ind a c;1sc of the ciggles. The "h~U-llalian, ha I f - Swedish" !Jt•auti· also got her .!diver fl ight 11 ings ~tondn.v Ill< 1hc firs! 1,1 on1an 11ilot 1\·ho 11·itl • -Ul£.....paSiCnger ... jetline.rs.."1<!ou:r_ . .aa_-411· n1ajor U.S. airllnc. 'l'wo 1vo1TI· l'n ha1·c qu11Jifi1..'<.l, ho1•:cvcr. lur fl yi ng duties. lit:!{ SllAPELY 5-foot-7, 125-ix;und fi gurr 11·as 11·rll hia- cle11 undC'r a na1·v hluc uniforn1 llut ~he told it ~II 1rilh a grin that 5trttched lhe freck!('S un her t311nc<l nose and cheeks. "I don't thi nk 1•ou can ignore the fact that J'rli a \\'Olll~lll. I 1hink people 11 re kind of used to having y,·om'en in avia tion ... said the nc"' A 1n c r i ca n ·Airlines pilot. "\\'omen fly no differently than n1en." FIRSr OFFICER Tiburzi. 24-, <lf ~li:uni, wa s graduated fron1 the airline's 10-"•eek pilots school in Fort \Vortl'. Tex . and '\\'ill be based at l .... 1t;unro1a l<'il·kJ in Ne1v York City. She s<iid it 1vould take three ~·cnrs to ndv:ince to the co-pilot's ~-cnt of a jetliner and 10 yea rs to beco me a capta in. "I've been 11,nitin~ for this n long time," ~ti ss Tiburzi said as American Airlines Citptain Ted ~1cldcn pinned her flight \Vin gs on the front of her blue tunic. TllEN PILOT kissed pilot and the giggling started. · :i.lis-s .Tiburzi's father. a former Trans \\'orld Airline 11ilot. !augh t her. to fly "hen . she 11•as. 12.. The only thing Amt'ri can had to change, she said. 1\·as the uniforn1. Sales Jl lo1u1l SAN FRANC ISCO I AP 1 Sales -0f food sta111ps here are rising 11 1 the rate of 1.000 custo1ncrs a rnonth, the pri>- gr<rn1's directo r says. As of ~l<1rch 31 . 96.820 Sa n F rancisc an s \1•ere µa rticip::iting in the federally financed progralJl. Lou1iges Can Pcul 74 7 Far e •----~~:. ~~~~~"?!~ :~~-T~ere's-~Wal -1· -00-1UIU~lr-iPS-ID need for qualified people or all ages m the: dynamk medi cal and dental fields! ' lhe a1·rport . Learn it r ight! 1 Use the Bus-Air· Southern California College of Medical'& Dental Ca reers offers excellent courses for MEDICAL port Serv ice-directly to you r Airline Terminal, Save ASSISTANTS _ DENTAL TECHNICIANS gasoline-avoid parking problems. -MEDICAL RE CEPT ION ISTS -and - DENTAL ASS ISTANTS. You gel superb pro- fessional instruction for il.n exciting future in hecih h care! Ll!arn it fa!t t! These are 'no-nonsense' cour.,cs. Crammed with cri tical infor1nation . You're laught quickly. 8fici('ntly. Aod. you go to work -fast! CALL 635-3450 Doh rlghr 11Ulli'! Vc1t1·11 !Jl'I111on'l 1utorn1 .. tion -<Kid -you'll di.'<'OWf j\1..'11 llQW 111<11"1Y peoi>lc '~ally do rM"td ~ l'LACEMENT l\S~l~,./\NCE 1~on GH/\Dllf\TES /\T NO 1'.XTBA COST! /\CCRrDITEO l'>I E~IDER. NATIONAL A™1Cl/\110N Of' TH/\OF.. & TCCI INICAI. SCHOOl.$. AU. JIROOJW1S APPROVED POH VETERANS. \ SOUTI-IERN·CAUFORNIA COU£GE OF MEDICAL & IJENTAL CAREERS 1717 SOUTii BflOOKHURST. ANAH EIM 635-3450 " ., ' CONVENIENT RELIABLE ECONOl\11CAL FROM 84.00 fCll!IOftfl 5-11 , 112 ~;ire! BUENA. PARK ANAHEIM (D1sneylana) SAN l A AN• ORANGE CO AIRPORT LAGUNA HILLS MISSION VIEJO --, --AIRPORT SERVICE INC. :";LJB(>!Ul ~H'I' or CHRO'-'>-~lO't' ... ~EAIC,1,N CORP. F OR INFORl\1ATION SEE 'vouR TRAVEL AGENT OR CALL (714) 776-9210 . ---...--·-· OCC, GWC Stick Togeth·er Uy aet:jdent or d{'s1gn. or just dumb luck. con1munity theaters <•long !ht! Orange BACKSTAGE -Caro I Faulstick and Alan Hart , two local performers who played the leading roles in "Light Up the Sky'' four years ago at the \VestnlinSter Community 11M:ater, will repeat their roles in th e Long Beach Coln- 1nunity E.l.ayhouse production . opening June 22 ... In case you missed enrolling in South Coast Repertory's summer acting conserva tor y, there's still time ... SCR of- fi cials have moved t h ' deadUne up to nexl ~1onday. June 11 ... the session·will' begin J une 25 at the com- pany's Costa 1'1esa theater with .classes in voice, diction. acting. improvisation, gym- -11asties. min1e, movement and danc ._.calL~...1363 fo_r __ details . _ . • '~p for people. That's why Jjoined hnperial:' ~~~>--.. 6.00't 5.79' 5.2Y . 5.00' ~-· ~·-~--~--IS.ooo-;,,,..,, ll.--90-cltr ~•lilocal••· lot 2 .... O< ....... ... , ... O<-•• 6.JBX• s.9zx. 5.39'1 5.1Y' K--"'""f~ld· Klull a .... uat ,.i.f<I' ... --.-· ~1-...,w.i· '•ltllilMtMt __ ...., ......... 1,. ... A Plan for All People. Newport 1t11Ca. Oftict: J3" Vil ~ Newport lie.ch 7141673-JIJO Newport Crntt r Onicr. 550 Newport Ctnltr Dri''• Nrwport ft tath, 714/644.1461 01hcr oftlcc.\ iri Clnremont •-Down1own Us Angeles • E:u.t P:asadcn11. •Glendora • Pa~:idcnn • Rcdlnnds •Sierra ~1adtc • T-0pr1ni,?a C;1nron •\Vest Covina • Wh it1ic.r • Woo(!L1nd Hill&. Choose the insured savit)gs plan that is best for you. Saving at hnperial is convenierttbecause we now have over 60 offices throughout the state. hnperial offers over 20 helpful services; too ·most of them free. Come in soon. ··: o Wl'(1l1 <r Ol'l'NED ~U11~11'l1ARY' (Ir f) Ol{l101ifDOllAJI lll~~"UI COilll>O".illON O' ""'l"1C.-om I , ' ·-- I _T...:""'::.::':::"...:J::u_:ne...:5::·_:1_:9...:73:_ _______ ~0AJLY PILOT lJ I I TONIGHT'S Lyle Waggoner --the Playgi1·l~s Playmate ' TV HIGHLIGHTS Uy VEllNON !>l:OTI' ~IOLLY\VOOD t UPI ) Burt Reynolds evidently has CDS iJ 8:00 -lie's Your Dog, Charlie Brown." s1arted a fad by posing nude The Peanuts ga ni persuade Charlie to send Snoopy for the centerfold of a natkinal woman's inagazine. to the Daisy 1-lill uppy Farm for a refresher course Appenring in the buff this Waggoner, "and it has." su 1\• !he isho1v und 1;<11led llll' Waggoner, six feet, four In· the next day. 1 talkt<d to 1ny ches tall and wcig~ing about 1\'ife, Sharon. and she thou~ht 200 pounds. is on dlsplr1y in :1 it 1vas all right as long as the new publicatiOn, "PlaYgirL" pictures 11•ere 1n good taste." Stories, cartoons and rnalL• 1'he l)hologl'aph i t s e If nudes imitate the Playboy dc1>icts \\'aggont•r 11 Ith ;.1 t·oy style. s1nile. a hh'!iUlc chest und a "One o! the reasons t agreed strategically placed knee. nude n1:ih:s these d11ys:1 \\':ig· goner s;;iid. "I th ink It rnl~h! las! a fi•\1' n1orc 1no111hs bu! the puhllclty value Is fRcling nnd I don '! belie ve mAny· 1,1•cd\- kno11•11 n1ale personnllt ies 11ll/ be posi ng in the future. "1'1':1lSONALI.,., I! n' thi 11 k fe 1nales find a11vth1nr erotic about nudl' Ill 11 l 1 \\·ful!L'<I to gr! It ovPr \\•i1.h. Th&! 1:amern session l11sted only about 20 minutes, "I'LL BET It ''!.k'!.iloD<t~r 11'1 photograph nud~ girls. It's a ortst!~e thing !or gi rls, hut not for 11 n1an." \\raggoner has a cau rornla vanity license plate for his rare Italian~ spcirts car. It. reads : "!\1r. Cool." in obedien\e. ;i month is Lyle Waggoner. the ABC O 8:30 -"That Certain Sununer." Ac· ;.i tall , handso1ne leading man of ;; claimed as one of the top dramatic programs of the 4 /he \\·ee kly "Carol Burnett -:-""oaso n.-the-stocy-of a-divorcecj...man .... t.r-yi-ng-te-ex-'l'"--'S"'ha..w," · · ' klain his ho1nosexualitv to his teen-age son stars Ca i:i Don Knolls or Truman 10 1~se naked ;1•as the. lac.~ \\'llJL~ \\1AC.GONE1t h;is thaL1f was a new magaz1ne, r -nol )lad the reputation for Waggoh~ said. , h~ bting a Inter dity-Cj:Pgory rea son is Lha~ Car~! Burnett Petk Cir ltudolph \'Hlc111ii10. hot~ra hs. The\' rl ofl't iur ·~=;;;;;~;;;:;;;;====t-1~~ on lo llien1. llil ( Olfiillg'il' -... SALlT K(LLllM.lf.I lj k H L · ,1 l' SI d S lt Cnpate be far . bchirurl · al olbroo , ope ang:e , i• ar in teen an co \Vhat wou ld 11i'SPife a nian to Jacoby. pose au naturel in a 1von1en's suggested tin.•. idea right on t!1l' Playgirl dlsappr·trcd fro111 air on: ~1ght after the ni<.ieazine stan<ls ':1cross the Rey~olds centerfold \\' 11 s nat ion. Today it i:; difficult to thel't' is 11 ('Crtttill lJ/1\0Ulll ~ ~ JA'M l5 CAAN ~ curiosity.", ~ \Vaggon .. ·~ "., 1110H has i... ~lJTH pubhshed . . nnd :i ropi;·1ii-mos1 cities. "TI1e publishers of Playgirl A spokesinan for t hf! creased &in<.:c !hr "''1g11zil1t> h' . -,~il, the stundS <!11.d. llrCSU111a'1•·· ... su htl\'C the ratings of ;'Tl1 I jffi METROCClOR MGMQ KCET fl!) 9:00 -International Performance. Igor n1agaiine'! Stravinsky conducts his own ron1antic RuSsiatt fairy ,.... "l thou ght it 'voulcl result in tale ballet "1'he F'irebird . ., a lot of laughs and fun ," sai d ' TV DAILY LoG Tuesday Evening -:JUNO __ _ Mu1du" (com) '38-Edwir• I . .,._ inson, Allen Jenkins. 1:30 u (j) fftwtll fM·D .Dinny Wiiii· ams isJnvo~v'd i1r lhe~shno!Jrta ol 1 1e,nager. --- D11stln Hoffman "THE GRADUATE" .7:00 Olld 10:)5.p.n'i. -pl111- "CARNAL KNOWLEDGE" (RI "'°--,~ P.m. Liza Minell i "CABARET" and Diana Ross "LADY . SINGS p•Jbllshers said. the ori ginal 600,000 copies have sold ou t and an addit ional 100,000 ha\"C been prirlted. Natura!lv. it h:1s been a boost to the pc.rforn1er's c~o. "I don·t understan d 11·h~· thci:,ai ,is__:o_~uch interest in ~FOUNTAIN VALLEY .,.1\&;-~D .,.._,,;oo;;;;;;;-, AJ,o,;c.u Ca rol Burnett ShO\\' .. and hi • \:J\1•n s~'ndicatcd j::.tme sho\\' ALSO IURT llTNOl.DS' •·Jt 's ,.our Bel." ·----"~fU,;:liA,'•' ---lie has no pla11s [or niort? nude n1odcling. f,;;::;;~;;:;;::;;::::;j;;:;~ .. I 11•as a little sclf·consciou~ 11 ··7 --57 6J:'l _ ~~~~~s :i~s~~~~s~~~t~-~-"-';;;\ Ml}N.\QJ 'I "ISLAND MAGIC" 19th o"d NIWPORT 541·1552 ENOS TONIGHT Chartto111 Heston "SOYLENT GREEN" Jomft Gar111er l :OO BOOe[lmaDmNtws CiJ :lQI Nt 'll'S 0 (3J (6 \ rn ABC Tuesday Movit: ~lllA,1$.IVllTD<t.T'Tll.1~, ... -Jl~ (CJ (90) "'That Certain Slimmer" Coll Theatre for 2 Disn•~ Hill THE BLUES" "Grass r~ot s11rfl11~i ot•lts bur'' ••• S;:l: Maga:zine. Plus Kraz.J/Kartoons -"THEY-ONL-Y -Kill~~ THEIR MASTERS" . 0 B411.1nz• '(R) (d1a) '72-H~I Holbroi>k, Holle S11ndoy Sth11"d11'lll' Both in Color "THE "'t~~~~ir~~EATEST l!nie. M~rtin Sheen, Scot! Jacoby. I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~ii!!~ ' @ C.urt1hlp of £ddie'1 f1ther O W1nttd Dead or A1lv1 m Tilt fllntsto11t1 A di~orced 1111n whost failure to r: ltlltl lj~~ .. w~'~"~'~w~";0;'~'~'~'~'~';~· ~"~·~·~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ discuss hi~ homosexuillfty with hi1 !Jmi!y lrads him lo lice the deti- ca1e ta1k of 1xp(ainin1 his lifi.styt1 la his 14-ye~r·old son. IE Sttr Tttk EE Quirtme y 01¥id1la ID Ho<111pod11 Lod11 . EE ThfH Stoo111 !=lO 00 Hor1~·s Huot1 .:....... _fJ_Movi e: (C) (90) "l ult"lor .lift" P1rt I tbio) '5&-Kir~ Oouala:1. An· thony Quinn, .Pa"mela Brown. T~e turbulent sto1y ol Vincen t van Got h. lt.I CIS New1 Walter Cronk i!t 0 Haw Gun Will Trtvtl (lg) Mtrw Critrin Show m Andy. Griffith .iD l'T1d H1l1$11011 m JNftne Clrson Show mMovt1. QI The frtnt Peopll m l,lttl• bu.tis ''"urn om• ... O lowlina f0t DoUtn 00 Truth 111 Constquenc1s [al Sal1ri to Aclw~tijrt 0 Whtt'I M~ Line! m I lovt LMC)' Q) I Dr11m ol Jlannit E!) Si111plc1111nt1 Mui1 ffi The Frtnch Chtf lE M~nttt ('lD Contest P1il1 Silo• CD Uirt' Clijb E.f) Spetd R1tti 7:3(1 0 lobby Ctldsboro Show M1e Ot· VIS 1UtS1 5. (}: Ho11n'1 Her0ts O DEBUT lnntr Spjt1 '"The Great White Oeath" Ron and Val Tayloe 111vel 10 tlie d1ngerous reels in Southern Australia to seek out the Gre1t White s~1rk in !h'is pilmiere episode . O Movie: (Cl (Zhr) "C~Olb tl Ronit" (tom) "6l-Ma1ctllo M1slro· ianni. V11to1io Gtssman. m Merv Griffin Sllow (11}Nmt1 ,:00 (D Dn1n1t fi)Nlftt EE Nichesf 1piti11 !:30 B @ C85 Tue~ .MoVit: (C) (90} ''81ch11o1 1t LIW," stars John Riller, Sara~ Kenned~ and Ha1old Gould. "Roll Out," stars Stu Giltlam and Hill~ Hieb . "Copa." stan Vin· t!nt G1rdenl1, Bruce Davison and Scoty Milchlll. 0 M111eJni C1n1rttion Norm Cros- by and lo1etll Lynn 1uest. c;JNtwS G) Ctl S1111rt Im MllChackl ltllilfta a!) ft1tlv1l Mtiiun• 10:00 0 ®J m rlrst Tuesd1y This tdl· lion leatures a 1eport en 1 ntw type of 11cllity for Ille menta lly rt· larded In Some1>1t. Ky. omm• ... 0 CD 00 m Mtrws Wtl~ (R) Stric~cn with a la!al illnes1, 1 fa. ml)uS pt1Qtognphe1 learns to accept tilt !act ind te>es on to compltt1 her bis! wo1k. Anne 81xt1r 1ucsll. D Russia's Silent Church * Rev. Richard Wurmbrind D I JJICIAJL I Ji1us to • Communist Woita "Voices of the M1rtyrs" Rev. Rich ard Wurmbr1nd discus~ u li· &ious perucution in !ht Soviat Union. EE LI Moliner1 ttl Pl~Jiili: !Or 11i i1Pi In 1n · expe11: • ment in hllman bth1vior. ,r;me 125 peopl1 p!iF 1evt1st 1olts as citi- zens ol •n lmagin•!J American 111b1n ceftter lorn by raci1I conllicl @ To TtU tht Trulh (II This II Your Ute 10:30 0 Ttlk lid: 0 Millitit $ Movit: (Zhr) "AU This D Movie: (C)· (2hr) HWhitl Co11- 1nd H11vtn TOii" (dra) '40--Beue 1nch1" (wes) ~7-Joseph Colten. Davis. Chn les Boyer. (!) McH1l1~• '" ®)Hollywood Squarn em Rnirta usiu l m 11111 Sir! t:1:) ~ews/ rts ID D111ntl tD CJtywttt htfl m Stand u~ Ind Ch111 CFJ Co1111dr CD It II Wrttbn EE Add11111 f••llr 1:00 IO Cl) ! lf1CllJL I H1'1 Your 0.L Ch1rlil lrown (R) Protestin1 Snoop· "'" 11 o o !Il mm .... rn Cf\ ®J "'"' 0 On• sttp hyond (6) M1nh1I Dillon m Trvtll or Conseq ut nttt ·m 1111ew1e: •111 Hon. u.u .. (dr•) '~5--Ralph Mttker. y's bthavioi, tht Peanuts 11,an1 1et 11:301J 00 CIS ltit M"i1: (C) 1wt Chulit lo send I~ devilish _cafllnt Fices of Dr. Je~I" (hor)-thris· lo the Daisy Hill Puppy f11m for • topher Lee. Dawn Ac1+1ms. re.ta.s.bttWJJ.U.Uub_tditnct, D ® ID Johnny (1n on ID m NBC Tutld1y Movit: (C) 0 Bin Clsty (Zhr) "To II.ill 1 Ora1on" (1dv) '67 Q (}) (]) &J J1d: h1r Tanitt -Jack P1l1nce. F1rn1ndo l1m1s, m Tt Till till Tnth Atdo R1y. An 1dvenlurer is hired to . r~!rltvt 1 u 1ro al Nitro 2. IZ:OO m AIMd KlttllcoU: Pf•Rb 0 l)J Ci) Q) T1mpt1atut111 Ji1in& lZ•JO 8 Hi&hnr P1tr11 (R) Beverl1 .G11tand 2uesh IS E!l1n'1 • D Movit: "llld: u.1,.1" (d11) '62 A~nt Clau dia. who c1usts • crtbb) -PetM Van £yd1. C1mp1nelll to warm up. ID Movlt: "M1111/fle.nt Doll" (dr1) ®J Morie : (C) (2.hf) "HontJlllOOll '46-Glnltf Ro11ri Otvid Niven ffoltl" (ram) '64-Robert Goulet, t1J 8111 Cosby ' , Nancy Kw1n. m A!11e4 HitchCoU Prttenb 1:00 (}) 0 0 0 ((}Nm (!) Disn1yt1nd an Paradt P11111ltrt @)It Taket I Diii ffi1hllahts Bill Buirud co-hosts 'lllth . , S!el1nl1 Powers .,for thi5 b1clut11• 1:45 IJ Movie: (C) "Tiit I Don l Cttt ' ~-~m----t00k-1~-lll1lo.s-.An1el1s-p1amif.11~ .l bf' .. ('!!~tl ~~t1i G1y~r~_: _:, __ _ Disney on P1r1de. Z:OO ID All·Nl111t SJtor. "WI•• 111d ' EE H•rm1nos Cor•i• tht Masted M1rvt~" "Ytrnplrt·Mtll EI! Walffpte fft ufnas or Ute Lost Pllntt" NEW MUSICAL VERSION "Tom Sawyer" IGJ 'o\rllll Jollnnv Whft•k•r Nd RESERVllD SEATS "CAMELOT" plus "On A Clear Day" !PGI "Class of '44" p111s "Last Summer" (PG) "The Getaway" IPGl .. , "Lady SinlJS The Blues" (R) Tfle Motl Pop11l1r Picture of Out Tl,,.., "Billy Jack" !PGI U. A. CITY A._ SOUTl'I COAST CINEMAS-TOESOAY S0c C. Burritll-W. MltlhlU "PETE 'n" TILLIE" "JOE KIOO" Clint E1Hwood Botti In Color! (PG) JAMES COBURN ~ Jbuth Coast Repertory HELD OYE R! TWO BRILLIANT SHOWS! . "IN THE MIDST OF LIFE" A Z"'Y· Vhuant Muslcal! fridoy thr11 5uftdoy "THIE CLOWNS" A Slapstick Syrnphony of Mime, Music and Lau9hter Wednesday & Thur54ay 1~21 NEWPORT BLVD., at Harbor DEL WEDNESDAY NIGHT* M ~ke Yled0nt11day night ycur night to .t at cut. At Oel 'Ta e.:i, V~ednc,dey "ight i1 Taco Night. You gel iiK te1ty Del T11 co1 for ju,I $1.75 ! Thi1 Wedne1d1y, drivt thru for a fA ,.,ily si11 me.:il vou won't fo1gct. Al pdce1 _you'!! find ha1d lo beat. HU NTINGTON BEACH Wa!neret Springdale NEWPORT BEACH SANTA ANA Bristol (Palisades) at Campus 4th St. and Newport Fwy. Baker At Fairview TUSTIN I STARTS WED . "THE CLASS OF '44" (GP! ~h11 IGPl "THE GANG THAT COULDN'T SHOOT STRAIGHT" B!!i~in _ f1a_tinee _ Wed. 1 P.M. Free Refreshments Adults SI .DO NATIONAi GINlllAL THIATRIS NOW PLAYING RISIRVID SEATS On Sale Daily 12 'til 9 MARLON BRANDO .h 'j>Bi1s WIOATS 1:4$ U.1. l SUN. l1»W14S "GUDUATI" P.G. WIDATS 7-IO:lO Wl!DAYS 7:10.10:00 SAT. SUH. l-4!00·7110.IO:IS "CHlllllADll5" X WICOAYS l ::IO l SAt. l SON. 2:3G-J1~:4f "HDUCTK>N Of INGA" -- TWO •OUU M0\'1'11! TWO CUH'T W l'WOOO llftS! DllTY HARRY 11 '===K=fl;:l_:_Y'S-H.111<» '.:.JI l•ncoln •••· ..... •' Knott 121·•C.1!1 (U"1 IAJ1WOOO HIGH PLAINS ORl"lR ft) 'lUlltlCHAIO TllOllW YOU'LL LIK£ MY MOTHI S•~D,•co fw) c ....... ,,. O!l·••m o 4t 4 41 • TWO CUH'I EASl'WOOl "'1it DIRTY HARRY 11, ._ -KllL_Y'S HEROS 1 ... p.,;,, ... ,.,." •••<h •••d. .. lf••l>o• l l•d. 171·1Mi2 CLINT lAITWOOD HIGH PLAINS DllFlEI !1! "us I •MMO TMOMAS YOU'LL LIKE MY MOlHIR lfr~ol" ~~"· ••-' -4 lln.tt Sl1·222.J l.INOCl MA M ii.iSi llHISf IOIGftlll: NEPTUNE FACTOR !NI + CULPEPPER CAml CO.,.. CUNf EASTWOOO HIGH 'lAINS-Dllml "' ., ltlA T AUSTY llOl Ml .... -.11'911Mtll1 .I ML !)-,, ... .. . .... · ............... . . ai) EJ Editklt de £nlttnle (Io) Celltro Ibero A1111fklno 2:451J Movie: (C) "list tf lM a.t- KRI S KRISTOFFERSON I BOB DYLAN W ES1 1"11N Slt:R "' O OLOf!N W l'S1 EE Movie: (Zhr) "A SU1ht Case If mtn" {wes) '57-J111111 I.a. KOCE1 CJl1\NNEL 50 Orange Cotmty's UJI F television statlon, KOCE-TV. has sche:iu lcd the followi ng special 2!_ograms today. _Det~!_led listings of Channel SO's progra1ns are carried In tfie Dafly J"Jilot's lV \Veek each Sunday. ' ~;DO Mllltr lllOtirt' H~"""'""ICI \PBSl Verl11v l)r09r1m (Ool'I· "'un1c111r19 wl!h y~ng chl!Clrtn. llM!ed'bv Fred R09Mt. •1» •11c1rlt CemplftV (Cl (CTWl Mu.-•~ lht 111~ lnwllft!Dr <111lll09S n1mull when ht crt1tltl 11n ow•l1 tlftct1v1 wrlt1•!a r1m11vor lor h!, motner f.11n11. Tiit! lmpQrl6"1Kt of "ell" ti ,,_,. 111d of I Word.-, H· lu~trt!t<I whtn tht Stuomt Slr1ol r.rowo 1h1<1 , ''Wh41t W<iUld We Oo Wlltloul Ed?" S:OO '"•m• 51 ..... le! (CTW~ B!<r Bl•ll plan' 10 run 8 !&>I M•~lct u1lng nla ntw l&•I w~l(·n ht m11cl~ usl~" ~dd oart1 Flt 1ouna "l~lng ••Ol.lfld" the S•••mt 51•eol n11on1>orh0od. "d• dl!lon111 te1rn lna p it lfttllldti txldy wrt~. 1ocl111 1Mt,4'tion, t<OIOllY· c.OllllllnQ Ind !ht cl!!le•tl)Ct btlwnn lltit ~nd l/151, $111~1 wcrd I• "11n llolH" (~11,l. •:OCI Lttt<Y IC.l !PBS) "Olyrnjtle on 1111 P•tlflt'" ~011 itgger .-.u1n. ()lympl ... Pa1elLl1-WC*Jnlt(l(ljOJ, y.:111 )how u1 tt>• rt/II ew.ne. ol !ht _.,....__, fh!llo1u1l ~Uh.• <~lhtdrel Q111tlll~. f :IO On'i!'lllUt !C,l !KOCl •T\11 'Wiii C.OllJI Jiu En1tmblt" 8-r••s •1u!n!ot wnltn 1r1v1h 1nr11uol'lol;1 lht 011n111 C.~nty Kl!OO! d111rl'1l will '*.tor,,, • !l'IU\l(·(UllUllll ~·· Ptrltntt. Ho" 01 tho "Qmnlbll•" T HC JlllOST ..... l,l'S'l""'" •11••<:•1. s..ovc 9 'f'Olll'I' "" ltlll: I jl\SON ROBAR DS 'remler Engagement 1.IJJ..!lcl!.l•c' ""-----' MON. FRl.·7 & 10 P.M. SAT. & SUN. 1-4·7·10 I ' -NOWAT - BOTH CINEMAS • , lllllfS 50\J'TI! I S•!'I OIEGO fWY. BllWEE N :;:::0.,~;'o';":>::.~: 8'12·••9 Al.SO CAU '4W2tt ' . I UO (lU ttl-7Jlt l·w ·R-"-·. ·~·.,..-~ • • • • '• . . . . . . .. \ . l· ·I ~ ., ~ ~ 1• • .ONl Y COUNTY SHOWING l,·w ·~ .. -~·~!4~· • • • • • • • • • t • • • •• .• :1 Ll\I \1\(.f\lfK . ' • :1 1· tiAR~OR AT l\[)AM', CO':.lA lollSA • 919~1_.1 ' HELD OVER .. .. ' ' \ . . ,Z DAIL V PILOT Tu~JY Junt 5. 1973 f'amll11 Clrr_' ... e--~"~" Bil Kea11e !:!q11id Goart•ttaets Stennis~ Anyone? ) A Ste~tl{ Shake? Fu.it a1td Gain es Witli -Co1igress111e1t \VASHINO~ON (AP ) The way Pence tells ii, tbc l)ence has bee.I! spreading Tired of jokes about the associatioo had a bill pending .. the game n1Ulonw1de through before Congress for fi\1e lhe.-nural ~lectric-Newsletter \Vatergate caper? Then let's months and when it finally \vluch he edits. try a new game, ''~ennis, \\las ,µaped,, .. he and some There are three basic rules STANFOHO jAP J -Steak says persons who cannot enjoy Anyone?" friends went but to celebrate. for •'Stenn is, Anyone?" 1 shake, ai>ple pie drink, roast solid food shouldn't ~tay at The idea is simple. You take "WE WE!\E •tr around -The names used must be \ heef and ma shed potatoes home been.use of their prob-the nan\Cs -last names only .. \,,""" ~ . ~1 1L ~SC_9f present_ membg s of • • ...,~~1---Jl---eoc1rtn11-are-+>1s13-fC\\t'""Of---thc-"'le•n1~-------"----o<'-ntembef9..... the-l:h&-~OID _mg gw:e_flie House ana·scnnle • J• Senate a nd H 0 u se . '0( out wha.t tQ do next, and. this If •· t · 1 . .. .,...-.., .. ........... -~ .,Grandma, why don't you ever give Mommy and Daddy any dime1?"1 Douhle!llrink? 2 Good Skates Marry 1a ... 1y reci pes contained in a "COOKS AND "'aitresses in . . , d t t • was what we came up wltb," -you 1wve . o ~xp a1n llC\\' cookbook for I i quid restaurants will blend Repicsentatives .in pu wo p 'd · · 1 ,. , i•our bill, consider it rCJected. or more together lo n1nke the encc sa1 in an in .er\1e\\. . dlc!crs. 1hings io ~·cur or<ler and \auah nnme of a special piece of Actually, the gRme has its -No first na1nes. "Blend und :\1end" \\:1~ \l'il h you -not nt you -for niake-believe legislation. genesis a \~hile back in son1e Soll\C n1?re examples; con1piled by \\'ilrnn King. a your Ct>ur:igcJ ·· :\lr:s. King anonymous punster 's creation 1be B1ble-Ohurch-Chnppel· lahoratorv assistant at thr said. FOR EXAi\IPLE: there's the of a pit'Ce or legislation Bell-Tower Prayer Amend- Stanford 'unl\'ersily School uf r\ san1i:lc liquid del ight calls Pepper·~ooney Pizza St~nd-celebrating the ringing of bell s ment. a!cdicine who spent se\'l!ral for roast beef. 111 a s h c d afd~ Bill. And_ the. Devine-in an Asian cily \\•hen a eer· The Ca nnon-Towell Keep years 011 a liqu id diet rollo\\'in~ potatoes. gra\'y and l>ecf A1cnrd Wi1111er · \\ r 1 g h l Presidential Sue-lain famous Asian athletic A1ncrica Clea n Bill . a ja"·bone operation. bouillon processed in a blender cession-Bi 11. And. un-team cnn1e to town . ·The Scherle-Ketche1n Police "I \'VAS starving on the tasteless hospital diet." said ~'!rs. King. "\Vhen I got home . I decided I could \\'hip up much better meals.·· and slurped through a stra\v. Costa ~Iesa High School fortw1ately, · the Tunney-Fish Th t · f 1 · 1 1-Assistance Bill. senior Robin Hardison Salmonella Control Bill . 8 piece 0 egis a ion \\':IS The B u t I er-Bakcr<ook ~!rs. King, \\'ho says s.he has won Da Kalb Agri-The credit -or the bla1ne the Long-Spong-J.,ong -Hong Household Employes Wage hasn't had a good piece of cultural award for out--for this son1ewhat useless Kong -Ping ·Pong -Ding Bill. steak s ince 1965 \1·hcn she fi rst 51·and•'ng w 9 r k in . ed Do.ng -Bill . Th H t fl · p· kl p broke her ja\\'. \\'ill probably , passt1me goes lo a man -nam e un · e1nz· 1c e-ep- be 00 a.soft diet·thc rest of her school's vocational ag-Dick Pence who , "'hen he's not THAT ONE didn't need per Food Additive,Bill lit rs. K!ng says her r1;cipes life. ~ ricultural department. pro J11 o t i n g ' ' Ste. nnis1 repeating. but someone at The Young-Aiken-Hart-Case provide variel'y as ,.well as Anyone?," is the assista nt to l1en~ table 'dredg:cd ii up Daytime Television Standar~s nourishn1ent although l.h e SHE SAID she put together Kid L • J . T ·the director of the leglslation and the gang \Vas .off and run· •, Bill . 1nushy conroctions 1nay not the 24-page cookbook because · S · ] {C 0 and cornmunicntions depart-ning. Some\1·hcre along the The \'oung-Studds Paternity look like \Yhat people norinally "I just 11·ant to gel the n1cnt of the National llura l line, this nonsense 1vas given Bill. "'ould co nsider eating. tnessage out for the benefit of Ask AltfJ y Elt~ctric Coopera_ti vt.' Associa· the na111e of the l\1 ississippi The N u n -D i g gs -L c n t Fro1n Wire Servicc.>s The bride v•orc v.·hite satin. :1 broad smile and roller skales. TI1e liquid_ food gou rn1ct other people on liquid diets." ~.-'-----li•in,.~ se11<.1tor. Stennis. Religious fo~rcedom Bill. payment. canceled a claim1 _ _:~_::;::::-c..:::::_~:::_=_::::::::_.c::~::_::::_::::::..:::=::..: __ _:::: _______ "-.._-oc=-=C:------::--=;---~-:::----:=:===c-:~-~~-"'-='-------- th1i"rBoone Still O\i'ed $75,000 Cathy Hayes and llarry Sev.·ell \Vere married at the _Red Barn Roll er Dome in Vrildosta , Ga. The v.·hole vtedding party, including the Rev. J o hn 113zelit. v.·ore skates. Sc\\·ell , 20, v.·orks al the (.___P_EO_P_LE_.-·_,) s kating rink and met hi s li· yeur-old bride there. "'I've .s kated since I \1•as 6 and She has, too," he said. r * Actor Pal Boone paid $5.000 to settle fina ncial difficulties with bankrupt Favorite Foods or America, Inc. Lav,.yers for the fi rm. in consideration for lhc cash Siv itcliiug Of Drugs Wins Vote SACRAMENTO (AP \ Phannacists v.·ould be allov.·cd to substittlt e cheaper brands for the drugs prescribed by doctors under a bill passed by the Assembly on a 43-18 vote. ror stock subscriptions. * Frank Cbituras, a Stockton bulk mail technician \\ith 26 years of service. was na1necl as "Postal \Vorker of the Year.·• Chituras, lef{p a r a I yz e d fro1n the \\;aist down after a siege or poliO. \vas selected "for personal courage and his contributions ·to the U.S. Poslal Service." the Pos tal Service's regional 'Office said in San Francisco. * U.S. Ambassador John A. \'olpe \\'as roccived in private audi ence by Pope Paul VJ . It· \\·as \7olpe's first visit lo 1he Pope since becon1ing a1n- bassador to Italy. The U.S. En1bassy described tile aijdience as a ·courtesy visit to the Pope before Volpe lea\'es for a short \'isit to the United States. T h e am· ssador \\'as aceompanied by is \vife a11d his son J ack. * ~ir Force Col. Theodore \\'. Gu) enior prisoner of war in North Vietnam v.· h o recently charged eight enlisted men imprisoned .1i.·ith hini_ of misconduct, under"'. en t unspecified minor surgery at ~farch Air Force Base, a base spokesman said.- The -Tucson, Ariz. officer checked into the ~fa r ch hospital one night and had surgery in the nlorning, the spokesman said. He said the operation was not dangerous and apparenlly was unrelated to Guy's five years in cap. th'ity. * Authored by Asse mbly1nan John L. Burton 'D-San F'ran- clsco >. the n1easure "·ould permit the substitution of cheaper brands as long as the prescribing doctor and the patient both agreed to til e 0 i Im a n C h a rl es B . substitution. 11le bill also re-\\'rlghtsmao was revealed to quires that the saving be ha ve made a SI million gift for passed to the consumer. the endo"·ment of the Institu1e of Fine Arts of Ne\V York BURTON'S BILL requires University. that the substituted drug be of The O k I a h o m a -b o r n identical chemical formula. 111agnate. former president of strength and dosage as that Standard Oil or Ka n s as . prescribed by the doctor. lt donated the money, to,\.ard a also requires that the druggist total of $3 million needed to indicate on the label tha1 he match a SI million grant from has made a substitution and the Ford Foundation. \\'hat it "'aS. . * -Burton said Jl1fonday the.bill Fonner PO\V llubert CJif. \\'as opposed by dru g ford \\'alker and his \\'ife Jana manufacturers and by some . doctors. but said he ·expected ha ve been granted a divorce 1n lo satisfy the objections of the Tulsa on grounds .of • in- d o ct o r s 11• it h fut u re conip~llibi lit~'. aniendnicn!s. J\trs. \Valker filed divorce "This irould g i \r c a proceeding s before \Valker. an Air f orce captain. \\'as releas· pharinacisl the ri ght t o countennand the doctor," said ed after five rears in a North Vietnan1ese Prison cainp. He Assemblyman Robert E . Badham I R-~1e\Vport Beach 1. filed a countersuit. \vho voted against the bill. l\irs. \\'al ker "·on custody of t"·o daughters. \\·ith \Valker to BADIWf SA ID nan1e brand pay $100 a month support for drug firms spend a lot of each cluld until the~· reach 18. money on research and also 1 __ run stricter quality control S d · 1han :cut rate n1anuract urers. Un ay IS __ ::JJlj,__,, __ lll!lli!lg, -' ro-RA.Av-- pharmacist in 1he shoes or Ll'1n I deciding ll'hat is best for a · patient th at he probably never in the l1tj!flij!!1ll h;is seen." Badhain suid. I I See by Today's W~nt Ads e OU) AND NE.:\\': Early A111t1ican sofa and cha.Ir ~ for sale and in the ~::ime Hd a King site "arer llf!d with frame, mattrt'as and lint"r. • NOBLE. T)'pewriter for as.le: A Royal Aristocrat portable \\1th case, m11t.IJ lypc, exceJlent condit)on. Why Mercedes-Benz Diesel owners insist that it's all those other ~011le who are 01rt of step ... H ow s1range: a linlc lamp on the instrument p:inel glon's ruby reJ n·hen the 220 Die~! is ready to start. Ho\v unorthodox: you 5tart i1 uo by pulling oul a knob. H ow odd: 1he eng ine n1akes ,1 "pockcla-pockcta" sound n·hcn idlinL. The 220 Diesel is no ordinary au tv- mobilc. It is ahnost eccentric. \\:'hat sa\'es it is a penchant for paring do,,·n running costs. For ins tance, Diesel ov.·ners sidcs1cp all these expenses: 1. Tank.ing up o~ gasoline -a fuel that can cost 49 cents a gallon for 1hc more exotic "prclnium" blends. 2. Tanking up often -Diesels seldom drop below 20 miles per gal- lon in average d riving. And "'ith a light foot on the throttle, you'll be amazed ho\v 'much belier than this you can do "ith lhe 2200. its cost above pfcOV.unl gasolines. And in_ man)' areas, the price of Diesel fuel is C\"C.fl lou.•cr than regular grades. Finally, nolc 1his: .i\1os t of the '~·orld's trains run on Diesel power. The same hold s for huge transport trucks. Such industries depend for survival on lo\\' running cost and rock-solid reli- ;1bili1y-strangc, isn't i1, that v.•herc economy and reliability really count you usually find a Diesel engine? Perhaps it isn't so strange af1er all. Perhaps the 220 Diesel isn't such an "oddball" after all. It \veil may be the 1nost rational automobile ye1 devised. Where the economy stops Enjoying Diesel c:conon1y n1eans no co1ncdo\\'n in your standard of driving comfort. Jn fact, if you have never o"·ned a J\lercedes-Benz it may mean a step up. 3. Re placing spark plugs-or adjusting car- buretors_J or fiddling \\•i1h distributors and condensers, or installing new points. Cos1s that mount in a year's dri\'ing. J.11 Y•H• ol •ntin••rina: r•fln•m•111 .stand behind lh• M•r••~•·BQI~ l~O Diowl •niin•. o .. •rh•ad ca,.ih~O. fud ini«lion, and a l l.0:1 CODIP•••· oion ,a1io ll1'lrk1he l11t" •·t r>to ... Try s potting'" this "economy" sedan in a shO\\•room full of i\1er- ccdcs-Benz cars. 11 \\'On'[ be easy; from the No \\·onder Diesel O\vners say it's e verybody else \Vho's out of s1ep. Why Diesel owners have the l:ist.laugh Pop ppen the hood of the 220 ·Diesel. YQu'll sec an engine minus car- buretors, minus spark "plugs, minus points or condenser or distributor. A Diesel engine simpl y doesn'I need 1hese often irksome items. It docs away \\'ith the tra- ditional, delicate igni1ion system;. and it replaces carburetors \Yith direct injecri<n1 as a means of fec"- ing fuel to the cylinders. Parts that aren't 1here \\'ill n ever have to be repaired or replaced. Nex1, s1ar1 the engine up. That .. odd, click and cl a lier at idle is 1he e ng ine compartmenl rc:i.r\vard , the 220 Diesel is almost iden1ical to SC\'cral sister· models. 'fhis means (hat the money-saving 220 Diesel mcasurc:s 5 feet wide i!lsidc. 'l"hc scats arc formed deep and rich and wide. They utilize not cheap foam rub- ber but. hand-\\•oven coil springs and natural fiber padding. This s1urdy machine ,~·eighs ove r one-and-a-half ions. It is v.·eldcd more than 6,000 times, painted 4 ti~es,scalcd beneath \\•ith 2-l lbs. of undercoating. "lmpccca.blc" is a feeble n•ord 10 .., describe that traditional 1\lerccdcs- Benz finish. Ten minu1es' br~>\•sing and you \vilJ coin your O\vn supcrlati\'L"'. Saves money-and nerves People often enthuse abo ut the pleasure of driving 1heir 220 Diesels. 11 is the pleasure of driving a car engi- neered up to a standard.-hot down to a price. Each "'heel on your 220 Diesel is s prung independently on its axle.Only a test-drive can show the difference 1his makes on bad roads and sharp curves. The car behaves \\'ith masterful caln1. As a result, so do you. \1ou stop squarely, because cucli \\'heel-not only 1he fron1 ones -car- ries its own disc brake. The engineers even tucked a shock absorber in10 the steering system to block road thumps from reaching your hands on the n•heel. Suggestion: Bring your \\'ife al ong \\•hen you test drive the 210 Diese l. She'll be delighted at hpw easy and re- laxing 1his ·machine is to dri\•e. She'll discover tha1 1his roomy 5-passcngcr sedan ac1Ually turns in a righter circle than 1he little VW 1100 "Bcellc." Debunking those Diesel myths Over 1hree decades, Mcrcedes--Benz has refined Diesel engine performa nce to a point where many familiar old _giti- cisms are nothing more than myths. .. Diesels are noisy!" Have you heard a Diesel la1cly? Due to 1hat com- bustion process~ it docs click and cla1- tcr at idle-especially \\•hen cold. Bui once il's under n•ay the sound fades. By thl! time you hit 30 mph, it is actually hard to tell-by rhc noise rha1 you're riding in a Dic-sl'L "Diesel fuel is scarce!" 1-l a\'e you talked ""ith a Diesel O\\'ner late!~•? The fa.:t is, diesel fuel is scarcer than g;aso- line. But it's av-ai lable \\'hcrc\•cr Diesel 1rucks stop, and tho1's thousands and thousands of places across the U.S.A. "Diesel~ don't go fast enough!'' Not fast cnOugh to \\·in a drag race. true. But fas1 enough to cruise comfort- ably on any high\vay (and faster than the posted limi1s in 48 of the 50 states). Mercedes-Bmz mo1or car..: from $16,594" to $6,761* ,'-.1ercedc~·Benz offcr5 J v.:is1 r~ni:e ot mudtl!io. }!ere .ue su1u;:e~1ed 1eu1il price~ for 8 of the mo.i populwr t~pc~: <CSOSLCCoopt "50SL Coupo:/Ro•d>ICI .,C~OSEL Sftian <C~SE ~d.i.n isOCoupo: 280 SN.on !ZO Sf.Un 220 0.C>Jl ~d4n Slb.~9,c $12.1.tt. Sl4,691 !d l,~9 1 S lU.(N4 s 9.AJ6 $ 6.999 1 6.761 .,..,.,Coo',,,,,.,,_,., "'I""''"''"" '""''''""' _., o"'ooa•,••"< ••~ 1.._1J "" .•I •n1 '-•M••I•• ltll, Mo.N<.-e.>•"'~-~""""••.r ~ A Diesel is undeniably "diffcren1." Bui nol as different as many people think....;-and-not different enough to pre- ven1 more than 35,090 ~mericans from buying i\lcrcedcs-Benz Diesel sedans in t he past 10 years. A $6,761 .jl in\'estment The D iesel comes fully eq uipped at a basic price of $61761 ."' Yo u can o rder extra equipment, e.g., au1omatic trans- mission, air condi1ioni ng, power windows or a sliding sun roof, tosui1 your special needs. Sec your aut ho rized i\ter- cedcs-Benz dealer soon. 1-Jc will gladly arrange a thorough test drive' in the 220 Diesel. For 3 free color brochure full of details on the Diesel and other _soYJ)d 91 fJ<i:LbJ:ing,<QUIPW.ttclin the combustion ch3mbers, rather than ignift:d by spark plugs a~ in ordinary cars. -Merctdes-Benz--modefs, clip and send the coupon"belo\v tod'ay_ ~ The i\lercedes-Bcnz 2io Diesel does not stop wilh an unconvcn· tional ignition sys(e1n and direct in- jection of fuel. It has a comprt.'Ssion ratio of 21.0:I where a typical d~ mestic V-8 might h"ave one of 8.5: I 1 and it burns a diffei'cnt type of fuel. "I-Ou can feel. the difference. Rub a blob or Diesel fuel bct\\'CCn your fingertips. It's a crude oil, cheaply refined. Not even stiff taxes can raise ' TlieAlrrcrJti·IJtit; n o DltJtl, o cdlor/lil t (lr. Cttp tlrt f011]1<111/or(I rofor/11/ br --- • r-------------, I ® JI• ....... ,., .... I I IJOl Ou11!1 SI.. P.O. Boa u .io I Newport 11 .. c11, I ~·n1orn11 '2663 I I l'!fa~f 1fnd mt )'our lull-color brochure l I :.:: """'"'"'"' ~·~ ""· I I -'dJ'"' ""••----------' '"" ,, J L.::::~--~------- Jim Slemons Imports, Int. 1301 Quail, ;.o. Box 2640, Newport Beach, c.;;~663Phone :11~-s33.9300 --·- I J ' ' l r I . ' • • Good News Spread By JO Ol.MlN Of tlle O.ltr ,lltf l"H "\\'e're trying to spread good news in-- st£ad of bad. Things are going On as normal. Killamey aod Cork a r e peaceful. 1' _ Pauline O'Brien. \Vest Coast represen- tative or the Irish Tourist Board, has as her mission to bring good news about Ireland to the United States and thereby ' encourage travel to Ireland. · considering rinding an apartment in Newport Beach. It will be a great pleasure (or her lo unpack her Irish linens, \Vattrford ghiss, old Irish prints and treasures from her travels in Europe, she said en- thusiastically, because it has been months since she tla s even unpa~ked her suitcase long eoough to call someplace home. JOIN CLUB -1£ all Irishmen are as friendly and channing as Pauline, she's right: Jt tru1y -is a traveler's paradise. "I will become involved in:;,;r com- f\.fiss O'Brien Is one or 12 "goodwill ;im-munity," she emphasized. "My.h'.ome \viii bassadors" currently \ tr ave Ii n g be very permanent." She believes a throughout the United States promoting person is "on the fringes" or life unless lrela~d-Sh~ has called on travel agents, he is a melnbcr of some community __ bceJl_Jnten•1ewed ~1 -radio-and television,__ . . . 'visited vlholesalers and airlines and groops.-For her, these will be Zonta Club anyone \\'ho nlight help her spread the and a tennis or golf club. \\'Ord thal Ireland offers a weallh of ex-She loves to cook and entertain and her perlences to the tourist. fortWlate guests will enjoy bro\vn bread NEW COUNTRY and other delicacies for \\•hich the Irish are famous. "lrelalld really is the ga_!.eyy to Europe." she said. "The people ~e most impressive in lrelalld, ho\\'ever. 1bere is an openness and a welcofl'!_e -al!!_you can communicate at once. Still you are in a new country \\'ilh new_ customs and traditions." · Other attractions, she said, are the peace and <1uie t of the countryside, low density oC lrafflc. the 2'20 golf coursC'S th.roughou1 the land. the stately hon1eS to be visited, the arts and crafts, drama productions. music feslivals. interesting a<.'COOlmoclations (many castles have been made into hotels) and abundant !rout and salmon fishlng. Part or Ireland's coast is \\'armed by the Gulf Stream, she said, so there is .a tropical part of the C0W1try that is a surprtse to most visitors. Shopping opportwilties · abound for 1 those who are interested in Waterford crystaJ; fine linens, Belleek china, hand- \\'oven Yi"ools. designer clothes, Umerick and Carrtckmacross lace, Aran S'A·caters or Donegal l'A'eedS. \\'0\'EN IN HO'.\IE In some locations tra\'tlers can v.-atch !he items being niade, such as Umerick. \\"here sisters in !he Good Shepherd con- vent will show hou· 1~ ... ()\'erstitched. pu]led-thread lace is made and in Donegal where tweeds 8re woven in the home. l Travelers will be channed by the-Irish storytellers, she added. These are called "seanac;htais," \\'tticb is the Gaelic word for storyteller. Every hotel doonnan can recount the legends ol Ireland as can the jarveys, or drivers of the jaunting cani which tourists may ride. Dublin-born Pauline will make ' one rmre trip back lo Ireland to visit her mother and brotheni and take travel agents on an information tour before set- tling down to her West Coast tcnit<ry in July,. She plans to live neiP' the ocean and is Ho'A' does an attractive young \voman like Pauline O'Brien become involved in promotion work far from home? Travel through her father's position 1t1lith Irish airlines u·as the first step. Then she started becoming atA•are of fol k music throughout Europe and realizing Ireland 'A'BS rich in folk music of its. 01vn. Next she started to explofe her ·native land lo learn its folklore and customs. A trip to the United States to visit her sister,· who had met and . married an Irishman in Chicago, u·as the nexl step. "I had no idea the country was so vast," she comsnented about her first \'iSit.- Her love or peciple, her travel ex- perience, enthusiasm for Ireland and her interest in the United States \\'ere< a pe'rfect combination for an ambassador. She depends on these qualities for her public appear~. "I have· no training in public speak· ing,'.L.she e~lained. u1 speak-from-my heart." ~liss O'Brien commented on the unrest and violence in Belfast: "Any loss of life is a terrible tragedy 10 me. Ttie---rr'ish people i re very anxious lo have a peaceful settlement. Civic and economic problems \\'ere polarized into religious issues. I hope the hatred will lesse1'--38 time goes on. "In the loog run, the Irish people will have a brand new look toward a reunited Ireland \\'ith justice and jobs for all. "It is :!.._ety sad. Before, no measures had been taken. Now they have been. \Ve're very optimistic." The .. lrjsJ! Touri.st .Board is offering a frtt, full-coJor travel pJaMer whjch de- scribes Ireland's scenery, historic sites, notable gardens and houses, acaimmo- dations, festivals, sports and toors and contains detailed maps. It may be obtained by "\\'filing to flfiss O'Brien at 681 ,.tarket St., San Francisco. 9~105. Chinese Fl.avor -· Spices · Season . ' ' . NEW YORK (APJ -Designer Rudi Gernreich says tba.t people will wear anonymous daytime clothes Jn the future, but at h4me they will dive into self-expression. • "We're still very nosla.lgia-oriented. which.. js not my bag al all There seems to be thj.s: desire not to face present and future," Gernreicb said a{ bis fall collection showing for Harmon Knitwear. He rni4e a clear distinction between his simple, happy-looking.<lay clothes and the all-out high viSi· bihly, evening dresses and pants. ----After:. a -break-in---the--shOw;-models-emtrged--- made up )Vilh white faces, tiny, heart·shaped mouths, and black-wigs to slither along in a series of Chinese- looking dresses. These were body·huggtng and set with bold round !lowers. · No hostess could ever get lost in the crowd of her own party weariIJ.g these black .. pink and-orange dresses. Gernrelch said he had difficulty thinking of a --woman he most adnttres, fasblIDr-WISll!-;-and wu par-- ticularly down on the gigantic shoes which women are dragging around on their feet these days. ' In fact1 he used 10-year-old capezio shoes with ·his clothes, ''because the new .shoes looked too old- lashloned," be said. However, be says he has ''C09led It" since 1969, when he showed toy?illes and dog • tags. That seoson collld have been' a low point for him. He lives his own Cashion messag_~ Re wears a series of c1ftans In his Hollr."'.ood HIUa home, ind be bu woril..bb~ Hay ' unlform"-a two-piece sill! with epallle!& On the ShOUldo1$-•fOr years. uCl1 .Gernreich's le es t he Chine fl11vor look 1--1-------------i.-.:l~s;,,,...&-fo M-11•m<>n•~-4i,..;_.;-,....--c ·~,---- • One of Ireland's great shopping intere sts is-hand- woven woolen designer fa shions (righ t J whic h Pauline • O'Brien (below J t a lks about while sp reading good news about her native land. ! ~-- BEA ANDERSON, Ed;to• Counter Charge Credit Due Clerks DEA·R ANN LAi'IJDERS: I would like to reply to the person \\'ho sent that Credo for Salespeople. It made every clerk in this store hopping mad. Aller au, 11t•e aren't ALL ignorant, unresponsive, in- different and moronic. -Granted, one out of 10 salespeople just might fit that description, but I can tell you from experience that the chances for getting a pain-in-the-ankle customer arc better than 5(1.50. Here is my lis! or sal esn1cn's grievances. I'll bet no store manager \1·ill have this credo framed and hung. but 1"11 feel better for having written il. I. Please don't try to get a clerk's at- tention by snapping Your fingers, whi st- ling, or pulling at his or her sleeve. up. (Some of Y?U "kids" are 30 years old.) Your psychiatrist told y()u (for $40 an hour) that your parents arc to blan1e for 1nessi ng you up -that they, 1vcrc loo busy making m~ney or being com1nunity big shots. A hired woman fed anti dress- ed you . \'ou weren't rocked cn9ugh, or breast-fed. Or your parents had a bad marriage. They yelled at each other and yo u got bad vibes. How do you account for all the kids \\·ho greu' up on the street, never kne\v a 2. Please don't let your children run loose in the slore. screaming like decent meal. no silvcr\\'arc on the table, hnnshces. knoc kil)g over stacks of cans. father a drunk. mother a barfly. yet they breaking and soiling 111erchandisc. If you made it just fine -1\'ithout psychiatric ---can't disclpHne them. leave-·them at --lielf). ~·ranYorlhesC so-called "ilcglcclcd' home. k'd I d . b ' . 1·t· 3. l\lerchandisc is scaled for YOUR protection. Please don't rip it open. Would you buy a jar with a broken seal? \Veil, neither would anyone else. . 4. At present I work at a supermarket checkout counter. 1 say "thank you" to every ~ustomer, One person out of 20 responds. I could go on indc:inilt!ly. but these arc for OJ)t!ners. Lct "s h1:ar it for lhc Sales Cl erks o(_ America. J.~vcry day \\'C have to put up-with screaming kids, shoplif~rs. non-English-speaking customers a n ti sourpusses like thnt cl0\\'11 \Vho u'rote to you. No hint as to where this letter can1c from. please. Ann . I nccd my-job. Sign nie--OTHER SIDE OF THE COUNTER. OEAR SIDE: Ne\'tr ltt it be said !hot I didn't give bolh side~ of the counter a lair hf"Oring. Voo've made 11ome vDlld points und I thunk you tor "'riling. ""I~-DEAll ANN LANOE;RS;_J}.ere's . an 01>en letter to till you kids "'ho ore mnd at your p:irtnls because they didn't give . -. you enough lo\'e when ypu were growing 1 s are ea ers 1n us111ess. po 1 1cg, education, art. n1usic -\\'herevcr you look . I am so fed~ up hearing kids blame their. parents; ror ever~thing that I could throw up. I am y,·aiting for the day \Vhen they have kids of their own. Let's .see how "·ell THEY turn out. -YOUR GOOD-FOR-NOT HI NG FATJ·IER . DEAR FATl-IER : \'ou didii't ask for ony ad\1ice, but I ha\'f: an idta you i1hould ba'•e-gra.bbed a le"' oJ' those. $-10 sesslGU.1_ for yourstlf. You sound dttply dls81>" polnled in your t hlldrtn and "·orst )'Ct. !fflhin~ 1'ilh angtr. 0 1.Jylou!ily yuu'\'e bttn hurt and rtjecltd and It sho1v1. l\laybe it'1 nnt too l:lle for ~·ou to get somt 1elr·under!ila11dlnir. t rtcommend It Are your -parents too !tMct ! 1-fttrd to• reach~ Ann Landers' booklel, "Bugged by Parents? llo1v to (:t!t i\lore Frtiedom," cou llfilp yoU brtl'l~fl""thn generatton gnp. Send 50 ci!nts Jn coin y.·1111 )'Our r1,.-quest ;ind a long. stn111ped, sel!-addrt:ISttl envelope to the D.'.lily Pilot. • ., ' / ' ' I UP'I Tt .... holo Going Down in the Pages of History The appointment of three girl pa ges in the House of Representatives·was announced less than two weeks after the initial break \Vith the all·boy page systen1 was made by Speaker Carl AJbert. One of the three, Your Horoscope Tomorrow l6·ycar-old !·Jed i Stain of Brooklyn. is sho\\'n on the Capitol steps with her ~ponsor, J{ep. Bertra111 Podell ~D-N,1 1. ... Gemini: Take Responsibility , • Acting Anonymous Genuine INDIAN JEWELRY Faces Pt aced AUCTION FRIDAY, JUNE 8 -7:00 P.M. Out of Order NO LIMIT -NO RESERVE OVElt $20,000.00 Yllluatlon of the ftn••t Gl!NUINI INDIAN JEWELRY AND ARTIFACTS. N11v'11Jo, Z:1.1nl, Hopi, Pu11blo1. M11ny OLD ,AWN 11l11cff. DO NOT Miii THIS ONE. Hy F.Jt:\I~ BO~IBECK I urn ashan1ed to ad mit how miserable I an1 at remen1· bl'ring na1nes. \\'ord association doesn't do it for me. Neither does going lhrough the alphabet to jostle rny subc<Jnscious. If a person isn't \\'ea ring a bQy,•ijng shirt '"'ilh his na 1ne on the pocket, forget it. "TilC Iric k," said n1y hus- Oand. "is to C1Jt1Ccntrate the morncut son1eone gives you his na1ne and say, 'Gla d to n1eet }'OU, Farns"·ort h.' 111e11 introduce hiin i1nn\ediately 1l11cf 1nake SOlllC referencl! to his 11an1e like 'l'an15y,·orth is an English derivative, is it not'.''" 'l'he other night \\'C \Vent to a clnssy restaurant ".he re everyone secn1ed to be on a first nan1e basis. The boy 1\·ho parked our car said. "1\.ly uarne's Bernie and I'm your car hop for the e\'ening." ·•Hello. Bernie," I ~a i{I ex- .1en'di1J! n1y hand. "1'1n Erma an d this is n1y husband. Bill. Bernie is an Engl i sh deriva til'e. is it not?" 'iii · don't thin k so." he hesitatC'd. "It's B c r n i e JAKE'S AUCTION ~ ~· Ar-)!~· ~·Ul.J\l~~o~...Mr.i~i•~ .. ~s~·n~•~'-'"~~·~-~n~1Jl~.--l!H~~-~Y~~! WIT'S END By th.c tin1e Ba'r_t._o_u_r_•_•o_i_te,1~·.11 ·came y,•it h the menu, I got Karen hopelessly confuse<! I \\·ith Bernie and I 1\•a3 calling! 1''ern Ginger, ~ \.\·as the nan1e of the-1adies' roo1n at-l tendant. ., OVERWEIGHT? ~~:.'', r 56 LB. LOSS IN 40 DAYS ~( Under Medical Supervl1i on at th• Omega Clinic ' HOURS: 9:00 • 7:00 • CALL FDR AN APPOINTMENT ·COSTA MESA ANAHE\M SAHTA ANA "lt!l•rlo":"'-"•llr• . Uf.• w lld•V 1JtJ1TUlllnA~• 1}{1 w. t.~Ha.11•• lllv~. . 116t N•w,ort · · (714) 870-9347 646-1633 7784841 547•6329 (213) 697·1791 To further muddy things up. a pair of olcJ friends, Elaine" and Pete Turbot, slopped by the table and introduced us to their fr iends, Esther and I)y,·ayne Turnbull and Vehna l"-=-::-~--::-:-:::-:::;::;;:::::::;:~====-=-2=:::~ and eeci1 v.1ickcr. Ir l in trodu ced Elaine as I Golden Needle's .Karen ond got D1vayne 1nixed S ,,1 .I ,,.j .. L _ "~'--L up \rilh Pau l. the bartender. ~ 7 i;ce #Veete As I got into I.he c:1 r, ! said l~-=:-i:j.-------~--------1=*:=:"1 to n1y husband . "Barney , I I . "t ·11· don't know how you do It." 111(/.n'.e I 'IVI • l · "TI1al's Bill." he correc1ed . ! "Glad to 1neet rou. Bill is an l English derivath:e. is it not~" "You're t h in kin c: of Famsy,·orth." SEERSUCKERS! Va lues up lo $3.98 yd. NOW $2.77 "Oh. yes. the nice boy y,·ho parked the car." Sch1,·artz." Inside th'f restaurant. a frail rfi1. ~Ollicn .~11c~li_l~ ~-B RICS gi rl Catne to' greet us and said, UdJ SOUTH COAIT PL1'?A • CAllOUllL Ll\llL ,"Ht.'llo. n1y narne is Fern. and -----------.'.':::~:'::: ___ ~"":'~'~~'.'.'.''_""'..-''....'..'~'"~'~"':'~'--rtn your hostess_ for tbc C\'C·1- ni11g. '' "Ni'.."<! !o ·rl'lt"CI you, Fern." I said. ''TI1ls is Bill and I'm Erma and of course you kno1~ Bernie in the ~rking lot.·· _, .. =-.. MY~KI~ND~O~F =G1F=Ts~ .... --• WEDNESDAY JUNE 6 t-----6)'....SYDNE.Y-Oltl.4.JlR yotu' y:ay. Tau"rus. Libra persons could play ker roles. ~·l ake adjustment at horne. ~TAURUS (April 20-~iay 201: Accent is on "·hat you create, your own st~ le. your ron1nnce and y o u r rela- tionships 'rith ch i I d r e n . Obviously. you'll be busy! Key is to also be selccti,·e. \'ou "'ill have choices. Pisces could play big rdle. C1\l\.'Cl::ll 1Junl' 2l ·Julv 221: You ll'<n(I, l\rJ1c. cn!J ;.11•'.! n1~1kc con r:ict 1rith rclCJlives. Ari~s. Libr11 ]X'rso11s <ire apt to l·c in1·uh·ed. En1pha1)is i" on f in d i n g out 11·hcthcr "shur1cut" !'Pally is con· structh·c. Hclationship 111ay be <ii nn:il stage~. in action. One in po!:iition of authoril.v could elevate your O\ITI standing. Prestige is in piclure. Ke~ note : s ac· con1plishn1enr. Ge1nini, ,.lri:o persons t·ould figu re pron1· inen1ly. Get ear or one "in charge ... As she edged away, another girl approached with, ''Hi. J'rn Karen, your cocktail ·waitress to serve you th is evening." I took a deep breath and v.•ent lhrough the lisl again. ffitltdt1 t4~!''® -. •' Fishes Observe FOOD GirT PAKS Golden Year :'-Ir. and ti.trs. r-.tort ime r \\'. Yen1ini comes bac~ -these ·persons can say ''goodby" a number of tin1cs and relurn on just as n1any occasions. Don't reh1 on Gemini when it comes to ·leaving "for good.'' As far as Ge1nini is concerned, -a "fare"·ell " p e r fo rm a n cc servea onlv-as a reason for making a Comebacl\, GE:\UNl t ~la:i.:. 21=J une-201; En1phasis is 011 responsibi l it~· and how you handle it. Don'l procrastinate. Beating about bush results in possi ble loss and en1barra!:isn1cnt. Sav \\·hat \'OU 1ncan -st rike at hCart of fnattcr. Older person is vcr~· n1uch in picture. LEO !July 23·Aug. 22 i: You nta kc n1onc~· through original 1ne1hods. ind('pClld(tlC'C. by taking initia1i11e. Br ca k through layers or lradi!ion. Create your 01vn lraditions. t'.leans stop being av•ed by the past. The rest of )'Our li fe is thC' future~ CAl'RICOR:" 1 Dec. 2'2-J11n. 191: Accent is on \\'ha t \'OU Y>a111 to f!chie\e. You Can bring goals closer to rea lil)'. Special c<Jrresponden ce could be featured. Check distances. .directions. Journey is on agen· da. You learn. Libra. Aries are apt to be involved. Eish marked their golden v.·ed·. -- ding annh•ersary with an open Dad will enjoy the tnste tempt· in,q cheeses, smoked 1nral and orbe_r foods men enjoy, .. in our complete selection of fo od gift paks. TAKE IT WITH YOU OR WE'LL MAIL ARIES r ~tarch 21 -April 191: Spo tlight is on health. the "·ay you relate to peers. If diplomatic. you get posith·c result s. \'ou are better 11011· at 11·in11ing rather than forcing To avoid disappointJnent. prospe<:tive brides are reminded to have their \l.'edding stories '"'·ith black and v,rhite glossy photo- graphs to the DAILY PILOT \Von1en 's De· partment one '"'.eek before t_he \\•edding. Pictures received after that tin1e \\•ill nol be used. For engagement announcements it is imperative that the story, also accon1panied by a black and white glossy pictur~, be s~1b­ mitted six weeks or more before the wedding date. U deadJine is not met, only a story will be used. To help fill requirements on both \red· din~ a nd engage~ent stories, forrns are available in all the LY PILOT office s. Further questions . be ans,vered by \Vomen's Section f members at 642-4321 . INTERIOR DECORATING-SEMINAR We Help You Help Yourself VIHGO !Au g. 23·Scp1. 22\: Lunar cycle is such that you arc on target. you n1 <.1ke 1·a!uablc contacts nnd 1·ou dra1\' cotnplimen!s fron1 "op- posite sex. \·ou l'!in ge t. 1rhat you \\·ant. not neccss;.1rily 11 hat you nt>cd. Aquarius. Leo persons <ire featured. LIBHA ISept. 2J·Oct. 22 !: Strive for greater 1·crsatili!y. Dhcrsify. \\'h at you thought 1ras lurking behind the scenes turns out to be har1nless. e\·en an1using. Don't turn from goal. You kno"' \1 hat \'OU are doing and you ha\'c rig.ht to be confident. SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21 ): Accen t is on v:ishcs. ron11111ce. special dei>ires and aspira· lions. There '''i ll be revisions. There also could be so1ne tear- ing doy,·n for pur poses of rebui lding. You y,•il! be dealing ,,-ith l..t.'O, Aquar ius and Scvrpiv persons. SAG ITTAHIUS 1:\01« 22- Dcc. 21 1: \\'hat you do results AQUARIUS 1 Jan. 20-Feb. 18 l: You learn about costs, production and potential. Joint effort is most li kely to suc· ceed. Be selective \\'here in- \'esl!nents, purchases are con- cerned . Ignore one \\'ho \\'ants you to hurry. Time is likely to be on your side. PISCES (Feb. 19-:\·larch 20) Ob ta i n valid hint fro n1 house gi\'en in l he i r Capistrano Beach home . Hosts ·were their da ughter. Barbara Abshear of Nc"·porr Beach and sons. Charles Fish of San Diego and Austin Fish of Da yton. Ohio. The 'honorees, who \\'ere married in Dayton, also hare 11 grandchildren. Aquarius message. \\la i t ·.-----------I observe. Permit others 10 show their hands. You gain by careful planning. Acti\•ity in· dicated in con nection· "'ith partnership, n1arriagc. Break fron1 past is indicated. IF TODA\' IS voun HIRTH DAY you have unusual voice. You are capable of bringing together those who hold opposing vie\\'S. You are restless, fond of sv.·ccts. You draw· to you many bo rn under Taurus and Libra. You can teach and act: December could be an outstanding month for you in 1973. COUPON ~ t MAD ~\o>ttS I 'o~UNnNIHON II.A.CH C,UIRINT FASHIONS AT DISCOUNT PllCIS 1HI$ Alllml If I~ m1n11••• rrom c.11 M- ind N-por1 •Mell Ol!ly lM ,.rkl•Y Ill f ,.M,, ,, .. 1111 I 20% OFF ANY_CARPET -CLEANING-__ SHAMPOO '. STEAM CLEAN HYDRA CUAN. ;l'REMIUM PAK $3.98 Large on appeal. Features lllckory Farms of Ohio Jelly and Preserves Jn addltion to four ~ t~sty cheeses. MIDNIGHT SPECIAL $8.50 One -1UEEF'ST1cUu1dhlirlget 1.on~h~ - Belle Fl eur Cheese, Srnoky (Sn10J.:cd Chcr.se ·"~ 11nd imported 1::andies to 11dd 11porklr:. . DELUXE -HOLIDAY-CLASSIC -$14.98 The ALL CHEESE plus $10.50 Ooo lb. BEEF STICK, Bo1Io Flou• Ch""· Belle Fleur Chee11e, Butter J(11ese Chee1e, Goud1, Edam Bar, Smoky (Smoked Chee1e Ed•m B11r, Smoky, four Cheese Spre1d1, two Bar], Crackers, Butter Kae1e Chee1e, ~1ild C•l•r C•ordl11otlo11 F11r11l1ure r.tau111t11t Gou~a. boxe1 of old·faehloned crackers and Midget Longhorn, 4 Cheese fipreads •. Sharp -l--ll-''"·'•'-~Sticks Pl!!! Jmport11d c1ndle1. Cheddar Spread plus Imported candles. Wh•l'1 Now Wollcoftl'l"t The Jli•r11l1•re for Y•• Drapery Ir All Wh1dow Trfffrn~ll c.,, .. 111, e Vinyl • Ll9lritl119 ' e Acco11orm Your Home Is Your Class Proiect 3 Clones $50 REGISTER NOW CLASS •1 Tires., Jir11012 • Tffl., J111110 I'· fit01., J•M 26 1 r.M. ,. ' r.M. CLASS •2 Wed., J irq 1l ·Wed., J111i.o 20 . Wad .. Ju11e 27 10 A.M. to 12 Noori CLASS #J f)111r&., J •11e 14°lhirt1., J11111e 21·llt111r1., J11111t 21 7 r.M. I• ' ,.M. ~ ~ .I GOOD Good for 1h1r p1~1y touch u111. In between steam cl11rto Jn91, Or for 1p1r1m1n1~ ('teaq C!}GAfac§ter CAfflllT AND Ul'HOLS TElf_Y CLCANllf!I -aitf!tri, l/i;;111/1tJ11 &11ritJr1, 200 NEWrOIU-CENTER DRIVE , 1 ! 1 lfotobliohed 19251 BEmR Qu1Uty clt1nin9, Extr1ets h•••Y toll, 12 to 24 hr. dryin1. S11rilbe1 c1r,.t, 1'ho Ultlm11t1 clo•11lftf. Mtrt ••· tr1ctlo11 ,owtr. Quick 6 t• t hour dftf"I (••I clr,.t•). No thrid:.,., 011ly tho w•M 1nttr1 yeur homt. 540-6011 OR 645•1313 FREE ESTIMATES •ONE DAY SIRVla offer end• 6/1.S/7~ · 1740 Superior Avenue (Newport & 17th SU Costa Mesa Ma•t•r Chara• NEWPOr.T Bt:ACH e O:»GN PLAZA e b44 ·8ll0 01 ------~~~~~:!li,l COUPON I ' Make Dad's Gift More Attractive SPECIAL WRAPPING 01' Dad .will be hnpre11ed with his well·-' wrapped gift from Hickory F11rm1 of Ohi o. We'll wrap your gift In 1ull11bl11 and di1Unll" tlvt1 i;aper ind 111t11ch • d•coraliv11 (and us• abl•) ('Jlrq cob pipe, cla:ar or prectlc. a:olf b.li. }'Ult lllk Ull - fl(Clec1f'1 t•!!!!S · \ South CoaSt ?Ina - Co.STA MESA OPEN DAILY l•...,, C.,..,..I Moll S1111day1 After Clri111rclf"Tll S ,M lrl1tol at tllto Son 01090 kwy. PHONI 140•69tl eL..!1-~MEll~1I~C!~~~r.t~1~.!JIN~G~cmsE=:..S:.!!!TOI!=lES=~ • ' • • DAILY PILOT J 5 Watc hers Wa nted -I Sitter Service Mee-ts Sp9tial Needs. By ALLISON OJ::ERR ing, tees. uanspor1ation 3Jld small children are very ex· 01 .,.. c.u., "11°' s1•11 other considerations. cited about it. Parents of older \\1here do you find a con1· An initial · n1eeting i s retarded feel it is something petent baby·sltter for a scheduled for Thursday, June they ~·ould have used if programs doing n1ueh the san1e thing. "II is open to teenagers. col· Jege students, h<M.Jse"•ives. any· one in1eres1ed in participating ln the training session.'5." retarded child or con1pan.ioil 7, at 11>-'ll.m. in the honie of available when their children -----------.------------ for retarded adults~ ......_ ~1rs. Roof, 191 7 Lodi Place, were young." ~~~ ~~~~~;:~~~~---1 '!'++"'"ii=....J>areJ>tsool .• ll"1=nlaJ:d1ca...JJl.-Anaheim--Sho-oo_.,oo..-.IhLirailling__ww:k•~~~lf~~~~~~~-~=+t~.I' Orange County may soon have tacled for further information be conducted by pr~~ssionals 3 F ull Service MRS. SANDERS MRS. ALVAREZ MRS. WEIMAN Spring Rites - Couples Recite Vows SAND ERS-HIPPE Gail Lynn lfippe and David Ellwood Sanders y,·cre mar· ricd in St. A n drew · s Presbyterian Church. Newport Beach ·with the flev. Or. Charles Dicrcnfield officiating. Th e bride, daughter of f\.1rs. ~vilh 'Delta Sigma Phi. The newlyweds will reside in Phoenix . --. . ALVAR EZ-OLIPHANT St. Andrew's Etesbylerian Church. Newporl Beaeh was the setting for the nuptia l Ceremon y linking J an a Oliphant and Robert Alvarez (If Taunton. Mass. cisco· honeymoon. the bridal cpuple will reside in New York City. WEIMAN -N EDOM John Lawrence \\'eiman of Hunti ngton Beach claimed, Clnrene J\1aree Nedom as his bride during ceremonies con- ducted by the Rev . Dr. Charles Dicreniield and the a pOsitive answer. at 772·3937 or Sharon Shipley, fron1 the Regional Center Location' in FRANCIS- The \Vomen's Aux.iliary to 879-i771. 1 • H 1· I e h th 0 C l A · 1. donaling !heir services, she ~ -:,c""":;;'";;g~o"'n~~·;;•< '\ ORR J for Retarded Children are parents of the retarded and added.~ Later, there will be •'"'"''''"''•w11i e o.11~e,1e1 1 e range o.un y ssoc1a ion The meeting is open to '.\ -PR ESCRIPTIONS-~ '-'> organ:izing WATCHERS -tho.se interested in thi' speci!tl participation in a work ex· L•I •• r"l!l r,tu• '''''"' fl:\~~ STATIONEl:Y \Vomen's Au~Uiary Training training. A follow·up meeting perience day. "ff(;' ptleft• GllADUAllON Course for Home Employed i11 planned Car Thursday, June ''Those who do not have a , t:lae ' G•FTS "7 CARPS Respite Service. 28. retarded child or a 'retarded l~ DR\IGGIST". 11 ) r~~!~~o~;S r.lrs. ~1ichael Roo 1 r, presi-A one-day training \lo'orkshop perso.n in· the family can't-~ u1 s111 s,,. .. , ........ SJMsos ~· Notes ~7 dent of the auxi iary, CX· is tentatively scheduled for I H11nHng ton H•rbollr 144-. r \ 11111 co•u l!iM'll'Af •1s-1111 plained that \V ATCHERS will July and the association hopes know ""'hat such a program ,.;~~"..:"_~3-:~~~~~:;~1 ij·\!1'1•"•"•'•"•'•"•'•'•.'•"•"•"•"•'•"•"•"•' .. be a rererral service. the program wi,11 be in opera· could n1ean to the parcnts.l i~g~-§~=~~-~~-~--§-~~~j~~~~~~~:~~~ Volunteers will be trained tion by September. Every parent needs tin1e lo ~ ....._ _ ~---_-_ for the "'ork and WATCHERS DISCUSSIONS hin1self. I \.\1ill act as coordinator. refer-The idea came about arter "IC you ha\'e no family in ring paren,ts needing· the several discussions with the~ area. arid ll'lo:lny Orang_e service to tttose in their area parents about the difricully of ·County families don't, you -can "'ho. are interested in the finding si tters an d com-really feel trapped if good \Vork. panions. It became th e child care is not available. The REF.E RRALS personal project of ~1rs. Roof class will (lffer training in \\IATCHERS "'ill not be and i\frs. Shipley. now with the basic child c;lre and care for recruiting jobs for baby-sitters Regional Center ror the Men-the atypical child." and companions, she em-tally Retarded. Already interested are a phasized. Response from parents and Yri-1CA teen group and a group Parents will then ma)te their. volunteers has been fantastic. (If Orange teenagers no\v own arrangements on schedu l- she added. "The parents of \vorking in public sch®! TJ\1H. M•rjorle St•rnper ••Y• ... Come to my ... "JUNE INVENTORY SALE" "'~,;:~,~ .. .,PANTS $12.75 I ~~---~---------· Fashi oIJ .. §~utiqu e 445 E. 17th St. • 645·8322 e Coste Mei• Bank Americard "Spccializi n;.: in Travf'I Clothcli" Bublitz Croul of Costa ti.1esa, asked fo.1rs. Fred !\1allgravc ltJ to be her n1atron of honor. Br idesmaids v.•ere t he ~11S"Ses Kristine Laun, Ann ·Grimshaw, Jeanne Aylsworth and Debra Suskin and 1t1rs. Conrad Orosco. The bride is 1}le daughter of Mr. and !\trs. Ken Oliphant (If Newport Beach and the grand- daugh ter of t\tr. and Mrs. \Valier Knott of Buena Park. Her husband is !he son of l\frs. Allan Fooks ·of Winchester, Ma ss. ~~~ew~np r~asdgo; t ei~ i :~1-------------_:''._ __________________ ~-".-.. -~-.. -~-".'."-~-'."'."-~-".'."-~-.. -~:::~ .. -~-'." .. -~-'." .. -~-'." .. -~-'." .. -~-..... -~-..... -~-'." .. -:".~' Attending as best man y,·as Anthony !\1elcndcz, .ind usher:-. v.·ere Robert Lauion, ~1ichacl J)yer, Jtobcrt &hcuncman.- Jcffrey Hi?~ Orosco and Leon Hodgcrs. The bride is " gradu:ite or Ne\rport ll ;irbor High School and Northern A r i z on a University y,·hcrc she \V:JS a member of Alpha Delta Pi and the Cardinal Key honor socie· ty. Her hushand is the son (If Elh~•ood Sanders and h1rs. J(lhn Ca1npbcll. bolh 0 r Wickenburg,,Arii. He als(I is a graduate (If NAU ""'here he received a master of science degree. and he is affiliated !\lntron of· honor was fi.trs. Don .9J.i.Phant and br idesmaids "·err Su!;an Reining.J<athlcen Pickell. !\1rs. David Penso and !\lrs. Gcorb'l! Senter. Stephan fi.1athenson was the best man. and . ushers were· Don otiphant, Allan Hudson, ~lanucl Cincotta and James Quartaronc. ThC' bridP. is a garduate of lhe University of Southern California where she pled ged Kappa ·Kappa Gamma . Her husband attended L o w e I I Techni cal Institute. Lowell, rilass. follO\\'ing a San Fran- Church, Newport Beach. Parents of the bridal couple are ~1r. and Mr s. Clarence F. Ned om of lrvine· alld John W. Weiman or L(ls Angeles. Mrs. Gordon Nedom was the malron · of hondr and · bridesmaid.s "'ere the J\1isses A.nna Stumpf. ~1 aya Rein hardt . Pat sy Emmert and Lorie Linkhart. Best man ~'as Leland Loomis, and ushers ~·ere Joshua \\'hite, HoWard · Huiz- ing, Gordon F. Woo lverton and Capt. Gord on Nedom. The bride. a teacher at El Camino Real School. Irvine. is a graduate of Whittier College. Her husband is an alumnas of California Stale Universily. Fullerton. They will live in Tustin. Installat ions Scheduled Groups Wrap Up :.iv ear Panh elle ni c Laguna Beach Panhellenic '"ill ha ve insta lla1i on ceremonies after a noon luncheon Wednesday, June ·6. in Irvine Const Country Qub. New leaders are the ~1m~. ~farshaO Patton. president ; Sherman Todd and Clyde \V. Phelps, vice pres id c n t s William D. Bird Jr. and Ralph Davis. secretarits; <111d F. ~I. Pouenger. tre<1surrr. Ind ian Maidens A. graduation ceremony for third year members of the Kabnec T:i /\1ation. Orange Coast Y .Jndi an ~lajdens will take place :it 7:30 p.~. Wednesday. June 6, 1 n Tc.Winkl e Park. !it.'ni or music major. presented n piano ro1K..-er1 for members of the music section (If the uni versity's To~·n and Gown support group in the Palm Desert home of fl1rs. Alan_ Stone1nan. The section raised $1200 in scholarship funds for the mw,;c department in the past year. Eb el! Juniors , Volunlcer p h y s ic ian s.... ,registered n u r s e s and laboratory technicians a r 'e being recruited by the Junior Ebel! Club of Newpon Beach · for a VD free clini'c. The proposed clinic. co- sponsored by ~nter Clinic, Costa ~fes:i., will operate Tuesdays and 'Jlhursda~n­ Charter Chapter. American Business \Vo1n:i.n·s Associa- tion. The 7 p.JJl. m~eting is scheduled for lhe V i 11 a S"·eden. Corona de! !\1ar. NB Library Ne~'PQrr· Beach Friends of the Library will offer used books for sale Thursday, June 7, from .1 to 9 p.m. ror mem· bers only. Regular S8lc hour.; \\'ill be 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Fri- da y, June 8. and 10 a.n1 . to noon Saturday, June 9, in Island House, Fashion Island . Tra cy Guild Las Brita• --rngs-from 6 to 9 p.m .. at 132 E. 18th St., Costa ri1esa. ' Orange County Guild for the John Tracy Qinic will have a victory luncheon to celebrate the success of the 10th annual Peacock Hill National Horse Show.~ Mrs. Thames Bowman will be the new-president of ·.L3s Brtzas del Mar Auxiliary, Children's Home Society . The group will 1nstall of- ficers at a dinner meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. June 6, Jn the She raton Beach Inn. Huntington Beach. Serving with rher will be the Mmes. Lary Kopriva. Willi3m Denithorne, and R i c h a t d COurtney, -vice presidents; William Ponn and William Boekelheide, ,secretaries; Art, Caplett. lreasurer, .... and ·Alan Krlz, parliamentarian. --Ii-vine Junior.l-- Threc recycling c e n t e r s operated by the ·trvtne Junior \Voman's Club are collecting aluminum, p;iper and glass. Locations are the Zee Street Fire Stalk>n, an orange grove Donations or an e x • aminalion table, microscope and disposable medical sup- plies are being requested. lnrormation is available Crom the Center Clinic, 642--0377. HB Women Mrs. Grorge Briggeman will host the. event in her Villa Park ·home at II a.m. Thurs- day, JunC' 7. At their J\1ay meeting, lhe UffEll'S Huntington Beach J u n i o r \\'oman's Club announced a HOLSTERY .stries ol membership coflees UP to be given in August. A•Night 'Mell n:•:_W• at the Races Is set for Mon-1tn H.tMr IM. day, A.ug. 20, at Los Alamllos. c.t. ,.... -14M1St Bu.sineu 'Homen I~= _SY.~rme_IJ,ussell. I ~ a d teacher in lhe Title I program CIVIL WAil -Ol..O j)UNI at Wilson Elementary School, will speak on the program at the Thursday, .June 7, dinner meeting or the Newport Beach B MANNING'S COL.LECTORS SHOP ~ (10 Culver Drtve between the 'pi;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiii Santa Ana Freeway a n dH Walnut and at the Unl versjty United Methodist Cbuch. Juniors took a first place in educ11t1.on; second places In youth, -conservation and press and. first In Federatioo at the state ronvenllon (If eaurornia F~aUon of Women's Clubs, Junior Membership. ( Tow n an·d Gown Miss Stella Talaro, UCt I WE HAVE ENTHUSIASTIC AND HARDWORKING AVAILABLE AT MOST HOURS -FOR AS FEW AS THREE HOORS. OUR UNIVERSITY STUDENT EMPLOYEES ARE CARE. FULLY SCREENE~D, IONDED, INSURED ANO ARE COVERED IY-SDI AND wtJillKMENS COMPENS:ATION. UNIVEllSITY HOUSEKEEPING. CALL •1•·1100, MON., WED., ·FRI. ON LY: HO URS I A.M. to It ANO I to 5. ' . •• . "' • • I 12 days 'til Dad's A $20 RACQUET ~FOR $5 W I T-H~ ANY BRAGG! PURCHASE! BRAGG I , THE COMPL ET£"' LINE OF GROOMING ~·ssENTIALS' HAS A SMASHING OFFER FOR YOU. A GREAT !'IEW RACQUET.,. FOR TENNIS BUFFS , ANO EVERYONE WHO WANTS TO GET INTO THE GAME , STRONG, SPR INGY , PERFECT FOR PRACTICE OR THE UN.EXPECTED EXTRA PL.A YER, A . $20 VALUE , Y6UR5 FOR ONLY, $5'WtTH ANY BRAGGI PURCHASE . COLOGNE $8, 0 SUPER THICK SHAMPOO $3.50. /_j PRE -SHAVE LOTION $5 .Sp. -J COND ITIONER HAIR THICKE:NER $4. L 1 COLOGNE DEODORANT SPRAY $3 .7 5. ~ SPRAY COLO.GNE. SB.~ HA IR SCALP CONOl'flON"ER S S .~ AFTER SHAVE BALM $5.50. ~ COSM1tT1 cS. ._, • NEWPORT FAS HI ON ISLAND I I • ... CALL 6 44-2800. PHONE OROER BOARD OPENS AT 9 AM. OR !¥!AI L. COUPON TO ROBINSON'S , 2 F'AS HION ISL.AND, NEWPORT , CALIF, 92660. PL EASE SEND M E THE ITEMS CHECKED ABOVE. NAM~------------------~- AOORESS, ___________ PHONE ___ ~- C ITY _________ STATE ____ ZIP __ _ CHARGE PAYMENT ENCLOSED c .o.o.rl ACCOUNT PL EASE ADO APPLICA BL E SAL ES TAX 1F' DELIVERED IN CA~I FO RN I ~]Sc 5_EAVICE CHARGE:..ON ALkc.0.0 1.s.; - " PICKUPS ANO PURCHASES UNO!"R $5, SHIPPlr.G CHARC£S- ' ·ADDEO OUTSIDE OUR DELIVERY AREA, N -6-~-1 2 S HOP 10; 00-5: 30 644-2800 . . • .. ) . . .... ' • J 8 O~ll Y PILOT Tutsday J1.1nt 5, 1q7J Anteaters' Big Headache: • Stormy ··w ather ... Ithaca Spec ial to the Ouily Pilot Adams indicated he y.•ould come back of action vi'ill :Jgain be postponed -to SPl1J NG flEl.D. Ill. -lfea\'Y rains· with Ray l-lun1phrles 113'1, 2.62. e.r.a.) In w~:~:f·pul l<WC~ht>r one big scoring -.. and tornado \\'amings caused postpone-the second gumc if UCJ l~s a~alnst inning in each or I~ first two games, get- .-!!_Cnt of the NCAA col!cgc _d~visi.~p wo~Jthaca's B'Om~berri. Humphries p~t~ Ul'\g five runs in the eighth against the U. series for 1 1c second time 111 fvur d ay• the--ttrsr--gome vtttory-~--lJn1ven.i--f>M;-t;Sr.-f.Out!t--Rivertnen.and six in_ll>..._~-~·lonclay includinu the game bct\\•een the ty of Missouri tS, t. Louil) on Friday. sl11:th against Eastern Illinois . U .. t TeltPl'IOlf "' h \ ill • With the heavy rains that have pel ted only t"·o unbeaten tca1ns r('maining -If UC! v.'ins the opt:>ncri Hump r es w this ~1ld\rest to\\·n this week, humidity UC lr\'inc and Itha ca, N.Y. -at Lan-pr-0bably be held out until the final game has. been hiQ;h and the Anteaters have phier Park here. tonight. if ncces~ry, with ~_Dodd or had their problems adjusting to the silua· 1'hree teams reinain iu the tournamcut Bob BarlO\V gelttng the nod tn the early tion'. · Ithaca has been 20th-ran ked nationally of the sta rt ing field of six that began on cven111g game. Uc · · N I ted -•1 on the college le\'el and has brought its · Friday. Ofricials ,are hopeful that all re-I. lhe nations 0· ra ... -...... egc season record to 23-5 \\'ilh the tv.·o mainlng games can be played todny. The di\'ision tca111. holds a S.5 ·win o\·er U. of tournament \'ictorics. UCl·lthaca coolest \\"8S the first. early i\I. (St. UJuisl :ind a 6-2 verdict over B-01fl!ihaca and E:asic111 Illinois arc 1his afternoon. · "'fhc loser meets Eastern Illi11ois in. an elimination ,contest. The l\\'(J survi\'i ng 11•inners v.·ill play one or (\l'O games tonight to complete the tournament and cro"M'n a national eha n1pion. Eastern Illinois. upset-minded nncl each has posted a vic- lthaca defeated .Jacksoo\'i lle Strate. tory over defending chumpion Florida Ala. in opening action. 3-2. and stoppc:I. Southe rn to cli n1inale lhe t.1occasins. The Florida Soothcm.''1-1. !or its two "'irtS. Florida team scored orily one i:u n in each Eastern Illlnois ha s defeated Florida defeat and !he ruin dcl:iy will give both .. Sot.it hcm, 9-1. and U. of f\:I. (St. [.(luisl, 7-te:in1s added pi tching strenglh thal 4, in addition to losing to UCL \\·ouldn't have been av;1ilable In a sho1·1 J! rains contin ue todn\' or ir the fi eld is series. JOHN KENNEDY OF BOSTON AVOIDS TAG OF KANSAS CITY"S COOKIE . ROJAS. UC I ccr.Jcb Garv Adan1s sa id ho. 11·ould slick with Jcrty ~t.a r a s (8-3: l.76 e.r.a:) as his starh.>r aga inst Ithaca . in an •nnplaya ble concliiion. the final day. Y 011ng Infield Sparki11g LA ' Pe11nant Dri,,e CH ICAGO L.\P1 -A big chunk of credit for Los Angeles' success this sea~on has to go to the "corning of age'' of Bill Russell at shorl ~top. But the neoph,\·tes arolu1d hin1 in the Dodgers in· rirld deser\·c so111e praise 100. ' Like his double play par!ncr at sec ond bnsc, ·oave~· Lopes. Hussell is a eon- vertccl outfieldt'r. Russell played sporadically at the start or last ~cason as the Dodg11-s lried 10 teach him the unf<i1niliar posiiion. .ll.1anager \Vall Alston said Hussell \1·as picked to succeed rilaury \\!ills at the position because he seemed to have the best tools of anyone in the Dodger organization. After the teain \\'as out of the pennant duel Russell took o\'er ;it shor!. 11 ith \\'ills on !he bench. in an rffort to gh·e hint some ·s~aS011ing:_. Then \V ills \\·as rclt-:ised and Russl'll had the job this time :iround. _ But \\'hile he \l':lS only in his seeond season at short. Bill Buckne r took 01·er rirst base af\cr \\'cs Parker reti red. And Lopes and Hon Cey at third. \\'here Ken l\fcMullcn 11'as expected to play. rate as rookies. U .. I T"""ft Buckner fol1011·ed :i Golden GlO\'e 11·Jn- ner in Parker and so far this season has com mitted just one error and is batting 284. OAKLAND'S SAL BANDO PREPARES TO CHARGE UMPIRE AR.T FRANZ AFTER HE CALLED ELLIE RODRIQUEZ SAFE . A"S LOST, 2.0. Lopes is 18-for-19 steal ing bases, giving the Dodgers thC'tr first rea l theft threat since Wills. In addltion the second baseman is bat· ting .322, among the top 10 in the league. and he and Jlussell lead the nlajors in double plars. · The Dodgers.sent Claude Osteen t-0 the rnound earlier today against the Chicago Cubs in hopes of cutt ing the margin in !he ~ational League \Vest. Los Angeles sta rted the day three games behind the streaking San Francisco Giants. EAGLES CAN'T PLEASE RAltlS Plll LADEtPHfA (AP ) Th e P_!!~!adclphia Eagles are still tryi ng to ac- qutre quarterback Roman Gabriel from the Los Angeles R:ims. but ha\'e yet to come;. up ~·ith an offer that pleases the Rams' management. :·\Ve didn't get very tar," Eagles coach ~l ike ri.lcCormack said ritondav night. "I talked to Rams owner Car ro 11 Hosenbloom and he \1·ent over a list of names. but didn't reach an agreement." ~lrCormack said he "'ill continue to negotia !c. Gabriel asked the Rams to trade him after they acquired quarterba ck John n:idl rrom the San Diego Cha rgers. Gabriel came to Philadelphia last \\'eek to mert 1\·ith Eagles' management. He said he \1·as pleased 1-l'lth \1·hat the Eagles urtercd him . • Tigers lnl·ade, May Hatcheted Despite lour no·run performances. Rudy i\lay has been dropped from the Cali!ornia Angels ' starting pitching rot a- tion. even though only Chicago's \\1ilbur \\1ood has as many shutouts. Three of the shutouts came in a ron•. But after-getting his record up to 4·2 J\.1ay lost three straight. 'f1len his last time out, on ?.-lay 31. Atay lasted only four innings against Boston. He gave up seven hits and five earned runs. "I think Rudy 's problem is a matter or concentration," said . Angels manager .Bobby Winkles. "Berore he wins 20 games he's going to have to take command of himself." \\linkles said as his team prepares for Detroit tonight at Anaheim Stadium. ri1ay has 11 appearances so rar thi s season, one in relief just before he pitch- ed the three consecutive shutouts, and • five complete games. • · In a total of 68 inn ings he has yielded 25 earned runs and an e.r.a. of 3.31 , third best among Angels starters. · But while his record fell to 4~5. ~!av gave up 17 earned runs in his last four games. Tlaree Sets Nastase Defeats Pilic For French Open Title PA:ll!S l;\P1 -. Il ic Nastase Romania beat Nikki Pilic of Yugoslavia 6-J, 6-3. 6-0 today to \vin the French Open tennis title for the first time. Nastase stroked his ,,·ay past Tom Gonnan of Seattle in a semifinal ~Ionday -just as he did in !he semis at Forest Hil!.L. and the Davis Cup fina l in Bucharesr last );ear. fhiS time~ the ofroom as usual. telling ho\\' he did it. Pille, 1\•ho sPent five years as a con· tract pro. played so well against Panatta that he surprised even himseli. "I really didn't kno\~· r could keep up that form on clay (or three whole sets,'' Pilic said. The match \1·as a big disappointment for the '22-vear-old Panatta. who beat sco~~s ~·.ere 6-.3. ~4'. '6"'1. . . Nas\ase in iast year.'s Paris tournament . Pille l11t 1cp for1n 111 ~onquer1ng the ris-and <l@.in in th e final of th e British ~lard 1ng young Jtallan.,-Adr1ano Panatta;-6~.-Court Cfinmpionshij)s this year. The- 6-3. 6-2. At 33. the Yugosla v Jefthander is Italian had looked forward to another i~ a major tournament final for lhe fir s! meeting in today's final. time. "I'm not at all sure Na stase \viii win Gorn1an said after his ma tch "'ilh the title." Panatta sa id. ··On that forrn Nastase: "lle's a funn y guy, different Pilic could beat Nast:ise or anyone els~ every li111e he pla ys. But he's certainly :l in the 1rorld ·· ' · dirficult man to beat.'' .. · Nastase has played a variety of roles in this tournament. \1·hic h for the first time has run into a third 1\·eek because of rain . The Parisian cro\\'ds ha ve cheered his cle,·er shols. laughed at his clo\\Tiing in men's doubles. Jeered "·hen he argued o\·c.r line calls. booed V.'hen he Jost his Meye-1•-L1°ttler-Ear. n ~pots-·";;;.~~: in;i.dent came in Na~ase·s--'--' ~ U c1ua rt er-f1nal against Roger Taylor of . 13rilain. He got such bad reports in the · British press that he said he "·ould never I U S 0 T <igain talk to British reporters. 11 l)ell Ourney But after beating C'.orman. he was sur- • o o -rounded by newsmen in. his dressing Denni., :'llerer or Sun Ben1ardiiw and : Gene l .. luler of La Joll1l. 11·ho under\\ en! rnnccr stirJ?el')' 111on~ than ri ~·c;ir ago. led ~t>1·en qualifiers for the l:.S. 01>en g-olf • (•hampionships In ~C'ction:il riu:illlYln~ ac· · lioo at i\fission \1iejo 'io!f C'luh 1\;onda v , 1\fcyer posted n rhrC't. .. under·p;1r s,·Ore ; or 1~1 for JG. hol"" "·Hh rot111d!' of 7fl-j1 . \\·hlle 1961 U.S. l)J)(ln 11·lnncr Lltll"r \1as . on" si rok e hack on the li.61U·y:ird coorse . /.iulcr undcr\llCllt ('tlnecr sur~cr}' to have l)'lT\ph glands rcn101·ed from w1der his lef~ en11 01·er a ycnr ago. lie shot a 7().72-1 42 10181. Also at 142 \\'(IS the only amntt!ur 10 ~quiilify At A11sslon Viejo ro.r the _;prtstiglous tournamt!nt. Dc11n i\lay of :L...ike Arrn11·hcad who hnd 7~n. · llunter of Pacific Palisades (73-70) and Cd ~lcrrins of Los ,'\ngelet! (70-i3 I con· eluded the ~roup going to the Open fron1 :'llission \'lejo. . • 111 other sedlonal toumarnenls nrou nd rhe counlrY. !he venerahlc Sa 111 Sncnd qua.lilied rOr the event in sectional pin~· a1 <;J1arlouc. i"C. Snc<id fired n 70-69--1 39 to gain a spot in lhe Oakmont. Pa. Coun· trv Club event ·sncad. 11'ho ims \1·oi1 the i\lostcrs. the PGA and the -British Open. tms never 11·on a U.S. Open title in his 61 ye.-1rs. Qtu1tirylng rounds \\'Cte also staged at t'incinnati, Chicogo. Denver. Dallas, Tat..-oma. \VAsh. and Kansas City on ~lon· day·whh the last ouallfylng rounds today ot~1\!Tnn111, New York. Phllndelpl\111 and • Pittsburgh. Approval Certain OKLAHOi\tA CITY r A Pl -TI1e Amateur At11lettc Unkin is virtually ccr· tain to vote th~ l<'ll to restore a111ateur stnndiog to fa1ned Indian athlelc J im Thorpe\ a national AAU official pre- dicted . Thorp~ \\'On !he pentathlon nnd dC<:athlon In track and field al the 1912 Olympics at Stockholm, Sv.·cden . The medal.S \\'ere taken away from him In the following spring "'hen the AAU ruled he had lost his status as an Bmatcur when ht played baseball for money In 1909. S111ith1 Topples Aus sie Rival R0:'\1E 1AP1 -Stan Smith's slump in !he French Open last v.·eek continued through the first set or his $135.000 Italian Tennis Championshl~ match ~Ion· day \\'ilh Australiun Phil Dent before lhe top-seeded American star got back on the on the y.·inning track. Smilh beat Dent 4.fi. 6-3, 6-4 in a second round match after losing his service in the first game of the match. He bounced back with a service break in the fourth game to tie 2-2. but had his service broken again in !hf' ninth \Vhich cost him the first set. . Sn1ith 01'ercome trouble in bo.th the sec- ond and third sets. In the third sel, tre Pasadena native rnUi cd when behind 2-2 nnd then broke Deni 's service in the ninth game before mastering his big · se rve in the 10th game to end the match. Smith, seeded first in the rrench Open last week. lost lo Tom Okker of the i~etherlands. Bane Selected By Minne sota In First Round NE\V ''ORK -Former \\1estmin s1er Hig h standout Ed Banc \\'as. selected by the ri'Jinnesota Twins in the fi rst round of the major league baseball su mmer draft loday. Bane, a left-hancle'r, h:1s pitched Arizon:i St3tc into !he t\CAA College \Vorld Series whi ch gets undpr \1•ay !his v.·cekend in Ornoha , Neb. He struck out 19 batters in a Disl ril'l playoff garne Friday. In other draft selections. the No. I pil'k \VaS Davie! Cly t.lc, a left-handed pitcher from Houston v.'ho \\'as tabbed by the Texas Rangers. California's Ange ls chose outfielder \Villiam Taylor or Savannah. Ga . ~'hile the Los Angeles Dodge rs picked catche r Ted Farr of Spokane. Californians picked in the first round included shortstop Rollin ''oung or \\'oodland Hills 1!\lih\'t111kt'C\. thi rd base1nan-out fie lrlrr l;;ir\· Hoenicke fron1 \Vest Covina i ~lontre.\J 1: right-handed pitcher Le.,..· is Olson of Alan10 t Kansas City): right -handed pitcher ri1ikc Parrott of Camarillo 1Dalt in1orc 1 Detroit tabbed infie lder Charles Bates or Compton. Bates played for Los An geles City College and Cal St ate ILA l. And Oakland chose Rand y Sca rbe rry . n right-handed pitcher rro1n Southern Cal. Cincinnati picked outficlclCr Charil's Kessler of Claren1ont. Other first round pitk~· in<·luded : Philadelphia -catcher John Steams 1University ol ColoradO ): San Diego - outfielder Dave \Vinfield t Uni\'ersity or , Minnesota)·: Cleveland -first baseman Glen Tufts (Bridgewater. J\.1ass.); San Francisco -Shortstop Jdhnn!e Lemaster IPajntsville. Ky.): Atlanta -Shortstop Pat Rockelt {San Antonio .. Tex. l. St. Louis -thi rd baseman Bennv Edelen tGr acemount, Okla): New York Yankees -right-handed pitcher Dou g He inhold ~Victor ia, Tex . I: ~cw York r.tets -outfi,elder Ltt ri.1 a z z i I l i fBrooklyn): Chicago Cubs -fi rs! baseman Jerry Tabb I University of TuJsa); Boston -shortstop Billy Cox (Midwe5t City, Okla.>. Houston -shortstop Calvin Portley (Longview, Tex.): Chicago White~ - catcher Stel'e Swisher !Ohio Uni\'ersity ): Pittsburgh -Ca tcher Steve Nicosia (North F.1ianli Beach, Fla.\. Clyde was al.most booted off his high school team for walki ng 13 straight bat- ters as a freshman, but the friendly 6· fool-1 lert-hander became lhe scourge or - the-Texas SCliiOl!Xiy ranks. His feats became legend. Clyde has pitched three no-hlller1 in four starts of the current texas schoolboy playoffs to lead Westchester to the state tourna- ment. He allowed one hi t in the fourt h game. He's pitched nine no-hitters .. : TI1c 01hcr four players to make n sµot in tht' Open at i\·1l.11slon Viejo Include John ... Jacobs ol Ah1mo. Ca llf .. ·lvho h:1d 8 hole· in-Orn> OO·fhe 21~~·ard 13th hole .J3cobs sho1 round5 or 71·'i2, Str\'r BoiJRn of t'ullerton i72·711. ~Inc Jack i"tcltlaus. Lee 1'revjno and 31 01 ~r player~. Trloh.lding recent. Open "·in· ncrs nnd hig h finl~hers and J>(;A tour leader!!. v.cr{' rxcmpt from lhc qunll- r~·!ng RC<:cntly the AA\1 executive com- mittee vo ted here to -rocommend' rcl11.statcmcnt ' of Thorpe's am&teur stntu!i for the )'cars 1909 through 1912. Appr11vul at the. annuaJ AA U 1neetlng -Oc:t. 8·11 in \\rest Yellowstone }">ark i~ l'irtually certain, sa id Harold \V, Keller. nAtl9n11J rcg~lrallon ch8 innan. !LIE NASTASE RETURNS BALL IN ROUTI TO PRINCH OPIN WIN. I I ·• • J I . ' I· t . I I . ' Awards Fo1· GWC Girl Stars A myriad of awards In- cluding certificates lo all members of six women's nnd .,.<.'0-educational teams 11 t Golden West College were presented Monday night at the t--{!""!'11lllf!I. ~poi;ts. awyr ban~ct e arnrne scl\00 s s u®nt lounge. Most valuable playe r honors in ~omen's sports went to Shauna Welty in tenni s, Jan DICK TUCKER Tuttday , June ~. 1973 DAll.\I Pll.OT f7 Top Fr osh Gridders Pick OCC By CRAIG SHEFF Of IM OfrllY Pli.t 11111 Three All-CfF stars top the list of freshman football pros- pects who have indicated they will allend Orange Coast College in September, Pirates ~ch Dick Tucker announced today. Heading the Ust are J."'nun- taln Valley orrensive guard ---Ron-St , E!tltflCitt-runntn back Dan Princeotto and Mater Del center Jlm Meehan. Stone earned second team All-OIF AA¥ honors while Prlnceollo and P.teehan wtre wise. \Ve think we're going to we lhould-have a better run· ae<.'Orded third unit berths. have another good team," nlng game with John Dixon, Olhtr top !r0$h prospects says Tucker. . Princeotto and Becher. listed by Tucker Inc I u de Wilh quarterbac~ A I vi n Orange c.oa.st opens the 1973 Estancia quar{frback P.like While, flanker Steve Aionahan ' season against rival Golden Magner, Newpart II arbor and defensive tl.ckle Pat .West Saturday night, Sept. 15. ttnter \Yarren Ray, Fountain Sweetland having moved on 10 After non-con!ettnee games Valley fullback Le.s Becher four-year schools, the OCC against LA Harbor, Long and the Edision trio or Bill coach feels that those three Beach CC, Et Camino end Ford (linebacker), Mark po$itions are question marks A-1enlo, the Bucsi launch South Weathe (fl.a..aket) n d right now. ''°'""'-..~.,,.~--Coast Conference play against Mike Morado (defensive "Our oft ve me FUllertOO. back). be better wilh the guys we A triangular scrimmage "We feel that this has been have. coming baclc and some wilh Gro5.1mont and Mira a_ very good year, ncruit~~Jteshmen coming in. And Costa ls plaMed for Saturday, Siegel in badminton and Mary ---------- Halapaff in swimrning wllh the softbaJl, basketb.111 nnd volleyball 1 teams g i v l n 'g awards1 for other achievements. Co·vducational compctitiOJl in tertnis and bftdminton on an interschool level under the v.·omen's coaching staff along with women's teams i 11 basketball, volleyball, softball. tennis and s¥:imming nre staged each year. Co.Et> Tl!NHIS Moll Yal111DI• -Mo<"lo PlfNfl; Moll lmllf"OY.0 -Jo Z•~n; MOii lfllOlrl• !lonal -J1> Zappen. WOMEN'S TENNIS MOii YllU•bla -Sll•unt WtltVJ Mbll Improved -Pam Fletel\er; Most Im. Wllrall!IMI -l(rtn Oltori. WOMEN'S lASl(ETIALL Va.Wty !la1t ahoollnc1 perc1n11oe -s ... Letlmu•; But taboundlno -Sii. ltnmant Mot.I 1nl111 -Li nda L•wrtnc:t. Jllftior Vanity leosl 111oo11nq pe~l'l\tai' -Vicki• Melnff:&h1 !Its! rebol.lnd ng -Vldcle Mclnk1111 and B01111la ThDmali Moot IHllll -&oN!le Tlloma1.~J WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL VarsUy Bell 11111er -VlcM!a Me1n1ooh1 8111 Hrvtr -Vlckl• Mcfnlotll; lltil H lffr ..... Marllvn B••~•dlnl. Junior V1r11lv ,.~::: ~1~r.~n-NI~~~~: ~~~va:~11,~·~ J.., J1ntn. CO·ED BADMINTON M01t YMl.llble -Jen Sl.g.el; MO\! ilf\prov<!d "'oman -K1!11y Foll!; Mo$1 lmprov<!d man -Mlkt Tl'lan'\e1. Asher 2nd . At Downe)' 00\\'NEY <AP l Roy Buckley, of Colun1blls, Ohio, rolled strikes bn his fiD<Jltive attempts ~1onday night to defeat Barry Asher of Costa Mesa. 216-203 and lead a five- man contingent into the finals o( the $55.000 Winston-Salem 8ol'!·ling Tournament. Buckley, who had been right behind the leader since match play started Sunday night. dislodged Asher as the tourna- 1nent leader In the eve.nt 's 42nd ga1ne. The triumph "'BS Buckley's fifth of the night and 15th since the match play started , ga\'e him 9,614 pins for three days. Asher, 'll'ho took a one pin lead into the final game , "'ound up 11,·ilh 9.572; although he knocked do"•n more actual pins than lhe leader. The dif- -r~rence was that A.sher cap- tured '"'O less games and missed the 30 point' bonus for wirining each match game. Sports i ta Brief Newpor t Couple MAKE OPPONENTS PLAY At YOUR PACE Two Tied For Lead New Offense Dana Hills Plans Win in England_ In bead-to-bead matches, a com-At Kona T q Apply Heat mon ploy U to upset the opponent'J pace of play, Be sure that this doesn't happen to you, Art Jackson, Jr., · 19, a rookie from Lomita, and last . ·-- l"11NCHESTER, England - Park Newport's Mark and Gail Elliott won firs! round matches Jn the Northern Grass Courts Tennis cham- pionshii)s here Monday in preparation for an appearance in lhe famed Wimbledon toumament later this month. Malavasi, 42, rounds out the staff of new head coach Chuck Knox. Curtis Sl9111 CINCINNATI Fleet lf you are normally a faat player and your oppOnent is more m.ethodi- cal, continue·to play at your normal rate. Walk briskly to your ball -es· pccial!y on occa".sions whe n ft is ahead nnd to the side of your op-. poncnt's ball-to show him that he's slowing dOwn play. Soon he'll get receJVer Jsaac Curtis, the Cin-the subtle message and alter his cinnati Bengals' No. 1 football normaJ. patt. year's fifth place finisher, and By HANK. WESCH Of 11141 01t1y Piiot Sl1tf RQn Dietl of La Habra, ~hare Dana Hills Iiigh's footbait the tOp spot following the third team received a baptism by of.game block, of the West fire In Orange League football Coast Match Game Elimina-last season .. but for a number .• lions, Afonday night atKona of reasons Dolphins head Lanes in Costa Mesa . coach Tony Leon feels the 1973 ~rark reached the second round of ·the men's singles "'ilh a 6-3, U victory over Riek Vetter of l\1ilwaukee while his wife Gail dereated Jean Hellier of England, 6-2, 6· 0, in the .opening round of thll' women's singles. draft Choice of 1973, has sign-If you are a slower player, co• ed a contract, the National tinoe to maintain this pace -within Football League club an. reason, of course -even though nouoced today, Y 1 ou 1 r opponent accms to want 10 play .44. Jackson, in his first try in season will be the-one in which the Ellrm, \\'as third at the his team is lhe one applying end or the first and second the heat night's competition, then came Leon feels his team will have up with an 86t after· the more depth and g r e a t e r Memorial Day rest, to shove maturif1-' next season, and his total to 2601, a 216-average those two factors alone should for the dozen games -iden· go a long way toward erasing Ucat to that of Dietl. the memory of an 0-9 season The ~n Diego State and ';::as:·:":·=========== .. :·"='~=~:"::::-=·=,,...='""=== former Santa Ana H I g h I speedster, with 9.3 clockings in Arno!d ~aimer's "HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR PUTTING:" A copy the lOO:-yard dash, w a s of this hu1t·packed boolrtlet is )'QI.Ir& for 20t; when you enclosed descrl·~ as "the fastest man • stamped, self·addreued •riv.lope •lon1 with your request to Dietl was sixth after the' the first-year school labored .oPening round, moved to through in 1972. The duo will also compete in the mi:1:ed doubles al both tournaments. ~ Arnold Palmer, in care of this newspaper. • In !oolliaJI" by Bengals head coach Paul Brown. fourth, ~en to the !~p of the "We'll 6e platooning a Jot -, heap, with an m outmg-June more this season and that-ha s 1:----...3'-r"ie':,..f •_, Savage l naprovecl INDlA NAPOLIS -Swede Savage's 'condition was slight- ly improved today at Methodist Hospital where he is under treatment for severe burns and other injuries su(- f ered In a crash during lhe In· dtanapalis SOO.mile auto race last Wednesday. Terms oC the contract were not announced. British Ope ll PORTitCAl\'L. Wales -Ed - Tutwiler, a former U . S . · Walker Cup star and Irelaoc:l's Joe Carr led the· advances to- day as the British Amateur Golf Championship opened while Frank "One Round" Strafac:i of Miami lived ua to his nickname by losing ln the first l'Ol;lod for the 23rd year. Smalley Follows rt. Dietl has . had three games to help." Leon 'says. "Right under 200, with a t~pper of 268 now, it looks like seven ~ along the way, •,vh1le Jae~~ starters will be platooned, and has been under 200 but once, if all goes well we may have his best single game of 12 in nine. TONY LEON the books, 247. "Plus we'll have everyone running attack the punch that pad's Footstep~ As the standings tighte~-back from last year J and \Vas missing last season. ~· thre were some big they'll be playing against pea-Spiers played on bad ankles Jumps, Ie:ad by Ralph I.om· pie their own age, "'hich bard from Manha t ten should make a difference.'' and was used exclusively on Bea~h, who roared fro'!! 33_rd The Dolphins. in the midst defense last year. But with to su:th on fa 396, which ID· of drills four times a· "·eek, post-season surgery in whicb eluded a 290 game. a re installing a new offense one ankle "'as re bu i \ t .But it wasn't high tor the for the coming season. the Although still listed I n critical condition, '' Swede ~cents to be a little more stable," said Dr. Thomas lian- na , medical director for 1111~ U.S. Auto Club. "He had a UI· tie lung problem Sunday, but that was corrected. He still has a kidney problem and will have for quite a whi.le. But on the Whole, I'd say he took a little change for the better." Another crash Victim of the 500, David "Salt" Walther of Dayton, Ohio , was listed in seriou s condition at t h e University of hf i chi g an l-fospital's burns center at Ann Arbor. Walther was transfer- red from Methodist to Ann Arbor ~nday. l!lale-.l Hired LOS .ANGEI,ES_ -Th< Los Angeles Rams have completed the ir new coaching staff by naming Ray Malavasl , Unebacker coach at Oakland the last two seasons, as the defensive coordffiator of the National Football Le ague team. Tutwiler. of Indianapolis. beat Joel llir s ch of Homewood, fl!., 2 and 1 while carr, winner of this tourna- meDfin 1958 -and nmnerup in 1918, elimlnated Doug Smith or England 5 and 4. Strafaci was beaten 3 and 2 by Thomas J . Culligan· of San Afateo. PGA flaanges CLEVELAND . -PGA of. liclals and three of the pros who ) will play ln the PGA Championships in August now have looked at Cleveland's Canterbury golf course. The · conseasus ~ that rew changes will be needed to prepare the course for the tournament. · Biggest changes will be longer grass in the rough and shorter yardage on one bole, No. 13. The 13th now ls a par 5, 490-yarder. For the pros it will play 472 yarOs at par 4. That wUI cut the overall course length to 6,859 yards, par :lf-3S-71. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Roy Smalley Jr. says when his dad gets on him for malting an er- ror. he counters, "Sure, but rm a bettcr'bitter than you were." I Last Saturday the 20-year- old shortstop for the Universii. ty of Southern California could have rubbed It in on old dad , a Chicago CUbs shortstop of the 1950il. It was a day when juni'or was mentioned in the same breath with Mlckey Mantle as a hitter. The swltch·hitttng Smalley clouted two homers, one from each side of the plate, a dou- ble, -a-single, drove in four runs and scored three as the Trojans whipped Los Angeles State 13-6 for the NCAA Distriet 8 championship. Rod Dedeaux, the veteran Trojan coach, could recall seeing only one other player hit homers right-handed and left-handed in the same game at USC's Bovard Field - Mantle in a 1951 exhlbition game between the New York Yankees and the Trojans. Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit New York Baltimore Milwaukee Booton Cleveland East Dlvlalon W L 27 22 26 24 22 22 23 26 22 25 21> 30 W<1I Dlvllloo 27 18 30 24 26 2\ Pel. .55t .520 .500 .439 .468 .100 .600 .556 .553 GD I ll 2 NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago Pittsbw'gh Montreal New York St. Louis Philadelphia East Dlvillon W L Pct. 31 26 .608 23 22 .511 21 23 .4Tl 22 25 .468 22 25 . .468 19 31 .l!o West Division 36 26 .643 31 21 .596 29 21 .556 GD 3 5 Chicago Kansas City MJnnesota .Angell Ooklaltd Tera.r·--- 25 22 26 26 San Francisco Dodgers Cincinnati Houston ·532 ~ Atlanta ·500 4'l• San Diego 30 18 ~ .545 5~2 32 .360 15 11-.3411-H1'--t9 34 .358 15~1 ---- MMHY"I 0111\M llolton t, lt"1111n CHY J Mllwl\lll.H 2, Oeltlllld 0 Onlr e11M1 tchldul.o, ,. ... , ..• _ Ml~"'"°'· (WoodtOfl 4-J) •I Cltwi11'4 1a.oern1n 1<1 Cht<QO IWDad 1).4) al !11J1Jrnor1 ICu1U1r N l K1m11 City cor .. o J.-1) 11 loaton (P1ttln 4•11 Hew Y0111: fSl01tl1mv,.. NI 11 T1i11 ISllOfrl ,.,I MllWMlt (ii.ti t-1) ti 0.11.ltd (H1rn//10t1 >II Oelroll (PtrTY 6-J) If ""911 (Hll'4 t-ll • ¥f. • ........ Mlr"*l:lll 11 ClfWl11'4 ~ Clly 11 161~ Clllaotro ., .. lffmor. Ntw Yortl lot TIXll Mtlw11.*e. •I a.11111111 Drtrolt 11 ~· • • MlndiY'• G1ntn San FT"1MIK1t J, Plt!il;oll'9h 2 Clnci......11 ), N.w Yott.: 0 HOl,lllon 7, f>l1>H.ot1Jlfll1 O Onll' .. ,.,.. tclltd1.1llllll. T'teeY't GMMt • DM9lf'I tOSlfft'I ~I) 1tt Chl~·IJf'lkln1 ""31 ,.,11e1111 (Glllfrv ..SJ 1t MOnlrMI ISl'Otltfnll'I 1·11 Htw Y«lt (IC«nm111 f"ol) If CffltfnMll (Gt!mr "' .. I Stn FrtndKO (8r11nt Hl M fJl!hflUrt!I (llrHet ).--0 .~~ --· ~lltAJilll1 {TWl!dltlL a.2) It Howton (Wll• ..... 1 &In 01-t0"41 44) 11 St. Laul1 (l'OllW WI ., - .,.......,..,,, 011111t Dolftwl •1 c~ A!ltnl• •I Mol'!lrN1 $lfl F.-lndx.o •I Pl!lfbll(fl't f>~HIOtlpN1 •I ftoul"'" S1n Dle.o 11 St, Loult Drily Nl'l\tt .tdledvled. • r "And we've had some pretty good switch-hitters," Dedeaux sald, naming ex· Baltimore Oriole Don Buford as one. Dedeaux, who recalls when father Smalley broke in as a rookie with the old Los Angele.s Angels' farm club of the Cubs in the late 1940s, says: hlfs amatjng that they (the father and son) are so alike. -They even -have the same personality. He has a strong arm like his dad and his ac· tions are like his dad." The senior Smalley, a maintenance contractor in the nearby South Bay area, at· tends all Trojans games, and Dedeaux S8Ys he tells him the son is better loektng -and a better hitter -than his rather. However, young Roy says, "If I can be anYWhere close to being as good as he was, I'll be happy. From what I read, 1 don't think I'm as good as he was." night. Houston Veer. And \Vith the completely, and tol"Q. ligamentS Glendale's Rick . Ryan new offense, hopefully, will were tied in the other, the pounded a 296, to go from 53rd come a running attac k thnt j_unior-to-be is running well in · to 25th. Walt Block from was woefully missing last practice. Carson, ru.shed into 11th from season. . , . "His start bas improved 56th..lhanks to a_9JO. -; ---:~ The .DoJRhin~g com-tremendously and his time ror ,Using an 895 as his ch.1ef blnatlon' of Bill Springman 10 -ihe 4Q.:yard dash as come weapon, Fred. Bernal (1\istln) Mark Sljenbolm, which com-down from 4.9 to {,7," Leoq took, over third . place. ~st bined for seven touchdowns. says. "He is a very hard run- year s 16th spo~ f1n1she_r trails returns intact, and with a ner, one-you don'! bring down the leaders by JUSt 14 pins. yea r's maturity could be even with an arm tackle, and he '"· •-11r c11v Pi"• more effective. A running at· could be one of the best back3 1. ::;:, b~~~ L~t!!-! 1_:11 tack is needed to take some of in the league next year." ~: ~~~ ~~~~~. l~~'~ J;~ the ~~s:ure . off. Springman, Spiers could be used as the s. Gttn Ntvtn•, Lr» At1m110S 1.S41 and !l 1s 1n this area that Leon lead back or t-he ta'il•·ck ·1n '· 11:1\flll LOll'lblrd. M1nh111en 2,5311 feels th t m h d t lid 1. JtrTv Knl11t11, G1rden Grov• 7,51• e ea as ma e grca the offense and between 1. Otn T1~1\en....,, An1t111m 2,sol progreSIS · ' · · '· eob co11111rn. Lona et.cf'! ,,~ M k ·F 1 1~ d Spiers, Foster and Springman, io M11111owcu11. e111111·f>1r11 ,..,., ar os er, a ....,.poun Leon •·-· to develop a I!. W11! lllock, C•rlOt'I 2."7 ,.....,.,.. lt. ~;::;-11:~:~ ~~~~vi.tto-J::'~ lineman last season, has bee_n rushing attack to complement u. Diet w1n1c1. ,.-.,, 2.-tn conv~rted to fullba .. ck and 1s Springman'• pass;na. 15. ~ink llelllndfl", llutn1 P1rlt 2,.t74 i..:R th t t j I -~ 16. S1rn Sl'l9rrn111, Ptrrll 2,4SI nl8AJ.11!i e ran51 iOD n ce y, "[ [ eJ ·11 ott11t1 -20. Fr.a Dougi.eriv according to Leon. And the , . e we score a l'~::r.· H11111 1.401 11. &Ud Jtow min m r •-·· ••--t1llfl l'IQton 11t1e~i 2,.1,1 :u. F••· surprise or the spring practice 1 um o o~e W\IC11uvw11 a re!I Hlnklt flrvlMI 2..W.h ''· R•Y game and w th th dded 8•YIOll cw111rn1n1t.rJ 2.361: 57. CIJd• has been Bob Spiers a 5-10 • l e a bt~~''1W~'::,i,,,;;:,:r'~.Js~. ind iv 175-pounder who could.give t~ maturity probably two next season," Leon says .. "So we 're giving rirst consideration to .. Huntington Youth th~:;;~~;~. two transrex Roy, an only son with one students are expected to help sister, was 6 when his father a great deal. The duo, Mike retired from bastball in 1958, M; "Ses Nat;onal Mark Vlgganelli from Poly High Ill so he didn't get much of a t.C 11 San Femando __ alld Dou g chance to see him play. Cheede from Port Huron.. "~e other day t hit him Mich igan are pr ob a b J e some ground balls," say.s the_ Daron Linsacum, 11, a nall6nal recortl for his age sta,rlers, and will help greatly son. "Even though he's 46 I'm member of the Huntington gr.oup. in temts of depth. not sure he's still not a better Beaeh Boys' Club's track The sixth grade youngster lit Vigganelli , a 5-IO, 2 0 0• team, long jumped 16-11 in a Marine View School also tied fie lder. · re~ent AAU·~ponsored meet, for first place in the 100-yard pounder will step in at of· -"He usually doesn't get on coming within one inch of the dash with a time of 12.31 and fenslve tackJe and linebacker, me at all," the son says, captured 9eCOlld in the 50-yard while Cheede will most likely "Sometimes if I don't make a dash with a time of 6_6. be used at defensive end and play, he'll say something, or Ca CJ• • He is the son of 1\1r. and safety. he'll tell me, 'lucky hit.' ll's ge 1DJC r..frs. George Linsacum, 17381 Three players who will be all in fun. The purpose is to Chapparal Lane. freed of offensive duties under make me bear down a little Sch dul d Other winners in the meet, the platooning arrangment are more." e e Dave Buck, Brian Davis and held at Upland Hlgh School, Roy says he didn't need to included : John Ulloa, who were alt two- be prodded into Pl a Ying University or Southern Jay Ramsey. 13, who fini sh-way plarers last season. baseball, California basketball coach ed first in the 880 with a 2:10.7 0£fens1vely, backfield men "Ever since 1 was old time. Amulto Mala~. Mark Howe Bob Boyd will be among the d Fr k enoueh to thlnk about being coaches serving as instructors Jeff Hayt~r. 13, who won the an an aur, all 100- anything, I wanted to be a for the Boys' Club of Tustin ,, JOO-yard dash for his age pounders are expected to see ballplayer. He said I should be basketball clinic July l&-20: group with a tt'!S'econd clock-plenty ol action, and Leon also whatever I want. • ""--third ···ual arratr Is ing and took fourth in the men ti one d back u p "ShlirtstoP -c1m~-p r'fl t-y o~ril'o ail bo;s .. ~ge<I s:t&.and · -eight-pound shot-put-wilb-a ___ quaryerbac.k.. ALJ?cnaVidez._ as. natural to 'me. He always will be held at the Boys Club. thro~ of 43.4. showmg great improvement taught me everything, He en-580 w. Gth in Tuslin. Fee is $IO John Luack also took a third this spring. couraged me to switch hit. He per boy. place medal for his time of Dana Hills' schedule is also first mentioned it wficn I was The clinic wlll be divided in-5:26 tor the mile. in the school's favor for next 12 years old and playing Little to two daily sessions, with The track team, coached by season with six of the nine League. I was too afraid to boys in the third, fourth and Bob Mecnahan, \\ill sponsor games to be played at San start, thoush, until I was 14 fifth. grades given instruction its own AAU track meet Clemente lllgh. the achool's and ln Pony..Leagii_e..''-from 5:30-7;30 p.m. and those Saturday ~t Huntington Beach hon1e. field, including the first As a Trojans sophomore, from grade-six and up from ~l~h School. three of the season. Smalley hit .285 with five 7:30-9 :30. bomera. Al a junior, he takes All instructors are donating a .m mark with-five homers lhelr time, and all of the !ers to Omaha, Neb., !or the will aid in continuation of College World Serles staJ1ing Boys' Club actiYities. For Saturday when USC meets further lnfor·ma'tlon call 8J8. Harvard In the first round. 5223. ~Cltllc)i iJJ -of Ntwport ll'tch-• Cust.om Tailor and Shirtmaker t \'ir\lcllU 1'~11 • Stv1ntf'Onth .. nd lfvt~r • _..u-JD?l --- BOB PALEY AND ASSOCIATES INSURANCE e AUTO e HOME e YACHT e INDUSTRIAL e COMMERCIAL e BONDS. • 808 PALEY 474 E: 17th-51'!EET -~ 8AF8 Ctl COST1! MESA -1N9UAANC9-64-2-6500--546.JJOS • ' . . .. . J . ' _Jft_OA.ll.Y PILOT ________ TurSdJy June 5, 1973 27 5-potrtader Lunded ·m.· ¥l Bob Dense of fhe Balboa Angling ·Club (right l was presenled wilh the ''first Ji.!:h fla g" fo r broadbill after weighing in t he fi rst swordfish of the 1973 sea- son Sa turday. 1'he fish tipped the scales at 275 pounds and was taken after a 40-minute fight. Another B.<\C 111e1n ber . Steve \Vei!e1n a11 . skippered the boat. 1'he fis h was taken on a barracuda and ca ught four miles off the can dump at Catalina Island. Base ball's Ne1vport Netters 'l'op '.fen H-onored Tonight NATIONAL LE.I.GUE PllY•r Club G Al " M Pel. MlddO• SF •3 161 10 S."l .ll! Wilson Hin 3\ HS JI I.II ,l.19 I • Area Sends ·Only ·Four Starters Back, So11thland Tro11t Plant 9 Golfers · · But Edison Will B~ Tough LOS ANGELES -Douquet Cnnyon. Crylilel Lake, Legg Lake. Little Rock Creek, Pud· To State Nine Orange Coast area prep golfers qualified to rePresent the Cl F Southern Section golf conlingent in the slate finals ~1t Bakersfi<·ld f\tollda at'Huntington-Seaelif Country Club in the CIF tcan1 and individual fh1r1ls. ri.1arina's Tony C;un pregher settled for lourtll place in the indi vidual competition with a two ove r par 74 on the tough Seacliff course. Palos Verdes' Bob Palmer copped individu::i l honors with a 72. f\1ission Viejo High had three players qualify for the stale meet at Bakersfield !\1onday as Tom ~lartln. Ted C umm i n gs and ~·lark O'l\.lcar:i. the rrio t ha t .spearhcadOO the Diablos to the Crestview Le a g u e ch<1n1· pionship, caseti through the \8 holes with 79, 79 and 80. Estancia 's Larry Collins and Sa n C.1emente's Graham Cov.'- cn also made the cutoff \\'ilh 80s. lRCiiYlOltl l 1. BOO Palmer I P,.!01 Vrrae') 11; 1. L~ Mll<IH 'llllo Mew) 13: J, Oennli S1uncSer1 <Vtlencl~! 7(; I To"V Ctm· 1:>reG~• [M.sri11") 14' S, K..., fq~"'°" IWe~I Covlf!al 76. Oiiier A,._a Qu1Ulltn. G&,... Lesho (Founlaln \l~rlev> 71 : Tom M1r!111 (Mlsslo11 Vlelol 79: P~111 O'Slle• (Newll(lr! Ha•borf 79: Oenni• Luellen <O""' +-rills) 19, T&a Cumrnlngt tMIUiOll Vlr\o) 79; LatrY Coll•nf Cf1T"ncl1) 80; G. Cowan ISa11 Clemtnlt) IO: Mark O'Me~ra (Ml1\lnn Vieio> eo. By ROGF.R CARL.SON dividual assignments." says 1170), Phil Nea l (18{)) and dingstone Reservoir, San 01, •tie oa11v Pflot s1~u \\'orkn1an. "and we tried lo let P..like Green (180) shared 'the Gabr~(East and West There are only four ''arsity 1hem know \\'hat is to be ex· lood in spring practice at ForksU / football starters slated 10 peeled in the wa y of drills." fullback . RI VERSIDE -Da rk Can· re.turn in !he fa!!. a1 ~d.ison i;::valuating the progress of ·r1r1e only serious casualty yo!)' Crcck, Fuller Mill Creek, J-l1gb School. but 11 s def1nitel)' his squad is d i f f i cu It , during the drills was an ag-Fulinor Lake, llcmet Lake, not...the-tl1ne..lo.--OOg.i11..1relliUQ-nflilll'Sily,-dne.-4 t limU: ~rt1Vftfed--hamstrlng-:pull,~tt""'L"'~,e=...,..;,..,,.,.C.--~-'-- for the Chargers. tions of spring practice. returning st a rte r Eric trav.· rry ee · lnr;fications are th at they'll "You can evaluate athletic J uhnson . SAN BERNAl{DINO -Big be as to~gh as ever and .new ability soinev.•hal. but ivhcn Johnson is ticketed for cor-Bear Lake. Big Rock Creek, coach Bill \Vorkhu1 n -has 72 you put a tfelmet on them and nl'rback duties aga in jn the Colorndo River, Deep Creek, v~rsily and juni~r varsity can-n body in front of them . fall and y,·ill also be ilscd as a Gregory Lakl', Green Valley d1da1cs lo back 11 up. rhat's what counts. recci\'er. The other two In addition to his four "\\'e rigure ii to ~ a returning s l a r t er s are Lake. Holcomb C r ee k • ret urning starters he has a rebuilding year, but "'e also defensive ha 1 f b a c k Joe Jackson Lake, Jenks Lake, 240.pound, 6-t trans fer in U1ink \\'C h.:l\'l' soine talented ~torado and offensive guard Lytle Creek (Middle and camp. kids here. John Duggan. North Fork). San ta Ana That's Jack C\a~k. \\•ho "\Ve've gone as far as y,·e A gem appea rs to have River. Santa Ana River South played bask-etb:11! for the can go \Vithout putting on the come to the surface during Fork. Cha rgers trs a junior follo\\'ing p11ds," sums up the Charge rs spring drills in Dave l\•lills. a1., __ .-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; .. a stinl in Sacran1cnlo and boE'5d._ d l ti-I, 190-pound tight end pro-preyiously in Ohio. tSOn seems cep a spect \\'orkn1an sent his Chargers quarterback v.·here r i I? h 1 • • through thc:ir puces· during hnndcrs Dave \Vh ite r and . And he lookt'd good .at • \1·ere wrapped up Saturday in !ling. i\nd a thi d possi!lility is d1cal~n he II be going both NEWPORT LEASES 2400 Wet COCKt H19'wej Leas_ing. all ·Vehicle~.., .645-2202 !'.pring drills and the \\'Orkouls · N::ithan Chin~ave been .bat-· li.n~~cker :--pcrhap.s a.n In- a controlled touch game. the versatile S eve Hines. up ways in the fall. No s c orin g \Vas kept, but from th~ 7-2 homore squad. Johnson. Hines, Sharron and II_~------"'!'-~-~-"'!'~ tile issue \vas 11ighligh red by a llines 1n11y. ,1·ork into the Rut herford all possess ex- 65"yard touchdown pass-and-starting li~up as a receiver ccllcnt. footUa ll speecl and run play to Dan ~1cPherson._ and-or _defensive back, along qui~kness and that's a dep.-1rt- All hough !he r ec en t 11·ilh the q u a r t er bac k me n! lhar--Workman isn'I \\·or· ,,·orkouts allo\\·cd no tackling possibilities. ried about. and limits players to non-con· At running back the on£>s to On the rccei·~ing end of the tai;t 11·or k, \Yorkn1an says he ""11ch are Billy Rut herford, game it's ~1i ke Bennett and \\'as able 10 get some basic called a ·'J.-5 r\ca" by his Joe Troxell y,·ho shared the things acromplished. coach. and 175-pound Bert I i m e I i g Jl t , along y,•ith "We ran our basic offense Sherron. ~1cPherson, d u r i n g the and tried to teach the in· Bcturning starte r Joel Peck workouts. • FOTO DA•• c•r IArl1 "'"_.. .. ,. .. :-wilt ... fir .. ,. Clll ttM lWllS\'194 111911 rt1l1t1t l1Ue1 CIYt 11 S... C1lll. IN hl tr IN 21 ..... l;- OllD(9 Mf:UMI. OR.ANGE COUNTY I 714 I 835°2220 NO OlllGATtON -MO COllTUci - ------···l•1Y Mon )I ,,. 15 39 Jl9 11-LA. -llt-15 A-J..,_~s.1C\\'POI.Lilarbar.J:.llgU:s.....ClF C1sh ,.git 37 15'1 2<1 51 ,3J s~nio Chi •a 111 11 $6 .111 AAAA runncrup tennis teant Tochjls,ubo and Foun tai n Val-__ ley's Dave ~1oran. r:~e~L SF ~ :~r ?{-.1! :iJl "'j!J hold its annual banquet re:v R('Xinson Phi lf :ni ;? rs .1~ tonight at 6:30 in the School LOPH L"-'' u1 n u. .111 cafeteria. MO!Ole Run$ sier!le!t, PIU~burgn. 16; H,A.,ron, Awards \Vil[ be prese nted on Au111111, lJ; wvnn, Hmut~n. ll; Bnndi, San Francisco, 17: ~Tiell w un 11. • the frosh-soph. junior varsity llluns B1tt~ •n and varsi~~· levels to honorary Ferouson. L05 Anc,elH. (J: lltn<"· c ;nc1n,,11u. •o: ~111rcie11, Pi"'""'""· 31, captains, most valuable and 11.w11n11m~ Chk100. J•. Wauon. ..a I Housron. l•: OOnlls. San Francisco, :u. rnosl improveu p a Ye r S . Pilchln11 ' Oeclllont Ne"·porl won the Su nset Bil!lnoh&m, Clnt/n.,,,11, 2 7, .fOO; wise. st. Loui,, 1.1, .11s; e·v•"'· s11.. League title and made its way Fr1rn:1sco. l ·l .• nt; "''11• f'"'1""a11 !'.-to the CIF ft'na ls for the 1, .71,, Oown!ng, Los Anaetes I?, .11 1: ~;~!~~, "'i!" v::~~n'11~~0••1Ji:'· sui~;:,'. seven!h straight season before Lo• Angeies. 1.J •. 100. losing to Beverly ~ills. AMeltlCAN LEAGUE P!a""' '"hi .. " .. • • ~i* Blombt<Q NH ~ "' " ~ ' r' KC " ,., n " " P. Kelly Chi ~ '" " " .J?l n ~"·-~ '" " ,., '" " .Jn H..,l!erwn '"' " '" " ~ .J11 ... 'i" ,. "' " " .110 C1r'tW Miii .. '" " " ,,, " " 'M " " .3~1 Holl M;n ,. '" " " ·"" Fr"h<!n o .. ~ '" " .. .~. Home lhms M&vtierrv, Kan~•• Clly, !J; O.A!ltlri Chica~. 11: Bando. Oa~lanci. 11: 7 Tied Wiii! >O. Run\ 8J111!cl In Ma~t>errv. IC1nw• Cit~. 57: Mellon. Cn•(d'1Q, 39: Ill J1cks.on, 01klanci. JI; M•·'<er, New Yi><k. J.I, D.A!lcn, cnicaoo, J7. Pllchln\l I O..cltton• Halliman, O~~lln<l, 10·2 .. ~JJ; Slnqer. .-~1110•"''• 9 ? Biii: '"ril~man. Ol!h "!t, 111-l, .769; Wood, Chita110. ll·• .. 16S; ~ .... ,1or1 •. Ka n.as CiJY. 11·3, .n1; Lee. r.r'.cri~; s.i~.~:.; K~~1:::c ii ~j~".1~~;11· Jllnt Worko11ls Candidates for the South \1·rcstling squad which .. ~:ill cliish in the Orange County All·slar meet al Cal State ( ~,ullerton 1 June 22 began "·orkouts ~1onday at Fountain Vc1lley High. TI1e Soulh is coac hed by Bolsa Grand e •ligh's Jim i\IcCrillis and Founlaift Val- ley's \Vayne Mic haelian._ The South roster is expected tu include Estanc1a·s Vince Klees, Costa ~1esa's Toshiharu Su11111'te1· Ccige Action B egins for Jciyc ees Sum1ner ba<:kctbnll action begin~ for Golden \\'cst and Orange Coast collci;c.s !his ·week'. Coach Dick St r icklin' s Golden \'/cst Rusl!ers takc 011 Long Beach Ci!,\' Collc~c's iSo. 2 rca 1n toni l!h! in opening round play o( th\~ l.BCC loop <I! 6:45. • And coach Herh Livsc.v's .OCC Pirah•S tangle "'ith LA Harbor's Seahrurks at 7 · o'clock Thursda y e\'cning in !he Harbor league. Golden \\1l'St 11 ill ci lso be participating in fh<' Cerritos ·.and Rio llondo leagues. Firs1 round play in the Cerritos loop 1~ June 22 \\1hile !he Rto llondo lcaAuc Jitarts at a later date. L""t l!le•cll cc Le19ue JUM S ..._ S )0 -v ,t ,ngl vs. (.vpr11lJ I •S G°"'HI \\It'll vi. N("'""'~n: I l"ul!erfQI> vs. Ce<rllO!U 9•1} -"'''w .... C~LB JI/ Ju11t 1' S 30 -tlo.y~e"'B" ...,, (Sll JV ~ •S -\11-1119\.,. J."I""'"" ' (VO••\' VI, lle•bOr;. tS -Golden W•ll V\, (e<rilO!o • Jll"tt If -S XJ -V!~lrl(ll VI, H•'t!Of'; ~ •5 -N()(le""''I •~ L ·•"'f\t, I Ct••\lot Vt C~l."6 JV! t ,lS -~ Wtil ~· F11ll• ·!<JI J11"' '6 -s·)D -N0tM••llfl .., .. Ctr• "'°'• t.4j vl•lnQ\ •"S tSL9 ""' t G!l'dlfft Wttl v' CvP<t it< t:lS - Fllll.,IOll VJ H1•b0t' #ul'...!4--:5-21 -~otfl W~L II)< 'llto:;j""F t"6S -"l-1\ .... Hl•l,o\)tl I CtrtllOt 'Vt. Cv'Jirl'll\I t :IS -l"uflf't'fOll vt C;$L! JV J\ltv 11 -\ JiO -NDr-11 Vt. P'Yllel'1on 1 '.tS v••• •C •• c • .,,,.,,, ~ Gotdt" Wt•l .-• HMDOI", ' IJ - cv-• Vt. C~L8 J'I Julv 1' -s )IJ -v;~inQ• "'· Nn•1ema11; '''' -l'nll~"~" v• Cvor~s: 8 -C.olden Nn t vs. CStS JV, 9;)$ -(~rrlto1 VI. H8rbo• Ju1v ll -S )() -sevrntl< 11!1te vs. el?Mll ll!ace. !'•! -!It:!\ v< -s1~rrr; • •nord •• !l)urlllr '/.H -llr•I 111. * Clllld. Cerrrto. Co!leq1 Ltlt)ut June 71 -S'JO -Cerrito• 11~. S1.,11 IJO'l•Ca b l\ -C~ldtn W~~· VI F81Cof\s: 8 -H.tfl>Cf v>. (ompl.-.... June ~ -S lO '"""'0' v• H&100<: &.:•5 -F~ltOf\S •t. Sa111" Mo11.c•. !.~ Go!llcn Y.'esr ·~ (nf!ontof\ Jul~ ~ -S JO -[errllo1 v< Fra,ons; 6:•S Gol<'"1 Weit '" HaHJOr; 8 -(On>PIOn VI. ~&nt• Manic ... JuJv lJ s lO .c~rr·•~ ••· (Pfr,Oll>n: 6 ~! -FalCoM Vs. H1•b0t'1 I -(.olOf.~ Wr1I v1. San•11 '-'onlf• J11I~ 70 -S;JO -C.oloen W11T ..... Cerrlloo; 6 •S -F"lco.,, ¥,, Com1>10111 I -S1n11 Mo1>lca VI. tl1r1>11r, Jul~ 27 -s JO -111m v1. •hi~. 1:•5 -'"'"' ·~· lourt~; t -Ion.! ..., ~re· .... LA 1l1rllol" LtA91H! June ) -6 -tla•l>Or Vt. A•~o; 7 -or .. not cc.;t vs ~e~~ .... ~, ! El C11.,.lno v~ ltuGen; t -f-lll~•ton vt. Sl"I• MOl'ol(A JUM 1' -~ -O••no~ '""'" vs H•rix.r 7 -Jl.vto '' ltuucn. I S.-11~~"'~' vs. l"nl1 MOl\i(I, t -El C•mlrio vi. Fllll-111111. J IJf\t 11 -6 -H1•tx1• y,_ P.,ntn: 1 Or1"9<1 C."ll .. ~ ..... nl• ~l<I. I - Avco .... Fl.lllerlllfl , • -Stl~IWl<S VI. Ct C1m1no. J""'e 11 -& -l11•110r Y\ S1nll N.otol<o'1 1 -R1111!1i Y1 l'"!lt•ln~; I 011no-co,;o• v1. El C•"*'cr: • -Av<o y,, SeftllAW~J. Juh S -' -l11tbOI' w~. Full1rlQt1; 1 S•nt1 MOlllC1 Vt £1 C.&min i, I - """""VI. Se•~•"''"' -Or1ng1 Co.II VI AvtO. J11I, II -6 -l11rtl0f' VI lt <:1<11fno1 1 .-f11lletllll:! v1. :k1ha"'-'i I Sani. Motlk'I ••• Avc11 ., -llr•nQ• Co.1/ v•. lllll\ltfl J1111 ,. -' -flf•l!Or .. ,. \e61\111rli;,.l: 7 El CIMlflO vt ,tovc'J I Ora11:tt Coa,r v1 Fullt•IOll: ' -S111•• l~0111l1 VI lfl/W ... l\"11 ), )0 -Pi~YO'I\ Any current senior is invited lo try out for the squad. Dotphi11s tn11ded Phil Hu tchinson was named most valuable tennis player al D11na Hills lligh's sports award banquet Saturday. Special a\vard "'inners: Tennis Varsity -r-.tost Valuable: Phi l Hutchinson: ~I o s r Improved: John Smith. JV -'.\lost Valuable : Brad Albert. Golf To11r11eu Golfe rs. 15 through., 17 years of age residing in Orange County, wlll quaJify for lhe sixth ann ual Ju nior World golf championships at El Toro l\>tal-ine Corps Air S!ation. l\1onday. June 18. . 'The 18-hole q u a I i r y i n g tournament. conducted by the Southern California PGA. is one of five tournaments held throughout the Southland to qualify ' boys 15-17 for the J unior \Vorld and the PG A 's first annual Sou t h er n California junior tournament. The sixth annual Junior \Vor!d is set July 11-14, wi th the PGA's first annual South- ern California junior ~urn3: ment scheduled Aug. 2Cf. Entry infor1nat ion and ap- plications for tqe Junior \Vorld nr£> availa!:Ae •at golf courses And al.so <ll Junior .world Golf. 437;, Temee.ula St., San Diego 92107. Deep Sea Fisl1 Rep«;>ri NEW~ORT (Ar1'1 L1"Gln9J -~9 aOQleri.; 1$ ye11ow1~11. u w nd 1110. lft toe ~ tOd. (0 1vey'1 \.oc~•rl -:• .,ng1ers; ~ vellcw111il, I rotk cocl, I sit••• ~M,.,~l'r l 11rl'lll• <r.t ""'"' DANA WHARF -111 111Qt1r1· 1l7 c1llto ~''' n oarr,t\ld•, ,._.. Qo<>llo. 1 h~llbut, 77 ve!1owt11!, ~ .-...:~ere1, SEAL BEACH -s' lln'tle•~· SID·~:• ccd. S row tOd. S• tend ba11. l ~·· •ICIJGI, 1 bonito. dllr9e -1~1 1ngltrt. m bonito, '' 1an<f 1Mu. I whllf 1ra bll'•· l3 l'llll!lll!I LONG BEACH (~ltrpolnt LIMlrlt)- 4 111Qtfr1. S1 yelll!'NIAll, Jl ~e\o l>au. 27G rotl< .coo. (l tlmonl .~11r) -11 1"9ters; 7 llOfllto. 1?1 •ftnd IHH, 77 r!ltt cod. B&rge -XJ &nQlers: 11 b••· r•t<i<I"· 11 1,1P'ld Od11, 117 oonl10, •7 t>aUblolt, •t:O O ND O -•1 •nflltri 'l y1t11ow11n. ts oonllo, lSI t•ll(o Dau, 190 111w b11•, J 11111b111. I 1•111'\0n, s...i fl)(lt (!>II. B11r111 -11 .tnQl4r.: 1.S mtt ktrel, 711 boftlto. IMPt:lll lAL l lACH -f' •nllllrt 1'6 y1 lows.II. SANTA MONICA -U "~Ohr,_; t7 roe~ ccc1 :100 callto blH. OC.IANSI Ot! -11tl ariQler,· ~' 01• rocud1, t• oonlto. tS kelp 01'1'1. l h•llo .. 1, •1 r1tllow11H. f AN.ltE'DR'O {ftild Sf.-LAf!illnol -(.). 0~1· 117 yltllowl1H, l be'fatlld•• )S ttllco ~u. ~ 'tit.If cotl ISIH!'Ul\/11"111 -n ''"''-"'· 11J venOWl~ll. JOO rock "' MAL••u -» tl!Qltrs 3'0 rot• toCJ. 11)11 t~ll(O 0•1), ) 1111111\ot w1!PI 2 tr~de·1n1. plus S!.73 Fed.(•. Ta• for 01ch 650·13 1voelt1s b!1c~w111 At111 Pltc•on tire. SIZl ~~~~5·,---' 2 for 44.9;5 1--i'ia-_, ~':.',~ 2 for 46.95 1--T.;----' .,._,. 2 for 48.95 '" We'r_e clearing ou t our entire stock of Alias Plycron 4- ply rayon cord tires. Sizes and quant ities a re limited, so hu rry and make you r selections now. Big values on sports and compact car sizes, too! Limited sizes! Limiled quantities! Oller ends June 3Dlh. Precision wheel balancing. Good values, right in your neighborhood. 4 Whffll $4~!.~.$2.97 Includes weip~ts. Kee ping wheels balanced he lps C::orrect a common cause ol vibration and premature tire weer. ValueCenlers are E1txon slatlons that offer a continu ing progr~ of good values on·th e things your car needs.-Right In your,nelg~ borhood, you can shop for tires, gel e lune-up, an olt change and much more. Check out all !he good values this monlh at the Exxon ·YalueCenter near you. 11ne w.,s to aiar.:::r1 \tlluoCtnters. fE§ONJ [llJ~ ' WPIU•"•H• $3 lllOr• ••ell. C~&ck our,v•lv11onolhe1 111e1. Oil.change & lubrication. . . . • Diain crankcase and add up to 4 qua rts of Exxo n'Extra Motor Oil. (Or we'll put in Unifto~. our very best motor oil, for only 40i more.) •Lubricate chassis. s3~.~.· llUlnQ\ ii n1111ded. Look for the ValueCenter Sign. Blue VatueCent.r Signs Identify stations operated by Exxon Company', U.S'.A, Pricet and orfert shOwn above are avail· able at thelifllations located In ri11ny metropolitan areas and communities. Riel Val"9Ciftt1r 81Qn1 ldentlfy partl'Cl- patlng Independe nt Exxon dealers.Prices and ofler1 i;nay vary at these staUons. All olf9rl ond June 30lh. ' ' • • PUB~IC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE SUl'lltlOlt COUllT 0, THll ST.I.Tl 0, CALll'OltNIA l'Olt THI COUNTY OP' OllANCil .., Ht. A-16616 HOTICI Ofl HIARINO O" f'l!TITION l'Olt f'ltO•ATI OF WILL ANO l'Olt LITTEllS Tl!ITAMIUfTAlt'r E111t1 of JOSEPH E. TINTI, 1lt0 -.nown II JOSEPH Ll!O TINTI O.C11Hd NOTICE 1$ HEREBY 01'veN ,,..; Y,VONNE 8EA'Tlt1CE GREEN T!NTt !11• foltd 1Mr91n I Ptlll!on for P•Obll11 ot will •"II lot" llk11nc1 o! L.,11•1 T11i.m1n11ry to P'l!lllontf' r1~1 lo which h 1'1'14101 IOt lurtrwr 1>1•Hcul1r1, Ind ~1111 11\9 11in1 find Pll CI of "••rlno IN 11m1 1111 be1n M.' IOI' JYNI 19, 1t1J, 1t t~OO 1,m .• 1n 1111 courtr°"'" ol Dtp.ertmtnl No. l ol t l!d coun, 11 100 Cl~k Ctntlfl' Dr1v1 Weil, in Ille City of S1nt1 An1, Ctllforn\1, 011to:1 Ju,,. l, 1f1l • WILLIAM E, ST JOHN, County Cl~k l'AUl A, HANNA Ht rMr LIW ••11111"' l\t •••• 11111 ,,,.., .__(~t MKti, (I Ulllf11l1 t U11 ' l"f'1 17U) Ml-IN I Al~ kN"t l'ttlllon.<' P ut1ll1hed Or.1n11• Coa1r Ca lly Pllol. Jurw S..•. !1, 1t7l 1113-71 PUBLIC NOTICE •ICTITIOUS 8UllH•IS HAM9 ITATlMl!MT TM tollowlt1g PlflClf\1 trt <IOfr'O b\11lflltt II~ D ANO L OIAMONDS, 11'031 Ash SI H\lf\ll"lllOfl l11ecn, C1I. '76-11 " • Tutsd.a)', Junt 5, 197' OAILV PILO f J fj Ji'a,el Short age ( Economic Adviser OVER THE_ COUNTER Major Oil Firms ·Named by Nixon • NA.SD ,Listings for Mo nd•y, Jun• 4, 1973 Cut Advertising OTC ~TOC!t~ l""tf>d ,, 10-. 11 ·1Pll!llV1r I 1•, l''llD Fa !' .. , . 11\c:M -·•lllWU "''"" It lj " Pvln c~ •'• 1·· tllY Crp .,. >• WODl•O'J bY .,.. N•· Freil f'ce '1 • Qontr 10•, I '• ·-~ llg.,•I Auoc1 .. !lori l)f rvli•r II 1 1)'1 §Vl~r !fl~ l!"' Ill''• llJ'o 'Kll•l!oll 0...ller~. Funk Sft 17'. 11'• ,_,. I 10'\o ""' rtr.1~ W IJlo U , \VASJIJNGTO:V lAPl pansion" in !ht CCO!lOn1Y and ••• Dldt •l'ld Orftf'I c.1 •• v ' ~ . ..,., 1•nr I> ,,.. '"' Ttt(M ''· '" P id "i 11uo•t11 DV ovtr·tlw Galbrtn 11', n M~vcftl l lllenv ,.... 1 ~s cnt ·' xon has seleclcd a said he clot's no1 r:icpcc! :u)y (°"'"''~ -ltffie•' lo oari.n~ ~i• lt , 1•~ u• ..,. cc I '" I I , · , f tltfl Ollltr •1 DI Gile l•J !'' v f!1v m11 ~1•~ 19"° ''"' '-l" LOS ANGELES !AP) -The much·publiclted fuel shortage is creating a paradox in oll ln· dustry advertising. Most of the majoP-.firms ... are~oow--t~Ung the public to buy less oC their product. "Jt dO!fn't make sense to proinote n1ore gasoline con~ Sumption at a time when both government and industry are talking about the necessity ot fue! allocations to insure sup- plies to priori'ty users," said a spokesman for A t I a n t l c Richfield Co. or Los Angeles. INSTEAD, ECHOING an en· vironrrtentalist theme, l h e spokesman added that the - thrust of ArCQ's national adverlis~ng will be directed "lo"•ard urlng the public to help overcome the problems of air pollution, tralnc congestion and energy conservation." H.R.~-a:m m e J'.o,m a n ad- vertising director ,for Standard Oil of California, a San-Fran- cisco based fi rm that is the state's leading gas marketer, described his company's new ad policy and said: "Yle'll be talking car care and good fuel econo1ny. y 0 U II g Sp CC a I S I I I} f('C('!iSLOll IQ OIJO\I.. cloo<l !Etite•n ~l(O CD 1 1 111• Q/"'°' P~ 11>4 lf'-o Towt1 N-! l'l ,, Cal Standard will limit Us pro-agricultural economics to be a 1 , 1 ;;1 1ao"':i:, 1~'1'~ 11 t~:~'P 21:~ ~~ R~0\1..:0 11 ' 11:: j ~~"o~t',. l'i ' 1 1:1• duct advertising Jo i·usl tires. member or hl.s Council ur STL~"N R•'J>L···T•'o ro••. m••llUO. tlllfk !'I Cr~ , .. 11' =·· ~11~ 11~~ 1~1 · '" Oclfl .. , ... f"-t.: o;;. i;,11 a:.. lhAf dOW'1 .,.. co"1ml1-G1Jld 1'111 1 1 R'~ .. R• f\~ J ' Tfflllfl Fn 10'• Iii• batteries and othe r ac-ECQnomic Ad visers, the '''hitc hlghl'r gasoline' taxes nre :t'i,.-· .. ,~~·,ld 04,";::1 2'61io 'm 1g~• 1~i~ Rr.;,:i Ml ~"} ~1·· u.,\ <:t~ ,,~: ,It'! cessories. FINANCE House announced, under considt•t"ilion hut thnt ,, • .,,1.11Dr11. G~1:ih sc ~·· s: ~~~ ~f, fj''• l'i•· ~~:;", 'Yli •"'-~·· J · · h d • Dr G L o. J · · '· ' IHOUSTll lALS Crev Aov 8" 9>.l. HolUni a l 1. I '' "! &K NI l" l" 01n1ng t e trcn , Mobil is . nry . -x:cvcrs • ...,, lo the possibility is iu the context AHO uru.1Tll'S Mac::h Ch 11 ?s'1 Rous• co 1 '• .., u Trto: L 1 "11 nning·a -s~es·..1..----a~r-·'••••••"'-....;;;;;.-..._....;;~-~--tnfs-beeo.-on~h&.e"''....,IJ:il ''"" _1 , l 1 , MDrlO•v H•i'" Ew 1n, 19>, Jitowe Fn• 9~, I •t Un.Iv Fdt l•'·• 1•" Cl l VI ucn .,t' ,.~ . . --. ~ oonierV1ng ... ue.__.:nll\er U1an ""'-•-JPl)_-u· I Jn~ t\o 101. Ruel ... Pn \~ •1 Uflv MoOJ 1 1',• ad v e r t Is em e n t s urging since 1970, \Ylll be no1n1natcd cooling the econo1ny. • ~/O' .. :~9t4·1 3 r::!4' .. i:: 1t.-:-t-l~ ~ ~~ ~ '.~---! gasollne economy through lhe lo succeed Dr. Ezra' Solo1non. ~r::r.nirir t,.! n"" ~·!~ F~ ~.t f• f:•lt17•1,co 1tl' 11:· ~=~ ~~~t 12"' 1 \It use of car pools and better· Hu • who resinned from the three-. rn response to another qucs-Alleo Lnd i•'.1-IP-I ._::""" c " ,.; i~n':i~~-'". ~ .. V•<•o•I s1 9'1 io i ntll·•utol" " t100 Stein Sil!d forrncr""11~ &tv 1~ 1~"H•fll0 Ms 7'• •~ellO!! ,., 21•;?r·"I°"'° svs 3>.. •'• plannl'.!d shopping trips so that Ii~ Ii me1nhe r·council in ~1arch . ' ' AUltd 1•' 1•'-11~ Hnsfon. 1,,~. 11'·1t:ou inn. 1''' li'' v~~·I s~ • I'• as many purchases as possible Council Cliairman f-lcrbe.rt Trjf5y UZ ~crctur_y 1John ldCon· ~-{:~~!* 1£11!~ ~~~c!!, c 1:.~ 1:':!''~i1~ ~ 'f~ l-~· ~.111n sil !f~ !t; are made In each ouling. Ad • S1ein. in!roducing See"crs at a ~a · .'v' specin P!"e.s en-.-.mE• Lb 1~~ 2" H::r'M1a if ·?~ ~~0~rJ ,:~ t:~ ~::~ 1 1014 io .. Ve r tl ses \\'hite !louse le S b · r· g !JUI adviser, h,1s partrct paled :m f1::tj i<1~~:f"' ~yeti C 10 .. 11•, rv Mtrch 12 iJ W•ob Re '•'' 0J:• One result of this change in r \V r1e 1n , · . 1 d'., . . "' H~oter c n• 1 11 s.""~'" 2• l• w..a.., . l {ocus i.s expected to a con-r.-tonday, noled that · the J&. 10 ~verah iscussions co11n1-:~ ~~~ JJ~: ~14 Ind• Wat "'' "'• ~~t:; it~ 2~': Jll\! ~!:r.!o ";~ :1f; l!: id b · Id . -, cern1ng t e econom\\. u AM lrc sv i.~, ,, Ind• Nuct '1" ,,._ ~ ........ ,., •'• W>1cs1 P1 • ~, era le trimming or ad-I G year-o nomnice IS a . . . An1 lelev 1S'· 7•'. lnforr~ I'' ' ~IMOJ.Ofl 10~. I 'Ii W•I P1101 1,·· r.·· n erman). sp-·1al'°i ., . it I Stein denied reports thil! Con· Am Weld 11'• 111 .. 1'11~1 C•D 1S :'9 Sn.ioo Toh •l't ··~l W1nr FCI 1'0. • -vertising budgets of oil com~ ...... .., n agr1cu ura II . h d' d h An~•,,.., .io•. "'6'• 1nrerc En •• , s sin<t Pao is 1s.-, w11!11"'1 1 11~. 11 panies, which can a-·nt 10 economics And J1e sa'd "tood na Y JS ea ing an a oc •"•en ln ' ,i\1.i1n•(llr c., 13'• 1•'• S1><o<•r.1 11!.. "'• wl ,., " J 11"' 1l'• uivw . · I StUdy charting f U I Ur , A1>at~I E lO•o 10~ nt Al~trn ·~· 1'.~Sllf\odv I li 16 W nl P~T ll''t l~·~ •an estimated •M rn1·111·on an-1 d 1 1 bed and agriculture are very high ~ APs 1.,c" u u 1" 8~~ • 6 • 6 ~1a R.,..,1, 1•·· Ii·~ WIK Pl' 1•1• :<.. """' t may soon ar· clc , CCQnom'c lO\' •s A•ao MYI '1 1•, 1nrr..i CD "'• !l•• 510 N ... 1. ,, , 7J'• wooo.1 l'" 16'• 1f nually at Ex:icon, ro~erJy in the list of problems" now 1 11 c · Ano Aur 1~ ''' 11~•ana R 5 ~.1 ~,~N &•w u . u•. \"1or1d ~v 9' tC • • "' but Huntington Beach hopes to A k d ,1 th ti Arrow Hr l S'• 1611 J•me•ci .,, 9\4 Sit•~ N s ~ 101. wrlqM w 1 • \•, StandardOil of New,Jerse)'. facing administration s c \lle C'r 1c,rc ilreArvld• •~· 9'•Jt• •••Fr •'• ~-.si...:ie T.c 11•.1J l'om• c11 6" r . become an American center""· . . seriou d"fferciccs bet ·e A1so ce>1111 111• 11•. Jo11v., M 1e1. 11•, ..,_~, e1 11o I'• v.u1 FJ• •l'• •l • 1nflat1on-f1ghtcrs. S l I \\ en All Gs LI 1• u:, Kaiser St• ,., 10,, l'n~r C<> 10•. 10..,, z1,..., co • a.'" for \Vest German industry. the CEA and Tr e .1 s u r >"•"'•o Tr" ''' •' Kalv~• c: •'• i'• ~vn.tr co 101. 10 .. ll011• u111 11 1. • A SPOKES.l\1AN for Union ' • ra A1o S'" 5'o Ktarn ..,~ s•o 6'~ Oil Co. of Lo.s Angeles said he The cily has bought lwo ads Tll.E OTJIElt c 0 u 11 c i 1 Secretary George Shuli z on=:~~.~~ lf~ lf• ::~wro,.n ii'' l~'· ------------.--- arlticjpates a cut of as mUch in llandelsblatt (lrade paper) member, fl.·larina 'Vhitm:in, economic pr?gr<ltns, Stein did ~:\1:'"M~r ~i., l~" ~:.so·~~ '6l:; ,:•· It• Jllfl8f, 11t•ia ~c as •• 10 •• percent •'n hi·s a daily financial newspaper said sh·e was deli.g"'·d that tiie not answer d1rectly,.but rather 6nk.Bldo 1•\o 14>. Kev (y~t " t __ ._ i-"7""-~ ~ 'd d h \V JI St I ~ . . · . 6a"k Ret 16''" 16~ K&v11 1n1 U'. 1~ f. , d . bud cons1 ere I e ' a ree CEA noiv has a member •• ,1•110 said: "There are scrrous d1f-B~•n~ 11 1a·~ "'• l(MS 1~d i t.. • NEW vc111(' tuP11 -1r.. 10 mo•' •c'''' 1rm s a vertising get. J n I r c f ' . h' I 8 0S"l!1 F 1.1.. 26 KnaOll VI I) B rr•Ota o~ Int OTC mo•k'! MPr>d•v, ·~ Al Cal Sta<ldard, Ham-our a O ermany. has seen 11 cow close up.'' erenee,, w1t 1n me over 1ow eavl••s 11 111• l<ocitr p, lY ~D auPPiltd uv NSD t P OCc'd '' Bttf'1f F ~'· .. kt1>1K1er , •• R Stock Volllnll &laA1kH C~ •. me-a11 phrased h' r· • Seevers said he is ,. oinl ng o r · Bekln. Ci> ,.,1i .,.,, K11srm Et 6' • 1 No• Llbl!•lv &2 1100 1 1•-· • ''" IS 1rm s TJIECOSTOFlh I d 8tnHvls 1'(1i,21'-'>t~e1d Pet J•• 1'•G~ncrua~o11 n:m 1~'• ll~.-•'• posili'on -re di'screetly "We ' e wo as. thecouncil as "an independent R11t Pro 31 Jl'lt Lftncen ll'•" ''"' 0 ,0n t.0100 9'• t'•-'• ""' · scheduled to run June 25 and SEE\1ERS -'(' ll EN ne\V Belz-Lab JA 3~ Lenci 1sv. 16'• Am &krs 1n1 Fl• s2'soo ~·· ~,,.. -• don't foresee-bvioosly, the thinker!' Jie tur ned aside . h' be !St .. ftl:°o.~ -11,~~~-t!~B~~· ~··~''•m E•1>•••t ~1:600 541\'t 50'P9-'1 same volume of advertisi ng ~~f·8~2~k~s1fe~itya·~:~o~n!~ questions on b ow tnCPha -se-3 ~pen::ia! assis~!nt si?i~e i\l~~s~ :!': l:~ ;~~-~ r-,.1oe,i~ ~ 1~~--'}'!~~~fdc,~"-~~.= j ;: ;1t 1 ~: for the near fulure,'' he said..-economic program was V.'ork· .., eootti ND 11•• 1~\l L 1 c~mD 1'• a-'• st i>aut cornD <60.lOCI lS•• i s~-, , develop1nent coordinator. iing, but did say that food 1972. H~ ser~ed <iS a senior =~r;~: t~ 71;; n .. tl~ ~fsl~ ~;; ~:~f~m., G'f,, M ~:g 11•. 121>-'• Applianoes Get Labels Surprisingly, the Germans prices "are flattening out." staff econonust the previous l~~~ Ar 17,;· 1~ •• t~': CD ;f11 ll' • NASD volume tod~.16Lt00: aova~c~• came to l{untington Beach, Siei·n sai·d that taken as a two years. 811ekrv ' 1" M~o Gas ,,1, 11 200: aK1!""$ m; uncr..t~ed 189~: to!JI -Burno SI 11•"1 23 M~I Jit ltv •'• •"· ll lO. seeking the cj ty's advertising . ll•hole , Phase 3 is working. From 1968 to 1970 he \.\'ilS an e111i.r f,1 :lolk.JI•;. .Maircwr 36'• J1•. . • . C•m T•ll 23 '1~ Marl! F•I 13'~'1· "One of th e ir ..cor· although he conceded the assistant professor at Oregon C•C>I sew ~·, •·· M~rv kv ,,,, 1••· ""ai"iter s '" Lo•er • , , , Ci1 N Gs 11 11\o 11'• Mc Cmck •1'• ..,.1, U &~ 0 ~ respondents saw our domestic economy has been eYn.:i.ncJing State Un1vers1ty and previous-cen v1Ps 1th 11 McOu•v "'"' 11>, --------------~,.~ . Chmo Pt 12'• 13''• ~\edtm 11 II'• o.r.nl1 Ryan, 1 .. 7$C NlcholJ, ~un­li"lllDrl llutn, Ctl . '76U l-.1ro T. Bl~aUui, 11001 A•h st.. I N A 810 TO discourage Mllflll"lllon Ot1tr+, C11. '16-17 J I J f ads and talked to me about at a rate faster "than we ly was a county extension criance A Jo :ioi, ~fd110"", •,•,•• •1," ... , '"''' T1w1 ioeiowi 1111 b -d h " d k t . M' h' H h Ids cn.n.1 Co ~·· Y.• ~,..,. n ., '• Nrw •O• -"llQ uy1ng an a t ere, says 'i\'OUl Ii e toseeconlinued." agen 1n 1c 1gan. e o C-llf:m CD 11 11 1.1ev~r Fr '''•l0>•1h0w1 !tie1toc•• 1rw.1 h•v• 011nec1 lh• B k "Th 'd I ti ti \ h d f A' • Cnl Br Ir 7H' 7~<4 MllUPOr •3 U !Tl~! """ IMT Illa moll ~sfCI on P"'''"' ac . e I ea o a rac ng He forecast a . ''gradua t ree egrees rom T\-i1ch1gan c11,1, ~~ ' ,,,01s Ge• 1•l• 1•ll DI c11e111141 an 1ne 0Vtr-1i..c:oun•rr G -d ·-t H b .d. . f . s t -u . 't • 161 111 Ml.,., F•b s ,, , ....... .,Ill Qllllled bY ll'lt NASO. erman m usu Y o un· su s1 mg o excessive ex· ta e n1vers1 l-cnit u A ,.»,,. 39,.., Mo<1u1 co 11¥1 ''"' Net •l'ld "''""''111 c.r..ro;•:i .... 11>+ In Proposal TMr•11 T. Jit.yan, IM7SC Hlcl'IDI•, gaso inc sacs, some oi irtns Hun!l"ll'°" lie.ten. c:.11. fU.17 · are doing a°"·ay with pr1>-1r1,,. 8IK111tUJ. 17031 All'I SI,, Mun-!l~IOll 11111<ri, c.1. ""' motion gi1nmiclls such as 'l.ngton °·ach m· tr1·gued me" c1av111k t>o •'• Mole~ ln 3ol JS 0111''""' wtwnn Tr+e pr•vlou• l••I blO ~ · (tow. Cr1> l?~· o•• Moor~ Sa 21~ n~ prlct and tl!t t llfrenr ltst bid pr ice. P•~~.!r::::~'.'"' 1, c°"!!uc:•ed bf .1 o•ne•al gl~knives and recipe_ 0mnr1 L. 11t.y1., cardS. l{ammerman said that -WASHINGTON (AP ) -As part of an energy conservation program, the c ·o mm er c e Department has p r o p o s e d labeling home appliances to Inform buyers as to how much electricity they require. 'TMI lll!tmen.I w.11 lllllcl Wirf! !tit (C>Uf1·1jjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Iv Clt<• O'I D!".11111 CO\lnfv on J.,... 1 1911. ' Put>UW\ed Or..-iot Coeil O•Uy Pllti-3!7~! SEVEN ADV A.!'"'ff\.GES · '· 12. ''· 1,. tfll 111 .. ,, OUR PAGER OFFERS PUBLIC NOTI CE ... ,., SUf'l•IOll COUll T O" :THI ITATI 0" CALlf'OllNIA "OR THI COUNTY O" OlllANGI . Mt , A•J'6 1J lrl01'1(1 0" HIAlllHG 01' PITITION "0111 f'llOIATI O" WILL AH O 1'011 \.ITTlltS 0 " AOM1trltSTllAT IOJll WITH·TNl·WILL ANNIJlll!O Elll!a of JESSIE MAE CH ASE, 0f'CHJl'd, NOTICE IS .. EREBY GIVEN tri.1 JUANITA WESSON ANO ~ ll I E 0 A ~ll.VEltA. hlva tllaa ....,tin • pell!llNI lo.-Pr-ti lit WIU lllCI IOI' IHuanc1 Of l.ar-1.,.. Of Admlnl•lr"lon wl!l!-1-10 _. .... tel IO !... palltl-r1, •tltr.,..a IO "'"ltl'l l~ ~· loor lunllar parllcular1. 111C1 11'11! llw t!mt Incl plttt 11! 11t1r!<19 !Ill ....... "'' bHn Ml IDr JUl'e It, nn. t i t :OO t.m .. 1., Ille eounr_., of °"'4rl· m•nt Hn. l ot MIO coun, at 100 Clvk C.-ittr Orf,,_ Wt1!, In 1111 Clly Of S1n11 A.,,, Ctll•orri11. 01 1.0 J-l, ,,,, WIWAM E. Sf JOHN. c-rr Clcr1l ~INNA. 111n11i10 & "'NCH 2o• II T-11"4 L..-HNIL (a/If, fUJI '"'! CT14) ... ,.. A~1 ""' ,.t!U...,.. PuOJlll!ed Orano. Co.n! JuM 5, 6, 12, ttJl PUBLI C NOTICE JllCTITIOUS IUSINISS NAMI! STATl!MINT Tiit IOllDWlnQ ~·'°" II aolno b\11lnn1 •i: GlltOUP FOU R, 3001 lled H!ll I!~...,_ IV No, 1~1. Co".t M~•· '1616 v1,,1.,11 Eol !r+ P•r~•. Ul'\A Or•no• • .-.~1 .. COili MfM. (~Ill. tNJ1 Tnh ~In••' 11 cOl'dllCl.O bv en In· 01~1c11111. Vlrvlnil E. P•rk1 Tl'll1 tllllmll'lt Wtl tllfd wtll'I 1111 Coun· ly Cl••• ol Or•noa Counry Juna l. 1tn l'·UJM Publl.ntd Ort....,. Coell 0111, Piiot Ju11t '· n . "· 24, 1t1J 1111.n PUBLIC NOTICE fllQTIC• OP •UlK ftANSl'Slt 11ac1 Ht1"1t' u.c.c.1 Noller 11 ,.....r~ •l'flft to rtlf Cr1<111..-. et M1rtc 0111, Tr-t.ror, wllM9 blnlne11 1oortu 11 7 .. 8 Wftl IMI StrMt, C111tl1 Me~, Cwnty of Ort,.., ''''-of c..ntar• nl.t. Ille! I bolllt lttnlltr II llbout ID tot m1<M 10 Robtrt C. Rofh, Tr111S!lf1t, Wl'IDle bu1l,,.11 -•fH 11 2612 No. C Ott W1y, Hunrl"'llllltl 811tn, CounlY ol 0.•"fl· s1111 o1 Caufll!'nlt. that yours may not !- 1 COMrLltl OIANGI COUNn COYllA&I 1'-. hlcl..n.e: L .. ... s.c ............... .. 0-PoMf,•w.ft • '-'.-1 9"t•fL.A. MONTH TO MONTH RINTAL IA.SIS HO DIPOSIT RI QUIRID OH ArPIOYIO CllOIT ONLY S17.00 r ER MO NT TOTAL COST f ••llmltff ,....) NI W COMPACT UN IT ~~~c~ '~i;s~~''2 ~•••n ALSO ARI AYAIU.ILI 7 •ULL •Rl l MAINTINANC ORANG! COIJNTY RADI01£lfl'HONf SERVICE I';( 714 • IJS-JJOS .. 1 SO. \IHTA FE, SAHTA ANA ,.....,. l.lf-ltldl, Ml~...... Ylefl "• "'""' S.111 Cltme11te, S.tll •"'-· SI n ,., c.111 '-It f 4t'"3W The voluntary I a be I i n g "'ou\d be done by home ap.- p 1.1 a n e e manuracturers ac.- cording to specifications set by the deparfment. SECRETARY OF Com- merce Frederick B. Dent 1'1onday said the program "is designed to help the consumer make more intelligent buying · choices, as well as help each indlvidual and the nation save energy." Dent said he is confident the home apPliance industry will cooperate fulfy. · The departmenl will allow 30·days for pubfic commt>ot on the program before it becomes fin al. But a spokesman said it is Pl fair assumption the pro- gram will be carried through e\•en if there are objections. DENT SAID the Commerce Department and other federal asencies will work with in- dustry to develop test methods for applia~s and come up v.ith a "volUfltary energy con- servation specification" for .each product. Appliances 'i\"OUld carry an energy specificalion l a be J "''hich v.-ould include a Depart- ment ol C.Ommerce mark. BACK sAro \Vest Germany is· currently figJ!ting a severe labor shortage and is loo king {or foi·eign loca tions for new plants. "They already have im- ported two-and-a-half million Coreign workers,'' he ex· plained. "and th ey're still a million short." He also said that according to the Wall Street Journal, "Gerrii.an corporations no\v have more capital invested in South Carolina than anywhere else in the world, except Germany." "\Vhy not lf u n t i n g t o n Beach?" asks Back. llANDEI.'iBLAIT HAS a daily r eadership ol 440,000. T})e Huntington Beach ad will C<1ver one-sixth Ot a page. The German paper i s publishing special editions on the industrial opportunities on the U.S. \Vest and East coasts on the dates the city's ad will run. Mattel Toys Record Loss NEW YORK (AP) -Mattel, Inc .• reported a net loss today or $9.48 million, or 57 cents a shar f' !or the quarter ended May 5. This compared with a loss of $7.86 million, or 48 cents a share, in the comparable peri2<1 a year eilrlieT. ltlt prtl9W'ly ID bt tran1 t.rrl'd !1 loc.tlt4 el 14' 8 Wnl 17fll, C111la M111, CCl\lnty ol Or11'\111, Stilt Ill C1lll1trnle. 51ld Pr'OOtrl., t1 lkscr1bed In ot111r1I •1: All •lot• !fl tr1ff, ll~1ur1t, equl11mtn1 11'1d 900G1 wfll f1f tf\lt F11tfl(!Ufa Slrlpp{flO b\1Jlntt1 k"*-' •• CDtta "'"' Furnltur1 • Mtrll StrtOPlns •ftd 1or1tff 11 C06rt Miu. C.ufllf Cllf O•lllfl, 51111 o1 Calllotnll, Make money at Keystone. ' Wayne Andrew. of Signet J\farketing Devfces of Costa Mesa has been elected a · lieutenant governor or the Na· tional Office P r o d u c t s Association, v.•hich includes of· ficc pr o d u c t s dealers. manufacturers and represen· 1atives in three states. "' Newport Beach r e s i d e n t Ronald W. S)'kes has been ap- pointed manager of product planning and marketing for P h 11 co-Ford Corporatio.n's l n d u strial 41nd· on mental Products Op-- eration. Sykes was manager of new product d evelopment r or Rock· \'i'Cll Inter· IYKl!s national Qrporation in Ana- heim before joining Philco- f'ord. In his current assign- ment, he "'iii oversee the man- uracture and installation of re- verse osmosis water and \l'aste purification systems. * 1tferne E. Young of Irvine has been named vice president and general counsel of Owl Truck Compa.iy of Compton. Young joined the company in 1969 and has s·er\led as cor- porate legal counseL and secretary. Prior to joining "Owt;" Young---was assQCiated with Pacific Gas and Electric in variollS administrative and engineering po!itions. '· (oc.C \.a 16.., 16,~ Morrl1n It 20 GAINl!•S 'c~!.~r+~ ~~ ~i ~~\oroa<f! J~ !;~ I 8uildoSvs .010 ll•+ '~ Up ll.O ,,,_, Nn CnVSI ' 10 2 Slljll'ltrM ECKi!-1114 +lit> UD l~.·-Conlllll p 1•;· l •l· ... , Lll)IY 1 , •• l ltLK1tdll 1nc lilt 1"'• UD 15,t c..,.,sln• 16,• 11, NI Ma!C:r e 9 • ltDrl Mounl.tln 1\.ot 'o UO I! I ~ro:•11 C~ 1~,• 1::• NI P1'1en1 S?o ~·, } Key Phtrmcul 2V.I-l, Uo 11 .1 r~~r'NoU 121: JJ._: ~~rmc:o ~~:: H" t ::~~~1on1n~~~ ~~t ,': ~g lJ.~ Dani lMI 1 NEn<1 GE 16•o 11 I Cimln lfld!Jlllf l'• ,_ '• UD 9 S -.-16, 260 ~ NJ N11t G 16 16' > 9 Grt11l'llc $(111 51. I" '1 UD 9 1 O~nlv M $ ~ ;,. NlcC>lel In l'li 9'·• 10 Kev1C1 A .10b I'''" '• Uo 9.! 8:\1 g~~ ~~ ~.~ Nlflsen. A JJ•1 lJ:o 11 CDrll•en Corp 1 9-16+ '1 Up 8.7 Oa!n G~n ~''< ~0 " Nlfl~11 8 ll\1 JJ•o l2 Crn!~f'Y l.ObS l••+ 1• UD l .l Otcl:i Ca 9'> 10 Nordslf Jl · 11'> \J Chtieplo1 ln•I 5~o·I" l o UD 1.t DIKor 1'1 -.-i •o 5' "IW! NIC 9'~ 9'', 1' Ro~rhOll ,,A 16 -ti UD 6.7 OeWlb All •lV• "''~ NoKell CD 41'• ~9 JS SPOl'ltoecn CD ~\•-t-\~ I.lo S.t has assumed du ties a s presi· oa1h1 1n11 l"t ~"" gv~i· 0 RHt ~~1 ~:) 1• Jen••n tndu•r 4'111T t. UD 1.1 8e U>ft C 37>; 391., o "' 1 ,~ 17 S~llOrug Cp 11, +•1 Uo S.6 dent of the National Scale '"m <:rs 11•1 11 •~ &::~~ ~~ s;~• 5~,! 1s A<1tt1110r .0111 s\> ~ 1. UI) •.a M • A · t' h ·d Ol1m Md 10 10"" Oc""' Ml ,,, •'~ 19 Graco In.<: .01 V '" I-1 UD •.I en s ssoc1a ion, ea -0 1c1r A e 1"• 2s« orlsh Lqs ~' 71, 11 C1r1r!a1>1 T11a 1~1+ \i up o.s t d . Ill' . Dlvts Sci l'.!:r.:. ll:r./o WV<1 • i1 O•n1lab lflCOtP l l•+ '• uo •. , QUa r ere In lnOIS. 00<u1tl Jll'.• Jl"· Orll!v NI 17 IS' 1) Ivy Corl)rln t ! '·• UO •.l The F'ountain Valley resi-Doltr G•n 1' • n·. Oh ?e.,o 1~·1 a•! 24 S1rv1~, Me•c" 11 '• uo • l OClfltlCI~ ?l'o '].\t, 8Dll CO.ti 15 16 2S 6arneJ HllMI ll\1 ~ UD •.2 dent is industrial product Pow Jons lO 30'4 ,mont ~'• r i. lOJl!R" Coyle oe 1~ 1'1,l; 0Yft11Yf ft'-> ''• l USF 1.,.,, "''~ \o-'. Off 15.0 manager of the w e s t e r n Ounktn o l' • ,,., ovt•• N" • •'• J 0on.10 corp 3 -" 011 20.D • . • • F.COll L•l! ,, .. , ••• 01llt Cro S'I, 6 J lil'11)/(la,. .ruD • -I Elf 2'0.11 d1v1s1on of Martin-Decker and ECIU( Ex ,.. •. , JO''> Pal)sr er 6Sl1 ts•o • Loc111~ Cp .OI •J -•~• 011 it.• bee . . El Pa•o Ul. ll'• Pacc ar Jl J2 5 Sol1'nCI Equlfy S -I OU 16.1 has n associated with the El r111e11 5 51, Pac Gtm 11•0 11.,, , Mc•!I" ACI .Old 10"•-2 oo 1t.1 firm since 1959. ~'11S·a.t ,t;!--,~,. ~:~olK~l ' -i...J&~;~j.-pf?-: = l~ &:: l::~ * F.:11!~11 A '' 16 Pen 0<01 11'o 12'> 9 Gu•ten.IV Noll • -'!:. Olt 'l" E•«U 1n S•o 61'o P1ul Jite~ ll'o 1511 10 Gen Cr\ldll .lO '17>..-~·· Off 1 .I El P1lnl 1 I •, F'auley P 1'1 ••:. II V.t'1 Shkll; 16 iH4-I~ Oii ll.6 \\'illiam E. Baugh, manager ~:~'ion.'"Ei ,!~ 2I~~ ~~~"'N c:: ll:: l:}\ \~ ~f:e~11,i~Ft f1~ 1~ &ll l::~ of the Southern California Firm Br 11 12l. PaG"4 w 11>, 1t'•" Otean.cE•P DI t i\-11o1 Oft 11.6 'r.YI OfQ '~~ 1 Pel H&H. I~ 15 n RirCD ol C1lll 6Vo-1 011 13.l distribution d . v . s . of F llCI•"' ll 171' P"tr9 lw ,,, '''" c.ce11i.1;1 1511 9 ...... I'll 011, "' I I J 0 n F" Sostn ,,"·,is,,_',','"• ,,. ,•,lrJ Slit II Atl P1pCCI "su 12 -l"I Of 11:1 So th hi TJFln ''~ I"' fl rl'1 23 11 Hoch(;hm •DSD 1• JYI Oii 1l I u west Forest Ind ustries, 'i' w.ii:-n• 2''" PIClfltr w ·~ 9v. u Foothiu c~ouo ,~ "' Ott 1,;J has been elected lst vice ~:~:!~11~ -.-lhl l~ =!;i ~ l!~ lf: rf ~1~r0L1~t" c".! Jt_ -~ 081"; ~ti .d of N h A . For••' or 11 ,,,,., Post Cl> 10 10"4 ?'l Tr1cor lncorD ~--"' "·' pres1 en! ort mer1can Foll 0 ,..,., 2t..., 2~..._ Prof Golt l~ 2r-1l...BYJ!.on s_.1'0__ 11 \>-.lV. Off 11.s , Fr~nlr El t'O ji~ Proc1r.,... I ~f 1'l'I 1• 8ar~!Mg W!!I 4 ~ Off ll.1-WholesaJe Lumber Associa-Frant11 2J'lt 2'J\'1 PSN car 11 11 ~11s Caoehtl'I lncp 6 -'!t Orf 11.1 tion. Baugh is currently a dircc-l""n:""'o..''~~ Joe of· the association's .,. M' UTUAL FUND S ecutive committee. He has been in the wholesale forest products industry since 1939. e::\9.lt"'·'11ml!5&!"11Rlllle<:-'""t:rlllll.a:• He and his wife reside In -·~ N B h Ntw Yor~ -Fol-So 1nct11 753 1,2s J p Gwtll I.SS'·" VOVl(I f 6010 •9 ewport eaC . lcowlM 1$ a 1111 ot Jrd Clf!I ,,20 10 M Jan u1 Fd 16.1• 111' Jitev••• F I" l.lJ blO •ftd a1ktd D•I· E&E Mu J.15 J.U JH1n t'l'I 1.39 .OJ Rln ln l ·" * ~·~,o .~ QllO~lu:~ iJ.to/&NG& •.61 J.7l 1~n",,.,lci J-~~ J.~ ~:~~:•fd l~ I :: T\1lcrodate Corporatlou has IM NASO Inc:. ltOWAtlO: KEYSTONE : Sc1111• SD 8 311 '16, -ll1!n Fa ,.3110.lt C1t1I At llfllt.eG SCUDDl'tl FOS: a pp 0 int e d Robert M. Mand.t'I' Gwlh F 12.IJ U .Ol Cull 82 20.15 11.0. 1111[ Inv 16.SI l•..A Jun• A, 19n lnc:me 6.11 6.&e C\ISI B4 B.31 9.11 81 enc 1.S.76 H.'6 WaJD'llTigbt as products ' &Id Aok soteu F '·" 1.°' c11s• 1<1 7.09 1.11 com 10.1110.1, f d AOMIRAl.TY· Ste~ Fd 1'.11 ll.'lt c .... 1 KJ S.41 6.01 ~111<11 2t.O. 28.Q.f; manager o a I a com-Grwtr+ j:n •.'1 Etll!•1te1 •.1110.Jl i;;u,r s1 n .59 2J . .a s1111 t~v •. ,. •.10 • 1· H tncom 11 •OJ EOJE SD 19.Jl'.l It.JO Cull $1 10.51 ll.S9 SEC:UiltlTY "OS: mun1ca ions. e came to iniurn 7:1l 1:60 EF<: MGMT GllP; c:11s1 SJ 1.23 1.t2 EquUv 3.11 J •? ~ficrodata after four yea rs at Adviser ,,11 l .5d Eatv Gr 1.Js . c,~!, s' 1.11 '·°' 1nvnr •.s1 1 :io -Aetna Fd 1.63 1.J.t Ecilv Pr J·" ""'o •.32 •.7J unre F 6.!J 61J/1 Control D a t a Corporation Aluh.l•e •.• s 1.65 Fnd """' .1• Pl<ilfl J.31 3.6t SElECTEO FOS: . -N~u•-••••--~u•--ww where he was manager of data All111tt 11.6<1 12.s2 e11u11 Trt 1s . .16 K,n~r G1n '·" 1.i1 OPo Fd •.11 •.11 , Allll'll Fd 11.51 13.tJ Em11n1 J.47 J.lt flllmrk t,17 •.75 Spl Slln 11.24 12.24 svstems and cducal!on. At11t•o F •. ,s •.at EMf'Qv io.ts to.9s L•n• Fe1 t.t• 4.91 Ser1n.,r1 • . .fl 10.2s • . . , • , Am Ovr1 t.•S 10.33 EouUv F I.II .. , l.l!JI( OllOUP• 1entrv F 13.~ U.ll \Va1nwr1ghl Jlves 1n Foun-Am Eaty •.:z2 •.62 Fa1r110 1.&.i 1.:u CD Lear -HA•l'HLD •P : · V JJ AM EXP•ESS Ft11 8ur1 t .'ll t.2t -.-15 14 16 Jl Comll 3. l.JI la1n a ey, FUNDS' l'ed JitR1 1.97 Grw!n $12 6.:M Entrpr 6.:W 5.8' C•D!al 7.23 7.l'O FIDELITY li!fvch 11'1• u'19 !<I.ti Fd ],67 •.OI lncom a.so t,19 GROUP: lll!tv Fd ~··s s·u Htrbr irri '" 1nv11m 1,17 '·'° 81\d !llD l .ot 9,q Lift 1'11Y 1: .. ,.:M Lea•I l. s 6.•S • Ne wporl Beach re side n t Saecl 6.ff r.u c~o'•' 10.'9'·11.ou tr11e Cao ,:,, ·~ P8a Fd '· 1 1.11 Stock 7.ll 1.99 Cantta l.Jt Llnq Ffld 3 Jl . SHI.All SON P:OS: Tom Boris has been appointed Am Gr1h 5.62 6.1• Cv sm 1,1, 1.s1 l.OOMU · ·· · ADD•( i1.21 1e.s1 Am !nsln •.11 s:is Ont S-'t lncom 17.09 11,M West Coas t regional manager Am 1nv~1 •.,J • . .:i ,e1su t,61 't:,"o'' '''''''' 1n"•'' 1.•s t .21 """' Mui 1,1s t,91 veril 10.63 11 .67 Y \ · • Sh De•o t.tt 9.t) of Sau Magazlrte. He i'oins the AmN1 G• 2.22 2"3 ,"u.,_a u.0116.40 ,",'•'o'",,,· 4.U h .:iJ jldt Fd J .91 7.5, , . ANCHOR Urol., 9.25 10,11 ' lilMA F NOS: Boston pubhsh1ng firm from GROUP• S•lllm F J.11 •.2J Att1111 J·ll 6.ts caa Shr ·11! 1.n . · -· • C:•otal •:it 4:69 TrtM 2'.U 24.'ll Am B~I .. 01 3.26 ln.v 10:0 10.96 * * E. I. "Jim'' the Chilton Company where he Fno Inv 7.'11 a.11 "'NAHCIAl Bnd dtb t.10 10.11 r,,, 1:11 1.s• ·h II r d Grwt/'t 7.•I a.ii P•OG11tAMI•--Luuwrn 10.JJ 11.01 v ... 1ur .. I I 9-0I • ., e e.y o serve as West Coas t 1ncom 1.26 1.•e Fl., ov., J.t• J.t4 Lu1n., 111 t.7310.6lsm1rn a -,J1 9JB J\.I a rtln-Decker TIM b\11-lrlnlftf' will be cot11umm1tt0 an • 1..,. ~ lflh day ot Ju11t, 1tn, al IO;OO A.M .. 7.W 8 Wtsl 1111\, Cot11 Mn1, Coo,1nty of 0.-tlllJI, St111 ol C1U1o<n11, So t.r 11 k-fl lo Illa lr1Mlf'fl• .tll bull-ntlTlll •fld ldelrflMI Uud br. Trtfltr.rOI' far ..... •iv.. rH•• 1111 Dell, I 0111rr1nt from Iha 1~, 1r1: Nani Co 'I V1"tur 7.64 l.J9 Fin I"" •.11 •.11 MAGNI\ "UHOS: lB l&Gr tO:OHi 1o:ff rpora on manager. Wft N•tc 11.sa n.60 Fin nc: !·', s.s1 <:11111111 J.56 J.90 0 O.nF 11 .a2 11.1N l r~~~~~~~~~~~;~;;;;;;;;;;;,~~~~~~E;,;;ilA'''°" 3.51 1.1• Vent .n 3.11 lncom 1.63 9 . .:1 wt t lf\Y I.CM 1.411 Auoa~ F 7.!16 1.26 hlF/ V1 10.<IO 11.37 Pl1qtm 7.95 1.69 If fnv G S.99 6.lf AXIE FIJt T Ma .. htn 3.19 •.l• vr In 11 02 n ,, I_ Ii. HOUGHTON : INVIESTOltS: M~I OWi l.U 1.U l)t(tr1 i62 1· .. Y 1 o o o, 'I ~~::g : ::l! ~:~~ g~~~ ~i l:ll ~:~ Mf.!:mco: 1.1• 1 . .-lttTtn'i .. J/1o11 J! 011ed: J\lflt .. 1m lll'Obart C. Roll!, Trtnlftf'" Publl&lwd Or1n;1 CCIII! Diiiy Piiot, J Ul!t S, ltn l7Jl-1J PUBLIC NOTICE '"" --"-ubU~ Ot•noe . c ... t Dl!lt _,.llotj June 5, 1tn 17'•·1 PUBLIC NOTICE Kids Like To -Ask .Andy· ' KeV$1one Savings fs more tha.n a place to save money. It's o. pince to make money. We're here to make your money grow. Stop by Keystone soon. Open vour savings account, choose the free se rv ices you want, and get your Money Machine card.You feel rtchec. an<eYilonr.wJlh goo1i-reasonc - 1111111111 pays Jiii the •1gN11 ,. ..... bdinll. •aoL Cerliflcate Account'. $5000 minimum deposit. 7U Term : 2 to 10 years. •53/.0l Certificate Account'. $1000 minimum 14 7U deposit. Term : 1 to 2 xears. •5uoL Bonus Account•. itoOO minimum ~eposil. 7t 7D Term: 6 months or more. *5DL Passbook Accounl'. Dopes.it any amount 7U Add or withdraw al any lime. •Annt11I lnlef'fft. Account• '1ntured Up 10 S20,000 bY en 1gancy of the Unltlel Stat• GOY11nment. OKEYSTONE SAVINGS A•• LSo\W"lllOtl"TIOJI , ~.-- • • IOMN W. r.&1pm, Cl'!AlrTMrl ol lho IOtrd btctllft llltlelt W11t81...,, I.OJI ludl 1\WL. "'Kl fft H•'Pw.nny IM, rllone ~91 . A1111Md111 ol'Doa1 ~55 N. hctld- ~llt.l~,V·lobtuoft'L rt.... 77J.74f0. .\.ll'fO't C.tll', *"""' l&llic.I t)OI MICAl:lbUf 11\'4., l'bOM IU4M1 -MMiB ll'Y'llfMltiUI .- ~ ORDER "~1 . ?, • (· YOURS . , TODAY! Personalized • Stylish ~eautiful Stick-on LABELS • Efficient Order For YourHlf or • Friend· May be used on envelopes 1s return address 11.bels. Also very handy es identification labels for' m·arking personal items such •s books, records, photo,, etc. l"bels stic k on 9le1s •nd may _be used for m1rking home · c~nned fo':d items. All labels ere printed with stylish Voque type on fJne quality wh ite· 9ummed paper. Slot-S..!I 6.'ltl Stoc~ F 1.so 1.21 lllCID ~ 1.11 7.16 Com l<d '.13 'i• A,t Sci 3,9, •.21 hi MuUI l.lll t.)o M111 F 11.U 12n Ol~e1ll ... 5'41 l tC Glr+ 10.92 ll .'3 hi Siert J.'° l.95 MASS FNCl1 . PrOQr$ ,·,.._ ... , •b$Cll'I 10.>6 J0.36 FORUM OltOUP: MIT 10.8111.lt 51 Fr Gr \'\ \i> ll•~roc 6.97 7,41 100 !<II(! IOAf 10.~ MIG 125.2 11.61 St Fr llK : fl ll1vrk pr 5.ls 5.ff 101 Fl'ld •. 11 ,.11 MIO 'J.OJ0 14S41111t .$Ir •••l •~IJ Ortc'1 HI I.JI 8.91 CO'lum 7.'1 .tt MFO lj.4t I')' T•ADMA~' l'DS-BNCOll 10.n 10.n 1J Fund S.43 5.'3 MCO 1 l"! 67 A ifld ,, ) oi e8erw K 11.1111.11 :,""u G• •.u •-•s M•11• Iv f , :u A~ Fd 1'n 1'n trk~r l.tl •.27 NOERS M1~1'11r 10 .. lj-"' ffl.,.11 1.J1 1.JI Oor'I01I~ {ti !11 GROUP: Mid Am 5'23 n ITllN lit.Cl flos: !Oii Fdn '·" 10 '21 Grwtl! 5.20 j·61 Monv Fo t:H> 10:..t B1l11K 20 11 11)11 r1>wn l,2• JS4 llKOm 11.141 ,l)M\I BnG ffSIOI' (IDlll flS t • IUl.\.OC:I( F Mluel 1,51 9.l7 M F FO 7"41 ··-'' ' 1 ' 01 ' FUNOS 1 F So.ell 11 01120. MIF Gro •'.I( ,:r. SISocG•OUfl~I •. ! v Bull Fd 12 4J U.6 ""°'"llCI F I a-9 t 06 M...OM 111 '51 1 fl Gfwlh -.-s •• •'I 'In Fd l1.0ll2'Jot FllANKLIN M"'°""ln 1"91 f75 1ncom 104 1:.. Dv Sr+r 3.!16 3.90 GROUP: Mui Sl!rt li 151i1s S"'mll i N t7 Nllwd 9.lt !O 113 t>NTC 7.71 1-'6 Mull Tri 1°'1 I t2 Ttcl!fll ., 4'92 .... kV ven •961091 Gwlll Sr 7.09 771N1t lllClu t:•1 9.41 svniro F 6o111 7"'J 8mnm--t.il-i.tl Fr lnem,. J..t\ 2,09 NAT S•Vl"Dft· -TM At> ir. '1 1G Funci t ,'3 I ·" us Gv s 9.9910.tS 81l1nc I tl ',, THC;;, ,.. i "1i1 ~Dltmr 7 4? a lJ Ulllllll J05,J7 5 II BDl!d 5r ito ,-36 T--' ~ J '> •1> lnvs J '6 2 JO lit•• CIC! •-oil I '1 OJvfdto ,·i; •••• I !a1> s~rs 5 32 s ll Jit.s Ecu'l' • O? ••I p 3.'2 T,,_r 5 71 • 2 •o lr!11 t°9S 10 81 Fkl l!Eo lj.06 1f09 I rtl Slk .. 6 14 Tri~ 'JD 1.ll !·' tnl Sh• 11:1111J,otFdMr 1111 :.. 181 s~or'sr ti: JS: f.'.i:~ ~ 1t'_IJ,' H.-.NN!MG F~NOS _IH(P O•wtll ti' ... ml\ CG 2 21 l R FUNO\, 0 OU,. Ht W ING · r+ Cl J°$6 • !1lnc<1 IO 44 II 4l Comm f '.lt 9 Of ~oullv ti M 11 oo nl"" I;' na FO 9.f• 10.10 l~ac 3+J '·'' rwth 1 '' 11°36 8" lt.l"d IO LI om Stk 11s ll' Urrriis 1r 1 '!l'"l' •10.1 16"2717,111 NION •••~ic:•QJ G•w!h •9~ J'°Glot 1 7 lNEA "1\1 926 t•s ROUI"· !~\11 t~ •~it~'~, ~U 7·•1Neu c • .,, .-., •.'•1 t~s 1 .. 11.191'# cY.'f.ff •. 2 691 GTtouP~1l:ll 6 23 a=~~ 1ln 1i:ri ~~ 'c~f· ,~ i~ 1f~ i':i 7 16 e ::r"'Fn:_ ft1 ~ :! N!ww r;.1{] 11.ilf 11ttf UN~~~o 111t3Jos· Fron CD •-'3 s' Com SiM 10"111199 N thlll ···' •. tf ACt\>n\ '·"° I,•! lr+Tr es 6.19 '· &'h FA.In •. 1 41$ NtSI '~" IS.'6U.-'6 ind Fd 805 ·~ _, !"' 'I' rtll 111(1 11 !'!I!' (k111111 j·°' •·• ont QW t.03 t , .• ..,, Fd l ,JI 11' 6 n°id n'. 9 ~~'. r 8"1r.if Id 11-J; !~·~ I INll lnc t .t? 10 I {:o~i1\AL HF11n~LTOH JOJ ~.JI ~· v.iu1 1~1s u..u ~~°"" 1z:H1s1;,-]; ~·,•~ t.4511.ss Grv.1~ l,31 '·' ~",'1~M ,'°,,',,,, 0•,• !· 1.1 Cit.I IV J,05 ,)] cl"com ... 6 ll "' c. I 10 F\l!!<J t 411 j\ •rtwel t '6 t 9$ Frid I.ID 1.i-1 Uj O~\ 10 al 10 ?.I Grvrrn 5.11 I: 1ri l.¥ f u 6 y 0 'e TS'' •.OD 6 ~ V LUI! INI FDl! 111eom t.19 1 . 1 HedbtQ '·U 111 f'••irro.'rc 1JI10.n Ve! ln1 •'·'' 5 fl s";:~o 1~;~1 ;~~:ffl:~ t.:i l.J7 ::11IAt~ f,~ ~'.; r:~6~ !:ii :.~i ~·~~~NWltM ='co 1:·~jl;:l; ,Pa'wAu1 i:jj ljJ YvA~C~ ,,w J,;t .• A, .. B 107 1.1•1-•• 1r: ,,,.. t:t11 .\o I' l.Q IAHDl'll:SI ' 'ff 1.)11 nc ldA m I 11, ., ~n1 sfd 1 '-1' •~ Fll(I 1 ao 1 ~l _, i' o, l'H Inc BOit ' 1 • IJ >I:" • I·"' YS c...... 6.l'CI 1 ff IMllD D •. no FAm li j "E•'•"• ,1•• .10 S11tel 7.1• 1 -· ' ' . \"""' I 3 l'CI 01 Vfl<lrtllf ~-'° J' ~.. d .< , " "W'•' J. ~ .. •' '' t·" 1.11 '""'' I)< "" _,, t·lj 0. J l"Ylrn .• 1-'1 f'd l , 11 '' 4 Va"' tato 5 t7 Ol'll lflY I , 11·! nv Co A 11. I •• ,•,IOfl"..11 f" !-"' Vtr ltd 1 ,.,, •Ill 11111'1 ow •ff .> l"Y G11IO I 71 •r1~., ~) 41 Vi~"" Qr 10 1·~ 1111Mt In 1. 1-·I' nv I~ -~ ',',',, 11:0 1, 11J..11 w .. 151 "' :C.... , 11111r111 ' • I I"' !i!t l ·'• 11 1• lit.OW : W••~ Mu 1 ,It ll t ~•,~c u.1 1'·j NVI T o•oup, g ., n. f 'i·''I Wt/~-. 1 11 10.J wn 111 in •. 4 '§l Olb ·,:, ~'. .• " 1 ,,, w"' tNOT N fl. nv 5> •· r 1 NO .11 $. "'' •lot' 'I',_,, 0110 ,.1 "'"' o.u "'' I " l~ ' " ',• f} ! ' ·'' ''°'~ JO !l"til l.A,'NAlll ~~l\11111 , ~.\O fVV,...f~ ,JI 4_,. !~I t, -t ' DUr• fl<11:k I , lj ·~f~ •t.! I! ._lll fiilr 1;1 1 " ' p 'i"" "'" ' > [!"',.'" I :~ IO... • r:n • 10 v1r·P•Y l. 1 •M •v 1 11'''' II r ' 4, t"t Ill•• '. i :6 "UNOS1 • w.,i!V i: , ,~. ~11co ~ 't40 'o,~ln ~' ... ~-;:,~r: 'l~f'~,t! :ri::,i:,. '~ 'Ji ~ 1• ,:.~ ~ " •• ~ {"-···" ,~n =' llld 1:. I ""'1• "· '~ 11\ l ,. b ~... 1f1! ·1·n WIK~?' ... r.. . I l«, ... ,...,, ......................................................... ,;.~:1. 'l 10.rrv.11 htll ~"II~ 20.li ..viii _u; l ·!J z~ -J:. • • ~ LY l ~, U.'1 h• f\IM •.'f -~ V11!1 F t,•, 1 .... ~·d•YI~ • -- . . .. ' ' .. i'_J DAILY PILOT 5 T11t$d.i.,y, Junt 5, 1973 ' l' alue to All · Consume1· Index W atclied Closely NOT ONLY Is the in· formation u s eful to housewives in planning fami ly budgel s, .b~t also to labor leaders in drawing up new contracts. To pensioners iL could mean higher in comes, and to divorcees big g e r alimony payments . ----The rise or fall in the cost of SALES, EXCI~E .and real 1vtn 5 eomputca y me-esta~-taxes ar~l Labor Department's Bureau of not income or personal prop-. . . erty taxes because they are Latx,>r . Stahst1~s from tn· not directly associated \\•ith formation s~nt in ?~ 240 men the costs of goods or services. and women in 56 c1t1cs across . . the country These part-time In co1nput1ng CPI. food is '\government· "·orkers roam given ~.weight of 22,49,,percent ttirough 18.000 retail stores of .1he . market basket on the and :--,se,rvice es tablishments, e~t1ma~1on ~hat th~ average checking prices on 400 items. city \\orker s !am1ly spends . . . that much of · its budget on Mailed ~ueshonna1res are food. ousing accounts for 33.86 used lo collect figures on percent, clothing 10.37 percent, apartment rents. bus fares, 1ransportation 13.13 percent, utility rates, newspaper prices health and recreation 19.77 and <Jthcr items not requi ring percent includini 6.45 Percent persona l. visits. ~lousi~ costs, for medical care, and 5.09 per· college tuition and used.car cent for 01hcr &oods :ind prices are collected by ' other Services. government agencies. ''The Consu1ner Price Index ALL TOTALED information on 120,000 individual prices pours into the bureau where it is sifted by gov er n men t clerks. statisticians a n d economists. Fed into i1 com· Pollution Buzzer Set WASHINGTON IUP!) - . Starting \Vi th 1975 models, cars ·will have lo have buzzers or dashboard lights to "'arn motorists if their air pollution controls get out of order. Th e E n v ironmcntal Protection A g e n c y an- nounced the policy Sun- day. It said catalytic con- verters and exhaust gas . recirculation syslems in- stalled by manufacturers might stop functioning without the driver's know- ing il. is used widely to guide !an;iily budgeting and lo understand what is happening to family finances," the bureau says. "It is used extensively in labor-management contracts to adjust v.•agcs. Automatic adjustments based on changes ! in the index are incorporatcdl in some·v.·age cqntracts and in a \'ariety of other types of 1 contracts. such as long-1erm · leases," the bureau explains. "IN ADDITION, lhe CPI is u.sed as a 1neasure of chaQgcs in the purchasing power or the dollar for SllCh d i v e r s e purposes as adj u·s t i n g royalties, pensions, welfare payn1ents, and occasionally alimony payments." Bureau analysts used lo in- terpret the monthly fi gures al l press briefings, but the l\ixon administration put · an end to the practice in 1971 after the bureau and White House of· ficials differed O\·er the mean· ing of the figures. This dre\.\' charges that the administration wns injecting politics into the bureau. The \Vhite House denied it.· Sliultz Asks Removal Of Ceiling 01'1 Boncls --w~SHINGTON· AP) = Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz recommended 1ifond:iy thal Congress remove the 5:5 percent interest rate ceiling on U.S. 'savings bonds and create a new government bond which taxpayers who are due income tax refunds could invest in. mitt1t--t&--elin1in'8le-l~fl.e present 41~ percent interest· rate ceiling on all tteasury bonds. T\\'O YEARS ago. Congress allowed the Treasury Depart · 1ncnt to exceed thi s limit for $10 billion in bonds. Since 1hcn . Shul1z said . the govern· ment has issued $8.4 billion in bonds \\'ilhout regard to the ceiling. He said it hi:1s helped stretch out the average 1naturity of privRtely held public debt to a low le\·el or three years. When Sylvia Po11er Do high food costs cut down on th e cause you to quantity · and quality of company dinners? Do you find yourself slighting your family's nutr itional needs in order to meet financial needs? You can find 'help with these and many other problems of fami ly finances 1n Sylvia Por{er's column several times weekly .in the financial pages of the DAILY PILOT. Yes , Sylvia-Porter c·an-be a irtend of YOUR family. Her nationally syndicated column, "Money's Worth," features im• port ant ideas which can relieve your I . concern over monetary matter~. For ex .. ample, she will tell you how to save a considerable percentage of your gro · cery dolla r despite spiraling food costs. • SHULTZ TOLD the l~ouse Way~ 3nd Means Com mittee that 1he Treasury has made no decision as yet on changing savings bonds' interest rates. But. he · added, ''removal of the ceiling will allO\Y us more easil v to alter the rates in the lnterCst or the program if, m _the future. It be com es necessary to do so in order to offer a fair return to savers .. " He-said -the--'proposal -to- . crea!c a n interest-bearing . treasury b o n d "'·hich tax· paye rs could ln\•est in at their option would have helped sol ve the prob I em of overv.'ithholding of individual income taxes from paychecks. Disney Says Let a Ref1u1cl-Uue--SYfv ia friend Porter th e drop . in on you tonight. can viSif)'Oilfrom ·+~ UNDER TFOS procedure, Shultz said. a refund check would be Issued In the normal manner. tr the-taxpayer decid· ed .to hold lhc check, It would automa11cnlly bcnr interest after a s1x--cificd period of time. Beside altov.•ing ror equity, he s::lid, 11 \\t>uld encourage savings and coritribute to more orderly casb and debt mansgemetlt by !he Treasury. Shultz: also urged !he com- From ll{S .. ' of pages right to • DAILY PILOT delivered \ .. J'Complete New York Stock List I • . ' • • . • • ' • • ' . • . -' ........ ~,•\\ . ' . . . . 22 DAIL 'f PILOT Tutsday Junt 5, iq1J •• AMBLER :;'c·-~~: -... :, · · · ·, ! .~ ~:·· ~.A.Mil.ER. I MEAPO TUMBLEWEEDS -.o..R LATEST ALBl»1, ... A MONE'/! --- by Doug Wildey DOOLEY'S WORLD by Tom K. Ryan frAP. HOW 51ERf01\"PEV CAN YOV Gi.f. SALLY BANAl'(AS - ~R\6f'iL!"; (JCl\!"nBl\:. 0 11,,9 0 I ¥ .t1~,, 0 MUTI & JEFF ·--· ........ ·---·- FIGMENTS Rf,\08\BEJ<, /\VI, \()J 6ET Mi'J11Y HllN611Y UP IN M M T1* fllU.S 5J BRIN6 f\E!l!Y CF 6!'/\Pl.fS ALO'J6 ! NANCY THIS IS THE HOTTEST DAY OF THE YEAR WHERE HAVE YOU BEE N '? I WAS LOOKING FOR MY EARMUFFS . TDDAY'S CRDSS\VDBD PUZZLB Yest~rday's Puzzle Solved: ACROSS 1 Arum plillnt 5 Just elapsed !l Bridges 1<1 Mr. Air1111 15 Aec111ngul11r pier 16t'lint disease 17 Eu1opean mountain range 49 Affectionately 53 Dress ----·-··· 57 East Indian garmen1: Var. 58 Representa- live 59 Mine p1oducts 61 Grivel monkey 62 Make lun of 18 Name1n ·fashions --63 Future user 64 Mr. Slaughter 65 was wrong 66 Saucy 19 Climbing vine ~O Ce(lters 22 "Wizard of Oz" character 24 Lea"e out 26 Specific talent 27 Unresolvod 29 E-plosive '30 Drink 111ow1y 33 lnveter111e 37 Dic kens ch11rac1er 38 Harmonize 39 Actor -·· Ferrer odO Soll dr'ln~• 41 Prevaricil!Of 42 Ottawa body <14 Feminine 67 Depression DOWN 1 Saylng 2 let one's hair down 21 Reproductive 01gan 23 South 3 Savory jelly 4 Animal African cou'l disease 25 In addi1ion 5 One's room: 2B Menu item: Slang 2 words 6 Phi1ippin11 30 Fish Island fennel 31 Asien 7 Inventory country B Italian lolk dance 32 No IOnger 9 Pick oul current 10 Pointed 33 Valley object J.4 Petronage 11 Chinese 35 Turninl) sull1J1 45.Rec.eived_ 46 Opponent 47 Group ot -~H---poinis- 12 Taboo joke: 36 Three: Preli• Informal 37 Held in people 13 Simtner subjection • " • " " • .. q " " " • 40 ''The Elder" and "The Younger" 42 lnferio1 43 Data: Abbr. 45 Reduced to shreds 47 Rigid 48 Grammatical word SO Male bee 51 Pretend: 2 ./' words 52 l:.eavening agent 53 Appre1ise 54 German rive1 55 a.,.-mtomm1 56 look• ob!i(luely 60 Harden \ . _IS ,,, ~~,, :d;S .. 1 .. I . . , ~-.... .... ~-. -t:f§,, by Al Smith Hale GORDO MOON MULLINS 011, 011! Poc,,v's .STOP PE[) PVR.R.INGf --;s;.\•!( HAMBURGER, BUT ® SURE". I ~TA D,ATt:) so HOJ.DiH' ONIONS." ANIMAL CRACKERS E'ARMUFFS'?-- by Ernie Bushmiller I NEEDED A SET OF BOOK ENDS WHAT FOR'? M. Schulz PEANUTS by Charles .--------=-I\ '{A AA! N't'AAA!NVAAA!J! ' ~ - " - JUDGE PARKER IF BETSY'S A80Ui TO GET NUMeER FOUR, THERE'S NOTHING I CAN DO ABOUT IT, LILA ! MISS PEACH ,,.t ~1:_1...1... Y • .5n.Joo 1... f'~O~ 1.-1:..AI\ C::l.-INIC. • ~ II~ Tt-!E '°"'~•>Iii!> 8"Alrl -Po'li~.of nt!!~ ' "fO f ST<i OENn' TO SOC.><( yov-. MOS'T" 1M9o~TA•lT ~OIJl,CN,S \ • ') ' ..• '' •, 1~ ••. I FO UND OUT THE NAME OF THE.MA N! HE'S A LAWVER~V-IHE ·NAME OF SAM DRIVE R .•• HA 5 NEVER MARRIED .•. IS $Al0 TO HAVE A VERY 6Rl(::oHT FUTURE! -MY PRO&LEM 14; r CANNOT COPE WITH LJFE. COULD YOU Pl.EASo V.SS. YOtA lil:: t::OMBIN£P Slt'AIN·POWER -ro HELP Mf SOLVE 11? DICK TRACY SON, I WANT YOU TO RETURN TO MR. TRArCV's DEPARTMENT. SHE DOES OETTER EVERY TIME SHE MAKES A CHA.NGE! ' ' ' 1111, :'yAWN ': . . •' t 'I < •' by Harold Le Doux I THINK YOU OUGHT TO. MA.KE A LITTLE TRIP TO SEE ' MR. DRIVER! -HE SHOULD. BE. VERY INTERESTED IN A OLOW~ 8Y-6LOW DESCRIPTION OF LIFE WITH ~ MISS LOVABLE! by Mell :LlrA;-W0Ul;O TMEY- FIRE LAP ALL -rMI! &L~T FL<f(.NACoS OF ALL -rile s-r!EL MIU.S IN GAf(.'f, !ND1ANA,<!LAST SO THEY C""tLD MAKE A HAIRPIN ? • by Rog er Bradfield X J«sr WANTED ToS~IF Youm~ U SfEM/NG by Charles Barsotti by Gus Arri~la by Ferd Johnson WOTS/o. IDl',A, _-....-~ UNCL E WILLIE ?? You C,ALL IH15 A H/'MBURGER ? 11 "· ,, u ······-- by Ro9er Bollen W FACE MAS!l•r ~ 'TlME TO 8U\..D l!P CALLUSES.' THE GIRLS '-... ~ ---- "There'• nothing worse th•n having something end that you've spent we.kt getting rNdy for." .. . . / I .. T11t$day, June 5. 1973 OAILY_PiLOT Z3 Irvine Leads Way • Ill of Towns ' f ,_ I I -· ' _ _,_ __ • I I What Do New Commu ni ties A cco1nplisl1? • I / By FRAN P. HO.SKEN Considerins the {'norn1ous growth of .~..,~·~-;'!"'-,. Chrislia1t Scifnce J\1onitor Service California in the past 25 'Years1 \Vhich last [~l .... t'. f~ ,.'r "Ne Towns" some pundits pro-rail came to a sudden stop, it is a plty ' ' 1• 1 · wd · th . 19so·s .. will solve all our that planned community de.velopment •r!~~=~~:!~r·t'i:i:-~-:t:=~r..;_--~°'.""--;t-C aime 111 t: . has not taken hold bcfOt'e. Va!cncin, :12 Ul'ban::oproblema ' W-ha.L---ace-tbP,Jt really_mi les-norlhwes ( Lo1--Angeles, .oo accomplishing? What is it like to live opposite side ~rom Irvine and another O.ltV Plllt S!atl Pho!OI where everythmg is new, where you are grov.•th area. is being developed .by lhc challenged to initiate and r.un all kinds of Ne whall Land and . Farmi~g Company on • : . . ? a 4,000-acre section or a 44 .000-acre act1v1t1es in new way s. Ne\vhall ranch Practically none or the ne\\' com- munities have even reached half of the_ir projected population. l\1ost are only a few years old. Some, such as Columbia, ~td., Reston , Va .; or Irvine, Calif .. thrive "'1th rapidly growing numbers or Cilnvinced in- habitants. l\1any more are only beginning const ruction, v.;hile still more are just in the planning stage. Nevertheless, there has been enou gh experience with the ne\v-tO\Vn concept to make an initial evaluation. ~There is no doubt that·a planned new community offers a happy place fon children, giving them more freedom to roam and ex plore on their own. All you need to do is to sit in a village center and watch the goings and enjoy the f w1. JlUT \\'Jill£ TJI E new towns in some countries suc h as Great Britain Qffer--ncW jobs and a new lifej(Linhab1rail ts of city sl ums, !_be new CO!!Yllunities in the __.United~Sto.tes do no such thing. To be sure, as balanced and lhoughtfully organized communities they are a viable alternative to the haphazard suburban sprawl. But they cannot at this stage offer serious answers to the social, pollution, crime, housing, and other prob- lems that beset all cities :·t'!d are begin- ning to invade many _s_uburbs as Y•ell. l\1ost of the nev.• tov.11s presently plan- ned or under construction are loca ted in fast-growing metropolitan areas. They are satellite tov.11s. ·The \Vest Coast region and specifica lly Orange County is oue of lhe fastest-gro\ving areas in the United States. Irvine, the first planned new community on the West Coast, st arted construction after the middle 1960's and by now has some 30,000 in- habitants. The city Of Irvine \\'ill have eventually 430.000 people (some time after the year 2000). It '"ill occupy 53,CXX) acres of land on the huge ranch which is cont rolled by the Irvine Co.'11pany whose land goe.!5 back to Spanish land grants. TllE C0:\1AIUN ITY lS expected 10 have 25,000 people by 1975 v.•hich is pro-. jectcd to gro w 10 173.000 in 1985. ac- cording to the Los Angeles County Regiona l Planning Co1nmission. Surrounded by \vooded mountains. ii is. designed from inside out. All the housing is arranged around culs-de·sac. Vehicular tfa(fic is entirely separated so children ca n play every1vhcre and walk to school: An elect ric bus syste1n Sim~ar io go\£ carts is also plannCd. 'rhe California Instit ute of the Art s. a (our-year art ';aid n1usic school, cndov•ed in pai·t by the late \Vall DisntJy, is in the ne\v lo\1n. as \Vrll as a community college, the College of the Canyons. A total ly different .kind of conununity, ·n ne11r ''tO.\l'TI· in to11·n. ,. Cedar River.>ide is under constructio n in an old neglctli:!d area in hfinneapolis. bounded by 1hc 11ississippi River and next to·a ne\v od- dition of the t:niversity .of l\linneso!a campus. The co1nmunity 1\·hic h once 1'h e spee d and •cule ll!J · Jllhlch thhogs proceed in West I# o vermhel111b1g lly Easter11 stn11dnrJ1#. ~ served poor European im n1i grant s is full of inslitutions no\1·. t'\1·0 hospitals. 1>lus t1\'0 more educationn l facilities besides the university campu s. Bl.Lt' the residen- tial part completely deteriorated, froin 20,000 people in 1930 to 4,000 residents listed in the 1970 census, TH E RE~1ARKABLE rene\l'al of this commWlity was ini tiated a few years ago by Gloria Sega l. who no\v functions as vice-president of Cc d a r Riverside Associates. Inc. \\>'hat n1akcs this such an unusual undertaking and such a suc- cessful enterprise is t ha t Cedar Rive rside, or really Gloria Segal. takes the opposite approach frotn all other new-town development . elegant. S)·mphony \\loads . v.·hc-re sum- mer music festivals are held. has been functioning every season. There are riding and bicycle paths. golf courses, growin g industrial parks. a hotel. a large office building. a 31 -acre_ lake. a clinie rwu .. --h6Spirarto ~nre ' an -· ltlch 1nore. \\'ildlake. opened in 1~7 as the fir.~l vilfage. is nearly complete, and t hre~ more are under construction. each 'vilh its O~\·n community and convenience shopping center and recreation find facilitiC's. B\" ~O\\' COLU~t BIA has 25,000 peopll' and by 1981 , the probrrnn1 sta tes. Colu.n· bia \l'ill have 110.000 residen ts living 1n seven 'Villages. ;ind its to'>'·n center u·ill serve the entire region 11 ith inStitulions. recreation and cultural attractions. nnd shoppiRg facilities. Columbin v.·as planned in one of the fas1est-gro1\·ing areas of the United States. dra\1·inl{ on both Balti1nore a.nd \\';ishinglon . II is being bui lt \\'iltwlut an.\r help in te11ns of loan gua rantees by the Departtncnt of l~ousing and l}rban Developrncnt. It \l'aS started \\'ell before the 1970 legislation. "The Urban Gro\1•!h and Ne'>'' Con11nw1ity Dcvclol?meui Ac.L" \vliich in return for observing specific planning and quality standards enables developers to borr0\11 wit h federal sup- .port. -The location of Heston some 18 n1iles south of \\1ashington. the rirst ne\\' town planned in the -ea rly 1960's, is less favorable frorn a population point of vie\\'. Hence Reston ran iti to financial troubles \\'hen it simply <."Ould not attract people fast enoug h. Robert E. Simon was the man \\•ho started it all and who set out to build a truly balanced community in the lovely Virginia .countryside. Bul his carefully pl:inncd to"·n '>''as taken ovc>r in 1967 bv Gu lf 10 become Gulf Reston al'tcr the strikingly handso1iie first village on Lake Ann v.·as .buil.t. A If0l\1EO\YNER'S association (a similar organization exists in Columbia and in most privately built uey; com~ munities) owns and control s all open land and recreational facilities, swimming pools. tennis courts, and more. It operates many citizen-initiated services including a bus service going fron1 Reston to dov.·nlown Wa shington. One oth('r ne"' IO\\'n should ht> 1nen- lioned in this admitted ly incoinplcte list. COUNCILWOMAN GABRIELLE PRYOR LEADS FINGER 'TOUR'-OF NEW CITY Vis iting Delegate from France Among Many Who Qui1 New Town Leadership TllE NE\V COi\U.1UNIT Y is organized into vi llages as are Columbia or Reston in the East. It is being built around the campus of the Unive rsity of Californi\ which is also under con· 'J 'h e re are a 1111mller of 11em COIJ!munities plan• 11ed ha Texas a11d A ri· Redevelopment began piecemeal by rehabilitating so me de I er i o r a 1-1 n g buildings so that the people in the com- munity would have a decent place to live. .:'t111a. ' TENTED REGIMENTATION OF IRVINE RANCH; STRAWBERRY FllLDS TO YIELD Homes Will Raplact Agriculture in 53,~crt Future City of Irvine , -· • _ __ , • ' '· -' ·It Is a pity that pla111ted co1n111111aity develop1nent 110• ttot taken place IJe. f fJre.' struclion on J,000 acres of land donated by the Irvine Company, and 500 acres purchased by UC Regents. \Vhen I first visited Irvine in J!i&t. bulldozers v.·ere busy leveling sites among an endleSs succession. of sun· burned bare hills. There was nOt a sing!~ tree as far as. I could see. "We have planted a million trees by nO\\'. '' George ~tcDonald or the Irvine Company recen tly told me. "Some 7D,()I)() alone.in the industri al park, and '>''e are operating a tree .farm. The city has a complete water-reclamation system. and ___ lhg_ j,p(@stm~ture ~pd ~r~.i~~ ~ build now are planned ahead for the next SO years.'' TllE SPEED AND .sca le by which things proceed in the West is overwhelm~ ing by Eastern standards. Another feature is that Irvine is incorporated. Eighty-five percent of the · inha·bitants signed a petition, and on Dee. 21, 1971, a vote \l'as taken in favor o( incorporation. A cily government wa s formed to protert the future of Irvine for its own citjzens. This all came about because the Industrial Park of Irvine was such a suc- cess lhat neighboring communities cast longing eyes on these tax-producing prop- erties hoping lo annex them . But the citizens ol Irvine got there first. " . ~,~' Gloria Segal promised never to evict anyone. She managed to keep rents down in the rehabilitated buildings. The first Floyd-~cKissick, president of Mc~ssick goal was to live rather than onl y work in · Enterpr1~s, has piano~ Soul C1.ty, a Cedar Riverside. ·new IO\\'n 111 North Carolina. Accorduig lo McKi ssick. "Soul City is planned to economi ca lly upgrade a rural im- poverished area. ll broke ground by bui lding a road, industria l park, and some hou sing for the workers this ~1arch, and has some definite com· m·ilments from industries." tlntil reccnlfy Ceda r Avenue \1•as replete with liquor licenses and liquor st ores. No\v it is a center for theater, art exhi bits, and all kinds of cultural en- terprises lhat attract people from all over the metropolitan area. But it still lacked housing \\'hich became the first .._priority of the developers. AT TID S POINT the first stage of the planned ne\v-to\\'n housing is under coo- st ruelion. Some 3,000 people are schedul- ed to move in this fall. The design by Ralph Rapson should 1nake Cedar Riverside into one of the most handsome truly urban communities. A variety or high-rise and middle-rise apartm ent buildings is juxtaposed with open plaza s and \\1ith tree-planted peQeS!rlan ShOpping malls. AllVChiCillir traffic is ~rated "out'' with parking garages belbw ground. - So fa r Cedar Riverside. which also has a federal loan guaran'tee, is the only "town in town" based on private in- itiative that is "making it." Every other One planned has failed due to resistance by the neighboring com1nunilies. They have failed because developers did not ask the people li ving in the area to participate from the start. l\leanv.•hile, back Easf, Columbia. l\fd., has a thriving tO\l'n cen ter dominated by a regional shopping center \l'ith depart- ment.and specialty stores. supermarkets. . and boutiques, all under one roof and \\•ilh an interior mall and patios, all very ..J '• There are a ~umber of new com- munities plailned 111 Texas and Arizona in areas of rapid gro\vth in a favorable climate. In fact new town building has itself become a prime growth industry. However, it takes large amount s of capital and a great deal of time. , As it is yet a \'cry new field , the federal suppOrt has been decisive. The housing moratoriun\ imposed by the Dep<irtment of Housing and Urban .Development not only affects a 11 subsidized housing but also the new.-com- mwfil y legislation. RECENTLY S0~1E community groups are becoming interested in new-town building because of economic ·studies still in progress \Vhich sho v.• It is possible to build t.'OOpCratively citize n-owned ne\v towns and broaden participation of 1J..ver~ income groups. Ins tead of the private developer mak· ing the profit from the land used by com- mercial and industrial development, the land is retained jointly by the cit izens of the co1nmunity. This means that monthly payn1ents of the ne"•-town inhabitants co uld be substantially reduced . This would enable more poop](' to live in plan- ned new conununities. CITIZEN PARTICIPATION IS CHIEF GOAL OF IRVINE 'S FIRST COUNCIL Valley Vltw Housing Hearing Drew Roc~rd Crowd; Density Fought I" Mid-c ost Propos'al • - / I . • ' ,f DAILY PILOT • Diane Whan and Dave Giron have been selected Girl and Boy of Month at Ediiwn Hi gh School for .l\tay. Both are active in campus athletics. Miss \Vhatt ls also member of campus Music and Drama clubs and Giron is chess player and member of Interact and American Field Service clubs. SD May Ban NJ . Nigl1ttime Fligl1ts SAN DIEGO (AP) -Port oommissioncrs s:iy they're thinking of banning all late- 1ight rlii:hts to and from San Diego's Lindbergh Field. Commissioners asked Port )!rector Don Nay to draw up 1 resolution ,that would put a .:urfevr on flight s at t indbcrgh, \\"hich h3s an ap- 1roach pattern directly over towntown San Diego. They left he time of the curfew up to 1hc port dist rict staff. Nay said he filed a. protest rlth A1ncrican Airlines over ts plan to sc;hedule two jet JighLs from Lindbergh after nidnight , starting next month. Two other airlines. Delta tnd Pacific Soutnwest, have IQSt·midnight fiights here. t Water Ration BOLINAS. ( U P I ) \esidents of this Marin C.oun· y seaside village must ration vater for two v.'ceks because .f an auto accident. Nearly 150,000 gallons were ost recently one afterooon vhen a car struck a fire 1vdrant. v.·hich erupted In a Pcctacular geyser of wasted 1·ater. Utility officials a s k e d -esidents to forego non-essen- ial uses such as garden- up and move the capital to the south this summer to see what s1nog is really like. R epublican ·Assemblyman Jerry Le\vis ad· ded. "Too many I egi s I a tors represent districts \V h e re smog just isn't a problem and most of the members are essentially fulllime residents of Sacramento," said Lewis, who hails f r o m San Bernardino Colinty. e Bypass Ope,. GILROY (AP ) ..:... 1'.1otorists now visit this farming town by choice, not necessity, as a new Highv.-ay 101 bypass has open- ed through garlic fields to the east. ln the past, drivers travel- ing this section of the road faced a succession of 14 stoplights as they were routed through the middle oC Gilroy, San Martin and hlorgan HUI. On weekends in good weather, traffic co1nmonly was backed up for miles with resulting delays of several hours. Deputy Police Chief William Kirkpatrick welcomed the new road as a relief from "smog, noise, congestion and nothing but trouble." e Area Sprayed __ vatering, car v.·ashiog and i:.x· ra toilet flushings until the 1•ater supply in the reservoir, 1ow -ar 2D,CXM> gallons, can be lllill up to near its 420,000- ;allon capacity. SAN DIEGO (AP ) -The U.S. Forest Service has begun spraying 3,113 acres o f Gleveland National F o r e s t with herbicides despite pro- tcsLs of the Sierra Club and conservationists. Although the spraying had been delayed since. May 5. a Sierra Club attorney com- plaJncd that ·a longer delay was authorized. But a forest spokesman denJed it. e Capital !?love SACRAMENTO (AP I lecause they're breathing the 11.1re air of Sa e ra men to, .:a!ifomia lawmakers a r e la...,·diing on antismog efforts, :ays a Southern California 1Ssemblyman. The Legislature should pack The spraying from li ght planes was done to retard the growlh or broad-leaf chaparral ' in certain areas to create fuel breaks in event of summer fires. Solons Back Vote ) ; For the R~ord DAif~Y Pil~OT CLASSit~IED Marriage .le•-M'1'lt.11n. OO!Ut IC1y1 Ind J"""" 11:u1t1ll W••d, '"'t"''' 1... •nd T_..., w.11r ... A•c1n.11, TllOm• l..oub •llCI Chrl1llne M.11rlt MIJ\ll'fno. Mtnvtl a. •nd Hatllll<ll• M. C•Pfll.11, Ch.lrlt·A. Jf': -l..tnd1 L All<'ll ,, 1'1J Wrlgfll, M.llrl.11 5 . .llnd Jl""11Y W, OltENI ER•&AIU(i!' -0.11wld J ollr\, 11, S1r1uu1, C•r04 .11nd liloti.llrt 1«>1 E 16111 SI., API E, NtWllOfl Gl•u, 1(1ren ~~ .111\d OO!l•ld B11cn 1nd Dl•n• M••Y. ]I, 24(11 E, B••n•rd l6111 St, Ap! E, Htwi:iort B11cn, Grott, Mt• M. •nd Zul1h MENDOZA·ARAELOLA -Remon F.11 In A1,1th'J~andJ1mttHOf11 Alv1r11, 11, 11:10 Po1M1r. Apl, ll, Sllll• C 0 '• ""'' L lilll!I Ann E' 1'1 An.II l!ld lrm1 R1mon1, 20, .)211? rOWT tr, · · Camino ~u'IO, l!!l-...!.JU.n __ B_r!oos, cJ• •t Kt!Ult! • M rlt C'lo!111'1no. ---:ioye ICILMAN.COCHlllAN -Allin 1(11!1'1, 11, Rlver1, M.11r!.J and lil11!1olph P. 14MO J.c•Mtn, Mldw.11y City 1no JDhnscn, P1!rlcl.11 E. •nd G•ry L, (ynlnlt Ann., 11, 9062 Muilr.on °'"''~ Reial, J•me• Lortn .11no Oolort• Merli Wt1tm1"11er. Wiisen hl1 JNn •nd v11·a11 M•'• l!IAAOFIELO-MATTHEWS -pa u I Piil• C....,11, R <Ind J.ianll1 _J, D.nton, '3. lrsG P•l'Mllll .!!it., COiall Wllk;..scn, Linda R11tl'I .11nd Robert MtM Ind Oorl1 Vivian, ff, nu E. Htrold S.11nl.ll Cl1r1, Apl, F, S1nl1 An.11. H..-o !.<Ind•• Marti a nd J.11ck W•ll11c1 GRIMES·FEOAIC -R-111 Norman. )t, ' ,, SI. JOMoll Aw. LotWJ Bt.ll<h •no Atx. J11nkO .11nd Sl'IOlro Ml rl-K•Y if. n• .)Off! SI., RlclYrdlOl'I, Latr.11lna L. and Alch.l•d 'Hewi:iort BIK~, R.11lph GEHTAY·PAnElilSOH ,... OtvJd Brt.11n, BrldQH, Audrt'I' A. and Wlllltm R. If, U~6 Eld.llfl, Apf, 0, Coste Mt11, o.mko. Bobbit Lorr1lna Ind JOhn and P ...... y '•lrlcl1, 11, Ul S. Wiiiiam Wt1ICl'teSlet' Of'., Apl, S, Antllelm, W.11lwll Joa and S1,t1an 0 KNOST SECHI -J.11mtS Eow1ro, 2,, H •• ,·,,., Thartu Fnzabell'I •!Id 20t'il Ti.ttlfn Avt., COii.ii MtM Ind OCn" • ~ SuMn HMNnl, 22, ISO.. Wtsl Ctrrho1, Corwlll Lyle - An.11n.1m. Santoro, Nlchol.111 S. and Mll•ln1 A. APfil r, 1tn L.11ndtr1, Shlrl•Y Loulw 1nd C••'°'1 MORTON, JR.COi.PiTTS Scott Ctr! Hallfllan, It, 6'IOO Wt1I Warner, Apt, Burcltlai, Candi tnd TllOmll I !St, 1111nllngton Bea(n, •nd Lo•n• J El1in., lJ, 4600 Wtol W.11rnir, Apr. Jacki, O.nt1f1 Stanley a nd M.11ry 1na lff. Hunrlngron BNch. Hi;rWe, OUYI• Jeanne .11no Jt1se Ptul WILLIAMS.CLARK -Sllnle-y, 21, 191» Rusoell, Joyce E. Incl OOl'l1l!I k . M19llOIJ.11, Huolll'ICITon Bt.11dl 1 n !I 8le...(Nn, Lawrence Edw•rd and J11nlct ~c~~;' c:.~~!~e~!':-~-Club Ho~•• 11:1;:.:::Z,rr oonn1 Lyiin •nd • SliVtn st~'1°~~ir~~~lu1.~0::r ~~~'HJ~: ca~~;~.~~ B1wr1y •nd Jo11n llngtt;in 1••ch •nd M•rlh• Oart.lln, 1(1, Car-, Con•l•<>ee Ann tnd Brian EYa n1 Wl HO ltn!I Clrctj!. Apt, ll·F, Hun. ~• llng•on 81.11e:n. Ce LOflll, ROM E. Ind Elmer R. TATE·LUTGEH ,... G•rY Mlch•tl, 22r H.ise. JOHPll Alvllt end Meru.11rl!I l'OJl? S.11nt• An1 Awt., Sant• Ana 1na GIJrltl, James T . .llnd V1rglnl1 5, 01nlw M•rlt, 23, :>87 W111 8•Y Meo1Je1, Gloria Lind• .111\d Rtvmond • Strttl, Cotta Mesi. Ronald HOYT•SCHOE;~ -Ptllr Camlin, 2A, SlmPM!fl, Wllllim Edwlrd tnd J ull1 ll!~11lr~n LI:::.~'.'• ]~~i~",.:'~~~ J11n1 Cor9fla del Mar.. Oweon, FrN S. •nd Clllr1• L. SMITH·PRENGER -Mlcllatl S!tVtf'I, LY.In, Sh.Iron ArTent •nd BlllY Oon ]A, 1•n1 J•l!•rson 51 .• Mlawav City Perlin, Oon1ld and Lff •nd Rhond• J~. ?J, 15'1 E. ca11Una, Hanten, sr.nley P. and Olnan S1n!1 An.11. M•son, Elttnor L. Ind LIWd H, LEPkEll, Jlf,.ANORAE -E!IWlt!I R-t GI ·• "'" O S1m11e11 lt, :1115 E1lrtlla s1., sen FlDfes, ..... n nt ''"" car Cltmtn t 1nd V1lvPI Ann, le, 201 Lundy, Tltf'fi!ll<:t Micll.lltl I nd Jacklt telt~H•J:1~s~WA~1~EC,:·~~iir1 Ewlnq, a:a'i:., Lind• Marla and W.1111.,. 6,, 6700 E!llnt1t r AVt., Huntington Eitwlrd Beech •ncl M1rv '""'' .S,, 6700 Burktll, Mich.le! Eden and Sut1n Ann Eol1111er Av.11., HunllOC1lon Betch. Ch.lpmtn, Pa!t'lda and ClltlO!'d W, RACINE·BOYO -Tlmolhv WllU•mr 21. 1C11lln, K•tlllffn Esmt •nd Alb.II<! Jon :fJ~~. ~~,;!,B~•AF.~s~F°0.!;,;".1~ Glanz. Oet>o<-1h Lynn Ind Jim Wltl11m Valley. Morion JUllltti 1(1y 1"11 Bradley W.llOclt OAVIS·GAALANO -Flol'tl L• Roy, "· At1kelt. Artnur .no Phvllls M. lll1J LI Ptl Plue. Wtttmlnfltr IMI Rlhr11r, Joan C. and Rllclll• G. M1wl1, jJ, 1'352 BtKh Blv!I., SP.llCI Murphy, Rlcn.11rd E. Incl Joan K. IOI, Westmln11tr. Wlt.lf!Wn, Sherryl A, t!ld /tie.al H. GERAROS·PAANELL -Pat.II Jtmft, Wlllli ms, Elllll)flh B. and Bruce A. Jr. ''· 4Cl10 '•rk H-porl, H.wport Cl.11rk, Tom• D . .11"'1 Barton C. Bt•eh •nd Oolortt M•y• A1, 42JO 1 0 . , ~ ,...,, , Ptrt. NtWPOf't, Apt, 4l , Newi:iorl Jitnn fllll, flln .. tt .11,,.. IY B111eh, LtV'I', llontld 8. t nd Dolores II • F"EllGUSON·PORTER -Anclrlw Lwnn, D!.11mond, Jonn L. tnd Calhy L. ~I, 24151 Alli Vlst.11, Apl, 1, 0.11n1 Allhou .. , M.lrltyn J111n and llOt\.ll!I LH Polnl tnd flKkV Lynn, 19, 1dl1 E•· Brown, WilU•m I. and Ila M. ctls!or Or. La Mlrotd•. Alh.llrlon, H. Randell tnd Lllytn E. ANDllEWS·i<ELt.:EA -R1111er F"11nk, Toscano, Je-;11e A. ind Joann 36. '322 L•11•nl Or .• Hunllnolon Btach Emoootlt. ICelhlttn o. end Mlcheel A. .11nd Brinda G.11v, 2•, 9]22 Lt1l1nl Or., Huntington llNcn. Seo!!, Gerald W.11yn1 Ind Linda C1rol HERYF"ORO·BOLTON -Oov!l!as Peul, L.11wrenc•, Konr•O Ind Karltl L. 21, t56S Sl.111tr Ave .. Apt, 11, Founl1!n L1zarc1yk, Kalllrvn L<111IVnd Tlloma1 V.111itw .llnd NlnCJ Lynn, 2•. 954) E!lwtr!I Sitler Av.11 •• Ap r. 2 , F"<iun1tln VaU1y, Trimble, Terrl!nct Aten t nd ll:11rn Ann ISHERWOOD·THR.liSHEA -Rober! · t o Wt ICtndtll, 36..1 Xll7l p11.o El Mirmcl, Garoner, Vorg nl.11 Lte .11n loYr Sin Juen <.l p11lr1no •nd Devon Lor-Clarence Jr. r1lnt, ~. U502 MollltY OrNe, L• OlfY•r. Shlrlon l(ay •no W11111 Mlradl. M•rsa!I l(AAELIUS·MEYER -Mlcll1el llobtrt, Z111er, Joseph G. 1nd Ruby A. 25. 321 71h St., Ao!. E, Huntington Btllve1u, Gl$elle Gl9I and Joel Peter B11ch and Mar't. Mellsu, 22, 2'1 W, 8runntr, 1(1th1IMn .11nd Edwar!I J1me1 c~~~.~~b~b'ARcg'• _M•J~n Lewi., Lawrenc•, Mary $heron ana Jame1 25, 1092 E, M.11ln, Apl. 19 T11illn end GKl<Ut J.11cQue1vn M.111, 25, 151 E1s1 2hl SI., Gwin. Cacil• Marie Incl Leroy Earl API. 21, Cost• M.lls•. Horvlt\, Pe•ricl• s . .1111<1 Sttph.n E. CALLAWAY-Os::rb 1'_ J1mts Ott, McGrevor. Ja""" A. Ind Gertruclt 29, lOi.61 El Ei1t , Fountain V111ey Crt.llOh, Wllllem A. Ind Judllfl M. 11111 Jo1nnt G1!1, It, 1294 Conw•Y Shell'>er, Ronald O. end Aowm1ry A~t., Ccsl1 Mesa. Hlnlon, Linde Mat .llnd J&mt'I Bern1rd BATTEN·llARRICIC Trevis ~ Abf'llng, Ruby E. ana How1ro A. W.11yne, n. nt Wt11 Mllrlpgsa, Sin Gilel\!!t, Grady A. and Ha<>ey A, C!1mente •nd 51111n Ellraberh, 19, Bec11.e..., cnris11111 Joann .11na O•wld 26186 Btll•ll Cln;t.11, Min ion V!e10, Edwin FAVOUR·AGUlllAE -John Alben 7l, K-..,11, Thom.111 Hirt' an!I Either 112 Broaaway, C01!.11 Mn• •nO Hine~ ~-~ Lwnn, lt, IJll Trumbull, Hunlinglon ll1n1 Bt•cn. Hulllllns. List Ind Richard P ELLETIEl:·WEL(.S -SllPfl.en l 011l1, Miiie<, E1lher M. Ind S!tnlty O. 26, SU M.11rltotd Awn111, Coront d•I Adams, SNron Jo ana Donald Joel Mi r •nd Cvnlhll E•tlyn, lS, 5ll6 Nacl!«e, l(llhleen H. Ind Jol'ln B. M1rloold AV<!llUI. Corona d!!I M.llr · Mllltr, Melinda Let tnd •Elrl ll~ EASOH·F"INHl!Y -ltobtrt w111..-, 2'. Johno!Oll, Palrlcla /\.. and M.11rc L. 31111 M.llotlrl. Cotll Mtt1 llnd ~nn R • W'llt J M t J El11hW, ,1, llot M.Otlrl. CMl.11 MKI. omo'l y, 1 am · Ind Ir fnl • KAWAUCHl·OELIA CRUZ -Roy Ch•prnan, M•ry A. Ind Jet'ry T. Hiroshi, :n, 10200 Boha Av•:1 !pac.11 KlmbeU, Btf'lf•mln F. Ind Marina C. :II, Wt1tmln1ttt and Oor'11n ~1ehly0, T1yl0<, Georoe Alva an!I B1ri..r1 Jane n. 10200 l!lolsa Avt., S111ce :II, ~Lean, M.llry L. •nd Rooert J . Wintmln1fet'. Howden, 1(1rln Mar!• 1no Gregory COUSSENS·SUTLER -Tlm(lthy Cl;lb~ Jo11pll, zo, 1'62 All1n!k, /.pl, 1!, Hyntlnof1111 BtKh •nd Mar!.11 Anne, 19, n•11 Woreh.lltltr Lent . Hun. tlnolon Betc.h. OUH"1tGAN·KIHOIG -P1ter Martin, 26, JG1 Rlch1rd11111 W•Y· Miil Vallev Ind Carol J•t n, 21, 2197 Am1rlc1n Ave. Apr, B COlll M-.., FA8Rlc tc-WA~D -J1mts Nel$00, 26, l7SIJ V1c1s Clrct1, F<111nl1ln V1lltv and S.11r1 Ell1tbtth. l 7JlJ VKl 1 Cir-t!I FOVl'tllln VllllV. PAR~ONS.l(tMBER -wn111m Pa\11, :io. n1 S. Otmlnp St., Stnll Ana and Wtndyl 19, 15952 Queen Circle, W111m t1t1er. GEAACt-CAECIAT -Rober! Jot, 16, "671 Warner A~1 .. Hunll"!lon B11c11 .11nd Lorrlt Mey, 2', 792.S lark, Hun· Unglon Beach. STEINER·SCHUHMANN Steoh<!n Jahn, It. ::om Cordovi. O•n• Polnl 11111 M•rv 'ti""' 70, m Avenkl• Va· 0~1H1•:1:t6S~v.WAA~~R -Wll!l•ms Kenl, II, lJJJl Jelltr'°" SI,. G1rden Grov.11 •nil Tl1 Coll119n, l5, '611 Jtf. ftrs<in $1,, G1rd1t1 Grove. l!IERKEY, Jr.·LEONARDO -'1111 cUnlOn, n, Jll 35111 sr .• New1111r1 l!le.11ch •nd Jo Ann, 2A, 3ll 35111 St,, Newoort Be1cll. P URCELL-WOODMAN -A1ron C.-V1, XI, 32• 161h ~!.,Apt. B, Hun-llnQlon BH<h •1111 W1nd1 L119, l-4, 1"42 Klllwlci<, H""Unglon •Hell. MI L(.EA.CAVEHOER -H• rold J1mt1, "· U4S Su11.11rlor St., Newport B•Kh •1111 G1m1t M•rle, ... 1'•1 WIS! B.11~er. Cot!• Mtl•. 0 ' AA RESO-TOOY -Vl1tenl Josellh, 2'l. 112s P••k St .. Hvnt1119ran Beach tn!I Ret11cc1 Fr.11nee5, :n. lotSl 01nbtrrv Orlw, G1r!l•t1 Groue. ANOERSOH·MCMAHON -JDt eate, :11, 26762 VII Lln1re1, Mission lelj· •nd Lvnn, 1,, '21956 Yel1<1w1ront , E oJO::N-MUOlli -Dontld Howard. 21, JJ9SO Coo111r l.1nllll!'n, O•n• Point and M.llt!ltt J11n. It, JJ950 COCIP.llr Lant1rn. Dan• Polnl. WA IGl-IT·WEBER L1 wrenc1 Edward. :II), 27' 8rOldw1y, L•9un1 Beach •nd B•rl>llra M1v, 45, 277·A, llro•dw•Y· L•oun• Bttch. COOKS·BANlr:S -J1me~ Carson, 16. 102 Sin Antonio. Sen Cltmtnl1 and M1ro•rel Lut , 2•, 119 Vlctorl.11, San Na~t(s~~~i:iUEIAA -J1m11s Wtl11, 25. 131 wnt Por111, Alli, c , S.11n i:11m1ntn 11111 Jinn. ,,, Ull ANICIPI, L111un1 B11eh. M.o.rrl•ot l1cen1M -·• 1111/ed lo 11141 foll0Wlnt1 11 ol MIV 17: [)(''l~OH·VO(\<'L~A"1r. -Jnmei .... n. 2l661 Broolihur1t, Hvnllno!on Beach •n" P••#lrl• I . 21, Ctr•!!,..., VOIGHT·FLEMING -P1ul C., 22, 1...,,... 11•~'" r"" l..,.,,.1.,. R , 19, ]911 W!sttr!.11 SI .• SHI Buch. H{ll..MES·P ... R• -llr1'1f"""· 71, ~nd Sh1rot1 o .. XI. bOlh of 70S1 Macldo• l/rlTER(.OCUTOllY OllCltEES S11!tlYan. Rlcnard JDhn and j1.11nn11tt I. Youngo1oom, Rlcnaro J. and lilo1emarw MenGot.i, Linda Ga¥1e .11nd Salvador Penfold, Gregory T. and Nancy Suatan Tynan, Tttrw Colleen •nd J1m11 Mlcn.1111 Stttlon, N.lll'ICY Wlnfltld Ind Ptftr JOI• fries Stirn. M1rilvn Anti and J&ck lrvlno Woods, Jane 1n!I kennt!h Pifer Burge, Oennv B. Ind N1dl1 Alron, Tony• Lynn etc, Ind ltaymollll w1wna B1r111r, Rh1!11 June .11nd V!r11ll Robllrl 1Cr1n1, 1Ctnn1 Su •nd IC1t1n1lh Lff S.11ndtr1, lr:enntlh E•rl .llnd M1•v Ann Van NCI~ Mlltl.11 v. and Vinctnf M, ~~~v~ha~:lt.'!·.•;:/~a~: ~: MlklQ5, WIHl11m P•ul •nd C1rot LH Hltt!ew•. Aavmot1d M. an!I Oorolhy J . llrPOb, Marv Allee and Willl.11m RotH'rl T11ttJeY. Lindi C1th1rlfit tnd M;chltl CHllOll Pl!'droz.11, Luis P. and Gtnov1w11 Grav11, Glenn Edwlt1 ano Ll'I Ovan,,,. W!M<"o, 11:-r Ca rol •nd Vic1ori1 Je.11n OYing!Dtl, Olp/\111 etc. •nd Aoymond Pl.11tkt. Regln• •nd Edw•rO F. Reed, M1rw Helen and George A, Ktel, Patricia Ann Ind Cn1rf11 Htnfy N.11v11lsky, A(I-J. llnd t>onlld B. So.adv, Bertv :ro·111t11 Rct1~n A, Miiier. M. Llnd8 .11n!I Robrrt Cl'ltlr Amos, B•rl>llr• Jean '""' Mlchtel Otrl· s~i:h, Sluar! LH In<! Lvnntlla L11clll11 Revnoldl, P8ul and Nin11 Olson, Annelise 1n<1 Lorimer v. Schlll, Tnom1s E~1r111 tnd 8 r1Ql llt V1r11 Fosler, Tlm<illly Jol'ln 1nd Ellen Ellzabelh Krooh, carol Av!lrev and Rolltd John Wiiton, NOrm.t Off •nd Sam W. Shett5, Le-111-A. and "0.11\1\d L•w•enct Johns.on, Melvin E. an!I Lyellla L. 01"9rl, Ann S. and ICrnnelh E". Otl(lr1o, Mlclllll J O$eph •lld Sus•n O•annt Simi, Oonn• L. and Rkhard P. Or111Co, Emlll1 Ftrn1nd1 •n<I Rlch1r!I Mu111lman, S1ndra L. and Henry L. Hf,ld1on, Elf1 and Wllll.11m Leon G•rtYI Virglni.11 C. and Jont1 S. Mins! .id, Miry L. a!ld J1me1 C. Miles. P1!rlcl1 E. and ll-•• B. Klrllland, Eaward ).. Jr. •n!I Fr•nclne w~iicw-. R11tll E. Ind Mel E. T.11yllM', K1Thlftfl G. •nd 0 .11le J, Woltord. Jent! f . •1111 llon.1110 E.igtrie Ht!l1rn. BtrD.'lr1 J. and Gtrald P, N•sh, PtflnV Sut and T"'9mas Lee Hav1thl!lll, Jo~• T a~1to •nd ll-•t Sle~ens, Waller Carlos lfHI Sl'l1l1rn I(. Trout, Helens. •nd Pa111 o . S1tw1Y, H.11rltn w. an!I Sandri E. McC1bt. Cyn1nr1 S. •nd Bernard J. f)rh,•. M"n'I""""" 811C" 9 C~llllllTI, LI/IOI J, ~ O.nlfl f , ,_ AOn'lll'o, RKhtl L-l .11na Vtlltll...,. "~~r:· ,,1r1c1.11 e. •nd Gt<irt1• WANT Mt11Qr, Noni• LYmtn •ncl 81tt11r1 Ann TO (.~t1b.,J-,°',: ~~:"t,,5i:MT!~yo1 ~ '1 I~ f JI~) , Alr1111..R11C1 •J:)dD.11[\lflt'IJ.!!!f I'-------~ ,e 1' -~·•--·ie -· fvrW. · l 1r1. 01rv!t a .11iHl(Mrlln-: , CLEAN ~-,, '" s• ow -S..OOtlh, 01rl-V. 1nd Chttl•' It. ~ Zlf!l!tr, M•rv Jtnt •PHI Tl>Omts :;;;;;;;;;;;;;: TffftWtll Jt~t1n, Jor0.11~ 1no C1rol L. I•••••••••••• ! Boll, J111'1.11t Jjttllh •na J11n "" I G I J.11<oue, <.hffyL L. •nd Olflnl• H. UP enera E. --M.11n1nt1L B•• 110 1nd c .111111rlne A, G I :;;;;;;,:;;:=~--~~v;;•;•;•;~r~•i~i::~~~~:iJ •;'c"c"c'c'o:..----..'f".--s~WSl\lrvl :nn •nd Rlch1rd M•rll~--.!L~.1:=::::;,;;;; -VACANU ,,,.,, J~st~J~~11~ IT'S-FREE! DRE --.,...~--i PArk.,., Hubetl L. ~nd Joy(t M. READY G., ...... Llov!I LYll •nd Marolt M•r1• OH All or lhc lender lovlN{ ('81'{' L~o•I, Thomal Gtorga .11n!I YOl\9 \ , t ~ '¥'•net. that has bct'n gl''l'n to th :<t O"iwr an.~iows: J~~'< l'cor.o.t .. ~ L•n•, oon~;J,:t"i:li~'ii'lliC..•1<rie!'Ofl llloy honw Is h-ee. \'ou hrl\'l' lo COME 3 h<'1rni & f1unily rn1 ho1ne R11111.11, w11u1m 0 1v1a 1nd Mtry L P<',Y for lh~ rt>st. lt's \\'t'll on ~hug._. ('Orner lot. rnon1 tor ~~~~Y~~~~t~i ~ v,~ fYrut M. YOUR priced at $33,500 for tht' 4 boat or lrttllCI', )\llll:'.·!llZe Na.. M1rllYn G. 1ri0 Mootr A. good Jllze bl:dmon1s\ (nJI i'O\'t'rf'fl patio & private R.•mlr11, l(rl1tl.n1lr:1t1nd Ciro shag carnoll"d) s~s TRUE nJ n .. I k · lJJw ·''l Eo111111on, WIUl1m Horman •nd Laur• ,.... yu . "I'" (.' J:OSS. u.i • , EAH kitchen \\i lh tren1endous $27 250 fl t:;:; Salldr.11 v. 1nd J.11mt1 V•n Cl boon! nd t ' He-;,.., Pa.ii A . .11n<1 Gtn.v• M. cup spa('(! n 00 s.11ntri, k•Y Ann 1nd Jot W'ayn. muc h nlOre to nlCn1'on. .,.AN'T,\~tc '"-"roo"i hoine HORSES, HORSES knullol\, N1ncy L. andr,:•M A. \' •tt •-I ,., Cati r "'' ., ..,._.._, •· .,.,,.,, <•" w. '11 '"lit ou '"'''e o SL'C • I It f • " t UT? .,. -<O o -on y 1 n1 " ron1 ocean. Holt, l(.11rtn Ltt 1nd allllolllh Ch.I r •s o 0 nD\\', 7 I . ·" I • , .·•tl•"'"'t <UI I his •,", acre W•lolll, Glorl1 Ott .11nd Alber! Eldon 2,2()() SI.I• ft. Of recu l'IUUll '" ~ Fincus, B.11roar.11 D. •nd Joon A. C-';lo•·t•in -livi1,.... Forrnill ran<"h \rllh !urge l'UStotn 0~.....,port. 0.00<111 L. and 1tlcn1rd E. "' oe I l LUS ll•w.11nt, Fr1t1klln o. •na Lind• l;llttn dining, largl' fHJnily J\)OIU, hon1c, fcllL't'<I ('OM1l ~ ' ~:11:;~, 5~,fci ~'."' .!i'W:!,T :.&;, 3 bath!>, garden kitchl'n. a J 1Jt•clroon1, l"Clll lal at. $200./ H•rmonl k1ren o. 1nd JM;m R. Ornn1111i1• vaul!NI crilini::;s n111. Custon1 honic ts Vlt.· Glmol, oh!> G. Ind CKllt · I \V'tt Tuk1r, 11.1cilard L. •nd enl iu·c{'lll the spac.ious.ness In ca11t. quh•k po!IS('SI! on. t WlllClf'!,. Junt1t1 Ann en0 alPil Albert h ' > t t ho Proto I t N B d pt•" Jont1,.~1t1>111n Ht rltn tnd .iwy f<<;in t IS :.. eve 111c. S· t•Xc l!\ngr or , . u .... x, Schlnsk~; M1rc11 Ann •nd Wit! •m C. FOR sionall.v · 11u1dscapcd v.1th n · $65 000 BllOUllll, Annt M. •nd D.11vld J, . U MOTEL I ' ' B~i lt~. Sl11erl Wll.der Ind M1rlon a NIT hui;c side YVfd. Sroeit t<X ay. w~~~ Herbtrl M. alld Cltm1t1tlne \\'ith 40 X ]~ QOOl + 15 X 12 $46,750. Blanche hot \\'atrr Jacuzzi pool. 4 J.,!:°•r~l~d•L~~~·n~,~;~ i~ lilo1t ·fAST! units 1v/kilchens, Prop. in c~~1S:r. Gl1br.t Joh" 11111 J10.1 J..,.,..11 good t'Qncl.; located in Fretman, Mery Su1 and Akh•rd J. Dest~rt 'tlot Springs .. Jmn1cd. W.11lte, 01vld Ev.11ns tnd Gall Merit ........,.,,.,_ 5,-J,OOO. P11rson, B1rblra R, an!I C••I W. FASTI ~~ ·~ Weoti, P.11trlcl1 A. -..J1rry W. -0 CaJt· 673 366.1 ,....,_~,,.M>~E<~• B11rnt1, Larry C• W1yn1 .11nd Lonnie · • '"°'.......,._, · ci:-'11~~~ Sh1rot1 Elltabtlh •nd Jaromt Wisley 2=."'-?v11:ia Gall •!Id Wlnl1m ACTION! I( ":'1111~r 1111.11 Ind Vlrgll 1<:rmr..r11nu. Norma L. 11111 Cllarlt• H. G1rr·11t1,' J1rnt1 H1rve,.-Ind Mary_ LOii Tlnol1, P1trlcl1 E . .11nd K.11nnelh E. llllOCl_,.lh, Jo Ann Ind Lor1t11 Bark.,, Wm E. I nd Anna G. Dolin. M•ra••ll cor1.,n •nd R0111ld Ouant Sowtll, lo J . and Rlch•rd C. Kerr, Jonn How1rd .11nd Jt1nt1.11 Cr11sor MAln, Je>hn Robert 1/ld Anlt1 L WlllOl'I, H1rold 0. tnd Gl1dy~ I. Mtnchac1, A1!1tl 1nd Marla G. K1rr ThOr A, tnd Miry Lou Bowlfn Shirley M. and BOtlbv 8. G11~11(, EIK!ll M. and Vlrgll 2\Uffl Scl'llr.11r. Nor.11 0 . and BrlJCt It. WvU•, Rock.._, E. Ind J•me1 O. C:u•Kk. John Btrn1ro Ind IC1ren Ann Sntartf', Johl'I Ban 1nd Lind• Annt White, 1!'.lhtl F. Ind N~SOl'I E. G1rda1, Ellr•btlh M. end Kell" E!lwtn QYAn, Sendra Lff 1nd FrPO Blngm1n II Wclcl-. Jullt 1na Grevorv S. Cl~usen, Sft••on Vlvl.11n and Joi.n s.~::.ms011~rv E. 8nd Con1ld N. • Pe•kln1, Robert Otan Jr, and Ol1nnt Fl~i:":i.eWllll•m OtYld and 8t~!lh Ann F.,lntr. Wl!ll1rn H. Jr, en Evelvn II:. M~rrty. John W. Il l 1nd Sl~ll8nlt L. C••!s.on, WllUam Ronal!I 'end 01bor1h T•~:r.:'1t1. B•rbtr• end A lch~rd G.1111141!, Thtma A. 1"11 Otvld H. 81•~. Oonn• M. an<! Raber! I<. ~cnltdow. M11rl~• Row •nd Cate J . Jone1. 1iloblr11 Florene• end Jerry Alan c~"'n"'ll, J>Jdlrh Frl!Ktl 1nd Arbra K~~r.'n. Corot~" Nadine ind E!lw1r!I F;.!~:~:, Juli~ A •nd r"elt~~ f'. Mr·~~n. e ... 11ln1 Ell11tltlll 81111 J<i.e!'ll ..... , Flom, lll ONOld end Elllnt Ptlrlcla WIPW"· J.11rnH W, 1nd Ptlrlclt Colin. PrlscHI• and M!ch•e• ~. Mc(1rty. G•IVIOl'I M. Ind P~Vll1$ P. Ftrn1f\dt1, Vlrglnlt L. and Ravmond S O~YI•. Be!!v J. II/Id Jame• "'· L-1•, G!!'Ol'O! IA, Jr. and M1rv LOU Fir!!!, Kalnryn A. Ind J1me• L. L'Holr, Anne A. Ind F"ri!'d W. <•"'"' R.11yrl"Ond H. Jr. and Marv Jean J1cobt, Harold L. In<! Vt>nGa L. Gon1alr1. John A.. Ind F1ortf'lct A, 2'11ko. Oebra F 8nd Me•tln G, ICOl>I, Shlrll!Y M .. and G.orot K. Wolfor!I, Patricia Ann •1111 Tl>omas Edward E•arhos, L8u••* A. and Jamt • G. FrlH, L11l1nl LHI Ind Htns Htinl Prowell, Bonnie J. and Jonn M. Gt!lllt!'. M.llrllyn J~ce and £voene Wiiiiam Levin, l awr1nc1 Karol 8"11 BM!y JDin Jackson, M••Y Lou and Clludt B. H•nan, Jamn l81and 1nd lr:lm Al!lOl'I John•Ofl, Ooni11d F. and Marsha J . Caw!llon, Sll1ron Surannt •nd Gorden CH , l'lelHngtt, P•lrlcl• A. and Erwin It, Lewlt, 1. Lnl!e c. •nd Elltt1 J. Edelman, t.1ur1 5. an<! H8r,.., Oa•f!, M.11rsll.11 M. 1nd kiri L. CALL DAILY PILOT CLASS· IFIED ·DEPT. D I A L Roon, Colly M. and Wllll1m o. D Clend<!nln<;J, C.11rol Ann and Roland Br1JCe NelllOfl, Jt.11ntllt A: tn!I J1mts A. Grlstty, !lrtnd1 and J•mt• Ale••ndtr Foley, Hiney Caroll •nd Fred ROIS Tobin, B1rblr1 Ann and lloOlr Ltllfl I But!rum, Lerov 1nd Kay Htt5. 01v!d Allen tnd K1tfllt1n Vo!oye Sm1U.._,, J.11mtS Jun!or • n d Err111llr11 Ber1n.11 Browne, Robert Clillord •1111 J1nn1 L119 Btllard, Terna I. .llnd St..,.n M, Oulf, Aon1ll" w . .11n0 llarbtr• E. associated BROKERS-ll:EALTORS l 025 W Bolb<ia 67J-J66) WATERFRONT DUPLEX-$ 170,000 Includes ll\u boat docks and adjacent \'H<"ant lot for ad· dilional building or for just plain pri\'&e)'. Just listed. c w~ll<lR & Lll Re11!tors 646-7711 . ~'043 \\'estcliff Drive Opc-n Iii 9 Pl\11 SUPERB VIEW COMMERllAL LOT ON COAST HWY. NEWPORT BEACH Sell or Trade $17,500 George Williamson Realtor S48-6570 MESA VERDE DELIGHT S\parklin~ t'lean adult O<."· curied 3 heir., 2 b;1th ho1n e ,,·Jth fan1ily 1111. choice t•or· ner lot '''ith boat gate and \11ork shop in rear. This one. is ready to sell at $39.!rJO. Call Red Car!X't. Realtors 546-8640 \oJl(>n evenings/ "MR. FIX-IT" 0 \\'nl'r \1·ill tinance this rustic 2 BR· Fixer!! Perteet rental or first home. H uge R -2 lot. Add units Inter! Asking $17 ,500. Submit your do'''"! Try a trust deed! Call 645-8400. TWO FOR ONE Ktllzer. Vlvl•n M.11rlt .llncl Ne!I ROll.lld R Go1011ech, Jottfl!) Ju1tan •nd V11mi M. Tuo houses lor the price of B~~10n S1ndr.11 Ol•n• •nd Rilph Ont>. Unllclievable t'Ustom 2 Gar11, Cr.1110 Wood 1n11 Conn• Jean -E-bdr., home \\'ith cute one so11n•,J.~11.!tllttn..a.nd . .Q.•J11'I Lw: -bdr:;-cottB-in-•ttfl Prime-Rt1scn. Lynaa L. 11nd Mtrll v :· ·• .,~ • Arbuc~le. C.11r11erln1 .111111 Fr•nels o , Eastsicll' location, are you s1ou1, Anne Finnerty •nd J.11r1111 D. ready for this -only $40,000. :=~~~~r1e:r.z.!i~1;,:~" (~ene c Call fu'd Ca~t. Realtors Brll.11y, Ptntl-A. end Mlcllael s... Right No\V! $;1G-8640 Copen cn1crw1c~. Lindi •PHI s1~.., • i 1 Ltwl1, Htttn Kave •nd A1ymond John 1_r_v_'-"-"~'"'-...,-------Renne.11~an, Linda Marie •nd Ron1k1 "' s1ra11on, P1ullne •nd .II.cry 0111'1 T l(u~n, R•n<IY P. •nd Olona Mar!• H111Sion, Harold I. 1nd Eve M. LfndtnD.'lum, Michael •~d lr:1t!lt11n- Bu•Ton. Ernest II. 1nd Ott>ra G. (hlt l, Ollnt H . .llnd A!frtOo V. Koorn, J.11n •nd Ne!KY P1uletle McCllln, Oorls Ind 011rwood E. Moral11, Bearrlct I(, 11111 WllUam Stndtrt. 11ow1r!I P. •no Shlgeyo s. IAcLendon, C1rol J.11n.11 •nd St"Ptlln lllobllrt ' l ....al Po111r, Lindi G. Ind Brian C. Colt. Btverly J, •nd AOOllrl E. Ltvl, l(ar.n 11/ld VlrgU Rlch.lrd M.111l1rt. W1lt1r Gtr•l!I .11/ld Fra<>eln - -Allcla M.ont9D1T1ery, Shlrl.lly Mly ind O«llkl Henry, Gtort11 N. and M••l•ne M. Hns, 111 11• I nd Oon•kl E. R11w.11lc1bl, Btv1rly A. an!I Andrei Miguel Sltpttlon. W.111n• w. ltld L<ll'Tllnt A. READY TO INVEST? V•le have new and used apartments. Three builders keep us with inventories on an exclusive basis. Call 546-8640 for an appointment now. These prop e rti es usu.ally sell long before completion. r~uu cooperalion 10 other brokers, Red Carl)('!, Rea11ors ~ (open evenings) *IRVINE* COATS " WALLACE . -~ REAL TORS 962-4454 SIMPLY BEAUTIFUL "SPANISH" 3 IX'clroom Spanish beoauty \\'lth irnported Italian tile noors, JalfRL'ous kitchen and fan1ily room, formal dining llt1'a, beauliful t r op i ca I alriun1, \\·et bar plus much 1nuch n1orc. SqU<'aky cl<'an to boot. This is 'a "ni ust M.'<'". Priced at only $46.:AJO . Call NO\\I 842-~. oPf./<J TIL 0 . IT'S Fl,JN ro BE NICE' ~ HOME lo BUSINESS 4 Bedroon1, 2 baths, double garage. $30.000, -Best of terms. ~,LARGE FAMILY? 5 Bedroon1, 2 baths. Close to Mopplni;:t $32,500. NEED SECURITY? 3 Bl'd.room home fully car· pt.'1Nt, l'f'(·c ntly painted. L<1rge t'nC'losed i;unporf'h, f Pnl·ed front & back yard, l'OOm ror bo,i.t. Quiel Stl'l'1'1. S27.500. - Roy Mccardle Realtor J:llO NC\vport Blvd., C,~1. 548-7729 On The Water ... you 0'>''11 the land ~ Live In a nice 3 bcdroon1 hornl' "'/pil.'r & slip . near harbor t'nlrant.'t". Enjoy large safldy beach . add-on la ier if you desire. Available imn1cd. SITh,lb:l. 642·4353. PETE BARRETT -REALTOR- 642-5200 ONE-Of.A·KIND EAS'TSIDE 3 bedroom & din· ing room, Blg rural stylf' kitl·hen 18' x 20', big )'8rd "·ith dog run & botit door off allf'y, 1.werf'd paho. $32,950. Xlnt. financiniz:. e CALL ANYTIME e 646-3921 or Evo. 646 4Sl3 -- Lachenmyer Realtor *6-UNIT~* 9=r21 OCEAN VIEW 3 + Guest $25, 950 ·1~nva1e C'h1·ular slrl'Ct of fine hon1rs. PaiJ1t und Sa\'(> t h o u s a n d s . S\\'('(>plng grounds "i rh room rnr hoat. 3 bedrooms includi ng hirlc·a·\\·ay nuu;ter suite, St~plu-.itl' gurst farility, prn "'llh sliding gla,ss door to Z5' <'lllcrlainers patio. Breath· liikint: v ie'''" of canyon And hluc Pacific. llURRY! Call 645-0.103. IORl\I I. Ol\O\ ,<.• l "! I r ('A' BUILD YOUR OWN NEWPORT HEIGHTS IMMACULATE BAYCREST $6B,900 Oric of the nicest. cleanest 4 bedroom homes you "''iii Sff. Dining room and 3 baths. You own the land. F or further information or In see call 646-7171. OPEN TIL 8 • rT'S' FUN 10 BE HICE/ L' sJ two ·Mplox" on 1 lot. Alt STOP LOOKING 2 Bit, units w/mod. bUin NOW 0 I 1 0 1 0 kitchcns. Income $920/mo. Room fo r 2 or possibly 3 Let a professional serve )'OU. more unirs. Out-of·lown· Our service Is free to you, owner TK!t'ds immed. sa.Je. simply tell us v.•hat you are $92,500. Call S 4 S · 8 4 2 4 , looking for Rnd v.·e KO to SoothCo Realtors. v.·ork. Wo p1un1\se to give * lS UNITS * you no hieh pressure sales techniques. Call A pro-0n(' & h\-o BR. units. Court· lcssional _ !).16-8640 Red yanl. entry. Carports for Carpet, Realtors top e ri each apt. Near shopping. evenings) No vacancies! $175,000. e RANCH STYLE e --GE"Mo---3 BR, living room w /firepl to 1610 \Y. CoMt H""'Y" N.B. a bean1ed cathedral celling, LPt'LAIR ·BEl:NOES -S8ul M., 'l1. ll"'~~~-~========~==:--=~=-===:::-:1 -r.-n Open-Mee.ti ... n~-g----.·l~~~~.~~·1;·~· .. ~·f~~?¥E1~~:~,h~~i~~~, :,,urv, P'T.C'K 1 V It •:r~ ... ~~·;~~·~~.;.•r-::.o;-,,~; .i, .1:.1 .l' . OF Punch 6 4 2 Fantastic UNIVERSITY PARK Jocatton. ChanceJ\or I lome • Poe_ular 2 bedroom plus den, or-3---oe<I: • room model. BeauUlully da'Orated, 2 fireptnces, wet har, !lcparatc laundry and atrium of( master bednn. Be quick on this one • $45.500. CALL 545-8424, SouthCo Realtors. REAL TORS &124623 formal ctinlng room, quiet, -sPECULATOR'S-tt"""'-l~":e-"'~~1--Near 'UC/Inline. $36,900. DREAM CALL 00-1221. Raoch •tyl• 2 BR oo prtm• ~~ All four Orange Cou nty i!lsemblymen voted to place in the ballot a state con· stltulional atncndmcnt re- ~uirlng legi slali\•c"""t:omr.nlttr-c 11eclings lo be open to Jhe public. Among the 69 ye! \'ntes passing the measure to the ;: CAPITOL ) Senate for approval y,·erc AS$Cmblymen Robert i': . Badhom (R-Ncwport Bench), John V. Drigg.s (R-Fullcrton), ltobert Burke (R-lfuntington Beach ' and Kenneth Cory ([).. Garden Gto\'C). The bill past- 1-----cd 89 to I._ ,. TN OTllER Assembly llCtlon I slweclc,o ssc m bly men lli~dham. Briggs t'nd Burke supported a $9.4 billion atale hudgct for 1~73-74 and Cory was absent from I he U1Wnlmous. i2..0 ''Ole. Jn the Senate three bills "'ere approved and sent to the Assembly. The measurcrs and votes of Orange County's state senators were : SB. 25 -Allov.·s community to '!ibmil sample b a I I o t qualifications statements In both English and Spanish. Passed 21-14. Yes, Sen . Denni s E. Car p enter (R-Ncwport BPach). f\1o, Sen. James E. Y/hctmore (R·La FfabraJ. , SB 195 ;_Reapportions state Senat<' dislricts elimlnatJng the "at held by retiring Sen . Alan Short (0.Stockton) and creating a n e w dJstrict, populated w i t h hiexican- American.s, in Southern C11!1· fornia . Passed 25-13. Yes, Gar- PQnter and_.\_Yhetmorc. ·SD 15 -allows community colleges to l<'vy up to $10 per studr-nt per year to pro- vide health care on tw0<year college campui;cs. Passed ~I to 4, Yes, Whetmore. No, Car· penler. ' a.: .. · •• , .... ,.,,,, .. "'"""""'"" ...... ,~. ~-vto CollYl'llt>11'1,. l~ II.Iii .5'f"ldk•-w•rs1:HHUTTEP -8~1CEA -Ct,.fq w., .... I -.,., 1.°"• 11 ... ,~ •"'" Judi"• "'· .,, L dba'-PUNCH 1n•1 Q11lnl1n• L•n.11, Hun1Jno1an -A!·1--"_.. L~~:.;fl,,.MEli~ -l),.n1 .. 1 ~" ,,, 7701 .,...,..,, •• A"" .,,..,,1 ..... •.,n Beien and 1 .1 .... r "(I '"' ,. .. ,.Int. MCANOREW·ftOMERO -SlfPhtn J .. •• ,..,..i ""'°""'"""" M,. '~· hn!h ol ''"' W••"'• '""' , H•'""""'-" l'l•er" O"~'°'"W'LL•11M~ -<\-l!-,-.-'4• """ ~~··-•• • •< ...,11'1 ol 211 IJll'I SI .. .,,, .. ttnn!"" ,.,.,.,.., SP"'= .. "' ,.. ... P~f'\Y -M••I• It . '' ..,,7 <•ol ll••rh 1111...t , ~"II 8"1>th I nd .~.;.... .. ,, ............ . 71:~'T """'"·•<"\81<no,r -r;,_, 11. .. ,c, t • .-.......... • .. ~ ........ ,. • 'O. 1'7SJ Vl1 ~"!/!do", MIHfan Vlt!O. Dissolution Of Marriage Mtlnlrvdt, CtrolY!'I Gtr'lrudt tncl O•vld El•rl • Mlcfl.111/d, '•"Y Ann tnd !aftt'd Antonio Gokltn JifM• Henry tfld M.11urlffl Ann 1(11 ... , bOi(lf' .. Ind' lwtl\ J. - W1klen MtOldY A. 11fld O•nltl D. Sn.tion'. 01n1,1 llrvct tlld M•rl11 LUlll l!l••rd AIYln Owayllt .lll'ICI (.oh Mtt MtCll~llc, VlrtlMi ,r, t tld' Tl!Omtt 5, P.11c1111r, Nol• and Htrrv A. Wall1, ROii., 11111 J11n1 Tl!lorp, Donn11 C. tl'ld Ron1td It. V•UQhl, Ju1nn1 •nd Oan•ld It. Cll•tldltr, Eltitl lllote end ltonttd le• Flll-1<111r. Dbttlll R111 ™ Tllomll Mft~tl Nt~I, S11ndra L. 11111 lllOWI A, G•~lty, Artll11r J , Incl ,l!rldt A. llle~noldt, JDin 9 . and LttUt C. Phtlpt, Heney I .11t1d Jamts S. M;v~1~. Gtor9t ll:Ollell .11no L1urJ1 1 I ------ [ -CUSTOM EASTSIDE BEAUTY lk':autltul twt:i story custom bullders: home located 1n E3st Costa Me111. tmagirll' 4 bdr., _3 baths huge raised hearth fJreplace, built In gas )larbecue, h1rge comer lot with boat yard for $45,000. \\le are alv.·a.ya open -Call 546-8640 Red Carpet, Realtora S.. To Believe Owner leavlna. Gorgeous yrd with brick fencing. 4 bdrm1, 2 hath!!. Dream kllche_n. Dining rm. Rep.r Hvlng rm . l)oat co.tc. Firt'JJitl(.'t:. brk 136.ooo. 540.1m. TARBELL • QUICK-C~SH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS CALL 642·5678 ' R·2 lot, room for 2 more units! Shng carpeting, bltns. 21 dining. Room tor bollt or can1per. fruit lrees! Listed at $26,950, Sumbit your of· fer ! ! Cnll 645-8400 7 "'' V. E. 1~,. .. d & Co. Uf«. El11•n. t;..,•""'1 WALK ON THE EASTSIDE Lovcly l bdr, 2 bath home rttshly J)l\lnted. Choice loc11- tlon, you can walk 10 evf!rylhh\iil' I n c I u d I n g 1733 Wt'8!Cllll Dr., N.B. MESA DEL MAR Lovely 4 bdrm. home on quiet, tree 11ned 111:treet. Xlnt residential .o.tta. 1% Batlul; lrrshly painted Interior. Carp., & drapes, Copper plumhlng. Elec. garage door opener. A 1ruly fine family home offered for S.18.000. MORGAN REAL TY 67U642 67s.64.59 W•~cllU sbopp;,,, U.tte r * POOL PLUS * run lo Red Catt-pt. Realtors PLUS 4 lxlnn11, Spanish dc-54&-8640 (o~n evenings) oor. Walklna to all achools $250 RENT and tthoppl0<. Make otlcr. . _ Asldnr $42,500, lmmedl111e 'TILL YOURS occupa"'l' ran ho arr•ogcd. 3 Btdrooms ll\C'ludlng goost rncll lty, ccrzy den. Goum1ct J(ltChcn. --Sii.ntil I tnnlrrf. Used brick tlreplace. Rux· ged bcnms, Hur.e nln'lpus room, Owlc(l P a vilion . SPARKLJ.NG POOL. AKent SV...0003. Need 11 "Pad"! Place Mad! (:\11 642-5671!. ••••• t,..Mt .~. •••••• GINNY MORRISON REALTORS 5.17-41'0 Put a little "1001 .. tn )IOllt 1.rvl.8--~ll lho~c b...ul~les ro\' "burkic'', Ct11J Cln&°'\I 617 OO'nl . .. . Announcemtnh • • I • • • JOO • SJ.t Automcbilof • • • • • • • • 950 • 990 The Biggest Marketplace on· the· Orange Coast • -~ • """" -"" .... • • • 115 -'"' ~menf . • • • • • • • 700 • i'99 financial • • • • • • • • ' 200 . 299 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS ~ .••••••••. S25·S"9 ........ --. ..... ·"°""' bal l:t~ GtMfot, •••• lSO • 199 ~for Sale ••••• '100 • 124 . .sso • .$14 • • •• 800 • 849 1.0lt&~ ••• --···· You Can Sell It, Find It , Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678] One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval lt,nfol . • • • • • • • . • • :JOO • 499 Schook llftd IMtr\ICllon • , , !i7S • .$911 ' . s.,.,jm ond hpoir, • , , • 600 · IHI lromportotiori. , •••••• 915 • 949 ERRORS. Advertisers should check their edt dilly & report errors lmmedl1tel , The n., '* . f DlUL'Y-PICOT 111um., l1abllity for the first _ ... u. _.., .... HouMI for Sale --Salt \~l~n~co~r~rect~l~n~M~r~t-lo~n~o;_n~ly~.;-~-~~~~~~1 G=e~n~•;ra;l;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;G;en;e;r;al;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;ji~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii j ;;M;E;S;A;;V;E;R;D;E;;;;;:;;;;G;e;ne;r;a;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I B;~N~aNEW HOMES I~ 1~~ 1~ SHARP 3 BR. 2 BA. localed on pretty cul-_,,,Uo ~L HouaelforW. 11! OUR 24TH YEAR de--sac, large corner lot with drive,vay, gate . . Offering Service and pad !or bo at or camper. Lovely shag Grerit Eastsidl' Ltiration • 252. 262. 274 . 2'lnd St._ Ci\'f Laq;e 3 BR. 2 Ji,\, tam rm, f11J1._ AJIPl'OX J!I()() sq. ft. C1 pis, dr ps, Jnl/sc-pd, ftlt!d. All inl'ludcd. 90' r fi nanc- ing !! Dri\'4!. by ! ! ! General Only Experience carpeting and lots o! TLC. \Ven ldscpd, and Can Provid• 3 blocks to all shopping. A"4tc#-S.llt/d ~ MDASSOCIAT!S · ' REALTORS 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY COllONA DEL MAR. CALIF. 644·7270 ••••••••• e llUIL~ERS ATTENTION ROOM TO BUILD second UN IT On this large corner lot. 2·bedroon1 house, carpets, drapes, fenced yard in Ne\\1port Height& ' ' ............ ' . . . . . . .. .. . . . . . $33,500. ••••••••• e DELUXE CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX Beautiful .' .. tree-linecl·street in Old Corona del Mar. BOTH DELUXE UNITS HAVE 3 bedrooms, den, fireplace, 2 baths, builtin kitchen, PATIOS. 2 blocks to shopping and schools. Choi ce location. . . $98,500 ••••••••• atii . \\'ithin wal king di stance to schools and shoppin g? 4 Bedrooms. 2 baths, fireplace . Has assu1nablc V 1\ loa n -.1\11 for only .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .. $29,950. IMMACULATE & SPACIOUS . best describes this 4 bdrm. & family rm. home in the finest ?t1esa Verde area. Newly decorated thruout, '''ilh expensive 'vallpaper & luxuriolL~ _carpeting. Beautiful· ly lan,dscaped. §64,500 - SANTA ANA BARGAIN 3 Bdrm., 2 bath home -ne\vly painted in & out. PLUS guest home no\v rented at $100 ~per_montj}. Will trade up for Newport prop· erty. $29,900 ****** * TAYLOR CO. * IRVINE TERRACE-$185.000 J\1agnificent vie\V of bay, ocean & Catalina! Custom quality thruout this fine home \vith 3 la rge be<froom s, for1na l dining, paneled family r1n & 3 ba ths. Terrifie ne\v sauna off master bath. 3 Fireplaces. Beautiful pool in .private front courtyard. Shown by appt. "Our 28th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road "Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club" 2SOO LAKE PARK LANE , Newport Beach! Wow! \Vhatta address! And \\•hatta location! A -shake roof chateau, nestled on a hillover- lpolting legendary Cherry Lake in-Ne\vport Beach. Surrounded \Vith · pine trees and quacking mallards, this three bedroom home is super and definitely Unique! UN19UE HOMIS OF NEWPORT IEACH, 645·6500 A lbtl1t of Koy Ginn lJ~l()UI: ti()Ml:S REALTORS Genet-al * * SACRIFICE * * LA CUESTA VERDE HOMES in Laguna HilJs has 2 homes back on the market because of credit rejections. Both have cozy kitchens and family rooms . plus 3 BR's. & 2 B.i\. One has a !irepl~ce. Quick possession. Excellent conventional financing available. $31.000 and $31.SOO MAKE US AN OFFER! I Call J erry Hardin or Joe Wilhite 714: 544-IOl2 1-N,E,W-,--P_O~R,T~_c_E_N_T_E_R~·-N~._B_.~.-~~-644-4~-'-1_0 1 .G~·~n_•_r_a_l~~~~~-1 -G_._n_•r_•_l~~~~~-1 General General BALBOA BUYING WGU1'D-¥0U BEklEVE-.~ ...... 29,500---fENINSU'-A 3 UNITS? FIXER UPPER EASTSIDE COSTA MESA -2.000 sq. ft. 4 bedroom, 2 bath home on fa'rge R-2 lot. Cus- to1n buiJl ranch style. featuring beam ceil- ings. massive double brick fireplace and hardwgod floor s. She ain'l very pretty but 'vow, \Vhat potential -n1 aybe even con- &'6-S.l32 or s1~s1n BY O\\'NER, 3 br. trplc, c:overed patio, nl'w kitchen, G\o--0166 or 6-K)....()Z27. Balboa Pininsula verting to dup)ex. l'ricc.d.r ig ht. llY 011·11cr, Pcoin Poinf ht"ll uty:2 Bit 2 llA, i1nn111c. 546-5880 ).lu~1 s\'e to :1p1)1-cciatc. ult :; pn1. li7:~545.; _ Open Eves. .. 'fr. """""""""""""""""""""'""""""""""""""""""""""I Coron• del M•r ~,..HERITAGE . REALTORS Genenl General I -SHORECUFFS ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;.:;;;;;;;;;;;;::;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Pe1i1aps the best IQcntion in DOYER SHORES -VIEW the bt'.sl suhnil•ision In C.d.;\1. This fi1·c bedromn 5 BR. -pool --Bay Vie\v $159,QOO home ,1·iU 00 a JOY to h!.>hold · TOWNHOUSE-SORRY-SOLD 11·h('rt the current re1nodcling • • • projc.~1 is con1pleted. Pri· in 2 days! Let us sell yoJ,l rS! 1·11re beach, quiet streel! HARBOR VIEW HILLS 3 BR-!a1nily r m.-ocean vie\\', pool ~99,000. We have li5tings of many oth•r homes Call us for your needs CORBIN -MARTIN REALTORS Cal.I Anytime 644-7662 General General PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT ho1Ylercd by bt>au1!fully 111a!n1al11rd lin1•ns and i:ar· drn.;;;, and thos<.• fnhulOllK ('()f;1l trl'C's! Can 67;...722.J. OCEAN VIEW Top Quality Construction by 1 we!\ kno1vn bulkier - ··h11rmi ng, Corona del ~far 3 BR \\"ilh for1n11.I dining, 111any uniq111' fea tures - 1·c11• fun<'tiOu:il floor (Jlan - in1111cdiate occupatk')'. 418 Hazel Dr., C.d.M. Open Wed. & Thurs. 3-5 WE CAN HELP YOU BUY.7"" -HoK&U SELL, OR TRADE A HOME "'".~::.:·­ ANYPLACE IN THE NATION IN MESA VERDE -3 Bedroom 2 bath. On POINT ""•'" you dO oo " c a<J. · quiet street. Bring your paint brush & dee-$SB ·SOO I vanragcs of this in,•cshnenr LINDA ISLE WATERFRONT Custom 4 bdrm., 5 bath home \vith vie\v of main channel. ~Jt colot_s, r ich \v<!9Q_ panel- ing & ITrpTcs., give a \\'arm i11tirnate feel- ing. \Vater!ront mstr. suite has dbl. ba th , AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES REAL TORS 644-7270 in ('On1parison to a triplex orate to your ow n taste. ' in tl'nns of reduced maln-Charn1ing Ne1\" E n g l a n d LARGE CORNER LOT Clapboard Beal·h Collage tenance and do\\1'· \\'e ha1·e il·ilh e:qxiscd 'lx>ani ceilings 3 ·Condos, each priced \\·ell General ! Gener•I --------1 ARTIST RETREAT 1 3 BEDROOM P LUS FAM ILY ROOM large enough for pool table. Close to schools and bclo11• 111\at lhe models Sl"ll and crackling \\"ood bw·nin~ fireplace. Only 1 bkx'k 10 for. Each ar e 2 Bedroom. l~~ WHY SIT, & . WATCH shopping. While it lasts $2l!,500. · ' CUte coy 2 RR, tuckc<l H\1•ay on a quit•t .s r1wt on Bnlboa Peninsula. lnu11aculn1e ron- dition. Sll'P sa1·cr n1odC'111 kilcht>n 11•ith hu i 1 I -in s. , Formica sp\11.sh boards. 2 patios. Outstandini:: lrrii;:-ht lil•lng rooni 111111 fi1"C'p\r1Ct'. Asking $.)8.500. EZ tcrins. Call 673-8550. Ba!hs, Elec 8/I Kitchen. secluded tree shaded park, Carpc!eri. Private Patios . private l>ea('h and boat 5,; or lo~;, f:>o\vn OK ... pric('s, interest increase. Gel 540-1 151 ramp. Cozy fantily kitchen 01vner 1nusr sell. $18,000 off Iha! c.~1Ul'h anti conie see overlooks vour to v C' r e d caeh. Call anytin1e, 646-0555. ""'»> HERITAGE this beauti ful n1odrl home. Open Eves. privare pa.tio. Great sun1-. • REALTORS ·rhnt's right, 11·ith all the ex· n1c·r l"('ntal and appreciatio11 li'RS inchtried. Convcrted l~!!!!!!!!!'l"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'l!'"'"""~"""" ... """"•I po!cntial. Fol' an 111>· i;:a rage. a.ir,--rondi!ioned, 3 General General polntn1C'nl 10 vie1v this most p.1tios, fl r of es s i ona 11 y desirable prO{lCl'1)' ca 11 "''"""''"" ;"'""'· "'" bar. ' ·ELEGANT LIVING Mini Canyon ,,...,m. ()PEN TIL i • ITS FUN 10 BE NICE! huge lx'llroon:is and.just 2 You should see tl\is lovely E t te years old. t,>Mce? to se ll at 4-bdrm. home~ Beaulifully s a ·11·-SJS.OOO. Let s go. decorated in !he presligr Fixer • View • area of Lake Forest. Don't ;_'_ I,'_ · 11•ail tor this one. It 11111 sell '$25, 950 '-=~§ fast! 5:!6-0222. £P ECJ,\L ATTENTION could -''IRYINES" Sell idle Items .....• 642-5678 J ~;:~~15 BY THE SEA 1nakc a drcain com e true. • J'W'":NJ Kestled A TOP T H E ORANGE Gener at G=-e-ne-r-a°'I------· iEnjoy the \'ic11• ft'01n the BLUFFS . PANOP.A...i.'11C , :;::;.:~:_ _____ _;;_c...;c.... ______ 1 decks or this Capistrano VIE\V 1'-UREVER, O\'erlook-ORCHARDS I · Beach duplex. Three' spa· · ·~"'lpl.-J"'l!llll"I cious bdnns. in both unit!! ~'k~~"X°& ctJ.R£~~ '',The Ranch" oUers 4 br .. J SAN JUAN BY THE SEA ~Across Old Coast" liighway from beach. J\.3-Parcel (3 lots) 75' x llO'. Beautiful ocean vic,v. Sign on property. $79,500. Carol Tatu1n QUICK POSSESSION! Now vacant ... SELLERS INVITE ALL OFFERS -3 BR. & cozy den. built-in elec. kitchen. Nice location in Irvine. Ask. $32,500. "Chuck" Le\vis LARGE LIDO LOT Room to garden or expand or !or ~our fav· orite pct. 3 Bdrtns. & den & charming! Full ,pl'lce $94.500. Gene Vre~land NOW IS THE TIME all-good-tennis-players..toJDO'lll ti> Bluffs ! 3 Bdrm., 211 ba., 2·story condo, de- signed !or the weekend athlete!· $74,500 WITH LAND! Toni Ese<>bar CLASSIC VIEW-PRIVACY-POOL For that 's pec. family who needs studio, 3 : BR. & enjoys nature. Dramatic home w/ incomp'ar. day & night view of Laguna e<>asWn e & city. $129,:;qQ. Bo)l Yorke . LARGE LIDO ISLE HOME Exciting home designed for family living. Children's area separate with own family rm., living & din. rms. with parquet floors. Six bdrms. Two lots. $179.500. Charlene Whyte 3 OCEANFRONT R-<I LOTS PMmo location & views with fine Spanish home & income. Super invest .. C?.J>portunity. Develop condos now or later. m9,500. Call George Grupe l»-0700 --· ...: Coldwell,Banker ~ 550 New~rt Center Dr.; N.B. · ' ' \\'1th large yard. Lo\\• sixties. The SEA is at your finger 1m~aculate 3 yr. old ho~e. Upper unit avai111.bll' for lips. Features 3 bedrooms, Or iental gardens. ~n. a quiet move-in 00\\'. SUBl'liIT dinlng rooni, huge grounds, cubcl~c adjo1nmG: a 01-~F'ER! 58S-02'22. new fi nancing: or assume ~~--~RI!.:. ......,,. LARGE LOT Sl47 per n10nth total pay. \\ALru.. _ &.. a..r..E Realtors AVA,ILABLE n1ents. \Von't last -call llO\v! 5't6-0022 962-;;;s;;. OLDER This beautifully decorated 4 bdrn,, home is '"'''""'' BUT so NICE 101!1.\I [ 01\0\ RE"· '"ORS suited lo your Jnrge fa1nily. Pll'nly or t'OOlll fo r boat and trniler sto1·age. This home 11·ill sell fast. Ca ll us im· mroia!ely! 586-0222. 2XIO .sq. n.:3 br. hon1e -not j ust a hou!le -\\·Ith full din· ing room on q uiet tree-lined street. Oll'ner says "se ll" at i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiil $311,000 \\I ALKER & LEE Realtors 54&--0022 "APPLE PIE CONDITION Newport 11 F1lrvltw 646-1111 Enjoy lhe char1n and con· _\•enicnce.oUhi.sJcn•cly ~~'­ roon1 hon1e in Costa 1\lesa. This n1 an's hobby is his W!)"llmt)_ ·•-- MACNAB IRVINE ---- home • you'll agree 111at BEAT YOUR WIFE H """"' II. T,u •had• ,,.,,,, cool the \\'ell landscaped to this fantastic deal. You grounds, the i n t er Io r 111on't -need much money for is painted a.nd scrubbed and thi!; beauty. 3 queen siic tastefully decorated. It's bdrn1s \\•ith 2 luxurious shnp!y not possible to find a baths. Full price Is $31.9.:,0 place n1ore convenient lo '"Ith 5',0 dO\\'ll it can he shopping, c..b u r c.h es_,. ot )'OUl'S, LeJ.Jl~ show i1_ to you schools. $34,950. Call 5'16-2313 by appointment. for an appolnlment. Ol'fH TIL 9 • rr'S FUH 70 BE" NICE/ -• THE mtl ESTA~ $17,000· NO MORE Very clean 3 bl'/den & \\'Ork shop ln rear. lots ol prlval"y wilh chaln·link fen- ce &l'OUnd lhls chw111!ng home! Pr\~ 11 linn -but tl\!IY lina.nclnf(. \V i.\WU:R .t-J..£E Realtors ~22 . Yott don't nccf n gun to "Dr{llV l''n.~I " ~·hen you plnoo ru1 ad 111 Ille Oo.lty Pilol Wnl\t 1\!19! Ca.ii l)OW -G42'-G618. • Real tors 54>-0465 Open eves. best area .. fine home 0\1•nE-r lln.'(ious, BeauHful rolot1ur yrd. it bdrtns, 2\' balhl'. Dining m1, built in1'. Famll)' nn. Pllllo. Piclure \\'inckw.·11;. \)\•!{ $ 2 9 • 9 5 0 . M0-1720. TARBELL 0 \VNEft sparkling 4 Bd, 1 ~' Ba plwr large 14 x 25 n. Family room w/fircplacc, hulltlns, forced air , full y curpet~&_ dl"l\()e8, ltlTJ{t! fcn~d yafd. CJ050-fnll> ll('hoo\s, churches and shop. ping !H'CO.'I, ;Only $29,90(). 838-=1.L~T For tllnt HQtll under $50, rry ttic Penny Pln('her. BIG CANYON liandsome double doors open to ma gnifi- cent golf course view. Imported· Italian tile entry -beamed ceiling LR -5 BR's _ 41h baths. BiUiard size ga1ne roo1n. $190,000. Maxine IVU!iams 642-8235. (Tl9) ~ A HOME TO LOVE. Ivan \Vei ls built - -located on one o[ the prettiest streets in Baycrest. 4 generous BR's & 3'h baths. Large DR, FR & sewing area. Fenced poOI. J ane Frazee 642-8235. (T20\ . \. PARKLIKE SETTING Behind \Valls of used bric k &: wrought iron -prime Baycrest corner - custom 3 BR/ FR w/fireplace & Cully equ ipped bar. Ron Sherman 642-8235. (T25) Irvine Macn•b·lrvlne RNll'IComJ>!lnJ IOI DowrOrlve f.4t•tt35- llU M•cAJ1hatr Mi·8200 N.wport Beach, C1llfornla 12113 sitting area, vie\v decks ........... $-295,000 For Complete lnform1tion On All Homes & Lots, Please Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 67S-6161 General FEEL LIKE FALLING? General NEWPORT HEIGHTS 4 BR & Fani & Dining Over 2650 sq ft -Ne1rly BY 01\·ncr. 1st offering. Cozy l'Orner 1.."0Uage, 3BR. 2BA + nu 1100 sq ft unit. 2BR, IBA & lrplc. Top quality . $116,750. 5 O O Poinsettia, &J.1-7311 or 646-9079 Nf.;\V DUPLE.'( -Great bay l'ic1v plus extensive green bell -SlOO,CXXl. Prin. qnly. • 673-9239 • .-.-~D~u""'PLE~x-.~. T l\"O l-BR. \Valk 10 beach $39,500 Ai:ent 673-8500 lB Bedri1oms Plus Ocean View 1't'dtt0ralpd INSIDE AND Actually it's 3 bedroonu1 3 OUT! NC'11' 11'11.ll-to-11·all baths. family room and a shag carpeting th r u ou t , :lXl() sq. ft. fini!;hed 1·ccrr· fonnal dining room PLUS alion roon1 fh.at 11·ould di· fan1 i!y room. covered pa tio vidc easlly into ta more sun'OllOd~ by 1.u s e i o u s 1 10 x 13 lx.-d1001ns or any-Ja nc~<;C"npu1g. \\.4.L?< T 0 '. thing else your heart de. OCEAN OR BA\:. J ust ~ires that takes up 2(0) eq listed at $59,9j(). ' fl. ' THE REAL ESTATERS CO~TS WALLACE REALTORS -546-4141- lOpen Evenings) * MONTICELLO * i\Iuc·h sou~ht 11ftrr 3 BH.., 2!1 • !!!!!!"!!"!!!!!!!'!!!!"!!!!'!!"!!!!! 00., ram. rn1, ptnn; Nr. pool. I GOV'T REPO • O\\'nrr nuist !>C'll in1mrdlate· ly &>sl 'buy ln Ul'C:t at $30,250 $13.500. BALBOA BAY PROP. * 642·7491 ~ SPARKLING NEW 4-PLEX Just co1riplctcd ond re11dy for For th l~ RITllO!ll llt'.'11' 3 bl.'()room. 2 balh be<Juty in the bcnullful l'IC\\'. city of lrvlnt. Only $1 .250 do\\·n - 1hould M!ll immediately. your l\r.\ ownt't tux 11.d· R~111to1•11 646·77l1 vunlnge, $upe1· ~hnrp, good :IJ.i.1 \\1e1tcliff Drive rcnt11I 8.l'C'fl 11.nd only $!10,000. OO'pe=n-'lll"-'9-'P-'•'-I ~---­ l)()n't \\'Rll on thi1' one, Call Y.ou don't nct'.'d a.. g\ln to r..!G-86·!0 Rt<d C /\ r fl I' f • "Dr11w Fast" \\'hen )·ou Hcnltors. \opcn Cl'cning1'1 place tlll nl:I in th~ On\ly On.Uy Pilot \\'ant. Ads have I Pl/01 \\'ant 1\ds! <;nil 00\I' ban:tilns p lote. -&'V.:>678. --------~ $20,000 beiOIY re~lacenient CO&l at only $99,500. C a I I GT';H',679. /Jn NIGEL nAILEY I, ASSOCIATES Costa Me.. POOL PAD! E1·C:111 the air il! srru~ky Clean iclectronic air purifying systen1) In this grnch>us 3 hedroon1 honic. Yoo'IJ party all Sun1n1er in the cathedntl .t bean1 ceilinged family T'OOnl, and cu:i:y all-Winter around the tv.'O fircplace11. Call our hot line for details. larwin realty inc, 968-4405 (24 hrs) ft 5 BR. 3 lli\, 2 flrepl1ct1, '3>car (llrK.51:c, lnrge_ fan>il)' 11)111. $83,00f) 61h'Wl6 f·'asi ttsuhs are Jud a phcq call 11wa,,11 &12-5678. l ·~ -:; { . ' I .2.fl_ DAllV PILO r I ru~Ktay Junl' 5, 19/J [ . ..-,... ]~ [ _ ..... I~ I'-[ ;;;; ...... ;;;;, .... ~J ~~ 1~' --~·-iiiiiiiiiiiii:l~..;1;.l .;~;;1 "':;;... ~~~ ........ -i.i~J ~iiiii· [ ...... , .... ~]~JI (;.-;;'."'"'";;"';;-~I ~~I Huntington Bffc.h I-• I I U I -• 1,E::lc.T:..•::'c:"c....-----1 ';;;;;:;;;::;;;;:;;;;;; l ~H~u;n~tl;n~gt~o;';n~B;H;c~h;;;;;; 1,,..,.;;•::l•:;s:.;i•::•c.Y:.:::lo:?;I•::____ Mobil• Homes 1,1;;.n::CG::m;;.IO~P~r~o-~pe~rty~--"l.:U, l==u~s~n~"='~~~;;;~200~ Houiu Unfum. JOS Hout•• n urn. ·~ ARTZON1\ O\\Nt.H Atust , .. u !' 2 BR, l\i lfA CONDO, a\r .....:f-.•_•_5_•_1• ____ 1_2_511 TRIPLEX OpportunltyGot ::.;;;..,.::'c:'c.1 __ ...:. ___ Huntington 8e1ch ~-.~H~,1;;:~~ rm~i. itC~'~ COUNTRY CLUB ~~:i ~~~~d~, .. ~pl/~~1': Motor Home Rentals Thi'\'\' ' UR units on Scott • Coektt il-alnt buy cond. l!Qfl \o\lllf'I'-, AJ\1 6.: Pl\! " Ult 3 BA, ('UlilOlll dalllflt'l'I s:z:,,txio. Asguml' 7',i,';.' f"llA Pl.. !Ill\ l\lesa. ~todcrn & • Mf7-2 kind s ,_ ,1•7, ,..__ Jt 11'' JJOOI, S€>11.c-htf Golf I' I sh ""-of hl I)':'..,,., ., .1 ! t 'ort1t ..._, .... s111 Coiirs..•. \\'nlk 10 the Ot't'an. l011n-\ d wrry TO. SALES & LEASING arp, P•......, <Wo'tiei'!I fo e Co f e• Shop Lo dn r.t~lrl:i,15~1 'l'ot<o J:d. & 2 t'ln•plRC'f"S, J <'Ill' gar, tri,: 5.-liJ.T.YIO. Ml strvlcc faclllly ~ i ~111~!~~47'.~~e, s-i • Apt Re nt•I. 2 BG rm RENTALS Apartmonll Dupi.M 2 BEDROOM 1 Bath, bulltins. $2 I 0 . p • r mon th. Children & pets OK. CAL L DALE 962-4471 fon1 )"Ill , llo\Ull'led, ,:p.1c gal'· GREAT view In ~1il!!!ion v~ Oanmar Motor Homes HOLLAND 8 s I Fountaln Valley CO••NTRY CLUB den kitt:h ,, bltin aJ)rli 's llu· jn, 3 Br. nl'<•r roll£1!:e onty · CALL E) 646 ·~414 us. a II "'I; $t:ll·1·lcau O\'l!fl, :.ep 1nundry S3·1,7""JO. Gy owner, 4~. &1&-4170 or 54tl--1Xlfli\ I've. AT~OSPHERE rni, 11:a" U-B-Q & 111,,rtog. Newport Beach 531-6800 ins Orunge, Cmita Mffil -· •I BC'dnns, 3 baths, 1 ~~ ye:1M1 LDw n111J11 tdsCpg, upgrudNI I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;: REAL TY rc1rnn1111'l 4;u \V. 19U1 SL, CQl!ht 1'If•S4 IMMJ\Clll..A'rE ('t)MlCr 4 br, lSM S. Coast 1-lw)'., l.i:1,J;unn Jar. buck yd, ncmss fro1n 111•1\, ''.Pl.)l'VX 2700 sq rt, for-w/w crpl!>i & (·ti!;lni d~. 11-gl' OELIGll1'FUI:. & y11 idf• Nt1r Ntwporl Po11 Office Money to Lo•n 240 ~f'r-J !-;'~nal dllllll).\', W:Orjt('OUll CU.I'· nHts!c•r be<lnn .... ·/Iii!! & Vlllage, Npt. Oc:h. :n-::ss FOURPLr:;XES, good inCOOltJ ~ -tNt11~t"C-~tctr;-s!"p frrr. rrlro~. Plrs1 i----------JUDblie. .Jlon1c $.JJi,.tiL, .Ju..ll.w1ti.u111oo .£cacl)..,.,,_\\•ill 11 T It L la1~n<lry rm. Cho1('l' Joe, 1irue on inkt. SG9.500. BLUFFS rr .... 5743 trade !or home jn So. lmy s·1--080$ , c•li'•rn. >iChl, ull extras, $2g5. ~"-\J\tF;S,\. O_f_fl!!>,t:J.,l,.,,,.-"""""i01-1!!2i"'"U""'"~----I Scl'ving-Costu")\1l·Sa. ~l·11 1~w: ~IOVlN(~ N()t'lh: 1-'01· n:nt 4 WORK ANYWHERE but live in GrHnbrook lif,0 Sq. ft. of fanttt..;111· livln~ spacE-, lots or s:lorit., bl-auti. rul ltY.'11. forrnal dining. ls.mil . room .. 1 hr, 2 Im. for only 3,900. Call 963-5611. l!U1(•1 l'Ui-dt··sac ~I J'l•CI. l)c. NE\\'POR'r JlA y (11• OIO.'ner will Cl\rry :ffld'rD. iu~nl'd for lhe part11·ul11r hU)'·l ll' . OOLLl-IOUSE J.I •. ''ou~ Renlty, 84.2-8540 UP TO 93o/o l'I'. CALL 968--1-fiG. • 1'rC<'-Lin~ Greenbi-11 Ne .... • 2 BR p\·t bcoach or &17-121ti. • $2s.ooo. 762-+.11l:::.)54"'a101 3"~~t~'.'l1i.~T~~:;;·;~ ,\d1111s $16,500 5r;r-0121 industr ial Property 168 2nd TD Loans '73 BUDDY 12x IO, I lxl nnl;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;~1 a 1\finutt"S lo beach. Court-CLOSER TO HEAVEN furn. Costa i'llesn Adult 4. ACRES Lowest r.tt•1 Oran9• Co. )-'3.1'cl cntcy 3 bc'Clrms, love-S1lo:1y 111ous:1nd OoJlnrs p k S.1500 Jy sha!: car~t!:. Beautifully ln it h10 s1nry l~1n1c . Dru.11· A ar: · --~ 9390 S•ttler Mtg. Co. ldS<'pd, Jovl'ly patio. Real 1he drilpo·s In l"C\"~·111 tllf· mer1can ~1-. 642·2171 SCS-0611 st .. :11. Con i•eniC'nt nbrbood. C.1uunpai.:1K' JIOlll. '"ou u·ill J'!f'ase Cnll: 6-ll-llSO '69 SKYLINE 2!b.'52 1.xlr1n, 2 \\'ell located rorner . Presenl Serving llarbor area 21 yrs CALL !lii.'!-<ll5G. c·nte1·1aln in 1hc t'\unpus bath, Cos1a l\lc&'l Ai!ult incon1c S1400. pc'r n1o. Creal ., ' r<1om. arwl t'llJOy ,1h1• sptlC''\' Park. potcnl ial. iviH di\'ide. Ap-NEED CASI{. $1,000, or up Uc:ich, llunt1ng!on ]I, ,;;·11 1 1, • .,1 1,, 1. '' ,.,,, '-·•r II"' I BR r I . '1 ... ~ '•' '11 • "'~ • "" • · g-~r. ap · iia 1'1 }'runl'l~rltJn f'ou111nhui By & elec 1xl., <.tulrt & Sf'IRl!i Qk. Th•' Si.•:1. HG2-110ti fl I I $140-SI55 · 2 Bl< l!OUSe~ ~vi 5/\l'klwls g11.1'. &. yd:; ~1ne 011 Es11le --Sl.G:I • 1 JiR duplex. Jik1· l.llG 2 \~ 1;;u, din lln1. 3 hl ks house, ;111 utll pd., cu1·po1·1, fl'Otll lr1•;u·h. fl W.'t'<I yrd, encl. yd. ili·tul'h•'ll ~u1'. Lcuse $300. S120 • Bach, lurn, all util pd. ~>::3&-°"'Hlll=l.------ E /side. :: BEDJ'tOOnl -LEASE $250 CALL ~OW C1·pts, d.r·11s. Nr schls. !\.\TELL.A 847-fi061 0 !hat's oflrn 'fl 10 ,ou in a ' CHARLOTTE LONG An-,,·c"n ··1 9~ I ">= 10 $3000 SIOOOO IU\ll nKire C UNTRY KITCHEN · ... " ·"' -, '""' lll'OX 1"' "'' rt ' ' ' ' LAGUN',\ BEACl l Ol~lCE Franici;ran s1yl1• hnn1r. NE-\\'PORT . . "T . R M. C ~d· I · R It nrmembl'r Avco Thrift for '" Fantily prubll'ms -pl"iccd , fur PERi"OP.~fANCE Rt·:,\LTQR SINCE 19'".il ~ RA'· Bt.A"' 'i oy C ar e ea or a Heal Estate Loan. Upon $150 • Co:.:y 1 BR Cottagl"' in Irvine under niarkct. 4 Bcdnns, :i 96:"1-:iti2\ 2 Br 2 Ra su~wh·ck. 11vt 1)1.;h. ISIO Neu-port Blvd., C.l\1. approval, use the nionC'y L.11,."Una, slv, 1"1.'hig, )('ardi•n, 1;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;; halhs. PV ,..,.11inc fi replucc, t\clult park. -~I0--?.1372 .s.ca..n29 1i-0 .... ·ever you like. Also ask JK'l ok. ~~St. ro1·mal dining, hlock fence, WINNER'S C:IRCLE "* S'x-17', 2 bdt. C'x rond. about our unsec urt>d $175 · Ne1v 2 BR. nr. ocean, Fountoin ~ley Ca. 92W't.• h1•avy shake-root. Priine Jo-This one is No. I, ~t $37.:tXJ. $219-5 1 l d ' alun1 S · personal loons AVCO gar cp!s drps l)l't frlti ,..,.. cation near Dougl.'ls, fret'-This lru-i:c singll• slol'y J BP. NEWPORT BEACH shed, a;~i~g~M~ eves. Lats for ale · 170 T HRIFT. · stis ' -0Ceru1 'vi1'I~'. 2 l1H, 4. AR. 21 ~ b11., ••••...•• , $435 :1 Bit. 21 ~ I.a., tarn. rn1. $~ 3 BR. 21 ~ ba. Deluxe !14 963-561 .. 1\riy .~ shopping. Ci\LL ii. <'S:1l"<'n1f'ly shar11. LOvl"ly 2001 Cliff Drive c~"t 1 BR, SH·AG I"-· -oJ, 620 NeY.'(Xl.rl Center Dr. bltns, cpls, drps, <-·hild, sm. A.sum.bl. 7.2 .,, Ln S93·S.'l'.{3. I ' ld . .;rpg front .ti back. If i\1iuve1ous family hnnit'. Lgc. "'1!~"!\, awning, ron1cr i~t~1. APARTMENT SITE ' Suitt' 101 '. IX'I- Bluffs, N.B ........... S4T.i 4 Bil. 2 ha avuil • , • , •••• $Jiij 11 BR 21 ~ ha avail M/1 .. $42'.> 4 lJlt. 2 hit. 1'.ll. Hills •. $475 '~ you' r c r u s~ y • cu I l Llv. Rn1 11'/calhC!dral ceil· $1875. 64~57SI or 540-31!13 Prin1e location in Neu port Beach 83.1-:W<IO s:~;o ·Big 4 BR, 21~ DA. ffl))c, Prln1e· Fowitain Vaill')' areu, $30,000. PERF'OHANCE on tliis Olll' iru.:s. J bdrm. 2 ba. 1.h\'nslrs. Jiiiii;ii;ii;ii;iii;i;i!iii~I Jlu11tington Beach CA$l l IN A HUH RY~ gar., fnl·d for kids, pels. cloiw to s<'hool.~. pafks, 4 Lovely bcd1·n1s, 2 h:ith.~. il-17-35.'!I 1 l\(!1Slf'r hdrn1 & ha u11 Ni'a.l' Huntington 1-larbour Borrow on your hon1e, pHid ALSO SUnlnlER RENTALS 1;hopping centc.cs. 2 Bil , :ll£ tone-ou-tone......shaf!;. Jack .t 1\Ssu;v1~.: 111)' 7•;,, VA loan \1/!).'e. sitting rm., frplc. & Just listed! fol' or nor. Usc runds to l'Oll-CALI. 494-9491 5 Or G Ult ............. $375 1-----~~B~Ab (;ust drp~~\jPgl'l:l.dc · .IDotlc:LStnr~l.-lla1:d-. 11·/$3000 1o!u1. Jluge, sharp 1io•11 . Beam ('('ilings in nll ' Re•IEitat.. $200,000 solidalc bills, improve you1' *LANDLORDS* <'rpl'S, pr1v paliOW/giis B}\Q. 1\·ond floors, hltins, hlocK r.oldf'n \\'<'"! F:ii:tale's1 4 liR, 1non1s. AffiiCh~ 21Jdrm. __ Gener~I ..ho.n~ pro , tf..;_F;_R£lS.I.AL_.-SEl!YJCE 20x2'l fam rm w/gas fplr. 'l · v.·alJ fence. Our best listing S·l:l,t~. OC>.'-'i!i.:. up1. IO.'/frplc & ~parate iiiiiiiiii~~~· HAFIBOR fnr any g~j ·~u11=l)!C~o~a~.J-,!~""~~~~~ 'll 11 h ''111· I I ii' cru· garagt> \V/l'!Cc door a1 th is prirC'. Owrl('r trans-[,.,\HGf: '.i"~l-ll~l~,~,,-,.,-.,-,,-, -h-o-nir n11tio ( f fiden lial, 'lust scrvicr h1 LANDLORDS! opencr, suuna. conununity ferr<'(J, CALL 893-li.53'.:. \\'/pool, fanlily + lui•ni:il GRU.BB & ELLI CO. Acreage or sale your hd'inl.' or our oUict'. \\'e Specialize in Ne....·port pool, tenni!I, tnt 101. dining nii. loiv rnain1. ~d . _ REAL TORS BUILDER'S A'rrF:NTION SIGNAL ]'.fORTGAGE CO. Beach • Corona de! 1'1ar • ---·-1·L·11li11 r SOUTH BAY REAL TY $30,950. $~2.500. 11-12-m:i:l .,,,,.., r. c ' 1 11 c n ,1 1 n~,·,.., 1_.,,1,.0,,, •1.,, •. 1.,,,. ,\p-COMPANY !714) 5.itHl106. & Laguna. Our Renta l Ser· 962-3002 "* 96R-7177 POOL -POOL PRESTIGE tr1tct , :; Hit. :.! -'J" .:.. 'fiTh._1oSO'Y· . ·". P;~~~ fur 45 units.~ REALTORS vl<X' ts l"REE to You! Try "SINCE 19-16" I ~! \Vrsl<'~11 B:ink Bldg. Uni\'ersi1y Ptt1-k, Irvine Days 552-7000 Nights eves· 968-400-1 3 n~1rn1s. 2 b"1h•, formnl BA I t • ·1 • '"'""'~~~""'!!!"''"'" llANIA REAL1°Y IV\. SINCE 1944 l'iu-Viei\·! ' • ,..._~ " • 103 ur. :i 4 '"' a1'Suni. "'v 673 4400 2ND T t D d NU-VIEW RENTALS MAMMOTH dining room. lots or deck· nbl{' loan, 1'1any .'l'!ras. O\\'lll'. FASCINATING "* fi.t?.Ji560 * • rus ee s is thiJ; roRG sq. ft.-fnniily ini::-. Pri<'ed for qu iek sall'. ~46-5.113. . t.;PtTI'!fe ry l!!!""~~~~ ... ~~!!!·IPRIVATF. FUNDS AVAIL. 673-400D or 4!14-3248 : home all 011 o"" level. 4 BH, CALL &12-93TI. NEWPORT Lots/Crypts 1S6 EXCHANGE Any Amount At.ONE on 101. 2 brs, i,:nr , 2 Bl~. 2 Bath."' ..•.•••••• S3T.i fonnal dinh1g and a special --'Irvine CHARM -'='-'-"-'-"'-;_ __ .;.;.;er $110. Also 2 br, sv.im pool. i::amc roorn \8.q:e enou~h for FRANCISCAN ~IX f'(!ml"tl'rv lots at Pacilic R-2 1:AJt/1vi\l take 6 Units, * Call 675-4494 BKR. $160. Also old huge 4 br. 3 HR. :.! barhs .......... $273 :I BR., 211 ba. Bonus rm $-125 a n>gUIRtion pnol tablt'. FOUNTAINS H' nd H G 2400 :-;q, fl. o( <'11<1.r ni :•. \·11,..,.. i\lf'll~L"ial Park. \\/ill ll\nll1n~ton Bea~h-. 1.,.,..,..,..,..,...,.. __ ~ flun r111, on aCTeage. SlS.O. Don't miss !Iii~ down-lo-Spiral stah~·asc, 4 hcdrnis •• a er arages Ne\1'f10rt Heights not fa1· ~ .. 11 .'l ll nr r:u1. \\'ill di!!· FOR: 10 to 1:> Unu:i; lnrMon W -Kids, pels OK on all. ··KL earth family home. Excell plU.s par•'nl's rOh't'at. 1"C\\' form a d<'llghtf11l garden-~but not too clo~r• 10 Jloai..: , ,.1,11 . !)6?,...21.'\7 r;fh•r j or Or.mgr_ County. _ •V anted 250 }"i"<" 979-8·130 3 Bil.. 21~ ha ....... $350/375 4 BR . 2''.: btl ........... $375 cond. Tn lnspcc.t raq X'ls, flC\\' paint, cusloin courl entry into this 3 lxlrni. Hospital on C<ttaluia Dri'-'" r :ui~tune ..,.·eckendi;. -Sparling lnYts!ment \\'ELL ei;t, N.B i1rnr. t1iHn call P ERF'ORMANCE draJX'S. Sho..,.·s l)('!!er than !I bn. 10\vnhousc. Brunch al 4 Rr formal dining & hup.· Corp k i... SI ' ' f !163-56ll the brl"akfasl bnr or ft•ast in .. -...... __ " Ii LOTS In 1-lar bor Re~t. \\~ll • i-ce .'I lo ... ,rro .... · .J.t)I I Cir 3 Ult. \1·/,\' sh:lg, p.irio, Jo'P, Cnhnnn Club, Pac. Sands at S:l·ll i\tunslcr, Call t21Jl 7!}\...1027 J\\• Jla\'•' Sun1n1er Hentnls Vision- ii n1odl'l. 1:ALL 8-12-53n. re\'l'Cj lson room ......... -3n .v ~1·11 .:ill or p:u1, fl<'asonable . 638-5662 :.:!~yrs on.2tKI tru!'t 11;.•1'<1 on thr• separate din ing roo1n bHy vie .... ·.. \\'AL'·'ER .t. Glt-:ilO.I N.B. hon1<' ..,.. ·s-lj,Ol.JO l"'lli!.' REPO EXECUTIVE 1\·it h i!s 11•ntnut buffet. f:1n1-1 EE R 0 allor :: .. , !V\"1'> "Attention Builders'' '' • " s. ·rT\T""VU"""· -,,·ill p.>•y ma-.:. l<',.11 i11• $750 DOWN ily l'001n's a !urge one with '12 Unit site! \\"f'st Costa TWO STORY fir('placl' and I.lo• ma,ler HARBOR vu f.tONTECO Commercial 'I . . . 0 IC'rcst ralt! hul .. ~ µoinl~. c_oll.• .• 9.• Park Ired hill :.! or 3 Bil .Townho use, hi::e 3 '-4 BR, I-cul-de-sac \'\I lot. 1' esa county i.tr:p! \\·ncr J>rin. 0111,-. 'Vritl' .ssified -;:...:...:;;;;-----1 Bcrlrn1s up, 1 dO\\'!l for suilc's a dream .... ·ith ,\'alk-'" . I Property 158 11·anls ~ 3 !l. o O \l . trv rumpus roon1 db e gnr, privacy, 3 Oaths, family in l'lO!<et, large clressin" Fan ta st 1cal Y upgraded. suhord inn li on ,11, Tr•ust di't>rl! nd No. il!IO, U11ily Pilot, P.O. f"OR Lease. :i'BR. College swim pool, few te 42 ft. lf2u~! rooni, formal dining rooni. nrca, fircplnce and balcony~ lslu nd kitchen. Del Piso Tile, CORONA V.E. 1-hn\·anl & C 0 . ~)\ 1;:iGO, Cos\11 !lli'§a, Calif. ~~kii~:b:h.imo. Kids & Pl'~ REALTY Fl 557-9p1~ or 8 -4R4' 1 1 .,,.. hU)::'f' li\'ing t"OOlll \\•ith <:' It\ pl'ircd to go at $6l ,OOO _ foil 1_?,!lP..-r. tinted glass, 64:i-S·IOO. ,.,~,'=-~,;~-~--~~-A Compuny \\'Ith VU!ion rst 1oneer ea ty rhl"dral 1.:Piling-s, upgr11 · d,1n·i \\'nil ! pane'-"' gar. J\luch, n1uch DEL MAR -'J • , . • lsl T.D .. nn :'.\'l'l\'llfirt !!eights Coron• del M•r Un iv. Pa1·k Center, Irvine ' thruouT. Assun1e 6~4~1 • v• • n101'C'! Con1munity pool. . ~-. C -LOT, xln1 loc. .. approx. 1>r11p, \\,!I n~y JQ\,, Call Anytl1ne, '552-7500 e VETERANS ... Jo~xlra la.rg;e homr in . · 1$100-0~11 Sat/Sun. l -j, 01\1u'r 1. Pt·u.11e "'' lo!_ i1v1ul~Uil' _on 50:.:ISQ 011 lfarbor Blvd., .\gt. £/.H:.U · Gi':J.-Ol4'1 $150 • Util Pd. Ni{'l' furn. o rt1ce hours 8 Ai\! to s PJ\I nhrhood . .CALL .S-12_.(45 1. 61-1-i?i.-l-l · a h111ld to suit h:1s1s ,1·nh C.1'.\. n1us1 St'll, o....'ller. B.ach<'lor, 1 blk beach, full [•-""""""'""'""'"'""'"'"I * DUPLEX * parking !t•I" 11 c a I' l! r11 :l) 79'1-1~ Mortgages kitchen. T\\'O nn. Nrar !'-0 .. 1,: Si\ t-Ieated l5'x40' cusTom pool, 4 bl.'<irm ~. 2 baths. Only APPROXIMATELY S32.500. NO do1vn. REAL Plus vatant lot . $97,500 Jo .,---. Lanr. $21,500. 0\\'ner. Pnn· il•1u.,r. hltns. garng>', S1ovc. ~i!l -:iG.111 nfl. 5 i. ···-red h1·11 2~~~.nb~~r locat ion ' .... ·ith Li\liUN~, _Vie ...... J\lys t ~c Trust ~ds 260 s~'I)') -Srnall nl'at 2 13r. 11-....·ys, frplf'.' rlish1\'asiK'I', ESTATE t•AJR. 5:16-2551. 1/3 ACRE _ 1, Coml'r lo! \l'ith 2 St'paratc t~ar 1 \\"n _11npro\'cmc11L~. clpa.Js only 6 _12 _08 4 4 PUT YO s.1011 :! Bl{, rr·pJ(', dhli BLOCK TO OCEAN G1-ea1 potcnt11t1 for a s1nall 491-9007 ' UR MONEY ;.::ii·age. Y<uxt. t'aiio.i Laguna Beach .J BR, 2400 !'1(1. fl., 2 ~ ha, play ~·ards. 4 Bedrms, 2 bltns, D\Y • <;IJ>:lS. drp!i, fplc, _baths, brjrk fireQl!IC.C. rle.;. 2 slor)I. $12,900. 968-6'116 kitch 11•ilh dish1vashcr, in1e1·- SAVE-by OIO.'JK!r, sharp 4 br, l'On1. firl' alann, 11•atl'r- 2 ha, 1 story Stralfonl !<Oflerll'r. i\lany more extras. homr. $37.500. !IGS-4122 Only onl"'<lr-a-kinrl. Terms RE Brach Cottage . $57.500 rcstau1·ant or".' r\ s k 1 n !ti'. ~ • TO WORK FOR YOU! 1 l'hil•I 1X·t. ._.;...;:;;. __ _ ALTY BALBOA BAY P:ROP IX'1·hai1s too high a· p1·1c(' -BEAUTlt UL ocean \'tew E 10,. NU VIEW i i'"' t I o 1 Univ. Park Ci:-nlrr. Trvinl' . subn11t l>[rers and lt'!'s $N' J,,\GliNA R-1 lot, <'lose to ism ' in1 erest un ~JI--RENTALS :...., . Jr l'l'llU \Lew iou.sc, Picture yourself livi~g in this Meredith Mansion ONLY $49,950 3 BR, 21.!.c BA, lnundry roon1. lge 'fain rm, brkfst room, formal <lining, l'ntry hall. i1nn1 a«ulatc grounds. Call 96.1-5611. ~'r...ts1. -Valley Ca. 92708 714-~-5611 $23,500 FULL PRICE 3 BEDH'.\T, 2 Cllr gAI', COt'lll"r lol near scliools ..and.....J;hop. ping. Subinlt your 1C'rn1~. 846-1351 or 8-17-85.11 -ALLEY ENTRY lla.<i big parking, µ<td ifor ''"'"tl°a vehicles • E-Z entry Jor trailer & boot. 1'Tes.hly tlecoratcd 4 BR. 2 BA bon1e, l li miles 10 beach. Close to ~Ills & ighopping. Our best Vllilll" a t S28.!f,,O. RED CAr:1>r.r, R F.:A L T ORS, 531;-811::'fj, FOP. lea~ or ii:ale by O\\'ner, t----·-1-2DP....ll01.lsf.._y,•/2 car ~r _& ftV p1·k1rn: ar~<I-10. mi from bch. No rnamt. counlry patio. Nu 11 x I u re" lhroughout , Rc~pn:1 . par!y only n~ aµvl.\', C 111 714 -536-S!r.J>01 nit 5pnl, lihO\\'n by appl onl,y REPOSSESSIONS fflr infor1n11tlon 11nl) loc.'ltlon or 11-ic.-c FllA & VA hon1e11, ton111r t • KASABIAN 962-6644 Real Estate Call Anytin1e. a.J2·TJOO * 67~7420 * ii·hal happens. Bkr. liT::>--72'!5 ci!y. Saclilil"1' SJ 5.~. · S('("W'{'d 2nd Trust Deeds on 673-40.30 111· 4!14-::2-IS Vu•1or111 Bt"'h. Office hours 8 ;\'.i\1 to8 Pi'II WALK TO BEACH I 494-7508 496-2'218 Ot•nngc r.otlll1 y real est ate. $~125 · l'On1p. n'1lf'\', 2 br &pt. * $291500 * VIEW ' wr~ SIGNAL n!OltTCAGF. C.'O. ~ -small ill"at 2 Ur. (h"l"k, \'ie11·. Ill' heh. arranged to suit, CALL ~·12·4451, IRVINE TOWNHOUSE ... club & tennis from lhis (714l 556-0106 !louse, bltins, garai:•' S:.'75 _ 2 hr, :.! 1111 • 11 11 hltin!I, 2-sty. 4 BR .. 21; bath home i\'C'\l'POl't Bl"nc h vic1Y of bay 4500 c •-po• o N n S:!iO -re.ll'C", 2 Br, ~ill'. npt. nf"ll• & nlct'. 3 rlCC'k \'1cw. * UNDER $.10,000 * w/frplc., lgc. patio & 2 car 2 Bedroom House & ocean. S.=ii,JOO. 979-:n~ I ""'"'~-,..";,.,..~'~··,..·~"~· .. gar, pat10. 011ld ok. NU-VIEW RENTALS Like uew 3 beds, 1.150 Mf. garage. S43.500. __1!_X34.Ft. ~ Golf course R-1 Lot 10';6 DISCOUNT on $35,000 $300 -2 Br, frplc, dhl gar-673-40:l> nr 49+-3248 1"'1 1• .11ir (.'Ond. shai: cptg, CAYWOOD REAL TY Downto .. -c-ia M .. .,,, 1'."i!I' on 15th Tee; of r.tesa lst TD on San Clrmcnte a.11:r. yard, P<tltO. Ch.ildJpct TOP rN IO.'ood p.i!io, nc;ir pool ~.. '"' ,.,.. c NU VIEW RENTALS I k 0 * 548-1290 * RIVI ERA REALTY V_ rrde .c .• F_antastic view. ace"'" view motf'I apt il11l"'. , • am par . ....·ner selling !his , -~""'====~~~ 3000 1 ~· ~1 '""" uniquf', A l pine -sty I e i -642-7007 645-5609 Eves. :>lG-I ~ .i-1926 $350. nM). incl 8" ';(., due ~1 ol . ....,..,., or 49-1-3:!1il 1ow11housto in 'ya I n u I * OCEANFRONT * 1-----------1 ACRE \'IC\\' lot, $60,0CO. yrs. ITI<I) 493-1154 . NIL Ocean 3 BR. 3 Ba, dC'n. Squure, aniidst the orange PARADISE 'n"O adjoining int'Oml' prop-CupiStrano Beach. d1n.rn1 .. hltns .. hcan1 C"t'il., GrovC' in North Irvine. 7,IXXl Sq. ft. of \\"OOd & charm t'.'l'lles, N nler C.i'l-1. $75,000. 626-'15.12 frplc. $150 67.1-3477 Cost• Mesa OF THE WORLD Sh:1decl hy tall !r('e!I: Igo. :; ) BR. & fanl. m1., 21~ ba., frpl. S\\·in11nin1t pool. S.JOO n10. yrly. Jcaiw 1\llSSIO:'\' REALTY 49-1-0731 S29,900 fh·ni. Please, no duplex. S320.000. by 0Y"11r:. ,64S-2020/&l2-6560 Mountain, Destrt J Houln forlt.m: If~ I ng1·nts. LIDO REALTY Condom1n1um1 [;~R~e~so~r~t~-;:;;:;;;:~1:7~4'[::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~" ;i~ Elegant Mansi .On SMOG FREE IRVINE 1177*Vla 6L7;3-do7·.!!rt B*eac:h for sale 160 LEASE OR LEASE OP· 1 BR. f'(l ·rrt'i. silo\""· dl!p., I~ I I 2 -c TION $450 • fr·.n<'I~• yn1Y .... ·/patio, 3 111n1acu ale BR tou•nhouse CAB!~ nl rl'stline. Ac-300 . • per mo. 1n-Spacious 4 BR single story in \\'nlnur Square, air conrl., PARKLIKE surroundings, c'Onimodatc 9. \VN'k or Houses Furni1hed eluding pool service. 3 blocks 10 beach, util incld, \\'iTh red tile roof, \\WUf::hl 2 BA, s?J.~. Red carpet ••SUPER HOT'' pool , NB. J BR. 2 Br\, v.·rckl.'nd. Call :>-15-2685 Bed 2 b h M $2'!."i nin., ls! & last 4!17-2591 iron gate, .11'0nt entry cour t, Healtors. R:-1..~~0 S-13,000 or 10.'ill rent \\'/OJ>'-1 BR._houF:e alone on lot $100. rm., •t • esa 3 BH, 2 HA, 11!1 ex~. walk c.6vl'red patio adjoining gar. --~-~="-----Rustle J BR, 2 B A charmer. to buy. 642-36~5 Also 2 br mobile SlJO. & 2 del Mar. PoOI & rum--ro beach s. 101\11. }450 mo. den kitch. Separa!e niastl'r TUHTLE Rock home by OJ?en beams, fplC', bltns. Ranches, Farms. hr country hon1e on land pus rm, Calf 546-4J 41. Jse. Ov.·nr 497-1022. BR . / owner. J BR., 2 ba., fan1. Nl"wport Heighls! J ust re-I p 166 Groves 180 SlS.'i. Kids. pets, OK on all. suite \I' sunken Roman rrii. Ou park $'2 ,S OO. 1 ___ , S34 ncome roperty "* Sll,\JlP 2 Bl', 1 "•'i ~L~•_p~u~n~•...c.N,ic!~u!~---- t"b & ·'-· '· rd ' e°"""" at ·950· Lo\\• dov.'ll l-----'--'---"E'UTIFUL l~crc \'alcn-Agt. 1-·ee. 979-. stlO ' 0 -"'""''l' in ga en se · o""'-""la· o " Townhoo••. Pool . Ga-g• . . c . I .,...,..,,,,. OK! !{Urry! \/. E. HO\'.•ard FANTASTIC B Ibo p I ~ ••• ting. onveruent 'home or 19al2 Sit'rra Isahella Rrl. & Co. Realtors, 64.5-S.WO. 1·ia grove. Lovely home si~e a . • 1n1nsu • Distn\'ashc.r, S225 :\JO grat'ious livi ng and enter-p .~ rctii'f'mc.nt income . !<S.1-897-1 tainu1g. $44,900. L1guna Beacfi -IOl Jo-ELIZ. N.B .. Ea.stbluff 4• LEX Sacrifice at $2Zl,OOO . B~l.BOA PEN T~ Ba:yfronl -·===~·~=----- 4 Bit. 21-'.i bn, large yerd, prh'8cy, unobstrucled view. S<l50. 100, leasr. 8.11--{6.1.'"1 M '!sa Verde 1, Condo, 3 BR, \l't't bar, beaut ;-;t:•\R NE\I/ U ~!Ts, -19-l-7:Jl'ki!, 4!16--2Zl8 :i D~. 4 ~A . P1C!r, f!MI . :lRR , lBA. bltins, YOU • • • deror, ror unit on lg 1 h··' 3 BR 2 B\ Avail ~11d J une-July 28. ....-f lO.', drps, lrg yard. bet a wous . ; • 2111 level acres • betv.·~n Al Sc 1 Wkl 6..., .......,. $250 .,A., """'s. 531 5800 ( ... ) 531 5800 can see forever fron1 green dt. °"'11"., H ~-u 5 e ov•ner's unit. \\'~k to So. Capislrano & Lake Elsinore. so P · y. •...-w.rJ. =;:=::;,;:""::o'~""':;:..· '::~~·"""~'-· -ICLEA:'\/ 4 RR. 2 BA, on cul-• •••t • thil'I beautifully d esign('(! t'\'Cry ay ~-v ... 'Jlet, Coast P laza! Anx1oos o .... ·ner $.l9'21Hlcrc. $975 do .... 'll pay-Cost• Meui $250 MO. 4BR, 2'BA. Drps, de-sac. Xlnt cond. Gardener 111ulti-lcvel home. Charming GID-l39i asking $'!2,;:,oQ. Tenns, trust nient, easy terms. 833-3223 i.0.----------n:'frlg. stove. \\'ater pd. 1st lncld. $325 per mo. 3017 ....'OOd & glass construction PRI beach, (Bayshorel 2 BR deeds or trade! Ca 11 R 1 E W -• 114 NICE 1BR, c;loSC> In :\tore~ & last. Kids OK. 55&81a1. Ceylon Rd. Call 540-327fl. BEACH LOVERS .... -ith sliding glass windCl""'s & Ba. Cozy cottage iv/patio, 64:'"1-MOO · ea state ani.u hus, $1 95, 646-5.137 or 4 BR, near Pa1·k In Cosla Newport Bt•ch leading to outdoor dN:k. 2 yn/, boat storage, priced to r ~1 ' <: cP\'lfJ, 1 oPf1J t1~9 962-&1.1.'i, 1963 tlarbor. l\1esa. $275 mo. Call eves: $33 750 Bd I ll w 7311 6"90l9 CALLING C.Q. C.Q. C.Q, L . ' • -rn1s .. arge-n1~ter suite S(' • "'.... or ..... I . ,;a\' I' II .J • ,. 40Yc Huntington Be•ch ~r'~'"°="=' ~"'~"=-c-~~-~ rEASfB UfF l'Olldo, 3 13.R, Chn1m1ng •. l year old, 4 he<l-ovcrlookinx calm, serene 2'595 Cresr,•lew -Or. • "· ov.n ru (,. UJ. O ~ rooin, still smC'lls bra.nrl r~acHic $5! !lOO DUPLEX 1 1 llio. •.11,...., 1:.."f"",. . 4 BR, 2i,.; ha, htd pool, 2\{ bll., frn rm, Shutt<'Nd nc .... ·! All glass c A R 0 EN ' • · . Ol'Can ront. ~T :l ADRl\I 2 ba. frpJc. lg yd. I adults. \VestclUf area. Pool v.·llldows. frplc, <'Omm pool, l\IT, Cl-IEN ~\ith_ patio p\lss· ~'4 old, .c~ose t~ school. all 40 GARDEN IS DUH. STANDARD FEE nil. lo l~ac6h,1 kids OK, pels ~Sc~"':..:.c·~i~t=2'~.~-;";~34~39=:.. ---I S400 1no. 673-7)!?2 , '' •· . "d ·'t u,-.1,.1,,1 £. 10, _ _ '() ·-ff_ 1tmen1.ties. TI4. 673_-909_1 from ON l101'1E SALES. no, ·a~ail I 6 -9/l $300 IC-. • V HARBOR y JI • C I "t1.11 "' " " S4'TO ~o 8 tee ,73 13~ ·CALL C.Q. mo. re.fer. 002-7408 WLunta1n· _•ll_ty _ u in~. a rn1e , ~~i~na:;~Pl"~~at~{c~.lrni;~: -REAL .ESTATE ~0a;~r~~;~;'· ;r~,,;;~Y u NI JS GU i"nfard 1 L 1 ••,gu.n 0 a 11 So 1 p•, 1 c.h 1 "'· •pt.' ""'B"-R-.-,-s-A", "11"'n";,:..""""'"'1bo_n_o_s 1 ~!~:· s~~'5~16!''11k Be, ·Near i'll ani cu~ lawn!< :ill in· 11 90 CJenn('yre St. 3 BR. 2 BA, pri\• slip, l)('ach, ., . ,, room, bit-iris, fi-K'CI yard. J.IARJlOll V~lhns, Carmel, ~h'fl, 1~ doubl<' ~u ra~c. 49'1-!WT.i !H9-031G by o,1·nC'r, Balhoa Co1·l's. \\'C' ('an sulislnnti;it r p ,t, L REALTY \\·fgnr:ii;::e. Walk to lieach~ ~~c cgi~~ily cl~~ 1·~0J~i~t: Sharp. :i BRf: f1;1.n1, nr pool, . t1lJu.nc b,v e:-.i·lu si\'C ---spANISH BEAUTY 67:>-4217 for ap11t. fil{lll'P!< •)n lhis one. ns ..,..e Sine• 1'46 $2:l.') _ 2 BR, rcdr c. Occao ll:ll/ 21 :1 ,,9,.143 inc gnrclcncf, S47;,. 644-1791. l'.!X\·c ullve bo1ncs. Ju<.! bloC'ks 1 Duplexes near t he OCPnn Do t C M · t N be h' l~~·="':cc:.0· ~·~'..::;'~~c.:::.=·--2 BR I 1 be h l-i 1 1 .,1 G:-Bi~ ocvfln v!C'\V' new 3 n1a111t~•' ii, H•'IH!Tifully main· wn own 01t• OU \'ti'\\' ap . ear ac .. i~R E E ., l'Onv , ll'n ... $323 yrly n Ill' . ()\!."I\ IOU ". ~j I ' i'llilcs Larsoo, Realtor I . rl l t 1171 J:Wrk 'V L -As • F.V .. 2 & 3 3 nn +den S3GO )Tl toral do10.n!? BKR 962·~~-1\ l. ~{d1•n1 ., 2\~ _haths: Ovt'dook· * 673-8563 * S~~~~Ol.O. ~)l'l~~~~~~l~ ~~!;: · HARBOR 642-2991 s:~25. _· ~iCC'ly rum. 2 BR, 2 BR, encl 2 car gar, 20x2'l Ca)'\'~ H.elli\;" •. 548-l~ DUTC1-I FAR?of S'J"fLE COT· ing th(' city or .. Lctguna BAYSHORES OWNER S 1· I BA Voe , 1~1 I'" e fam i'll1, pliv patto. Com-GE f B1•11!·h. 1~ntn cr1l s.. dbl. par 1ng nvestment · ..... •" c. ..,m · MODERN \\'al,.rfmnt 2 Br. '/':11 '.~i:l bre~~n~:;~~~~1: r~·plc._ tots of ,\·ood. Spanish 4 BR, 3 BA, $61,900. !HZ.3-19-1 Carp. 638-5662 k Quick Cash * NU·VIEW RENTALS ~j1~1;';,1J;'~r:!~n~~1fi1~; Compl remodeled w/new separatr family room 11·i1h rih·. & J:lass. Pri,·nie hid. & Newpor t Heights DELUX E 4-PLEXES \Vill buy your property. All 573-4030 or 494-3248 Renlly, 962-3002, OY:ne r dock. 673-43.t'i, 675-2354. heavy bcanl <.£.iling. Cruck· 11!'.!)i ~ .... -~J::1 · ,\ real Only 3 Lclt! &>st n>nlal area. cash withln7 7~. hrs. Cal an J~~-~•plstrano Ai:rc nt -l BR, Blick Ba.y, 2 cnr gar, linp, used brick fil'{'place, 1 \O,{' 0 · · . SEA BREEZES I A!I units have f ..... lc's, dsh· ~--!l..'GJ Huntington E\each Nr school, pool, gardener h" ts 1 ths m·· """-A--. .,. i NU 3 Br. -l~i Ba. -vil'w -pd. S.'t"~. ~ suns 1ne carpe n1on ,~; o1.1.u~ Pl.LI~ \'ii:.-.... · nr oCcan & B;iv \\hl's, forced oir heal, air / l!I t Curpet, drapes, $325 / nio, I old, 111a mmoth livhit;: roo1n ....., . ,....,,,....,,~ froni iipst1tir~· fain ily mi. l'Ond., (lkJ/led garul:'cs. Pool llll Aft~ 536-0029 3RR hou.ore for rent. drp:<1, 5 BR/3 Ba, lg F'/R, DIR, nu '>''ilh n1usic center for thal ........-.-. .. q av&i l. \\'a.Jk 10 shop'g, schls • ;,, block wnll frnce, children & <'rpt + drps, comm. pool. hig Grand Piano! ArJisl's · ~ C.h•~nnini< :.! BR, & :l haths, & park. • _ ·-·-\=V=•="':'~'=:":'="~"~·~·~··~-~.&1~2-56~-~7l!~~pc~l;o~k~.~IW~-~1-~""'~"'~· ~~~;:~$5~7'~'~'~""~·1~.~·g~o~N~lo~""~'=•·=8=33=»=!tl>=J. rent-at for composing or 494-5671 .ttt.1100 ~~~:1g11,~~!"i.-,r'.~;·.11~ n!;~ Sparling Investment Bf'OKERSINC. --·· -- Cfii_Us. Tlarnb/tng -n!al" ](If ,,,_, -~.. • ..... \.~ =~~~~~~~~=II~!!!!!!! 1\•iUi hlick B-8-Q, plus a UNIQUE & UNUSUAL \\'irh \1·nlk·in Jl'lnlry, nirrh orp:, 638:S6'2 -~--C..f'tQ"-o--:;i\°"""",(-=i)_ ·~ fan1a.'lric IO)\' price. Bl\H r~ q11<11!1~· ,t,, \'lt' .... ·-lmportanl l.'1tbinets & bit-ins. t:xira NEW TRIPLEXES I l[i] \:)\!::> 1.'QU ~). -'!J !Xi2-.'">5U lo ~·nu? Gr1u·lous l1vln1t 1n a lgr. dhl. j?nl'agl" on alley & IN COSTA tllESA Flnmc:lal • T' / LOVE IT! I !lUJJt'rb!y construcll'r! 3 Bit l':<1l'a flHJ"ki ng'. $4!1,5()0. 3 fl<lo·m I" B lh l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiil nal ntriguing Wprrl Game witli a Clluc1 /e • 2 fl,\ 1·u!tlon1 h11me. Si>t:'lutlrd CALL e '''·141< ' ., .,. a .., 11:; I II' h 2 Bdrm .. I 1't Br1lh ldit.11 ltr ClAY •. POIWl------- ant you ...... 11' en you S<'r rli11in" pn1Jo. dcckr. .\:. 91 ~ 0 •- ti ' · 3 ar. 2 "' A ·.A 1 B<lr1n., l)-4, Balh Business R~ ""''•rs of th• 11s nl'a ·as-n-p1n '· bt~~1lthtnking ort>an vii' ...... ~. " .... f bl.cl BA + !t'g bonu.~. Lovel.v Owner In to\\'ll June 2 until RF.Al: TY O l()'µi ~\VN Opportunity 200 "low :'{Ol"~f:ur tim;:l:~t;;, <'Ovcred pa!io .... ·Ith firepH. S(lld. Ft)r ficlnll~. 119-1--j(jg!l. Nt1 r Nt wport p0 1 1 Offlee range ounty Honus .~ rm1lo .... ·ired for aft fl pn1. Apartment I R e N R E c I i;1erffi. d i.~h .... ·shr, sprbiklf"l'S .:::.:...::-".::::...------· l l~UHOPEAN nrtisnn hanti Realtors 547·6791 AflL . . nnd It 11,1•11.kcpt low niainl Lagun• Hills rr11ftL'll thi!I view sl1e dream WE'lCH'S l I I I I.' I front g. rcur yard. $36,95(). 3 BR, 2 .BA. "Cordov!l," in home in lhl" tree Tops. l\tov-SIX UN IT -apa11n1t.'nta wllh PRODUCT , _ . _ ·-_ for J'J::l-tr'ORJ\1ANCE lnq, l\tust sell , To many OCMn ~1'("('1.CS. Spaclou11, 3 Bllllon dollar Industry need11 1147.3584 popular "J\fls!!IOM" are~. ra bulou~ re1tturt'!'I to list. un., t~~~A. blt ~tUI, crptd, no1v n.'!ipon.!iible men an<I I H A A E D , 1~ LK lot $36,900, 675-6900 Cotne Se<' _ Only S79,5«1. drt1 d. 65 x 300, .clO!IC 10 1 · hi h I '24'>e22 ' FAMI,._ Y RM• "Ge ttyslturg Address" Laguna Nlguol Brokl"r, Si6-4()l:!. gra111mnr 11ehool . $1050. In· '>''\'.>mr~. 0 service, g \.'<I· I I' I I' I ••' o -,,,. A'k\n .. Sil' 000 but utne '"'"'('r'tl.gc rou cs. 3 l~h'Outn -pl 11!1h -1o1hni;c AI0.·~11 \\·inning 4 BR, ~ BA. 2 BO CO'M'AG "" .-. · ·~ " ' LIMITED OPENINGS ··11rJl('I!<, clean. S2~.500. <'nil n1nn icw-ud comer lot. IJCl<I CONl>O. 2 BR. 2 9,\ on Golf , E, W/\Y crpt, niakc an offrr. J<INGAi\RD S 4 7 - 6 061 , KA TELLA 11u~_1ngum l3each location! l"OOl'l!t, bltn.~1 beaut vu, ten-tll'IO. drp~. rrplc, m11sslve lot ! ltE. 642-2222 PART OR FULL TIME RF.ALTY, H.B. Shal CT"J•tw:, 11hnk~ roof, ni!i club. JO A, dn, $36,»l J::~1~~P~7:~~J2~~:t 5 CHA.RMING unilt In xlnl NO SEL ~lNG I• K U F E L I ! hhn!>., 1f!n1ni;:! Valued at /l.11-f.6.?JI LAGUNA location, clo:i;e to Company t"Stablishcs com· I I I I · O ld li""""r -ml I •r :i Bil. 2 ha, 111onc 001i11•r s:w,;,oo. Suhn1il your lf'rml! Lido Isle San Clemente eY'C'rythln11:. nl'>''BYll' n-nted, mcrclal or factory Iocation!I, · """ '" n $Cesi C0'1 tireplr .. d in. rm. tar. ~ar 11r tr11.rle~ '. V. F.. 110\\'ard & cxlerlor Jul!l painted. Call No tranchi!!t" fees. Com· -. - . • remember when kids used te> ~fflx>B~~~~;a':~~j:!d \of& 3<'f~~.-nr. bf'ao·lo, 11-·pl"., Enjoy This Summer Bt';id~\~ne~'l. 3 f~I~. ~~ ~\S1'SCIADREP';:ST'97A-l~ftESA, -~~~Ir ~~~:R~~es1$rioo.n': ,r--S-E_H_K_U_T __ , ·run awa y. Now tliey ~=c ., • S.1llclly huill, bu,yfronr with pa1KJ, 2 car gllr, lndM;:pd, ~ ..._...,. " \Varner. •$34 ,00). 16771 lrhy JIH!io, w/w 5hag, crpl, l)lf'r & flOUI . Spackl\.1114 UR/ bc1lch g-ide 101. ask $42,500. &-2 BR units, ~ Inc mo. for 01ore lnfonnat.lon Write: I I I I r 0 eompr.,. the t hucl!e quoted 1.n .• 842-8194 CAIHlna Oub pfivLifW:l>'if, 1uths. 3 a..r i.:;1trage. &1n1ly4 ,~92--:..::395~o~1~------Ownt>r . $87,500. MS-96.95. N. C. B. 7'ilnc. by IHlll'l!J In the mJssJng WOtd. nv ownM'. )!"'r11nclacnn F"oun· S26.7'"J(), Cllll Zl.3--71/-1-1027, i.l('llCh/oc-ean \'U(.' $2Z 000 s~ A -~cwot•• ·.,So lle -you devolof) from step No. 3 below. '-· '"R. 28 '• I ~·t 'lo•st•r P ·1· 0 " l 'LIDO REAL. TY ' ·, :;•::n:.:,t•;;,,;::."::';.-----''1111 L.' . •£V 18 uL~, 'lD A. pat.,,, n1n "'v' .i• " .. • act 1c ·w.nr 11. 1• TIME FOR Ottk and, Calif. 94621 • 1·111, \\/11pRnlsh t r pl c . MEREDITH GARDE S ,.371·y LI N' D I --• · -r· lud no...,... ~" A PRINT NUM&ERED LETT ERS IN l<l,900. ll42-8<5< ~ la '"""NJ" >ftC > OWNEI<. 3 BR, 2 BA. fam ~UICK CASH nc • n~•• Num~r -'<:!' THESE SQUARES By o .... •nc1" 1'rl level, heout 3 * 673-7300 * rm .. completely upgraded. T SPA.Rh"LTNG Dutch J-l~vtn UR, 3 UA. fo1·rruU din m 1, M v rd Shlll{ r.pt!I, «nl11I ilir, l)llns, THROUGH A EXPANSION Funds ~ Prof. a uNSCRAMBLE ABOVE L·1"11•s M1ui_oa :I l\r, 2 Bil, family llv rm, l»Ull!i~ fam rm, e1a e • <'Uldc511c. Nr. Sehl, S. Csl 1ot1u1 Guur. 3 for l Return -TO GET ANSW~R " 11 roorn . .\'!any xl"rlls. fly ;;'c<"'::;l<::,•,.:~=,52;::,000=,·-"962-:::::!lOO='•'-,· _•RR 2 h d bl Plnza & f'ru')•, S.18,500 .. DAILY PILOT 1st Yr.Ca ll Mr.Vlctot(1J4J Ow-·r 847 ~, -~1!90 . "·• crpl, rpll', tn8, "'~1 ~11 • "~2 5'•11 ·~I~ 11(':::·~-.~·64;56711 _r"':"'1\c:"•";"~'-.1"_-.,.,,;:;":::'= Ju>•!:•._•_Pbo_ne 2 <-'ur gar, lrit yard. V,S,000. ,,,, -w CLASSIFIED AD 1,,.::;'T"":i:,1c.:1,"E='1'-',p-11-a·-t-O~,-m-.. -A~.u~--:t..""-J v-1Ul67 (J1v11t1r, !">49-01<1t CLt\SSTnED "'Ill ~JI II! -.r .... " '"" SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN . CLASSIFICATION BOO \ • • Tutsd.ay, J11nt 5, 1973 DAltV PILOT %7 [ _,__ I~ [ Aow1 •""• ... -I~ [ ..... .-... -][!] [ ._,.,._, .... .,.. l[~l Ap.•.-o•k<Rn l~ 1;;_ ... _ .... ~l~;1~l -1Miiiiijjt""1iiiiiiii1on ~1~~~~1 ~'""'~-~1~ .. ·1 ~'~-~""'-..... ~· !~~1 A Office R•nt1I 440 Schools & School• & Garden ing HouM• Unfurn. 305 Apt1. Furn. .;..;..-------360 Apt. Unlu ro • Cost1 MeH 365 Ap~~;n. o r Unfurn. 370 PF~:n . o r Unfur n. 370 .. ~1'-1".,.=:"','" . ..,",.."'"'.,'-.. --... -P-Pinl<-"1 1 __ 1;.n;:•.:;tr_;u_;ct.;.l;:o.;.n.;.• ___ s_1s __ 1_•_•t_r_u_cl_l_o_n_• ___ s7_5 A ProfP"Mion1il. unlforn1~ N 1 w po rt Beach Co1ta Met.a .=.J.-------1 _;.;:'-'-';..;,--'---------------1 mlill, con,11lli11i,: or:?'.? unlqut' garth:ning l£·an1. Servlnr: CUST hull! IX1n1e, ovf'rlouk- lng Back Bay In older l!ee· I.Ion of Blufl.s. Beaut dee - mirrored walls .... cr:yilhll' c:bandellc.rs -)f:l' 1r>1T 1v/tas l\tc:-1, CwulC·I & Chaf. fin dl'Ol'ICl"il'iS, <"IC., CI C,, $1i00 mo. YE•ar ll'alll'. li 11-1()'.JG til-l-46:i2 $30 WEEK & UP e Studio &: l BR Apts, • TV & lilald Servlct• Avnn. e PhQrk! &~rvicc-11td. PooJ • O.Hd1'i.!n & l~t·f Section 2376 Nr-11•port Blvd., CM 548-!175.i err 645·39671 Ad Citl(MJ ~·,)r S5 on Rl·nl * SUS CASITAS ' PINECREEK Costa Mes-Costa MeP :t;!orcs, has ~ avall. OUNTY only 111: ~s11.11L>1, apl" I ;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;I )''1,;irn $1JO/tno. In C;innc•ry ORANGE C trxlu~ L'Otnp1t•;o.;~·i1. ff'N' ,~5t, I• 1 .~. 30t" s N B Cust11m l.and11<:ii.pe l\t.aln1 EL PUERTO t' iii~. -" 1" • · VOCATIONAL nw> "'1-720l0 , I l'UllNISllED & Unluo·nl•h· TRAINING SCHOOL "A Frnnk M. s"'"'" Co." ed '" coo.•• ""~· Corona >:xrER. Jopun•"' Gooleo>·r. MESA drl l\lar. j4:'r31~>. Ctln\Jllt>ll' yurd -~"'-R<'llll. &. 44s LEARN lll'lt\. 1-~n'l~ PSI. 612-13-'l:J, -Business Re ntal --;' , ~:xri.:it . An1e1·ica11 $300 -3 Br. 2 Bt1. Frplc·, ll-·t.!'W'1'll'*•~·__J hlk..l1<:h t:i\r l"u1·11 Buchclor & I Bl't'S. S.~ -4 Br .. ~1~ 1.)11., 1r)11l'. "-;' Mortt'I~ O!X"T1 &.tlly;- J};u;k Buy cornlo. J)hl KHr. 21 lU Nl'wpr.wt Blvd .. Cri1 LIVES UP ~ TO ITS Nl™E . , • FOR BETTER,__., Q- Si:,PRES U1'" U.Nr 1u1n Ga rt.l•'!lt'I'. i\lnlnlen/lll(,'e, ---+'"' 'talu-Slci:l:.t,-'""'r!~t••·•LAodt-----_ ' -U ~ LC _ Cl•'~l\IJI ,'(; L..111ds<:aplng. Ot·ennfron~ Slorcti 11.vt1ilabll' ~---:..:.:::,___ 01•1·r ~ lnll 11·(·1·~ $'150 -4 Hr, :.! Bu. fl'fJI<'. tr.. 1 RR. terrace. S/1XJOI, ~ \;lk hl·h. Nl'\\' & 11 ft'l'. Jrleul ror bachelor, adlt!t, no IU\11 10 sl1'1.•an1s wtth walcrfulls ereR tt• u ::: .. "'. u._ ~4'~­ADUL T LIVING FOR LESS at nuxlcsl ret11~. ,t,.,.__ GA1'DEN1'::1t or '.?'! ~<'Rrs ex· BALBOA INN l"'rlc•n1•l' SI'• kl't 1~:. nd · * s WEEW: • MODER N d1tionnl n111lnH·nunCll jobs. NU.VIEW RENTALS chll1'1f'£'n, no il"ts. S14-0 1993 ~73_,1030 or • 49.i.;a.is Church S1. 518-963'.S 1'l'la.-.1ni:,.. si:Uing fl'lr 105 ~lain St, 67ft-S74U INTENSIVE COURSE ' DIAGNOSTIC Grori:" ll11n1pton EQUll'MINT * 5-19-201 :'! * * THE BLUFFS * * * STUNN ING 1 BR J:"\lnlr n apt, pool. l't'C 111-ea, 3 HR .. 2 ho.; 1"1~iO· S:~> 710 \\', lS!h St. $165, your spacious new J. 01' 2·bedroom nportn1e11r. Sn1nll 1)<'111 ok. 1•ron1 $'170. Jo'urnirure available, l\1odels of)l'n 9:00 lo 6:00. 2300 Fairview Rd .. Costa J\11•sa. PhonP: 5-15-2300. 1-15 E. lSth St, C.i\L :)uifablC' for sto1'<'~ 01· -Ole's. {a1 68-1 s/f. $190/.mo, fbl 362 s/I, * TUm ON FINANCING AVAIL.A.Il l F: x p F: RT Jar<1n (' !!. " * l'l il'ARATION FOii: Glll'dt'Jlt•r. Con1plt·h' Y11nl CLASS ....... SM OG ~{l'\'Jl'l'. Ft'<'f' .-...11ma.1es 3 HR., 2 I.NL, l-,:1y $.18:1 4 en .. 2·~ ba., Z--t;ty $·12:i Huntington Beach $100/1110. {c) 10G9 s/f, ~l.""1/1110. C.J.S. R ca I * MORNIN& AnEllNOON I EY ENING CLASSES LI CENSE INCLUDED :14ll-~161i='~' ~---,,-c=:-,­~:xPER. JapnnC'<:<' Gur<lf•nf'r. l\no\1 h<n\·. Tri n1 m in go . Cll'11n-up. S1ni1ll lanclscrqi- ini.: ~'6.1\-J !AA. 3 Bil .. 211 bl,!., ~rhlt $•17:) Al\ V:tl'lllll, ll\UVl'·tll! BLUF'fo~S REALTY 1>14-1111 • Bfo:A!Jr Rl.t:~·~·s II Big 7. f\-lodl~t 4 BR, .15th l{lt or fnn1l ::HA, kllt h/ra11)ity. t.tv, Rnt, (lln Rrn, S11anish patio. Nr schls, park, S.575, !nclcl!I pool. gan.!en;'r, -refs req. M-4-5620. .... HARBOR Vu Hon11·s, :i hi'. film, 2 bu, Xln'I hOlllt'. I("" & yarcl 11'-"'ah·1· 11r1. No pets. S466-n10. "'-d<'poM. 21 3-8 67-~5 0 f• \\'kdays. &-44-6188 wknd. AVAIL. Junc 151h. Custvn1 4RR ,i:,_ fa111 rn1, OP h~ 1:ul-de-sac lot, r1n for l>Oal or trlr. Gunlncr pd. S~50/mo lsc. ~~ or 642-4387 BEACH 2 block!, 3 br, or 2 br/den, 2 ha, fplc, lnelds club n1f'rnbe?'!':h111 \1•/hld pools, tl'nni-. ct~. :S:l'l:i. 645-16!'"JR 1 BLK f.m1n ht•nch. "A " fran1e 3 hr. 2 ba, fnsd yd, pool priv. \'rl:y ll'us•·. SJT:i. mt>. l sl, last $200. Sl'C. After 6 pn1 (i.12-3818 Newport Heights 2 BR, fir.1ilc., ;!in. rn1., 2 cnr gar, NO PETS. $775. C a 11 548-fi&IO or 537-l:l·lli San Juan Capi1trano BRAND n••11· 2 DH 11p1, pool , plent y parking. !{1•111 ~:!-10 .. ]('11..Se s22:>. enn pa t 49.1-47'.¥.l. Houses Furn. or Unfurn. Huntington Harbour 310 I BR., pa11f"lS, frplc's priv. ~arag<>s -r1ivitk·1! halh ,f..: lots of elt!~ls. Re<-. hall, pool & pnul 1:1l1lcs, i;-1u1n:1 b111h11. S(•t' fur yourst•H. 17301 l\c~·li;nn Ln . 11 blk \V. or &•uch, l htk N. of Slater). . 842-7&.IR $J•IO -ULTRA NICE Apt, G l)ool.-i. '1 ..;ardens. Saun11. 'r1•n11ls. Pt'ivnte pat i o. Adul!s. rll: X·lli--OZ:i~. La guna Beach LAGUNA F:~,.A·ri:: LIVING On aerc·i; of ~nrdens, 1,1•illc 'X'l'tlll vic11·s. Cl()!;(' to bra.ch & .l)l\OJIPing. llC'ated pool 1'00i\. l.t:t·., c Us tom dl'l'<'lrato!' ·apt. 2 BR, 2 bu. Dish11·asht'I', si•lt. cleaning O\'en, ref. & freezer. $;150 !\lo. Funi. or unfurn., incl. ut1I. & garagl!. li-t:a,ture 11d11lts. 4!~1-·16:», Or your broker Sl:Li ~·urn. sn1all hach('\or. i'1'. l{<•:it•h. Frir I responsi· hi!_' ('01pluy<'ll arlull. 4!l-H200 0cE.\Nf'RONT apt. avail irnn1cd. \\"blll'.t rates uutil July. •l!H-i302 Newport Beach $29.50 ))l'I' \Vk & up. 1 BR. 2 Bil & Bnchi.•lnrs. Color TV, n1aid sl•rv, pool. 'The l\fes11, -115 N. Nt'll'IXil'I Bl., NB. G-lti-9681 OCEAN~'HONT -0f)('n .June & .lul~·. Formcr Ol\'11Crs Unit. $~ ,r,,. $225 "'kly. 67J..-8S.11. ' :i BH, l·blk«:ean, furn. S2'.l.i yrly; adul1s, no pets. Avail r1011•: Mag! 6-14-43.W. 3 BR, 2 BA. fa n1ily rm. Ap-Newport Heights ...... pliall('('S for s;1lC'. Call for I--"'----=----- details: 8'\&4332. Cl..F.AN 1 or 2 BR. Adults. no OELUXE APARTMENTS e I Mi. to Beach e Sun Decks & Estall', 518-llGS * Job Placement Assistance Available * Classes Forming Now Air Cond . F'1•p\c'11 • 3 S11•im· ming r•ools • llealr11 S11:i. · Tennis Courts . Garrtc a11d Billiarrl Roon1. Patios e ·carpets, Drapes e Loads; of Pa rking e Garages;-Pool $130 & UP COMMERCIAL APT. ON .COAST HWY. ' I CdM, 673-3345 --~ * Special Courses for Mech anics who need Class "A" License r fJ~I p L=.,~,~.~,,,---~1,-.. ~,,-..,~ .. -,,c,. I 111a in1. M'I'\'. fon1111 '1. 1nrl. rr~d. Sprinklr~. t:ll'nnup. &1~~9S7 1 licdrn1. 1'~ron1 $165 • ,2 Bcdrn1. Fron1 $20j e Rec. Roorri 714/646-6505 All UTILITIES PAID I & 2 BORM'S. Fur n . & Unfurn . Ava il. MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE 1959 MAPLE STREET, COSTA MESA 2400 liarhor Blvd., C.1\1. t714) 5;;1.11020 Also Garages for Rent REr-;·r At OV FICF: 36S .. Apt. -Unfurn. , OPEN 10 lo 6 IJ"'.'l,".LC:\'~-1 ::7'-c-:::-:;;--;-·--- HAR80R GREENS New,,Ort· Beach Furn. & U11furr1. f>)· s1:m. Buch, J, 2 S.: 3 un·s. l\lodr,-l.-; THE NEW 0f",'n llJ '1il 7 pn1. 2i00 BAY\VOOI) APARTl\1£NTS PelC'rSOn \Va)'. C~1. nr. Bio·· in Nev.•po11 Beach arc -~-iiiiiiiiiiiiimi Rentals I~ Summer Rentals 420 OOr Blvd. &. Arli'lmS. rearly, The salt--s offi('(' is 546-0370 open •daily fro1n 10 Al\-! lo BA YF'H.ONT .... Be au ti ( u I 6:30 Pl\1. r.1aC'.'\r1hur Blvd. \•icw. 2 BR. Sl('('ps 7. June * RENTALS * &. S..<tn Joaquin I-fills Road. $1:tl \\'k, Jtlly sz~ ll'k. Aug. YEARLY \.. 644-5555 S350 \l'k. Also l BR. Sleeps 4. June $75 \\"k. July $150 From $650 Month ~::ASTBLIJF'F: beaut. ne"' "'k. Aug. S17:> "'k. Also avail SUMMER apr. 2 BR., 2 baths. Bltins, on yt·:irly. Slip a\'a i l . frplc. 2 Patios. Pool avail. 61H98·1 r 67:;....{l-178. From $1200 Month fJ().l. 64·1.0355 ~------~-~1SAVE in J une .. Sl'i5/week, BILL GRUNDY NE\V Bav. front-priv Bch & A 1300 I R 3 BR 2 R I 67s I ug. , . !IP . , ea tor ·616 Pier 3BR, 2BA, S550 n10 )T-ha. pool priv. 2 hlks to bC'h. UNF. 2 BR, 112 BA. Adul!s only, no pc'ts. Slj()/n10. GU). C J01U1n SL :HS-ff.i73. ly. 9TIH>63t or &l·H510. Pvt pkg!, Ms. F' en ton, NEXT lo hay & park, lBR. 6'12-9933 ·/ 673-2110. Frnnl duplex, no pl'tS, $175. LIDO Is[e \\laterfront 3 ----------' I.ease. 673-22""a6 BR/2 BJ\. JurK!/July $1250 Capistrano Beach 1700 WESTCLIFF DR. 010. Aug. $1500. 673-SS86. "-'"'-'"'-"--'-"-"'-''---· l:z BP., l & 2 BA. Bltn ap. BAYFRONT BlllOOa Pcnili. S 3 Bn UPJIC'I' rlupl('X. Ocean I' l'ool "''627' B•·. ,,.,, & ,1,·, •.l·-p l•I. Vu. $2~.0 1110. Opcn \\'knlls, p IUll{"eS. ' ...... ... ,, ... ~ \Veckly J unc : S200, Jtily 10-2. 3·1-1·13 Via Espiri.-lztl. 1 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 !'JOO, A>og·. •500. ,.,., ~n;; 0,. Capistrano 8('h. 87 1-00iii..i " ;r-w.,., Apts., (11 682-0153 €!\'CS. DOUBLE shop ::Gx:~ ft. Nr. N 'pl Pos1 Ofc. &_ i\larincrs !\Ii. $221 i\~o. a~t 542~14 Indust rial Rental 450 NOW LEASING Huntington Beach NEW M·l 940 Sq. f't. & UP llun1i lton & Nc11·lrt11(1- 646-0697 or 833-0Sl9 r--~-~-~~-· ! !NOO<lR/Ou1d0<•r 111 ho r , -iiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~~~~~~:I ('1('1111\n;;, yarrl pmjt'<'IS, !!!! niu1111 , V<'ry reas. 1·att:>s, I ....... ,..... l ~ 11 '""'"',;'" II 1• J ~;;:::~~c_g _____ _ L. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim~~-:132· _t"URNITUlU'.: V!!Q --1!>,r ·-I ll'll..'o11 f11rn huuls ,t> g'{'n ;- Found (free ads) 550 Schools; & 11auling-. ;JlS-1."4;2, -/ ';en "!ra l Services; I 2120 PLAC ENTIA AVE.-COSTA MESA 1:mo SQ Ft 1\1-1 space, ,v/fronl offices, lrg rear FOUND -Youni:: 11·hih' instructio ns 575 !'KIPLOAl)F.R S.· c\uinp ttl1ck door, $ISO n10. 1781 \Vhi1ticr female ki11Cn (l\lust J.:nl -1,~·rk. Con<"rt'11'. asphall St., C~!, f\46-.:.03.1 days, Vic, of Albe-rt .~ Qran~C', PHIVA'fE S11·imn1ing ,i:, Div·1 !<;11\"\111~-, llt't'ak1ni::. 8·11i-7110. 6-1(;.ffi~l <'ves Cos 1 a 1\1 cs a Bl' r . in~ lesi;ons ~~ug:ht at your LOC.\L niovin~ & h:1uling Uy 9am~5-T.i.i7 hu1nc. 6-H-1916 sturl•'lll. La1~c tr(u·k. Hc;1.~. Rpntals Wanted 460 FOUND Jari.;c altl'1'Cd niulC' 5'.'.4-l:'l·IG or :,,~4-211>1. cut, grey st riped, I Sl'flSOllS r I ~ Y1\Rf), );lll':.1!.-:(' ('le.anups. \VA.~TED to rent or lease -3 i\fobile Park, Costa l\lcs:i., I $enricel aftd Repairs Ht•inove tn•1•s, dirt ivy. br, 2 ba, Sp. for 3 ho•'!lC:S· 6-'f>-6..'1~1. O\\Til'I' pl r a s c _ Drhe\i·ys, i.:ra1hni:. S.li'-2666. \Vil\ consider older hon1e, in claiin. No pets ullo11·<:d or n<'ar Orange C l y. ht·i-e! .... Housecl•an ing 645--3269 FOUND Sian1ci;c kt t l e n ua..Jy:iiitt1n9 Ca rpet Cl•an!ng QUIET adull seek.<; year-vicinity Shakcv's P I z'l a Floor Care & Windows round ] BR furn. ~n-Parlor, Nev,,p01·t Beach.. TLC MY HOME 1al/lcase, on Balboa Pen1n. Contact ShakC'y's for in· Wilion Ave Area n utrh :0.Taint Scrv. 537·1508 or lsland 6/a-$826 aft. 7 Pi\1 forn1atlon 6n-930t Costa Mesa Dedicated Cleaning 'IiVO adults need t1,1·0 txlrr~. TRI-colol'C'd n1alc Bass1•t E xperienced Mother * \\'~ DO EV~:RYTHING • apa11mcnt by July l in Hound \1·car1ng hcavy blttek 548-3317 R<•fs. Frt-e i st. &!fi..28~9 no11h Hunt. Beh. area !eat~· L'Ollar \t•1ffi brokcn I M rcasonable r ate. 430-7cm8. l'{)pi:', vic:lniry Bo!sn & CHILD er.RS In my hon1c, _•_•_o_n_r~y _______ 1 3 OR 4 BR unfurn. hon1e in Sp1·u1gclalc, M B. R!rl·38·10. dcpcndabl~ & rcLiab!e. C!1ild· QUA LIT\. niasonry ••·01 k Nc11•port area. t.11d-June · rcn fi'{)nl 2 to 5. 546-1l·la Brick & blot•k \\'tills. Pnuos St•pt. l st 6'14-4i56. FND kitten, · hung1y & Builders u specialt y. 6\0--0SS7 Huntington Be•ch _ WAITING LIST OPEN Balboa Penln1ula OCEANFRONT $175 'Vic1v studio, ne11'ly dl't.'{)ratcd, best Balboa loc. Adults only'. No p,e t s 6iJ...6372 frightened NC<'ds horn(' in1· 1------------,1 2BR, 2 BA, fur n, Nr. Bay & ~ n1cd. Vi'c. l\1ngnolia & \\~ILL build 01· r e p a ir Pa inting & ocean';' across from prk. I I Yorkto11·n ·uiyth1ng 1·our ho 111 c h • ~~\J Bch $200 \\'kly, ~;;-;;;;;""""···-~· ;~ · 96S-32Hl ~eeds. GC'ne ·Enn£'S, 547·1838.[-~P~a~pe;:c.•;cc•.:;n~g~>n-9,,_ ___ I CLUTCll p u r s c 11·i1h No \\'nsting for 1, 2or 3 BR Apt at the VI LLA YORBA Corona del Mar STUD IO apl, Hunt Harbour, prl'scriplion glasses. 19th SL Carpet Servlce * WALLPAPER * bcaul furn, rec facit, across Auto Trans;portation 525 Costa l\1esa, 548-9387 aft. , \Vhen :yon rail "Mac" from ocean, $150 11·eck. 1:00 p.nl. JOl·~N S C.1 rpet & Upholstery 548.14.14 t>ves. 87!r2001 : 871-iOll c1·es. TRANSPORTATION !\f!NIATURE malc ivhitc Ori-Shampoo free Scotch· ~-_,,_,.,.,....-,.=== LIDO Isle, con1pl. fu111, 2 NEED.ED NOW! 11 -Jc, bobtailed, l:raincil. guard (Soil Retardants!. Gror~I' P~inting & De.cor'ng BR 2 B \ I I t. al l D<grl'asers & ;ill color rntl'r1or & Exll·r10r \"IE'\\1 apts, l BR. 1\lso · ' · rp c, pa IO, From s.A. College aN'8 lo ~ound in L.A. n1onth a~"O. hri"hlci~~rs .~ 10 nlinutl' G. uarant eed Top Quall~y, hl.1t·helor apts. Cd'.\t 2:).10 elect ki!C'h, dsh/ii·sh. Avail Huntington Beach's Sunsel 54&-7707. blf!;t:h for ii·hitl' ra.......,.ts. \\·orkn1ansh.lp & l\.1atc11als So>avic11-. 675-6-1-43 Junc, July, .Aug. 6Ta-l3G5. Aquatic Park, 12:·00 noon.1,--'0-U-N-'D_m_od_i_"_m_•_m_a7\l-,.-crl &l\'I' your nioney by s~~n~ Frt'e est in1a~es • l~1c. & Ins. Condominluml pc>ls. Lge kiL $1:'5 .... Sl;iO, Z-121 E. 16!h St NB 6t5-1SOJ Jlunt1nglon Bl'nr-h Unfurn. 320 Apt. Unlurn. 36S l __ •1_71_4_1_84_2_·_96_2_2 __ Costa Mes;a 425 t.'lon--Fri. \Vil ling to pny fair female puppy, 1,;. i.-olden ml' l'Xlra trill.'I. \Viii clean l.S•O-R:,74 Vacation Rentals; price for ride. Call a fter 6. rctrievl'r. Vicinity Corona 11 1 d. · & p INTING • I '" ,, TllE EX', ~, ,· BALBO,\ p •• ,.,, ... 18 ,, ...... , 5.'U-3S86 d•I M•r .~ ... ~·, \' ng rni., 1n1ng nn, . A , . "" rcpa r, ,,., y -t:l l lNI..• "" .,.. """-u "' 1:.-v.xo.. hall $15. Any rm. $7.50, \\'orkmanship guar. Take PALM MESA APTS. apt, sleeps 8. $ll0. \\'l'ek up. SPAYED fem dog, 7n1os.. couch $10. Oiair $5. 15 yrs. Rdvantagc ,of n1y exp. l\11NUTBS TO~ Ne'f_c_BC_!f. ---962~ 1 ll 'iti l fox t('rrie.r mi'<, 1,1·h \v/blk cxp. is what counts, not 536-70j6, Bach, I & 2 BR. from $150 ====-----4-3-0~. Ptnoft#s face & ears, vie Arch Beach method. r do 11·ork myself.1.::=-=::0P~A-l~N7T=IN=Go--- Fountain Valley Balboa Island 2 BEDROOM, I bath ::: BR, 2 BA. bltins, frplc, dbl NU 28R 1 builtins , fully earn.fed. f _, I $""''" , t'l"pl11, <rps, r • i:nr, nt'<>• yn-· .ruu 1110· d hi h f I Children OK. $14S. per · I · \ " ,~.., olil \\·~h/dry. it "·s .. rp c, UlC · n1ain · ~ '" · I ~ G ·• C I •month. Ca I I .OALE, 557-5640. "'kcnr\s ctt t I pier, yr y, _,,, rAJ iu ana , 213-.12S-a738 tin-.t1~ 9624471. Townhout• Unfurn. 335 F.:LEGANT 'l Br \\"i;<H'. nr. shops/lx::h, Yrly. 835-3-137, Newport Be•ch cve/1vknds 5-111-i:IDS. l'-"'-'-------:,---4Coron• del Mar Adulls, No Pets. Rental1 to Share Hts, Laguna. 49-1-9815. Good ref. 531--0101. 1~ 1 . ,_ ~ \ ,~------~;; It pays 10 ca l'O cssiona ..... 1561 Ml.'Sa u< · FND -Orange Joog haired Carpenter · 5118 *MOVE IN TODAY* (5 hlks from Newpc)rt Blvd.) .FE roon1mate, 24-30, non-v · r.1 ·1 &1 -~--------ll "-f'•::•',..:crr=«c,'.=""::t". l·~· =-· ,.---: 546-9860 sn1okcr, to share 4 br, 2 ba, Personal1 530 cat. le. a1'quer1 e NE\V remodcl fran1c & BUY W.P./hnnging conrracl Spa. 2 & 3 BR. $149 .t-$199. Nciimt Sch-front. 1,1•/2 girls. I-----------Coast J-l1,1·y, Cd!\1. Male. · • 1000. 1 Kids ok. Pool. l\L'l'lson 1.n. • CASA v rCTORIA * .. 675-49-14 aft 6 finish. storfs. offices & by Jt6nie 11PP1-s srnp s. (! blk \\'.of fka('li Blvd ., I & 2 BR. Furn & Unfunl. ~;~i,~~ne, ~IOS. 1110 • VETERANS · t10mcs etc. Custon1 v.-'{)rk. Thel·lang1nen 547-58•16 off Slat('r/. 96.1-4029 or CarJ)('ts, drapes, D/\V, TV Earn $4.58 to $7.00 per hour ~~~~ZL~~~'t'a~ D~j -~~· Licensed. 962-1961. HOiVIE, Hcsidcntial. A111. AOULTS-LEASE 2 Br. 2 bn ., ('al'J)(U1 .. S250 3 Br. 2 ha. i.::ar, pool ...• $:«XI . REAi.TOil G-12-5..":::::t 1H7-TI86. ant. Pool, l'IC, Conic by in· BALBOA Penin Poin t. guaranteed' by using your' · \VOOD\VORK, cabinets, Quality \Vork. lnl ·EXl. ..,Y WALK TO BEACH quh'C al.Jou! our l\1ove-i n 01,1•nl'1"s 2Bli iipl. nr bay-t..i.t. Benefits 1,1·hi\e at· Faii•n. 54,9-(1223 paneling, gen ?'('pairs, Duke !teas. 5'18-95-18, 64::->-l57j . ~ A!IO\•·ancl', 52:J Victoria st. ocean. Gar, L"Olor TV S200 t<:_nding Santa Ana College. WHlTE cocka1JOO Pu P P)I... Da Durl:a, 646-To9S, R•l6-9-195 EXP. Painters working ll"l\Y ...... • New 2 BR, Crpt/drps, at Harbor, C.l\1. 6-12-8970 per \\'C'ek. 675-7213. Call now -1'~ountan Valley n re a , I II Call Ch d ! h h fr11t. 2Qj 15th. 547-9561 Ext 370 531-3221 Cement Concrete t iru 00 cg~. · u ' 1 s 11·s r, Huntington Beach T\VO men seek thh'CI to shn1-e ' days 540-0070, t'ves 642-4183. Ouplexe1 Furn . N•wport Beeclt 34S ON TE.i'>: ACRES .ll47-~7. furnished bl'ach hon1e. Non COUPLES 18-35 + Sl\1ALL black kinen \11ith BRICK Vl'ne<"rs. SJumpstone CLEAN f>l'{)fessiona.l Paint· BAY VIEW Apts. furn,/unfurn. Lease LRG 2 Br. Studio, 11 ~ Ba. LA QUINTA HERMOSA ~~ preferred $100 · Parties or meet cpl lo cpl flca collar on Avocado St, & co ncrete, block fl'nccs inJ;:" rnt/Ext free estimates. 4. br, 2 ba, upi)er. Conipl. FircplaC'l' I pr!v. patios. $1$7.50/nlll. l\1arrif'd eple, 1 Spanish Countr" Estate Liv· Cati "'Leah" 2·8 p , n1. Costa l\-1csa &t:>--4124 il'l"OUght iron, store fI'{)n!. cill 557.7~55. 2 lk Pools Tennis Contn\'I Bkfst. child ok. No pets. 842-1:'>49. ,·,,. & g...,1,.ious Apts. TC'r· Share APT or liOUSE. 638-1511. FOUND bike vi c i n i I y Cus. 1,1·ork. 963-1855 • ~~~~.~-,---,--""c I fl!J'Tl. Re-dCC', b s tOO<.'t'lln. -a ,..... ====~°'c0"'-7~--=---"PROF h I ~ 9C-O Sea Lan, Cd:\-1 64~-2611 3BR 2ba ·-d bit ' ---' I ke a Call 'J-IOli-fE...PARTNER' Sandcastle & Se11.cres t , . . pa1nrer, ones \\vno., • 4~th St. Yrs I!«'. Avrtil. · • crp..,,, r11. ins, raL'"' lXIO · sun n g s 836-ll94 or 54&--I4'79 "·' ,,_~79 PATIOS, 1valks, dr1W!s. Sav.-•, reas. Jnt /cxl, free est. S.Zi tlays 5-i3-~. eve!I. fl\lacArlhur nr Coast 1~1,1-y) no pets. $275. rno. !cast'. BBQ. Unbelievable Living. ruLLY LICENSED Corona dcl i\1ar, <H-4-,,., break. remove & replace Refs. ~-2/a9. S32-!HT8. 673-23i0 l BR. UNFURN SlGS Garages for Rent 435 * SPIRITUALIST • Large Gem1an shepherd, ml. ''°~"~ogre~t~o~.~5'~8,"66S~~fo~r~•~•~":;:-IP:Afiifi:Nc:i~;;j;;;;:;;;;;g;;;g: l ="-'7"C--,,~,-----~3•s~O 2 BR, <1111. nn, frplc, ncl'o' LARGE 2 BR, unf. $140 i\lo. 1 BR. FURN Sl85 Spiritual readings 10 (lm·lO Vic. J-IBH S. Blilck &. tan . .;;; PAINTING & Paperhang1ng. Duplexes Unfurn. r rpts & d1·ps. S28.i/mo. Call Clean~ Near stores 2 BR.· FUR.i.~ S215 DOUBLE garage for rent. pm. Advice on all mailers. Friendly. 842-6478. CEl\IENT. & .Block \Vora. Clean \Vork done 10 your r.1r. &als. ;,ss....~. RC'alononiics. Bkr. 6Ta-6700 ALL lITfLITIES PATD $40/mo. 177 E. 22nd St., 312 N. El Camino ReaJ, San S 1.,t t•• ,.,,, .• , C•ll•g• 10Yalhl.,pa.,t",..'·bs~c!,;w,!11'5s, etc. Satisfaction. 540--0167 Balboa 1slano Adults, No Pets Costa i\lcsa 642-3&15 c 1 t 4 9 2-9136 m. c .... · ~· ... · ". "" "°'"-"~·~-0'~· ~~~=·~-2 BR. $26."1/mo. Crpts. drps, Mesa Ve rde (4 blks s. of San Dj_cgo FN)' 1 • ' • -4fil,e men e · ' Park area Cl\1. i\lusl iden-C 0 NCR ET E Drivev.•ays, P la :.ter, Patctt, Repair LEASE 3 hr, 2 h.1, pit'r, "'alerfrunt. $42:>. 214 Gnl.l1d Canel, BJ. 673-3&18 Costa Mes• Gar. Crpt, drp. Call-l\1r . =--~------on Bench, 1 blk \\'. on 1-loll SNGL gar. Fernando-&-"9034· ~ ttry. 5.'l7-TI&i. p · .... • -Bl )CIC wall Beals, 556-8790. DLX 2 & 3 Br., 2 Bfl, Encl to 16211 ParksidC' Lane.) Edge1vater Balboa Pen. $2j PROBLEl\1 Pregnancy. Con·~~--------r.,1~~1~ 8tJc'd sf5--0595\\'a *PATCH PLASTERING * '"'' 111:.-"P R•nt'I Of" ""r mo. 6T:r0478 aft. 6. f ,·d ''' t , s ", m_P•. th<' tic Lo•! S~S · · ' All ly...,.,s. Fl'('(' estimatf's NE\\' 2 BOR.\f, fa1nily rm, i; .. · ·~1 u · '" ' .... ~=~m~.~4l-i4':;'.~'~-544~'=:;::::;=c!<i:riii;;;''.,;;,.;';i::..::"'-,:;,_u;o I • • r ''pts, de~. bltns. •·•=. nio. 3095 l\1ac·r 1\ve. 54fr.10.14. .-: Office Rentat 440 pregnancy counsehng, Abor· -Contracto --s;.lo-6825 ,.. ,...,::""' N 8 h \\'INTER, Sumn1er, Yrly, .... tion & adofltions ref. REWARD Pl bl Aval! Sept .. 675-.wvc> ewport eac Aniln's Rentti.ls, Bkr, 2005 PC RE 642-4136 L Jc EN s E o· Contractors. um ng 2B1R0• 1 ~1 BA, t<1'1't1"1•0d1•M1>8,. SHARP 2 Br. 1 ba. So. of ''R t A p · \\'. Balboa Blvd, 673·2058. PRESTIGE · A A FAMILY . . ~lfd':;,·'t .. wo~'n at.ad,gul-~~. G~,!!; -Remodel-Additions, ~tios,l --L-.R-.-0-T"l_S_P_L_U-,--tB-IN_G_ b n11, ~ar. l>ft o. 1 o. H10o·v Yr!y lease avail en 1ece OFFICES .. ·-.,,v '""" -.. fences etc Pron1pt ntt n to GALL:-546-':iJSO . sov·o· R•altof'5 ~Th-5930 ~of a Palace!!..... I I ~--=co FOUNOA'f.ION-Van Sickle, &iG-2756. . '5-i ·• " ()8;" RemodcJ.,o; -~ Repairs. \Vntcr ' I~ Fountain Valley, Beauli· · ·fietail. 0-5603,.&ia--l ;, heatff§, tttspnsnl ~. rurnac<'i:. -Dana Poin__!... Co1ta Med OCEAN d Rentals ,,. rul new building, ground PbJrsonl!I C&ll "}~italap ~i S~ALL 2 Y~ o:d ~alpo~nt JACK Taulane Repair dsh"'ash rs. 642-6263 i\1/C & LRG 3 B'. bit" k'.t. 2 h•. ----------Gft ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim·mml [ floor, 3,000 square feet, ~~~;i_;," 8 . Mam,er.e , ":~· l'nAlaC'. N Br. remod .. addit. 20 yrs exp. B/1\. Con1pletC' Plun1bihg More Room-Less Money 'I 1vill divide into smntlC'r 13:...,....JVUV ar ner s ""1unro p!s, · · Lic'd. l\1y \\'ay Co. 547-0036 servi<'e. P11.nor11mi{' oc('an vi" v.-·. COl\11'.: i;l'C a real gardrn HARBOR VIEW Rooms .al\ft officl.'S. 50c ""r ,.,,uare PREGNANT? Thinki n g \Ved. !\1H)' 23rd. &12-0956 0 I , CES CO CIOM! to heh & harhor. Bldg apt! Like Uvin..,. in a honlC El-anl aru.i•tn1cnt!; designed ~ ·~ '"' abortion? Kno1v all the facts LOST hlnck kitten, fctnalc, 1 ra t ing TOTAL SERVI · lf'!lll thnn I yr olrl. $300 mo. ..., ,,,. ,~ foot, Includes carpets, ,,·,s1! Call LIFE LINE .... 24 "·ks. R"t"rn 10 Cinema Vi<'· --~~ -l\finor Plurnbing & Repairs for $1 62.50/i\10. 2 BR, JI~ \\'ith a l\.las!cr's rouch, SU· COST1\ Mesa plC'asant furn drapes, all utilities, jani-~ u DESIGN/draft. plans home &16-0977 or 646-1809 499-2895. BA. 2 11rk'g places, priv pcrb hOUSI.' security, exclu· roon1, bath, ma tur e tor .SC.l'Vice. Call Marilyn hrs, 541-5522. jo for reivard of !hC'atcr & con1ml. addi I ions, PLU'lBING REPAIR p111ios & rec areas. \\'ilson sivr Vcrgairlrs Club and en\ployed v.·on1nn, \v/ur Stovall {714) 832-5440. ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. pass. Call 8.17-9888 aft 6 pm g1u·Ages any .size j ob. N~· joh too sniall C:ardcn~. 011 \\'llson St., \V. pool '''ith unique Aquabar, 1,1•/oot kil. priv., no11· Phone ;,42-721 7 or write PEKL"llGESE, light tan, r.Iay 842-3400 * * 642 ... 1128 * * or llarhor. No child./pct. fountains and formal gar· sn1okcr, n•fs, 6 4 6 .... 1 9 1 9 Jo'ULL SER VICI:: P.O. Box 1223, Cos la l\Icsa. 31. \\'ill gl"'-' reward for 2283 Foonlain \Vay East dl'ns. All pa.1.·t or lhe South &l:Hli65. Westcliff Building SWINGING SINGLES re1urn, vie Collc1,'<' Pk. &l&-2846 Coast's finest apartment ROOl\t for rent. Ne1,1'J)OM. Corner \Vcstcllff Drive & Call "Leah"' 2-8 pm 530-12:",0 .. c6~7"-="'~"""-=-7----,--~ E lectrical SP.w ing/ Alter11ti">n1 Hql\fEO\VNER'S electrician. Alt ti n -.r:.a 2•5845 Apn. Fur n. 360 THIS IS IT L"Ommunily. Shores a1~11. Across · from rrvine Blvd., N cw po r t S . 1 Clutn 535 LOST r.1in Schnau...er. jusl PEACE & QUIET l Bl'dn;iom/studlos rrom $t9S bl'h. \\'ould pl'l'rcr young Beach. l\1r. Howard _•_<_1_• ________ 11groomcc1. nns . to "Sam," Air L'Ond. dryers, 2:20V. e r• o ~ remod. etc. 545-602'1 Neat. accurate. 20 years exp. · 2 Bedroom from $'280 roll""e girl. S60. mo. refer. 6 o _.. ,_,~948 3a lboa P•nins;ul• All Elcctric (;old l\1edallion, i\olodels OPf!n 9 A.i\1. til dusk ~.. 645-1 I. -'PARTNER' lNTROD. re11·a,..,. ""~ l-~ L ECTRIClAN. liccnsed. Tele v i1ion R e oai r -.. -2 BR. Apt. 11•/palio, l'nc:I. 54.~2i07 PRESTIGE OFFICES Per.;onal Service. Low Fee Sl\11\LL 1vhite ll.'ddy bear. $35 WEEK &, UP gnr \\'/SIOl<ll;tl' & laundry -tf ROOl\IS $18 \\'k up w/kit $30 New prof'! bldg, Fountnln 548-1479 or 1136-1211 Lost 5/13. ftC'1,1•ard~ handed. Sn1all jobs, nlaint & ---- rcpntrs, 54&-5203. p,_,\ \"S TV• Scr\·\1'(' coll $9.9!5. e Sleeping Roonls fncil.' Adults Only. No Pets. -. !ulJit_ wk up apts. Children & pct Valley. $Ta0 per mo. \nclds l~~~====~==:kMCE~~··~l2~-!itlti~hl ;;p;;;c:;;;: l---J•HootSekH'fllng..R-Oom,s--t~tt60~-!t·r~m~o~.~20~th St., C.l\1. _ ·---------=!~""'-rj"""~=io~n~.E23!·~'6~N~c~""~-~rt~B~lvd~.,t~--·cw__r111: rec c D..l~ ~ LARCE...orruw;g......W:ipc:d-cat. e Ocean View Apl s . · or Gm'.1". ON THJ; BLUFFS ... i ... ;,..g:::g155, 6t • ans10o·er'g service. Sl!crC'1."lr· · Lost ~ Found \ Vic San Juan Tc!Tacc, San L.k T d , O Tr d , 1951 Nl'"'JIOrl. No. 1'1. 1 e to ra e. ur a cr s 646-8313 ~lu.rnn....is...fol'...)'.Du!,..~~~~~~~~~~~I 5 lines .. 5 days for $5. Calli . . .... BALBOA INN $16.i-2 BR, 111 BA. Studio on ROOl\15 -$:U .& UP. ial service avllll. Ph: Junn Capo. ol93-3.13R. .. ,,1."'"'.~"c, Priv. ""'tio, ........ ,, AT NEWPORT 0\"'rlooking J-iarOOr & 847-8989 or 962-8955. ~----;;;;;;:;1 • ... , ... 64~78 I . ._.... I i i~! 105 l\1nin S!rcct ... """" ,... .~ , 6;s.87,10 c1111s, clrps. bltin~. Nr. Occ-an. 1-i hlk to ocean. 2500 or::sK space a ... ·ailnblc S50 ="""o-~c.--='7-oC::::I shop'g. Childl"l'n ok, No Fron\ Nc l'o'J>Ol'I Blvd., turn at Scavie\\', Cdl\1. mo. \VlU provide furnlturc Found (fr.,• ads) 550 917 }:;, Bnlboo Blvd . New )'l(!ts. 735 Joann St. L'r.1 11oSpitaJ Jtond {l bl0<·k F'urn Room ,1,ith balh & <1t $.5 1110, Answei·ing service ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiim~\ Trader's Paradise duplPx. S11n1n1er rcntnl. 4 &li)..!4fi0 aOOve Paclllc Const Hwy l IQ kilch. pdv. Non-sniokcr. R\'a.!lablc. 17875 Beach Blvd. BR, 2 OA, fl'J)l , Or 3 UH, 2 SMA"I "II <'-t 'I 1.1 ('lllf'llnt:1_>, 901 Cagney Lani', N DCC .,7 o= l'""fingtoo Beach, 64~321 BA frpl Ra!c fl'(lrn $2Xt-S:t50 1 ........_ 0 ' c.uli lilt e, u ·1 N('ll'J)Ol1 Beach, Ca. 92660. r. · ·~1 -.:>W" -iu \\'k'. Nei!IOn Roblnso11, Rllr. 1>r'I. 1 adull, no J>t"I, Yrly Telephone: (71•1) 645-6242 $9~1. UR. furn rm, pri. ba, 1150', JMMED. occupnncy, 200 Dallx>a Blvd. 61!)...8120. $14().$145, 642--8520, 336 E. prl. mtrance, g8J', patio. \\'iii consider dividing for 2 .;:::~=:;:.,;~cc·'-'-'-"'= :llth Sr, Open· house PARK NEWPORT Call 642--3436. or more tenants. OJast Hwy Coron• del Ma r 2BR, unrum, crpts, drps, APARTMENTS $7!1/l\lo Sha;c Ba. ,to; Kit. No at Newport Blvd. 1'1-ee QUfET, spne rum Bo.ch, frpl. rang,. JVCn, refrig, no pets, Pc1s 111 ,r.:_ Last. Aft. 5 p.n\., prkng. 642-4644. $181'1. M1t rurc buslnc55mnn, $1 45. 968-14;,5 Oft the bay 2293 f"airvk!w Dr. C.l\.l. 3 RM deluxe suite, adj. oon-fllmokt•r, hnn1nc, S. NE\Y 1 & 2 Br, 2 ha, drps, Luxury apartment llvlng Uuest Homr . 41 5 Airportcr Hotel & O.t. I l"'Y· sr..,_1Aj:!l N'J)lg, pool, bbq, gar. Adults, ovcrlool..:lng the ii•1ttcr. En· airport. Full s <' r v I c e JI , Cost1 Men no pcl!I. l'l'6 W, Bay. joy $750,<m heaHh 11118, 7 SENIOR Citiz<'ns, you 11•ill ::tic/fl,, no lca!l' l'C'Q . 2172 LOW WEEKLY RATES E Kecutlv• Suites 2080 Ne wport Blvd. Cos ta Mesa 642-2611 STUDIOS A I BR'S e J:'RE1':: Llncn11 $140 11p. 2 Br., 3 Br., 2 &t. s1vlmn1Jng pools, 7 lighted start living a:galn under my 1 .;°"~""""'";:t,~R~m=. :8·~""'°3-3223='"""" Pool, bit-ins, play yant. ll'nnls courts, plus miles or Cfl.T"C~ Priv or scn1i-priv. 'm 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB 1996 f\l11plc. 642-3813 bicycle trails, puttlng, ahllf· Shnllmar. Cost.'l Mes.'\. 19!!0. 1294, 7"J6 It MO !!((. ft . * 2Hfl. lBA. l\:fcAA Venlc ncboard, t n><tuet . Junior 1'1 Summ•r Re n tals 420 Am' P I e ~r k JO:. U t 11. upstah~. lrg ck>sets, $150, from S189Ji0 monthly; aho l BaumgardOt>r, ~11-5032. o .... --4 und 2·bedroom plans 11.nd LUXl TSLE BAYFRONT OFFICE SPACE no pets, °'>.rt>'" 2·slory town hou5el. EIPC" <\ BR. Plcr & SUp 2 BR. Adultfl, no pe!J1. BAY trio kitchens, private pallot ~ M(l. Rllr. 6-"=111 N~'port lklll'h, buildlng r.1'EADO\VS APT. 387 \V. or balconl-, car-ilng, dra· ;.;..:a:: ~rlook11 B!!olboa Rily. o.~ •i C'I "" ~n '., ,..... LIOO lilt, 4 BR. 3BA, home Prln1e n~a. Various 11h:c e FREE t;1ilit1c1 • Full Kilchen e l!c11.tc<I Pool - ..-.,, 3 " "· ""'"""' • ...,.,ril~L SUbtcrrane11n park· 1200 11·~ d r-July S • J\U't. 'tvU, ays suites: rent or 1~-11~e. 3700 • LRG 3 ~ 2 be, ~drps, lnrit with clevator!S. Opllonnl 962-1~1!!6. evr~ 6T.>-Siti6 N('ll'pm'I Blvd., NB. l\·lgr. bltns~7 .... ~t, nr $185 mFald1o"rv1·~ce.,, JuilJ:>O~~ Of CORONA del"""?.-lar. TOr, fam 1.::S'5:.::..;·1c:;220:;:c. =~~-~-nio •. ~ ""WoN• ash n 11<!l.nu ot amui.ircc blk f .,._. • 2 BR Townhouse, l 9i"""BA. and Snn Joaquin Hills RhlHI. rm, .1. roni. ()Cean, ~· HUNTINGTON Ilc.h, ln1n1ac. I T I I In<) "" 1900 \l'l~k. 67;;...J.'!08, 2'• room, c11t'd. pvt bulh, utll rm., encl. gar., pat o, e ce ionc ,... .. ,. ""'.fl' 1~ ,1 $1 75. S45--6.'42. for 1'1'ntn.1 tnfo1,nollon NR OC<'an, & chunncl, 3RR, prkg, utll pd. ·~ · ""· " r. 2BA, $~275 "'kly. Da)'ll Lani: M().1301 wkday11 . • Laundry ~·acilltl~ e TV &c: maid Aerv ava11. • Phone Service OLDER Grear Dan c Job Wanted, Female 702 Brirldle fcn1. Fnd Vic. NOT alrR.id of hard WOl1c. Irvine & Mesa Dr. 5.i7-7861 1 • Will clean your home & do a ~1a1c miniature boxer tnix. Ines good joll. refs rurn. on rcq . La l\1irada rabies lag. Vi c. $2 . .50. per hr. ph 545-7990 I PatJlar!no school. ~83~2. t• 1 546-6!Hl J>'OUND p~gnant cat. Vie. I mes 11N~E_E_D_h<_ln-,-,,-,,-.,-,,-,-,-\\-'o Sanla lsnbclla &. Santa AnA l111ve a1dc11, nu r $ 1• s, Ave, COfita Mesa. 5'18-1729 d 11 ho 11 s ekprt, C.'{)ml,)llnlons. ,_6 wk old G('rman Shephcrrl Q ars llon1 cn1nki.'r2' UP John , puppy. Vic Crt'efl Valley, 54i-{;(i 1_. _______ 1 \\'ard & Slater. FV. ~-19ZG,., ___________________ _,,, 1 oA Y\\°ORI\. G<'rK'ral C1tan· 13 Sc 1 Ing, Afl.\·lim~. R c Ii 11 b IE" . f\~~ th. Irish ttcr. 30 11c. No. Sn.n Olcgo Cnly COJ\ll\IERCIAL Jot 159x1)25 Tr ansoorl1'hOn. :>13-7006, -----~----tl5 ml. . Rancho Call!. (val. lron1 $t. to st. CIQJW lo 541~330. f"ND. Shutters Coast Hwy. ss:io per acl \VIII tradl' all Ontario Airporl and FN'Y, =~p~ft,~\M''=l~C~A7L-N,,.-"""-.---- 492....f'i65i i>r part for O.C, properly or Clcf\t. Trade for lncom(' wanr~ ddY 11·ork PART German Shepherd, t. 543.5525 er 548·9710. prop., O.C. 830-6498 aft 6. ph 6L>-nl9 ~&le, iv/choke chJJn, \'tc. L..\h'E Arro10o1\~d; ncj:lr O\f?\."ER dL'l>iN.'fl cxchartRI! Help W a nted M&F 710 (,;oast H\\y., L.N. 4~1720 ll'll', !urn. 3 Br. '.? !)n, A· 24 \1nit buntllng~ fn Rell for ' IRISll Seller. Vie of Newpo11 'ran1c house. Supor loc, &: l.or 4 br, hou~ in J-luntins· ACCT NG CLERK Rlvd. & SrlBtol. Ca\ I ;\(:11', $14,500 rqulty !or Qr. f?11 Bi·h, Cosla ~tesa area. lAn;c. cwv o(c ~ in- 54!HM82 • --i~ ·enty. prop, ~. Call 213-869-8346. ri11,ldu<tl tu ~•st~ n1atu1<;rer. POODLE! Yng dog -blk -t'OYOTA LAND CRUISE!t l ACRE beau!, sn\og ft'('(! Son1f' l..lnta p1~11Slng <"l(· 11rnl • Vic N.H. Dlvd & \971. 25,000 mllf's. \\!Ill Cnlif. Plnt'5. l\ltrny rrc. IM'r hrlpfl.ll. A\·1t IYJ>i"", Tflklma. 67>4929 trade \for Volks\Vl\jtrn" or rncUIJic11 nr b:y. $23%, 'ilaluc. !)al111'y lu StJOO. Call Sally t~Im.E mnlc blk pllp;lY. r7!?? 1~ 1--:. I~. C~l. l'rHdc for aood ~·nr or Harl. ~ICHi()i>. Coo« t11 l Lab? 2-4 wks nld, vi(', Lake ~-44S5 "'ttgOn ot tq. val. !)1.).4965., PeMIOllnel ,\acne)', 2 7 !) 0 Slli(I, 1 BR furn l'Ji!, ht ()net yd, uUls pd. Newly po.lnted !W&-9390 "fl 6. Need • "Pnd''f'Pl"t'C 1111 &ti! i BR, qulcl artn. Sl!°).<l. t!,tll Y1EAR1 L\' • 11'i1k 2fBR apt. Spa~. 6'1H306, a.fl 5. 5'Uh122G '-"A.II lhe old stuff. 8"" the pa.Id. Adull!!, no pels, "'"~t \ >a. (,'Ony, > J"Onl ncean "' ~~.,stuff, ~ A1.'ot.lldo 646--1:201 My, only S2r. -"73-190!.'I. Cla~11ified /\<I' ...... 612-5678. "'·===-------• t'orc~1. El Toro. !\'I0-1531 •••••••••••••••••,.•••l~"~·~·~~''..!8~'"'~·!c~>~1·----·.r. ·-' . • • , l . ' ·' I.' .. ,, ; ,_ 28 DA.Ii¥ PILOI I ~[ _..__, ..... ___,J[Il) I --J[H] ·r.___-·_····~l[Il]~[ ---·-·-· )[ijJ l.___'-t."'--···~l[Il] ~I -~-·-_ Ir»] I ri-..... J[Il].__t ""'""'"!'"""....._-_,J[i] ~[Il] l•--------------1-------•l•-----... 1 .;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9!i!i~ll!f'll!!l!' ... ~~!"!'~ Help Wanted, M a P' 710 Help Wonted, M&F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Want~, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, Ma F 710 Help Wantod, M & F 710Help Wanted, MAF 710 --'-------' · · -···-·-~·--~--··-...... __ MACllfNIST -GENERAL A hN1er lf'1np, J.(lsi!loo TEACHERS STUDENTS HOUSEWIVES . Male & Femal!I A SS I S1' .A NT 1nannacr 1ruint.<e, l'Ounter ..girls. b')' l'OUb . 18 or ovr;r. Apply 10 n1unagcr. Jack Jn The Box, :'.8:5 r:. 171h St.. Costa Mega. CARRIERS NEEDED FOR DAILY PILOT OH.AF'TS.\IJ\N, Arch. c<1n• Cl::N"€RAI. MAtNTENANC£ Tu opcr11te enllchlne thop fOl' tli)cr. take \\'Ork home Nf<w Chl.'vy dlr seeks ~1rl HOSPITAL gro"•ing C;)i:h1. M'*" Co. &16-M::O. ' lh11c f'C'lirl'<l "man F1'iday" 'l'ools, dk>s, & short run exper. ltcni or overtdck or 111 arowwJ new 111.clllUes. 11urfa,ce grlnder, etc. DRAPEHY v.'Ot'kroonl help ~or u llttlc clcanin' a~ fix · M prod. F.xp'd lathe, mill, MALE OR FEMALE ""' 5'l6·""' p""""''· ,,...,,,.,,.,,, •P· M Genen~ Ho1rn1'tal Col• '"'"~"""' Corp. ART DIRECTOR m . • portunlly. Howard • • ercy JI:' 2034Pla~~~·~;'"'·CM E'F'.(."l'J'O·.NICS Chc\TOlct, ~fat·Arthur nod ..,._.,.,.,., N~'"''l!Ort Benrh tlnanclftl MUST BE 10 YEARS OF AGE OR OLDER ... _ ~ .1tu11bo1'«' Blvd .. Newport An Equal Opportunity 1 ln1ili1u1i' h11s: in1mt'diute HAVE A DEPENDABLE BIKE TECHNICIAN B P.i•1u·h. 2701 So. Bristol, Santa Ana Employer opcnin~s fol' 11 Corporaf(I GOOD PROFITS! GENERAL H Ip p/Ume •!AID • Full time. Motel • Artis!. \'nu \\ill dlrtX·t com· Dana Laboratories, located In . c • Phone ( 714) 979-3500 " er • tOOfani:: tOr ..-Su"'m'm"er cJ11p!oyn1l'n\? Coine t'Cgister \\'/Us for good f»ly!ng h'nl· po1•;iry asslgnn1c<11ts in a ltu•gt~ vnrl('ty of industl'Y in Or1u1gc Count)'. No eon· tsac-li; lo ~ign. \\'(' NeC'd '\'ou! Ask nbou\ 011r bonus plan. pany grapl'};;'cs rh• li 1;: 11 , fl·v1ne neat' !he O C. Airport, 1:vrs. fro1n 5pm on. DriVf'rs Apt, f-lntg Beach. '·· N -le h p 1 1 I ,.,. Sr 1 ,0,.. • I••• •n ,.,,,0,.~,·,10 opening •. ~ Ki!chcn. Over 21. A11ply. • Ca\1 536--04-11. ad\('''"ti · • ~ y 0 u l· ('(If-•• ,... fK ff 11111 ~· to111 __ , • ,;1t. ' eu M Ed "'n-E ~------liii\iiO'of.i"'cjiii;=;;~;=o;;;;w;I=~~ pora1c ucn ... i'Ciitl~... EAL-l.---642 .... 321-Ask"'fot-Gary=;Jarrett•---T-M,<'llR'lectrOl'lles tetfffflEtfi.11~ ;'7;bS~Cos;:~esa s..-~1 ------'"F'"'Ull Time &-R'eliif... !\V\JO-"'for ctutr"W -, ---!! Interim Personnel Service 17581 Irvine BJvd. Sartdk'h:u•k Plfll!I Bldg, #115 Tustin 838-5460 Equal Oppor. Etnployer ACCOUNT1ING CLERK 2 Yi·~ ll('l'OU n1s p:iyabli' ex· per. and J!llOrl gener<il at" l'tlUll!in:; h:1l'lti!\'fl\lnd. Type 50 11'.Jl·tn. elccll"ic. C111i For Arp!. J11dus1rial Rcl111ioni; runi'.~ rii:·uiniru;; r:1>scntial Help Wanted M & F 710 Help Wanted M & F 710 Applicants should have 1·3 GEN'l. Bookkeeping, exper. Applications Accepted 9AM • 4PM ~ft\v $2BSO t~. Ap~n::ed. l'{'([uin'nlcnti; 1 n l' 1 u de' ' -• yrs college eiectl'onlcs or Must type, ltllS\\·cr 11honcs. 1 · ay ve., · t!cgrC'e in 1:-'l'Rphl cs. or a_rt + Computer Opr $700 n1 ilir1u'Y ll·aining in analog Girl ore. Send resunie lo RN'S l\1ALE & female help wanted ~~l~~~st i:o~~rti~fe~~~~~ Career Secretaries F1·c Paid/Also Fee Johs & digital circuitry. Xln't Pt-cs-Kee, Inc.. 164 0 . ~~h. to51gta~~e.Dot~?1':. JJJ'\'fl'rred. salary ...,·Jll be in Wcstc.llff oppor. rfor udv~ement. Superior Ave., C.r.t. 92627. 311 ;1c1'Urd1,1nre \\'fcxpcr & Avrrage range S500·$750. Top ~c~~<'! J\gcney Please Apply HOUSE SUPERVISOR · San Clemente. <ru~ili rications. Subm.it rl'-s. NO FEES. N.B .. C.i\I., 1651 E. Ed1n~cr, S.A. DANA GIRL FRIDAY MANAGER TRAINEE 1'1Ulllt' w/salary requirr-Irvine, Orange·& $.A. Call li\lar~ Ill ~·ntc1·1 LABORATORIES ,\Iitst he good typist, book-ICU/CCU & LYN '3·11 g 117 Outst.anding opportunlty ~to int>nts in t..·onridcncc. lo: In1n1t•dintcly. 5-12-8836 kccpinit .. handle phone & • advance to n11umgerlal posi- Cl assilied nrl r;I). S76 • p p S CONTROL Pu1·king lJJt, fu!I 2·101 Can111us Dr., Irvine front r,,ccptionist. interest-lion in 30-00 days. Our cur- ,c/u D1lily Pilot • • • ur p/lirne. Appl y in person. Equal Oppor. En1ployer · ing \1·01·k with good pot en· v rent m n nag c r s earn J?.O. Bo.'I: 1560 K~ntucky r~riE'd ChickC'n, ~=========-:1 n111. Sulary commensurate OB DEPAR·TMENT $1000-$1500 n>O. Must have Cos!a J\·lc~H . ca 92626 Pacific "Personnel 693 S. Coast H'>I')', Laj,'Una • \\'hh t'XJlcl'ience. Call for dirrct salc:;i experience. "" I Elcc. Tl•ch to Sl JJ.;: 0 & 2 C 11 •• .. N~"'''"'' 97""-E9ual Oppor. Employer 1 Services, Inc. -~""·'~'~'-· =-,-----ap]l't l\(•t1rcen 1 a1n 1· 11 ""· .,_ .,....~" ~ &cre1aries $650 3 11 & 11 7 500 i~c""'llOrt Cenlt•r Dr. COO i~ _ \Ile have J)(>l'nl." 1,, I I •""'" noon. 64J-IH33, ask !01· ~1r:;. • • J\IAN AGER UTO .::eypunl' 1 10 ,'OU'.N Cl k M I ' I d EX A Suite 000, N.B. slllons open tor an exper ,\cctng Cl L•rk s.·i00 ar ·. LABOR & DELIVERY anager w lO s l8. • • SALESMAN 641).1970 cook & dietary aide. Jmmed Rcceptionist $5501~=~-,-----,-,-PERIENCE in n t ine 24 Central To1vcr, Orange employmePlt. Parle Lido Girl Friday S550 GRILL cook, ex-per .. male or • creative specially shoj:>. Ph, --547-6446 :Flagship Conv. Center, 466 Asst.. Bkkpr ' -S500 fcn1ale. 497-255(). Carmel's POST PARTUM ; 547-7733. ' Top S S S Equal Oppor. EmPloyer Flagship, N.B. Design braJ1sn1ru1 $850+ Dining & Pie Shop, 628 N. MAN train for Window tint- COOK, cxp'd in inl!ltitutional P.N 30 hr \1"k IO $600 Coast, Laguna._ ing Installer. Start $2 hr. Expanding nciv car dealer-CASHIERS-EXPER t·ooking. Beverly J\•Innor Receptrf'ypi!<t to $SOO GRlU. Cook. PI!} 111 c · NURSERY Raises monthly 10 $4.50 hr ship nt'<'ds 6 men to round Paid vac,_hol, sick leave, Hf.c convaleSC<'nt 1-1 o s pi ta I, NEWPORT \Vkn<ls, holidays. ~,1·po1i within 1 yr. Over :.5. Tall, out their professional sales ins, ~cd1cal, rlcntal & profu L;aguna Hill.~. 837-8000 Personnel Agency Beach T~'nnis Club, &1·1-00:;o llt'at. &M-6,194. staff. r:xpc.rience helps .... 8Nhar,i~g. L L be c·--833-oover Or .• N .B. GUARDS EMERGENCY MANACER nien·s· clothing. bul \l'e 11·iU thoroughly-irain 1-' a 1ona um r o. •-Cr.oss-country ---642~3870 Full ,t'. P/time Positions experlenced,._Lo o_p e.ra t e nieu \\'ith good potential. Jr 19122 Brookh~t Drivers op<>n in Long Beach, La-leased dept. in highly suc- vou l'ol<l direct or door lo IC<1rnrr or Gorhcldl e Foremen """"""""""""'""~""~I guua Nigu<'l in Laguna .~ Full Time & Relief Cfi'Mful discount store, C.J.f. (Joor ~nd a re ambitious and llunlinglon Beach ELECTRONIC Con1pton areas for qualified Pay inc Jud e-s rrtnge 1\·ant 1.1 earn top dollars, • Managers "' ~SSEh MdBLERSld . r applicants 1vho · cl es ir e 11 ·7 benefits. Call J\lr. Wilkes, (71) 494-9401 h · 1· · o be • Assemblers i:.xpcr. 111 au M> crmt: 0 ".1e"cly employn1ent. JS Yrs r2131 ~7315 t ere .is no 1m1t. ur ne-CLERICAL PC boards. J'llust hn,·c " .. ER TECH 11 7 fits inclurle free demo, va-e Molders knowledge of coniponents, of age or older. Apply in / • TELONIC t•ations, bonus plans, h06-Hyland Labof atories A e Inspectors \\.·!ring: & color codPs _-2ncl person .. 326 So. Lemon St., INDUSTRIES pitalil.ation, & insurance. Leader in Medical Diag-e Gel Repairmen shift. Apply ;it Babcock Anah('1m. behvn 9 am & MASSEUR Earn \\•hilc you leru:n. Apply All 3 Shifts El£'clronics. Divis i o 11 1 P111; • • , Laguna Beach in pcrsor. tn sal£'s nu1.nagcr nostic Products, Has \Ve \Vi ii Train Esterline Corp., 350i H:irbor ADT Sterling Security service 9-5 p.111. Guslafson Linc· immediate openings for MacGregor Yacht Corp, Blvd., c~t. An equal Oppt. An Equal Oppor. Employ('!' Equal Oppor. Eniployel' McrC". JGSQO Beach Blvd .. skilled individuals want· Employer. MED SURG RN 11-7 For Private Gym · Telephone 557-1154 Be~wHn 9:30 & 4 P .M. .,,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,,....,,I 11 1· 1 fl h 16.~1 Placentia. C.M. -~'=='""=-~-~-I ~~An. T i\1 ENT Mana:;:ers, un 111~ !"Ill f'tl<' · ing to associate with a ..,,..!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!ELECTRONICS ~lssen1blcr, GUARDS t!...\'.h'('f! couple capable of firm offering· top ben8--~ expcr. or trainees. I'en1. as~1ning: full n1anagcmcn! AUTO fits and working envi• Dcllvt'I')' of [JATLY PILOT. Pal Elce1ronics. 6391 SURGERY RN 3, 11 r esp on s i bi!ily inc:ld iJ1i.: SALESMAN SUND A Y ·ON Ly, t o \\'estminster Ave, \Vcstn1. --clcanin~ & ;\laintenance • ronment. n~·v•spaper <'arrk•1·s in SAN 89-l-3301. FULL . OR P /TIME f>ot ECHANIC, 1,.>eneral, nel\" cnr clC'aler, gdO(I 50150 split. Start Imm~iately, 8 to 5:30 ;, da,ys. Phone John Boyle. 54~2407 , l\trcrl 1 s a I e s man, ex· e SECRETARY Ct.Ei\1ENTE urea. Requires EMPLOYMENT NF:\\'PORT BEACll & /\PT -Asst ;\fgr, refirt"d or l fl<.'L'it'nccd, Srll ·sr.1c . Fer· use or Station \Vagon or COUNSELLOR SANTA ANA AREA . DIETARY TRAY LINE PERSONNEL G<t:rma. . I N l'nri, large invC'ntOl')' of \JW~ Typ'ng 60 w p Van. Contact i\1r. Harry · II I' G I •·. · scnii, C'jl •• no C'.'l:p. 0 I c·nrs, t-rr·c drn10, cxcrllf'nl 1 ' .m ., s 1 ,.,,, 11· s s Dur to e."pan~ion -0f out· \I .e s an::o lllll't ""'l'\'K'~ I 'I l/ t A t + ~·ol sh 80 w p m et· cy, ·•·lll est ay 1., D " k"• Po~t·c 5,,, ... ,,, I ~rEDICAL Assistant wanted, exp in lab, X-ray & EKG. Approx 32 hrs per wk, agt• 25 to 35, SAiary co1n- nwnsurate \\'Ith exp. Cal! 548-3742 ~l~i-~·~-,~. I' ·" . ~d~:~1~rl~!~~1\ti~\1i1~i1i~~-Bud e PURCH,ASiNG I Costa i\1esa. 6·12-1321 ~11'.~i~~~k~1~\~~~1~.x~:!c~·o1~~~ 1~'.~i 1Vis1~Co11u~1~n1~·1·::111~. NEWPORT DELIVERY !11t•n. pcrrnanent sl'lor in Orange Co. !O '1ianil!(' l'ulkrro11 nr JJh: j?;,.2::Sfi CLERK /)<tl't ti111e for enrly inon1i11g Onf' o[ our busy ilrsk.~. C:1 ll ' HI-Fl Excellent' benefits & Working Conditions ASS~113LY Experimental Assemblers Will perform as- sembly w o r k of highly skilled na- ture ot experiment- ~! proto-type sheet metal components and close tolerance as~embly s t r u c • tures. High school education required plus five years ex· perience. Precision Mechanical Assemblers Will perform close tolerance assembly work on missile re- lated hardware. Must be able to work from blue- prints, sketches and specifications. Apply In Person 3333-Hiirbor Blvd. Costa Mesa, Calif. IMPORTS E . , f tlt'\\"spaper delivery I o Jean Bro11n, 54-0-605.i. Cual't· ,..0'.• II"". 'I'."· 'T '•' ''•' xper1•nce pre erred, hn111cs in Ne\\·port &ach. ' " v.~ .~ • excellent typing skills i\lust have clepeudable car & ;il Pt'rsonnel .Agency. 2i~Jll Salar\'. Cosla :lll·s:t arCa. C:tll J\IEDICAL Lab needs lab 3100 \\'.Coast J-hvy., N.B. 642,940S . d he reliable. ph 6·12-1:\00 llnr!'oi· Blvd., Ci\1. :llr. ·r.ann, U to 2 pni only, Eq.ual OpportWJity Einployer assistant RN or LVN, exp'd require • EMPLOYMENT 121::1 ti~:l-R'.!4'.":. in blood dra\vlng & general A S I e Cl;:ERK DELIVERY i\Ian, p !i111c. lab knowled~. For 1~ uto a esman I Early 1i1orning h 0 ll\ {' COUNSELOR. Hospital,ity Hostess -tervie\v Ph 63.1-5633 To Srll 1'.'e1v Ri\l\V's, g~I TYPIST delivery of neo\vspnJ)('rs, nq Prcv. a~ncy exprr. in s;tlC'~ Service ~elp Wanted, M & F 710Help Wanted, M & f 710 . - \rorkini:: conditions. Set 5 . ('Ollcctions .. over 23, n1ust &.· ''· l'h. <l.csk. Ext•iti11c 1, 1,..~kin" ror \i·onlen to "'el-! -K--~1EN & \V0i\1EN wanted for " b 0 wpm required h d 1 11 11 B " "" ~ \varehouse work & machine o O (h'\liCr nt ' • ' • ave ep('"l1r all' Clli\ · . ,1oh-!11 C'll111lngs ,..,~,1 "E·o1rk 1·r1nl<' S: in!t'rvir1\• nc\I' rrsi· KEYPUNCH f\IACHINlSTS operlllklns. 540-7864 call CREVIER BMW I Apply In Person area. ,l\9-.1·42Ll. l';fn1a~f<'J' ~TJl. ._... -l,1 ll1·n1s. :Siles o1· nd\'ertising . bel\\'Cen 8 & 5. Or Call: nr~LIVEP.Y 1ne11. per l1l I ~llis .. 5~~....s~~J. cont r 0 I l'X)ll'l',· hl·lpfu~. illust ha_ve II DA y SHIFT Exper1"mental 208 \V. 1935~13't~u1ta Anti I Dpna Leverett I 'Jp/lin1c for eru·lv -lll•>l n Cnl'('( 1 En1p!ofn1e11t Agen-(':;r & typc11T1ter. 547-3095. MOTEL MAID ---=~-~~--! (714) 540.5000, ext 150 nc1vst1aper tlrhv. co l1ona·s I 1•1• 3Hl0 ln:in(' Bhrl NB , G J\To's at•t\ial \1·ork r'l:pcr. AVON SAYS Jn Na. S200 + pt-r lllO 1::.::i'.:CUT!VE Secrplary-Re-Housek~pe306r., f/time on keypunch, keytapc or kt')' Mach1·n1·s1s Call 00-~i "Be Your Own Boss" Hyland 1 612-4SOO. _·1 rr111101ust. F\1 11 lin1c or hall ..,..""" dise dC'viL-e. f\10l'EL l\Inirl \Vanted. Will Eani an inconlc of your own, I DI·:NT,\L n.r:ClP'T'lON IST. tin1e, hank l'XJ)l'r desirable.JJOUSE:KEEPER, babysit-I.rain. Apply In penon, right in your 011•n nclghlxn'-La borator1"es office n1anagel'. Preventi\'e, Rl'SUlll(' to Bo." 2151, '-fission I \l'r, -live in, cxp'd .l/i refs Apply In The --Eight years gener· Cos1 a r.1csa: Inn, 3 2 0 5 hood ~ \VON Jt progressive, general prac-\fil'jo. ri<'l'. No smoking. 3 ehiltlren, __ Pi>rsonnel OePRrtmf'nt I h' ho Harbnr Blvd., C.!\f. Near scnt~tiv;. ~ail now : epre· tice in Huntington Beach. pri rn1 & bn & TV. a day ~tonday-Frt. 9 ant·l2 Noon a mac ine s P ex· Bus ll"loP. 5'16-:>.341 or S.W-7041 3300 Hyland Ave Inia tive "& cnthusiasn1 11 \\'k, lovC'ly 1\' ate rt ro n t PACIFIC MUTUAL perience in manu-1·,-,-0~T-E~L--m-a-id-.--ne~a-1,1 1nus1. Plt•asa111 office "·ith FACTORY Nc<1rport 8<.'h home, salary facturlng precision energelic, Laguna Beech BABYSI'ITEP.. live in, t Costa M 92 e 6 s 2 a 6 , Calif. all pha~es of general office n[lf'.n. 673-5666 700 Ne\\•port Center Dr. (proto-ty-a ppllca• 'resort, G day \ittk. 494-l19G. child, 6 \.Ts. Roon1, board & k 96" '"l9 -Nev.:port Beach .--\\'Or · ..-u., 0 S H INC 1-1 0 US EKEEPER!rompan· tion) parts and tool· NON·DRINKER, age 50-{i() ~inl salat'y. Gl:r-6895 DENTAL Assistant, Ortho STAC WITC ' ion live-in for t'iderly ·lady. Assist gc11Uen1an. B,\R i\l11ids f21. Over 2.J Equal Ollpor. Employer Office, lluntin<>ton Beach, -. NEED~ Non·sn1oker. 673-5599 KITCHEN helper for ltalinn ~~ rbelquired. Mu1f cr1•1•~ 1 n1ali' & fc.(nale . .,,. ....._Electro-Mechan;cal ))('Ji. Exp'd only. 18514 .,.. a e to 0 ..... rate ·v-r-"""" part ti1ne for co lC'~c heer 1_,..,..,..,..,..,.., ...... .., .. Ion ,\1lanta & BrookhurstJ , HOUSEKEEPER, uncn-'Be h Bl d H B. D VII JI &~ NOW 1 h h 1 --• ba.r , !'<'SL Phone 833-8191 1 · 962-2405. Assembly Leads cumbered, mature, live-in, ac v ' · e eg g no, 4 rxpa!1io'~~ ~:lg e ~Pa~~~ al1cr ,., pm, ask for o\\Til'r. '·---------· ·~M h' · t ,_, C ,· n n horizontal 1' DENTAL ;is.sistant, fu I J ....-ac 1n1s s non-smoker. 837-~ • fi11i.~h cubinet 1na k er s. * B.1\P.MAlD * CLERK TYPIST tin1e. 1 year C'XJ)('rience. FV ..,Mach Shop Helper HOUSEKEEPER .... ex-j Laborers milling machine. 540-2860. ~-~~or part 1.ime~~J575 area. 839--9660 .,...StOck Rm. Clerk pcrirncC'd, references re· 1 SUMMER W 111 perform the i:~~~:~::::::::::::::-.1 Sales Order Dept "Receivingi Inspector <JUired. Call &16-1243 · layout and mechin-1 Nuits~s ~~r~Js;>i:::,10& c~il~~,~~~~ ,\ccura!e typist 60 ...... p.n1. DcJpru.·tnw'"".' 5R'0 0"bi'nson ..,...Elec. Test Lab Tech HOUSEKEEPERd. reliabh:6• Ing of complicated EniployC'e lx:-nefils. Joe. For· electric. Exper. in order JJ:19 BakC'r, Costa liles11 \1•llh trru1s, 2 ny 'veek, parts from dlmen· rester Ltd. "645-5370. processing, invoici ng & ex· Ne\\·port Beach 549--3041 hrs, Lido. Gn-0029 EMPLOYMENT sional p r j n t 1 or port procedures helpful. DISPLAY TRIMMER An Equal Opportunity ~ sketches. BEAUTICIAN ...,·anted !or ~1ust ht• exp. F/limc En1ployer husy salon nt s. Coast Call For Appt. FURNITURE SALES ... Alf. PlRzn. Paid vnc. Cal l lndus•rial Relatl9ns f'~/fitne. cxpcr. Dt'COrating FE~lAl..E hl'lp p/llmi> 16 yrs OlYINE PEK:>uNNEl Interim 5'1H-i1S6. 171) 494-9401 I not neCl'SS, hut helpful. or over. Food takeout. 515 SERYICES•AGENCY Personnel s.-.·~e BEAUTICIAN \Vantt•d \\ith COSMETICS r:. P.alboa Blvd, Balhna. I .... Apply In Person 3333 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa, Calif. s1nall following. Eileene's TELONIC •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilF/C 13kkpr/Sre'y to $900 17581 I '-I Bl d I Be:ully Salon, 792 Center. l'ull-Time FIGURE CLERK 'i:'/C Bkkpr (retail) to ss.iO # r...-ne v • CM 642--0.;JJ INDUSTRIES PBX OPERATOR JndoMComm'I L. Proc $850 115 Tustin ........... OPPORTUNmES FOR STAFF NURSES ORANGE COUNTY MEDICAL CENJER BE UTIC AN · 552 i\lultiple. Musl , Exec S0C'Y J\1klrjg to $700 838.5460 e ~ ~ A .. I expenenced to Laguna Beach he cxper. p/timc. tlt~1st have good IJping skills, l.ns. Ratl'/Writt• ' $700 Equal Oppor. Employer re .i •.• :: ... takr over palrons. H\ln-Apply in JX'r~n 10-5 pm 4:-i w.p.n1., _good (1gurc work Ac<:lng CIC'rk/EDP to $700 ~ -!.~.~v ,a ting1on Beach. 846-2900 E<]ua! Oppor E~ploycr No. 2 Fashion Is.I., '.NB & some of11ce expcr. Cost Acctng Clerk to $680 LEGAL SEC. Stlinulntlng Univ~rsity B M h R• ~ C Environment oat ec • ICJCJet ~quill Oppor. Eniployer Ap ply In The Sccrei;i· _.,/CPA lo Fee 1xl. \'ng. lawyer nd.!!, Full & P/timc Posltion11. . · p ] De t 1\SSI &lokkl'CLK'r fQ -b"J"ty &-5 · ] j .1-L-:\'Ct'd \1'0rking kno1vledge or CLERK DEPENDABLE y~ung n1au ersonne . P . SCc'vs ioo -sh1 - -to $570 a t.1 . yrs. ex.p, in ega --•lrWI e Cr1•t1'cal Care WI r!ri\'C"S & cni.,>ines. Ne'\'·• !\Ion thru Fri 9 am-12 noon !'cc'· Tri iec 10 $550 to assist hiln. Xlnt bnfts. -t·•JtO.,.''.,."•'"•'•"ii·ii6ii1.iii·ii~r:ii'ii0·.,..,.,.I .ENGINEERING DEPT. ~i~:.~is~:~':1~i.ke~~t~i.~ PACIFIC MUTUAL Cicr1s TYP't:°ts to~ ~~iO/~io. Also {et' ~sit~ns. Equal Oppor. J::mployer mil • Psychiatric Care Pavroll Clerk $498 Call Elly EIHs :J.%-.~. ! :::::::::~1;• General Care k ·· Sl.75. Call 837-:rl58 Aft 4. TOO NewJ?Orl Ct>ntcr Dr. ·rriiinees (lite lVJ)C> $.'l7"5 Control Career E~ploymf'nt - ASSEJ\IBLEP.~ - EXPERIENCED Pre c is i 011 i'lt'~·tm-111Pt·h ass'y, solderlnt::. <!rill pre~s opt•i·ation. Col{' lnSll'uinl'll1 Corp. 2031 l'lacf'11l111 A\"('., C:ll (H2-.~0."'1 An £(1ual 0 11p o 1· 1un i ty £n1ployl'r ASSEMBLERS * Bk Prs * ~1aintain en g i 11 e er Ing Dependable young man. fl('at Newport Beach •1,,.,1,,,,once !\fan 10 !G60 Agency, 3100 Irvine Bh·d. NcWemployes stnrt on even. l'C'('Ords. Reproduction pm-I ·d 1· 1 • ..,..,,....,,....,..,..,..,,..I"' NB MACHINISTS or res1 ence c can ng se n.•. ,...__,·gn Drllfteman .,""L; · Ing or nilti sift ~: Transfer to A Cf'ssing, ty ping ab i I i t y · XI · 1'1 !"LORIST · S ~' _.. -"=°"7"--c--7"-o--Sl RT NOW! helpful. Perm. position ice .• ntopportunity. ionc . n11n. yrs .. exricorp Legal Sec'y $700 LEGAL secrela.rymln.2yrs Must do own lathe&: mill days. XJn't frilijl'C benefits. \\"/growth potential. 6T<>-G655. 1"/lrcsh flo·K~rs. Full tinic. Ac-ctng Clerk/EDP to $700 E'Xp. Calif. law. Salary open. setups & have Olvn tools. Staff devclopo1cnt progrrun. •A/PAYABLE ~........,,... T.2,P pay, designers freedom Ml"d Back Office to $GOO PosiHon avail immed. Phone NITE FOREMAN •A/RECEIVABLE -Call For Appl DIAL A JOBI Gi:,-6291. R1.'Cept/Typi:;;t $500 642-mll· Secondary operation ePAYROLL Industrial Relations · • -FRY COOK, EXPER. CALL TRISH HOPKINS -~L"E~G~A~L~S=E~C~'Y~-Setup exper l'eq'd for nof('Ji. eGEN'L ACCTNG ,714) 4,..9401 Full Time. l\t ust be clean & .TERRI \VHITTEMO RE Corp. attorney for grt)\vlng Ing, tapping, drilling, de- Cnll {or !nte.1views: Dirl'clf11' uf Nursing t TI <I J 63J....9393 Ext. 336 or 640 eNCR MACHINES Liz Reinders Agency ncnt. Xln't ,vorking conrls, 488 E. 11th SL (at lrvinf'l CM mMuf. firm needs pvt burring, broaching & ·outer Lot1J::: or short 1er 111 TELONIC 4500 Campus Or, N.B. .r,, pay. Apply Surf & S!r-Suite 224 642·1470 secretary. Must have some machine operation~. 101 City Dr. South ussignmcnts. • , 557-3401 . Join , 593() W. Coast Hwy., NB ~ 1f.;c' .,,_. '11 civil & corp exper. Salary to DAVENPORT Ornnge, Ca.Iii NEVER A FEE AT INDUSTRIES GENERAL LABOR !650. Coll Sally Ila rt , Set·Up Men AA"1 AUEinna1llw TEMPO ~ .JANITOR, p/tih1e. No ex-54()...-0ffi.), Coastal Persormel BROWN a SHARPE ct on mpoy~r Laguna Beach DINNEr{ cook & general JWr. necess. r.tr. Senne, or Agency, 2790 H'arbor Blvd, 'Scl·UP Men . kitchen helper, top ...,'11gcs. , J\h'. WllllAms, Silverwoods, CM Good \\'ages. Steady eniploy. NUlt SES Aidt .. Orderly. exp • rr,·ine 540-4450 Equal Oppor. Employer Ben Bro\vu's, 3llOG Coast New.port b•ach 4!1 fashion Island, Nv.:pt L·'VN'='-. -,1/~ti~m-c-~7-~3~ . ....,C~h-org"""e ment. 1st & 2nd !lhltt open. not nee. Optnlngs on daylJ 17f!02 Sky P:trk H\vy, South Laguna. ~ Center. Nurse. See r.trs. I aber, inp 7-3: mklnite ll·7. GoocJ Electronics fir1n needs ex· Anahc<in1 53.3-2322 COLLY..:CTOP. 10 h 8 n d 1 £' Costa Mei a _ _ -· JUNJOR.JA.LE~tiL. __ H.8-....ConY.alc.sc_ ~.. ' b<'ncflts. l\1ake nppllcalJOn 1---I pt>riMl!"t"f._,.,.,.f',~(-t~f--~\U.-bA -Palntl\o--1--idc~l~in~o1~if:cco~door~o. u~:;'i!~in:~t appear'. Cot· ..... n ... ,.,~ - -Eam $20·$40 per week --1881 Flbride. H.B. ~e?lTTrll\ie bCnc?nl:• in· (n .... 1s SUpctlht J\W., N:S:- produelion dt-p!. Full time Trn11JO TC'mpor:iry f-I clp ~<;o,~·ln~lhil: .~: 1,,.,,.c·""',,,,. 1.1.! \age Coffc(! Shop, 562 \V. Orange & Irvine r hoo' __ _, 847-3515 elud ing company paid group or call 642-2410 Pl ' ' II I ,,. ·• ·" "" \\"Orking 8 tcr lliC 'l ...., .. , lnsuran.-. NURSERY. MAN wa•• t ed , t•in t1)'mt·n .~ t>'l:C(< en flexible. S.17-2::00 bcl llln>>>. 19th St C M I VN Ea I k " "-nc11·1, J t ,-I r B00"·1 ·EEPEn--G · I ,. · 1 " . . N F 1v kl p 1 k on Saturdµys gcll ng new L -sy. p easnt "'or · REXNORD IN() n1o·n. 2 yr•. ex-~0nce ,., S':.1111\A·n~.us .1 n111, r•om pf1i;;1~ .. f~r ~n1ttllroo;~:~'Z: COLUMBIA YACHTS-o ces. l'C Y ayc1ec customers for the Daily 10$600.0mcgaCJ!nlc, (714) S 11 F il " bi'"' Call DISHWASHER 6 AM shift, Day !!hUis,.2ntl Pilot. This Is not a P•P<' -"'c:.'c.°"::':::"'-------pee• ty astentr Div. rota nursery_ usnei;s. Call for ,\p11t. lndusfrin\ r.cln lions 1714! 494-94or TELONIC INDUSTRIES Laguna Beach 11'.:quRI Oppor., F.n1ployer Xln 'I 11·orkin~ C'<lnd!lions. li"J .~lcCormi('k, Cl\1 1 $110 week shifts and gr11veynrd. l\JU!c :ind d()(..-s not Include -, 3130 W. Her'/ard Bmrida for nppl. bet. 9 & 5, I Glti--1!~:.:: 1iltt·r ;:pn1. Custom Boat Div. 11 . S t An Mo~~'ri. &U-8686 c:xrerlcnt•cd disln\'sher want-p p s deliveries ot co ect ing. tn • • ="'-'-"'-''°-="----I --BOOKKEEPER Exp•nsion in custom ro hy rcln.tlvcly snuUI res· • \Ve have openings in South· MACHINISTS 714/546-5100 2131585-2184 NU1'$ei; Cn, lnralf'd !n lrl'ln1· l'on1pl<':oo boat field creates im· taura nl. Six day week in· • • • \vest ~a Mesa. and South equal oppor. emp!oyet m/I RN-LVN-AIDE offf'~ nu 1.s111nrl in it op. med, oPenings for rludlng lhl't.'C nights until Pacific Personnel Huntington Beach only. _ 117 • · · 1 por11ini1y for the pcl":'IOn \\'ho e CARPENTERS is::ID p.m. No Sunday work. Apply now! 968-0041 , --· .,. other shlft.!l. Top pvt , has hn<I '<On1c t!Xper. ,I( 1·01n1 p11,,y, lnclurllng ov~r-Services, Irie. EY UNCH Top rate of pay i\lachlnist duty pay. Immed: Pll)' for 1\rirllff 10 ;11h·oncc to ti. bl'llf'r • ENGINE INSTAL-linll', a\)out $llO for 52 hour !iOO Ne..vport Center Dr. K p · fleiror dut)' ... County w Id e 1 posilion. Start SGOO. Call LATION MEN "'<'ck. Apply Lindberg Nu· Suite 900 Newport lkh Progressive mamtrn.cturlng Jntl'V\V!I, Mon·Ft1 9 .~. l,in<!a H:iy, 54 0-6 0 5 :1, e BONDERS tri tion located en Jower tev-G-i()..lg70 OPERATIIRS Commensurate w I ex p e r. company, xln't working con-J..c.acouJle Nurses Rerlstry, Coa~11d 1'1•r8(lnnrl Agency, 4 Day, 10 Jloui· \Vork '\leek ~l \ln bltck or 1'oy \Vorld Previous work necessary bl ditions. FrinR:e benefits. -351 llospltal Rd., NB (Lob· 2i!l0 l !11rhor Blvd, C~t Pllld Holldn.YR st1.1ri• in South Coast Plnin :i.1 Cc:ntro! Too•cr, Orange milling n111chincs, lathe$, lm1nedlnte Opening For: . l)y Psrk Lido B I d g) ASSEMBLERS B 1.:: 1.:: P R-Exflt'ricnct'd 10 Paid l\1cdlc:111 Shpplng Ccn1er, Co$ta Mesll s-17"64<"\G 'Ve:' nre set!klng c x p c r. etc. Must do own set-ups & AUTOMATIC SCREW· 642·9955. 541).9954. • 1•· I · p 1 haVQ 01\1n too1!1, Position Vnri1u1 '111111 rhacl1inci; a tl)l:..1s1 attauntant '" prop. ...,n11s nrcnt1vc rQR1·run kt'yt\Un t:h ope-ratoNl o t 1 1 MACHINE NURSES Aide, 7-3 ~hin, ex- s I I M Ou Be r, E"unl Op110r. En1ploycr d 1 & 1 hilt ~ 01)C11 to male or em11 e. IC'arlcr In tlw nlinl cvn1pu!er 111;.rn1cnt .. u )l\J l 1'fsun\e 10 • any 1or · nP 1ti1 Dr's Assistant 1 ..,-.!!l'~!!!!,..,..!!!!!!~~!!!I ayt me ll'W ng!t • •lm· OPERATOR per, pref' cl. JI u n t 1ngt0 n lnd11inry hu~ Mve,ral lr11-"Dick" P.O. Box 1851, f:Xpt>r. Only Need Apply l2:30 arn on !hf! Un ac Cflll For Af'Jpf-• Beach Ctinv. Ho11pltnl, 18SU nltflla\(' (>p(ll'lh'llt'S tn uur ..NeYiJJ!'»1 Och 9200,3. No Phone Calls f'lcasc \"ouni;c Indy (18-28) lo U5h1t GENERAL OFFICE 1701-1'1'10. \Ve orn wUlin 10 Industrial Relations Flodda, H B 841·35lS plYJduct Jnn area. You inui;t BOUTIQUE ~alei.igtrl ~125 Apply Mon thru Thurs in hcttllh SJ>U. \VilrTTflln, no Must have aoocl typlng 'kllls train on !he tab punch . To stf•UJl A OPtr&tf;!: w/know. NURSES-Al'd· • ' 1 h11.\le N niln. ()I 6 rno·s :r. 8!l<lMll\\1'~r. 8 w 1 m wear. Con1ac1 Noel Kelly, Supt. exp. n~. Apply in per!!On & figure npTHudo to hatu:ll<1 verifier. LocaUon of the key_ (714) 4M-MOI !Sedge of Traub or Brown & ·will 1 1 "'M·' day VshJ: · 1 1 -"· 1 1 "-' 1 Equal api-r. emplo•"" m/f any art or eve. 2930 \V.. onicNI & hllllna on Friden punch de~t. in lbe ne11.r hfU'Jle. ra n. ~ C•~n: 111 rui c ('C n>-111'""'"·'" cu >cl\ch area. UVU\I l'JCt'$Oll:t • · .., ,..:.. Coa H NB -mpuler. Wiii 1r11tn. S"'•H Conv. llosp, 661 Center St, ll.'l1ten,bly function. Jt you're lty, train for m((I'. Must be COMMeRCIAL st wy., • • ..., ru1ure \I'll be Fashion ·TELONIC SHUR-LOK CORP C.M. 548·5585. IOOkl~ for ll po~ltlOn 1v/n t•xi>'tl. 6'l'l-7:'i69 between 10 &: TELLER ofe. Tllipi'11!\Uc COtp, 185l Illl n.ntl, Newport BeaCh. gn1..,.1ng Orange Co. com · ;; DOME.'ITIC Help Gl!Org(! Kf'tr~rillJ{ St., Irv In C'. INDUmlES ·Apply At NURSE -· Paychlarrte f!xptr. Jiulcr ro: 8: meet thc1ic -'-=B~U~S~B~o=y~w=A~N=T~E~D~ \Vi• prcJicntly have a posi tion Allen Byland Agency. lOG-B 979--6080.-• Plraise CAii Mn'. Rose • L Be h Rohe SclentlflC pllimc. PM'l9onnd-di!-pt quallfiClliOns ... nlcMe-a,pply ~ .. ¥ l _ t;pe1n 1o1r1 an,cxper. rom mer-E. 1£th St .. S.A. 547~. C.ENERAT .. ~/ft!,'!!Jitl, ~,___i_or1•71n41appo7l~m71ent ~unt _ac __::_· _!26_5So!.-~~-~-Hoeg Hosp., N.-8. . 1n J'l('l"SOn l\1on thru l"ri. _ AALppL'ev'" wP•""'es"T t:ft1l '"p er. C -T>ONUT Shor>. nllc shift & p/ J1tn.1clion hkkl~ exp e•~r,.. 54 ~.... Equa.1 Oppor. Employt'!r ante ""• NUnsES Aldt1. t."xper. req. 8:JJA~1-IP~I 10· 1be Peraon· lca.'c ontacl t11na, f(!lll &lc. Age 25-43. tlttl. Prepare puyro\I , union GR. EAT WESTERN · ~ 7-3 f/tlmc i\ 11·7· !/time. nt'I Ck;p1. 11r con11cl J:l. 2100 \\'. 01·t>nnfront, N.B. lllr. Nt>whi nd, 83&-:1.'!05 Apply In pc~on, Mr. Donut , report!I, A/P, an 11 we r "While Eleph&nts" over• You don't need a gun 10 H.B. attn., 842--l'>5$1. ~lk9 • ·~~~chel~n ~~· CABIN r: T ~1 A KER S. s:~ ... OCF,0A,,M, E90R,0l~A 135 E_. lTth St., C.t\-1. pho~. sorne ty11in1t. no SAVINGS running' your houstf Turn "Draw Fast" when you .~., Profit It attained when ""· •• C;( • • fnim<l"1, & dc!all propJc. , .. ,..,.. "'' Don't ~Vt! up the 1hlp! tmoldng. 1'1orr.l'rl, · 8 hrs them tn10c "Cllsh".,. 1QI) place an ad In the DnilY )'OU soil throu.qh ~'ult-get· Equal OJ>µor. Eln~loycr. Jor cnmpcr f11ctory , Apply F;qulll Oppor. Einployer "List"lt In cla~!dlled, Ship <™3. Mt-l'4l:l 1418 N. -P.1nln St., Santll Ana them thru a Daily P iiot Pilot Want Aibtl CaD ~ ting Otllv Pilot Cluttftcd Nf'f'fl 11 "Ptr1d"! Plare an adl858 '-"'-'\V-'.-'l"Rl"'h'-, C"•"•;;:•:..M="":::.· _: """'":::'..;";,d:.."'::::o'":el;,l'c:·.c·~·_:G:::4!:2.f;l:o' ""78 to Shore Retrult11! 60-5678. Yo1.1'JI find 11 In ClasslUed An Equ~I Oppty Eniplo)'cr Clnsiifletf adl ', -642'-6671;. ' Ads. 642-5678 . - i . I ' • ---~·---~--------· / • . . • . ' Tu~dlJ, J 11ne 5, 1973 t>All..Y PILOT ;!t} [ --· l[l}J l ·-.-· l[fi] [ .......... l!rn I --·-J[ll]I ._,..., l[Il] [ -.'.... !!Ill I ... d •• ,. I~ I -!~1 :.;I _ ........... _. ;;;1~;;;··1 Help Wonted, M" F 7~ I .... Ip Wented, M & F 710 ! Help·W•nted, M" F 710 I Help Wanted,M & F 710>ielo Wanted.Ma F 710 Heip Wonted, Ma F 710 ~~ ~ Ml1cell1neous 'Stor•. Rt1taurant, Ol'F!CE MGR -\L CSn'\'f" '\L.ES '\Lf" 0111 .... & WOMEN WOMEN WOMEN ,YACHT CREW EARi.\' Am"!''•" . .,,, & Wonted 820 Bar ·-831 rur1 t1li\ltCf' Ot't'l''f' ·~· · c.:;, . :-i: ··"· 1•1• 111uuuet!f · --C k '· . . ..... 1 chair $100, Klngs1ze ,\·nti.'r 11,, .. ··r•·o 1 . 11,, .0 1 1 11 4'. l\tciti fo~ N, C )' ·. SU(.U;ss CAJtEl::lt 1u:i.rkln.1:. FuU OJ' p lhui·, 00 , ..: .._11M'.lnee1• Jro<.'Ut'f OOtl trarne iunutt"" & Ju~ ~. -Or 1u11lq1ung: ( 1.1 ! ~ t f" "· lthJ1·r xturt>!I, ''' 0eitlergltlJl. \'o'u (kno'n i:i'· I New o~ cxvcrlen,:cd. Juin the \\~tn1•n or rc:th·t·(t 1~1cyn, ~70 Effic ient a nd expert help, full time or part aboard lw-g£' y11i:ht. Slit> 59, llnt<i· $25 :.t5-i693 aft;; t1\!atlle M:1rin·"' nu1t·hh11·, S'. ~ 11ldPd ii lshl'U dli1pla1 Please apply 111 ""r8(:n::.i. i;. ._'1'0\\'lng re!Wlc or~animtlon u11ly. port Bcitch. ·I ROO"'I~ of furnl tur.:-. h\' eh1•,;t~ 1u1d ~·ct of .J 11·onclell w;oudoln. ;;• 1t S' v.·h11t• e:i<pt>rictl('C you ntu~l 1, v~ \\forld s: lal);O!it nnd fnstefU • B1·111;g:; 11·u1• nl~h1Jl.1 P~I time rtquirtd for a new and exciting 1 Lido \'ncht s\ncborug~. ~e\\'-' • ' . ~Ir uighl .~1and11, 2.bru•hlfk>r / K0111k)la,;, ftliM> Jo1gl 11idf' K' pl 64•7770 1~ · with 11 ucty.·ork of over 300 1--. . ! program. rn1. Jh·utti;: 1•n1 , 2 Wrins. chain;, Also need la1'Ge O\'al I r11t•rnic~ l'tl!liu~ lahll'-.'.· tone .;-· 1111 r b o l' olficC's · kl be~ 0 SALESl .. \Li) n•:~ded. \>1\•f Sel'vlcing homes, apartments and businesses Con111lett'. 8 17~1 111i r1'01', t r und J e b1't1. 11l'rvicc· dt·!!lk. 5.t0-:!591 P\'I'!< Anlerican "'10tors. 11u1n1ber ~~ our 11.ii1ll~unh·~ 1, c~r·.~1'.111u~~.' ~~·outt11• i";i 111:1 t with c leaning, party supervision and assist· I ]{""'} c:nl-.:E:-i" uph. rouch S70 .. 2 b1'0\l'l!tOn1• (.i,)flllin1µ1nlr)' TV Radio Hi Fi 2 OFFICE GIRLS Cluh. l\1ult.l-million !lnllilr fi.\ ,u 22~' '' as 1 un 8 11.nt • ance. , Mlf'Chlndl:e V s11·lvel bar stools $25. Both loveJ;(•at. Last ltl'1n~ nlllbl St ' ' 836 NEEDED atl\'erthiin~ r,rogr:a1.11. J.~n..<c I ·1--00 C m any ~enefi~, ~l'!U.ttit_~· for ·~vane•· I good l'o nd., ,196-29-18. ~ !1: .ROOll "'o nd i Ii on. __ e_reo ________ 1 -rnunO"!e~c<l1'omci;-""""'"'eed-1 ,.,,...., 'ld!ool' s c A --~k -· ·1-'· -· 1 --. OtJSE"'Ftl *SPR11'1G-Sl'l!CIAt,.,,,r--1 lttust be 25. able to driv~ E.xcellent salt;.<1 tra1nl11v. E RET RY men . nor ing in u crim nat ng nomts anu . . . , SHIHLJ.;r TE~ll'l.E . ctoH. I . . . ·. . . Apply In Person \\·hat is your h~nsc l\'Ort11 businesses in the beach ie•. I Antiques 800 O'[ fur1111ure. t>-12-~qgll l1ugt;y, na.n1c p\n, dt•1·k of Rebu1 l!;P1ctur~ Tube YELLOW CAB CO 10 )'OU? Ch"" ow· month\] CROSBY INTER ATIONAL I 3 MILLION DOLLAR Garege Sele 812 '".':"· o.~""' Qt~·h" doll • $8S:-l1. ?r .is C~i~! JSG E lSth Cost i'•I • • h1'.ln\1s p1'0grurn \\'hi1·h n1er111i; • ANTIQUE 11 1~ or 16 1<·hl~··d * 1 'i 1-.,\f, \\ Af:.H1\1'1 \'. • ' · 8 1 (sa SSS to you~ I'lt'asc call Requires 2·3 years sec· [ 645 6010 G.\RAG1': SAL1<:-'.\10!'DAY n1v;1th 11r<'fr'rl'1.'ll1. t..·11·•:" ulJ lnstutl1it lot1 AvRHablr· OPERATOR lor Burrough.<1 Vht;tnla Jones S35·4Sll. re.taf'ial experience with • Show & S•le ~4 \'isin :'ilade1·u, NB C'hiu·lcy 1\l.:.<:1q1.hv, &.iuthi'rn P.i1·p'.s T<'lt>\·i~l~n ~1'111•1• I.· 5 0 0 0 Book kl· c Pin~ RED CARPET d m i n i m u f 60 H I Wanted M&F 7lO 1 Help W•nted M&F 710 I _Jun~ 7. 8, ~· 10 ti l-1·8676 f'at'lfit· dirH\~·i· l·hl nll',. piLTi'!I f(IJ'll1Prly l\f,•s;i 1'orl~ Ccnll'r n1ttchinl'. \V;\., \\lll train if Realtor• , m 0 1 e P • _ -~ .-.!....----Annhctni l:onvt>ut1011 Centc1· SQU,\RE oak table. ·old of Bo.it"' Brier pnl!f·rn ;11 1 Bick S. nf Dtll\C·t· .ilf,...(',(r():.1 you huvc .sc t'rul yr.~. CX· -· w .p.m. typing and 80 SEllVICI:: Station Att endant SOO \\', 1.-iuell(l, ucros,, fa shioned 1inosscr. p JI . Spc1tlc. rCooLI,' 1\•1t'\fln11hl;·. 01ie11 f>-:. Iii tluysi pcrie111.:e in or f 1r.:1' hc· R w.p.m . shorthand. Ca!'· full vr p/linic. OvPJ' t'I. ''''"" T\'PIS1' ftun: . J)lsneyland G75-3QS::i aft€r 6 P!t':tsf' r<"'ply j r,.2:~~ L'OUnting. ~16-0til)li ecept1"0.n1"st didates must have abtl· ply Bl'O\\'n's Shell, 990 E. R PRO Thurs/1'\'t/Sat 1-10 Jill\ -,--, 815 0 1 0 UH 1c·x·r\I Tt'U('S I RENT TO OWN Outbrd M.10 M h ,-It h di · d C t H · N·R 611-11'1 E Sun 12-6 pn1 ewe ry : ~ .. · · .... · ~ ec an1c y to an e var1e as· oa.s \\y. •-., ;__ ! \\Ill 11ay .i·lO'· n1ore t•u.•h TV'S & STEREO Sununer or rern1an('r11. l\fo\"c I Typl"St signments with a ~.lni-l SHEET. METAL 1 . SCRAM-LETS \\llITE 1et. tA-111 . dl:11l\flll•}· ~h~u~ !"P .S P••Y• <'S. l:;\'cs. 1 SlO to beauliful l,Rki' Ar· mum of supervision . _ .~ , . . TYPIST 1 ~J300. ltuhy 1.0::ic•. $18J .. 1!.1--:iihO / 1'01\'hcad, Cnll 1 7 \ .i) I p , , , 1 • SJ\11.l.f.[) & Sl'~i\11 Rl\ILLED I Arter(i P'.\f -.:,18-715:1 -0-RIENTAL-RUG-S I I :{.17_2501. rev1ou~ act1v1ty .n With Exp. in following I ANSWERS· · , · · -J • " · • · " • , l'Necd~d in1n1cd. for long 1crn1 convention planning is • Si·JJ-:AR·B lli\l\E I . . . , Machinery 816 \\ A~~!'.:D. !''.1r_ !•;p L·a~h. r..:.~.~1 ~-~1t ,cl~i;<k~ :~~ De~~'.~ P1clf,lc Mutual Life Laguna Bench assignn1l•nr. highly deiirable. Appli· • PUNCH PllESS , An u11n1ed11\te open!ng e:.1sts ~ &l~-lS-OU. l':'\t .11 .. I Fi~·~ Dt ~1 c'..~ .· ~ l~•. Rrpau NC\\'pQl'I Bca1·h Honie OflJN' i\lust type eit least 55 11-.p.ni , h Id 'h , •DRILL l'ltE 'S for a sci~ond shifl rept'O Corner -J\ltcnd -'F luke -F;QUIP. for dry Cle~\· \\'l'TEIJ , 1 . 1.,, , . ;\lonlhl) H• 111,11,., A1r11l:lblP ,\·~ency ~ e ck ~ 1 , , 1 · r u'"· cants 1 ou ave ex· :-:>:. • Ef'ECT >ng press .-hop B<n"•a111 1 • ·• 0 iu~. 1 ' 11~11 o E 543 4444 " -· ~ 11 ti I .11c• ... e.\'pcr. dc·sil';ihll'. Ii t 1 , e \\'ALl::S NC PUNCll I tYl)ist. B."perlense required. •"J uske~ -D . . -, ,, · 1 ;·7. _ 0 ;, 0 tninihu·r & huiips, nk-e .t pen ves . • 1v/clllkl!le exper. fo1· llnf1n· ce. en commun cations • LAYOUT TOOLl;-.;t_; 01d·tJmer ren11111sces: "I iinc ag~ uea o .1 , ., rL'awnablc &i·l--4687 ------f~nl ~lm;ning+!lulc~.0~1 ~1~): TSI skills. • \\"ELDF.n.1; Apply In Person can re1nc1nbe1·· \\·h;11 ki(ls ;>18-7191 , • S .. .\CH IFJCE: s,\LE! 197 :: Professiona l 11'11,v tn1\nin" t • GRINDFllS & used to run a\\•ay. Nov; tl1ey c Musical Instruments 822 1!1tr1nnn l'iu·don rrceiv<'1'. ... Excellent wol'king con. •TOOL cRrB .\1'1'E~U I 3333 Harbor Blvd. DEFECT." Miscellaneous 811 QUl\_1.::-.. rt 0 ,, .. k ._,12 .. ,,,,,, I'.!+ 1;1" l·\i·:•\, ·spi·alt('rs, P l< progrnn1. c:·1u TtHl ph Bro1111 I d't' d f • b c t M c Ill ' " " C.L.U. 6r \\', Gt•rnld Te11-I ions an l'tnge en· Xln't wages & benefits os a esa, a • \\'A.NTE~:. 19th cen~ury i\IOVlNG! Old trunk SJO. Sllg htly usc1l. S-12,), iiC1\·, ldunh ttu·11111hh•, orii:-innll~· ncr, 64().3225 . j 3303 Harbor, Ste. a.2 efits. I K. c. Halloway, Inc sh~p patnU ngs ·-top pr1l~s Crnlts.tnan circ. !la\1' 7·', 1:: 11011_;. $:)()(), Electr:\ base ,.;,.. ~r,(',S, No~.1$J.~i NC'vcr used. PACKAGERS I Costa Mesa --~ Apply l11 P<'t'son 16680 Armstrong Ave I pn1d .. James_ Sr~} It! on_, hp, $30. Encyclopedia set .~ case. ~;o !i73-lf~:\ crn1s .• , . . . E".'CTn'en-<I ,·,, '"'·'··• "' .,,, \:::l. Dil·!:'o Fr11·y 'Hartxi1· E:-:i11 ' or call: -Santa Ana .. ~ I ~aut;c.fi A.nt~es. 'tl't;A ~-dictionaries, -$12 .. {Kei1n101~ T,\J{E uvcr pnyn1cnts Sonola 2·1.. ADl\lrUAI ... Color TV, .~ "" ~ oa~ _ \11', 1 ~na enc · 11·asher, S{'ars ins., avail profi•s..;;ional a cc 0 I'd i 0 11 lnstanl pla,v t'Qnst>lC. i-:.\-tn let pa{'kaging: & opr1·11· Dona Leverett (714) 557-4040 497-29JO or 4.H-9.179. Sat. $:j)). Cunping cooler & 5S6-7!J 1.s a.fie~;;, · ""llio>nt buy swo. 67:1-~m. 1\011 or rtllini;:-&. lul>eHng , 979-3660 1714) 540-S-t 250 1'1 $10 ----vuu, ex Sign Painter, axper. gas 1e r 1!10 s · 121" COLOR.~ l!i" Rlk & \Vht 11111.chinr"s. r·uu ·" P1111 1in1r.1 H I d "'S·"·l·I Appliances 802 Oscillosc?pe S2;;i. Va;lcty of Office ful'nitur•/ :\la,nui·ox TV's. Sl ::;, rot• 646-3931 .\ Viv. or Courtl.'s\' y an ~ ., ._,,_, rl clothes i;1ze JG l\1an" black - 1 ... ,,,,,, o.,, ... , ... , ,,,,:, ·' '"""'' IS Rent W11her1/Dryers : '· · · Equ'1p 824 bo!h. S•IG-8.~13. ~· ~ • .. Sl\·lALL l\lfgr n1'Cus young •• 11'00! suit sz 42. $10. Dishes. · PERSONNEL _ L b t • 1111111 for ~('ncru l \\'Ork in-$2. \Vk. Full n1nint. J e1velry. f\1isc. 1627 l\Iinol'('ul--~. -'-------. - SEC'Y a ora or1es rluding Uriving light truck. Equal Oppor. En1ploye1· 111 1f * s,19.1202 * Dr. l\Iesa Verde Costa RO_'i AL Ty p e11·r 11c r ~ * RECEPTIONIST !i-12-22;'6 -----KE Nl\10RE 1vasher-elect. !\le~. ' :i;;~i~:·~~~~o~t:~~Ue:~·(c~.· I! S • Day ,11. nighi, ll(l exp. l}('C, 3300 Hyland Ave [ SP.f\GHETII Bender has ST drye-r. 2'10 V, good condition. 2 T\\'IN n1ahogany lid boards :HS-3259: Free to You Great Opportunity! 1·1<sv, Ju n job. '\'ill train. 110 Costa Mesa, Calif. openings fo1· hos t cs s . TYPI !\loving. must sell now. Best $17.50 e~, 2 inahogany end E-'X_'_E_C_"_"-.1-.,-,,-,-S-,-~-.:i;-.-S-ec ~------~ Lllr~c n1anuf. firn1· Jh•f'ds ns-! 1.1·riing or sllorlhantl. ch~. 92626 I wriill'('i<S. pa11-lin1e l'QOk. Newport Beach offer. 64-1-lOZlJ. Ibis . $1.>. ea., chest of chrs s812;1 Desks S20/!l0 OH 3 Lines, 2 Times, $2•00 11i.o;tan1 to )X',rs<>1111rl n1gr. Apply in JIC"rsun any art or I Cati &l.>-il6.'il or 2 J 3 : The Irvine Company seeks .FREIGTIT Dainage Sale 00 dra\\lets $15., ~.. $27.50, Supl 867 \\' 19 CM G42-3-IOS Should ha1·e good t,l'ping &I 1•1·f'. ;11 2930 \rest Csl ll"·y., Equal Oppol'. E:n1 ploye1• Y.12-2606 _ autoniatic t y P e 1" r i t er qew ITotpoint & \\'hiflpool $30. Old pedestal $15 .. p· /O ' 826 1 •••••••••••I IHI' sh ~kills,.~ enjoy irork. N.B. I n1al~&. fe1nalc ,, -State Mutual Savings U"fllnee operatol'. (ITELJ r e fr ig/11·ashcts/dryeri> barstools ~ for SlO .. St. 11no1 rg•n• 1 YEAR old M. German Ing \'' 'IJ1l' puhl ic. Xrtu 1ong l I \\'ill rcloc;;te 10 Ne11·1J0rt FILE CLERK ~5-0780. George Drun1 S<!t SlOO., ne,vi-;;:;;:;;:;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;; Sl>"11hail'. !..'OIXI iv i I h 1e1·1 1s·i 11 it To SSS RECEPTIONIST I IO\'t>seat $5j. i\lisc. USEol• v ·• j P.l\I. r~l'. .. ~ .. £f~\1'~·~"F ,'?r . I I SECRETARY Be;H•h Sepl. l!lT:l. l1nn1Pd. \\'ith 2·3 yri; typing ll'gnl 14'_ ~\1 ESTING HO USE USABLES, 25fiO Ne1vpo1't BABY GRANDS children, lifll'r ' -TEM' p' 0-1 IM ttl 111a11uf. fu 111,..111 Cnsln I 1 np0enlt1,gs for . . . <l-"n>C>>fs + "Xper. \\'/fiJ. refrigerator xlnt cond. $150. Blvd, C.l\I. Tues thrll Sat. N 1 $lOOO _S·_ll_--O~l_if_.1 ~---~~-;\Jc~n. 'lt111t lx• 1~hlt> to hun· N t B h j Cr. Interviewer .,,... 1 " 897-2ll1 Days, 4 3 6 -3 G 8 9 . O~\' S<l\'C up 0 · on r'C'r-;, BEAL'T ki llen~. hcalth.v. 1; dh' 1h~· pul•he 11·/cusc. Cuod ewpor eac: B kk Cl k in~ l\"t1·ie\'a s Y s t c ins eves _ • SUPER 81\I i\tov1e carnera & tau1 rloor 1nodels. Other 1 ~0111>! ~kills C"iill h:a~' 1 The /1'vine C<J1npan.r seeks 00 eeper er 111'Ces:'ll!J.'. i\Just ~ detail .. : . case,_ like ne1\', S45. Polaroid Grand; Pianos frorn ~729, 1vk,; i\lak· & feni . t•aii(1J \\"iiu:. ~1 lO-f>Oji c oa s t.ri 1 lil'Cl'l'lary \\'1 n1in. 2·5 yi·s I Comm'I Indus Loan consctous S:_ n11:t11 . .:u!ou!'ly \\· ESI INGI-IOUSE dbl doo1 land camera with flash al· Thl'se and 1nanv ll1QI'(' nt: 111om too. 6~:)--067,1 Pi"l'$1.'llnf'I Ai;.:€'nc·y, 2 7 ri o {'Xpcr. Back21'0u111I in <'0111-1 Proc a~'Curatc. 60 \\".p,ni:. typing re~-ireezer w/ice mAker. tachn1e nt like new $45. AMF Wallichs ~·t"usic City TO good honl<.", yng long Irvin<' , ;°1·!0·-l·i.iO ' 1 iSO:? Sky Park i\nnhC'in1 53:i.2::2'..!, li:lO \\'. La Pahna Tl'nlJ>!> Tcn1J)Ora11· Help Ilui·l~ir B!l·rl, c't n1uni!y rf'!;;1·io11s 1k·sir<1ble. Escrow Xlnt \\'01•k1ng co11d1tLons & 1 "\r old. $400. 675-3308. bo1vling ball lvith fold out -haired ligcr cat, shot~.1 111e ..... rson 11·p SCt"k n1ust be oo. beCeflts. i • OISll\"ASl'E'RS, '"•"l•era, corning , • .,, ~mplete in-South Coa st Pln:ia 510-2830 """l'ed & ,1°•lawed. 64&-2277• Ht'<·f'p!loniSL part-rin1f'. to '"" · ' Call CollC't l ·~ ~ ... " -..,. l~""'"!'""'~""'~""'""''!'l'! "•~ ..... \\'Ol"k In 011hodonlil· ofriL"t'. able 10 ~la.le \\'C'll lo ~ll <_1ge ~Ir~;. ~.;ngell;ry all 644-~389 dryC'rs, rebll, guarn & cluding shoes (wurn 4 1~ BLOND Ai rdale /mix nil\lc inornings. l\lust havr picas. groups 11 ~atTnth & chg1~1ly. I 21316z;...7411 (''(t ~1()4 Or 644-3317 delv'd. 839-7620; 54&-5218. times) like 1ie"'· l\1en's size Sporting Goods 830 dog approx. 1 )T. q_kl. POSITIONS OPEN unt rihoni' voit'l', neat and Ac<·ui1.1te 10 i\·.p.in. typing. Equal Oppor. En1plovcr Between 9AM & 5PM RE1'"RJGERATOR. copper· 9~!!\t Phone 644-4687 GOLF~ f'riendly. Urgent? 6-12-00'.ll Sh 9().100 & :.l n't l!ll'an1ma r. · * AUCTION * Clubs. l\I acGregor, FOR NEW BRANCHES <illrai:th·"· Past i;eeretarial Xhl'! \1·orh.'ing ronds & co. STATEMENT ClERK Equal Oppor. Employer tone, Adiniral, lower fr~r. ne\Y, Ni ckla1Js lfet'itage, F'REE 7 ~·r. old Cbcker ""P· dt'Sirable. 546·5170. t}('n<'fil::. $100. 979·7799. Fine Furniture ro111 plcte. Cost S-150. Sell Spaniel. Likes children. Call HECF.PTJONIST/Clrrk Cali Mrs. Smoot \Ve nrP presently taking up· TYPIST REFRIGERATOR, 20.5 cu. & App\,·an-a SZiO . .)48--4189, 548-2·t.12 645--0963 • Tellers plications ror our st<lten1en l '"" Typist. lt1l·lurlirig lite IXIOk· 644-3389 1rindoii< )lust have sonie Gi·C'al en try level position for fl. lol"igidaire, 1 )T. old . Auctions Fr-Jday, 7:30 p;1n. You'll find it in Cla.<;si.l'ied Cl;;ssified ,• .. :is • • 6~2-5675 kccpi11g. B 9 ' 4 >.»Pin" skills. I plcasin"" ""I'· lhe high school gr aduate to S27j. 979-1007 Windy's Auction Born iiliiiiiii.-iiiijjiiiiiijjijijiiijjlt • New Accounts • .Loan Pl'oc. Sec'y e Receptionist P<'.11•flek lns1n·1111r•f" f'h\'('('n nni ,. pni r' I\ • k" '~1 stnt•t a career \\·;,\,\.\ C'Qlll· RECOND APPLIA!'CES ·1!1!--103.7. :'-!rs. Brnrlh'Y --- -~~~~~i~~· a> c 10 \\'Or ii·. I JC nany. Slar1 $~10. Call Kay ~l,iver~d : guar. Dunla~·s, 2075~? N~'J)O~, Cl\J 6'16-~.sG Sa1·in"s & Ll'J.lt1 i<.X""1"1' RETAIL S1:1 les......,1 ......... '''l"'i' I SECRETARY -Pl<'a."e Cnll \Vi ng, 5-10·6055, Coast<il Per-181.J Ne.,.,·port, C.!\'f 548-7780 Befnnd Tonys Bldg !\'fat I. " t" .-"""'" .... 1• sonn1::l ,\g-r ncy, 2790 Harbor STEREO U I · d Pret'd. Apvly In P .. 1·son unl \' F/t11n<'. N't>\L.!JOrl. Stn-1 ;;;,.,.L;1•1:::: l' {' s p 011 " i bl<'.' ~!1·. ~e1\·lnn1!. S3&-. :)(}'.) C AUTOl\'IATIC \\la.Sher elec· : n c a 1 m e M•riner's Savings & I t1n11l'o;. APJll)· in perMn. I 1<'rl'i:"ltil c,, 11ir1t1u·i> :.:.1! rfir I BANK 'OF A.MERICA Bli·d., i\1. trie dryer. E.\'.celle1{1 con-laya\\·ay. Garrard mode.I, lo." A •• oc.11t1'on" 12'.!'J BlrC'h st, NB l•ll~Y. 111111011_111 ro 111 p.u1 y 1'.·c11 porl Ccnl rr Bt'l\Jlch \YAJTRESS. Dinner house ditil)ll. $90. 646-5848. syst~m1:ied changer. stereo I I I I '\ <le I r I o E I expel'icnce pl'cferred, i\[ust receiver, air speakerii, tape 151· \\e ·icliff l)r NB I lr Q!( lll · Cll lXJr! .l1l'l .qua ppor .. nipoyl·I' I 21 i-:1' 1 9 1 c deck jacks. Still in box, .> '6.i24000 " 1 · · 1 _ SALES MANAGER c~p~1:1c ~r se~ '1~~:.'111 '11. ~ 1-STEADY-P/time ore elca-l\~esa: ,. :. \\ · 1 l t, osta _!uilding Materials 806 originally $18.q .• balance $85. '""~t"!~"ll!'!!'!~~~~·I 01µn1 ?:Al1on ._h · . .,.t)Jll ning, CQ!.J ple-man-wif.c.. ex-• S I B .Id" Or tetms. 893--0501. ' r PRESS OPERATOR I, . . . I 60+ \1 ,p111 l~n?1dt'd_e <l[ I per. onlv. Approx. 3 hrs. \VAITRESS -part time. urp us. ~I ing STEREO: Quadrasoru·c ~ . _ r111.-1s un t.:xt·111nR & ~r+le~ & ~uh'f'l'!1s1ni::; h1'lpful. 1,1.('s N B & c i\I ar!"as Ov!"r 21, .CRtl 962-1212 or l\IATERIAL 1000 s of NE\V ......., 2nd Sin.re .. \\'onicn. to '':ork clutltl'n~ni:: opportunity for I Salarv <'Orr>n1P11. 11·-c);1}('r. !'.'··.n.·,,-.· c'all 1~;) ·927 •11.,· 968--0365·be tv.·ee11 l & 3 only ITEJA!S• Ooo. 1 be pl watt receiver, Garrard for >I t Id I t h It C 11 F A ......., •v .. LJ """ f t ' rs, u!11 r, Y· mod e l . Sys te mized ~. : .J as ic n10 1ng I! an · t f' 1· g 11 1t1(1Jl or .'~'1t11n1n tn a or ppt. or app · ~\'ood, .alum sheeting, mold-turntable, tape deck, 4 *546- 3370·PRODUCE ~:-~;,,1[;~,,, :ii ,.'0',•1",p'u'n",.11 i,' 1 1111~ I Naomi, 642-9470 \VAITERS "'anled. C. L. 1ng, w1ndo\.\'S, etc. s p eake r s . Neiv & v., -~ STOCK CLERK r-.tarks. i\la rquis Restaurant. BUILDERS SURPLUS d r I . h I Ac1'01na1lc <>1Ct licld. To ' guarantee s 1 g I Y Hf ,.. I l ! 1670 Ne1t•pon 81\'d , C.r.r. ZW6 So. :!\-Iain St., S.A. scrntchedl. \\ras $399. NO\\' (tun Y .vou 1111151 1" u 1 f" 10 • Secretaries &12-8293 I l\Ion tlu11 &it 10-5 $100 •• Term11, 893.{15{)1. CLERKS ~7/~~ai;~~ \~~~1~::!ir~'0~·~'1~~ • Typists l~~d 1:~1~~. ~~~dt{':~~~·ic:i~ \VAITRESS-Food & Cocktail ---71~• _,,_5.JG_.1_0_32 ___ $.~.coo FULl.. L ENG T l-1 c:o111rihu1r• i<llbstantially to • Trne Assemblers i·c--s tocking. Exper. helpful. Exp, Days & Nites · App. 8 Garage Doors & hardu·are -l\1Ir..'K COAT. Best offer II 1u•1v rirodurt applicalion, 111.1·1 • Gen'I Laborers in person. 2122 Bristol S.E. for sale. You remove! $20 over $120l.l ll.i!I be acc:cpte<t tiotl!ll ,;nil's plans. sho11·s. VOLT C11!1 For App1. S.A. each. 209 Pain1, Balboa before move to tropics next Experienc1.'<i. Im me di a 1 e 1 1.·I<'. & <"fftc1ivl'I~· 111oth·utl' ll l11dtlstrial Rclalion.q Pen. 675-5774. month. for beautiful i;lzc OpcningShl11CW Costa r.I<'Stt i co1111nis.sl0n snlcs f01'N'. F.x-I Instant Personnel WEED & PEST 14-lf;, in e."cellent condition. store. :rULL and P1\RT JM'i·ien•'<' In our, or a ~iinilar T1:111111.1r1Hy Solr1ii:l' 1714) 49~9401 Furnitul'e 8l0 644-5-198 Tl i\lE. con1111od Hy fiL•ltl dcsirabl(', :!S4!1 Cn1npus Dr .. Sui!•• 106 * ALSO CASHIERS hut "01 ' """1 '1"" 1' '" """~"" B<>d• ;J6.4Joil TELONIC CONTROL hru1·il·t'. \\'e htl\1• :in ;it· F.qoal Oppor. E111ployer tNDUSTRIES * ALSO BOXBOYS I ;:·;.cl~i~~ .. 'i.c~~ in ~ i';. ~a t1l 1;11;i :::::~S:E:C:R-=-ET=-~A=R-~Y==,t Laguna Beach 1 yr min. e ·"Pe r ie n c e 1-esults~rientetl l11<!i1·ithi:1L absolcrl'ely necf!ssary. Salary · I & · I E \ o E I open. La1!tu11a Hills Area. :sent resu1ne · ~ariun)! To Store Maneger qua ppol'. · 1np oyer Call for Appo\ntnu•nt (1131 860-7213 PROOF CPR ~(lply l1l-.Pl'rsot1 SECURITY PACIFIC BANK :;475 Via Lido Nl'WJIOrl Bt:•acl1 Equul Oppor. En1ployer PRODUCTION TECHNICIAN Perform electroni(: e!1t>ckou! of n1icro"'a \'C products' & RS components. T&;hnlcol or service school trahiinl!l in electronics S· i\1in I ~1· related e.xpcrit>nce. I · 1 n 11· E t ·i, Ca ll 586-1580 for appt. us1ory o . . as er, ;i •• S \\'oodl•••I S< Orange Bu.sy 1 girl office. Intcrcsllng SU" , E \V E LD ER w/omamenlal · · ·• · · & """·'"'""· »1i•I R \\'Ork tor young Callfo111ia 9~9 '"'· -. 1 iron e xpe r . l\fl ke 's -J. W. Robinsons 00 lege st~dents nia!e & 0111an1ental Ii'On \\'orks, -Saleswomen fentale. l\la1ntenance & yal"d -M l\p[lb' in J){'rro;on, 10-j \l'ork. t'.l 10 20 hrs i\·kly. 7'l;i1~ Laguna Cn Rd., Lag • 1 aneger No. 'l Fashion Isl .. N.R. 83.'HJOO.l 1 1 ~B~<~h~. ~•o,91-6'c"3'07'C6~~=== -A11t Manager Equal OppQr. Eniployl'r a.m. on y. \VHO \VANTS TO \\'ORK? fashion \i·onll'.'ll!i <'lotliing _ --~ TELEPHONF. Sales. \\'ork DRIVE A CAB! i;luttn. \\'on1c'n 111us! lravc 'SECRF:J"ARY for Costa front ~·our O\\'ll hon1e, C I ba k -" Jd \ '' CI' I r· E II HiKhest co1nmlssio11s. Ex· I•IOOSE your hours, \\'Ork ~ t-s c ·gi"011,...,. t•a po. ' esa . ., . 1rn1. x~c ent for yourself. be l'OUr o\1'll silion fol' enthuliil\Jitlc, ca-t~:p1st S.enol't'tle pel'ience n ° 1 necessary. boss. l\Ien or \VOn1en. Can rccr minded. Fu)] co. llc.llf· Qualified in gcne1'lll office iS9:'-"~:J!~S4==,..-,....,..,-.,---I be slightly handicapped. lit~. Please apply in pcl:•. du1i<'s -1nust be fl<'x ib!c & TELF:PHONE lntcn'ie"·crs, N 'ea t-Clean Appearanee. son, 1X'r~1ahlj;', \\'.rl!e-elassified \\'Ork frotn-)'OlW-home,-flex.... Vts,-l"Ctired. Age 25 to 70. Backstreet a d no. 69:'1. Daily Pilot, P.O. ihlc lJOurs, no selling. call SUpplenicnt ~'Our incom<!. Box 1560, Costa l\lcsa. Calif. 816-7441 Drive a <'all 6 l11"S or more a :l(ll l'\o. llarbor, r11H1•r1on ffi 'J'o.,.,·11 & Country, Ori::. 25 i<'ashion Island, N.B. j(; Fnshion S~~~_:~- SALER . ATTENTION : CANDY FUND RAISERS 92626. <lay. Apply in pen;on, S ECR ET A R "t , e xee. 'i'cll:i11· Cab Co., 186 E . 16th Nl'11·1Xlrt Sch. Unique opply The Irvine Company St.. Costa l\lesa. for, .<>elf starl.Pr. Reply in Has Opening r·or \\'IG Slyllsts _ t!:xper. S2 - \•n11f. tn Pcr~nnt>l , S11i1t• Secretaries S2.50 hr. Sn! + Bonus. 7800 300. 2.'lGO ~lunth1gton Dr, San I \\'/2-3 yrs related expe1·. Edinger, Hunt. Bch. · l\1arino, Ca. 9110,~ M k t' S 'y ar e 1n9 ec \\'OMEN -Need 4 altn\.('tivc ---------ORIENTAL RUGS, !\"IOY~NG TO . l\f ~X I C 0 : HAND~·fADE. L\IPORTED, Can I take it '1'1th n1e & NE\\' & OLD . ~1u.st sel!1, beaut. ~Joane'~ ,\khavl Oriental Rugs custom 8 1~ U. da1enport, 814 Xo. La. Cienega Bh·d, l..-0~ Cf?llten1~. side c.l1al1:5: 1.."Ust. Angeles. 213 -65~1~80. \\'~ king size bed \\/m.'lt~h. also buy used 01i@ntal rugs. headboard & i;pread: quality ==--=~-~---~ .,.,·alnut BR. set: walnut Jove Atrro Garal!le door opener - seat &. breakfront• stereo Finest brand reg $..?00. conStOle w/super sPeakers; ~pecial $12:9. Installed 1vith decol"3.tor 111.uught i r o n ;i yr. til!Rl'a.nlee. Clt1) bookcases, leather topped 4~7953 -~=~=~-----cherrywood desk: 1\.'alnul l\fUST sell .Exec. desk & end tables: lan1ps: fine c h ai r , A-l co nd . china & n1ore. 6:1~1-.J.198 ProJes$lonal drafting board KINGSIZE box springs and & Rtool. . l\lise o~e ~ eq\lip. niaMrcss "i!h mal1ress Call anytin1e 642-256.'.l. l'o•,oer, blanket, bedspi"Cad, \.\.AN+.ED-USED f gooc1 cond. $50 six foot long ORIENTAL RUGS couph and loveseat brow!\ \\'ill pay C'Rsh. Pleaf;e c n l I plaid ~erculon ain:i~t ne~· 1213) 874·2S~2 (.'Qllcct. (.'\)St $650, seU !01· $3JO. G.E. ==""--~Oo'--"c:-c~ dryer bl'and ne1v anton1atic BRAND llCI'.' Gaffers & Sat· ignitor $35. R.C.A. color TV tier. gas range $65. Couch. in oiled 1\·lllnut danish chairs, blk & \1•ht TV. moden1 console $ t 5 O , 5~3.S?.S 536-Ti'tl j,L~.\~R~G~E:=c-,.-.,~.,\~o~ba-c~k-· -,-,,-m~k. BARRELl.. furn. h I k . very good oondl•ion $6j.QO, naup.hyde. Rec. Purchased, Sonja Henle doll $6:i.OO. tbl., 4 ann chrs, end tbl • ;,,i;>-2368 • Three · Doll Fashlon'.s! Call For Appl Industrial Rclelioni; Ari' you tired of \\·01·king for peanuts? Join an Ol'l!lllniza· tion thal c1u1 n1ak€' you big do ll"1''i in 1'Qn1n1iF;slon & 1714) 4.,9401 lionuses: u11h1& ca n.d y ~ candles, '111tio11ery, g:!f!s t. SECRETAR\" -B.ec(•plionii;!. E\pt•r. 1v/l'cscarth orgMi?:a-\l"Qn ien for u11 to ::; v.·eck typing & son1e l1kkpng, tlon desired. llvy stat ty p· 11ubHc 1·elation project to in· Sh h<'lpful, nol rC'Q'd. 8·5. ing. 70 typing, sh 80. troduce hnnk service to l\lon 1hru Fr.I. S n I a r y PI ca Sfltl I I c I e phone Lnguna Niguel rt'sidcnts. l\lntz, 2-:J pn1 Secretary 10 3:3o. Call ~trs. Carlson. "'/lan1p. s·-couch, hassock. * onrEXTAL RUGS • $550. firn1. ,\ft, 6 Pl\f Several used !\eccled by 89~1700 private party ..Also · · I NE\.\'LY eovered blUC' Danish hru1tl111ade tapcst:r). G7j...S77::t 1,c~11 d !11U1• .• 11:hl busy I I drPs.~111g: h~l' 11 '~ tc<'n dOll . ou~ge so. a w/bols~ers.133 YDS. Rus t/sh o rt I SU\£' 11 ~ni.:11 (ortu1w,• TELONIC novelties. je\\"E'lry, f'(c., ctc. No lnvestn1ent. \\'ril(': giv· SEC''l-BOOI\1\EJ..:PF.Tl Bnekground in laud develop· 49:>-0850 1\·11low chairs, blue cushions 11. $6.30 r ·d. 1nsu· ~ ,,,._,...,. 111,.,......,. I i-m ~ .· : ~ 1--t--'NDUSTRl""'--J-+ng-phone-•wnh••--·P,Q. Box 85, Canugu Park, Coli!. ~50-$300 n10. 979--6090, l\lr. personnlity ·~·c1. ~nlarv. No S('tl ing, \\'ork 9 Xhft opportunity 1v/jp.i>\\•!ng n1ent . co. Ex_per. in &111-\VO-,-,-A-N-,0-,-•• -,...-~,0-0-po~lio ~ttt-?.le11tt·t"0;-('71"'-Ge:H•'rl-,_,,.,,,.,,,a1 lt<as111g-;-doe\!nl'M--ttr."J";"O--S:FiWRli . e da)' \1'/stroni::: typing, !ih ,t;, tallon or legal . field. Typ-, hl'lekpng. !\Ion Lhru Fri. i bkk png. cxpt.>r. ,Cole lnstn1-ing 70, i;h XO. l\Iu1 2 Yl'li 1.'0l· 1 ain-3.30 pm. $300 mo. H.B. Sl:ki. "°f11.tc!11ng la 1np St':': 2 shag/11l ush C"l\l'pet & 2-tone ~ -1'1T.., __ • -trr . ...: '1. 11 .. 1 lll'I\ l"niart f:islnons , ~'11 -L .... Au.!.faU~"'°"· '-"'""""l----1 . ·:> 7:'.62: ptuiti;. hotpantli, city~ COUCI J & chair $.t'i: ,xh~t BUNi{ beds, gas rll.ng<i, • ro: sun1u1e1:'s prl'tti<'l-t sh01'1 S, C!lpe, potholder V('St,, cond. Extra Jnr. p1l·n1c kitchen ~et. \\Tinger u·asher s1de-:ollt. l1')\1•Uln11111.~l top tunic ilr~·~i;. !(Ing-rtrcss.j table~ & ~Jl('hrs $10: I.Ar. l,ikc 11cv.·, \Vard's push over sho11s ot' pan!s fol", 1;11p. shriwl. Laguna Beach 91304 ' .............................. 1 nl<'llt Corp, 203·1 Pla.ccn11n , ll"ge. ni'CB. 962--1997 aften'!OOns. EquaJ Oppor. En1pl'tlyer Salt>!> C.l\t. 642·8080. Equal Op1J01'. Adm Secretary I -. . . \VO!\·IAN to \\'Ori: in Do Nu1 REAL ESTATE SALES Rc~ales in Ne\.\·por! Beach areo. HARBOR VIEW HOMES 1829 Port-Shl'llle!ld Pl(l.CC Ne~·port Beach 833.07$0 wk·dfty11 oncy REAL ESTATE SALE.S • FREE ~ICENSE TRAINING Fomo11-Roal Estate Licens· Ina-Course J.O\v nvallo.ble thru TarOOU P.ettllo1·,, Free P1aecm,.11t S<-rvlcr. Free Training Pl'Oi1'n.n1. Earn while )lflt1 learn. Cnll Al Slot1.n (71.41 832·:t140. REAL ESTATE- SALES MANAGER Res&le OUlce neiids n1anagcr -wtth-2-,em c;>t ~Rcol Esto.to experience. Newport Beach a~a. ~Pt\ndlng con1pnny. Excellent opportunity for profe5~onal growth, Apply in contiden~. Send re~un1e to-ciueulect ad 110; 638, <'lo Dally Pllol, P.O. Box lriEi(), Colla MN/l. Calif. 97';26. CLASSIFIED , ...... 642-!1671 I " WORK WHERE? ALL ORANGE CO AREAS E.'>()llnd\ng rec'OnJ.ta~ ret.nh s101·e11 a(,'Cepting applications for. lull lhne sales, 1ngml trainee, ,\, full n1gr posltions. \Vr!te Clasalficd Ad •GSS. Dally Ptlot, P. 0 . Box 1560, Corita Aiesa, C&.IU. 92626, SALESGIRL, lop !I a 1 c $ person, exp only, for belier ~lalty-•tore, salary open. Send lnforn1l'll J e I t e r u•/general infonnatlon & exp. \\'e \VIII r.ontacl you, Send ltltter to Box no. 882. '-,~ Dally Pilot, PO~ 1000, Costa Melll\, Calif .:+=- En1 ployer F.1..ix·1". 111 a 1111.nk, sav111gii & shop, Rfterr)()f)OS. 110 phone --S-EC TO. VP loan. title L"O .. escroiv 1:0·· r.n.lls 11Jea.~e. \\llnchell!!. 29-17 10 y1·s ex11 .. S/H, typg, l)(J(lk· Jund deyeloper, or la\\•o[fi(•e Jlarbor Bl\·d .. Cosf11. l\tesa. keeping, beaut nu fa(..'ilHil's proersi;1ng N'DI f' f tR t e nr Ne11·port ft'C\\'y, !71 n 1locu1n cn111. Typing 70, die· ;l;i6·870U. 1:1 11hon~. ll1dividual selected SALES Buslness·n1!n1Jcd c r f'I\ ti\.~ per!!()n \1•ho's 0\1•11l'd thl"lr ""'" retail Al\Clp, lntcttKl('d In fn11hlo11 & creRt1ve aelth1A' for ~ fine spcc;:lllJl!y 11hop. Full or Pfll'I ttme, Salary )'W'n. Ph .. 7 .. 7733. -- SALES Olrl• \Ventt'd. 5-9P~t par I· t Im e e vonin$"S. !\1on-f"rl. No experience 1icl"Cs5.."T}'~Stnrtln'? $1 .f;i hr + con1nt. Cnll r-.tr. \Vll11011 SECRETAR\: & li te book· keeper, energetic, dt>alinit \1·lth the sa.lllng public. Ap. ply 121 Tustin Ave, NB. SECRETARY fnr nu1-st'l',\' I 11ehoo1. full tin1c. Apply 2.ili'i \V. SunUo.,.,·cr, S1tnta J\lla 11 ill Ix' n. 1;r.ll sllirtet' 1\·illfng te> ;1(!1'1'.'pl rl'sponslbility &. \\'Ork independently. l·::-.ecllcnt benefir11 & \\'Ol"klng t'O!HIS. Coll 644-3389 · or 644-3317 Betwe~n? am & 12 only SECRET1\RY -knO\\'ICtlj!'f IJf Ti:U.: s1\0"' Ort, 10 lllCrchnn· yAchllng t'qulp. or \\•Ill-d\$(' 11~ !I c 111 b J c r !I nnd lnl:llt'li~ lo lcHrn, T.vviuit & hnn~rrEt. lnif't'"\•\e-.v'l ng dnlly bookkeeping ne e. 642-2932 h•'llVn 10 and 3, 350 Clinton S'ERVlCE slRllOn i-;;;~. i\v<-, Co&lll ?.1('.s!'l. ~, ,, .. ·-., ... '" I ~,, .... ·'"· ·~ f'XJ)t.!l'ICllCC' .•. Dc~ire -I O_JJ Ali1:11111cnL5c.1'Vlce.'.l"uJI or 1111leit.1l'lftn, hlt'ht MtJCl;anlt;ul rnrt 11nlC. ~lllt1ry plus COlll· know I td Ito . ncn1 np· nll1'1!11on. Call 644-8022. Coast ~nra.nce. Apply 1non1!ng:i., \uhJ ~rv\c(! Center. :l590 Ne\l:poct. Costa Ates.a.. ER" §5lv1cr. ~tallon salesn11111 .TRE ~ & 1u~ n111n. i·op pay St I 'i 1· c:-cpcr. nect<1$. ~lnr~ rrlnJ.tf• beocrils. ExPt1., mnn ~~<-n~, Lait. lllU11 urfo. 11•t ''d. 1'"1111 or p/tltne .. 1~·~1)_ft~p!. ___ _ ~1-24-lii . ~hf"ll, 171'1 & 1t·vin1•, NB.. 'l"?t:'C'l\ ih·h "" rc-r M'!11llli'l' I SF:lt~i'iii1~f!Orl:u11 n;1u11!''1 .. 1•11111•:. ,\ppl~· 87>$ ,;-_ 0-.:;-1/t\ \ •I . \ por->> \\. 1Sl h, C"o~l n '-lt•AA. I J\l\l't.l.\Ylltl1t:'B~· Al to \ n1c. 1p,.·}' n ;"':: ----~ run an nd! Don't delay, . . Tiu ,-1~,r I· n1r 8ht'l1, Z:iO:l rSc.11 t11C old 8ll1fl Ruv t.11£' JlCI\ ~I today &42-rlli'f.,: Ml\rhtl~ Rh•ri;-f!oM . ~Sud. w tuffr .._ •. I • • \VOOD\VOnr.::ERS .ft ~('tl(!rlll lnbor. apply_l\1011, 8an1, 3001 Redhil l. Bldg 1, Suite lOS C~t. UNSKILLED ASSEMBLERS Female No FeH-Top $$ C\111 ln1n1cd it1'cly \\lc.<Ckcnd!I l11cludl'iJ • P. P.S Pacific Personnel -S.rVice1. Inc. WO Nc.,.,·port cnll'r Dr. SuU<• 900. N.tl 64°"1970 24 Central To1v1·•. Ornnae !)>17-644G T·~1unl Opf'Or. En1ploser he.nvy 1t·h1tt> ~Hee 1ble SS: nloii·er, & chest<;. 5-13--0436 p l n g here, th ~ 1 e. ~t.:\·f;!'\'l'l-.l,.fl'I<: CESTS nnsc. Cull alt. !>:30, S.12-3516 11, \TER Soll R fi e v l" 'r y \\ h L' r L': Choo~r lo• .. ,01-, , .. ,,,,,.,, ... ,·,,,,1 ,,-, ~ . 1 etwr, .e net', 1vildf1011't'r p1'i111s. ' " " " * HIDE-1\-BJ.:O. q u {'en fru11 sz. Llfetin1<' frbi::ls. Sell I'.• 1 !(! p 9 o o 1 . c1:nt~ for each pattern ror size, \\"Orth $5.j(}, sac. $230. <'heap. 5-13--T:iSl 2-1 hr~" '-1' J tn ;c s · u~ir:~ 1~ 11 1r· I Alt l\lall :\nd Spccinl 1-tnndl-Ncar 11£'\I"' AlliQ Ifereulon · issess izcs ,, · · ·, 1' i11•'!: illht'l'\1 11\I.' third-class M>(a & love°seat. 67~ ESTATE SALE: Na1u ra.l lS. Size 12 1b~~1 34! t~p, 1 clP!ii·cry \"ill take lhret!' l\tAHOG cl . b' Autun1n tlii.zt> !\link Stole. 11ho1't.s 3 ya1'ds ~1n.:;h fabr11·. l\t'"ks or 111orr. St>nd to 16 ch~:niaz:11'a1~.:~· telr1' Nter G: s.:>2•9n 5 ~if~\'t;XT 'k ·t'IVf~ Ci!:S1'S ,\llce Brooks, lhe OAfLY ro1teh, n11sc ilcnis. · S!lO \V: f.ll~bnck S\\'l,·el seets for for each J)l.lllcrn -add 2:1 l)Il.OT, to.:i. Needlecraft t5lh St Si>ul!e 28 ~a 1·ans. cent~ for C!nch 11a11e1·n tllr Dept .. Box JG3, Ohl Chelwu ~." ' • · ' * j.17-11(19 • Air i1tiil ttnd S~cial l·IAndl· ~lntlon, N'ew York. N.Y. . NE\\I 1:hag i•at-pcl i't'~hond ln.i::-: othcn\'li;o thlrd-cla5s 10011. Print Nllrn-e, ActdrM!i. \\'ANTED to i>tiy hk~ne11' pad &. laOOr ~1~1., Froni "delivery '"ill tnk~ tlll'e~ ;r.111. P1tlh•r11 Nun1ber. f'unliture & Jn1nps, n1rc & s-'"' ·d "'' 71 1 1 , ,, 11'eeki't 01· n1C\l:\'. St>nd to N,' ~ E 0 1, ~ .. C"\L...,, •-•. l'f'U50nable. &14-4687 ,),<.J ~ • ,,.. -· 1111 '~ to.Torian l\l11rl\11. th~ DAILY "' i:. ''-' r I '"' I !OT I 1 60 Cnx:ht•t, knit, rte. f"'rec ·* Custo1n built {~-.uch fi'Oitl · 1>0 nt e eel.lie .!ilOYP S · PILO'r. 442, l'attern Dept.. · :"o(}c l~nll0<•k's. Cost SIOOO sell 4 f'\•!endly poodle/Jal/ pilps 8 232 \Ve!ll 18th SL. Ne1v d;:~!~?ts. ,\ia~n nl(" Book. $.2.:iO. s.\6-nss: · 111'.s. free, 556-0268.. '\·ork, N.Y. 10011. P1•lnl oa11ic, f.'lnC'y knols. imt-• * ~tE'~113ERS1 11P to· N'A,l f'.'~. Alll)UJliS...'5 \Vllh 1 , ~I U0 E."XQUJSl.TE dln1ng l'OOln tbl Irvine Coast Country Oub. ZIP. SIZJ:: nnd ST\'1..E ';~,1~~~~1 . r r111•lwt Hook -& chrs, Rn('1ifi~ nt $Gj(), SU'llUEI' '\do ls\• s~. ,,131 Call 55J~j • . •• U>:irn h.v fl]CIUN'l!? Pnt· .... ., 1.i---SEE: l\IORI:: Q ui e l!: $lOO ***SOF,\ • Lo·-s·.·11. USED•BICYCLES r'ashlon11; :tnrl rl"IO(l!IC one tcrns. , , <)! n;; " ( 'l/Ul llil'I<' ht ... tanl Olft Boot.: 11c\~r used, both for s1 a,·,, ,\U '1)·1t('s ·• IH2'·1Z7Z pattern tree ft'0111 our _ ,1101.c than 100 gill.! Usual ly ho111Q, 9f.S·7910 6' Sl!E:ET met&I, Brn.kt' $SO. Sbrl~g~11~1~; Cntulo2. AH ~1 .on. 4Z.15 Sandburg \\ifl..v, Univ. 2?2~ ~!t>yer Place .• C11sta 11 -{iS~ANf' SE\\'ING BOOK l'u1u1llcte Ataflani Book 4 Pnrk. !<limy Barga.in llcn1s. l\IcllA, alter 6 pru. $()1\• today, wear tomomi\1·. s 1.00. Stan11 10 Al\! \\"ed.·Sunday. GOOD gas s!Ove. 123. Adding $1 . Ill ,IUty !tor lltw•i." ~ :n.., h $20 138 E \"' S Buol; u( 11 rrb,o \fi;:h1111.._ O llNA co.blncl SlOO .. sl1cltn.;: 1nllc ·• · r. • i t. lNS'tAi~T FAS l-11 0 N ~Oe. · 11:111.s!I, 4SX5-11~··1 ~1l1"l)l'\1't1N C.~f. 5-l8-4.is5. Bl)IJK llundrerlt of Qnlll O...uk 1 ~ 16 pattrrns. 1h1\"'e1'1, etc, ~7. ' Mlicelllrt.OUI f11o;hion fu1'ts. $1. !:(It-. ''\\'hl!" Ele11hR:11~.. 01.,•r-W1nted 820 Like to 'T'tadr \' Uur iradet''ll '111M>u111 Quill Ro.wk '.I - n.ulrtlng your house':' Tum P'lrat!lsc tvJumn ltt f•1r }\111 ' ;lie, !hem into 4'Cil~h'' ... ~11 BlNTNG iol(I & 1'11\•pr li"-1 ii Hne11, a dl\,VS for $5, l':Jll •111111 .. fur 1'1'il)\\'·~ Ll\"I"( • lhe·rn thru n Drii:y Pilol <'l"ll•l"· CRU f1.,r 1111vr11!~ & loday , •. fi.IZ...ri678 l j btau1ltu1 P11ll«irn!I. 50c. cla~ltlet:l fl.d i pick up. &73-«07, prl ply. I ' \. :JO DAILY PILOT Tutsday June 5, l97J 1---..-' ... _"""'~)~ [ --..... ,,-, l Llnoo, 2 Times, $2.00 ...... Soll ' )~ ...__[. -_ __,Ji!! I 909 Motor Home1 , • • --- * Jo'REE KflTENS• l Calleo, 3 black, Slan1eAe. Call 962.-3801 --------S.lo/RO<lt 1''LIPJ1£:R, fun tor sail, IOO(t 1 oond., alt equip. No. 413. e SALES e 940 '71 O!EV. ~van,""'• DATSUN MERCEDESIENZ VO(J(SWAGEN CHEVROl:.ET FORD w.b., v-3, d11e btks, lo mi'1, l---------1...:::::·:.::.::::;,;:,:.;:::..::.;::;::1::-::::-'.:::::-:-.J....'"'"'.:'.""--I 613 "' 933 • SERVICE< 121 BLACK kltt1!1111 8 11·k1, 1 '71 HOBIE' Jr! ...,. It r l r. • xln't oond. sm<l./orrer. HURRY JIM SL.EMONS • '00 BW Bug, """ '""· ·'8 CAMAAO, P1' •"'"" 49+4006. Yov c•n 1till nat • Radio/~ater, good cond. vinyl top, kM' mileage. l:" M. I '" """"' • )>S<b'"'" Mcl<;bb;,,, ..... Gd '"""'· • RENTALS • 1\tother Russ Blu 64'.?-7768. Stored inside. $1000. 6i.W858 .10 \\1K female Labrador I Boats, Sllps/Dock1 910 Shep pups. Polrnthll hunll'l"S 494·9S22 Lugun11 Beach. \\'AN'T'EO in Avalon 45 to 50' EXPLORER OF HUNTINGTON BEACH '6.j FORD Van. Carpeted, •-IMPORTS $T.S. • Cf!lL runn.illj( condition. N<'11 paneled. Reblt. '""'"'· $625. new Q1t1un SlO, 1200, MERCEDES BENZ . 833-28'15 th'e•. Will "'"'ill"' Im· OT otter. Must selU IU&--~~ 610 or Pickup AUTHOJUZSD TOP line 'TI V\V Bus $2100. $1500. Cu.II \\'k d11y11 bct11·ec:11 --At the old price SALES&: SERVICE Really cle'.t.n (.."'Ond &---Xtr-Js. 3-5 p.n1. S97-247'l - • SI Call 49l-9723. '72 VEGA hatchbat·k, 6.000 Autos W1nt9d 968 ----.. . '68 CTR\' Sdn. \\'ii;ll. PIS. J>IB, air, R/11. Nu titefi, <'lt>an, good t.'Ond. $615. ~ "'6-3478. "Tl ftl\NCl lF:RO VT. 3j(), 4V, air, phs, plb, fln;t $2'100. i11kc1i. 49-1-1-1-19 'ti7 ~'OHO Conver1lblc. XI. ' Jim emons VOLVO 1111. undl!r 11·n1lran. 1~·rr. 1---llllpOl'h t . "' 2000. 1301 Quall VOLVO .68 CHEV. '"'~''" ... o . •l-----l"*"-F-.REE KITTENS * ~1~~11~~~;;:c15 d~~g tJuly • siz..il?le ;1 •• ~1 JWNTINGTON DEACll 1 X1'111p11rt D,1b1111 . ·~·"·••' "•' '. '•.!" JOO. Po';;"i au10 •• '!'.l&.£9.!E ===--rlff on, a. ftl(;'.:13z<;. · INSTAHT.J:ASll! Mi\LE Crl\.v T11titiy, 9\,•ks \\rAi.~TEO: Slip 40' Sport o I d. short ha l r . Fisher, day 893-24 79; housetraint>d, 64&-i'G48. 646-5-171 a(t 5,' A SPECIAL kitten. yel~,-& 34· 001\T SLIP , fuizy, for a liJ)l'CiaJ holllt', 8 $60. u n10. Hunt. Harbour. "~'" house broken. 6t-Hl906 846-32'12. · * • CUTE blac-k .t. l\"hile, OOCK space for mif, up to rockapoo-!en1. 12'1-k!>. 111ale, 25' ()™"er. $1.73 'ft. Phone 1ii""'ii""ii.1i.iiiiiiiiiiiiri[=6-n-~_,_,,~·---~-~ I ' Bo•ls, Speed & Ski 911 J[B Pett, General 850 ~'M'l:NTJON PF~1'S! }1on1e a\\'ay fron1 hon1e. bull! just for you! ~!.\HK T\VAIN 18' dl't'p v hull, I/0 l\lert' engine, 165 h.p. Tandem trlr. very &'OOd rond . .$2!!00. ~'IB5, '!-tier 6 pn1 6-l-l-8828 * * HORIZON Jt:t S k i Boot. ·127 engine. $3300 or best olfer. 63lH;m MOTOR HOMES Apollo, Pacesc11cr. Barn n, Jruuboree, Roblnhood \\le'vc got 'em at KENDON MOTOR HOMES ~01 N. llarbor. S.A. SM-00.\' !i' ·rp:,1.L'O 2:\' L'f.) 'flVf.flER :."l'-22' CO~ITI NE~'TALS 20' PRlllE & J OYS VAN CON\ t:n~:>NS -·•· : • Service • Rentals * Danmar· Inc. * 1.~"-0' Jlnrixlr R!vd., C.C. !l31-Grol "l'<'"I lo G.G. Datsun Boanfing/Groomlng 546-2&48 °"11• 8S4 18' TROJAN 18;; hp, inbrd ski 1973 Disro1·el't'r and Sundial bout. &>au1ifu1. Cn 11 l\lotoL' lforncs for rent, make _5'_8-0223 __ ._._•_·15-4_3_25 ____ : rt'SCl"'\'atlons for Summer e PUPPY WORLD e l}O\\', Phone 1\Ii...;s Bennet at 100 ?l.IIXED Pu1>S. Open I ~~~~~~~~~~ Rob IA'ng11re Po n t inc, ~\~. TfiSh 'Seiter, Tuber· I' [i] 892.6651 nr 631).T;JJO, man, Fox Tf'l"rie>L'S, lluskie, ,.,......~ I ,a.,. sAatIFICE. Luxurious ~;;· Bull Terrier, T·Cup POocile, . .. euston1 h 1 t 111otorhon1e. ChihuaJiUl:l, Lab.. Boxel', SIAtl' insp<'i·lrd, lo n1ilca·ge, Cockapoo. S\\'i\P She11twrds 1 air, sctr cont .. nu tires & for ?? ~ St~d S<>rv 1110~1 ] Aircraft 915 inotor. 77-l-S92i breeds. :i3l-.i027. , ---------'69 CESSNi\ lj(), Nl!\\1, Exnlorer. U', full FREE 10 wk f<'n1ale pups. Dam AKC Lab Rctr-Sirc Ger Shep. 49.t-98.."'2 Lag Sch. Gd cornpany & protection, also potential hunting flogs. IRlSH Setter puppies. AKC registered. Ch q. 111 pi o 11 Stock. Born A.pr!! 21st. Ready ~nd y,·eek In June. SM-0361 OBEDIE.i'JCE clasl'l to start June 2(1, \\'etl .7:30 prn. Ne .... 'Jl()11 Beachllrvint> area 546-:4928 AKC Old English Sheepdog pups. $100. & up. 836-4476 01· 893-0293. SCHNAUZER Pups, shots, stud service, te1·n1s. I TI4 l 522-8366 PEKINGESE PUPPIES AKC REG SIJO\\I S'T'OCK • s.lZ..1128 * \\'El!\tARANER p u p p i e s , reg. $50. SJ6-{)()J6 BEAUTIFUL AKC Beagle Puppy, 10 y,·ks, 'n1ale. $j(). • 8.13-1~ * AKC DACHSHUNDS Champ. bloodlines. \\lcd'itys aft 3:30 pm 968-9.132. · · A KC hi sh &-lier 1JUps. 8 ,1-ks, Champion bloodline!'!, }-;quipped. Reasonable price. equip Sips 8, ajr/gci'L, 979-1262. 101,·e~t rates, no mileage, 5.12-8292 Campers, Sale/Rent 920 Tr1ilers, Tr1vel 945 '69 FORD, bubble-to p camper conversion, con1pl. S<'if eontained, lo miles, xl111 cond. Perfel.'t for young amily. $3100. 842--6890~ * CAMPER Shells for sale or rent. All n1akes & models. 2941 Grace Lane, B_klg C. C.1\1. MAJOR\VAY & Hair Pint Can1pers & Shells at fac- tory prices. 858 \V. 18th. C.1\f. , 1972-Zilt . 51h \\'heel !miler 11·ith 01· )1ilhout 1972 Ford '~ ton pickup. Sacrifice li<>c!\U.!le of .Heal!h, price new $1-1,l.lO:l. con1ple1c unit $10,00I. Trailer alone $6,500. Ph. 492-Z.142 196.:) INTERNATIONAL 4x4, Travelall. many ne\\' pans, 3 gas tanks, $2000. &IG-7022 after 4:30. '64 BOLES Aero, 22', I()[)',l. sell-<:ont. Tanclem, clean $339Zi. 63S-22.'i8 t:i' Aristocrat Lo\\' l.Jncr E."ct"llent condition! $1350. • 548--1395 CAi\.fPER & trailer repairs & supplies also van con-· versions. &l8 ,V, 18th, C.1\t. 81~' EL DORADO Crui1per. Xlnt cond, $800. * 5-15--0246 * OPEi'J Road camper. Full cab-over. 8~~· bed + extras. Call 962-3139 8\!1' HOLIDAY cab o'"cr Camper Jacks. boot. elc. Nil-'e & clean. $i00. &17-7«:i Cycle5, Bikes, Scooters 925 Tr1ilers, UtiHty 947 Utility trier. Ii IP y,·elght. Nu y,·hls, tarp CO\·er, haul motorcycles, can1p ~ar. sm. &14-1162 Auto Service, parts 9l49 8' PA~l TOP • S\25 • 51S-10i'i0 pet .t: sho'> s1ock. 96&-2971 '72 YAMAHA 250 MX VW ENGINE aft 6 l\1olo Crn-~s. Good l-'On<lil.km. needs \\·ork, SIOO. WE ARE IN ' DESPER ATE NEED OF GOOD, CLEAN FOREIGN CARS TOP DOLLAR-P1id For ·or Not I Call or come in to see us. NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 \V. Coast J-ly,')'., N.B. 642-9405 I 973-DA TSU NS ALL MODELS IN STOCK BARWICK IMPORTS 33375 Ca1nlnQ C11plstrano Sa n Juwi Capisrrano 493-3375 or 83l·ll75 Newport Beach ... -833·9300 hard!Q.11. nir_, IJ)Ill'2Qfl & ENTER FROM MacARTHUR 17th Anniversary blaCk. $100. Good c~nd. 846-2182 '71 MERCEDES SALE . .,, IMP~ALA~~\\~ ... ~317~. ~.,-... BE.1'lZ 2SOSL P/S, P/B lo ntl. Cleun. 2 Tops, low, lo1v nlileage. H $1"~ Ph ••1 -m<e>1v>. uge Savings ! ~· ' "' -'""· Call '58 CHEVY Brook\1-ood, "'b'll. Prll'es Su:irt Al runs oice & lookl'l 200!'1. $200. JIM GOODWIN, DLR $4260 T'"''" aft 9pm, 900-1613 72 * 282-8406 * . r DATSUN 6 -Pack '67 CllEVELLE-SS396. -1 l!pc'I. Cnb-Ovt!'r Can1per Deluxe. OPEL ~todel 144ES (144634·1-3851661 Bucket seats, n1ags, rcbll l\tany extras! 16,000 ini., \\'e ruake ovel"S<'as deli1·cries eng $351). 673-1564 SJ()OO 5-18..£397 ~ ... \\'E PAY TOP DOLLAR • 69 Opel v-.T. Tires & Sec It -You'll Huy It CHRYSLER 1'"'0R TOP USED CAns l\1UST SC'll, •n Datsun 510, engine in good c 0 11 ct • $900 Reasonable. 499-327J. ;o L • · If your car is exlra clean, eves ·536--lfl'i6 -8aM •1M11 '69 Chryt .• Sta. Wan. Jle us tirst. -~=~~·-~-~~ * ·n OPEL GT. yelloo·, * ~ l(Ml111 642_1447 • BAUER BUICK _ '70 OOZ. air cond, mag Whls, aulo, good conditkl'n? vo•vo l---------- 2925 J-larbor Blvd. nev: Perilli tires. Stick shft. * Arter 6, 646-:0928 * i Co•la "'"' 919-2500 6-l:hS.153 1006 """"°'" C.M. "'6-9:lO:l CONTINENTAL J!\IPORTS \VANTED ·n DATSUN PT CK' u P PORSCHE .. ;;67;---;;v"o"Lv"o""4c'd'C,-"c""--"'",,",,",",."w' 1---------- 0 C t • w/clln1per sl111ll, xlnt 1:ond., ""'" ~ range oun Y s . paint, air, tires & 8 I.rack TOP $ BUYER 51850. 932-2235 ~R 70, 911 T. CPE, s~rf·· stereo, xlnt concl. Sraxl. BfLL l\JAXF.Y TOYOTA 2. 197.1 Datsun f.10 .sc<lw1 ~ '.l:::~pd. new XAS ~d1a;.a, .After-5-call !>1s-=:15..TI --1SR81.~c4 Blv.:._ _ S.l@_ $1495_ S-IIl5t. Lug rte, clean. $tim.J,,;;~:c~=~~,,°'o"-==-"0-'-.,--1 .. fl. Br'lch Ph. 847-8555 6-14-2003 F.\~-67'$-69$ . .,,, .. u... -SST. Good run- '"OS · 11, 510 4 pd 1,1 .. 1 '\I 2 1.1 ,1. . nlng COIKI. J\tust sell $750. or 1 talion ag., . , s , . ,, . l l'i'. ".°'•1ng ? 5-18-4'168 Autos, Imported 970 lo mi's. Xlnt cond. Asking ,·,'l' ... It._ f\illy ('((Utpped,I---------V·S, a.u1on1at ie tn111sn1issiun, • THE Fl .'EST IN I $1600. 846-5929. I ' '. (l.J;,....3,';J7 ""'Autos, u.~ 990 radio & healer. po ·.-1:1· :<h't•\'• n: ..... ing, po\\·cr h1·;1l;c''· • 'l<"J, S M 0 S I ;\!UST sell "69 Da1 !>'Un. A1nt ir ' P.. SCH E. __ ;...,;co;:.:;.. ___ :.:;:1 ait· conditioni•I"' U ED I P RT e running cond. Radio & 1·n, nu tires, BUICK al · <'r· e THE FINEST IN hc:irer. Brst offer. 557-2:'J611 &~ r 64-1-0927. "' I I.ires. 1• $74$• IMPORT SERVICE • 1·n9 DATSUN Pickup. l\tust * • '66 POR.SCJ::!E 912. ne\\' '65 BUICK Skylark Cpe, v...s, GUSTA ' Do yourself a favor and con1e sell by ,,·eekend. $1050. 1notor, after a:30 ca 11 py,T, auto. Good l.'Ol\d. 1\lukt• ~ see us first. Open Tues. 6-10-1346 ~S-0903. S2850. o(f<'r. 615--2537: Lincolri·M· I../, and Thurs. ti! 9, Sat.Sun TOYOTA "68 RIVIERA. Lo n1i, full 16.SOO Bc"iu·h ill \i ·c·1 til 5· RAT l)l:ra'!'r, air, bank financing. J runtington &>:• ·'1 {EU;uEAN AUTD) "'" FIAT s:;o, "'w tire•, TOYOTA 673--J100. 842-8144 * (213) 592·5544 .s.. \wth:wcs) s..,;c.., bl'ak~~ upllol. $1000. Run!i CADILLAC "Home of the Viking" '72 MARK IV 17th Anniversary 1--------'61 CONT. • o... "C'~'"' LINCOLN ~~~~-----1" '70 LINCOLN MARK 111 V-8. 1u.1lu1uolic lrttn11n1i1slon ra<lio & hl'a!e1·, po\l'er steer: inf; .'i.-hr3kr.,, 11·hitc 11icle- 1\'a1I tires, 1·ir1yl top, leather inlcrioi., power y,<fJ\do11•s & St~urs, nir t.'Onditionlng. 17.SN408). $4889 GUSTAFSON Uncaln-Mercury 16800 Bcat'h at \Varn~r · J(u111Jng11111 lJcu.ch ,1 142-8144 • 1213) 592-55441. ''Home Of thi ·viliilnt''. 1 MAVERICK- e 'TO 1-1.JLL Y EQUrPPED e uir cond, nuto 1rans, ps, r/h, 32,0l}O n1i .. nu tirel. !\!,\Kl:: Of'J.~ER. 6\.1-1480 'iO ;\IA\'F~RICK, auto, radio, ~ood tires. xlnt concl. gold. , • $1~50. 551-5111 MERCURY '67 'COi..oN\' Purk, 9 PRsi;;. l\'gn, full p()\\"er, a/c, goort condition. !133--0l.G:i alter 6;30 PM __ ...,,ec.a_ 545·1<40 perfect 6T~7 or nili's - 6T;,--0960 lhUT)'! ALFA ROMEO '69 FIAT Sport Coupe $700. or best offer. Puff." l.il\V rni., mech. xlnt. SALE "Pan1pc1"l'rl." All srn:i(-e 196'.? COi\IF.T. N('I\. t'lUU·h, tecortll'l avail. $ J 3 5 O. 1nins, haft. l•l,{)(XI 1ni. Oii 67 1\LPHA GS; •I dr. sedan. \Vhite, needs cngir!f \\'Ol'k. Clean $775. Orig. pri\'ate party' 962-7981 AUDI CLEAN '70 AUDI Xlnt cond. Lo\\· $2295. 1\fter 4, 979-0110 BMW LEASE A 1973 BAVARIA - CREVIER BMW 6i~l700 • 61-1--0.iCX; t'f'hll l'ng. S300 01· besr offrr. Prie<'s Stru1 .\t 675-1 ISj, 1971 F IAT, Sport Spydcr. :i $2399 ,70 CADI CONTI. 1970 l\lnrk 111. ~"-'~==~~--spd, xlnt cond. $2700. or I LLAC rull)l0\1·1-, lealhi~r i 11 t ., '68 COLON\' Park S111 make offer. Call 5&>-28.13 4 DOOR Rn1/f1n stereo, $ 3 S 9 j. . \Vagon. Lo1v n1ilcs, air, 10 HONDA HONDA, ti mo old, 28-1 HOB, Bal. or r~nc \Vmty, 5000 1nl. Priv. prty Eves '557-0050 1\fUST Sae. leaving slate. '71 fiondu 600. Zink cond. $1511. Call 6-IG-3128 JAG~U~A~R~- JAGUAR XJ-6 '71, in1· n1aculate. 'rhite/h\nck in-_ lrrior. Pi· ired for quick sale. 642-.1121. '73 COROLLA lKE200TI2S54) • -196--1909. nas11. 111any ~ $1499. 'V -8, auton1alic transmission COUGAR 673-2006. t\o~-tlii:.1 ~-ad'io & heater, poy,•er steer: 1965 ~11-:R'°C"°U°'R°'Y'"<'"d'°oo-,-.,--~I - lUUIA UlllO ~ng & brake!!, air condition-----.---.. --·I lntruipGrtntlon car, niake of. TOYOTA 111g, vinyl top, wn/fm stereo COUGAR, Xlt-7: took _at 11.'r 71,1184fl..el14 po\\·er windo\\·s & se t ' \\'~I lt s .got: Dclux u~-t069AEX;. a s. tenor. console and cockpit A real Cruiser? $~689 dashboard w/01<e1·!1€'ad co_n-'56 l\lereury i! ll'Ols; factory air, rad10, Best offer. 6-12--042'1 TOYOTA Corona. 1973, Auro, GUSTAFSON !i\\'ing-a\\"f\Y S!l'\'rhu:: 11·he1•I , l!Mi6 Harbor, C.!\I. ~9303 Xlnt cond. Lo mileage, .excellent <'n~lll(' and h1.xly yc11o\v, ~-833-16&1 Uncoln-Mercury l'Ondition. 1r:. .11 ·r,,~. hut on1~· TRIUMPH I~ ~arh Al \\'r.n1cr :~c<' ~;.~ s;:~~s;.0~1!1~0\~' ,w . . llunlln1tton &:i"h pcl'!Olltll insf)(>('tkln 1,• i l l MUSTANG '6 i\IU~TANG. :.i:i9 \Iii:, ·12.00'.> n1ih •s. 1 n1,·r11·r. J.,'00(1 ron- clilion. Sl ~l,l)(I. Dtlys lilfr3375: ,.,,..'i fi:~r ..... 132-1 10 TRIU~IP~-SptU'ire, exeell 84J..1144.* (213) 592.5544 51\'IlY \'OU. 1\1\JSf sell. C;ill <~nd., lo m1~es. be;>! 0l!e1·· "Home of the Viking'' oriJ::i111il 0\\1ll'r. 52~-51:;5.1 \\ kd\"S a[! .1:30 ,);)}-(l(iGt)· ---~~ KARMANN GHIA \\'knds anytime. ' ' '72 COUPE DE VILLE. '68 l'OUGAR, 1i:ii11l rond .. full '="""c~-~­' f, :i ~1USfA:"o/C. l'>t'll' rngif'K' Sales -Scrvic<> • Leasing 208 \V. lst Si., Santa Ana ~. 1970 KAR.t\tANN Ghia. nr 135-3171 nl?\\", 1\llchelin X Ures, Sl3ij(). VOLKSWAGEN l''antastic Shnlimar C'.old \\;th pY,T, cttsl, piunt, eng. JUSI vinvl •nn n-t 'f 1 I ove1i1a11led. S.'\C. S 1000 . ,ft "tr\~~ ue~u I l~ cat~r 96/l...1i9l U><t\'" Nun1bl'r & !il'('s. S.:,00. Privntl' Party. GJ:t-!1-113 aft<'r ;1pn1 * I RI SJ{ SE171'ER puppies l\lake Offer. Can hr· sren at I ~~~~~~~~~~ S35 each. 645-61"6, 638'ir Orange Coast Daily Pilot. I ~ ORANGE COUNTY'S _ CentaSt. Cl\_t ___ ....330.~'.~~-Bay__2!.,_G_osta ·1-"litotfOl"taile --1f~· 1 ---OL!DEST 613--0Z\7. MAZDA VW's NEW & USED 2 Big Loc1tfon1 . 'pc ry •nle~r. I' ull 1\'"ith remrdin .. ~. po11er.' Fnctoi'Y air cond s1e1"t.-.o, tilt & telescopi~ '70 COVG.f\R, \\ill y,•/hlk steering, door locks Sold & vinyl top & int. Air, n<'w 'G6 i\n:ST ANG eon.,,·ert., 8 cyl, xlnt conll. $900. Call 5 to JO pn1. &124J.i6 _ AKC Springer Spaniel pup. l\lesa. A1>k for l\frs. Green-. . G pies. Cham. stk. hUnl/pct. n1an f'.i42-4321. ext. 2Ti. ';;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;-, B. l\t~· ao1h. 6T:l·U4i'i. John's Racing Cycles • AFGHAN PUPS * BULTACO * Antiques/Cl111lc• 953 AKC. shots S.18-3 179 HEADQUARTERS FOR * • * l!J.lS Packa.rd S.-\LES-SERVICE-LEASING BOB LONGPRE MAZDA NOW OPEN S Ml NUT ES FROM COSTA MESA 2114 ~. lST ST., S.A. 835-6531 SCI.viced here. (85iE;DJ). tires tlc. Sacrifice $2:'iJZ.. $5444 67.r-7,629. Sales &. Servire OLDSMOBILE NABERS CADILLAC ·10 COUGAR :>at. nuto. oir, I OLDSMOBILE 2600 ffarbor B!vcJ. p/s. p/b. Rai~ "''icl(' GMC TRUCKS Costa J\lr.sa llt~s. 2 spaves. t.hnl COllil. HONDA CARS HorMs 856 DESERT, J\fOTO X T'f Club Sedan. OVERSEAS DELI\'ERY Accessories. $lj()() * G-1;;.5412 {4 1\fil es No. ot So. Coast Plaza) 540-9100 644-1437 68 ELDORA~. Fim .,,.,.• --~FO--R-D___ UN~~ERSITY OLDS Harhor at \\1ilso11. C.l\I. ROY CARVER, Inc. HORSES for renl &. sale. 646-4655 or 646-24'.!8 RM,r"e1tlon1I 234 E. 17th St. i:rreen, vinyl top, lea ther in· 2850 llarbor Blvd. -··· _____ _;,.....; Need girl for rt'nl siring, Jtn HONDA' CB 35' Vehi(les 956 Costa l\Ic,;n 546-444-1 ol'er 18. Red,,oocJ Stables. !er, ~I extras. mint t.'Olid. Costa ~frAA SID-9640 All Models Ready S'.!1so. 61'-5569 ~-• ·05 Old• '""" eru'"'· , 15 MINUTES FROM MISSION VIEJO AREA :n2.86 Laguna Canyon Rd. Cus1on1 headers. 1.600 mi. Lag. Sch. No phone calls. f.xt·t·llent rondition. r.:ioo. 615-2".A:> af!. :>: 30 br 5.w.-0038 6 ":l'R. ~i thoroughbred, i; bt\1-n 12-3 John. quarter. Bay gelding, EnJ;:. or 'A'eslem, jumps. $42a. '72 BULT ACO AIPina. like 6T.r1725 Ile\\", $850. '68 Bultaco ';~~~~~~~~~:I Pursang s.KK). Both xlnt cond. Consider or Ce rs . I I~ &12-27-19 ..... ~t t,f l~EED Campanale · lighty,·eight $90. Sch.,,,inn Varsity like ney,• S 6 0 . 979-28.12 * 'i1 lnl'I Tra\'E'la ll 4.x4. rRdio. air, auto. 10'" spec. tires & 1rhl!!, 4000 mi., und. \\"IUT .• 5"8-2708. DUNE Buggy Rall. Corvair eng., 95% complete, $5j(). M&-""' Soorts, Race, Rods 959 V\V 1.1 in i T, hi g h perfonnancc eng, lthr int, slotted disc y,·hb:, nu Gates tires. $15i:;. 5-11-22&5 Terry Trucks 962 ·n HONDA , SL 125, gold, OtrrRIGGERS -19' Anglers good shape, ljOO ml , Specinlflcs, side mount, Overszd rear tire. xtra.s? 1971 FORD Ranger XLT. l.'omple1e. $145. 646-1378 S350. 64fr2807 ~' ton huck And 11 !2 ft. CAN'T ~II? Help yourself & 250 SUZUh:!, pri1no con· Arncrigo fibcrg las.o; and olhers:lll:'Donate. Sea Ex-dillon, 32 hp to rear \\'heel alum. cainper. Both loaded ploring, BSA, f)'l&-1900. .., pro-installed-get kiL \"cry 1ril.h extra!'!. fully self·h>n· Boals/Marlne fast. $150 or offer. 492--7662 1ained. Likl' 11e1v condition __!9uip. 904 ·~straoc,_T~1ro0 CBSix 1o00.,,1•10i:;s,,· nnd must be sel'n to be ap. _ AA" .. , preciated. 2.1,000 nii!e~. Al\fERIC.f\N frailer. Db I $295. Clea.n. 6T;r-0391, no e Phone 549·4348 e axle .f!lec. brakes, 1ires nr. calls after 7 pm, ask for Al '68 CHEV. i~ lfon \\"ilh new. Xlnt cond. i\take ofter. KA,VASAKI lT..cc. Late 'TI. camper shell. V-8, stick shift, E>.:es. 213 -49S-1.28l 1500 nilles. l\Iust see to ap.. railio. Can1per shell fully Boats, Power 906 predate! 551-5327 paneled & insulated. Very ---------· -e WANTED _ used 21" good condition, has only 1966 ~· Jo'ISHING OOAT . v.iieel 10 speed bike. 42,000 miles orig. O\\·ner. Glast.ron ,vJTrailer. 150 hp 962--0789 -"544-887C.:..,C"-<::,·~-~~-....., Chevy motor l\lcr-cruiser .• 73 YA..\fAH,\ 115 l\IX. Quick '64 EL Camlnc>-283 eng. 3 Deep-V hul!. Deplh finder. clean., $425. 2232 ,\ Pacific spe. pipes, mags, air, live bail tank. $3,500. C.i.11 shocks. Commercial license, 630-1710. After 6 ca 11 Av~ .. Costa 1.iesa. $595 or trade for V\V, 633-92&1 • 1973 1-fONDA 35'1 CL * 642-4689 CVf'S l:,. ___ _)t!Qljlt:Jruiiiifil::B<J.Ai'TC-lmnu1r.! Cond. Lo f.tlleagc _ ~i\t'=o°'v"'IN°'G--'="''"°61'"..ct=,.,-.-,-. "i.."'· ~"',..." GlMtron w Trailer. 150 SUJ. lrT/t-49&-l!nJ PU. 327...,.uto,. pis, p/b, hp Otcvy motor 1.ler-cnrtse.r. Ltl69 HONDA CJ. :~iO. ciirt r/h. 26.000 actual miles, Deep-V hull. Depth finder. tires. runs good. u:x>. $1550. cash. 548-6954 a.rt 3. live be.it 111.11k. $3,500. Call call 5-18-7901 aft 6pm .59 O!EV)' P.U. I-1\gh Pert. 630-1710. After 6 r:nll 63..'l·~ J-IONDA 330/4 1972. l n1mac. 400, can111, 4 spd. Blue· .. SACRJF1CF. 1'1' cabin cruiser. S92J. i\tr •. Lang, ~1301 printed + bal:11~1! etc. f~t hull, two Johtison 40hp \\·ce.kdays FAST, $700 flrn1. m-2513 motors. nl!\l·ly rcUll. S99:;., 10 SPEED DA\VES '71 FORD 3,.( Ton plus cah, S37~-Simple.~. 53t tub Ing, HT Camrier $2800. Call nrtt'r Boats, Sill 909 beautiful! SIOO. 556-0212 -~6". "61"f>.J~•96=""=--~- Xi0 BULTACO, ex c e 11 en t 1971 f'ORD 3/~ 1011 pick Uf'I, L.AP\"'ORTI-1' 2<1. l'"ibers::lass, condition. J\1ust sell, make auto li'U ns, ail', lo 111llc11. inboRrd. Gold pinier. S39Y.J. offer. r...i&-0172 I"""'-49" '"'"3 Long Beach.....i.\farin11.. Gan~· .:o;r.>., -"' · \\!&Y 18, slip 5:;1, rail St7.URT T'J> SAv8ge "'/Git Vens Tif...839.-592:). 1\11. ~1rong '& fast. $3:";(). ----------1 963 13' FIDERGLASS i\Jetcalr ~IS-79_'2 ______ _ CIUJ sailboal y,•lth AAr•I '7l TRIUl\tPJ-l 500. lo 1ni, dolly, firx" cond.. $175. :...1111 rond. nmst ride to a~ s.13-5168 Jll'f"d.'lte, ts50 .. ~1989. 2;' PEARSON i·on1nlmKic1· ~tor Hom,• Rloop. J.\111 Kttl, 51 ~ hp, S1le/Rtnt '40 JohnllOn. tc]t!(!JI• 4, xlnt. cond. I ----------- $<t9:i0. 633-10.10 Rent"A Motor Home " GREAT Da,ypllor. 11' Lnrk for your -Vac1tion "''/trailer & till equip. * 531-6800 * Flbt':rgJMs "'/Alum mllllt. 1 ~~"c-=--=~~-$.150. 646-5612. '72 20' ~::;-.cAPADE CU,slom * SEAQUEST JS' *-O<MlKf', ai\'. ell t>xtn.A. S:l.le . or 1mdt>. -1~2742. Sips 5, 'IRllQ, h~8.d, motor 1·1~11on1. hinged mut. Xlnl. Ne'v Luxury LrFE'Tf~tE $5500. 816-2439. ttasonnblc, lmmac, sips 6. HOOlE Cllt 14', 2 tAlls, 2· eets Pvt owner. 838-0900 Jlallla.rdt trtr/xtra v.'hl. 1972 PACE Arrow. 2'1', load· $.1-2982. ' ed. Prlct'fl for :~k ARIC. Contat.1 Martin, " 411 16' JIOOIP. Cat, xlnt cond., JJ.ust ""~ to aPPf'l!elate. O.lu•• Wlnneb190 • $47-14.l& • Ttcot. Ti'. 610-0182 Nll I tit '73 DODGE * Ton Surfer Vin V·S. auto1nRtlc b'an!l'mlukln. Radio &: hl?<iltr, JI 0 we T steertng, poy,·flr brakes, (iOO!IN). $3989 GUSTAFSON Uncoln-~ury 1~ Beach 11.I WtuTICr , Jl'untlngt.on Beach 842-8144 * (213) S9MS44 ''Homt of the Vlklftf11 Daily Pilot. \\'anl Ad.s 1tave hanrilns plore.. 1 CAPRI For IMMEDIATE '71 CA:i!ARO Z28. i\1\t-1'"\t I im~"· ~•a "'b.•ri.. 1op rack. low niileage, like !)('II". Pl': Anlo, nlr. plb, pl$. '68 eng, Delivery! p•y. Call bc111·t.'C'n 6 and · trl<'r hitrh, nh· shock.,, look,. 1-1-12 SO. BRISTOL, S.A. 546-0220 2001 E. ls1 S1U'-T A A~A {S.A. F'N')'. East on 7Pl\I 963-.m.t '73 FORD ~~-, l'UrioodM~-l-3spg 11 1~Y :l58-7871 1st St. '-' mi.) '72 CAD Cpe OeVlllt'. F1re MUSTA...,G "~5-t095' ~·kdRv; 11 es, • "E:tsy to Reach" mlst blue, wht vin roor Jthr ~n · · 73 R C )th uphol, fully loaded. $55oo. Lanllau, V-8, automatic trans: '67 .OLDS CutluM Supreme NOW OWN THE * Mazda , ot•ry * ommonwea Pvt pty. 531-4117. n1ission, air conditioning, ~/";:;, P/B, auto tr~. r/h, FABULOUS 1973 $66 MONTH Motors Ltd. \\.ONDE•-· 9-c d pcm·er steeri:;f, Po\\' c r hte green, ~·/blk int. bkt '" •roN~•s OPEN LEASE n..r u... JIAS!'i a b-" (37l)G~ ' r.eats aft 6 call uo~ CAPRI '.IV" 1 an $anta Ana L;lll-10 1961, black, P"T & ,-tuies 1 "' • $850' '"--1 ~1 ~. \rilt accept trade-ins .., lilr Best t1 $3689 or ...._,. v1. er \\'Ith 2,000 4 t.')'!inder or V-6 CALL ?r1R. FRY 842-6666 '69 VW · Bus, am/tm, bltin 64i-Ooo:!. o over $-MX>. . '66 OLDSl\tOBrLE Vis I a engine, \\'ith or \\'ithout Hunt. Bea.ch bed, & middle seat. Reblt19TI CAD CDV GUSTAFSON Crul9l"r \\'agofl, great decor group, some y,ith sun eng. 44,000 ml. Very good • lmmac, full al transporra!lon, $950. Pri roor or landau !op, _po\\·er MAZDA cond. :n pty. 8.11-1700. ft°i:;~r.$4;~·. 5~e;J: 11~1~ 6& Linc . n-M~cury pty. 6r.r8'2I4 • , disc brakes, style slecl 'it V\V Bus. New heads &. 6~3 ' ]611()() Beach a! 'V:iml!r ·~ OLD!': CullAS5, a/c, auto, \\·heel, rlldial tires, bucket 1·>1.lves. New lire11, $1900 .. 68 El.DO 1-funlin,lt"lon Bc11ch p/s, p/h. r le>'ln. i0,000 inl. seats. ORDER \'OURS 642-7930 • RADO Cad. Nu 142-8844 * (213)-592-5544 $!MO. ill ' ':il:'I ' 545·8.510 · NO\\'. ., ood paint, nu ti res, '<lnt 1i1nning "H of th V'k' ,. rt " '.lO $2789 173.11 Beach BL !!4'l-G6G6 64 V\V Bug. g trAnsp. cond. Pric,«I to s t' 1 1 . ome e I ing -n ~: . ..: ---------$300. Calf 53G-9Sl 9 673-3n6 art. :->. • s11111on '\'1\'._.'0n * "6:1 01.l)S tUllA..,,, clMn; OR r ~· YOU PREFER MERCEDES BENZ . . ~ '72 SEDAN de Ville, loatltc.l. HHO Fort! LTD. 8 pass. l'0\111• r;ooil t'f"lnd .. :~lipd, V-8. mi .. '71 CAPRI 60 \'\V rebulll engine 35.000 Low mileage show roo try !;(!UU't'. JouU p\\T, tac One Clll' O\\'T)('r. 96l-5353 (2.'l7COP.t 50 USED miles. $300. or best ottm-. clean. &IG-7227 111 air. vt'ry clean, priced for 19G~0L.JJS DEL ?lfONT 4 dr, $1789 IH&-59i7 .73 Cou OeV'l quick sale. $2100. Call nh', PIS, P/!1, S995. Ph: GUSTAFSON MERCEDES '61 "'v cam,., ong. ~~. 6000 ,:,:, py'.1'· ~~ .. th., 613-049' "3!)."'"' IS Pop top, stl bit trs. nu eng .. 557-9271. • pa Y· Call '71 FORD LTD Country -~P~l~NT=O~---t Lincoln-Mercury ON D PLAY br"' 11500. 548-<;1>1 •10 c 0 v eon . Squ;re. Fact. ,;,, Pt•. '"'" 16800 Beach al \Vanier Sharp New Car • '70 V\V Bus, red &. v."hilt', /out. ·1 i. ~~·hlte In· disc brks. Mus! sell, $2900. 'T.l PINTO \Vagon, auto, Huntington };leach Trade-ins • lo ml. Xlnt cond.. $2150. 586-:man co ' · Eves. Best ofter. 54s.-0112 ti:relux int &: ext, roof rack, 8424844 * (213) 592.5544 Coming In Evtry D•y · Priv. pty. 963-5353 •68 CAD. Conv. whltt' w/Red 166 Country Squirt Wig 8,000 nil. mAke o f re r. ''Home of the Viking'' Ask About Our Unique • '67 V\V, reblt eng. & leather lnter1ot E . Loaded. $695. 642-6670 _8<_·2-5262-c~'=,.,,===--I '12 CAPRI :m:i. V-6, lo Used Mercedes LeaM trans. oil cooler, $710 Priv. Cond. • 979'-1007 Autos, Mew 980 PLYMOUTH miles, delu.."\e interior, xln1 Plans . pt~ ... bla--&C 116 Po 30 000 '68 FLEET\VOOD Bduu, ooncl. Call 5-19-14U HoUse of Imports 69 1' .v amp, p to, • black &: be:iutlful' Va rancit'!! CO!it money: Rent n1iles. Nu !\lkiullln tires, tl795 * !liim3 I 6362 ~lanchestcr, Bur•1a Parle xlnt cond -642-0612 \1lt1r iou~e. ar>t.. store ~-· · l\tUST !K'IJ 'G9 ~'Ll!!lllte '~ 1 ·o 11-Piiot <1'l-the·.,..n•n-Aoa-l<"r.i\y _.._,___.._ ...___,_ 1 ~ D•uJt .. e.c. t 1n1 a a Y uu "·~ ~~ ..... e ... -"Ii""'"" o · srorrer-over gels it. Classlfierl Ad. St-!1 irllc·ireins 523-'iX"...O ter, as 111, Att 3:30 531-5364 no\\'! Ca.II S.12-567S Nov.•! Need a "Par!"? f'IAce an ad! 6~2440 ,;c==·==~~---1 =====,-==="'-'====:--:====_;.===:::--;::--:-::=== '72 KINGSWOOD, 9 pass sta \ wag. Loaded. lo\V ml, 50,000 ml Wfl.IT. Cnll art 4; 499-3840 '10 CPE de VIJlei all extras. New tires. Highest offer over $3000. 644-2'1991640...U36. CA MARO 'G!r-Z28, RALLY 11pt., R trak. mags, 1poilel"8, air shockl, Chcny. J\IU!l sec. 6r~ um I?l.tPALA cust. Loaded, p/s, p/b, p/11', clc. $3600. 52-1-9780 nrt 6pm. 'G9 CAl\tARO. V8, auto. ~111!<1 sell by lune Sth.. $1400. or bctlt offer. 548-2854 '68 CMIARO SS 396. Vinyl top. BeauUtul car. J\hMit aacrtnco. MWKMI. 'fir CAMARD V-8, 327, lac. a.lr. New eng., 1>1lnt. Ii Urea. $1400/offer. 567-8328 CHEVROLET ---· ... , ........... '69 NOVA, 2 dr, Orig owMr PIS. new Ures, C1@an, lU95 or bell offer. 892.--6724 '70 IMPALA. Cu11t Cpe. Auto, •Ir, ~'·· p/b, oow 11 ... & tune..UJl. $1A95. 8.17-!121 'fi6 IMPALA fact air, Joadf!d, Xln't cond. $506. 89~2148 aft 6pm . • '72 DUSTF.R, •11•\ly fnr·t. eqvip, Deluxn cond. $3000. 673-158.1 nnvtlll'I<" ---~-·--"'PtYMOt.mT~f'\l'T'r,71toorl---f hard 101). S:i()() 1)1· 1 ~'81 offer. 497-1624. PLY. J.'ury Ttr-:-1009 Sil', r'lldlo, ROOtl lin?8, quick 118.le prlr.e $800, 536-7257 PONTIAC LEASE OR BUY '71 lhn.t "13 PontlAt.'S DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 2<1.'1(1 llti.rbor Blvd., 1tt Fair Drive, Costa l\feM ~17 J.006 GREEN PonllRc E.'(· ~IM!, l)!r, po~·er. $78.,,. N eerl goorl honle for klvlng G='2'''=· 11»-!00c-·==--'68 PONTIAC4<1r HT BorlM, 0 riv.·r, u.lr, xlnt tlrn I; "°""· SIOO .. ~l6<6!80 '6.4 PONTIAC Bonn e v i 11 e conv. Gre1t buy at $2M c:r orrcr. 673--l494 eves. T·llRD --1-'67 T-BIR0 . .}'ul1 power.·xlnt (.'Olld. f.IU-'t IMlll. best O(ft(. 613-2383 VEGA •n VEGA ll11tchback, brake• & tire.. Mull lkst offer. 49T· L4 ' CLA~Sl~1EJ) • ''" ' . .. .. ' . . ' -· OAllY l'tlOJ 7 7 .,,, ~I ---l§J '~--"'--~ ~ ... _ .. _ ... ___,[i ~I -~-~ ..... ~\ ~~ ._ _ ___,llil I 2 u... 2 '""'"· $2.M . ~ ~ 90f MoW -Vw "' A-. l-1ed '70 Aut-, ,..,,.-970 Aut-, 1_.... 970 A-. UMd !lie :..:A;..u"'~'·..;u;.;.-,-----"°- • t"lln: KrlTENS• FlJPPER. tun for •• u. good -,. .. ,_ --"°' :'7l~atEV:;;;-;..-:-=-~v'=' .... ~1ong= l~~;.:,D;;A~TS=u=N:-~ I MERCIDU IENZ -¥0LK$WAGE.M. CHEYROuT _ FORD I C1o1ko. a blade. 1 ""1d .. all equ;p. No. 413'. e SALES e w.b., v-8. <lllc 1><1<1, lo ml'1,1 _________ 1 ___ ....;...:;.. ____ .. -· c.11 -673-1933 e SERYICE -• xln't cond-WoO./oUer. HURRY JIM SUMONS • '86 ew Bug, ,.bit e ... :;g c.u.rAno. Pf., auio .. '68 cmv Sdn. Wan. PIS. ' Ill BLACK ll:lttena 8 \\'kl, 1 •n HOBIE 14 wt tr 1 r. 49-MOOS. You c•n atlll •t • MPORTS ~k>/heater, aood cond. vtnyl top, low mild.Jn. Ex· ~~~~. a.l~lllCo~~ :.~ : 'M. I F. ---nrd 'I: htebrkn. t.JcKibblns sails. Gd cond. • R£HTALS • '6.i FORD Van. carpeted, now D•loun SIO, l200, I 0.,., __ ceU. runnJ11£ condition. Ne\\' 646.J47'8. I --RUii Wu &0-'1768. S-inside. $Ul00. 613-1858 paneled. Reblt • .....,.. $025. MERCEDES BENZ -tires. \Vut •1m«lce fo r tit K-Mnalt! btbrador-1 BO.ti,-Slip1/Doeks tlO EXPLORER Of otter" Must &ell! ~2685 610 ot P k kup TOP line ·n VW Bus $2'100. $lfl00 Call "'k dltl'S bet1,1·ect1 ·11. R.i\NCHERO GT. :r,o, 4V, 1 = ... Poitnllal huntett -At-tfteokl-price Alm!_OSERIZ6RVOICE' ~ally cleanreon<I & Xtras. 3--5 P.nl.-&'97-2472 nu" p/-s, p/b, flt'SI $2200. t = OF Autos Won._.. SALES ""' Call 4a't_a123. 1 ba k 6 ooo takes. 49-\-lM9 I ' mooring "'k·nds during July -Jim ~mons VOLVO ..n1i, ~Wldt'r v.·u1·1•tt1'l, pert. Laguna Beach. \\'ANTED in Ava on 45 to •iu' HUNTINGTON BEACH INST-, =..,. ~•... .,.,....... '72 VEGA hate 1 c , , * REE KITTENS * & Aug. Contact Frank (213) 18'01 Beach Wvd. 84>'8()3 Im....-cond. Auto lJ'an" $2000. ~-~~~-a>&~;=:;,:;~~~~f-'.HUNT~~ING'!ON~~~B~EA~·~:i-~~!H ~·· 968-8263 MALE C<ay Tubby, ""'"' WANTED' Slip 40· Sport MOTOR HOMES WE ARE IN -==~===-===='-!--N-iewpooo'f,rtQiiS:ch-81:¥0 68 biEv" ""' "4;11 •Id , 1hort hair , F;•her, day 89 3-2479; DESPERATE NEED 1973 DATSUNS 8339300 hardtop, rur, on1uwn .'& ~ • .6f6.TGt8. li46-M71 aCt 5. Apollo, PaceKctter, Baron, ENTER rnoM MacARTHUR 17th Anriivarunv black. -$100. Ciood cond. A SPECIAL kitten, Y'llow & 34· BOAT SUP J•mboree, RoblnhoOO OILOOODr CLEAN ALL MODELS _ 1--~~====~-I •• ·-J 11<6-n82 funy, for a special home. 8 $60. a mo, Hunt. Harbour. \Ve've got 'em at FOREIGN CARS IN STOCK '71 MERCEDES SALE '69 IMPALA \VaG 327. air, ..... ""-broke~ 6'4-0006 841>3212. KENDON TOP DOLLAR-P•icl BENZ 2\!()SL PIS.-P/B lo m;; Oean. MOTOR HOMES For Or Noll BARWICK IMPORTS 2 Tops.' low, low mileage. H Sa I 1 $1250. ,,.,_,;,_7027 DOCK space for rent. up to 25' pov.·er. SI. 75/tt. Phone 673.()i9'1. fu7 N. Harbor, S.A. !154.QO.n Call or come in to see us. 33375 Crunino Capistrano {Il4CHV). UCJI Y ftCJS • '58 CKEVf BrooKv•ood, wgn, NEWPORT San Juan Capistrano Call Prices Sia.rt 1\I runs nice k looks K9Qd. sm. Bo•lt, Speed & Sk i 911 "27' TP.A ~l'O '93-3375 or 831-1315 J IM '!,~~ DLR $4260 Teny, aft 9pm, 960-1613 IMPORTS '12 D~TSUN 6 -Pac k '67 c;HEVELLE-S&'\1l6. 4 sp<I. [ ....... _ )[B !\tAltK T\'1AIN lB' deep v hull, 1/0 ~Jere engine, 165 h.p. Tandem trlr, \'ery good cond. $2800. 54&-3465, aft~r 6 pn1 644-8828 ?'\' 1..'I."il '(lVERER 2"1'·22' CO~ITINENTALS 20' PRlllE &: JOYS 3100 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. 642.9405 Cab-Over Can1per Deluxe. OPEL ~loclel 144.ES (1446344·38Sl66l Bu~ket seats, mags, reblt ldany extras! 16,000 n\i., 1----------1We make.overseas dcJJvcrics eng $850. 673-Ta&i $3000 548-<397 e '69 O\><l C.T. Tires & Sec II · You'll Buy 11 CHRYSLER MUsr sell, 'TI Datsun 510, engine 1n good c on d . VAN CON\r:R~:JNS \VE PAY TOP DOU.AR -1· 1 e Service e Rentals FOR TOP USED CAnS 150 * Danmar Inc * 11 your ""' ;, ex<r.a clean, $900. Reasonable. 499-3275. '69 Chrys. Sta. Wag. 642-1447 .ATTJ::.VfION PEJ'S! * • HORIZON Je_t .... .J kl Boal, 427 engine. ~ or beat o([er. • see us first. 1:"1()1 llnrbor B!vd., G.G. BAlJER BcifCK - evt:.s 5$-4576 * '71 OPEL GT, yellow, * Home awl.)' from l'iome, 53r-6800 2!J25 .Hilrbor Blvd. '70 MOZ, ·air cond, mag wh111, auto, good-condition! bu.llt Just for your Boen.:lin&/Groomlng 546-2848 63Hf11 l'IC\I.' Perilli tires. Stick 1hft * After 6, 846-0928 * 64"-535.1 . CONTINE~TAL ~ 854 e PUPPY WORLD e 18' TROJAN 185 hp, inbrd' ski boat. Beautiful. Ca 11 548--0223, 645-4325 100 · MIX£D PUPS. Open ~~~~~~~~~ F.:\'tL lrh:h Seiler, Dobcr· :: ,. man., •·ox Te1Ti!'n, lluskie, ' __ 1 __ ' ---·-~ ..... a.ii Ttrrltt, T-Cup Poodle, .. 1 Si ... N°f''<t to G.G. Datsun Costa !\fcsa 979-2500 1913 Dl soo\·erer and Sw11Jial J~fPORTS WANTED J\folor ll?rnes for rent, 1nake Orange County's \ reserva11on.'I for Summer TOP S BUYER no11•. Phone l\Ilss Bennet at BTLL MAXF.Y TOYOTA Bob LollfgJL'e -P o n ~ i a c , 1SR81 Beach Blv..!. 892-6651 or 636-~ H. Bri.Ch--Ph. 847-8555 '71 -DATSUN P I CKU P w/camper Khell, xlnt cond ., S1850. 002-2235 2$1~9~ Da tsWl !!10 se<lan$1495 &14-2003 SACRJFICE, Luxurious JJ' '70 Station Wag., 510, 4 spd, custom · b 1 t niotorhomC!. Autos, Imported 970 lo mi's. Xlrit cond . Asking 1006 }larboi', C.ti l. 646-9303 PORSCHE '67 VOLVO 4 dr 8edan, ne1v --paint, air, tires & 8 track POR '70,' 911 T. CPE, gnrf., stel'l'Q xlnt cond $121() 5-spd, new XAS radla!.s, After 5 caU 518-<fs.ri , · 81-in;e. Lug rl<, clean. $5000. '<!"' VOLVO SST J!::ves. 67'~ uo__ . Good run-·,11 2 lib ,1 . Jil~lil. irust sell $1....0. or ......... '7TMARK IV Jffj{ <e. ,, ovu1g "·"' 168 · 1 · · ,.:1'.. : ···•Jc. Fully equipped, · V.S, .auto1uanc rans1111ss1on, Chltmahua, La b., BoXf'L '••·------· Oidlapoo. S\V AP Shepherds \' b" ?! Stud St'rv n1ost [Aircraft 915 · ().J~3517 A radio & heater, J)(l";•·r i;h_·~·r. · utos, UHd 990 ing, p<>l\'er b1•akl·~. · 1 tn·1, R S C H E . red ai1· conditionir1" State insJ)e{'lcd. lo n1 ileage, ;..._..;.. __ ,______ $1600. !W&-5929. alr, self ront., nu tires &: e THE FINIEST IN ,, 0~u~ST~.e~ll~'69~Da~tsu-n-. ~X~Jnt l" rm1or, 774-8927 USED IMPORTS e running cond. Radio & -J.31-:.on. :..;...c.....c.;.. ____ _ lO Ttk female pups. . '69 CESSNA lj(). NE\V. Exolorer. 24". full e THE FINEST IN hcatl!r. Best offer. 557-~ Dam _AJ\C Lab Retr-Sire Equipped. Reasonable price. °"' lhe-p. 49-Hl822 Lag Bch. 9."11'-'--"1262=·------ equip Sips 8, air/gen, IMPORT SERVICE e '69 DATSUN Pickup. Alust IO\\'e~t rates, no mileage, Do """'..-if a favor and conie sell by \\"eekend. $1000. 552-8292 cr ~~-Gd cmnpart)' &: proteclion , U.O pnt.mtlaJ hunting dogs. Campers, Sale/Rent 920 Trailers, Travel 945 s.tttt puppte.. AKC rdWrtd. Chan1 p lon 9oclt. Born April 21st. RAd)' ~·erk Jn June. -I EDJE:i'JCE claSR to slart June 31, Wed 7:30 pm. Nn:port Beach/Irvine a1a - '69 FORD,1 bobble top C'amper conversion, compl. self t"Ontained, lo miles, ,Xlnt l'Otld. Perfect for young amily. $3100. 842-6890. 1972-27fl . 5t h-v.·hecl trniler 1vith or \\i thoUt 1912 Ft1rd ~i Ion pickup. S a c rifice Because or Health, price new $14,000. t'On1plele unit • CAMPER Shells for sale $10,000. Trailer alone $6,500. or rent. All nlakes & Ph. 492-5142 n1odels. 2941 Grace Lane, 1963 INT.ERNATIONAL 4x4, see us first. Open Tues. --=.;c134=6------and Thurs, ~ 9, Sat.Sun "' 5. RAT (Ei IRl~EAN AUTO) · Wtb=9af 1969 FIAT 850, new tires, ._. D .s.rw.:. b111kcs, upOOI. SlOOO. Runs 2100~-.a.~-M~·M40 perlect ~7 or nites - ST=>-0960 HUJTY! ALFA ROMEO '69 FIAT Sport ·Coupe $700. ----------I or hc.!.1 t1rfcr. 675-1700- ~m. -nu ti res , BUICK \\'all lil'es .. c!li:· S.! l 6#0027. $7480 - • • '66 PORSCHE 912. new '66 BUfCK Skylark Cpe V-8 GUSTA" n\Olor, after 5:30 ca 11 P"T, auto. Good cone!. ~lak~ >J8--0!lll3, !2850. ~ ouer. &1>-2537. Uncol"·M· ';I TOYOTA '.68 RIVIERA. Lo 1ni, full l~ Beach a~ \i' ,. \'I' ----------1 ?'.>"''er, air, bank financing. 1-Iuntington 8'>:>"f1 To. YDTA •'73-3100· 842.-* <2u1 592.5544 CADILLAC "Homo of the Viking" . 17th Anniv-ary 1 ------~--, 'ITT . CONT. 4 . Or. "C•~•m ••~ · Puff." Lmv nu., mech. xlnt.' l'e(."Ords avnil. $ 1 3 5 0 . . • 644--0500 • AKC Old ~llsh Sh!'epcklg pups, $100. & Up. 836-4476 l'.ll' """"""· Bklg G, C.l\f. Ttavelafl, many new parts, 67 ALPHA GS, 4 dr. sedan. MAJORWAY & Half Pint 3 gas tanks, $2000. 64&-7022 \Vhlte, needs engine \\'Ork. Campers &, Riel:ls at lac-after 4:30. Clean $775. Orig. private party. 962-7981 SALE 'fit "Prunpt?red." All service Prices Sta.i1 Al 1911 F!Aj, Sport SpydeO', 5 $2399 ,70. CADILLAC CONTL 1910 Mm·k 111, spd. :-:Int cond. $2700. or 1 fu llpo\\T, leothcr in I . , make orrer. Call 586--2813 I 4 DOOR. an1/f1n stereo, $ 3 8 9 5 .. tory prices. 858 W. 18th. '64 BOLES Aero, 22', 100% -"'="-'===----- SCHNAUZER Pups, shots, 1 ~C::.M::::,. =------self-cont. Tandem. clean AUDI atud &ervlce, terms. CAJ\-fPER & trailer repairs & $3.1%. 6JS-2'l58 !TI41 522-8366 ~~~~~-------~-------supplies also van con-15' Aristocrat ,Lo\\' Liner ·PEKI~G~E PUPPrES versions. 858 W. 18th, C.M. Excellent condition! CLEAN '70 AUDI AKC JU:X; SHO'N 5f<XK git • EL OORAOO Camper. $1350. 8 5f8·1395 * SU-U28 * filnt cond, $800. XI%~~: ~· U'EJMARANER pup p 1 es, --* 5i5"-0216· • Trailers, Utility '47 --="-"-'-'-'-'=-- HONDA ONDA, 6 mo old, 284 HOB, Bal. of Fae Wrnty, 5000 ml. Prlv. prty Eves 557-@50 MUST Sac. leaving state, ""71 jlonda 600. Zink cond. $750. ca11 646-3128 · '13 COROLLA (KE>:Xl112804) o..::496-=1909::::·===--::=---V-8, automaUc trahsmission 1-COUGAR "··-~ l··..:· radio & ··~•er. powe, steer:.,-----'·---- _lUUIA UlflD ing & brak!'s, air condition.I· -.. TOYOTA ing, vinyl top, arn/fm stereo COUG~. :\.~7: Look . at power wilido\\' & t ' \\'hat 11 !ll got: Oelux in· (069AEX) s sea s. terior, console and cockpit ·~ H CM •~9303 s' ~ dashboard w/overhead con· 1.;/IJOJ arbor, · · <>°llJ" • ~689 trots; faclory alr .. radio, -~ '70 LINCOLN MARK ID V-8. nwo1natic trw111nliMion. 1 radio & heater, pov.•er steer. • ing S: brak<'s, "·hile side· • \\•all tire~. vin)'I top, leaU1er , interio1·, po11·er windo1,1•s & S{'lllS, all· conditionhlJ. ·tZSN~). $4889 GUSTAFSON Uncoln-Merc:ury lGSOO Bcat.'h at \VamP..r · lluntlngton Beach I 84U844. (213) 592.5544 ' ''Home of the Viking'' I MAVERICK e '10 1'1JU. Y EQUIPPED e air cond, auto trans, pg, rib, 32,000 n1i .. nu tirea. i\lAKE OFFER. 644-1480 ·70 ~-IA VERJCK, auto, radio, good tires, xlnt cone!. gold. Sl.t50. 5.jl-511l MERCURY '67 COLONY Park, 9 Pass. I l\'gn. full po1,1.·er; a/c, good condition. 833--0300 af.ler 6:30 . PM 196'2 COl\1ET •. Nt"\I' ('/Ulch, 1rans, ball. 14.000 mi. on rehlf f'ng. $.'lOO 01· bc5t offer. 675.l<lS:l. '68 COLONY Pul'k Sta \\ragon. Lo1v miles, air, lO pnss. n1any xtras! $1499. 673-Di&. 1965 1'-IERCUR\• 4 door. gri(icl tr:aMportation car,_make cf. fer 714/846-6914----- A real cnitser! '56 Mercury Best oiler. &:12-0422 TOYOTA Corona, 1973, Aulo, GUST'AFSON ~·ing=away__ S!eecinjC w~el'I, Xlnt cond. Lo mileage, excellent engine and l:iod y MUSTANG yello\v, $2400. 833-1639 Uncoln-Mercury 1.'0ndition. It's.« '68, but only r----------1 -reg. $50. 536-0056 OPEN °--d camper. Full I--,--"---'----BMW n.u,i; Utl fty trier, lite "·eight. Nu . · BEAUTIFUL AKC Beagle cab--Over, 8¥.i' bed + extras. "'hls. ta11> CO\'er, haul ----------1 Puppy-'. 10 \\'ks, male. S50. Call 962-3139 motorcycles, can1p gear, LEASE.A ~---- JAGUAR * 8.'U-1526 * 8~~· HOLIDAY cnb O\'er cS1=:::25:o.·..:""""'-"=62=-~-~~ TRIUMllU h8' 26,000 nule.! The low '68 I U~ JAGUAR X'J-6 -'71, im---r::.n lGSOO~~<'h at \Vanier pr;_ ~IU~k vou, anrf n i\ »•ANG.~ VS, 42,00'.> n1acu1alC' \•.'hile/blaCk in· ·~ . . fhmtutgton Be:u·h personal insperlion "' i 11 nillf'S, I owrlt'r, goOO ron- ter ior. Priced [or guick 10 TIUUMP~ Spitfire, excell 142-1144 * (213) 592.5544 li\\'llY ,00. l\lust se ll. Call dillon. $1300. Onys 8.J&-3.!15: sale. 642-3121. ct;tncJ., lo mil_es, ~~ olfer. ''Home of the Vilcinn" orig-in.'li o"'ller; 52.i--5G.'ir:) e\'r.s M6-l:l21 AKC DACHSHUNDS Camper Jacks. boot. etc. Auto Service, Parts 949 Champ. tilOOillines. ll'kdays Nk• & clean, $700. 847-1"'5 1973 BAVARIA aft 3:30 pm 968-9332. Cycles, Bikes, 8' PMI TOP AKC Irish S!'t1er pups. 8 Scooter' 925 ~J_If>~ CREVIER BMW "'ks, __ Champion bloorlHne!I, _:..:;;;c.c_;______ , .. . \\kdys aft a:30, ';);)1-(li6{); , ··-. _ , . ·65M'USTANG. !'\c1\' engine KARMANN GHIA \\·Jmds anfti1ne. 72 COUPE DE VILLE S.S COUGAn. ~1111 cond .. full S: tires. $.XX). Private Party. pet & sho1v stock. 968-2971 '72 YAMAHA 250 MX -VW ENGINE Sales -Servieo -....?as1ng ft 6 ...-_ 208 W. 1st St., Santa Ana 1970 KARl\tANN Ghia. nr new, AJichelin X tires, S1350. 6T.l--02!7. VOLKSWAGEN Fa ntastic Shalimar Gold ,,,.llh P\\'l', cust, p.·unt. eng. Just &12-9-113 afler 5pm viny l top Be utilul le ttw_ overhauled. Sac. S l 0 0 0 . "'~~=:'7".="-"'----1 .::":::c'=~==~---I titoto Cross. Good condition. needs y,·orlc, Sluu.-540-14TI 135-3171 * IRJSH SETTER puppies JI.lake t1llcr. Can be ~nat l ~~~~~~~~~~ ----------vw. 'S & ta pcslry Tnterioc. af.'ul~ 968-1])7. 1:-eave -.Nun1ber 'li6 1\1}.JSTANG conyert., 8 pcl\\·er. Fact......, n•'r cond \\ith l"a'Orthng. . cyl, xlnt cone!. $900. Call 5 to $35 each. 645-flT:>G, 638~li Orange Coast Daily Pilot, ! ' ORANGE COUNTY'S Center St. Cl\1 330 \Vest Bay Sl., Costa I 1~ OLDEST MAZDA -J • 10 pm, M2-09:i6 NEW & USED sle1w, tilt & telescop1C '70 COUGAR. wtir w/hlk AKC Springer Spaniel pup. J\!esa. Ask for l\frs. Green· Autos fors.le t!!J Q pi~. Cham. s-tk. hunt/pet. man &12-'1321, ext. 277. ~-----~ B. 1\-lay 10th. 673-24"5. John'.s Racing Cycles AFGHAN PUPS * BULTACO * Antiquo1/CIH 1lcs 953 AKC, shots 838·3li9 HEADQUARTERS FOR * ••19-18 Packard SALES-SERVICE-LEAS1NG BOB LONGPRE MAZDA NOW OPEN ,1cerino, <1oor 1oc1 ... Sold & v1n,y1 top & int. ..... new OLDSMOBILE-2 Big Locations llCt'Vi~ here. (852EOJJ . _ tires etc. Sacrlflt-e $Z>9:>. S MINUTES FROM $5444 6T.H629. COSTA MESA NABERS CADILLAC 1'-·70=.:::;co;;;;uG""AR=°"a.;"'1.-."' ... -=--. "'a;-,-r, 2114 E. 1sr ST., S.A. 4l30(} Harbor Blvd. p/11. .p/b. Raised wide 835-6531 Costa Afesa tires. 2 spares. l\-finl cond. Sales.. 4~&n:vi~ OLDSMOBILE - GMC TRUCKS HONDA C'-RS HorHS 156 HORSES for rent & sale. Need girl for l'l'nl string, O\W 18. Redv.·ood Stables, ~ Laguna Canyon Rd. Lag. Bch. No phone caJJg, S YR. ~t thoroughbred, 11 quarter. Bay gelding, Eng. or ••estern. jumps. $425. m-1m • DESERT, MOTO X TI' Club Sedan. OVERSEAS DELIVERY Accessories. Sl::lKI • C).15.5412 VE (4 Miles No. of 540-9100 _:6.::44:__' •:.:t3:::'~==~-- So. Coast Plaza) ~ ELDORADO, Fire n1ist FORD UNIVERSITY OLDS H"'""' at wu .. ,., C.M. ROY C4R R, Inc. 64&-4655 or 646-2428 RMrt.a,ional 234 E. lith s1. 15 MINUTES FROM ~en, vinyl lop, leather in-----· 2850 llarbor Blvd. 19n HONDA CB 354 Vehid•s 956 C:O..la Me"' "'6-4444 All Models Ready MISSION VIEJO $2100. rn..5569 • .-!er, all ex_tras mint cond. ~ Costa M.csa 540.S&tO e ·ss Oltb Vista Cru18tt, 8 Pfl.SJ5, !la wgn., top ntclc, auto, alr, p/b. p/s, ·68 eng, trier hiteh, air shocks, looki; .f.:. runs good. 14 mpg a buy at $975. 541-2885 nltn. 835-lcm wkdays. cu ... 1o1n headeN . 1,600 mi. Excl'llent condihon. $900. 645-2345 a!t. 5: 30 t1r 546-0038 btl\'TI 12·3 John. ''i2 BULT ACO Alpina, like ne"'· $850. '68 Bultaco Pursang $400. Both xlnt cond. Consider o t f e r s . 642-2749 --------• '?.! Tnfl Travelall 4.-.4. radio, air. auto, 10 .. spec. tires & \\'hls, 4000 n1i., und. "·11rr., 548-2708. DUNE Buggy Rail, Corvair eng., 95o/o complete, $550. 84&-2663 s,,rts, Race, Rods 959 V\V l\f i ni T, hi g h performance eng, lthr int, &lotted disc whls, nu Gates tires. s1am. 54-1-22s:rTetTY Trvcks 962 I . For IMMEDIATE AREA ·11 CAMARO Z28. AM-n 1. Jill SO. BRISTOL. S.A. low mileage, like nt>"''· Pr. Delivery! 546-0220 ply. Call bet\\·een 6 and 2001 E. 1Ht SANTA A..\'A (S.A. 'FN')'. East on 7PJ,l 963-3834 CAPRI ~78n 1st SL 1"' mi. l '72 CAD Cpe DeVllle. Fire '73 FORD MUSTANG • ''Easy to Reach" mist blue, wht vin roor lthr * Mord• 7l Rol•ry * Commonwealth uphol, lully koaded. jssoo, Landau, V-8, automatic tran•-NOW OWN THE $66 MONTli Pvt pty. !ill--0417. m;.mn, .,, conditioning, FABULOUS 1973 36 l\fONTHS OPEN LEASE MOtors Ltd. \V'ONDERFUL 9-pasg Cad poo·er steering, Power CAPRI \Viii accept trade-ins S.nt~AM LIMO 1961, black, pv.T I: brakes <310Gl\IT). \Vith 2,000 4 <.')'linder or V-6 CAU.. MR.. FRY 842-0066 '69 VW Bus, am/fm, bltin ~~Best oU over $400. ~$·3689 engine, "i th or "itbout Hunt B-e-ach .,.,.,. & middle ..... Rehl! 1ll1l ~co GUS,TAFSON decor group, some "i th sun • -,~. econdng .... Prl.ooopty~~l~~. ~ _po,.,.wer •• ~a917'-·-~·,:.~~ nc ft• ere' ury roof or landal.i 10p, po1\·cr ltli .,. 8 :r 3 disc -brakes,-style steel MAZDA-'71 VW !Jus. !'!:e_~ heads & 67Han. "" -l l,.! 6 ' 16800 Beach at \Varner "·heel, radial tires, bucket \'8lves. New tires, $1900. ,68 El.DO -~ -Ilunltngton Be11ch ""'· -"ORDER--YOURS · --642-7030----RADO Cad. Nu 842~ (213) 592-5544 NO\\' paint, nirtJres, ·:irtlit""ffiiffiing ''H of th Vfl(" , · $2789 17l'l1 Beach Bl. R'42-G6SG '64 V\V Bug, good transp. cond. · Pri~ .to Ke 11 . ome • sng $300. C.ll 0 ,.9819 673-3n6 aft. 5. • Slafron \\'~-011 • OR IF YOU PREFER MERCEDES BENZ ~ . ·72 SEDAN de Vllle l00<ied 1910 Ford LTD 8 pa5'. =•~ i7.1 CAPRI '60 V\V rebuilt engme 35,000 l..nw mileage, aho~ roo~ u·y squlre. l'ull p\\T, fac 1231C0Rl 50 USED miles. $300. or best otter. clean. 646-7227 1 tµr, \'ery clean, priced f(ll• $1789 646-5977 ,73 C.00 quick sale. $2100. Call GUSTAFSON MERCEDES 'ITT vw Camper orig. own. 6000 ,::;, lle~le, le" lhan, =673-54"""="'=~=-~-c-ON DISPLAY Pop top, sU bit""· nu eng .. 557-mt. . party. cau''n FORD LTD .Country great ~ Prt '68 OLDS Cut18ss, ale. auto, p/!ll, p/b, ('IC'1n. i0,00'.) ml, $1300, 61 ~ "':il3 I 548-8510 R.tt-S:30. :-6.",-0LD.5 -CUtla&.!, cMan, cood t-01ld., '.i'-spd, V-8, $395. !!_1!'! 1.'ll.r 'ol\'lll!.r. 963-5353 1008 OLDS DEI, MONT 4 dr, nir. P/S, PJ~, $995. Ph: m-0111.I! PINTO Uncoln·Mercury brks $a>o. 548-5151 .10 c 0 v Con . Squu-.. Fact. ,;r. Pl•. """ Sharp New Car · . . vert., wtute in-.. ,_ L..1..-'"'•··st sell -IGDI Beach at Warner * ''lO VW Bus, red It \\•hite, /OU! I t nd •-E ._..__ Ull'l!i. mu • ~. ,.,., PINTO \V Tr d in , x n co _.,,,,,, ves Best ofter 54S-0472 •.J aeon. auto, : , Huntington };leach a e-S lo ml. X1nt cond., $2150. 58fi-'1275 ' · · · delwc In! & eJCt, roof rack, 842-1844 * (213) 592-5544 Coming In Every Dey Priv. pty. 963-5353 ,63 CAD. Conv. White w/Red '66 Country Squire Wag 8,000 ml, make 0 fr e r. ''Home of the Viking'' Ask About Our U n iqu e • '67 ~'. reblt eng. A leather Jntcrlor Ex c Loaded. $695. 642-6670 842-5262 '72 CAPRI 2600. v_,;, 1o U1ed Mercedes L•••• """"· oil ooolor, $710 !'riv. Cond. · m-1907 Auto1, Now 980 PL YMOUTK miles, deluxe interior, :dnt Plans ply. 6'15-8476 '68 i'LEETWOOO Brhnl, _ __, ____ ....;..:..;;__ cond. Call M~1411 House of Imports '69 .vw Camp, ~p to, ~.000 tWack I: beautiful! acat1,i_C1 Q'.lS.lJ°IJ& ! Rent miles. Nu M1ohelln tires, t:l'lm * oo,g..8273 Yoltr hOuse, a '" sore 696'2-Mal nc~feP~~ellllF -ll'arlt L.c:ruld..M2:001L HST-..:ll-'69-CJ>e-de Ville bld",.,.elc.-tha:u.a..Daily..Eilot on I le o><snla "'Wl n\'y '66 VW Fastback -MaJ<e of· best ot"U~ Over SZ3oo gE:_ts it'. Classified Ac\. &>II idle i1e1ns . 523-,t!Y,aT1s, tt-3: 531~ ;. no\\.'! Cati 642-5678 NO\v! NP.ell a "Pnrl "? ?lace .fl" ad! 673-2440 '72 KINGswooo· 9 ="==""""=';;;;:-""'""==;;..;;;;i:::=::=c;:-'::=~:;;;;;;;..:..;::;===:--::-::-. -:.===;;;I . , pass sla wag. Loadl!d, Imv nd, S0.000 ·-- ml WftJT. C:tll alt -4; 499-38tO '10 CJ?E de Vllk\ all extras. New tires: Highest offer over $3000. 64-4-21991&41).1136. CA MARO 'OO-Z28, RALLY 1Pt., 8 trn.k, lhags, 1pollers, air shocks, Cherey. Mwn Nee. 6T~7 1972 lMP ALA cu11t. Loaded p/s, p/b, P/\v; clc. $.1600'. 5.il-9780 an 6pm. '69 CA~tARO, V8:, AUIO, ?iturd sell by June 5th. $1i>OO. or best offer. !.18-2854 '68 CAMARO SS 3$. VIAYI top. Beautiful car. Mmt McrlflCf!. 5M-80f.l, 167 ·€AM:AR.G--V-l,-O; ·fM. -~ air. New eJW., Pttint, & tlrefl. $'1400/ottcr. MT-3328 CHEVROLET ·-... _ • '72 . DUSTER, fully f;"l•;t. , equip, [)ell/KC l'Olld. $300(). ~~15.Sl anytime -'64t'LfM501i~t f'UI'\'. 2 cloor hard-lop. S.'ll)O-<»· -UO..t-orr(lr. 497·1624. PLY. Ji'ury 1iI,"lti;9 air radio,, ~ tires, quick llaJt . price $800, 536-7Zi7 PONTIAC LEASE OR BUY 'TI thru '73 Pontlatt DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 24.'j(J J-larbor Blvd., at P'Ah-, Drive. Costa MeM stS-8017 ~ G1tEEN Pontiac E.'(. ecuttvc,. 1tlr, power,, $785. Nee<I i;:ootl home tor laving: poodl" -"""'""-' ---'68 PONTIAC 4dr HT Bonne • fl pwr, nlr, x.lnt tltts &. t.'Ol'ld. ~., 5'J6..S5M ' '&l PONTJAC Bonne vi l I e ·oonv:---Grett~buy 1tt-i2:'1e-or offer. 673-t-494 evu T·llRD '611'-BIRD. Full J)OIVff, xln't ! <..'Ol'td. tu.Ill sell. bolt ofter. 613-238'3 VEGA I 7 ' ' . " 7 • .. . . ,. . . . . . .. . . ..... -. ~. • ';-_;·.· .~ ••.t ............. ~ • • • - San Clemenie ~ Ca_p!_sirano 'EDITION • ' . c • •, VO~. 66, NO. 156, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JUNE 5, 1973 , .. . . -·'--I ~ ~fhFeat t-0 Kil Ma.~ WASHING TON (UPI) -Convicted Watergate conspiratorrG:-GOrdontrdi:ly once threatened to kill Jeb S. Magruder, former deputy manager of the NI.I.on re - electk>n campaign, testimony by ex- presidential aide John D. Ehrlichman revealed today. Ehrlichman said Magruder informed hiin af the threat. He did not elaborate on,t~e circumstances or the date, but ap- parently was referring to some point be~orc June l7 , 1912 because hjs lawyer did not let him testify about events prior to the break=in at the-Democrat!' Watergate headquarters, · "Mr. Magruder told me Mr. Liddy had threatened him -had threatened his life," said Ehdl~an, who resign~ April 30 as -mxon's top adviser on domestic ailaln. Tbe Ehrlicbman testimony made public today was given recently as a deposition in the Democratic National Committee's .-.4_ milliOl.1 suit aa:ainst the Commttte'e for the Re-election of the Pr<sidenl re•ulll"' ln>m· the Wat<rgate bttak·ln and buUJng. Earlier testimony from aeveral wit- nesses established bad blood between Map-uder and Lkldy, who both were White HoUsi staffers ttiDSlerTed. ·to the campaign Committee to organize for the 1972 presidential campaigns. Magruder, who originally hired Liddy, at one point had 'him· transferred fl'OO' the main re-e~io!l committee to ,the campaign fmance committee and was OOMidulng firlna bbn. -Ebrlklunah said be abo learned that Mag~r Informed the White-House al one point that "an intelligence operation" had been eatablished by the re-election committee to obtain information about Democrats. · . He said he got that . information after beliJg Wigned by Pre~ent Nixon in April of this year to investigate events leading to the break-in, any possible . ' . us-s ·e ue . a ' Trustees Assailed San Juan Increases Pinpointed School _Boundary Decision ·Slated ' ' Trustees at CUSD Stay With Decision on Cuts Drunk Suspect Blames Slioes MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) - C&pistrano Unified sChool District creases lhe ADA, and the district's tu· . \Arthur Perry Jr., 51, was picked up trnstee5 reconsij!.ered a full budget. of ing capacity. but costs it half as much, :m a drunk dlarge and appeared ' ?&,000 for summer school Mond_ ay .~ght Benedict said. before City Court Judge Joeeph Ith the orim••I Trust,.. pointed out that the In-McCartie Monday wearing new but decided to stick w tr rt .. -crease, regardlus of the income ad-~ and white shoes with _two- decision to slice out $ll,tXMl. . vantilges to the district, still comes from inch hee1I. · SUperlntendent Truman Benedtet IU8• the local taxnm·-s. . ."I ,,.. not drunk," he told the gested \l\e reconsideration. He said ~ -line ilidle· because of provisions of slate ~1ng "I just think we should hold the on . •-ttd. of • to ,·······ngulatlons, etpecially Sena.le ~ill 90l taxes where •e can/' Truatee William ' ~ lhoel w11 new CUtting ••· budget ailo.rcdu-s illCQ!!l!l Enqulst Did. --·--uirr1111Cl .'t!JJ!"l lll'llti~ on,. "~ " '--=''BOti'llurst -presldent-ol-the board IUP-· -• ...._,.. ""vlni ...,..., 1Jndcr SB 90, school dlstrlCU can tax ported the i~rease· He said the eMuinC . hit a rock llltl It was hlS'd walking up 'to ... -certain amount per student. Jn · In them '' · Ille Capo •~trlct, the ctillng is '980 ~ tax hike -30 cents ~re per yeu on_a .:._ ~.oo.-111cean1V"A"l' man 'I" i..... dail t'--'ance $40 IX» house -was mrn\mil. ~.. · slud~fit. AS "~ ... veroge y :a ... ~ ,;l<l'I remember this -the la•IJON• wtto c:<11n•1-11p hen wJth that kind (AOA) gocl ll'P, the celling goc:s ~p; ' · . · Id f the of storY -a bruk." 1tO\\'CVCr, CO$ls per sludent In the sum• tn \this-dlstr1ct have pa one 0 we. dipnleee;f .. mer ...,.100 art about ball COiis of the lowest three rates lor ochools In Orarce · fl.. --'"---' • . County." he 11Jd. regular .sculon . ;:,ummer ~ in· ·.• • ' " ' •\.. . . } White House ilivolvement, and an y evidence about a possible-coverup. That was after Ni:ton said a fresh in· vestigation was undertaken l;>ecause .of new developments he had learned. Ehrlichman said the source of his in- rormation was Gordon Strachan,·then an aide to White House chief of staff H.R. Haldeman and the White House political contact man with the re.election com- mittee, • .- r - --·- ' .. Today's Final N.Y. Stoek8 TEN CENTS Ehrlichman said he asked Strachan "'hether he had any personal knowledge of any of the events leading to the \Vatergate break-in. "He (Strachan) said that at some point in time he had been in!ormed by Mr. ~1agruder that an intelligence operation in fact had been established at the rcelect'i-On group," Ehrlich man said. "He did not equate that with electronic surveillance necessarily." .oro Coast Trip • By Brezhnev ' 111 Offing? By JOHN VALTERZA 01 Ille 0.11'>' Piie! Stiff A Soviet airliner laden with tons or communications gear and an estimated 50 technicians was scheduled to a1Tive today at the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station -the advance-guard for a possi- ble major visit to the Orange Coast by Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev. -Several higtfiy reiiable sources have. reported the impending arrival -Of the Soviet delegation but orders of strict secrecy about the event at El Toro have causecj,._ base spokesmen to issue a "no .. . Cout Weatller It'll be lair on Wednesday, IOI· lowing the usual low clouds in tbe · morning hours. Highs or 65 at the beaches will rise to the low 70s in- land. Lows tonight 55-65. INSIDE TODi\ Y . T1lere'1 a 1&ew game in W~ ington. Ever htar of tht Long-s po n g-Fung·Rong Kona"'Ping ; Pong.Ding Donf1".8iU? Set story, PaQo 12. . • • I • ,. . "' Tut'sdiy Junt 5, 1973 , ~ --r· Resistataee No.t-ed Chemical . 'Hanson Mansion ' No Danger --Purchase Pushed Says EPA . WASHINGTON (AP I Th< By .IOHN VALTERZA in the splendid Spanish-s tyle colony on Of ni. o.i1y f'll•t 11•" Avenida Granada, has been 8" rest home -San-Clemente's 111ost v e n er ll b I e for 1nore than a decade--tuld-lts owner--- Spani sh mansion -the house built by the says tha l it isn'1 for sale. city's founder Ole Hanson -In 1!126 -And, furt bern1ore , owner George \Yelsh •·-~IN,,,· s week O ures i a controversy stem-insist ha e ctun JgriJl causl~ Ufl· mffig rom a e ion rf\re seeklngcuy-due concern among iS""Cfclerly tenIDm Environmental Prot.ecUon Agency said tod l!r_ that nitrogen dioxide . Is not a Wf<l espread3ir poll lilion -problem-attec all and t11at a 90 percent reduction or nitrogen oxides In auto emissions is nOt nete5S8 . ' funds for the purchase of the house. and his staff. . ·~~ But the o~ner doesn't want to sell . 1'hcy are 1\'0ndcring if the rest Jmn1c The cily's historical society is not in· has n1uch of a future. volved in the effort. .Fears among local ;::ificionados of San And,.esistance already has been hinted Clemente's Spanish landmarks spUrrcd br c.ity offic.ials. the lates t campaign. Nonetheless. retired real estate bi'oker ~1rs .. Cronland believes that the house 1'.1rs. J\·1arie Cronland is continui ng 'her indeed is :n jeopardy and that \Velsh drive lo obtain hundreds of petition cou ld find another location for his ~PA satd the national air-quah y n - an1 for nitrogen dioxide is still needed 10 protect public health, but the problen1 is not as \\'idespread as once believed. EPA said the nit rogen dioi:ide level1 '4'ere overestimated earlier because of the peculiarities of the meuurement method which had been used. signatures in an effort to effec t a business. [ - showdown. But Welsh says that R·4·zoned st ruc- Acting EPA AdmlnJstrator Robert Fri told·a lle't\'S conference, however, that the agency \\"as .Dot ready yet to recommend changes in the present.auto emission law. The house , one of the last still standing tui-es in the city where the zoning is com· · patible are scarce. Front Page l NO BAIL ... . ' Angela Davis was freed on $100,000 bail at a time when she was accused of being "nvolved in the munier of a judge and Juaii..corona had been freed on bail when he was accused of committing between 2S and 30 killings of itinerant fann workers. "Here we hav e no murd er, no death and no injury," Green commen ted. "l do not oppose a setti ng of bail. I si mply pro- pose that ii be realistic and related to the charges." Deputy District Attorney Oretta Sears urged Judge Thomson to listen to the series of tapes earlier sealed by Judge Robert Rickles y,•ho set bail at $300,000 after listening to testimony alleg~ly linking Remington and Rollo to the asserted conspiracy. Dist ric' a~lorney's investigators· claim that Rollo was one of three men arrested by Calitomia Highway Patrolmen who said they stopped the trio's car for a ts;affic infraction and found weapons in- cluding rifles and hand guns in the auto during a search. It is alleged that the two men wit h Rollo immediately confessed they were hired to dispose ot Alfred Fehling of Yorba Linda, one of a number of plain. tiffs in civil actions filed during the pa~ two years against a vending machine company of which Remington is presi· dent. Green indicated in the courtroom Mon- da"y that the two men with Rollo y,·ere Bobbf Joe Hart and J ack Hewitt. Both men are held in cu1tody and wilt be used, the secution .states. as witnesses aga1ns em ngton ana,-t~ary. Rollo. Green also noted that information given-to him ·by the district attorney's of· lice Indicated that his client wa s charged with Rollo and 10 "John Docs" of con- spiring to kill Ned OeLancy, a key wi,tneu against Remington in a civil trial scheduled to start July 16. Cable Misliap Causes Blackout A malfunction in an underg round cable along a section of a Laguna Niguel in· dustrial complex · sparked the major blackout which hit large segments of the community ~1onday morning. Nearly all of Laguna Niguel and large parts of sou the rly !\fission Viejo \\'ere af. fected by the outage \\'hich occurred shortly before 10 a.m .. said spokesmen for San Diego Gis and Electric Con1· - pany. The problem erupted along a section of Camino Capistrano in ,N iguel and for about an hour thousands of households and businesses were without power. At l l :OS all but six connections were restored. The remai ning half dozen were finally restored about 2 p.m. utility aides said. OlAM•I COAST DAILY PILOT TIHI O!'t .... CNll DAll..Y P'ILOT. wll!I W!\+c:ll 11 CO!ftb!Nd 1"9 Newt-P'rnt. II ct11bll1ftte b'I' Iii. Ort1191 C .. .i P'UDlllfllnQ (Olflllln'f, S.. ,..,. 1111111 ..... 1r1 llUbllllltcl, M-•Y lhfOllllh P'r .... v, for C111l1 Mnt, N1w1111rt a11c11. HUllHnalt!'I 81ac:fl,IFoun11111 V1ll1r. lt0\1111 . t.cll, 1,...ln•ls.ddt~k Mid San (ltl'nl11lt1 5611 J11111 C1p111r-. A 111'1911 ... lllNI ldl!lcln 11 Jl\lblll"'f' t.lll/ldtY• Ind S\lrllltrt. TIM Pl'ltM:IH! PVbllflll"' pi.nt 11 " lll We•! a.r SlrMI, CO.II ,.,,_, C<llU1ml1. nt:M. l!;ob1rl N . W1H P'r11111wi1 •1111 l'lltlllllll• J1cl It. Curley VI«' l"t ttMI'"! and Gtn.r1r Mt r\fffr Tho'"'' Ktt•il EllllO!" Th1m11 A. Mwrph l111 MMtflflt EdllOr Ch1rl11 H. L101 ltldi1r4 ,, Nell AHltlAfll Mtlll'tlfte 1!<111 .... 1 ... a. ••••• om.. JOI H•rfh El Ca'"l11• l 11I, fJ67J --c. .. #oata r UI W .. t &1y lttltl := ~~ ii» "'""°" ...,,.....,. ''" hKtlr 1n11 •..a ~IN u.i-"'Cf!: m ,. .... , ... ...._ T .. 1,t 11 (7141 '4Zo41Jt a ,,,....._..., ... , .. "11 s-a 11Ps A• D1,1:1wMt..1, , ......... •tJ.+tJO .. ~. ""' Or""" C..t '"'-!WI .. :tr:•· ... -'*'"'· lttwr ....... ........ " ......... "-te llltal~ ..... -........ '#llMlll .-C.lal ,.,. ............... ._._ "Th is is our liveli hood and I 1\1ouldn"t know 1vhere to relocate, he said. Si milar landmarks in the ncichborhood · have bi tt en the dust in recent years. Condominiuin projects have replaced the Ole llanson Jr. house and stables uo· coast of La Casa Romantica. And on )he other side the "Ole Hanson Doll ~louse;" a structure built by the founder for his wire, also was razed to make way for a multiple-dwelling proj· ect. ·Next door to that lhe Ras.'llussen Jl.1ansion earlier this year \\'as des troyed and the land earmarked for apartments. The series or demolitions has made La Casa Romantica the last of the mansions along Granada. Mrs. Cronland said that she has had hundreds of supporters in the effort and !ha t all the persons signing her Peti,ions \\'OUld prefer lo see the city condemn and buy the property so that it could be converted to a museum. City Man ager Kennelh Carr late last week was dismayed at the latest at- tempts to force the city 's hand. AlthQugh he would not specify the ex· act nature of his actiVities in the issue, he conceded that he had been trying "behind the scenes" to evaluate the future of the landmark~ · "This petition drive could erase all the 11·ork that has been don e so far," he said. The ni:!xt step for the petitioner Is to bring the issue ·before city counciln1en, y,·ho might adhere lo past custom and refer the entire issue to park s and recreation commissioners. One other group in the city has often expressed. concern for the Hanson landmark -the newly created San Clemente Historical Society. But city Director of Parks and Recrea- tion Arlie Watennan, a director of the ne1v society, said that the groue has not sanctione<rtHe latest petition d rive:-- He said the efforts are "premature." f\otrs. Cronland, hoY.'ever, believes that her efforts might be "too late." Burglar Suspect Shot by Police A Santa Ana police officer shot a neeing burglar suspect Monday. John R. Holloway, 20, of 2039 S. Rene Drive, Santa Ana, was shot once jn the lo\';er left side as, police report, he ran from the scme of the burglary, 1525 \V. Flora St. He is reported in fair condition today at the Orange County Medical Center. Officer Byron Quivey had responaed to a report of burglary at the home. When he arrived, he said he saw Holloway in- side a garage attempting to remove a television set and a stereo set. \Vhfn the suspect spot ted the off~cer he ran, police said, and Quivey shot him after ~a war,ning. The · officer -said Hollo\\•ay appeared to be T'l!aching for a gun as he fled . Realtor Joining Bo ys Club Board Capistrano Bay Area rcaltor Thomas Axtater \\'ill be s11·on1-in early next \\"eek as a member of 1hc board of directors or the South Coast Area Boys Club . 1\xtater, \\'ho 1\·as cited fo r commun itv ser\•ice in the Do"11ey area before moV- ing to San Clemente. is n member of the Sa n Clemente VF \V chapter, th e chamber of con1merce, the local board of realtors and a member applicant of St. Andrews by the Sea l\lethodist Church. He is broke r-01vner of AA Realtors at 208 Calle de los 111olinos. •r~ and his y,·ife. Arlene '"Dee" Axteter, live m San Clemente. The couple have t"'O married daughters. From Page 1 BOUNDARY • • • years at one school , c\·t:n if it 1s cro"'d· cd ," Ntwhart said. Parents 11nd studenl4 s u p p o r t e d Ne"'hart"s point, saying lhc emotional neros of students to have t0ntlnulty In sporu:, frltndahJps, and other 1rtlvllles were more important than cro\\·ding A representatfve or the C.plst~ano Unltled, Educator'• Auoclallon , 1ald teachers ravored balanci n1 1he school'• altendence as much u poulblc In th~ In- terest or C!llf.lity tducaUon. =•.:-"""!!' H1' II C11 .. .-... . _...., ... Uff\tt "'"' .........,, ., _., Q,11 -...~, lftlf~ .,, ............. ~. ''Ttllthu1-race tllr10me pro61cms o -!llegiancc that stu4r:nts do.'' t h e representa tive aakl . "but you , can m t as1urtd tba t your child •i ll have a better chance in equally-balanced sehoo.l.s" ' • Fri said he must decide by July 29 whether to grant a one-year ei:tension of lh'e 90 percent nitrogen oxide reduction . requirement, within the framework ol existing .law. . All Tliose A11to111obiles? · He · said that · EPA, with the new ip- formalion 'presented In forthcoming hear· ings on the extension request and with .further study of its own, '4"0Uld be in • better position to.,make recommendations to Coogress by September. and added that 14 million cars would be produced in the U.S. this year-at which the Chinese leader blinked in an1azement. Journalists fro1n Comn1unist China watcb. the pro· duction line of Chicago's Ford plant. "Has auto pro· duction increased.!" _the leader of the group {not• shown) asked. A Ford employe responde"d, '"Yes," -'-~~~~~~~--~~~~~~ The agency bgan reU1e1Sing nltrosen dioxide levels a year ago .and it repo rted April 17 that the problem see.med Jess seriou s than supposed and that the auto emission standard! appeared unnece1· sarily tough. Story i11 Pilot • Sends N eigl1ho1·s . - Rushing Witl1 Aid By JOHN ZALLER 01 1111 Dau~-P'Uot s1111 On Sunday morning 1'.1rs. l\1ary Carlson was greeted at her rront door by a neighbor 1vbo wanted to-g.ive her t\\'O bags of groceries and a $5 bill. Later another neighbor brought three bags or groceries and a $10 bill. And all day ~londay,, Mrs. Carlson said her phone 1\•as "ringing off the wall 1vith \\·onderful people \\'ho \vanted to help us out ." The help y,·as sorely needed. For seven "'eeks -her husBand, Richard Carlson, had been part of a Team,sters strike against the Southern California moving in- dustry. During that ti me, he struggled to keep Mary, \\'ho is legally blind , and their four children fed 9n the $3.5 a week he was getting from the union strike fund. "Why didn't.Yf.U tell us you were hav· ing trouble?" one of Mrs. Carlson's nei ghbors asked after reading a ne\vspaper slory about the family's plight. "We would have helped out • long time ago if we had _only knO\\'n." "You don't just go out and ask your neighbors to give you food," replied l\1rs. Carlson. "That wouldn't be right." After the newspaper art icle appeared on Sunday, however, the offers of help cume flooding in. "People \Vere driving by here all day and I couldn't even find out v.'ho all of them are," l\trs. Carlson said. "They sa id they weren't making dona· tions to charity by helping us." she ad· ded. "They said they y,.-ere just helping out some hard-working, taxpaying people like themselves until we could get past our rough times." Donations to the Carlsons included everything from fresh tomatoes lo po wdered mil k. And at least $2.S in cash 1\'as channeled through the Dail y Pilot office. J\1rs. Carlson said she has used the money_to_pay_ofLo\ter.due-bills. to buy food, and to repair a \\'ater heater that had made it in1pos.s ible for the family to lake normal sho1vers or baths for the past several \\·eeks. The Carlsons have also had offers of part-ti me \VOrk . although Mrs. Carlson said !\1onday that her husband's union might soon be able to put him back on the job. ''He"s out \\'Orking right now." she said, "but 1 don't know ye\ how long It \\'ill last."' · 1\-lrs. Carlson said her personal vie1v of society improved greatly because so many people gave her help. "\Ve had tried everyone y,·e could think oC and the answer ,.,.as ·no· so often." she said. "'We really y,·ere wondering how the society could be tfi'at way." Two agencies that did help her con· sls tentl)l. she sa id. were St. John the Baptist Catholic Church and the Salva· lion Army . "But we couldn't get any money at all out of ,the welfare office," she said. "I stlJI think that's \\TOng. Surf er Drown s • Despite Efforts An IS.year-old Bellflower surfer drown· ed orf Seal Beath Afonday night despite attempts by police to resuscitate him on the beach and on the way to the hospital. I Dead on arrival at Los Alamitos Gf:nual Hospital was Enrique j\'foralcs, 1.1911 ill(entvlew SJ .• Bcllllo•·er. The youth was surfin& in chilly "'ater1 oll lhe San Gabriel River jelly al about 8 p.m . lie was pulled ashore by t\\·o other O~Jlfl9_wer tceqagcra who heard hi• crle1 for help belore he became uncon1clous. Thty placed him aboard 1 surfboard and paddlod lO .oho,.., where Ille 10vlng · a11<mpt.s lallod , pollc'. sold. 'Lost' Social Security Checks Arrive in Mesa Under the aean Air Act of 19i0 automobile emissions or nitrogen oxides must be reduced 90 percent by 1971. At prestnt, auto em.W:lons are limited to 3.1 gram.. per mile ol nitrogen oxide and would have to fall to 0.4 grams µer mile in \'Chicles sold in 1976 and thereafter. Sc0:res of retired Costa l\fesa residents today were expected to receive their Social Security checks which had been 1n1ss1ng in · the mail , U.S. postal authorjties reported. '"They arrived this morning,''. said Assistan t Posllnaster ~larv in Gibson of Fron• Pagel PARKING ... . Camino de Estrella in Capistrano Beach by Lloyd Thomas. The one-story building \Viii be sound and odor-:proofed. -A Seven.Eleven food store at El Camino Real and Trabuco Street in San Clemente. -A blanket pennit for maintenance or repair of the municipal pier, sewer lines, transmission Jine s and f 0 r Un· dergroundlng electricity in San Clemente by the city. The commission said· the sewer and eleclrlcal lines couldn'L go beyond cur· rent capacities without special pennits. Man, 28, Killed In Garden Grove A man was found stabbed to death in a Ga rden Grove apartment late ~IOnday night and.police are looking for a kno\rn suspect, they reported today. The victim, '4'ho was stabbed several times in the chest \Vas \Vayne Floyd, 28, o[ 12581 FlO\\'er St., Apt. D, y,•hcre the at- tack took place. Investigators said they have t1~·0 11·i1nesses to the stabbing and_have a dragnet out for the suspect who is said to ha\'e ned the scene with a fema le com· panion. the Santa Ana Post Office, "and our n1ailn1cn will have them deli vered to-· dny.,. The missing checks were a mystery to n~l h.1onday. The Social S e curit v Administra·tion said they had been maii- ed. The Post Office in Costa Mesa replied that the checks hadn't shown up. And, in· creasingly anxious senior citizens weFe beginning to panic, thinking that perh..ips thei r sole source or income had been lost or stolen. TI:~ superintenden t of mails at the San- ta Ana Post Office cleared up the mystery today, explaining that the Costa }.1esa· n1ail sacks must have been sent to another area. "\Ve're guessing that the sacks were mislabeled," said Superin· tcndent Don Cluca. A spokesman for !he SOclal Security Administration today apologized for the delay. "Ifs the Cirst time it's happened in the two and one-hall years l \·e" been here," said Allen Hlldt, assistant niartager al the Santa Ana office . Regardless of how the mixup occurred . . . . ' senior citizens 1n Costa Mesa are reliev. ed today. · Seve ral hundred persons at Bethel Towers, a Costa Mesa home for the elderl y. did not receive their checks on time Monday and some \Vere beginning lo panic. But Mrs. Zenada Davis, a Bt;thel T~wers secretary, said happily this mon11n g, ''We hear there's oodles of checks at lhe post orfice!" From Pagel BUDGET ... an additional $100,<XNl to city coffers next fiscal year. Weidner added that retail sal~ tax ,revenues are up 10 pe rcent 3nd the ad- dition of new resi dential and commercial property to the tax: rolls also will add to the revenue picture. · Councilmen pl an to continue their budget study as week! go by, they agreed \Vcdnesday. Bui EPA said ooJy three cities -Los Angeles. Cblcago and Ba!Umore -would exceed the national nitrogen ox.ide stand- ards by 1977 If the present 3Jl·gram standard Is retained. · The EPA ooted that this did not take into account further nitrogen oxide reduction s through other measure such as transportation controls and control from other sources. The agency said that extremely strin· gent control of auto emissions "Vt-ould tire nC(!fssary only in Los Angeles to meet the. nit~gen dioxide standard. CUSD Trustees Withhold Action Un School Bid Capistrano Unilie<I School District trustees opened a bid for $237 ,500 on a hilly ts.acre school site Monday night , bu\ will not decide on the bid until next "·eek. ~ California Sierra Corporation sent a check for 10 percent of their bid , pending a~proval by the county counsel's office of several conditions asked by the buyer. The corporation asked that prior to fmalizing the purchase the 1teep acttare be de·annexed from San Juan Capistrano and annexed to San Clemente, that solla test! be done, and that the 1lte, now unz.oned, be zoned for development. The property, called the M&ma11a site, was declared SIJ!PlUI by the board last year and put up for sale but no bids wert received.. then. . The property is adjacent to Harbor Estates above San Clemente General Hoipltal. . THE NAME OF THE GAME .••. • • THERE IS A COMMON PRACTICE OF PRIVATE LABELING IN THE CARPET INDUSTRY. LARGE DEPARTMENT STORES, CHAIN STORES, ANO CONTRACTORS AT NEW TRACTS HAVE FICTITIOUS NAMES ON THE SAMPLES SO THAT THE CUSTOMERS CANNOT EASILY SHOP BRANO NAME PRICES. CUSTOMERS SHOPPING AT OUR STORE FINO THE PRICE OF EACH QUALITY PROMINENTLY FEATURED ON THE SAMPLE BOOK. BECAUSE WE ARE COMPETITIVE. ALSO, BECAUSE WE FEEL THE CUSTOMER HAS A RIGHT TO KNOW WHAT HE IS BUYING; WE NEVER CH ANGE THE NAME ON A SAMPLE IOOK. THE N'AME OF THE GAME IS INTEGRITY. • ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES . . . . IN THI MA-lAHA - tlNCI ltl1 1 .. 3 Placentfo "-"· COSTA -MISA __ ... __ 646-4838 M•. • 111ora. t tw l1JD; l'tf. t 1W t : W . tiJO tw I -. . ·~ ' I ' • ; ·-. I l •• DAILY PI LOT SC .... Tuesday; June 5, 1973 Dumping Of Dollar Continues LONDO!> (UPI) -The dollar plummeted to new lows across Europe Tuesday and gold. in Lo.ndon soared to a new high In frantic trading. Bankers blamed-the mounling- dollar crisis on a continuing .-.- now of Watergate affair .P.' 1 f.---------------!ttdisclosur.es. Tlie ilOl';,la"r '""'no"'iea""'i"Ve11'"".'t""' -record -lows in Finland , Frankfurt, Z u r I c h and Brussels and 'slumped to its se<:ond lowest price in Parls since the end of World War 11. ., Investo1· Protector RuleEyecl Special to tbe Daily Pilot LOS ANGELES -Wide- ranging proposals setting forth tough,· new rules governing Callfd(nla broker-dealers and investment advisers will be dlsclose'if soon by the state Department of Corporations, C41ifornia Business, Western "EVERYONE JS dumping their dollars to avoid funher losses," one London banker snid. "They -are airald the Watergate scan~al is going to get worse." Another London banker said "the longer Watergate drags · on. . .the more the dollar is likely to come under pressure.·· Yet another banker .said the dump.the-dollar drive' was in high gea'r because "everyone fears instability in Washington." • ( -t~KllVG ]-STOCK Financial Weekly, reparted 1t1onday. Jn Finland, the dollar droir ped 1o an all-time low today of 3.68 Fi.Mish marks as com- pared lo ~1onday's close of 3.73. Finland joined South Africa h1onday to abandon the lo\li·est agreed price for the dolla'r. Tuesday's drop represents a 6 percent decline from !he base rate of 3.90 Job With a View I The proposals are being designed primarily to offer'in· visitors g r e a t e r protection from failures by investment firms and advisers. e. Roual Inna · SAN DJEGC (AP! -/( spokesman for Royal Inns says that the financially troubled, S a n Diego.based firm is negotiating the sale of five of its 65 motor hotels (Q pay of( its 4,ooo·creditors. Stanley G. Mon ace 11 i , treasurer of the firm, said Monday that talks are afoot ror the outright sale of its inn in Escondido, the sale and leaseback of its operations in Point Loma and Chula Vista and the sale and (rancise of its inns in Bakersfield and Las Vegas, Nev. e lolnt Project SAN DIEGO (AP) -A $400- million joint venture in in- ternational power production and marketing was announced Monday by Gui( Oil Corp. and Royal Dutch-Shell Group. They will own and operate the San Diego plant run now by Gulr Ene rgy & Environmental Systems Co .• nuclear-power divisiOn oC GuU. e N0Pate11t WASHINGTON (UPI) The Supreme Court Monday let stand lower court rulings that meprobamate, a widely u.sed tranquilizer known by the trade names of Miltown and Equanil, is not patentable. The Court in a briel order rej~led an appeal by Carter- \Vallace Jnc., which markets Miltown. Carter-Wallace ob- tained a patent oo Miltown in 1955 that expired l a s t November. e Chief Named LOS ANGELES (.AP) Ralph 0. Briscoe has been named president and chief ex- ecutive o!Cicer or Republic Corp. of Los Angeles, which has been fighting since 1971 to stave off bankruptcy. Briscoe, 45, served the Columbia Broadcasting Sys- tem file. of New York as its chief financial officer from 1965 to 1969. e Sta•tl•rd Lo•e• WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court Monday af. firmed a lower court decision lindlng Standard Oil of calilomta guilty or antitrust vk>lations involving lls opera· tions in American sa.mqa. The high court, with Justice Byron R. Whitt nOt partlclpalbtg, rejected lhc oil company's petition for a reVlew of the U.S. District court order requiring Stan- dard to take staps opening Jhe American Samoa market to other petroleum firms. e C &: ft Stoek Spoclol to Uoe lloUy Pilot LOS ·ANGELES -C ' R Clothier• Inc. ha1 withdrawn Its prevtou,sly a n n o u n c e d reglltrafk>n statement cover. ing 300,000 shares of common 1tock. • 'l'bt-company .. Id II does not believe II Is prudenl to of. !er stock under Jhe pnoent stock ...-roodltlons. marks. , ~ 1 IN WNOON; w h ; ch generally governs v.'orld gold trading. ~he metul today soared $3.25 tb an official fix- ing price of St27 an· ounce after hitting $129 In ea rly trading. Both prices were new highs. The metal closed Mon· day at a record $123.75. The dollar opened i n Frankfurt at 2.5840 marks, a record low on the West German market, then sagged still further to 2.5720. The dollar closed !\;londay at 2.6050 marks. In Zurich, the dollar opened at .its weakest level on record -3.0125-3.0225 Swiss francs. compared to Mondoy's close of 3.03-3.0350. On the Brussels free market, the U.S. cur- rency was averaging 36.925 Belgian francs, a new low and down from ~1onday·s close at 37 .30. Senate .Asks Allocatio11 Of Gasoline WASHINGTON (UPll The Senate has.. voted to re- quire President Nixon to im- plement within 30 days a strJct fuel allocation program to distrib!r.lte gasoline lhroughout the nation equitably to small, independent stations and those dealing ic major brands. The Senate also approved a "sense or lhe -Congress" resolutioD urging the states to LOS i\i\GELES 1AP ! -A Senate Committee has been told that a 30().mile Per hour train n1ight someday whisk passengers on a cushion of air along-the West Coast to help ease the region's transporta- tion problems. Citing gto11·ing high1vay con- gestioft. jammed airports and dwindling gasoline supplies. representatives of government and industry teslified before a Commerce Com!f1itlee hearing here· Monday. The hearings Co1isulta1it Services Aid Profits A unique management con- sulting service -featuring management teams for loan \Vith no set fee -has been started by Oecision-Maldng Information. a multi-disciplin- ed research, consulting and think·laiik firm, co m ·pan y president Dr. Ric hard B. Wirthlin said. lo1i1o·er their speed limits by 10 -\\'lRTHLIN SAID m o s t miles per hour in an eCfort to management consuU ing firms conserve fuel . take a set fee for services. Both provisions were at-Decision-Making Information tached to the fuel allocation or Santa Ana does not. bill during · ~ebate Mo~ay. ··we go to 'a client with our The .Sena~ dtd not giye final management team to inCreB¥-co~ns1derat1on to the bill Mon-profits, or reduce costs, or to day. increase productivity, but we ORIGINALLY. the legisla· ti-On required the President to formulate a fair allocation pro- gram, but did not call for mandatory implementation. But amendments olfer.ed b:Y Sens. Joseph Blden (IJ.Del.l, and Hubert Humphrey (IJ. Minn.), would direet the President to put a distributkln plan into erftet within one month to lMUr:e that smaller independent refineries •n~ dealers are equft.ably supplied by lhc major oU firms. The resolution offered by Sen. Jennings llandolph (IJ. W. Va.), urges the states to reduct1 speed limits In excess of 50 miles per hour by 10 m.p.h. or to 55 m.p.h., whichever is greater. •1!1d do not ask for a set fee." he added. ~le said lhat instead the company says to its clients: "You can use our techniques and our people on a temporary basis as interim management or \vh'itever you need. and our people and our systems \\•ill make a definite dirfcrencc in your profit picture." WIR.nlLJN SAID hi s com- pany bases most or its fees on the percentage ol increased profits the client enjoys, 6r on . the substantial savlngs th.at it receives. Wirthlln said to h ls knowledge the co1npany's con- cept is not In practice by any other company. • WASHINGTON (UPI) -Treasury secrelllry George P. Shultz has told the House Ways and means Committee that he would plunge lnto the atoek 111arket U the )aw dld not forbid publlc o!- !iclals from Investing. "I can't explain why the stock marklt Is as bad as II Is," he said. taking note or the recent sharp plunge In prices -,ybich dioye the Dow.Jones lnaustrral average below 900 lut mek. "t--believe myoelf tbero are some IJ>rgains galore. I almost wish I mren'l In my present posi· lion so I could &•t my bands on some money and Invest Lt.". • ·-Bankruptcy Avoidable At Eqt1ity? • .. I ---Complete New York Stock List . I ~=~=----- r • . . . • • PUBLIC NOTICE llfOTKI TO t•.a DITO•I St.IPU.fOlt CO\laT 0, THI! JTATI OP CWlllOaHIA 111011 Ttil COUlllrY 0111 OllAHGI .... A•1'17* • I...._ 111 LEDIA ST I PHANtA GlllANOV$1UA STll:OTHElt, O.C.. .... NOTICI! IS Mlltl!IY GIVEN IO tM crt4i"" fll ltlf ....... Mfl'ltll ~I tMt l lt ....,... ~ c.i.i-a,.IMI IM Mid ~ flt 1tcWlr9d ta IH• ltllm, w11n Tht'-M(ftHfy -""•· In ""-olllc.t 1111 1'119 dMr; el IM tOO\lt '°"lltlfCI COUtl, Of IO .,,_, ~. wttn IN! N< ..... ,..,. voueflofr1, to Ille t,itll,ktllllMd at ,,.,. otnc1 ot HALL SEELY, AllOl'M'f' ti L1w, :M6 111'1 MIOl.r4'1 Ofl~t. Ht-I ltKll, C.!llornl• ""°· whkh 11 IM i>IK• of M lt1t11 Of/ Tiit 11110tr119"" 111 11! 1N1t1r1 lllll'"ltlnl"9 10 .,,. 1t11N OI tile! d«Htnl. wi1n1n '°"" ~•n1 1111 ... 111t Ut'f olJl)llui· lion ot lhlt N>lkt. -t 01191:1 MI Y I~. 1f7J SOPHIA G. SCHEP! EKICU!rlll of tf\e Will of Ille, 1DIW• n1mM llK9dtnt I ... T-. J,nt 5, 1973 D•ILV PILOT. J9 Fuel Shortage ( Economic dviser -OVER THE COUNTER Majo1~ Oil Firms Named by Nixon Cut Advertising WASHINGTON (AP) Presi ent Nixon has selected a you g specia l l s l in r~i Standard will limit its pre.>-ag rlc tural economics to be a ""' me r of his Council or duc t advertising lo just tires. Econo le Advisers, the Wh ite balteries and other ac-House-nnounced. cessorks. FINANCE Dr. Gary L. Seevers, who J.oining the trend, Mobil is has been on the council's staff pa.nsiOn'' in the economy said he does not expe<:t recession to follow. NASO l l1tln91 fw Monday, Juno 4, 1973 !~~~-HALL SEIL Ye~~~~~~ ~.,,'" Jis ANGELES (AP ) -The niuf publicized fuel shortage is·ereating--a-paradox in oil in· duslry advertising. ~1ost or the ma jor flnns are now te!Bns --f-..U.HJ1Jbllo-to-buy..i..s--0r lhel running' a series or 11ew1pape,,.,.'._ ___________ _:s!!ln~c~e 197~ will be nominated a d-v e r: t..i a e..nl e--n..l .. a..urgU 0 succeed Di'~ Eirli""Soiohfon, gasoline e<:onomy through the • ,.. ~n MltMI or1 ... .....,.... .. ,di, C1Jlfllnll1 n ... Tiii 1'10 ~ttll .,.,...,_, .... lucvtrlll PUOllllMd 0rt"9f Cotti Otlly Pilot, Mii~ 22, 2', Ind JlillM S, ll, lt1J lffJ·7J PUBLIC NOTICE su .. 1111011 COUllT 0111 THI! STATI! OJI CALllllOIUUA llOa THI COUNTY OF O•ANOE lilll. A·7'61' ~ NOTICI 0 11 MIAalNQ o..-PITITION l'OJI ,..O.ATI! 011 WILL ANO l"O• LITTlltS TISTAMl!NfARY Eatel• ot JOSEPH E. T!NTt, 1t.o ~ •s JOSEPH LEO TINT!. OK•IHO. MOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tn.r YVOHNE BEATlt•CE GAl!EN Tll,.TI l'I•' filed Mnln e pe:111100 lor proOet• ot will .. ,o "°" !HU•nc• ot ... ., ... TH11"'enlery to N ai-.--r•ffl"ef'I(• 10 wl'llcll Is ma<M tor fvrftl« ~rllcu11 ... •nd !hi! lhe llm1 Ind pl1c1 ol 1111rl119 llWI " .... II•• tlMn s•I tor JUM 1•, 1t1l, 11 •:DO 1.m., In the courtroom ot Deir.trtmfli'll No. 3 of w ld " court. 11 7QO Civic Centi(. Ori~• Well, 111 TM Cl!y of S1nl1 An1, CiTllornl1. Oiied Jvn1 1, 19n WILLl.\M E. ST JOHN, C01.1111V Clerk PAUL A. HANNA Hll'Mf' LI W • .,fldllll llt Int 11111 Slrwtl c..,. Mtu, c1111w1111 nut _Ttl: UlO Ml-IMI AttlrMp ... I PttltltMt' Publlshld Or1119e Cot$! 0 11lv Pllol, JUN j, 6, 12, 1f7l 17'll·13 PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUStN•ss NA.Ml. STATl.Ml.NT The follow\no Pf!'Mllll er1 dol119 tl\ISlnftl 11: 0 .\HO L 01.\MOMOS, 17031 Ash St., Hun!lnotan B.-cl'I, C•I. t16D Oenlll1 t11:y1n, 1'97SC Mlcf\oh , Hun- ll"910ll BHCh, C1I, ~7 L_,.ro T. 8ltcetlu1, 11031 Alh St .. Hunllnoron llHch, C11. 9'Ut7 T,..,.tll T. 1ty1n, 1te7SC Nlchol1, Hunti119to11 lllKh. C1I. 921M7 1r1r>t 8 IK1l1uz, 11031 Altt 51 .• Hun· tll!lll«I 8N<ll, CM. '116'11 Thi• bu1!nu1 II conchicled b'( I 0tntr1I par~h!P.~ • Otnn!t L. ll:y1n product. "It doesn·1 make sense to promote more gasoline con-- sumplion at u time v.·hen both government and industry are talking about the necessity or rue! allocations to ins ure su p- plies to priority users," said a spokesman for A t I a n t i c Richfield Co. of Los Angeles. INSTEAD, ECHOJNG an en· vironmentalist theme, t h e spokesman added that the thrust · of Arco's national advertising wilf be directed "toward uring the public to help overcome the problems of air pollution, traffic congestion and energy conservation." ll.R, Hammerman , ad- vertising director ·for Standard Oil of California, a San-Fran· cisco based firm that is the state's leading gas marketer, described his company's new ad policy and said: "We'.ll be lalking car care and good fuel economy. IN A BID TO discourage gasoli ne sa les. some oil finns are dolng awa y 'Yl'ith pro- motion gimmicks such as glasses. kni ves and recipe . cards. Hammerman said that use or car l'VV'lis and bet~r-ff t • W who resigned from the three-,... · UU tng fl member council In March,-plarmed shopping trips so that Council Chair~Herbert as many purehaseS as possible are made in each outing. Ad • Stein, introducing evers at a One resuJt of this change in . vertiSeS White House news iefing , Monday, noted that the 36-rocus is expected to a con· year-old · nominee is a sldcrable trimming of ad· In German~· specialist in agricultural vertising budge!!! of oil com-.J economics. And he said "food panies, which can amount to ul hi h an estimated $30 million an-It may sound fa.r-fetched, and agrlc ture are very g nttally al Ex•on, fonnerly n . h ho 1 in the list of problems" now ,.. but Huntington °"'ac pes o I · d · I t t · 'tandard 0,·,1 of New Jersey. Ame . t acing a m In s r a ton ~ become an r1can cen er lnflation·fighters. A SPOKESMAN for Union Oil eo, of Los Angeles said he anticipates a cut of as much as 30 to 50 percent in his fir m's advertising budget. At Cal Standard, Ham· merman phrased his firm's position 1n-0re discreetly_ "We don't foresee, obviously, the same volume of advertising for the near future," he said. Appliances Get Labels In Proposal for West German industry, The city has bought two ~ds THE 011IER c o u n c i I in Handelsblatt (trade paper) member, Marifl8. Whitman, a daily ··fi nancial newspaper said she wa.s dellghted that the considered · the Wall Street ·CEA noW has a member "who Journal of Germany. ha! seen a cow c,lose up." TtlE COST OF the two ads, .scheduled. to run June 25 and Nov .. ·12, is $700. according !o -BiJflfSc k, the city's economic development coordinator. Surprisingly, the · Ge.rm.ans came to Huntington Beach, seeking the city's advertising. "One of t h e i r cor· respondents saw our domestic ads arid talked to me about buying an ad there," says Back. "The idea o( attracting German industry to Hun· tington Beach intrigued me.'' Seevers said he Is joining the'council as "an independent Jhinker." He tuined-~aside qu~tions on how the Phase 3 economic program was work· ilng, but did say that food prices "are flattening out." &ein said that taken as a whole; Phase 3 is working, although he conceded the economy has been expanding at a rate faster "than. we would like to see continued." He forecast a "gradu~l subsiding of excessive ex- Tiils 1t111mtnt w11·tUtd with ll'lt Coun-tjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!!i!i iv Clt!"k ol Oren0t C01.111tV Df'I June 1.11 "' 1 •. ,.,.. SEVEN ADV ANTAGF.5 WASHINGTON (AP ) -As part or an energy cor:iservation program, the Co mm erce Department has p r o po s e d labeling home appliances to . infonn buyers as to how much electricity they require. BACK SAID West GerITUJn y is currently fig hting a severe labor shortage and Is looking for foreign locations for new plants. Publlalll<I Or1nge C011I D•llY Piiot June OlJR PAGER OFFERS 5, n. ''· 26. 1t13 111 .. 1:1 "They already have im· ported two-and-a -half million foreign workers," he ex· plained, "and they'r.e still a million short." PUBLIC NOTICE ...... SUPl•IOR COURT 011 THI! STATI 011 CALI FOltNIA FO~ THI COUMTY 011 OltANOI Ne. A•7"lS NOTICI 01' HaAltlNO 01' ,.ITITION FM PltO•ATI 0 " WILL AMO l'Olt LITTlltS ·01' AOMINISTltAT10N WITM·THl!·WILL AMNl).;10 E1t11e of JESSIE MAE CHASE, Oa<:111ed. MOTICE 15 HERESY GIVEN 1 ... 1 JUANITA WESSON .\NO I' A I E; 0 A SIUVEllA 1'11vt tiled herein 1 pe:rlllon tor Pr-I• of Wiii Ind tor ISIWMI ol Let· 111"1 of AOml11l1lr1llOfl wllll-lhe·Wlll .,,.. ~•td lo '"' 119tlllDflt!r1 , rei.tenc1 lo Wl'llch Is madl fof' h1rthtl".1tt1rtlculer1, 'nd !Ml Ille llme 1l'ICI pl•c• ol lle1rlnq ll'lt' wme ,.., been HI tor Junt It, 1t7J, 11 t :OO •.m., In Ille courtroom of Otopirt· ment No. J ol 1.110 court, 1t JOO Clvk c ... ,... Orlvt Wt1t, In the City o1 S•n .. An1, C1Ukltr>l1. D•ltd Jun1 J, lf7J WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, C-'Y (ltrk MdC•NNA. ,.1n1N• & ,.U.CH Ml • l:IT-ltOlll Uf9MHflk.·c.llf.HW Tt1: 1nu UN1W AH-p fw: "etlll-r1 Publl•hed Or•not Co.11 J unt !, '· 11. !Jn PUBLIC NOTICE ,.tCTITIOUS SUSINISS NAME STATl:MINT Tht 1011ow1119 PlfMln 11 clolno bullnn1 11: GltOUP FOUR., 3001 tll:ed HUI EiPinOa IV No. 2i7, Colle Mew 92626 Vlrvlnl• Edllh P11•~e. 2i liA Or1n0t Aw., COii• Mtu, C11lll. ~21 Tl\!1 IWl!nns 11 conducted by 1n In· dlvld111I. Vlrg>ll!l1 E. P1r11;1 Thl1 st111m1111 w11 IUtd will\ , ... COUfl· tv Clerk of Or11111t c.ountv Junt 1, 1f13 • ll·U7>6 P\Otllllh«I Or1rq1 Cotti 01U'( Piiot JUN !. 12, "· "· 1tn 1n1-n PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE 0" •Ul..tC TllAlllS,.IEI: 1s1n •111-4101 u.c .c.1 Notice I• h•rebV 91Vf111 to the Crldllon of M1rll; Giii. T•-ftrol', ~ bu1lnn1 l<klrn1 Is 74' B West 17th StrMI, COiii M1!1, Cou11tv ol Or11111t. Sti lt of C1lllof· nl11. thl l 1 OVI~ lr1111ltr 11 •'*'' to bt medt 10 tll:ot>ert C. Aofh, Tren1ler<M. Wl!Ott buslnH• ldclrt 11 II 2611 NO. C Dtl ytly, Huntington 81M;h, Counrv ol 0••"9•· St1te ot C1U1ornl1. Tht prDl»ftv lo bt IT•nllerr<11I 11 loctttd II 746 8 Wtt.t 11111, Coil• M"'· Cou111v ol Ot•nflt• !tett of c1rnorn1a, S1ld pr1!pl!rly 11 Oe'lcrlbeO Jn 91,.....1! 11: Atl llotk In 1r1dt, fl•tu•••• eq11lom1nt ind {IOOCI Wi ii ol lhll Furnllllrl SlrlPPlllQ bull/IMS knowf\ 11 Cosl1 Mt11 Furniture & M1'11I Stripping 1l'ICI loc:•!ed 11 Co.11 Mel.I, Count~ of O••nv•. s1111 of C1ll!llrfll1. TM bulk tr1n1ter will bt can1um.,,1tld on « IMll" tt>t llith d•'f' of J 1,1111, 1m, et 10:00 A.M .• 746 B Weit 17111. C:o1t1 MtM. COUflty Cl Or11191, Sl1te of C•lltor11l1, So t1r 11 IU>Own lo Ille tr1n1l~H. 111 MlnHJ n11Mt Incl llddrt11n vHd try Tr1hli.tw f'IN' tl'lt lhrM .,. ... , •• ,, P••I, It Olfftrlflt "°"" tt>t 1bov1, 1r1~ Man• 011911: JI/flt "' lf7l Rooert C. ROln, Tr1n1f.,ff ,.Ubll'/lld Or11199 Ca.tit 011tv PllOI. Junt .s. 1m 11.u.1J PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICI Of' AVAILAllLITY 01" A.Nl'llUAL ltlPORT Pun~l'lf to Section "°" fdl of lhe lnt1n'lll It-COCll, nollc• It r..rlbv 9lvM lh-11 !tit 111nvel •tPOrl tor !he c•lend1r 'tffr 1'12 of D1nltil Chet• Com· rnfttff Inc:., • prlv1!e lou<W11llon. Is •v1ll1bl1 11 tl'lt tauncf1tlorl'1 prll'\Clp.ol or. nee for lnspKtlon.durlno r111uler !11.rllnlu houri .from f A.M. lo 4 P.M. by env clflltn Wl'IO rtaw.111 It wltllln Ito d•v• elter lht Hit of tnl1 pubflc1tlon. Thi louncu11tlon'1 prlnc!Pll 011!c1 11 lot1'9d If 22' W1lnu1 51'"1, Newport ee1ch, C1t11, nwo. Tht prlncl_,.I mtntOW ti 1111 lounoiflon ll HolOM T. C:M1r.n1tn ltlcNf'f M. "'=''" 41' Wnl llfl I , ·-Ml ............. Clfl..,.141 Ml• Mm Cot1t Diiiy PllOI, 1 n4.,~ PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIO\IS IUllN•tl NAMI STATIM•fllT ,.,_ tollow1119 ~· 1r1 6olng bual~U 11: Il l KA.MS KENNELi f'l ltA.MSOU ltlNNlLS f'lt., 20m lllvtnllle Drln . '!>ln•1 A/II, C11JI. t71'17 Mlnlft I:. SOUtn Jt ., 10Jll I: i. • ..,..1111e Ori"'. '-nl1 A,,., C1t1t. tf11:17 Kwll 1 -llulh. -"»2 ltlv"'tldt Orlv•, $Ml1 A/'11, CtUI. '2711 l l>IJ lllil1lnu1 11 CClllOIKIH OY 11'1 In· "'"'ICtvtl rY11n 111 It. '°"'" Jr Tl'lll 1!1'-1 VIit lllH With tr'f ~ tv Cltf• ff Orlflt' (oun1r J-1, lf7:t ~ l'•tsnt P\llDll""" 0t"'"99 CH I! l>tllv Piiot J ., s. 11. it, ,.. 1m ,.,..n -Kuu Like To A..k Andy that yours may not ! 1 COMPLITI OIANGI COUNTY COYllAGI ...,_, ..... -s..c••=••·M..,.. lhtMI Poi.t, •..ti• IMC.ltad·llftt·of·LA. -MONTH -TO MONtH RINTAL IASIS NO DIPOSIT ll9UlllD ON APPROVED -cllDIT 4 ONLV 517.00 PU MONT TOTAL COST l•11llt!tlM4 '°'"' 5 NEW COMPACT UNIT SIZI (l l/••4a: I/JI VOICE MhSAGI P'AGIU ALSO All AVAIL.AILI 7 FULL Fiii MAINTINANC ORANGE COUN7Y RADI071L£PHON£ SEHVICE 1.,c 714 .. llS·llOS 4f1 SO. SANTA F lt, SAMTA AMA ,.,., UgUnl e.-c~. M.111*1 Vl•I• 111 Pein!, 5111 Clemenhl, S.11 J1'1 ••lllr_, El T•ro, <Ill loll I 496-322) The volu ntary I a be I i n g would be done by home ap- P .l I a n c e manufacturers ac· cording to specifications set by the department. SECRETARY OF ·Com- merce Frederick B. Dent Monday said the program "is designed to help the consumer make more intelligent bllying choices. as well as help each individual and the nation save energy." Dent said he Is confident the home appliance industry will coo_pe_!ate fully . · The department will allow 30 days for public comment on the program ·before it becomes final. But a spokesman said it is a fair assumplion the pro- gram will be carried through even il there are objections., DENT SAID the Commerce Department and other federal agencits will work with in· dust.ry to develop test methods for appliances and come up ·; with a "voluntary energy con- servation specification" for each produ ct. Appliances would ca rry an energy specification I a b c I which would include a Depart- ment ol Commerce mark. He also said that according to the Wall Street Journal. "German corporations now have more capital invested in South Carolina than 'anywhere else in the world. except Germany." "\Vhy not Huntington Beach?" asks Back. HANDELSBLAIT HAS ·a daily readersh ip of 440;000. The Huntington Beach ad will cover one-sixth of a page. The German paper t !I publisbtng-spectal editions on the industrial opportunities on the U.S. West and East coasts on the dates the city's lid will run. l\lattel Toys Record Loss NEW YORK (AP ) -Mattel, Inc., ~ported a net loss today ~ of $9.48 million, or 57 cent,, a share for the quarter ended May 5. This compared with a loss of $7.86 million. or 48 cents a share. in the comparable period a year earlier. W::iyoe Andrews of Signet Marketing Devices of Costa h.fesa has J been elected a lieutenant governor of the Na- tional Office p r o d u c t s Association, v.·hich incll:Kles of- flce p r o d u c t s dealers. manufacturers and represen· tatives in three states. * . Newport Beach r e s 1 d e n t RooaJd W. Sykes has been ap- pointed manager of product planning and marketing for P h 11 ~Ford Corporation's I n du slrial and Envir· on m ental Products Op. eration. tion. Sykes was Baugh is currently a dire<:· manager of tor of the association's ex· new product cculive committee. He has d evelopment been in the wholesale fo rest MUTUAL FUNDS for Rock· products industry since 1939. ~, •. _...] well Inter-IYKl.S He and his wife reside in Ntw 'll)!'k -Fol· s11 .incm 7.JJ 1.1s J P Gwlll 1 •,~1,I:? A~~~~ F 'i:ff 11·;1 national Corporation in Ana-Newport Beach. ~1":no1' .:k~'' 11,f. €&.'::: c~! ~ ~ 1~ ~ 1~~':.' i~ 1 ~ :·: :!;!~.. l2:e 1.i. heim before joining J!i:ilco-* ~-:nd: 1~ ouo~J'u:~ l~&MGI. 6·'1 7.~ J~1tn n.n n·n ~i::: r: I.ti I.Ill Foret In his current assign· Mtcrodate o.rporatfon has '"' H4~nc:. 1t.r1ir,.A~~= •.n 10_19 tec'u!~rgr~~ '11 lt.to 1c:uob•• ~·:s, '''' ment,· he will oversee the man-· I d n-~rt 'I MOllUY Gwth F 11.U h .02 Cuti 82 20 u '12 Cl. lntr lnw 1•.~ 16 • 8 pp 0 l·n e """"' l• • Junt •• 117.I IMmt 6.11 1.411 Cw.t ~' t '.31 t 11 lllllM la.71Ii16 ufacture and imtallation ol re-l\'alnwrlgbt as produ cts •111 .t.11t ~~11 F~ 1;:1'; 1~:~ ~~;i K2 t~ !:i~ ~=•• ~.~ ~-~ verse osmosis water and waste f d I ADMlltALTY: Et1er1td 'v 10 11 ~ust s 1 21.it n" soo L•v t.lt '·'° manager 0 a a com-Gfwlh •.II •. ,1 EOIE So 1t'.lo lt:lO "'' •1 10.fi It.it 5ICUl:ITY l'DS: purification sy*stems. munications. He came to I= ~:fl tJ t:Fc 1113Mr oaPr ~l ~~ ~:7l t~ Fn~T ~:1~ ~ ;J Microdata after four years at :1d~Fd tJ :J: ~:~ P~ j~ -· ~~10 4.J1 4.1J ~tt•• F '·" •I/I Merne E. Yowtg of Irv ine Control D a t a Corporation :creur.,,d !·;t ~1f ,~i;:, A8: II ·l; 12" l(nrc~~· l;t! l ~r s A~·~t~D '~tis: r: has been named Vice president where he WaS manager Of data ::~teFd l~fi l~{J ~Tri 151::t 3:7' r::::nrk!h : ~ !J~ ~s:'r! ,;·ll 1~:~~ and general coun sel of Owl nd ed 1. A ~ ,-41 ,·,, ner11v 1 t J 10 'i Ltnx Fa ''' •,t4 !'"'1"'1 •· -·ck Com-•y of Compton. sys tems a uca ion. A~b"vri ,:4s 10:.ll E111111v F 1:11 :. LEX GAOUP : e•'•'~••J"1..~l.gs111:.1! 1 •11 ...... w · · ht lives In Fouo Am e111v 4 22 , 62 F111r1111 7.IJ t .l• cu L.iir °' 1 Ji Young J·ot'ncd lhe company ainwrig · AM rxP•t:s·s · Fm llufl '·" ,.,, •IS.1• 16.SI c°7'" l·36 5· .. ta.i Valley .. UNOS· Fe-d Alls l.f7 Gtw!h S.11 •. 36 En rpr 3'67 io1 •1n 1969 and has served as """r-n · c101'1· 1.n 1.90 ,.IOl!!LITY At •rcn 12.11 u .1• Flel Fd , i.I ti> '" * incom I SO ttt Ol:OUP: Llbly Fd !·'i S.~6 H1r~ li]ol) a IS porale legal .counsel and n..,tm 1'.11 !:" ~"' '," •'•'~ ,',·!l Ll,11 1n1v .6"1 1.3' '-,",,', ,', 1·n i n ch Id peel .... ,63 I D!f ··~ ..... L "' (10 6.19 1 . .u ioos·. secretary. Prior to joining Newport Bea re s en t tock 1.11 '·?: en~~ '1: 1 ,1 Llnq Fnd 3.21 • 1::::10"11.21 1it.u Owl, Young was associated ·Tom Boris has ~n appoinled :::: ~~\~ !:ft t;~ ~~. s~~1 ' t~~lr I~:! 1:::9 1t:tt Me money at Keystone. with Pacific Ga s and Electric West Coast regional manager :~ ~;]' i:tJ ::,1 e ... rst 10.~ 11.~ ~·~ 9v ll·n l!'ll s~ 01111 •·;? l'Il l·n .. an·O'"' administrative and of Sall Magazlne.Jle joins the A,mN~ / •22 2•43 ~~~"~ 1~:tlt:u L0~~1A••=,' ,·, i'l/J'.d .. JNos:' ' --bl' h' 1· f o=%u~· s11em F J.lf ~ 2:1 Allll•t .n .1 10 Shr 7.lj 7.79 ' engineering positions-. ..Boston pu 1S 1ng 1rm rom c .111•1 • •,. 4,., Tr•nd 22:22 14:a Am nv~ J.01 ~:26 nv 10.0 10.~' * the Chilton Company where he ~~.~rw ~·~ : ~~ ~k~"Ac~~· 1..~~:!:'11 1l~ l~i} ... ~~tur ::!\ t~ Keystone Savings Is more than a place to save money. It's a. place to make money. We're here to make your money grow. Stop by Xeystone soon. Open your savings account, choose the free services you want, and gc,t your Money Machine card. You ~~~I richer _at Kcyston~Jl.!!!!..8_~. re~on: _ 11, ..... PllfS JUI tbe ·biglid pnlible inlmlll. I •&% Certificate Acco unt'. $5000 minimum deposit Term: 2 to 10 yeais. •5Jl0l certificate Account •. $1000 minimum 74 7D deposit. Term : 1 to 2 years , , •51lOL Bonus Account•. $1000 minimum deposit. 1C 70 Term: 6 months or more. •5% Passbook Account•. Deposit any amount Add or wllhd rew al any time. 'Annual lnteresl. Account• lntured up to $20,000 by an agency of the Un ited Staloa GOwrnmtnl. I E I "Jim" Shelley of served as West Co a st ir:::u'r : I: I.;t ~!~ ~~ !:T: ~.T~ ~"li"M~" .. u'N~s', ·63 ~911~ .. G~ 1t~ it~ 'r.1 8° nbDecker Corpo ration manager. AV:r~,:·11 II 51/ 1j ~ e:, lru: ~:H l J7 f= l.ii ~.~ ~-f-rn~ 1i:~ 1~::: -.::::::..:.::::.;:..:..:.::::__:__~::_-----=----~-=--=--==--= Audi~ F l1. 1:26 111F£ VI 10 .IQ I .D PllQrm 7 95 1,19 vt l11w G J," 1.41 ............................................ -... -... -... -.... -... "AXI l'llt T M•nllt11 31' •.II vr II\ 11.0212.07 ~...C-..¢"..C-~....;-~....:r.c-1~0-47--0-0-1 Mf~"!0Mi:~ ~." 1§~1i~1:s1,·:~ iY ~~~~C'bi :·.~, ':: 1t?~'ln~Niit.~r J Stock !-"' ' Slock ~ ,SO 1.22 l<Wlo F 7.11 ... §"" FO • . .Q 4.11 A.lie Set ·'• iu l~ Munl J,JD 1 let M11i F n .1• n .ri ·1vt111 4.H !.4 ORDER ·~~"" IS·U lk~ ~¢1:~1,:cr o.~tf .. ~·'! ~\S fNClili}~. II." l' 'rr'r~r \~-\ i"r •• autlful k or .lS S.69 IOI Fnd 1.11 !·" MIO 14.54 ,!Jlt. .Str . ,....,,,, lili~ l'.'7 7.'1 100 FIWI 10.Af 10.lt MIG 2!, 13.61 t fr ll!C l l n HI ·" 1·1 Colurn 1.n .n MFg "f: 14.JA T•ADMAN .. DS1 . \ on l 'n 1 '77 25 ~lld !-'3 S.'3 MC 12. I lj·'' Am ll'ICI 2 ,,, 2.11 Stl"c:k~n Btl"'Qllr tC 11:1, I :11 Fon r 4A4 •,IJ M11t1 IV J. 4 .1 4 A1i.o Fd 1.n 1.'12 -V Betklhr 3.t 4.27 l"OU Dl•S Mtlllt'r 10,44 10.44 lnvt1t 1.31 1..ll lonchlk (I) Ill O~OUP1 MIO An, J.n s.n IT.IM •o• fDI: YOURS LABELS o.t Fdn •. 41 10.2' rwlh tf,20 !·" M1;1nv Ft;I t.M 10.tt 8•1tnc 20.11 20.11 rown J,J, 3 5' ~"" 1.J~ 1 .13 Mt1 BnG •.u 10.U C1oltt t.A5 '·'l UL \.OCIC . F Mtu11 l .S7 f.37 MIF I'd 7.• I.Of Stock U.10 IA.I IODAY! PenonaU1ed • Stylish • Effldent Order For YourMlf or 1 Friend' Mey b1 us•d on envelopes as r•furn eddr11s l1.b1ls. Al10 v1ry h1ndy •• ld•ntific1fion libels for m1rklng person•! items such as books, r1cords, photos, etc. l1b•l1 stick on 91111 end m•y b• us1d for m1rkin9 home cann1d foc:d items. All libels •re printecl with stylish Vogwe typ• on fine qu•lity whitl' 9umm1d p•p•r-- l'UMOSr F SP«L 11.05 11·· MIF Gro ··u 4.'9 SIS Ol:OUP! w Bun Fd 12.a 13.1 Four•a ,•1, 1.2' .0. MuOtn 1t 4. '·" Grwrti •S·" '·~ ~011 FO 2j,• a·" "l:ANlt M\l'Orn In 1.t t .li lnc:Oft'I J·°' t. •Iv 511r .5' .ij OllOUc'' 2 n 1 Mvt Sllrs 14.7J 14.7.5 Smmlt .n 1.1 llwd •.•• , . iNT4 ' ·" Mut~T I 1.92 l.t2 l'echnl .n •. v •~ I~' ,, "" •• '·it ""~· ' ~ '·" '·" i"'Y! • UL'' I i~na . t s-b~~~-~:*1I:n ·~ "f.l/-m · •ec:h~jii fi -IQolmr ,•. ,U Utllltlt ll5.31 !.~ Sr •.90 J.'.14 lf'!'lpl G .Sl ,, 10 1nv• 2.ij .70 Rta c.1m •·" •.• r,1v n 31 3.t2 -• c .7 •.2 " ~'\' J' j·ll "' Ell.I"' -i,02 4.4 r.i Stk '· ,,116 r111 Cto .lt t., " " ,, ' , f~',.\'~ 'Hl 'i ~ •· !'" ... , " ,,~ ,,, ~eniN~f,..11.911 ·" I' "8' INC,i . ~~~Sr 6t·37 ,;ft ~=°tGH 11: 1 lj: ·'~i: .,." ll·i • :.:· '# .,~ ·~a:,~··11·\'.l 1,·~ .~uf.I : , ., "" r.t , 1·' ~" ,1, .a: .... , ''1 .. ,. cl:~ , "' C::111 I i: ' l~ l;\T~ J: 1)J N~~ Ml 1i;16 1::1' ai ~·l:VIC I ncOr'll .71 • l'T.l,. :J·~! 7.62 NIU Cent ··~ .,, ~ ,, '/·1•.14.41 ~J!!C:I :fl · 1 $i 61j '23 NIVW!ft 1' !'~ 1tt 11'1"' .G1 1.n i.ill~ • · ' u•"i•ci · ·~ l · I · ''I" !,# t~ ~"'f N: ~A~11Fn: J·n s,:J =1"w w'f: 1 .' 1 1)'.1 UNl;i:D I itli~JU:~ i io. 7·~ J':# lOr'll Slit 10'111f·99 N Chi.t 14., 14,.. Aee1,1FT1 '·'° 7,4 an P '·tt .J.4 §;h FArn 4: 1 4:4s Ht1t -ivtr IJ,46 J'~ ~ .. ,.OS I .I ' ' J' ' flll Ina If fl II.I, ~"' !'°' · I 9W .OJ f , '.,-:ii· M '"' '" .,,,,, I 1 ·ll . m1 "• ,,,, I'·' ~0,~AL , 1tfi:JLTON l~~"J'.fi ,. 1 HM ~y)i:S rtr 1!M ~i:; 'i,'l,'.; ,;:tt 11:ri d~O:: ti: t:o ~ ~'b 1:~ '':~ ij SI t:·a: ll'. "" ,,,iii · 1 •rtftl t.'6 'ii Tmfl ,. I ~ ~ i '\.1Ni " • " ,., •• -lrtL'I j.Uj., OC SK /Ml : Vt~~"'! {;r.. / n :1~ ~':.'II:. !~ ig ~:~n'.. o:: i·~ r:, :Ii i':ll 1': ~ u WLTM "=co I 11 IJ~ l'WJMfi 1:fi ·~1 ·~ ... ·~ii :I 'I 1 1, l,l :O.t.f.~ I :111l:u 9 ~ 111 '4 I r ~I : ~,OO f:~ --------.J---------1 = ~ I· , ::i n::, :ll :U ~a ~ .. • ::I.I ~,7. l, ,II ~ tfllt . ....-, Clflt .,.,. Miii Wlllil SI.JI .. , °""' ·= J: • . ~~ ii :" : ~: ' f, 1 '·n ~:..irf ':r, :. P l"4 Prtt.111., LOtl Olv .. p,o, l e.t IJ6f I c..11-.., c1t11.,,.,. 1 . n "" !Po ::al ·~ J: . ; ~: llWllC :, : ~~\r\•ioUi~ Ii I ~~Ill •: , , "'I"" '· ,, " Wi ' Jo11.10 o~t~ 'j·& ,.,. -Ig' "'... I : I I ., ~c J. 'j [' ' ••?V,'' •• ., ' "·" "' '"" Wl'I ,n • ~• 11'1 •• Nw or r11>•1: 11'1 ":\ ' :l. :.! " D J;" l:" ':!.f'..' ; ' ; ' 1-;·lJ '}!l I ~~"• _ ~ _,:!: io, ~=~) -.,, ~~ 1 -1 :; 1UJ i , K", 't'!:U i: ... ~ "1H~:ll ~r~.11: ,,......... 1' Ii '11··1 I v r.. ~ ' 1 j 1~:~1 .. •Y :u .JI "(::1 't! 11.u ~~~ ; :~; t ___ ~!.LJl!!.!~!~!~.!!. __ d ii~ ~: a:n ~~, 11 lJ s:::;-,r, 1m·11 ;,ft : , 1 •• _________ .,. ____ ,,...;1 ..... ~·1~ u:ll 1.r.. ,!l 11: .. 1i;n 1~ .11 1 ·• r...;:_1:a u 1a Ot\lf L• t. f~, 11'1 pQNj° UI UI Yltll I' fAI •-~ • t • f •' ' ... ' • ·--• TlltSday, JuM 5, 1973 SC DAILY PILOT J J Tuesday's Closing Prices-Co1nplete New York Stock Excha!!ge List .. • • • • • • • I l I • ' ' • " zi o•ITTPiior ---.._ Tuesday June 5, 1913 A MILER TUMBLEWEED·~- MUTI & JEFF ·FIGMENTS li:El\£\\BER, h<N, \()j 6Ef M~TY HON611Y OP IN Tlleo\\ 1JWt IUW.S S'.l BRIN6 P!.ENTY a' 51'AP!.E€> ALc:ti6 ! NAN.CY THIS IS THE HOTTEST 'DAY OF THE YEAR • WHERE HAVE YOU BEEN'? I WAS LOOKING FOR t-1\Y EARMUFFS . TODAY'S UIDSSIDID PUZILI ACROSS 1 Arum plent S Just elapsed 9 B1idges 14 Mr. Ama.t 15 Rectangular pier 16 Plant disease 17 European mountain range 18 Name in "fashions 19 Climbing vine 20 Canters 22 "Witard of 49 Affectionately 53 ·Dress------·· Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: 57 East Indian c R I I> garment: Var .• & L o Ill a 58 ffttpresente · fl' I T _ ·1ive r I 59 Mine products 6t Gtivet monkey 62 Make fun of 63 Future user 64 Mr. Slaughler 65 Wai wrong 66 Saucy 67 Dep1ession DOWN &R~BL~ !,C~Le>tlt-E l ! YOl.l'RE NOT STAVll(; OVER? E'ARMUFFS ?-- WHAT FOR? by Doug Wildey Sfl.lcKS. OC ~;cu GOTTA STICK AROl.JN01 l'M TAPNS AT.I/ SfEC.tAI.. IN-NASH\llU.E l(f ll-IE ENOOFTHE MONl'M! .by Tam K Ryan GAV. HOW 51ERfOT'il'EV . CAN YOU frf'T. by Al Smith by Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller I NEEDED A SE'JT OF BOOK ENDS I r~ f; ' DOOLEY'S WORLD SALLY BANANAS MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CR-ACKERS ()ll, ()l! A FIJI BAU; fEADED llll6 ~ ! by Charles M. Schulz .-------=.., K'{A/lll!N~AllH!NVAHH~! • by Roger Bradfield WHAT?. :C JUST' WANn;D '1l>·6'1>1F YOU WU/E. usraiiNG by Charles Banottl by Roger Bollen THE GIRLS ~ ~ 1.::::=:::~~ ~::..JJH ~~=:J ~~!:;;;;-1~~~=-l~-B JUDGE PARKER I J HINK · THERI!! 15, NUM6ER FOUR, THERE'S RICK! NOTH ING I CAN DO 1.·l , A60~T 11, LILA! . "/!!\~ I THINK YOU OUGHT TO I . T'Q UND OUT THE NAME OF THE MAN!"'°HEr& A - LAWVER, BY THE NAME OF &AM DRIVER ... 5HE1'0ES ~ -eETTER EVERY TIME SHE MAKES A CHANGE! ' MAKE A LtT~Tt!....,.RIP .... TO !!E HAS NEYER MARRIED ••. 16 5AID TO HAYE A VERY 6RIGHT FUTURE! , BUT YOU Nll!D ME. MERE IN CASE vou'Re ATTACl<EO AC.AIM • MR. DRIVER! l:IE SHO.ULO BE VERY INTERESTED IN A 8 L.OW- 8Y-8LOW DESCRIPTION OF LIFE WITH 't:; Ml55 LOVA13LE! Q 11)) 'IQ! m:J.11 IJCIN TO GET A K~ Qff A Tl/ ANTeNNA, 040 ?' .. I 'I !j 7 . , L I • -Lag1111a Beaeh EDITION -Today's Flaal N.Y. Steeb ' VQL. 66, NO. 156, 4 SECTION S, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALiFORNIA TUESDAY, JUNE 5, 1973 TEN .CENTS )VASHINGTON (UP.ll -Convicted Watergate conspirator G. Gordon Liddy ohce threatened to kill Jeb S. Magruder, former deputy manager or the Nixon re- elfction campaign, testimony by ex- presidential aide JohJJ, D. Ehrllchman revealed today. Ehrlichman said Pt1agruder inronned him of the threat. He did not elaborate on the circumstances or the date, but ap- parently was referring to son:ie point Wore June 17, 1972 because his" ~awyer did not let him testify about evenlii arter the break-In at the Democrats' \Vatergate"-headquarters. "Mr. Magruder told me ~1r. Liddy had threatened him -had threatened his life," said Ehrlichman, wllo resigned April 30 as Niion's top adviser on domestic affairs. The Ehrlichman testimony made public today was givep recently as a deposition. in the Democratic National LCommittee's $6.f million suit against ltle hrea-+-- Committee for the Re.election of the President resulting from the Watergate break-In and bygging. Earlier testimony from several wit· nesses established . bad blood between Magruder and Liddy, y.•ho both were White HoUSe-staffets transferred to the campaign committee to organize for the 1972 presidential campaigns. Magruder, who originally hf red Liddy. at one point had him transferred from the maip re-electioi;i committee to the ' Hfi~Magrrrder ~Tol campaign finance committee and was considering firing him. Ehrlichman said he. also learned ·that Magruder informed the White House' at one point that "an i,nteUigence operation" had been established by the re--election committee to obtain information about Democrats. He said he got that Information after being assigned by President Nixon in April of this year to investigate events leadina: to the br.eak·in, any possible • \Vhite House involvement. and any evidence about a possible coverup. That \Vas after Nixon said a fresh in· vestigation was undertaken because of lll'W developments he had learned. Ehrlichman said the source of his in· forrnation was Gordon Strachan. then an aide to \Vhite llouse chief of staff H.R. llalde111an and the \Vhite House political contact man \vith !he re·election com- 1nittee. Ehrlichman said he asked Strachan \\'hether he 'had any personal knowledge of any or the events leading to the \\'atcrgate break·in. "He (Strachan ) said that at some point in time he had been informed by Mr. f\lagruder that an intelligence operation in fact had been established at the reelection group," Ehrlichman said. "He did not equate that "'ith electronic sur\leillance ne<;essarily. '' ora or1um r • Soviet Jet 'S1.1rprise Blast' To Arrive ~ At El T-oro Assails Report By JOHN VALTERZA Orange County·, proposed open space report. conc!Uded : Of 1M Dall'/ 1"1191 S11tt A Soviet airliner laden y.•ith tons of plan was rapped as .. nothin:; more than a "Y9u see. there is a whole team up del'elopment proposal" before the there which has affirmed this area is eommunicalions gear and an estimated open to residential and compatible com· SO technicians y.•as scheduled to arrive Laguna Beach Planning Commission mercial deVelopment.'" today at the El Toro P.1arine Corps Air ~londay nighl. . . _ __Banning commjssioners,_s.truggling to Station -the advance guard-for·a-possi· -James-W.--D1lley, pr~s_ident of-the develop a letter either in suppon. ol or Ol>" ble major visit to the 'Orange. C«\st_by guna Greenbelt Inc., c1hng a number position to the county plan, appeared Soviet-reader-Leonid Brezhnev. of passages from the final open space surp,rised at the Greenbelt blast. Several highly--raiiable sources have -Faced with a Wednesday deadline to ,. . . . Arch Beach Project Under Fire ' By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL DI lfli Dlll'I' Piiot Stiff \Va rned that Arch Beach Heights "stands on the brink or a very real disaster." Laguna Beach planning com- mWioners r..1ooday agreed the city coun· cil should slap a third developnient moratorium on the hilltop community . .----------Commissioners-meeting · -a stud session said the council should act on the recommendation during W e d n e s d a y night's regular meeting. ' , According to a report f.rom lhe Depart- ,;;...4'~14'.,.--~~l..o.t.£la.nniog and Dev~-­ moratofium would allow time· for a com- plete investigation of solutions lo density, street access -and-fire protection prOl>- reported the impending arrival of the file a Jetter with the Cit C.OUDCil e.i- .1 ___ _.So,.vJet atlegation ·hut order:L-OL.11ttrn;;·c:it--1--~:::J--">--e~·· ~-~-~~--~p:;re;,s,;s~mg~~e~o~"s~r.e~e/;,n?.g;;s~. '!fl!~a~nn:!ln!'.!g':;-~-""-""~1¥"-'"'iT'--1~'-11 secrecy about the -ol El t.... have uug enies Commission Choinnan John McDowell caused_ base spokesldmcn t~ j~ a -.. ~ --~ said he" -would meet witb local greenbelt 7 I cOmment" on Uie w esprea reportii. supporters to try and work ·out a state- The visit by Brezhnev has been men· B ·z . 'K ·zz ment of Laguna's attitudes. tioned several limes by White Hou se ai in l, '"It just did not say-what I'd hoped it spckesmen but the presence of the ivould ·say,'' cominented Coinmissione r massive comntunicatlons operation today Roger Lanphear. "It could be the begin· reinforces speculation that Brezhnev will ·For· Pay' Ca!''e nin g of the end of open space in this address the American people on network ~ area.'" televlsion ·from the south OrangE:·Coast. '·This area" r 0 ugh I y encompasses Brezhnev and President Nixon plan the By T0~1 BARLEY lands 'A'ithin Aliso, Wood, El Toro, main portion of their talks on mututal Of tM D•l1¥' l"llft 111K Laguna, A'loro and Emerald canyons, he mndattetherrs o~ diplomaJtic relations, trade Taped conversations described by the said. a o items on une 11 either at the LanMear, a former member of the Wh·1 u -. t•-Pre ·de t• I tr t prosecution as ''absolutely damning t"' .I e O\l\lse or in; SJ n 1a re ea Greenbelt Board of Directors, said at Camp David. evidence" led a Santa Ana municipal recreation, as suggested by the county Soon afternards Nixon spokesman court judge l\fonday to rule that forn1er planning staff, w~s...not . ao appropriate said, the two leaders will fly west for the Ne~1port Beach lawyer Michael Kester use of open space around Laguna. stopover at the Houston Space Center Remington be held in Orange County jail "This report should not be to change and then another round of talks af La with bail denied. · the u.se of the lands other than historic Casa t>..lcifi Cit rn San c 1eni"iiie. ' --Judge Wilifam ThOmsoil .m":icie the rul* uses -namely a cattle ranch. These The White House has given no exact ing. and canceled ·the earlier bail figure lands can be used for grazing," said Lan· times or dates for the schedule duriOg oI $300,000 after listening in his chambers phear. the westward jou'mey. to what investigators claim are highly in· McDol'o·ell said the rift between the Jf Brezhnev indeed travels to the South_ cr.iminati11g conversations bet\11een Rem~ Orange County Planning Department and Coast he will be the moilt powerful or ington and a co-<:onspirator and Rem· the Greenbelt was a result of varying foreign dignitaries ever. to visit the jngton and' a poLice informant. degrees of "purist" though.t regarding Orange Coast. The· tapes_are the comer:stone of the open space:---~ Since Nixon established the Western prosecution's case against the lawyer on The county's proposal calls for the \Vhite House he has played.host to now· allegations Utat he hired killers lo 10,000 acre ve~ant belt around Laguna retired Japanese Premiere E~!OOJ Sato ..-remov~ hostile wilne:1Ses in a number of -Beach· to be preserved-but makes anOSoUih Vietnamese ·President Nguyen c:ivil cases in wtlich he was nQmed as* allowances for controlled development Van Thieu . defendant. ' based on the findings or resource in· 'lbe official repon for Brezhnev's trip Remington. 33, is charged in eight ventories. lo the U.S. is based in protocol f e I o n Y co. u n t s filed by the district Dilley said the local officials should not The visit \Viii be a return gesture stem-attorney's office or soliciting to commit be afraid to "make up their minds" for ming from Nixon's trip to the Soviet murder. Judge Thon1so n set Remington's direct purchase of open space lands Union 11.•hwe he hammered out trade arraignmenl for June I~. Also charged in around the city. agreements 1\•lth the leaders there. the case i§ Gary t11ichael Rollo. 21, of He said ''leaseback" revenues from the The only other Russian official ever to Garden Grove. a karate expert who has lands y.•ouJd cover all costs of acquisition. (See SOVIETS, Page 1) (See NO Bi\IL, Page %) The long-time Greenbelt leader also S. Laguna Condominiums LReooiv.e Commission Okay A 48-unit condominium project in South Laguna received approval Monday by the South Coast Regional 1.one Conservation Commission in Long Beach. The two-acre development ·by Manley Natland is at the end of Ocean Vista brlve•aboutJ,eoo feet inland from Aliso ~ach. County zoning in the area would allow .tp.lct.loo of 86 units and a variance bu been granted to build 10 tlu<e stories. • '!;he bultdilll wlll ooly be two slori.S oc leas than 30 feet in height, however 1 an Parents' lfeet Slated • HJJow to Have Happy, Responsible Cl\lldrcn" Is the topic of an adult e<luca- Ilon class at 7:30 .p.m. Wednesday~at room , 28 of the Laguna ·Beach High S<:llool. ; Dr. Clor:1 Riiey, a psychiatrist, and Dr. E;4ward Tomsovlc, a pediatrician, will be pretent to answer questions of _parents at the public mootl111. . -- ofricial from the Urban Research Design Development Company. proj ec t architects, said. Ninety.four parking spaces. almost two to one dwelling unit. will be provided. The cul-de-sac on Ocean Vl.sta Drive and extensions of the storm drain and sewer system will be completed by the developer. Also approved by the commission was a three.story orfice and apartment building at 900-910 Glenneyre St. in Laguna Beach. Developer Herb Nolan aaid he would provide 70 parking spaces where the city only req-ulres 55. The largely oommercial project is within the Prop. 20 com1J1ission's jurisdlc. tion of 1,000 yards Inland from mean high tide line. On another Laguna Beach project, a seven--unit, three-stQry a p a r t m e n t - building at ·420 Cypress Drive , the oom· mission required 12 purklng !paces "bere eight had been proposed. • Developer Melvin P. Jackson received • coastal permit alter he ,.Id he could provlde the exlra parking.· • • said the city and county should undertake a program of "resource retrieval" in· eluding Ute re-purchase of ' "vital resource land that has fallen•te develop- ment." Flap Too· Small- Lagii1ia1i Arreste<.l A Join cloth-clad La11:unan \\'as arrested and charged \Vith indecenl exposure as he strolled through an Art Colony residential area l\:londay afternoon. ___'_'I guess I'll have to get a little bigger nap," Bruce Paul Van Wagner· told ar- restbg officer Del. Sgt. Neil Pureell. · Sgt. Purcell said that as the man walk· ed. the !root loin cloth flap napped. Van Wagner, 21, listed the Love Animals, Doo't Eat Them address ol 732 s. Coast Highway as a residence. He was arrested near Thalia and catallna Streets by Sgt. Purcell who just happened to be passing by. SALT Meeting Held GENEVA (UPI) --United Stste1 and Soviet negotiators met today lot one hour and 30 minutes In 'the S2nd meeilng of the new round of Strategic Anns Lim- ilatloo T1lks (SALT II). Con(erence·om. cisl; ·said the nex t meeting would be held June B . ' ...J. , . ~ A 'Tired' Mo1ister lems of the neighborhood. It would also give the city planning stafr an opportunity to explore formation of a redevelopment agency to resub- divide Arch Beach Heights into larger lots than the 25 foot by 100 foot parcels that no1v exist. • The council placed the f i r s t moratorium on Arch Beach Heights in July, l97t, after learning from !he county heaJth department that septic tanks were creating a heallh hazard. '.1'he ban was extended through July of this year. pending instaUation of a sanitary sewer system, initiated 1hrough Assessment District 69·1. Building permits, hon·ever. have been issued for new construction contingent on conneclion \l'ith tbe new se1ver system. A new moratorium was supported by Douglas Whitaker , speaking on bebalf of the Ar ch Beach Heights Neighborhood Association:· · · · Citing poor access 11;ith the summer • Chi ldren climb over this unusual attracti.on in a Tokyo amusement fire seaso~ app:oaching, ~ h it a k er -t· -park.-Tbe-tie rce-lodking-toy is maCie completely out of old-automo:--declared,, (-Arcl'i"Beach He1~hts) stands. · bile tires. on the brink of a very real disaster." -------------------------~·cc_· "There is no logical plan of develop--_ ment lot. the area,'..' \Vhitaker added in ClJSD Trustees Put Off Decision on Boundary By JAN WORTH Of tlle. 0.11¥' P'lltl Sl•tf Everyone from a weeping studerit who doesn't want to be separated from her younger brothers to an irate father 1¥bose sophomore daughter has aJready attended lour high .schools assailed CaJ)lstrano Unified School D i s t r i c t trustees Monday night. So the board made the one decision regarding Jligh school attendance areas that will directly affect none of those present at the meel irig. In the current Dana Hills High School area, only students moving into as-yet unfinished homes in P.1ission Viejo east or Marguerite Park\\·ay an~ north of Oso Parkway will gO to San Clemente High School next year. Other Mission Viejo students in the Dana Hills area may opt to attend San Clemente. Many of them were students at San Clemente before Dana Hills open. ed in January. NEXT BILLION YEARS CANCELED . ' -LA JOLLA (APl -The now .Ommer catalogue at UC San Oiego ·Mnounccs a course, "The Next Billion Years -the Future of Man ." Bui over it Is stamped 1•canceled." The boundary discussion came up at the last board meeting because more area is destined for housing developments in the Dana liills attendance area than in the San' Clemente area. The decision was Postponed to Monday night. Trustees were told ,that if boundarits were lefl the same, Dana· Hills High, which opened in January, will be at more than Capacity next year and will skyrocket to 2,800 y.•lthin five years. Both high,schools 1vcre built to accommodate some 1.800 students. The pr01>0sal acyepted Monday night was ll~e original recommendation of Truman Benedict. d i s t r i c t $Uperin- tendent. ' A counler·proposal by Board President Bob Hurst that all Mission Viejo students now in the Dana Hills area be sent to San Clemente ~ligh was strongly opposed by parents present. "Wbat we're essentially doing is postponing our decision one year," Hurst said. ·•As it is, Dana Hiiis will be at capacity next Se~tember." In the di scussion over Hurst's pr~ posals, parents objected to the fact that some families would have students at two dif£ercnt high schools with 12 to 1:.. 1nile di stances to each of them. Truste(! Willlam Enqulst--said he didn 't feef famil y units sllOl.tld be broken. But San Clemente High senior Charles Dargan, a atudent reprcsentattvc to the board, s:iid h'e and his brother, separated b tne new Dai1a tlllls High. enjoyed at- 1s .. BOUNDARY, Pago ll appealing for imme<liate city action. ' The moratorium, as suggested by the city planning stafr. \\·ould apply to any parcel less than 75 feet by 100 reet. The staff report notes that Arch Beach ~leights al ready is shy three acres of parkland : that Suntmit Drive. the main access to the area. is overloaded and that neither Summ,it Drive nor Alta ,Vista \\fay can be reliably used for fire p~ teclion. "It is clear to us that some rather drastic and serious measures will need to be. taken, and taken quietly, in the neighborhood if we are to keep it from becoming a serious hazard to health and (See CONTROLS, Page %) • , Orange Coast Weather lt.'11 ~ fair on Wednesday, fol· IO'.''lng the usual low clouds in tbe morning hours. Highs o! 65 at the beaches will rise to tbe low 70s in-- land. Lows tonight ~. INSIDE TODA'l' There's a ntw game in Wash.-- ingZOfl. Eve r hea r of the .Long-s po n g.Fong·Hong Kong-Ping 'Po1ig.Ding Dong..Bill? See st~, Page 12. L.M ... ,, ·11 C•ll'-"'1• I CIH.illM UJI CM'!Wca 11 c,........ tt DMlll Melle:" I 111~11 l"etl • •nltf'llllWMlll 1•1t PlllUCI • 1f•1l ".,. MW l:tcWlf L 14 MtrlttlH lt .... L....,. 11 '" 11r¥kl , MO'llH II 1111111111 ''"'' • ,. ...... lffw• • Or••'"""' • '"'"" , .. ,. llKti Marti•" •tt T_,_ ll TIIM'-f U ·-·· ..... ,,..1, Wtrtl liltWt If • ,, '" T11tsdo1y J11itr 5, l q73 ~·-- W-ater•hed Issue Planners Delay Talks · on Annex Laguna Beach planning e<11n1nissioners took their first look l\1onda v night at an· ncxing thousands or acreS surroundiilg the city .. But it "'as a short look. --~•Ou&>.-~tM. la~s.-of lhe--hour-.-:com~ missioners decided lo postpone further discussion of armexing !he entire Laguna watershed to a future meeting. The Laguna \Valcrshcd is bordered roughly by the ritfgellnes above l\1oro, Emerald, Boat. Laguna. 11idden Valley, Rimrock, Rancho l.aguna, Diamond and Hobo canyons. The proposal that the city undertake 1he extensive annexation wa s made to the commission last week in a Jetter LagunaBeacli To Commend Sgt. Purcell Recognition of Police Sgt. N e i I Purcell's accomplishments and awards tops the agenda of the Laguna Beach Ci· ty Council for its session at 7:30 p.m. \Vedhesday at city hall. A resolution commending the detective sergeant Y.ri.11 be . presented during the council'! extraordinary business portion ol the agenda". Sgt. Purcell was instrumental in crack- ing the dope ring Broihcrhood of Eternal Love. and an arresl of Dr. Timothy Leary, noY.' behind prison bars. Purcell was previously one of the Orange County officers-honored by ·the American U!gion . and recently \\'as nan1- ed a "Super Cop'' in a nation,vidc con- test. Other business scheduled to be con- sidered by the counci l includes: -D e mo Ii ti on of the abandoned ·oceanfront service station on Ma in Beach Park land near the intersection of Fotest Avenue and1South Coast Highy.·ay. -A discussion or the Orange County Growth Policy. -A citizen petition requesting traffic safety measures near the Victoria Beach area. ~ -~a report Jr.om the cit~ manager .on city purchase of the lumber yard prop- erty adjacent to cily hall. -Claims for damages by residents of Arch Beach Heights sustained in con- structioo of the sewage syst~m set up by assessmentO.iiffia ~1 . -Appropriation of the city's share of Aliso Water Management Agency se',l•er funds. -A proposal for spending $36.500 on ci- ly yard faciJiUes. From Pagel CONTROLS ... community welfare." the report stated. In a related action. commissioners agreed the city should step up en- forcemeru of an ordinance proh.ibiting 'y,·eekend construction. Both residents of the area and members of the city staff repOrted that y,·eekend construction is taking place at a number or locations along \vith illegal dumping and grading operations. From Pagel SOVIETS .. _. vi sit the Orange Coast y.•as Soviet ·Am bassador Anatoly Dobrynin. who ·ar- -'--·-rived last year for several dl\ys of in- formal discussions: ' During that trip the Russian was treated to some typical Orange Coast dining. He stepped out for some Mexican food at a restaurant in San Juan Capistrano wi th his "host" -Henry Kissinger. • OUN•I COAST i.a DAILY PILOT Tiit Ot-.,,.. C..11 Dl'llLY f"llOT, wt11'1 wllk;ti Ill <""*lntd 11"9 N-.P,n1, II Mlithef Dl' tltt Or•noe Cllt•I P\lllU""lnt CornNfl'I', s.p.. ,.,. M lllon11 •r• Pllblltli.d, Mond•l' lflrouoti F'IUl'. IOr Cotti Mn., N•WPOrt 9Ndl. H1Mtlntl1H1 . 91ktl/Fovnj•ln V1U11y, ytune BMd\, l"'IM/5Hdl1bed: •f!d Sin Clrmt!1t1/ S111 Jwon C'1q_!S1•1,.... A 1lnol• "'OIONI 41dltlon 11 puo u,Nof S1h.wc11.,, ,,.. 5und•Y1· fl'l1 .,.,.'"''"' pODllsn111411 plant 11 111 JJO Well 81~ l!rM!, Co111 Mn1, CllllOr"i,,, tJ61' ltob•rf. N. W1 1d Pr .. hltnt Ind f"11~!1•tlt1 J•ck It C111l1y V>c.t f"rt11id«1I 111111 0.....ral Mt,..Otl Thom11 Ko•vil Etlli.r ThM11 111 A. M11rphi"1 M ..... ll'Pf llllltw Ch1rl111 H. L..ot Richord '· Noll ""'"''"' ~-"" ldlltn ~ ..... OMc. 222 fONlf AYl"llO Mtlli"t ~lllro111 r.o. lea•••. t2•s2 ~ ....... C"ll M-; ,. Wto1 ... ~'Sltfft .........,, l .. dl ~ ml Now..., ""'""''' .....,,lritlOfl lffdlll 11111 hKfl Mllle¥1n .. ,. Cllrrltrli.: JU •1tt I t Cimino 11 .. 1 ,.. ....... f1141 '4Jo4JJI c:a..lfle4 A4Mfl I I '4J.1611 ·---~-~'t.t-a .....-a1=•··•--1 Tel1,11111 494-MU t•r••• lt1J. Of•,... C..t ll'llMitJllnl c~,.,.. No -•Tef'lft. llllft!r'''°"'· Odf,.,lol IMlfol' W elllY.,llMrn«lll lwf•"' _, Ot '"'""""'" WI"*"! IMClll '''" "'""""' " c;ertt!tht l'M'llt. .._.,. CllN ,_.,_. NII If Cotto WM, Clllllmlto, ..,._..l.,lttl ltY ~rrltr UM ~\'t IJf llMll A.IS *'-'""' mllllVI' ... lftlfltflt .... llNMlllY. • from the Laguna Beach Civic League Board of Director!!. \Vn)'Tle Moody , c.ity·director of planning and development . indi cated lhc an· ie-xfil~proett<ting!I probftbty---"WOOld come after Laguna flies its "sphere of in- fluence " with the Local Agency 1'~orma­ tion Commissioo (LAFC). LAFC has requested the tity file .-t sphere or influence •nap by June 311, J\.·Joody said. Preliminary staff work has been 10 try and match the sphere y,•ith the boun- daries o! the Laguna Beach Unified School Distri ct and the Laguna Be<1ch County \Vater District. Both are substan- ti<illy larger than the cily itself. i\.1oody noted the land use element of the general plan unofficially lists !he city's sphere of influence as running from Crystal Cove and Aliso Canyon inland to Sycamore Hills. l~e-~id. hoY.·.ever. lha1 the sphere or in- lluence should not be coristrued as the "ultimate <lnnexalion area" of the cil.y. "All the sphere of influence docs is say to va rious agencies '''e arc con- cerned and interested about what ha~ pens in those areas." said J\1oody. Aitnexation of vast areas \\'Ould in volve considerable legal \vork by City Attorney Tully Seymour, due to recent changes in state legislation. \Vhile the re may be problems \Vith an- nexation. Moody noted that in the case of the Irvine Coast beh\•een Laguna and Corona del Mar annexation u·ould be tax base to the city and at the smne lime give city rontrol or the land. 'l)lc coast property, owned by the Irvine Company, is planned for tourist orieoJed development. Froml'agel NO BAIL~ .. made a number of guest appearances in the television series, "Kung Fu." Rollo, held on $100,000, \Vas to be arraigned to- day before Judge Paul l\1ast. Ne\vport Beach attorney Robert Green argued for Remington Monday that the $300,000 figure set for the Fullerton lawytr was "grossly excessive" and should be substantially reducec.i. Green reminded Judge Thomson that Angela Davis was freed on fl00,000 bail at a ti me \\'hen she Y.'as accused of being- involved in the murder of a judge and Juan Corona ·had been !reed on bail when he Y.'as accused of cOmmitting between 2a and 30 killings of -itinerant farm workers. .. Here y.•e have no murder, no death and -no inJury,"Green commented. "I do not oppose a selling or bail I simply pro- pose that it be realistic and related to the charges." Deputy District Attorney Orella Sea rs urged Judge Thomson to listen to. the series of tapes earlier sealed by Judge Robert Rickles y.•ho set bail at $300,IXX> afler listening to testimony allegedly linking Remington and Rollo to the asserted conspiracy. -District attorney's investigators claim that Rollo was one of three men arrested by California Highway Palrolmen who said they slopped the trio's car !or a traffic infraction and found weapons in- cluding rifles and hand guns in the auto during a search. It is alleged that the t"'O men \Yith Rollo immediately confessed they were hired to dispose of Alfred Fehling of Yorba Linda,,. one of a number of plain- tiffs in ciVil aCfions flied during the past l_.,..·o years against a vending machine company of whi ch l{cmington is presi- dent. · Green indicated in the courtroom Mon- day that the ty.·o men \1•ith Ro llo were Bobby Joe Hart and Jack Hewitt. Both men are held in custod y and \\'ii~ be used, the prosecution states. as \\'ltnesses against Remi ngton aod. if necessary. Rollo. Green also noted that inrormation given fo hin1 by the district attorney·s or- fice indicated that his client \vas charged \\'ith Rollo and 10 "Jo~n Docs·· of con- spiring to kill 1\'cd DeLancy. a key "'itness against Remington in a civil trial scheduled to start July 16. Remington is president of Ca l Vend ri1auufacturing Company. a Fulterton concern that is no longer in business. ·He and several other executives in the . operation have been named y.·ith their company as defendants in five civil ac- tions. It is alleged tha! th reats made by Remington Jed one plaintiff to .se ttle his case for fiir less lhan it y.•as \\'Orth and led another plaintiff to drop hls action. Di strict attorney's investigators clairn that taped statements In their posscssi9n .support thei r clain1 that 1ne three men allegedly hired by Remington '''ere on their wa y to Fehling's Yor ba Linda home .,..•hen they were halted for 1he traffic in- fraction. "It Is only by chance that y.·e do nol h1.-.·e a murder complaint here today," l\lrs. Sears told Judae Thomson. · Drug Unit Head Told WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Dr. Roberl ~. Dupont, 37, has been selected by Presi- dent Nixon es ~ltettor or-the \Vblte Hou" Special Action Ofllce !or Drug Abuse Prevtntlon. Dupont, a graduate of the Harvard Medical School, will succeed Dr. Jerome II. Jafle, who held lhe $42,000.a·year post !Ince the office was created two years ago. (, ,_ Residents . -- -Protest Shoals The Shoals development. a $1 million rommercial residential project, will be back before lhe Laguna Beach Cil~ Cooncll at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. 1• 1 The project Is th!\ desiiJ! of _Cot''",_"----tt--·I ctlman-Pe~r'OStra·ndCr;-an-arChtt~ . All Those A11to11iobiles? Journalists ffo1n Communist China watch the pro- duction line of Chicago's Ford plant. "Has auto pro· duction increased?" the leader of the group \not shown) asked. A Fore!' en1ploye responded. "Yes,'' and added that 14 million cars would be produced in the U .S. this year-at which the Chinese leader blinked in amazeme11t. ·-~~~~~~~- Fro111 Page l Hu11ti11gton Driver Sla1Iis BOUNDARY • • • . tending different schools. Residents near the site at 1601 S. Coast· Higbwa.y have complained the project1 • \Viii increase traffic hazards and noise. The project is being considered i1Y the~ council under specific provisions o! the building code. These requirements provide that a project may b ~ · SJ>e(:ifically designed for an area and that design adopted by the cowlcil and in the same n1anner as 1he zone change. The Laguna Beach PlaMlng Com- mission \rhen it held public hearings on !he matter re<..'Om1nended the council deny the project. Jn a previous council meeting u·hen the Shoals project \\'SS to be heard, Coun· cil man Ostrander stepped from the coun· cil bench and attenipted to address the City Council as a proponent for the proj· ect. - City Atton1ey Tully Seymour suggested that such an action bordered on confilct of interest. however. Ostrander lobbied for a continuance to the upcoming" meet· Ing to ·enable in associate to appear in behalf of the project. L<.igu1ia Trustees Ponder 'Tea1ns' To Riin: ·sc1iools -=-Retiring Trustee Fred Newhart pointed out thal regardless or "'hat the district does now, a ne w high school will be ne.ed- l11to Lagun-a ~tility Pole The Lagun~ Beach Board or Ed~ti09_ ed within three years. . A Huntington Beach man \Vho failed to In that case, some students mai have negotiate a Co<µit High,vay curve in to be moved again, he said. -Laguna ~each and s1nacked into a utility South Coast Community Hospital. Rainone Was a passenger is a small for eign cn r that rolled over after going out or control on a cur ve on Broad1,1•ay. is expected to give approval tonight 10 · - ''management teanis" to provide school · district leadership through Sept. I. "Maybe it's more important novr that pole early today is reported in satisfac- we al!o\v students to finish their four tor,v condition at South Coast Cotnn1unity years at one school, even if it is crowd-I1ospital. ed," Newhart said. Tony Licari of 816 liuntinglon St . \vas Parents and students s u pp or I e d found lying on the pavement after being Ne"·hart's point. saying the emotional thro.,..·n from his sn1all fo reign car when needs of students to have continuity in it struck a signal light pole near Ocean sports, friendships, and other activities Avenue and South Coast High"·ay in were more important than crowding. Laguna. A representative of the Capistrano Licari celebrated his 20th bi rth~ Unified F.clucator 's Association. said ll1onday and police reported the accident teachers favored balancing the school's occurred shortly after midnight. attendence as much as possible in the in-The Huntington man said he "''as feel- terest of quality education. ing tired and the next thing he knew he "Teachers face the same problems of was in Laguna and in pain lying on the allegtance -that-"Students do;'' th~ pa\'em-e·nr. satd· -pouce-·eapr-. -David representative said .. "bl,l~f you can re~t-B~~.Y.'Il. He suffered a dislocated hip and assured that your child "'I I have a better faci al cuts. - chance in equally-balanced schools." The victi1n of a i\1onday mo.ming ac- Retir.,ed Mesa11,s Discover Checks 111 Mail Toda y cident at Broadway and Acacia Drive. Philip Rainone, 39, of 1757 S. Coast Highy.•at. y.·as reported still in critical condition at the intensive car~ @it of Youth Witl1 J11 g Jailed in Laguna Scores of retired Costa Mesa residents, . . today were expected to receive their ~1· A jug-lugging young man spr1nt1ng Social Security checks which had been · across Soulh Coast Highy.·ay a\vay from missing in the mail, U.S. postal a Laguna. Beach supermarket attra~ted authorities reported. the attention of Patrolman B~ce ~r1ggs "They arrived this morning," said \\'ho stopped the fellow and investigated Assistant Postmaster Marvin Gibson of l\Ionday . . . . the Santa Ana Post O£fice, "and our Flore . Ph1lhp Gar1ppo, 19. of 2442 S. mailmen will have them delivered t<r-Coast Highway Laguna Beach was s~~- day." quently booked on a charge of .suspicion The missing checks were a niystery to of stolen property. a gallon ~f ~In rose. a:l Monday. The Social Secu r ity Of£icer Briggs escorted Gar1pP? back Administralion said they had been mail-to the supermarket at Coast. H1ghy.•ay ed. The Post Office in Costa f\.1esa replied :ind Cleo Street a~d questioned .the that the checks hadn't shown up. And, in-checker s about the wine and any possible creasingly--anxious -senior ·citizens were sale. . . . beginning to panic. thinking that perh.ips Gar1ppo told Brig.gs a friend named their sole source of income had been lost Rocky bought the wine. No Rocky could or sto len. be located. Briggs reported. . CC1ble Mishap Causes Blackout The managen1ent team conceP.t Is recon1n1ended to the board by Dr. Donald \Voodington. incoming superintendent. \rho \\•ill not join the district full-time un- til the September date. ~fan age men t Team A. \l'ilh responsibility through June 30, will con- sist of \Villiam 1'"'. ·Allen, acting -superintendent ; Robert L. Reeves, assis- . tant Superintendent . for · instruction: A malfw1C1ion in an undergrou~d ca~le Donald G. Haught, La,gWla Beach High along a ~ion of a Laguna Niguel _in-Schoot principal, and David Lloyd, dustrial coi:nple~ sparked the major Thurston Intermediate School principal. blackout. y.·h1ch hu large ~egments of the P.lanagement Team B. as ~tHned in community ?o.londay morning. the meeling's agenda. y.•UI watch over Nearly all of Laguna Niguel and large school district affairs from July 1 to Aug. parts of southerly ~fission Viejo were af-31. fected by the outage y.·hich occurred Team B "'ill be made up of Al}en, shortly before 10 a.m .. said spokesmen Reeves, Haught and "·hoever Is employed for San Diego Gas and Electric Com-in the business manager post fonnerly pany. · held by Charles A. Hess. The problem erupted along ·a section of Each nlariagement. team wi ll meet Camino Ca pistrano in Niguel and for regularly to discuss district operations about an hour th9~.s.;;inds of households and consult Yloodlngton during his 8rnf"busfnesses were without poY.'er. At periodic visits to Laguna over the sum- 11 :oa all but six connections y.·ere n1er. restored. \\1oodington, currently C<Morado com- Thc re1naining half dozen were finally niissioner of Education, was hired as restored about 2 p.m. utility aides said. su pe rintendent May JI. Hearing Postponed On Sycamore Hills 1\ continued public hearing on the massive Sycamore Hills development 1n Laguna Canyon, originally scheduled for tonight. has been moved to June 18 meeting of the baguna Beach Planning Commission. Repre s entativ es ol Newport ln\'estments Inc .. backers of the 2,000 unit residential project, requested the ex- tension due to time conflicts. The June 18 hc8ring will deal with a revised en- viron1neotal impact statem.ent for the _project. Other matte·rs contained in the 47-ltem agenda include a report on elfecta of the gasoline short.age on dbtrict operatJons; a request to set J uly S as the annual "organizational" meeting for election of ne"' board officers:, and a presentation from it:he high school WJ ldemess Club oo a recent river trip throu&h the California gold country. Rogers, Chinese l\'leet WASHINGTON (UPI) -Ambassador Huang Chen, head of China's new liaison mission in W1shlngton, held his first of- ficial meelln1 with Secretary of State William P. Rogers Monday. Tt\ey con- ferred.. for 30 minutes In Rogers' State Department Office, then had lunch together. TI.~ superintendent of mails at the San-I p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-- la Ana Post Office cleared up the mystery today, explaining that the Costa f\.fesa mail sacks must have been sent to another area. "\\'e're guess ing that the sacks were mislabeled.·· said Superin- tendent Don Cluca. A spokesman for the Social Security Administration today apologized for the delay. "It's the first time it's happened THE NAME OF THE GAME. • •• in the two and one-half years I've been ,, here." said Allen llildt. assistant manager at the Santa Ana office. Regardless or how 1he mixup occurred, senior citizens in Costa J\.>1esa are reliev- ed today. Several hundred persons at Bethel Towers. a Costa f\.1esa home for the elderly, did not receive their checks on lime Monday and some were beginning to panic. But J\1rs. Zenada Davis, a Bethel To\vers secretary, said happily this morning. "We hear th~re's oodles of checks at the post office!" Boy, 17, Guilt)' 111 3 Sia yings LOS ANGELES (AP I Roberl Grigsby, 17, of-'Valencla has been found guilty of first.-Oegret murd~r in the triple knife n1urder Nov. 27 of a Valencia hQUSewife, her son and 3 nClgh~r boy . l\1 rs. L inda PrcenwoOd,' 24. her son. Adrian. 3. and Scott titurphy. 3. "'ere round slain In the &earoo1n Oc the Greenwood hOme. Cr1gsbY.. Was also rounag Uuty Monday of assault wit]) a deadly weapon In an Sl· tack on ,,11"!. Anne Mur,PhY, 281 the n1othcr of Scott. Mrs. f\1urphy said she had gone to the Greenwood h'ome that day in starch of Scott. • THERE IS A COMMON PRACTICE OF PRIVATE LABELING IN THE CARPET INDUSTRY. LARGE DEPARTMENT STORES, CHAIN STORES, AND CONTRACTORS AT NEW TRACTS HAVE FICTITIOUS NAMES' ON THE SAMPLES SO THAT THE CUSTOMERS CANNOT EASILY SHOP BRAND NAME PRICES. ~USTOMERS SHQPPING AT OUR STORE FIND THE PRICE OF EACH QUALITY PROMINENTLY FEATURED ON THE SAMPLE BOOK, BECA.USE WE ARE COMPETITIVE. ALSO, BECAUSE WE FEEL THE CUSTOMER HAS A RIGHT TO KNOW WHAT HE IS BUYING, WE NEVER CHANGE THE NAME ON A SAMPLE BOOK. THE NAME OF THE GAME IS INTEGRITY. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MISA 646-4838 ,, Moo.· 11lm. ' le l:JO: M. ' re ': s.t. '''° re I , • .. l ' ' I 1 • • ' •\ ' I T ' I I I l • . , Saaaiehaek . T oday's Fin al N.Y. Stocks • l VOL. 66, NO. 156, 4 SECTIONS, SO -PAGES ORA NGE COU NTY, C'All FORNIA TUESDAY, JUN E 5, 1973 TEN .CENTS _Jiill-' .old- WASHINGTON (UPI) -Convicted Watergate conspirator G. Gordon Liddy 11nce threatened to kill Jeb S. Magruder, tonner deputy manager of the Nixon re· ~1ection campaign, testimony by ex~ ~residential aide John D. Ehrlichman reveal~d today. Ehrlichman sa~d Magruder infonned him of the threat. He dl<i not elaborate on the circumstances or the date, but BJ>- parently was referring to some point oo(o!'e June 17, 1972 because' his lawyer Viejo High ' did not Jet him testify· about events after .the bre~)t-in at the Democrats' ~tergate headquarters. "Mr. Magruder told me Mr. Liddy had threatened him -had threatened his life," said Ehrlic~3n, who resigned April 30 A!il Nixon's top adviser on· domestic affairs. The Ehrlichman testimony made public today was given recently as a dfpositlon in the Democratic Nationa! Committee's $6.4 million suit against. th e -eommlttee for the ae.etection of the President resulting from the Watergate break-in and bugging. Earlier testimony (rQlll several wit· nesses established bad blood between Ma"iruder and Liddy, who both were White House staffers transferred to the campaign committee td organize for the 1972 pre,sidential campaigns. Magruder, who originally l}jred Liddy. at one ~int had him transferred from the main rf.election commi ttee. to · the ' campaign finance committee and-""WaS considering firing him . Ehrlicbma,n .said he al!W learned that l'i1agruder informed the White House at one point that "an intelligence operation" had been established by the r~lection committee to obtain information about Democtats. He said he got that information after being assigned by President Nixon in April of this year to investigate events leading to the break·in, any possible - Russ \\lhite House -involvement, an-d -any evidence about a possible coverup. That was after Nixon said a fresh in· vestigation \Vas. undertaken because or new developments he bad learned . Ehrllchman said the source of his in· formation was Gordon Strachan. then . an aide to White 'House chief of staff H.R. Haldeman and the White House political contact man with the re·election con1- mittee. Ehrlichman S3id he asked Strachan whether he had any personal knowledge of any of the events leading to the \Vatergate break-in. "He (Strachan) said that at some point in time he had been informed by Mr. !\1agruder that an lntelligcncc oper"ation in fact had been established at the reelection grou p," Ehrlichman said. "He did not equate that \Vith electronic surveillance neceiisarily. '' Jet to-Vi-sit- Eyes Triple Ses sion Plan Toro Awaits Brezhnev Advance Unit 1 " I ' \ By JOHN ZALLER Of I ... D•llY '"llot Sl•ff ' i\lis&ioll Viejo tligh School, 3lready ~P.. provOO for CIOUbJe sessions next-rau-;-may open a triple session in the evening for student$ who can't get the help they need· during the day. · Superintendent William 1.ogg told the Saddleback Valley Unified School Board J\1onday night that the evening sessions would be completely voluntary, but that he hoped they would ·attract large numbers or students. "We said when we approved double sessions we "'ere going to make every ef· fort .to .see that students were not hurt educationally by the m," Zogg explained . "This proposal is designed to give students a chance for the extra contact "'ith teachers they'll miss because ·of the pressure or double sessions,'' he said. The evening session would be held in the-school-libtary-~tress-indiv19ual tutoring. It would be designed to lielp students who want t() make advanced progress 3nd those falling behind in their classes. - Zogg said three leathers. picked to represent all high school study areas, would be used to start the program . ,;But if we find there's more demand than three peo~le can handle, we would consider getting more teachers and open· ing· up the science labs or the technical shops," he said. · Since the evening session would be held In the library, Zogg said it would also provide a place f!>r students to come together and study at iligbt. . Trustees received his proposal en- thusiastically. Their only questions in- vol ved whether the school should provide (See TRIPL~, Page %) Trustees to Build El Toro School For $5.5_5 Milliop. Saddleback Valley Unified School District trustees agreed Monday night ~ pay $5.55 million rOr the new "El TOro .High SchOOI. -- - - The original estimate for the cost of the school was $5 million, which was revised two months ago to $5.37 million. The new figure set Monday represents the bid price of BerrY Construction Com· pany, which ha s begun construction on th"e school. superintendent William Zogg explained that the original $5 million figure was "just a ballpark estimate" tha t was being brought into line with the ·actual costs. • The district's second high school is ex· ~ted to be completed by September. 1974. In the meantime, its students and faculty Will constitute a "school within a .-.choOI" at Mission Viejo High School facilities . By JOHN VALTERZA 01 flll 0.llY Pilet Sll lt A So viet airliner laden with tons of communications gear and an estimated 50 technicians was scheduled to-arrive... today ·at the El Toro Ma rine Corps Air Station .-the advance guard for a possi· blc major visit to the Orange Coast by Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev. ······-·· .. Several····highl y ·reiiable ··sources···have reported the impending arrival of the Soviet delegation but orders of strict A 'Tired' lflmast'er Children climb over this unusual attraction i11 a Tokyo amusement park. The fierce-looking toy is made completely out Of old automo-- bile tires. ·----------------------- Music , Art Festival Set Br-San 1 o_aquin-Bistrict The rousing ·sounds· o( John Philip Sousa, "I Love a Parade" and '"76 Trom· bo'nes" ·will be among opening strains -at- San Joaquin School District's music and art festival tonight. · The "I Believe in Music" concert, com· bined with a distriet·wide art exhibit, begins at 5:30 p.m. at the Anaheim Convel'ilion Center. The art show involving displays from all 19 district school s will be from 5:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. in the granQ lobby or the <:enter. The music !estival will begin at 7: 15 p.m. with a special performance by the district honor orchestra . The full concert featuring about 2,500 voca l and.... in· strumental music students, runs from 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. . Admission is free because costs have been subsidized by .The trvine Com pany and a parents' Music Boosters group. .4. tribute to Ralph Gates. superin· tendent emeritus1 who will" ret!re at the end or this month, will higlllight the opening or the shou•. · Thi s is San Joaquin 's second and last mtJsic festival. • The district will go out of business June 3.0, after which three new unified districts take over operation of schools . Music tonight will range from the brassy bands to strings,· '"dueling ban· jos," folk songs and ensemble singing of patriotic and popular selections. Joanne Harris is coordinating the music program. Chetyl Biles , is coordinating the schools' artistic efforts. Judge Denies Bail i11 'Kill For Pay' Case By TOM BARLEY Of ttM DllllY l"llft S'8ff Taped oonversa.iions d..escribed by 1}\e._ proSecut.ion · ag· .. 'i69olutely damning· evidence" led a santa Ana municipal court judge Mo"nday to · rule that former Newport Be·actrla'"Wyer MiChiieJ Kester Remington be held in Orange County jail \vith bail denied. Judge William Thomson made the rul· ing and canceled the earlier bail figure of $300,000.after listening in his chambers to what investigators· claim ate highly in· criminating conversations between Rem· ington and a c<K:onspirator and Rem· ihgton and a police informant. The tapes are the cornerstone of the prosecution's case against the lawyer on allegations that he hired killers to remove hostile witnesses in a number or civil cases in which he was named as defendant. Remington, 33, is charged in eight felony count s filed by the district attorney's office of soliciting to commit murder. Judge Thomson set Remington 's arraignment for June 14. Also charged in the case is Gary Michael Rollo , "21, of Garden Grove, -a karate expert who has made a number of guest appe~r'1,nces in the television series· "}\ung Fu." Rollo, held on $100,000, was to be arraigned «r day before Judge Pai.ii Mast: Newport Beachatfomey Robert Green argued for Remington Monday that the $3001000 figure set for the Fullerton lawyer was "grossly excessive" and should be substantially reduceo. Green reminded Judge Thomson that Angela Davis·Was freed on $100,000 bail at a time when she was acc4sed of being involved in the murder of a judge and Juan Corona had been freed on bail when he was accused of committing between JS and 30 killings of itinerant farm workers. . "Here we have ·no murder, no death and no injury," Green commented. "I do not oppose a setting of bail . I simply pro· pose that it be realistic and related to the charges.'' ,Caspers to Talk at La Paz ~ -- Boy, 17, Guilty In ~ Slayings LOS ANGELES (APl -Rober! Grigsby, 17, of Valencia has been found gJJJli>'.-oJ_flrst-degree murder in the tripl~ knife murder Nov. 27 of a Valencia housewife, her son and a neighbor boy. Deputy District Attorney Oretta Sears urged Judge Thomson to ~isten to the series of tapes earlier scaled by Judge Robert Rickles who set bail at $300,000 after listening to testimony allegedly linking Remington and Rollo to the asserted conspiracy. ~n L~st of Valle y Series ~1rs. Linda Greenwood. 24, her son. Adrian, 3. and Scott Murphy, 3. were found slain in the bedroom or the -.Orange .County1s Fifth Dist r i c t Supervisor Ro nald W. Caspers will ad· .dte:s.! the final session of a lecture series on the Saddleback Valley at 7 p.m. Wedne!d•Y at La Paz Intermediate School, MISsion Viejo. _ h • 1 t" .11 Sleenwood home. The thc1ne of t e flna n1ee 1ng w1 Grigsby was also round guilty Monday the future or the Saddleback Valley. T of assa ult with a deadly weapon in an at· public is invited, tack on Mrs. A·nne Morphy. 28, the Caspers wJU discuss alternatives r mother of Scott: ?ifr s. Murphy said she developm ent and growth patterns and had .gcme to the Greenwood home that will comment on kinds of citiien Input day m search or Scott most needed by efected ofllcl als. SALT Mee ting Held District attorney's investigators claim that Rollo wa s one of three men arrested by California Highway Patrolmen whd said they S!opped the trio'! car for a traffic infraction and found weapons in· eluding rifles and hand guns in the auto during a ,search. _ It is alleged that the two men with (Ste NO BAIL, Page I) NEX T BILLIO N YEA RS CANCEL ED The se_ries, ~sponsored by the UC Irvine exteoslon and -the saaalebaclt Area Coordinating Council (SACC)1 acqualnled ilOO S&ddleback residents enrolled wUh . the historical and physical cbarac· 1-1? If ---;t~Oils!lcs ol'thelr · tM!munliy. Other speakers will include an ex·. ~utivc frorii the Mission Viejo Company. 1Peaklng on hoPes 6t a lan d developef ror {lie area. ---- Robert L. Snyder, program coordinator for the UCI~ACC"})rojcct. will· present an overview of Issues fllcing the area. GENEVA (UPI) -United-states and soviet negotiators met today for one hour iind 30 minutes in ibe 32nd rneetilig of the new round of Stiategic Anns Lim· itation Talks (SALT JI). €onfcronce offl· clals said the next meeting would be held LA JOLLA tAP )--The new 911mmer ca talogue at UC san Diego announces a. course, "The Next Billion Years -the Future of Man." A field tcip via bus gave residents a nrst·hond i"'?k at lotatlons and features described by speakers. CoOrdinator of the series was Ro:t Yeo. Orange County filttt district planning commissioner. r I ' \ SACC president Bart· Spendlove will dlscuSll SACC as ~ vehicle /or citizen in· wolvement. • But ovtt it ts stamped 11canceled .. H • Ju11c 8. · ' ) secrecy about the event at El Toro have matters of diplomatic relations, trade caused base spokes1nen to issue 1l "no and other items on June 18 either at the comment" on the widespread t.eports. \Vhitc House or the Presidential retreat Th e, visit by Brezhnev has been men· at Camp David. tioned-several-times. by White House Soon arter.warCls-Nixon ....spokesman ,spokesmen but the presence of the 'said, the two·Jeaders will fly West for the massive communications operation today stopover at the Houston SpaCe Center reinforces speculation.that Brezhnev will and then another round of tal ks at La address the American people on network Casa Pacifi ca in San Clemente. ··televisiorrfrom-tht?'-south· Orange·eoast ····-·---. .,.he ··White···tt"Ous-e-has ·-gtvetr·n:o·· ·lxa·cr--· ··-· Brezhnev and President Nixon plan th e times or dat es for the sched ule during main portion of thei r talks on mutu.tal (See SOVIETS, Page. 2) Irvine Co111tcil Urged _ Early Deadline for Parks BondElection Advocated . 101,Qe city _ courlcilmen :Ml'!dnesday· niglit wi11 be s'Ske<I lo reaffiftii their re· queS! that the corpmunity services com· mission set the earliesJ possible deadline for a Proposed $20 million parks bond ballOt measure. Councilman Henry Quigley reacted to- day to news the commission Monda y night had selected for final interviews next "'·eek, Jinns which hoped to have until' January to prepare a parks plan and ballot measure package. "I intend to get a sense of council on precisely what ballot date we are going * * * Final Interviews For Parks Bond Consultants Set • Final inf.ervi~Ws for three of seven parks bond consultants will be held Mon· day an& tbe final choice by lrvine~com· mWlity services commissi()!lers is ex· pected to assure a January not NOV'"emberbond election date. Commwtity Services C om m i s s i o n Chairm"an Sally Miller said today names , of the three finalists selected in closed session ·Monday night following public in· tervlews will be released after the ftrms are notified : , Letters were going out today to all firms. Commissioner Robert Holt said today a majority of the commissioo favors three firms over the rest. The favored firms are : t.ampman aild Aa..aate:s .or Santa Ana, who bid a range ol from $35,000 to $40,000 to plan the parks system and ballot measu"; Rtenation· Land Planners ·of Placentia, estimated. the planning project would cost the city $20,000, and Rlbefe and Sue of Irvine, who bid a ranfie of costs from $33,000 to $47 ,000 for the package. Paul Brady, city community services ·director. said today that dependin g on resolu tion of "negotiable. items" in the prop;os:als, the"iina1-choice of consultants is expected t51 be \vithin the $30,000 to -$40,000 range. Thi s would appear to preclude choice <>f the Placentia firm 'vbich Com· missioner Holt said. "seemed to offe r the most creativity in their approach to parks planning." 1 Sandy Freud also liked the Placentia finn's proposal and said, "l was ~most impressed. The most outsJ<t.~g feature was the finn's crentivitY and their im· aginative approach ~o parks." Of the three, Recreation Land_ Planners was the only nrm whit:h indicated it would be able to prepare' a bond issue · package--ancLparks plao-ln~time-f~r the November general election. The others indicated they JVould . need more 1\tme to prepare specific parks boi'Kls prOJ>O$als to place before voters. "We would like to be as specifitns IS.. PARKS, Pa(t ti to_go_for," .He.nry__Qu.igley s.aid_today .. a.d'"- dlng he fa vors tne-earliest possible date and prefers a Noveml>er ·General Elec· tion vote on the parks bonds. Quigley said he agreed to a switCh Or City Council meetings Crom Thursday to Wednesday of this week so the matter could be added to the agenda . On the assurance of Mayor John Burton that the parks matter <:0uld be. added to the council 's study sessiOl'I deli.berations of the city budget for 1973-- 74,· Quigley agree_d to the meeting change. The city council will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in city hall , Irvi ne Town Center, 4201 Campus Drive. Community services commissioners - will make their fin al selection of parks consultants Monday evening, in city' hall. Their final reommendation goes to the City Council which again meets on June 12, next Tuesday. Councilman Q~igley is a member or , the parks bonds steering committee assigned to coordinate scheduling for the bond issue under a council motion which set up the group to "speed up" proc· essing of the bond measure preparation. While Quigley sa id he believes "we need to have a _plan to show voters, t · dOil'ttllmlf ilOuglif lo be-so Specific as to tie the city in knots. It would be fooli sh to write into the ballot measure speci fics so fine it would be impossi ble to build a SO- .meter swimming pool instead or a 25- meter pool, if that's what the people wanted," he said. ' The language or th e bond measure should be broad and the consultants in cooperation with the general plan con· sultants should prepare a more precise plan for spending the bonds, Quigley ot>ser\'ed. · · "If the Council tlien were to make'. wholesale changes in the way the bond (Ste DEADLINE, Page !) Orange Cealit It'll be fair on \Vednesday, fol· lowing th~ usual-low clouds in the 1horning hours. Highs of 65 at the :::J.h~:u ro:g~~ t~~w 70s in-, INSIDE T ODAY The·re's n new oa·n&e i n Wath· ington. Ever hear of the· Long· S po n (J·F'cnig.I-Jong Kong.Ping Pong-Ding Dong·B·ltl? Sec story. Page 12. L.M ••• .,. ·II C1llftrflll l CllttH.i.d U.• Cl!ftlct .,u Cttttwt"' 0.fll Nltkn I ac11'81M1 Pttl I a11ttrlllMNllt l•U ""'"" 1 .. 11 lltr 9'lt •ten I. N HfrtM:IM 1' "'"' 1.tl'ldlrl l> • I" S.rl'kt t Me'lltl 11 ,Ml,1111•1 IJ-"411 • N1rle-ll11 Hlwt 4 OrlflM ''""' ~. SHt!I 1•1• srou M.trll•t• .... f9'1Y1lltn 11 .,.....,. 11 w-·~ N ... l>tS W..-lcl N-I ... • • .• 2 ~ILV PILDI JS Tutsday June S, 1973 Trttstees Assailed School Boundary Decision Slated Hy JAN \\10RTlt Clemente. Many or them were students 01 '~• O•ll~ io1101 51•1f at San Clemente bc Core Dann Hills ope11-Evefyone from a weeping student \Vho ed in January. doesn't wii.nl to be separated fro1n her '.l'he ~uodarr .discussion ca u ll~-_;.;.;~g rothffs o--tn rate .!the•...---.•li''iaslOOard meeUngbecause more whose sophomore daughter has already area is destined for housing developments attended four high schools assailed in the Dana Hills atlendance area than in Capistrano Unified School D l s t r i c t the San Clemente area. The decision "'as trustees Monday night. postponed to Monday night .. So the board made lhe one decision Trustees we re told that if boundaries regardi ng high school attendance areas were left the same. Dana Hills High , that will directly affect noni of those u•hich opened in January, will be at more present at the meeting. than capacity next year and will · In the current Dana Hills High School skyrocket to 2,IKIO ~·ithin five years. Both area, only students moving into as-yet high schools were'built to accommodate unfinished homes in Mission Viejo east or some 1,800 students. l\larguerlte Parkway and north of Oso The proposal accepted Monday night Parkway will go to San Clemente High \VSS the original recommendation of School next year. Truman Benedict, d is trict superin· Other Mission Viejo· students in the tendent. pana Hills area may opt to attend San A counter-proposal by Board Pre!ident Frotn P119e 1 TRIPLE ... food services at night to roak.e the pro- gram 'nlOre attractive. ·Trustee pennis Smith .said an everiing dinner service, similar to the traditional lunch service, might be particularly useful to students from the El Toro area, "'ho would be att end ing the afternoon session at .!\fission Viejo High School. "For many of them, it would be just impossible to go all the way home and then con1e back for the evening pro- gram," Smith aid . "The matter of ~he students are .going to eat d.inner is a.inly important if we are serious a this. evening op- portunity," he added. Trustee George Henry suggested "\Vhy not make the offer and see how heavy the response is?" Henry later suggested a student survey to determine in advance what the demand might be. The other three trustees spoke in op- position to an evening food service. ho"·ever. "I'd hate to see the El Toro merchants made because all the kids were staying at the high school to cal dinner ," said Trustee Joseph Pet~rson Jr. "I live in El Toro," he added. '·and my kids will be coming home to eat whether there's a food service or not. They can go back to school after that if they want to.'' Trustee Smith persisted in his support for an evening (ood service. however, arguing that many community groups use the high school at night and the food -,· service might be helpful to them as well as to students. The disc ussion ended when Boa1'C.I President Chester Briner a s k e d Superintendent 7.ogg to check parent groups and the hlgh schOOI principals for their reaction to the idea for an evening food service. From Pagel PARKS ... .J possible," l\1rs. Miller said, "Bonds pass because they are specific. Voters don 't want to buy a pig in poke," the chairman said. Brady added he feels the spe<:Uic bond package \\'ould preven t the city from making changes in the parks plan if the ci ty's general plan -to be adopted in December -required changes. Brady suggested he feels the city general plan should be ad~ted . prior ~o placing the pa rks bond iss ue on tJle ballot. Mrs. 'Miller sa id she reels most com· missioners agree "'ith this vie\\'. The chosen consult ant~ will prepare schematic drawings of pa_rk faci lltles, models of buildings to be plac.ed in parks and a _plan or locations to detennine the amount of land to be purchased by what is now estimated to be a $2() million bond issue. While expected to be "flexi ble" Brady said, the proPQSal would "pinpoint amenities'' sufficiently to make it dif. ficulL for the city to change them later. " DAILY PILOT Tne 0••"'19 to.JI DAILY l"ILOT, •!!h wf11~~ Is ~lllt'CI !P>e News·P•fll, 11 PUblltlled ,, • ltw 0••,,.,. CN11 Plllllls~lnt Compt"f. $tpl • •1 .. edlllott1 ••• llUblfl~N. MOf'ld11 Ill""""' Frkf1y, for Co1t1 Mew. N1wp0rl lle1ch, ""'"!l""toro Bnctvf:o.."ttln Y•ll•r. L•~unf ... Ch, t•~lntl~1dcllebllc~ 1m Sin Cll....,,t1f kn Jw1n C•~l1Tr1no. A 1l1l9ll r"eOIOntl tdllioll I• PUbll•l!ed S••u•••r1 l'nd Svndtft. Tiie PfinCIPlll 1>Ull!l1nlng "l1nt Is •! .UO Wfll ''' Str1er, (01!1 Mew, C~ll!grnlf, tl•U. Rob•rt N. W,1, "•nlot1t11 •NI P1111111~1r J.cl, R. Cwrl•v Vice ~"ftllll"'' 111111 Gtntril M•ne9ro Thorn11 IC•1•il Elllror lhorn11 A. Mu•phint Mlll•OlflO EdlhH Ch..t11 H. Loot .ltich •r4 '· N1U .A1o&ltll"' M•llffllno EdHon Offk" CMll Mn1: Ull Wt$! .. , Slrlll NIWl!Orl &NCfl: )W NfWPtrl ftov ltw1rt L•9""41 8Hc~; 'n l"ortn ..,......,. ,M111111nttoro lltKl'I: 11•1s llHcti aou1tY1r1 S.... ClelMf'lfl JOS Hort~ El (•"llfto Rt1I , .. .,.._ 17141 '42-4121 C"-tfle4 • ._,....., MJ-1671 S-. C~ AM ..,•m.t"'11 , ........ 492-4420 Bob Hurst that all Mission Viejo students now in the Dana ~)ills area be sent to San Clemente High was strongly opposed by parents present. ,;What we're essentially doing is postponing our decision one year." Hurst Saia.~ "As it i§'. Dana Hills will be at capacity next September." In the discussion over Hurst's pro- posals. parents objected to the fact that some families \vould have students at tv.·o diffe rent high schools with 12 to If>. mile distances to each of them . · Trustee \Villi am Enq uist said he dldn't feel family units should be broken. But San Clemente High senior Charles Dargan . a student representative to th e board, said he and his brother. separated by the new Dana Hills High, enjoyed at- tending different schools. Retiririg Trustee Fred Newhart pointed out thal regardless of what the district does now, a new high school will be need- ed within three years. ln that case, some studertt! may have to be mov~d again, he said. "Maybe it's more important now that we allow students to finish their four years at one .school, even if·it Is cro\Yd· ed." Newhart said . · Parents and students s u pp or t c d Newhart's point, saying the emotional needs of students to have continuity in sports, friendships, and other activities \\·ere mbrc important than crov1din g. . A representative of the Capistrano Unified Educator's Association . said teachers favored ba lancing the school 's at lendence as much as possible in the in- terest of quality education. "Teachers face the same problems of allegiance that students do,'' the representative .said. "but you can rest assured that your child will have a better chance i11 equally-balanced schools." From Pagel NO BAIL ... Rollo immediately confessed they were hired to dispose of Alfred Fehling of Yorba Lindi, one of a nuniber of plain- liffs in civil actions filed during the past two years against a vending machine company of which Remington is presi- dent. Green indicated in the court room l\·lon- day that the two men wilh Rollo were Bobby Joe Hart and Jack He"'itl. Both men are held in custody and wil! be used, the prosecution states, as witnesses against Remington and, if necessary, Rollo. Green also noted that 1 information given to him by the district arto·mey's of- fice indicated that his client was charged with Rollo and 10 "John Does" of con- spiring to kill Ned Delancy. a key wi tness against Remington in a civil trial schedul~ to start July 16. • Remington is pres ident of Cal Vend ~tanufacturing Company, a Fullerton coflce·rn Ufat-ls no longe r In business. He ana several other executives in the operation have been named with their co mpany as defendants In five civil ac- tions. It is alleged that threats made by Remington led one plaintiff to settle his case fo r far less than it "'as "'Orth and led another plai ntiff lo drop his action. Dis1ric1 auorney's investigators claim that taped sta tements in their possession support their ctain1 that the three men allegedly hired by Remington were on their "'ay fo Fehling's 'Yorba Linda home when th ey v.-·erc halted for the lraffic in- ·rraction. -•-Jt is only by chance that v.-·e do not have a murder .. co1nplai nt here today," ~frs. Scars laid Judge Tho1nson . Reds Curtaile<l ·Most POW Mail NE\V ORLEANS I AP) -The top State De'partment expert on prisoner Of \var maflers says that only a small percen- tage of the thousands of letters and packages sent to the American prisoners of war in Vietnam ever reached the prisoners. (lf>T•lllll, HTJ, ~llOt Co.it "llbll1M/lt ~"''" N1 Mwt .... ltt, l!""l<'•llto!I, "l10tl1t IN/ltr or ..,w1r1i..,,,..,11 flt,.111 mtf bt r!IPAll«f!I •llllout ._i.1 lltt· "1411lon ef COCl'/flllilll ·~·· Frank A. Sievens, special assistant la Secretary of State William P. Rogers, here Afonday said that most An1erlcan prisoners captur<!d Jn South Vietnam or Laos ''did not receive or send a single letter during the entire lime or their cap--~·-tivtty~· Sf(Mf (llU etllfft IP<llf 11 COlll MeY, C•llfff11I•. "'""'lllfltll er., uorrlf, u .•1 llWttlll¥1 llW 11'1•11 U.IS MO<!llll'l'J "'1Nllr¥ *"l"'tlofll• U,6.1 -.ltllr, , ' He added: 1 "And not just Americans. Olher11, too, such as two West German nursc1. ty,ro Canadians and two Fiiipinos. Their governments tri ed repcatediy i hrough ' the. years to obtain word of them ." • All Tliose Autoniobiles1 and ~dded that 14 million cars would be prodoced in the U.S. this year-at which the Chinese leader blinked in an1azen1ent . Journalists fro1n Communisl China watch the ~pro­ duction line of Chicago's Ford plant. ';Has auto pro- ductio n increased?" the leader of the grouR (not shown) asked. A Ford e1nploye responded, 'Yes," -'--~-'-~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-. Dru1ik Suspect Blanies Slioes llfEMPHIS. Tenn . <U PI ) Arthur Perry Jr .. 51, v.-·as picked up an a. dti.ink· eharge and appeare.d before City Court Judge Joseph McCartie _ Monday wearing ne\v brown and white shoes with l\YO- inch heels. "I was not drunk ," he told the judge. "This pair of shoes was new to me and I was just trying them on. "I was kind of weavin g beca.::;c I hit a rock and it was hard \\•alking in them ." Said Judge McCartie : "'Any n1an who comes up here wi1h that kind of story deserves a break.'' ''Case dismissed .·· Open Space Plan Rapped as Move For Development Trustees at CUSD Stay With Decision on Cuts Gapi st rano Unified School District trustees reconsidered a ·full budget of $78,000 for summer sc hool l\1onday night but decided to stick with their original decis ion' ta slice out $16,000. Superintendent Truman Benedict sug. gested the reconsideration: He sa id because of provisions of state financing regulation s, especially Senate Bill 90, cutting the budget also reduces income. L:nder SB 90, school d,islricts can tax u1> to a certain amount per student. In the Capo district , the ceiling is $960 per student. As lhe average daily attendance (1\DA) goes up, the ceiling goes up. From Pagel SOVIETS, .. ,. the westward journey. ' If Brezhnev indeed travels to the South Coast he will be the most powerful of Ho"·ever, costs per student in the sum- mer session are about hair costs of the regular session. Summer .school in- creases the ADA , 11nd the distric t's tax· ing capacity. but costs it half as much, Benedict said . Trustees pointed out that the in- crease, regardless of ttie income ad- vantages to the district, still comes from the local taxpayers. - "I just think we should tlold the llne -0n lax es u·here v"'e can,'' -'trustee William Enquist said. 1 • Bob Hurst, president of the board, sup- ported the increase. He said the ensuing tax hike -30 cents more per year on a $4-0.000 house -was minimal. "Let's remember this -the taxpayers in this district have paid one or the lowest lhree rates for schools in Orange County," he said. From Pagel Orange County 's proposed open space foreign dignitaries ever to visit the DEADLINE. plan was rapped as "nothin .:; more than a Orange Coast. • • development proposal" before the Since Nixon established th e Western funds voters approve are spent _ such Laguna Beach Planning Commission White House he has played host to now· as moving a pool or park totally out of a Monday night. retired Japanese Premiere Eisaku Sato neighborhood -then I think we could ex· James W. Dilley, presidenl of the and South Vietnamese President Nguyen peel some recalls.'' Laguna Greenbelt Inc., citing a nu mber Van Thieu. Quigley fa vors the early date for the ballot measure because it "wld provide of passages from the final open space The official reason for Brezhnev·s trip at least an interim parks and open space report, concluded: to the U.S. is based in protocol . general plan element as many as two "You see, there is a whole team up there which has affirmed this area is The visit will be a return gesture stem-months earlier than presenUy expected open to residential and compatible com-ming from Nixon's trip to the Soviet under the general planning deadline schedule. The general plan must be mercial development." Union where he hammered out trade adopted by Dee. 2a, this year. Planning commissioners , struggling lo agreements with the leaders there. ·"If a parks bond issue is going on the • ·chemical No Dru1ge1~, Says EPA I WASHINGTON I A P ) Th< Environmental Protection Agency said today that nit rogen dioxide is not {I widespread air pollution problem after all an'tt that-:ri lO percenhedUctlQff"'Of nitrogen oxides in auto emissions is not necessary. EPA said the national air quality stand- ard tor nitrogen diox ide is still· needed to protect public heullh, but the problem is not a:s widespread as once believed. EPA said the nitrogen dioxide levels \rere overestimated earlier because of the peculiarities of th~ measuremen~ method which had been used . Acting EPA Administrator Robert Fri told a net.-s conference, however, that the agency was· not ready yet to recommend changes in the present·auto emission Jaw. Fri said he must decide by J uly 29 whether to grant a one--year extension of ' the 90 percent iiltrogen oxide reduction requirement , with.In' the fram1;work of existing la"'· · He said that EPA . wi lh the new in- formation presented in forthcoming hear- ings on the extension requestrand \Yith further studx of its own, w.ould be in a -bCtfei' posilio'irtO make recommendations: to Congress by Sept.ember. The agency bgan reassessing ni trogen dioxide levels a year ago and it reported April 17 that the problem seemed tess serious than supposed and that the auto emission standards appeared unneces- sarily tough. ' Under the Cleo.n Air Act of 1970 a utomobile emissions of nitrogen oxides 1nust be reduced 90 percent by 1976. . Ai. present, auto emissions are limited to 3.1 gra~ mile o£ !litrog_en oxide aild~·ou.ld Jiave l o f8llfo 0.4 grams per mile in. vehicles sold -in 1976 and therea·fter. But EPA said only three cities -Los Angeles, Chicago and Baltimore -would exceed the' national nitrogen oxide stand- ards by 1977 if the present 3.1-gram standard Is retained. The EPA noted that this did not take into account further nitrogen oxide reductions through other measure such as transportation controls and control · from other sources. The agency said that exlreniely strin- gent control of auto emissions .,.·ould be necessary only in Los Angeles to meet the nitrogen dioxide standard. Cable Misliap Cazises Blackout A malfunction in an underground c.able along a section or a Laguna Niguel in· dustrial complex sparked the major blackout which hit large segments of the community ~londay n1oming. Nearly all of Lagiina Niguel and la rge parts of southerly Mission Vi ejo were af· (ected by lhe outage which oceurred shortly before IO a.m .• said spokesmen for San Diego Gas and Electric Com· pany. The problem erupted, along a section of Camino Capistrano in Niguel <1nd for about an hour thousands of households and businesses were "·ithout power. At 11·:0$ all but !ix COMections were restored. The remaining hal f dozen were finally restored about 2 p.m, utility aides said. develop a letter either in support of or op-The only other Russian official ever to November ballot." Quigley said, "we position to the county plan, appeared l'isit the Orange Coast was Soviet would have in hand in August or Sep-Rogers, Chinese ~feet surprised at the Greenbelt blast. Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin, who ar-!ember a fairly specific plan for parks Faced with a \Vednesday deadline to rived last year for several days of in-whi ch may or may not n1atch the general file a letter with the Cily Council ex. formal discussions. plan consultan ts' suggestions." WASHINGTON (UPI) -Ambassador pressing the city's feelings, Planning During' that trip the Russian was Presently the ci ty has no master plan Huang Chen , head of China's new liaison .CO mi · Chairman Joh hi Do 11 mission in WQshington, held his flrst of-~ m ssion . 1 n 1 · c we treated to some typical Orange Coast of parks and hen ce nO TeiaT tools to te· flcial meeting with Secrerary of State said he would meet with oca greenbelt dining. quire dcd1"ca tion by developers of any \\'Ill" t t t d k t t t 1am P. Rogers Monday . They con -suppor ers 0 ry an wor ou a s a e· ~le stepped out for some Mexican food amounts of public park land other than r d r '" · ment of Laguna's attitudes. 1 erre or "" minutes in Roger~· Stale "It i·Ust 'did .not say what I'd hoped it at a restaurant in San Juan Ca pistrano the standards emp oyed by the coupty of Department offtce, then had -Junch with his "host" -Henry Kissinger. Orange. to_gether. would say," commented Commissioner 1--,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. Roge r Lanphear. "It cou ld be the begin- ning of the end of open space in this area." "This area" roug h I y encompasses lands within Aliso. \Vood, El Toro, Laguna, l\loro and Emerald canyons, he said . · Lanphear, a former member of the Greenbelt Board of Directors, said recreation, as suggested by the county planning staff. \vas not an t.pprppriate use of open space around Laguna. _.:."Th is rcporJ-should not be to change the use of the lands other than historic uses -namely a cattle ranch. These THE NAME OF THE GAME ' • • • THERE IS A COMMON PRACTICE OF PRIVATE LABELING le:nd!f'C&n::be used--fcr-grarini;.~dtan-1-+----- IN THE CARPET .INDUST~Y: LARGE DEPARTMENT STORES, CHAIN - -~-.,, T.!OlfITT~ND.£~IMi:;TCRS-A l.NEW-<llAC~HA'<lli·fl(;f+l'lGUS.­ NAMES ON THE SAMPLES SO THAT THE CUSTOMERS CANNOT EASILY SHOP BRAND ~AME PRICES. phea_r... , McDowell said the rift between the Orange eoUnty Planning Department and !he Gr.eenbelt was a result of varying degrees of "purist" thought regarding open space. The county's proposal calls tor the 10,000 acre verdant belt around LagMna Beacti to Be preserved but makes allmvances for cgntrolled de velopment based on the findings or resource in· ven tor les. Dilley satd the local officials should not 'be afraid to "make up their minds'' for direct purchase or open space lands around lhe city. I lie said..';)easeback'' revenues from the lands would cover all cosl3 or acquisition. I The long-time Greenbelt leader also said the city and county should undertake a program of '"reSource retfieval" in- cluding the re-purchase of "vital resource land that has fallen to develop- men t." Liberian Wclcon1cd CUSTOMERS SHOPPING AT OUR STORE FIND THE PRICE OF EACH QUALITY PROMINENTLY FEATURED ON THE SAMeLE BOOK, BECAUSE WE ARE COMPETITIVE. ALSO, BECAUSE WE FEEL THE CUSTOMER HAS A RIGHT TO KN OW WHAT HE IS BUYING,"WE NEVER CHANGE THE NAME ON A SAMPLE BOOK. THE NAME OF THE GAME IS INTEGRITY. IN THI HAl:IOl AllA SIN.Cl ltl7_ ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES } 663 Piacentla A••· COSTA MESA ; ' WASHI NGTON (UPI) .= Liberian Presidem WIUlam R. Tolbert received a wnrm wtlcome from President Nixon at the White House today. 646-4838 ' Moo. • Th1rs. t te S:J : M. t te t: s.ii. f ':JO te I ( ' I , I • ' I I ' ' ' •VOL. 66, NO. 156, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES El ro itwai s --' ....---By JOUN-VAtTERZA--So\lietdeJegal1 n DU y order·s of !trlc( Of !he c..llY l'llet SI.., • A So,·1 t al 1· 1 d .1b 1 f secrecy about the event at El Toro have e r111er a en w1 ons o . .. communications gear and an estimated caused base spokesmen to issue a no 50 technicians was scheduled to arrive comment" on the widespread reporLs. today at the El Toto Marine Corps Air The visit ~y Brethnev has been men- Station -1fle advance guard for a possi-lioned several times by White House ble major visit to the Orange Coast by spokesmen but the presence of the Soviet Icade~ Leon id .. ~rezhnev. massive communications operation today ~era! lugh ly r.:11ablc sour ces have reinforces speculation thnt Br~zhnev will reported the impending •arrival of tpe address the ApieFican peo~le on network- -Attorney's Bail Nixed -By Judge No'W Maybe He Feels Better ... Problems with the telephone company arc nothing to laugh about and somewhere in lfuntington Beach there's , a man who Isn't laughing. ·The unldenlified, customer wenl to tho offices of Genert1l Telephone at 73$2 Slater Ave. apparently to straighten .out some problem he was hiving. Unfortunately, he arrived 10 ml.nut.es after the ollil;~S had closed for the day. a lac: th•l .. rlised-hlmr .._dlilfl-lo·lllo- cashi cr who was In the office. • ' When he wa'!i: unable to R•l n entrance to the office the [ru stratcd phone user !!mashed his hand into the. thick platt 1_., __ ala_l!l_ wlpdow, l.Oving • fist-size hole. ·rhcn he stalked off. I ) < • • Today's Fl••I N.Y . Stocks ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JUN E 5, 1973 l TEN CENTS rezhnev s :Aclvan ce television from SOU h..:.or8ngt: st-:- Brezhnev and President Nixon plan the main portion of lheir talks on mututal matters or diplomatic relations, trade alld other items on June US either at the White House or the Presidential retreat at Camp David. Soon afterwards Nixon spokesman said, ,t}Je two leaders will fly west for lhe stopover at the Houston Space Center '· a oo-then another roun<J"'"O ta Casa Pacifica in San Clemente. The White House has given no exa ct times or dates for the schedule during the westward journey. If Brezhnev indeed travels lo the South Coast he will be the n1o·st pawerful of foreign dignitaries ever to visit the Orange Coast. Since Nixon established the \Vcstcrn \Vhite ·House he has played host to !JO"'- -retfredJapanese Prem1ere Elsaku S<lt'O and South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu. Th(" official reason for Brezhnev's trip to the U.S. is based in protocol. The visit ·will be a return gesture stem· 1ning from Nixon's trip to the Soviet Union where he hammered out trade agreements with the leaders there. The only other Russian official ever to V1slt the Orange~co:a-as Sovie Ambassador Analol;'.)>obrynin, \vho ar· rived la st year for several days of in- form al disc.ussions. Duriri,i that trip the Russian was treated to some typical Orange Coast dining. _ He stepped out for some ~1exican food at a rcstauranl in San Juan Capistrano \Vith his "host" -1-lenry Kissinge r. \ " ' Meter Tab Slice~d • ' Surfers Win, But Cut Delayed to Aug. 2 ' By TERRY COVILLE Of Ille D1l1Y ,ilet Stiff The youth_olsurf city won their second . victory Monday night as city councilmen agreed to reduce the parking meter charge alortg 1he Bolsa Chica bluffs in Huntington Beach. On a motion from Councilman Jack Green, the city's leaders voted 6-1 to lower ·the rate from 25-cents-per-hour to !().cents-per-hour on P acific Coast Highway from Golden \Vest Street to Bolsa Chicii State Beach: Beach Woman Found Guilty In Fee Theft SEACLIFF: Approved a series of zone changes which consOJidate 90 acres of land around the Huntington Seacliff Golf Course into one R·2 (medium density} planned community. APARTMENTS: Continued to J\Ule 18 a hearing on two code amendments which woul<reduee by 30 percent potenUa l apartment construction in ocean- ortenled ariu, REVENIJE SHARING: Ordered the cuy· staff lo lake proposed capital equipment purcbuea out of the federal reVenue sharing ~et and p.il them back In the regul~r city budge!. ' cirY YARD: Awarded a $893,640 contract to Julian-Waterfield for COD· struc:tlon of_ the second phase of the city equipment yard. JONE.S: reseoled a plaque to '"Ruth Jone~ In honor (If her late husband. PJ1ul JQrtes_. who serVed 13 years as city clerk. r..a·s1 month. councilmen agreed to make the summer surfing laws more flexil>le along the city beach. As on two. previoll$ occasions, a large crowd or young surfers sat quietly through a. Jong council session before their spokesmen presented their ca9e. The surfers "''ere disappoint~d to team, hov.•ever, ... the meter change probably . could not. take effect until Aug. 2 because or the time it takes to pass a ci- ty ordinance. Rus Calisch, editor of· International Surfing ~lagazine, com plained about the sanie point in the surfing rule. "We've lost the effectiveness of haU the summer," Calisch said. "That (Aug. 2)1 is three full months after our presen- tation." "Perhaps "'e delayed too long on the solution," Matney observed. City Attorney Don ijonfa said neither the flexible surfing law (lifeguards will decide when surfing is allowed) nor the emergency lav<'s. Such a designation (See l\fETERS, Page 21 Delayed Again District Budget Still Up i11 Air OCficials in the Huntington Beach City (e lementary) School District are begin- ning to wonder if their proposed $8.6 million budget 'for lhe 1973-'H ftscal year will-ever-be reviewed by trustees. · Tonight's schedult;d meeting to discuss~ the budget was postponed this mornins, after three trustees reported they are goil;lg to attend a dinner in their houo_r. It marks the third time the budget discussion has been put off. ·"\Ve'll probably ~ve to get together some Saturday momifig if we're going to meet our · deadlines," said Charles· Palmer, deputy superintendent Io r business. . Tonight's dinner is being held by "the Cal ifornia Teachers Association in Santa Ana to honor recently elected trustees. Board members Dale Bush, Jack Clapp and Steve Holden, all re~lected in the ' April school elections, c3lled lbe tilstricl office this ntonUng and said they plan to attend the dianer, Palmer said. ;rrustee_Orville HllJlSC!!I told Palmer yesterday that he would be out cl. town Qurin& tonight's scheduled meeting, -aod President I..culs DaHarb said be may be called to work tonight. He is an airline pilot. Trustees had hoped to discuss the budget last \\'Cek, but failed when only DaHarb and Bush showed up. At least three -trustees must be present for a ineeting. The budget was on the trustees' agenda t~·o weeks ago, but was not d.i~sed because board members said they were too tired to review it. Another budget meeting has not yet been set. Pa1mer said. Councilmen to _Rezone • Parcel for Community Elma Rohidou.x Rites Wednesday • Funeral servi ces will be held Wed· nesday for Elma V. Robidoux. a resident of Huntington Beach for 42 years, who died Sunday. She was 55. Her late husband , Howard, wu eleded chlel of police in ·Huntington Beach in 1962 and died in office two years la.let. Mrs. Robidoux, who lived at 1020 Main Weather It'll be fair_ on Wednesda~. fol· loWifillhe usual low clouds in lhe morning hours. Highs of 65 at the beaches will rise to the \ow 70s in- land. I..cws tonight 55-M . INSIDE TODAY There 's a new game in WO.Th· i11gton. Euer hear of tht Long-s po n g.Fcmg.Hotlg Kongo.Ping Pong-Ding Do11g-Bill? Set ,itorg, Page 12. St., was a member of the Huntbi«t<m L.M. ,..,.. ·•• Beach WoLnen's Club and the Emble1n ~=~= 2s.,: •• u,.,rq • Mt¥1ft It Club. .. C•ml<• _ 11 Services 'viii be tlClJ at 2 p.m. Wed· = .... ~,rc.. 2! nesday at Smith's Chapel. Burial will ::~~.~~:,• , .. 1t follow at Westminster MerncMial Park. "'"•II(• 1t.11 She Is survived by her brother, James ::.:-...:•-" •· ~ M111\t.. ........ • NtlMMll Ntw' ~ Ot-t11" (fl,!llty • s_... 1+.11 Stt>U M•rtlfft ~ Ttle'lltlfll II TllMl'ftr U WNNll'i Ntw• 1).11 WffNI ..... t • • Shaffer of Santa Ana. three nephews and •• La1111er1 u two nieces. ------>._-_-_-_-_~_ ------..,-;----! -·- ·-• I \ T Z O~LY PILOT H ,..,..., J..,. 5, 197) - Longliairs AUl Police Cause l'l e• P,,.e J NO BAIL ... 'Gemstone' Link Told ' .,.1m1 llomin.... •od, ({ noct!l lfl', Rollo. ~Magrutkr Paid Bilt,-Ltddy Aide S-wears G...n lloo llOltd !bit lnlormaUon MAYWOOD (UPI) -Looi· 1iV111~1WI-.... the Clisliicl~t -y's-or-hllr<d you!bJ In blue June ho"" ' ., •-pickellng the city hall slnoe fice iodklllad tblt bis dlent w s c:harged ~· will> Rollo and l~ "John " of con-~~~~1~e;:~ndlng an cod to police sptrtnc to kill Ned 0.LaDC)', a key Maltreatmtnt or police, that i1. "''ltneu a,alalt Remlncton in a civil trial They fomied a group to pressure scheduled to ltart July te. the r..tay'i''ood City Council ot Remington ls presktent or ca1 Vend establish ii pension fund for ~ianufacturlng Company, a Fullerton police men. The city's police cur· concern that ts no longer In buslness. He reotly arc not entitled to pensions. and several other executive~ In 1he lr-,,-1..L:"l!elp.,he ll!rlirbllle. 1ie-.,.,..-~1-""flero ;.,,_have becrniamed-wltlrthel • .-r he helps you," read one picket algn. company as defendants in five elvil ac- tions. ' First Meeting On Unification Set Wednesdav ,/ The proposed creation of five unified school districts in West Orange County will be discussed Wednesday morning' at • the: first joint meeting of superintendents from each of the districts. It is alleged that threat! made by Remington 'led one plaintiff to settle hl.1 ca se for far less than It wa s "''orth and led anOthe.r.-plaintiff to droP hi s action. District a.Uorney's investigators claim that taped statements in their possession support their claim that the three men allegedly hired by Remington were on their Way to Fehling's Yorba Linda home \\'hen they were halted ror the traffic in- fraction. . "It is onJy by chance that "'e do not have a murder complaint here loday," 1'.1rs. Sears told Judge ThoJDSOn. WASHINGTON (UP!) -W1terpte consp1..-G, Gordon Uddy's lormef secretary testified today that Jeb Stuart ~tagruder -after the \\1atcrgate break· in -authorized payment of a bill for the "Gemstone" stationery on wh ich she typed the logs or tapped telephone con- vtrsattons. It was the first time that the name or Magruder, "'ho \\'as President Ni~on's deputy campaign manager, was cited directly ln 1he Senate committee's public hearings into the \\1atergate break-£n-and olher political espionage during the 1972 presidential campaign. Unanimously brushing off a request by the govemnient's special prosecutor that the public hearings be postponed in the name or justice. the committee ques- tioned Sally Jackson Harmony, Liddy's former secretary, about "clandestine" activities carried out in Nixon's re-el ec- tion campaign. r-.trs. Ha!'D}OllY testified that after the June 17 \Vatergate break-in, a bill came to~ the Committee for the Re-election of the President fdr the "Gemstone" sta· tionery that · she sa id Liddy ordered printed . Because Liddy already left the com- mittee undtr the cloud of Watera•te. ''I .,.. took tbe 'but for Gemstone to Mapuder." merce secretary~esignAte In April at the Atrs. lfarmony uld. "Lie lMagrudtr) ·height of V.'atergate di.sclosures. autbo~h.ed payment ~ 11.A. P°'t Mrs. 1-larmony. who 5till works for Nlx- Assoc1ates, and signed Jeb S. Mag~r on's Inaugural Committee s a Id to ,it." . . . '-.Magruder called her from the Commerce Mrs. ~armony said she then d15posed Department this spring and told her he of the-b!ll-4n"'8" ----Sssured'Tob1i'N:-Mitclle1 , 1txon·1--ronner Pressed by Sen . Howard H. Ba~er Jr. campaign manager, that ''he (Mitchell) (R-Tenn.) as to why she gave the im'Olce would not have anything to worry about to 1\1agruder Instead of to the office from your testlmooy." . manager,. Mrs. Hannony sa~. •41 thoug~t " · . he \\'OUid know more 3bout 1t." She ~1<1:· 1 knew nothing to impl1c?-te M~. she could not elaborate. -· l\lltchell," 1\trs. Harmony testified . "l Asked later why she shredded the ~aid J \vas ~.~ware of any v.·ay I could Gemstone invoice, ?i.irs. Harmony '8id tmpllcale him. ~iagruder asked her to do It. Meanwhile, a former aide in Nixon's "fl.tr. 1\lagruder asked me to destroy re-eleclion campaign, told Senate Water· It," she said. "He didn't ha ve. to tell me g_ate investigators today that he put docu- \.\'hy." ments labeled "Gemstone" -the code '"Then I'd like to know why '' Bak~r lvord for political espionage papers - said. ' into a file intended ror use at a meeting "Because ' Mr. Liddy had been \Vith ifltchell: . . . discharged from the committee; because ff;obert Reisner, once .admuu.sJrat!on it had the word Gemstone on it and 1 was· asststant to ~fagruder, said that during familiar with Gem stone and the way I -t_he week pr.iol" to the June 17 break:in had used it ," Mrs. Harmony replied. "I he was .~elp,ing. prep~;e a Magrud~r file assumed that a lot of members of the lebeled A-1r. IJ\.11tchell which he said con- committee were not aware of it." tained "things , Mag~er wished to take l\1agruder reslgµed as assistant Com· up with l\fr,. M1t.ch~ll. . · Reisner, 1denhfymg a large man ila en- QUIZZED BY PROBERS Secretary Sally Harmony j New FBI Chief ; ., ' J. The meeting, the first or what may be a long series of \mlflcation talks, will be held at 8: 15 a.m. at the offices of1 the Huntington Beach City (elementary) School-Di&trict. "We won't take any fonnal aCtion ," said Charles Palmer, deputy superin· tendent for the district. "We're jttst gG- ing to sit down and get a sense of di- rection ." Two Hunting ton Women lnjt1red In Auto Crashes Coast Panel Rejects Plan velope marked "sen!Utive material" and a lettertiead code-named "Gemstone," said 1'.fagruder handed him such papers and he put them in the file . Mrs. Harmony, who appeared nervous during her testi mony and occasionally "'·rung her hands. said she did not kno\V the information Liddy ordered her lo type had come from bugged con· ''ersations at the Democratic party's na- tional headquarters in the \Vatergate. Hinted 'Soon~ By Richru·dson ' ,.. t 'nle districts include Fountain Valley, Westminster. Ocean \1iew, Seal Beach and the Huntin8;ton Beach city schools. All fall within the 52-square-mile Hun- tington Beach Union High School Dis- trict, which· would be dismantled if each of the five elementary districts unify. 1'\'0 Huntington Beach Y•omen injured in separate car accid ent s l\fonday arc reported in satisfactory condition today at Pacifica Hospital. Ida A. King, 67, of 18582 ?i.tain St. and Peggy Willis, 25, of 8126 Foxhall Drive are recover!.~ from injuries they receiv- ed in the separate crashes. For U11its Beacl1 Approved \VASHINGTON (UPI) -Attorney c:ene ral Ell iot L. Ric hardson says a permanent FBI director is expected to be named in lhe n1 ar future. 2 Code Clian ges Postponed Until Jun,e 18 Mee ti1i g No action Y.1as taken J\.tonday night on ~o city , coc;le changes which would reduce potential apartment construction by 30 percent in Huntington Beach ocean- oriented zones. Instead, city councilmen continued the public hearing on both items to lhe coun- cil's June 18 meeting. Several property owners in the au- dience protested that they had not had adequate time to prepare their opposition to the atric't planning steps. The measures would reduce the allowable density on apartment land in the octan zone, which wouJd make the dtflsiUes uniform throughout the city. The only exception to de nsity re- quirements v.·ould be the town lot neighborhood. The ocean zone covers the Bolsa Chica marshland, Huntington Harbour and all areas west of Beach Boulevard and south of ,Ellis Avenue. The town lots, bounded by Golden West Street, Pacific Coast Highway. Lake Street and Palm Avenue , lie within the ocean zone. CUrrent ocean zone density allows a developer to build 43.56 units per acre on R-4 (high density) land. The proposed new den sity .would allow 34.85 units per acre on R-4 land . Similar reductions would be required for R-3 and R-2 land. Boy, 17, Guilty ' In 3 Slayings Police said Mrs. Willis was hurt when the car she was driving eastbound on Atlanta Avenue collided with another at the intersection ·of Newland Street. The driver ol lhe other car, Susan Wilson, 17, of 21332 Yarmouth Lane, Huntington Beach; did not report any Injuries in the 11 a.m. mishap, police said. In the second accident, which occurred at about 3 p.m, Mrs. King's car collided \.\'ith one driven by Steven Peter Hamley, 18. or 8681 Oasis Ave., Westminster. The collision occurred as Mrs. King was pull- ing into northbound traffic on Main Street near Beach Boulevard from a driveway, aceording to police feports. Wounded Woma n Trust Fund Set A trust fund has been established to aid Adelaide Luna, director of Fountain Valley's Colonie Juarez Community Center. She has been hospitalized since ~lay 12 when she was critically ~·Ounded by an assailant. Contributions to the fund can be directed to the center or to the Bank of America at 17430 Brookhursl St. l\frs. Luna has been hospitalized at Fountain Valley Community Hospital since she was shot in the head, ann and back . The alleged assailant , R i c h a r d l\lorones. 46. of Santa Ana is being held on $100,000 bail following his arraignment on charges of assault with intent to com· mit murder. Reds Curtailed Most POW Mail A proposed 75-unit condominiwn proj- ect !hat met joning codes in HlDllington Beach was turned down Mooday by the South Coast Regional 1.one Conservation Commission, (Related story, Page 3.) The denial "without prejudice" came on a 6-3 vote. the Project at Algonquin and Pierce Streets needed .seven votes for approval. The request to build the '"''~story building near Huntington Harbour was by Lawrence Rink . His project. "The Huntington," didn 't have a cily building permit, but Rink contended he had a letter from the cily assuring him or one. Commission Executive Director Melvin Carpenter said the project would con- tribute to a density problem in the area and make the now~pen land "ir- retrievable" for future uses. Dale Ingrahm, representing Rink. arg'ued that city zoning would allow 91 units on the JSJ,000 square foot lot, while only 75 were proposed. Tennjs _courts~ and a putting green ~-.... Huntington Ma1 1 Satisfactory A fter AccUlent A Huntington Beach man who failed to n~gotiate a Coast Highway curve in Laguna Beach and smacked into a utility pole early today is reported in satisfac- tory condition at South Coast Community Hospital. Tony Licari of 816 Huntington St. was found. lying on the pavement after being thro\vn from his small foreign car when it·struck a signal light pole near Ocean Al'enue and South Coast Highway in Laguna. Licari celebrated his 20th birthday Monday and police reported the accident occurred shortly after midnight.· LOS ANGELES IAPl -Roberf Grigsby, 17. of Valencia has been found guilty or first-degree murder in the triple knife murder Nov. 27 of a Valencia housewife, her son and a neighbor boy. NEW ORLEANS (AP) -The top State Department expert on prisoner of war matters sp.ys that. only a small percen- tage of the thousands. of letters and packages sent to the American prisoners of war in Vletna!fl ever reached the prisoners. Frank A. Sieverts, special assistant to Secretary of State William P. · Rogers , here l\fonday said that most American prisoners captured in South Vietnam or Laos "did not receive or send a single letter during the entire lime of their cap- tivity." The Huntington man said he was feel· ing tired and the next thing he knew he \.\'as in Laguna and in pain lying on the pavement, said Police Capt. David Bro\\'D. Ire suffered a dislocated hip and facial cuts. The victim of a l\fonday morning ac- cident at Broadway and Acacia Drive, Philip Rainone, 39, of 1757 S. Coast Highway, was reported still in critical condition at the intensive care unit of South Coast Community Hospital. Mrs . Linda Greenwood, 24 , her son. Adrian, 3. and Scott Murphy , 3, were found slain in the bedroom of the Greenwood home. OIAN•I COAST Mii DAILY PILOT Tll9 er.,.. Coal! DAllV l'llOT, wll!I ..... ~le.II It Qmbl!>W.fftto N ...... l'r"IH. It iiu&tt.i.r W lllt Ori .... CH1t "llllliVlll!f (-II'(. I~· ~ tdltl6nT 'l'r'1 Slllllffl~fCI, MOl'MhY-Tllt'allllft_. FrlUy, lw 0.tt Mt11, NtwllOr'I .... di. HwiH114111Dn llt1Cft/,oo.m11ln V1H1y, llfUM 9-fl, lr¥1Ml54111dlt1Mc-tnd ltn C"'"-"1•/ IM J1i11n C.oi11r1nc1. A tlnol• ,.,,_, .. lllfn It publllhea llturdt'n 11'111 $\Ondtyl. 'Tiie 11"l11C14'o'I pullll ... lf!ll pll11I It ti ») WHI l•r ll!'ttl, C1111 Mt.., Ctllklrnlt , nlH. Jtoi.1tf N. W11d l'm1111111 11111 l'llllU.,,t r J1ck -· Cutl•'f' ~kt l'rfl!d"'t Ind Ge!'trt l Ml..-ftf Th°"''' 1e .... u Elll11t Thom11 A. Murphint M-fllll 'E••tor O ttlM H. i.... -ich1r4 '· Neu Altltl111I MIMflnt IElllllfl . Torry C. .. 1111 • Wttl °''"" c111111r EdllOf , ............. OM&. 17171 1111.h k1i11t¥1"' M1!1illt' A44'11u ,,0 . 111 790, 926.fl --~ ... dlr m l'trttt ... ,,.,.. C:..11 M1t.1: .U0 Wffl lly SlrMI "'""""" .....,., nu ,........,. """"'~ &t!f Cl-'11 JOJ Ntrffl I I Cltnlrlt llttl , ........ '''"' '42""Jl1 C'-HW A"-' ...... '42·167a ,,_,._. ....... C....,C.. I Uhl ........ Cwyrltillt, 1tn. 0n,,.. Coil1t ~11111 ~11r. No ""'' 1i.r1t1, · 1nwtr11......., .. l!Wltl """"' .,. lll•lfl'll••'"""" titnln _, ... ~.. "'"""' IMC.Ill "" f'll••ltrl .. CWYflllll ..... lfc:oroC ( .... ---Hltl ti C•tt MfN, i-::.::~ .• -... ,.... ...... ....... _.., "''""'-.... ~ -1111•1 ... tntJI IJ,lf "*'"'"l "'""'"' etMIM!llM U ..• i """1r!ry, • • He added : "And not just Americans. Others, too, such as two \Vest German nurses. two Canadians and t\.\'O Filipinos. Their governments tried repeatedly through the yea rs to obtain "'·ord of them ." ~lictrg_e _Dropped In, Jet Attack- ST. LOUJS, l\1o. <UPI J -Chnrges have been dropped against David Hanley, a businessman \vho rammed his car into th e nosegcar of a jetliner June 2• in an effort to halt the plane from being hi- jacked. -JJanley. 31-;-of suburban Florissant , suf· fered fractures of the head , ann and ribs \.\•hen he drove his 1973Cadillac through fences surrOUnding La?nbert Field and into the 727 jetliner. U1S. Attorney James E. Reeves said · }londay the charge was dropped because Hanley had suffered t b r o u g h ho,,pitalliatlon and ''we have determ ined this is not a proper matter tor federal pro3t(:Ution." Rogers, Chinese Meet Rainone was a passenger is a small foreign car that roJ.!ed over after going out of control on a curve on Breadway. . Services Slated -Fot River Victim Ian L. Thompson Funeral services \vill be held Thursday for 1an L. Thompson. 18. a Golde n West College student \\.'hose body w a s recQvered Saturday Crom the Kern River. lfc had been missing~since May 25 on a college backpacking trip. The 1:30 p.m. ser1·ices will be held 1111 \1.'estminster f...femorial Pai:k. 14803 Beach Blvd . A memorial scholarship in the youth's name ls being set-up through the college to be awarded to deserving students In automotive technology. Thomp,<on, • im graduate or Bolsa Grande High School, was a freshman automotive student at Golden \Yest. Jte war-the; ·sen o Golden West sociology instructor Lloyd S. Thompson and Mrs . .Thompson.of Westminster. ·• \VASffiNGTON (UPI) -Ambassador He is also survived by ;i brother. Sgt. lhtang Chen, head ol China's new liaison Lloyd B. Thompson. stationed with thi mlasjon in Washington, held his first of· U,S. Anny In Thailand; two sisters, Mrs . ficlal meeting~ with Sttretary 9r State Michele >lensman or Santa Ana and Mrs. William P:"'"Rogers M:onday. They con~· Denise Curley of OU"de.n Grove, and erred-for 30 mlnutesi In Rogen• State -grandparents, M . nd Mrs. rmand Dc.~a-rtmcnt of('icc, ihen had . lunch TenRaa and f.fr. and Mrs. Alfred H. together. Vogel. • ,.,·ould occupy much of the remaining space, he said. Commission chairman Robert Rooney of Huntinglon Beach said the area is "far from the beach. I'm personally not very <.'Oncerned (abOut preserving it in open space)." 1'he commission is reaching a "satura· lion point" where it should deny some projects until it has a master plan developed, Commissioner Donald Bright of La Habra said. DI'. Bright. a marine biologist at Cat State Fullerton, said the last remaining bits of "pristine" open space should be kept that way. The commissions created by Prop. 20 passed by voters last Novemb;er are .su~ posed to develop a coastal management plan by 1976. The South Coast Com· n1ission has interirii penllit powers \\'ilhin 1,000 yards of mean high tide line in Orange and Ws Angeles Cowities. Voting to deny the project were Com- missioners Bright, Rimmon C. Fay of- Marina del Rey and~Judy-Rosener or Newport Beach. Fa,•oring the. condominium project \~·ere Rooney, Bnd ColnniissK>ners Art Holmes 0£ San Clemente: Louis Nowell of Los Angeles, Don Phillips and Russ Hubley, both of Long Beath, and carmen Warschaw of Los ~eles. Rooney told Rink be could appeal the denial to the state coastline commission v.·ithin 10 days of the regional action. Surfer Drowns Despite Efforts An 13-year~ld Bellflower surfer drown- ed off Seal Beach 1'.tonday night despite attempts by police to resuscila te him on the beach and on the way to the hospital. Dead on arrival at Los Alamitos Genera l Hospit81 was Enrique Morales. 13913 Regentview St., Bellflower. The youth "'·as surfing in chilly waters ofr the San Gabriel River jetty at about 8 p.m. He was pulled ashore by two other Bellflower teenagm who heard his cries for help before he beca1ne unconscious. They placed him aboard a surfboard and paddled to shore, where life saving attempts failed, police said. "\Vere you aware you '!''ere typing in- formation obtained Illegally?" asked Sen. Daniel K. Inouye, (D-Hawaii ). "They 'A'ere telephone conversations,., she said. "I didn't know the source.!' "When did you first discover tbey were bugged?" Inouye asked. ''When l read the newspapers on June 18," she replied. "Jn your mind, none of the information related to national ·security?" Inouye _ asked , in a· refe rence to Nixon's state·. ment that he did not want the Watergate investigation lo interfere \\•il)l national security. "No:· she said. Tattoo ed Lady . Nabbed by-Me sa Vic e Detectives A tattooed teenager at Costa 1\lesa 's nudie. entertainment n1gbtspot, the Fire House, inade no bones about her occupa· lion when takt!n into custody l\1onday. Robin Glinelle, , 18. of Huntington Beach, listed her occupation as plain old freelance stripper. She was booked into Orange County Jail and promptly posted $200 bail. Miss Glanelle's mid-afternoon per- formance at the former beer bar at 1 n E. 17th St .. was interrupted when vice detecti ves Rick Johnson and Dick J)e. Francisco dropped in to catch her act. "The search which has been very ex- haustive has ,been narrov..'ed do'!''ll ex- lensively," Richardson 1.9ld a. news co~­ ferencc 1'.1onday. "I can't give you a decision on how soon someone will be -narned,-.but.-J-"'®id like. il-to be very soon." Richardson made his comments after the White House ackno\.\·ledied that Kansas Ci.ty. !\lo. Police Chief Clarence 1\1. .Kelley is· under consideration. Kelley is one of at least four candidates apparently being screened to fill the po&t that the late J. Edgar Hoover held from its creation in 1924 until his death l\fay 2, 1972. The Kansas City Times said today "there is every indication ... that Kel- ley is ~ about to be named permanent director of the Federal Bureau or Investig8t ion ." The KBflSM__Gity newspaper said it learned that Kelley is the only man be.in& put through a security check for possible selection to the post. Contacled by telephone in Washi~on. ' eJle.Js...belng_inlerview~y federal officials, KeUey said, "No offer has been made to me and l don't know if it will be nor. if It.will , v.·hen n will be." . The other contenders are believed to be Roy W. 1'.foore. who heads the FBI otnce In Jackson. MISS:.j Wiiliam A: Sullivan, agent in charge o{ the Philadelphia of· fice, and Charles Bates, agent In charge or the San Fraricisco olfice. METERS ... They claimed her hips were undulat- ing suggestively rorward and backward \\'OUld make them effective sooner. in full view or all patrons. Mayor Jerry Matney, who was the lone ~tiss Gianelle. a green-eyed blonde. , opponent~of the-meter change, first '"as booked on six separately listed refused to grant another surfer hearing, charges under a 'new city law. accusing but was ovemi.led 5-2 (Al Coen joined her of . performing in the nude. being hif") by his council mates. nude, plus exposing breasts, buttocks ~ Three youths presented their side, and genitals while doing so. showing slides of the area, pointing to a Arresting officers noted under the data survey of cars using the bluff meters (80 category for marks, scars and other perCent surfen), a'nd describing the identi(ying characteris.tics -for future beach condition. crime file reference -that she has . a Surfers actually asked for a reduction tattoo of a broken heart on her lefL-in-=-the charge from 18th Street to . the shoulder. -state beach, !Jut Green suggested Golden A teletype record check through Sac-West Street (also known as 23rd Street), ramenlo indicated f...fondny's Infraction beeause there is no alternative parking is evidently Miss Gianelle's fifst brush at the !lluffs, while surfers can park in· with the law. land at 161h street. THE NAME OF THE GAME • • • . . THERE IS A COMMON PRACTICE Of PRIVATE LA BELING IN TH E CARPET INDUSTRY. LARGE DEPARTMENT STORES. CHA IN STOR ES, AND CONTRACTORS AT NEW TRACTS HA¥E FICT!T!OUS NAMES·ONIHE-SAMPLES so THAT THE.CUSTOMERS"CANNOT EASILY SH OP BRAND NAME PRICES. CUSTOMERS SHOPPING AT OUR STORE FIND THE PRICE OF EACH QUALITY PROMINENTLY FEATURED ON THE SAMPLE BOOK, BECAUSE WE ARE COMPETITIVE. ALSO, BECAUSE WE FEEL THE CUSTOM ER HAS A RIGHT TO KNOW WHAT HE IS BUYING, WE NEYER CHANGE THE NAME ON A SAMPLE BOOK. THE. NAME OF THE GAME IS' INTEGRITY. • M-.. Tllm. t lo 5:l0; Fri. t lo t ; s.t. 9:10 lo I ' I I ( ,• : ~ 'Vnder Kennedy Wire~ps Fewer -4 I .Now, Scott Says From Wire Services when the late Robert Jt"'. Kennedy was at· WASHINGTON -The FBI has main· torney g~neral. tained slightly more than 100 "national Continuing his figures for the Johnson ~11 ... --eecuritr' wiretaps-a;...year-since--Presi·--years;""Scott-1aid~ther"e"'"'Were--233-ht-1966, dent Ni.Ion took office, substantially 174 in 1966, 113 in 1967 and 82 in 1968. I II ; l !ewe< tban during moot of the Kennedy He noted that the taps declined sharply and Jotmon admlnistratloos, Senate after Ramsey Clark became attorney Republican leader Hugh Scott said today general. Scott made the statement about na-Wiretapping in the 1960s and '70s was tion.al security wiretaps in an effort to far less frequent, accordin~ to 5:00tt's refute what he said was an lmpres&ion figures, than ln the years immediately that Nl1on initiated wiretapptng and after World War rt. He said there were covert surveillance methods. 519 in l!KS, 364. in 1946, 374 in 1947, 416 in Scott said he obtained figures dating to 1948 and 471 in 1949. . 1945 from Nixon's congressional liaison Holding a news conference at the White man, William Timmons, and said House after ' be and other GOP ~- wiretaps are "now half of the level of the gressiona1 leaders met with the PreSl· early to mid 1960s." dent, Scott said Nixon himself would Scott said he told Nixon ~fay 22 of his present a more detailed report on elec- interest in wiretapping in previous ad· tronic surveillance with.in the ne1t few ministrations. That was the day Nixon weeks. • issued a 4,000-word explanation of the Under questioning. Scot~ said the Watergate case in wtiich he said he figures he provided did not include taps ordered wiretaps in certain national or bugs installed in organized crime in- aef:Urity cases. vestigations or in internal security cases, Scott said there were 123 national except where domestic security con- seo.ui.ty wiretaps in 1969, lifl in 1970, 101 siderations may have .been given a na- in 1911 and 1Q8 in 1972. _ . .tional .securi~y cl?Bk'. _ . . He said . .tbosc figures compared with . The senator said that m prev1ow: ad- 140 in 1961 198 in 1962, 244 in 1963, and · ministrations, not specified, there was 260 in 1964: Those v.•ere the years in the notable tapping and bugging of civil Kennedf and Johnson administrations rights leaders and or newsmen. Citizens Rea~t Needy Fa1nily Gets Contributions By JOHN ZALLER ot 1"-OMt~ l"ltet Si.ft On Sunday mosning ~1rs. Mary Carlson v.•as greeted at her front door by a ne ighbor v.•ho 1,1,•antcd to give her two 'bags or groceries nnd a $5 bill . Later another neighbor: brought three bags or groceries and a $10 bill. And all day l\.1onday,.!\1rs. Carlson said her phone was "ringing off the wall with wonderful people wbo wanted to help us out." And at least $25 in cash was channeled through the Daily Pilot office. Mr~. Carlson .said she has used the money to pay off overdue bills. to buy food, and lo repair a water heater that had made it impossible for the family to take normal showers or baths for the past several weeks. , ' Expanded Parking Advocated Dy CANDACE PEARSON\ 01 Ille DellW PllOI Stilt The South COast Regional 7.one Conservation Commission has made it C lear it favors. req rtng more pa mg spaces than are called for in many Jets 'Neeessaf'y' • Se<:retai;: oi State William P. Rogers, testifying before the House Foreign Affairs Com· mittee, says the sale of sophis- ,. cated armaments-reportedly including Phantom jets -to Saudi Arabia is "necessary to promote regional security." EPA Downplays • Nitrogen O~de Health Da11gers WASHINGTON (AP) The Environmental. ProteCtion Agency said today that nit rogen dioxide is nqt a widespread air pollution problem after all and that a 00 percent reduction of nitrogen oxides in auto emissions is not ne<:essary. Orange Coast cities. Jn a series of actions on projects in San Clemente and other areas, the corn· mission l.1onday req0uired additional parking spaces where possible to reach a ratiu of two spaces for each dwelling unit. Jn some cities, including San Clemente and Newport Beach, the ratio is one-and- a-half spaces to one unit. Some Of the new Proposition 20 com- missioners, with jurisdiction in Or?nge and Los Angeles counties, think this is in- adequate. The commission approved construction of a ·four-unit studio condominiwn at 120t Buena Vista St. iil San Cl"emente ·after developer L. F. Crowe said he 'COUid put in three extra parking spaces for a total of seven. UPI Telttiholo The commission didn't require .2:1 ·or- eight~Buse all ·units are one bediOom • In another San Clemente project, a triplex at Buena Vista and Avenida Pelago by Al Koch, the commission up- ped the parking reqUirement to six spaces from the five proposed. AIRPORT ·GUARD LAWRENCE-·MISHlER AWAITS MEDICAL AID Security Officer Wounded While Disarming Would-be Hijacker . It then received a ta.I permit. Alao approved was a six-unit apart- ment building with parking spaces at 91S Buena Visla by Reynolds L. Security Guard Wounded Gaimcross Jr. Th.? reversed its trend in. Foiling Airline Hijacking· one cue. It approved-a 0..-unit apartment-com-PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) -Three plex at 1417 Calle Mira<kr, . San policemen wrestled a high-powered rifle Clemente, by Howard Farley, although it ...,aw~Y. frorri a man demanding 8; plane at had only seven park1na Spa!-'eS-Portland International Airport Monday . Commissioner Art Holmes, a San One policeman was wounded in the leg Clemente City councilman. said much of when the weapon fired. t~.'! area was retirement community-The man, identified as Gerald L. oriented and oot tw&ear families. Bellad), 34, of Willits, Calif., was charged Holmes generally supported the 2: l with attempted air priacy and first· parking ratio, however, which the com-degree assault. Bail v.·as set at $55,000. mission also applied in Laguna Beach, Authorities said tie carried a· 3()..(16 rifle Huntington Beach and Newport Beach. to a Hughes Airwest ticket counter and Other San Clemente area project! ap-told an agent he v.•anted -to--fly proved by the commission ·Monday in somewhere. 'Ibey said he had several LDng Beach are : road maps with routes marked on fhem. In the struggle for the rifle, the weapon discharged four times. Lt. Larry Mishler . 52. wa s woWlded in lhc leg. He Was treated and released. No one else was hurf. _______.._ ·- Airport officials ,said Bcllach appeared agitated and threw a billfold on the counter .. "You can charge it, but ,..I have no credit," he told agent Bill Sundin. U.S.·Seeks Ocean The help was sorely needed. Fdr seven w~ks her husband, Richard Carlson, had been part of a Teamsters strike against the Soutberii California moving in- dustry. The Carl.sons have C1.lso had offers of' part-time work, although Mrs. Carlson said ~1onday that her husband's union might soon be able to put him back on the job. "He's out working right now," she said, "but J don 't know yet how long it v.•ill last." EPA said the national air quality stand· arti for nitrogen <Uoxide is still needed to protect public health, but the problem is not as widespread as on~ believed. -Single-family dwelling at = Beach p u-· t · G Road in Capistraoo Beach by Roy Disney 0 U Wn rOUp or North Hollywood. It was approved Offending Autos 4 after the commission required a SO.foot WASHINGTON (AP) -The United I During that lime. he struggled to keep !\fary, ~·ho is legally blind, and their foUr children fed on the $35 a Yteek he was getting from the union strike fund. - "'\Vhy didn't you tcU us you were hav- ing trouble?" one of Mrs. Carlson's neighbors asked arier reading a newspaper story about the family 's plight. "We would have helped out a long lim e ago if v.•e had only known .'' "You don't just go out and ask your neighbors to glvc you food," replied Mrs. Carlson. "Thal wouldn't be right." After the newspaper article appeared on Sunday, however, the offers of help co!llle Oooding in. "People \\'ere driving by here all day and 1 couldn't even find out who all of them are," ~1rs. Carlson said. ''They said they weren ·t mak_ing dona- tions to charity by helping us," she ad· ded. "They said ~hey were just helping out some bard-v.·orklng, ta1paying people like themselves until we could get past our rough times." Donations to the Caflsons included everything from fresh tomatoes to Powdered milk. l\trs. Carlson said her personal view or society improved griatly because so many people gave her help. "Y.'e had tried everyone we could think ol and the answer was 'no' so often," !he said. "\Ve really were wondering how the soc iety could be that way." Two agencies that did help her con- sistently, she said , were St. John the ~aptist Catholic Church and the ,Salva-lion Arm y. "But we couldn't get any money at all out of the v.·clfare office," she said. ··1 still think that's wrong. "The help we finally got came from private groups. It came from hard-Work· ing people. But those people had to pay twi ce, because they had already given their taxes to welfare and welfare wouldn't help out since Richard was on strike." Mrs. Carlson said the county Wel!are Department did call 1.1onday, offering the family food stamps. But the Carlsons, 30'l5 Garfield Ave., are not completely out of trouble. Today f\'lrs. Carlson was scheduled for ar- raignmeot in Harbor District l\1unicipal Court on petty theft charges. She said the case resulted from a desperate effort to feed her family. • Pilot 'Dial-A-Ride' Plan Success; Others Slated Bl' JACK BROBACK destination. Othe r passengers board and Of ,... o.nr ,.HM ,,.., gel off along the way as calls are receiv-The experiment.al Dial·A-Ride bus d service in La Habra has been enough of a e via radio by the driver from the cen- succes!: that Supervisor Ralph Clark tral dispatcher. Monday got Orange County Transit • It may be compared to a "shared J:?.istrlct (OCTD) approval to begin plan· limousine'' service and is operating in ltjng similar service to other cities. Canada and ·Europe as well as the . Clark, chairman or the board cf the easkm U.S. (jjstrict, urged the studies saying, "The A one-way ride is 50 cent! with R!illlic ri:spanse !2._lhe La Habra 9peJa· childreJJ @ltd Wlder 12 riding free when Uon has been phenomenaT.-The limit of accompanied by a fare paying passenger. capacity of our six buses will be reached In other business Monday, the transit at 600 passengers a day and on May 3J district directors: v.·e ca rried 586 passengers. -Passed a resolution supporting two ' OCTD was the first such agency bills in lhe state legislature l\'.blch would k> ctsablish Dial-A·Ride iil nw weStern pcnnit community colleges like Orange United Stales. A similiar service has Coast and Golden West to sign been operated in New Jersey by the agreements with transit distri ct for stu· kderal government. dent bus service. The district has • "Dial·A·Ride is solving congestton operated such a service for UC Irvine broblems in La Habra," Clark said, "and students which has been called "an It Is solving air pollution pMb1ems." 'The outstanding success.'' f7-passenger mini-buses operate on pro--:-Submitted a project budget for 1973· pane fuel, not gasolloe. 7f to the Southern c.:iurornla Association The supervl9or Said his proposed study of Governments (SCAG) calling for ex· of .,establishing similar service in other peoditure of $6,520,630 of I o c a I cltfM will Wldoubtedly result in adding tTansportat.ion fund!!. These funds are aevcral more operations such as that in derived from the sales tax on gasoline. La Habra. -Approved an agreement with the -"EventuaUy it wlll mean such service Orange County Flood Control District to p-all of Orange County," Clark added. reconstruct a diatnage channel which 'k'We kno\v thilt the Dla l·A·Rlde concept bisects ·the traMlt ·distrlct'rP&tk·N="Rlde nds ltSelf to tv.·o types of service -facility in Fullerton. Undergroun<!lng or EPA said the nitrogen dioxide levels v.·ere overestimated earlier because of · the peculiarities of the measurement method ••hich had been used . Acting EPA AdministratOr R-Obert Fri told a nev.·s conference; however, that the agency~was not ready fet to recommend . changes in the present auto emission Jaw. e.,.ment from mean bigh tide line up y· ld C J..o f p States today proposed creation of an. in-ti:..: property for public access across the 1e ac.,,_, 0 ot ternational committee to administer con- beach. . ventions against pollution of the oceans. -Veterinarian hospital at. 2 6. 9 2 5 SAN YSIDRO (AP) -Police se~ched The proposal was .made by Russe],1.-Eo- Camino de Estrella in Capistrano Beach today for the owners or three cars found Train, chairman of the President's Coun· by Lloyd Thomas. The one-story building blocking driveways of bomes_ne aLthL __ cilon Env:ironmental Quality ... in a .speecli_ will be sound aOO odor-Proofed.-. Mexican border. prepared for delivery in l.Alndon to the "-A Seven-Eleven food store al El An :0.Uicer sent to check the weeken4 Council of .. \he Jnter-Ooveminental Camif\g Real and Tral>uci> Street in San complaint found a total of I,810 pOOnds o'C f\iaritim~ Consultative Organization (IM· Clemente. marijuana in the cars, Police said. · CO). iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ''Our sa'lesmen are your kind of people'' PETE "The Greek" PELUSES Sales Manager PETE, PELUSES We have on our sales staff the type of men you'd lik fo1· neighbors. Some of then1 are. You'll probably r ognize Hugli, Cha1·1ie· or H.B. These men are part of the difference you'll find at Johnson & Son. Come in and let us offer you a fine Lincoln or l\1e1·cury to suit you needs at ~lways a fair price. • HUGH MYNATT CHARLIE THOMAS SPECIAL Continental MARK IV's • Outs tanlling Selec tion N·ow in Stock • .Best 'fime of the Year to Buy? • • All "Golden To1u;bcd" & Reacly to Go Rome Of The New Cor • , , ·•----'.,'Golden '.l'011.cfl'' "OrtntVt C011ftly" Fomi!V oj Tin< Carl" ohns_on _&_son ' . I I r,,,.('()! ~J H. B, PRICE Nome Of The New ear • • • ''Golden Touc•'' 1hort haul ·local trips and as a feeder t~. channel to increase space Dl the system \o Uxed ~te bus service-· ftici1it,/ will cost an estimated $226,000 or bctw~n cities." which the Oood conlrol district will pay 1 r Dlal·A·Rldc. buses are radio dispatched. _f5 percent. --1'1\0y-rcspond-to Ielephone reqU<sil-f<><--The Park-N·Ridc faclllty Is designed to ~ service and within 20 minutes One or the encourage commuters from n.orthcrn l~;;~~;;;~~~;;;;;;~~:~::::::;:~:;;:~~~=:~~::::e:. ... ~~:~~~~~::~ 1ma.ll buses picg up t!ie l!llSM!lll« at.his Orange-County-to 'park their cars and-'-"'1M"HARIOlflLVD~ COSTKl,R door and dellver1 him to his requested rlde buses to downtown Los Angeles. --.., ' .. • ... -·· - I OAIL y PILOT ii(} Die in Heavy Battles Near ,Saigon . . . • Prom Wire Sen:ice1 Government spokesman toclar. r~ported lb< bloodle1t llgbUng In South Vietnam liince the Jan. 28 cease·flre, a two-day bottle 50 mile1-toUtbwesH>I· Salgoo that ldlled at least 130 WIM! on both sides. Mllliary sources .. id Ille Viet COng sWIO<l-11-by-lrylng-to cut .Dlf Saigoo lrom Its rice supplies. . Clashes aJong Highwc,y 4, abOut SO miles southwest of Saigon, erupted Sun· >&'><-I! ?'-------day-an<Feontinued=M.ooday,-govemmen 3UUJ.Mo military spokesme~ said. Involving government battalions from tvlo infantry divisions and four battalions or more NO Thatik.S rrom two Vie< eong regiments. OFF AND RUNNING DEPT. -Okay, so it's summertime. and the zany stuff has already st'arted happe ning. You have to hope that the recent travels or Laszlo Farkas won 't inspire any of our coastal kid s. You may recall reading about Mr. LT. COL. LE T01ng Hien, Jipokesman for the South Vietnamese command, listed a total of 102 communists and 26 government soldiers killed and 52 govern- ment troOpen wounded in the tw~ clashes between the district towns of Cai Lay and Cai Be.· There was no count of wounded Viet Coog but the casualty toll I ' o.f dead and wounded presumably "'aS 'Ille battle on Saigon's rice route coin .. 1vcll over the 200 n1ark. ck.led with a barrage of more lllan lOQ tlein said 59 CommWlists and 26 rounds or artillery ~ mortar shells govemmenl so~lenJ died 1n the SWldaY against sovemment positions Jess than 30 fighting and t t 43 Viet Coog and two miles ff'Oll' Saigon .. It was .descri~ as government 80 dlers died in 1be M('f'Jday the closest Com!11-un1st shelling to Saigon fighting. Another eight government ot the entlrt Vietnam War. w l!9.ldi~s v.·~ missin__g. . In Cambodia, an American pilot as ·A · \vell-lnfonned ·government military ,k1Ued today when his spotter plane source said it is believed -the Commu· cruhed, authorities reported. ..-'-...;:C;.;,,A;M BODIA nlsts from the Dong Thap Isl Regiment . Observen said the plane had ~arcely . ""4heoZl~imeol..,.r< au.lllllllli!li~'!t~ _off th"-!~~of-· tile a liirtffi_ln<t--t-fj~...:. cut High~·ay 4 between the two towiiS-.------pfffi()m eM ~ It crasfiefi thus cutting off Saigon from the rice.-rich Into flames . They. said white P~phonis i\fekong Dell.a . rockets end machine gun ammun~tion e~­ THE HEAVIEST single day's dea th toll previously recorded since the Jan. ~ cease-fire came May--16 near Phu My m Binh Dinh province. along .the Central Coast. Fifty-three Commwust sold iers died and two government .sQjf!ie~ were \\•ounded in that action,-m which the government had artillery supJ)ort , Hein said. plocied, making rescue attempts impossi- ble. The rockets are carried to mark targets for jet fighter-bombers . AUTHORITIES SUSPECTED the crash was caused by a loss or power. T})ey said the plane had just retracted its landing gear when it plunged to earth. The fire and explosions, they said, started when the crash luptured the· long- range fuel tank llxed to the plane's !>elly. locNlM UPIT ........ Farkas, a 32~year-old 'Balboan by re.si- dO!IC<, electrical eriglneer by trade, and kayak P!'<ldlor by hobby. . Io order to · relieve the tensions or the times, 1'1r. Farkas has been known to take bls kayak out of Newport Harbor -and· pad<lle around a bit. He·did thi s just It was the secood crash of a U.S. milllary aircraft In Cambodia Wtlbln two weeks. On May 25, a U.S. Air Force jet ·911 a bombing mission near the-~ient Angkor Wat temPles crashed, klJUng the pilot. Meanwhile, in Paris, U.S. and North Vietnamese technical and diplomatic ex- REDS HIT POSITIONS \.!EAR SAIGON-WITH MORTAR, ARTILLERY He1v f1st Fighting Since CHM·flr1 Report~ in S. Vietnam enforcing the agr.eement ," a White House -statement said. ----;-ithe"1rtheMlay;-A.nd-as he~paddled-away, perts met again for another round of shoring up the fr~gile Vietnam cease- preliminary discussions -leaQing --up-:-to· -fire. The two men who ·negotiated the -w-y•s-1alb-between Henry-.A. . . . Kissinger and Hanoi's Le Due Th.o. Jan. 27·cease-ftre .agreemm:it hope to find -Tbe·presert<e'Ol'Ziegler-itt-the·party:for th~ first time toused speculation Nl:son may be grooming him for a larger White House role. he noted that sitting out there on the horizon was Santa Catalina Island; big, fat and inviting. Apparently 11..aszlo had one or those day! like we all do every now and then. Thus it was that Catalina looked ,most in· vi ting. U.S. deputy assistant &icretary of State foolproof methods of ending the truce William H. Sullivan and North Viet-violations and stabilizing the situation in namese deputy Foreign Minister Nguyen Cambodia. Co Thach met shortly after technicians President Nixon's press secretary, from both sides argued across the table Ronald L. Ziegler, left with Kissinger for in a Communist villa in subUrlian Gif. Paris. Sur-Yvette. "The President and Dr. Kissinger ask· KISSINGER. FLEW to Paris today to start 1the new negotiations with Tho about -ed · Ronald-Zieglei" ·to atttM-these meetings to increase his understanding of this particylar series of negotiations on Sulli,•an and Thach have been meeting in Parl.s since Sunday to prepare for the Kissinger· Tho talks. They ~ot together again at 3 p.m. when technical experts ended a meeting which began at 1() a.m. Sullivan arid 'I1'f8clf ·met-fof Six hour! Sunday and more than five-hours Mon· day. SO SINCE IT w~s Sunday, l\1r. Farkas decided he 'd just paddle his l~foot kayak on over to th e island to \\'Ork up a good appetite for lunch. Trouble is, of course, it's some 26 miles from_Newpor.LHarbor._to_Av.alon •. s_o_rt_ _o(__ as Oie crow flies. Lasz1o made it. In the ptocess1 however, he missed lunch. Al so dinner. AlSo at. hQIP-e be had a fairly Cre w...of Bu,~ning -V essel-'Saf e'- _Spacewalk Approved ~ASA-Rejects Extensio11 angry wi!e. United Stales Coast Guard people, who had spent most of Sunday afternoon searching the Catalina <(hannel for f\.1r. 1---Farkas and his kayak-, \\'el;'e also slightly disturbed by his---whim for·pm:tdle travel. Anyway, all's "·ell that ends \\'ell: THE COAST GUARD people, ho"·ever, and others knowledgeable about ocean· going matters, consider the Ba\boan mighty lucky just to be alive. They note that folks get these notions about Catalina Island ahd take Off in that di· rection ib almost anything that wiU Doat . ---Mf.FarltaS' passage via kayak is the first with such a vessel in memory of --··various rescue depertments. You ha ve lo give it to hiln: He must be a pretty fair paddler. But other people, particularly inland folks from the flatlands. have been known to launch themselves toward that happy island in the sun under all kinds or Iess·than·prudent circumstances. JUST A FEW years back. it was all the rage f<lr prospective .\\'eekend sportsmen to drive into thei r friendly local store and get completely outfitted \Vi'.h a ne\V boa_t, motor and trailer hooked right onto their auto while they \Vaited. Thus equipped, they v•ould buy fiva gaUoM of gas, race to a Ne"'}>Ort Harbor launching ramp, fire up and be. under way toward Catalina 1sland before the ink was city on the contract for 36 easy boat payments. l\fost of these flatland sailors were found out of gas and hopelessly adrift in Catalina Oiannel. Others, less lucky, just drifted off downcoast until they ran aground at Salt Creek or San Onofre or some similar spot. Still others; even less lucky, v.•ere neVer heard Crom again . CATALINA CHANNEL looks inviting. But Ufe currents Often get ,,•!eked. the wind:_and S\\1ells can come up without warning and abruptly, you're in trouble. Just ask the seasoned sailors. Thus you hope the s3ga of kayak pad· dler Laszlo Farkas won't set off some new craze ~'here youngsters start taking off for Catalina on surfboards, water· wings, raf ts or old inner tubes. One Ji.icky break a s~mmer is about all we can expect. Couple Slai11 Chicago hoinic ide detectives search for clues near the :bodies of Dor4?"" thy Cerny 25 and James Schmidt~ 25, both of Chicago. The pair "'ere to be' wed shortly. The bodies were found lying on the _shoulder of a road by a passi ng 1notorist Sunday. St3:te police are,~~ek1ng three men in connection with the shotgun slayings. No motive has been determined. . Failing Health Forces Pompidou to ~tay Home, PA.RIS (L1Pll -President Geor ges Pompidou tod ay cancelled all official social engagements for the coming \veeks to rest afte r a bout of influenza, fueling still further the nation 's anxiety over his reported\Yfaiiing health. . ---'l'he-·Eiysee Palace announced the president. "because of hi s obligations, has not had the possibility to take the rest necessary by recurring grippe from which he has suffered this "'inter. He has decided to renounce all social ap· pearances scheduled in the coming \\'eeks." THE OOMMUNJQUE \vas-the firs t of· ficial mention of·Pompidou1s·health since reports .that he~was ill began circulating last March alt~f he suddenly gained --,.,.eight and ·de Ve I Oped a purry--face. Government officials recently confirmed Pompidou \Vas taking cortisone for rheumatism. Pompidou cut his official public engagements one day after Gaston Def· "rerre. mayor of l\farseille and Socialist deputy in parliament, demanded the president inform the nation as to his sta te of health. "The French-have the right to know exactlv 11·hat is going on . Their fate depends on it.'' Defferre \rrote in the ne1\'Spaper he publishe~ in "1ar~ille. "It is not a matter of a private affair but of the destiny of the nation. "THE PRESIDENT has the duty to in· form us. The national interest is ~t stake.·· Premier Pierre ?.1assmer said he refused to reply to Defferre. Govemmenl officials said the engagements cancelled by Pompidou -in-- eludes ofricial receptions given June 6 by Senate President Alain Poher. the No. 2 man in' the government-who 'vould replace Pompidou if· he resigned, June 14 by National Assembly President Edgar Faurre, and June 19 by the Constitutional "Couilcil. The health s ubject, smoldering in rumor since l\1arch, broke into print when Pompidou did not appear \veil dur- ing his summit meeting in Iceland last week with President Nixon. 1llE MAGAZINE !'Express said Pom- pidou was hospitalized secretly before he new to meet Nixon. lt said he was given cobalt treatment as "'ell as cortisone. .... ' - Rail\S'-Wash Middle U.S. A fter Rescue HONOLULU (AP) -The captain of a fire-gutted merchant vessel reports all 31 of his erewmen.-.are--aect>unt~-for after their rescue by helicopters sent from the Navy's nuclear plWered aircraft carrier Ent erprise 1,000 miles \\'est of here. a Navy spokes man said. Reports from the carrier said all those rescued \\'ere in excellent health \Vith the exce ption of the first mate Who suffered ( IN SHORT ••. _) second· and third-degree burns On his u~ per right arm. Earlier reports had said 33 persons were aboard the stricken St. Constantine. a 514-foot British-owned merchant ship under Liberian registry. e NY Prinaury NEW YORK .(AP) -City Com ptroller Abraham D. Beame, a IO\V·key cam- paigner who emphasized managemen t expertise, finished first in the four-man Democratic primary for mayor but "·as forced into a runoff. Bearne, ·who lost the race for mayor in 1965, failed Monday to get the 40 percent nec~ary to avoid a runoff June 26 with Rep. Herman Badillo, who placed second . Badillo took the most liberal stance of the mayoral candidates. e Nn_elear Blast , LAS VEGAS. Nev. (UPI) -The Atomic Energy ·Commission will explode a nuclear device 3,490 feet below the ·desert rat aJ>hute M'esa, Nev., WedDesday: req_ulring the removal of people for miles around. · The AF.c said the blast, code named "Alendro," will produce a force between 200 kilotons and one megaton -the equivalent of explod ing a million tons of TNT. • Crash Theory PARIS (U·Pl ) -Aviation sources sal d today tile pilot of a. Soviet supersoni'c Tupolev 144 jetliner that exploded at the Paris Air Show may have given his .Jlfe to avoid a crash landing into the spec- tator !lands. Of 10 Days £01· Skyl~ HOUSTON (UPI) -Sky I a b . s astronauts ''"ere told today ho\v to perform a ri sky spac ewalk to cut open a snagged po1\·er "ing Thursday but NASA ruled out an extension ol their planned 28-day mission. Project director \\'illiam C. Schneider said a revie\\' of the problems and poten· tia_ls of the earth-orbiting lab "has resulted in the conclusion that there is no justifi~ti~n _).or any -~xt~jog_ _of 11\e -mission at this time." Officials had con- sidered. lengthening it 10 days. . At 8:15 a.m. (PDI'); Skylab com· mander Charles "Pete" Conrad, who will lead the spacewalk, asked to speak privately to Christopher C. Kraft, direc- tor of the Johnson Space Center. Under Suspicious Fire · At Re-election Of £ice Quelled WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -District of Cohunbia fire officials say Mooday night's fire in an elevator shaft of a building booslng the offices of the Com· mittee. to R ... Ject the President (CRP) was suspicious. It took firemen more than one hour to extinguish the smoky blaze from the shaft and a -hallway-on the san\e fioor as the committee, which is located in a 12- -story l>uildlng one block frOm the White House. One fireman was slightly injured dur· ing the removal of more than 20 persons from the upper floors of the building alter smoke poured up through the elevator shaft. • Fire marshal Inspector Murdo Macteay said the fire was "of suspicious ignition" and "right down the hall" from the CRP offices 00 the se<olld noor. Firemen at the scene said that the blaze started from burning trash in the: shilft. Macleay said he \\'ould discuss the case with the Metropolitan Police Department today, as is routine in cases of suspiclowi- fires. · grol!ilJd rules established before launch. secret talks could be requested only in rases or operational emergency, but theer \Vas no indication Cionrad had prob- lems. •·WE'\'E SEEN ONE other situation \\'hen they did th at and there was no emergency," said a NASA 1potesman. On May 29, Conra d requested a private talk to discuss Skylab's heat problems' Conrad. Joseph P. Kerwin and Paul J. \\1eitz received permission late Monday to proceed with the bold spacewalk . They \.\'elcomed the news, saying it would break the n1onotony of space station life. The aStronauts offered to give up two days off to make up for the experiment lime lost by the repair wort. After awakening the astronauts were told that some members of Congress bad sent the space agen cy a congratulatory message for the way the mission or Skylab had been bandied so far. The hand-over-hand e1cursion down a :is.root loog makeshilrllanMlilrarthe, side of the crippled !pace station was more dangerous than any spacewalk ye t attempted by Americans. But project of- ficials said the potential gain out-wetells the hazards. ~A SAID all spacewalks involve risks because a man only has one spacesuit to protect him from the vacuum of space. Thw:sday's repair operation is even more hazardous because the pilots have not rehearsed it Qn the ground, their handholds are • makeshift and they will be moving over a damaged surface. Conrad, described by Schneider as "a pretty smooth and cool cat," will lead tbe extraordinary attempt to repair Skylab and boost its failing power supply. The extra electricity is needed if Skylab is to be able to ;il'Jil>ort two full 5tkfay missions later this ye~r. -. . • '1 l l ( I I =Dozens of-T or1iii.(.fiies Reporrea=;fC ross PliUns As an estimated 300,000 persons looked on, the big plane went into a steep climb -bllrexplode<r'andi>liiffifimta-..... a ball or orange name in the Paris suburb of Goussainville, killing all six crewmen and eight villagers. He refused to say, however, whether the fire might hav_e been a case of. arson. Flight. directori sent step.by.step pro. ceclure! for the repair operation up lo the crewmen early today Via a radio teleprinter aboard Skylab. They will .re'<lew them with the ground tonight'edd hold a three-hour inside rehearsal Weijnesday. ' --:.-L..= ---=-1 ' I . . I .. "· .. , :lj :1, ·" Sources said teiday technical failure could not yet be ruled out and might ex- plain why pilot Mikhail Koslov throttled the Tupolev Into the climb. The n1aneuver put the plane clear or the air how grounds 3t Le Bourget Air Field on lhe Paris outskirts. PJ.ILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVIGE Dtllvtr)' of lht 0-1\y Piiot 1' 911ar.anttt~ M9IMllY• .. rld•r1 II ,.,. ,. lllt ht¥• , •• , ...... , lfY J!M p.111., '-'II •M ¥"f ,..., Witt ...,._.,..,..., .. ,.., C•lte ttt 10fl'I •"Ill • 71» '·"'· 1'1•r4tY '"' lllMllY; II .,.. .. Ml fK11¥t ytur cepy Dy f '·'"· S11VfC•Y• Ir I '·'"· ''~"''· ~·n •~• • ,.,, win~ It"""" It yw. (•II• lrt ·--1111111 1• •·~--- l'tltpllont' M"t or•• c_,, A•••• • Tango Ter1ns Brando, 3 Others Sentenced • I BOLOGNA, Italy (AP) -The movie "Last Tango in Paris" has been rated obscene by an appeals court here and its stars, Marlon 1 Brando and Marla Schnelder, have been sentenced to two months In~ jaiJ. I " l DIRECTOR · BERNARDO Bertolucci and producer Alberto Grl· t maldi Valso also received tw .. month jail tenns. • Bertolucci and Valso ' were In court, bu t Brando and Miss I Schneider were not. known . to be in Italy. The .court president, ap-' proximately the equlVilei!i-orchief judge, said the sentences will be •} .stayed pending an appeal to'ltaly's highest court. 1 A lower court last Februacy had cleared !hi film of obllcenlty 1 cfiargesor<iUglita fter-two-prlvate citizens complained about se~~ral sexually explicit s~enes. The state prosecutor appealed the dec!Slon •. -·THE /i\OVlE, WIQllY .praiseal>y -fore ign and 11.ilfaiiCfltlcs. co ncerns a ·physical Jove affair betwee n an Amerfcan widower and a ·young .french-~lrl-tn·Pari •. •' . ' 1 • Today's F IBal - ' • N.Y . Stoeks VOL. 60, NO. 156, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES r ORANGE COUNTY, CA LI FORNIA TUESDAY , JU NE 5, 1973 N TEN CENTS c :r:t oro wa1 s ilvance irliner r l • 4 ' ' I· I ' 7 1 -By JOHN VALTERZA Of flit 0.llY Pitt 1 .. H • A Soviet airliner laden with tons of eommunlcations gear and an estimated 50 technicians was scheduled to arrive today at the El Toro ~larine Corps Air sr..at;oq_.-.lhe advance guard for a possi· ble m'for visit to the Orange Coast by Soviet feader Leonid Brezhnev. Several hi&hJy reliable ltOl!fC~s have rt!ported the impendln~· arrival &if the _Magruder Threatened By Liddy?· • WASHINGTON CUPll -Convicted Watergate conspirator G. Gordon Liddy once threatened to kill Jeb S. Magruder, ronner deputy manager'. or ·the Nixon re- election campaign, testimony by ex- presidefitial aide Jottrt D. -Ehrlichman revealed today. (Related story, Page 3.) Ehrlichman said Magruder informed him of the threat. He dici not elaborate on the circumstances or the date, but ap- parently was referring to some point bc~e:-e June 17, 1972 because his lawyer did naf let ltim testify about events after the break-in at the Democrats' Waterj';ate· headquarters. "A-1r. f.tagruder told me P<i1r. Liddy had threatened him -had threatened his life,'' said Ehrlichman. who resigned April 30 as Nixon's top adviser on ~omestic . atfairs. The Ehrliclunan testimony made public today was given recently as a deposition in the Democratic National Committee's $6.4 million suit qainst the Committee for the Re-election of. the President resulting from the Watergate break-in and bugging.--- Earlier testimony from several wit- nesses establ~hed bad blood be!Ween A-1agruder and Liddy. who both were White House staffers transferred to the campaign committee to organize for the 1972 presidential campalgns. Magruder, who ·originally hired Llddy, at one point had him transferred from the main re-election committee to the ~ampaign f~nance committee and was considering firing him. Ehrlichman said he also learned that f..1agruder inforrned the White House at one point that ;'an intelligence operation" had been established by the re-election committee to obtain information about Democrats. ........ Heslld he-goMhaHnformatlon after being assigned by President Nixon in April or this year to investigate events leading to the break-in, any possible \Vhite House involvement , and any evidence about a possible coverup. That was after Nixon said a fresh in· vestigatlon was undertaken , because of new developments he had learned. Ehrlichman said the source ·of his in- formation was Gordon Strachan. then an aide to White House chief of staff H.R. Haldeman and tlie White House political contact man with the re-election com- mittee. Ehrlichman said he asked Strachan whether he had an' personal knowledge of any of the events leading to the Watergate break-In. • "He (Strachan) said that at some point in time he had been informed by Mr. Magruder that an intelligence operation in fact had been established at the reelection group1" Ehrllchman said. "He did oot ·equate that with electronic survelll;lnce. necessarily." ' Ne·wport-Mesa · • • --:Jludget W ill&o- • • ~ B efore Trustees Soviet delegation but orders of strict secrecy about the event at El Toro have caused base !spokesmen to issue a "oo comment" on the widespread reports. The vis it by Brezhnev has been men· tionet:! several times by White House spokesmen but the prHeDCe of the massiv'e communicationJ operation today reinforces s~lattoa ~hat Brezhnev will address the American people op n~twork HARB~ SllJPl'IN6 crK. ~Klij(} ur tJfF WILSON sr. ·COSTA ME!.'\· television from the south Orangt Coast. Brezhnev and President Nixon plan the main portion of their lalks on mututal matters or diplomatic relations, trade and other items on June 18 either at the White House or the Presidential retreat at Camp· David. Soon afterWards Nixon spokesman said, lhe two leaders will fly west for the st?pover at the· Houston Space Center. l'Olll INF'Cl«MATIOH CAU..: ~. "'flRN,tfJ LJ.WSO~ Eo42•4f.88 Recycle It Recycling \Veek is under way in the Harbor Area. It will run lb.rough June 10. The Citizens to Reeycle Useable Discards (CRUD) say profits from recyclable materials received at their reclamation centers dur- ing the week will be Ustd to est"iblish 3 fund !of a nature center in Upper Newport -Bay. Reclamation centers· are at Westcliff Plaza. Eastbluff Village Center and Harbor Shopping Center. . Richardson Says Decision. On FBI Leader Due Soon WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Atto'i"y General ' Elliot L. Richardson sa)€ a permanent FBI director is e:r:pected to be named in the near future . "The search which has been very ex- haustive has been narrowed down ex- tensively," Richardson told a news con· ference Monday. "_I can't give You a decision on how soon someone will be name(f, but I v;ould like it to be very soon." Richardson made his comments alter -ffi!-'-Whlte-Ht>\ae-acmowlOdged· 'thar- Kansas City, Mo. Police Chief Clarence l\f. Kelley is under CO(lsideration . 1Kelley Is one of at le'ast fou r candidates apparently being screened to fill the post that the late J. Edgar Hoover he ld from • ley is about to be named permanent director of the Federal Bureau or Investigation." 1be Kansas City newspaper said it learned that Kelley is the only man being put through a security check for possible selection to the ·PoSt. _ Contacted by telephone in Washington, where he is being interviewed by federal officials, Kelley said; "No offer has been made to me and I don'l know if it will be nor, If it WIJI, when it will be." Duplex and then another round of talks at La Casa Pacifica in San Clemente. The White House has given ho exact times or dates for the schedule during the westward journey. lf Breihnev indeed travels to the South Coast he will be the most po"'errul of foreign dignitaries ever to visit the Orange Coast. Since Nix.on est~blished the \Vestern White House he has pl"ayed hOst 1o now- reti red Japanese Premier~ Eisaku Sato and South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu . The official reason ror Brezhnev's trip to the U.S. is based in protOC<ll. The vis it v.·ill be a return gestu re stem- ming from Nixon's trip to the Soviet Union where he hammered out trade agreements "'ith the leaders there. The only otOe? Russian Q[fi_cial C\'er to ,·1s1t the Ora nge Coast \11as Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin, who ar- rived last year for several da ys or in· formal discussions. 11 During that trip the Russian was treated to 51.1me typical Orange Coast < dining. i ~le stepped out for some l\1exican food l at a restaurant in San Juan Capistrano ~ vtith hi.s •·host" -Henry Kissinger. ~· ' .. Bail Galled Off Ex-Newport Lawy er Ordered Held By TOM BARLEY Of flle D•llY Plitt Sl•ff Taped con"versations descri~ by the prosecution as "absolutely damning evidence". led a Santa Ana municipal court judge Monday to rule that former Newport Beach lawyer Michael Kester Remington be heIOiilOrangeCOillilf"j"iiiI with bail denied. -. · Judge Wi lliam Thomson made the rul- ing and canceled the earlier bail figure of $300.000 after listening in his chambers Negotiations Looking Up In Newport 'By• JOUN pADE DI hie o.IW """ Sttfl' Talks_between _Newport Beach and city employe associations. over-wages took an optimistic tum Monday . Spokesmerl say •that s e: L t 1 e m e n t. betWeen.....the_ city and three of the four negotialing groups over salary increases may be reached by lhe June 11 city coun- cil meeting. Discussions of a wage hike of better than four percent has been going on for. more than two months. Talks ·between the city and the Firemen's Association had been stalled and the possibility or the controversy being decided by the California Slate Counciliation Board seemed likely. But a r.-tonday morning meeting apparently has moved the talks from a stalemate back to lhe negotiating table. Ffre Association President S a m Anderson "'ould not discuss details or the lalk!, adding there are some details of lbe wage plan to be worked out. He said he hoped to know more by the first of next week. City Personnel Director Frank Ivens said both sid_es_ar_e "getting close to _a settlement in the disi:ute and hope to have a contract Package ready for the June 11 council meeting." lvens w.'oulci_not give the specific details of the talks, but added that further talks will probably be held later in the week to settle the wage and benefits dispute. Ivens said negotiations are continuing individually with lhe Police and Marine· Safety Associations. He said the city was close 1o signing with both groups and hoped to have a "memorandum of understanding" or ~contract package completed by t~ June I.Ith meeting. The city is abo negotiating with the Ci· ty Employees Association. Association . Presi~nt Jim Sinasek said lhe two sides "complete some action every time they nleet," but as of yet there has been no ·:meeting of the minds." to "'hat inv esti gators claim a.re highly in· crimin.iti ng conversations between Rem- ingt..:>n and a co-conspiratof and Rem- ington and a police informant. The tapes are the cornerstone of the prosecution's cuse against the Ja.,.,•yCr on allegations that he hired killers to rcmoVe"hoSlileTvilnesscSln a nuiii6CF""6r civil ca!lcs in whic h he \Vas named as . dcfendnnt. Re1nington. 33. is charged in eight. felony cou nt s filed by the dislrict atton1ey's office of soliciting to commit rrwrder'.'" Judge Thomson set Remington's arraignment for June 14. Also charged in the case is Gary Michael Rollo, 21, of Garden Grove, a karate expert who has made a number of guest appearances in the television series. "Kung Fu." ROii o, fleli:I on $100,000, was -to be arraigned to-- day before Judge Paul Mast. Newport Beach· attorney Robert Green argued for Remington Monday that the (See NO BAIL, Page 2) 'Irvine Co. _Ask s -Exemptio~ For Promonto1·y Project The Irvine Company today filed !or an exemption from the. new couta pro. tecUon law for its $19 million Promon- tory Point apartment project in Newport "Beach. 1n a letter to the South Coast Regional Goastal Conservation Commission, the company said It had invested..more....than $1.S millffin in the project before Nov. 8, 1972 -the day Proposition 20 became law. Stating it "feels strongly there are vested rights" involved in the project, the company told the commission it is 1naking the exemption request even though it may not .be needed legally. The company questioned, "the pro- priety of having the coastal commission act at all" on the question of vested rights saying that duty should probably fall to the courts. A company spokesman said the project has received 120 government permits to date since its revised city use permit was granted in Augu~t, T971. Grading for the -apar;iments has been completed and much of the .structural concrete and wood framing Is under way on llie-site..overlook.ing Newpor.t-Harbor anCI the manmade lagoon which is the centerpiece for the Pomontory Bay proj- ect. .. The company told the commission that by May 31, 1973, it. had spent nearly $3 million and oorpmitted $8 million more to the project, which is due for occupancy in February 1974. It is expected that the company arguments far" vested rights in Promon- tory Poinl will come before the coastal commi!lsion at its June 25 meeting in Long Beach. 'Lost' Social Security Checks Arrive in Mesa Scores of retired Costa Mesa residents their 90le source of income had been lost today were expected to receive their or stolen. . , Social Sec rily checks which had been Tl:! supermtende~t of mails at the San-. . _u . · -ta Ana Post Office cleared up the m1ss1n~. In the mail, U.S. postal n1ystcry today, explaining that the Costa author1t1es reported. Mesa mail sacks rnust have been sent to "They arrived this morning," said another area. "We're guessing that the Assistant Postmaster Marvin Gibson or sacks \\-'ere mislabeled," said Superin- lhe Santa Ana Post Office, "and our tendent Don Cluca. mailmen will have them delivered to-A spokesman for the Social Security day." Administration today apologized for the The missing checks were a mystery to delay. "It's the fll'St time it's happened a:I ~fonday. The Social Security in the two and one-ball years I 've bCerl Adm lnlstratl!)n said they had been mail-here," said Allen .llildt, assistant ed. The Post Office in Costa Mesa replied-manager at the Santa Ana office. that the checks hadn't showlP up. And. in-Regardless of how the mix up occurred. creasingly anxious senior citizens were senior citizens in Costa Mesa are reliev- beginning to panic, thinking that perb.i ps ed today. · . • -----.-- Decision Delayed Orange · Newport-Mesa school trustees wi!l .be its creation in 1924 until his death May 2, •• asked tonight to approve a $37 .4 million 1972. budget for the 1973·74 school y~ar even The Kansas City Times said· tOday 1though they raised some serKMll ques-"there is every Indication •.• that Kel· Coastal Pa11el Wants to Mee t Ne ,wport Officials Weatller It 'll he rair on Wednesday, folr lowing the usual low clouds in the morning hours. Highs of 65 al tbe beaches will rise to the low 70s in· land. Lows lonight ~. I lions about it last week. The South Coast Regional 1.one Con· Approval of the preliminary fiscal p 1__ servation Commission "'ants to talk to document is aelually only one step ar1U1 Board MuJl iu g N~Beach 't rr· . I t-anl· final ....... , ... ol the """""et in ...... ,....... c1 Y o . 1c1a s. u" ..uuyo .,...... 11le conimission ~1onday delayed ac- AuguJt, but trustees have voiced IOme $270 Mill" B d lion on a number of requests to build coilctm over .. veral !lllldlng ""iuesl! 100 OD S duplexes In Newport Beach un111 11 has 1 made by SUpe.rlntes>dent Jolm Nicoll. a presentation by city Planning Oirec- 'Trustees pointed to tbe -lblllty that n:'.!.."!"""llon BeCoach . Palorks, Beac1hesh and111 tor Richard Hogan or other city repr .. a~number of projects vetOed by them in ~a. mrruss ner1 tong t w sentatlves. tho past had been rnlnserted In the bulk dl9CllSI po1alble spending priorities for ·Commission ErecuUve Dlredor Mel vin . ot the l)udget. • • the clty'a thare ot the pr;oposed $270 C.rpeai.< said be-woold try to gel Hogan They asked that .au such items, and mllHon Ute parks bond Issue. to lpptar bef~ the commission next others which mig)lt be controvenial, be If vo .en approv~ the bonds ne.i tan,:-~offdaf or June 25. , brought Into lho spotlight an<! elQllalned · PBR Diroctor Calvm Stewart. said tho cl· NC)"pl)rt Be&cll cll)'·touncilmen have --•iivdctall. -ty woold-gel about $200,000 based on J><en hlgbly_qlllcal o/ the comml•ii@ Beside& Items formerly rcJecte<I by the population. OnlY l90 million would gq to ror denying pennita for duplexes fn West board, Nicoll Is as king for building tm-the cities, with the rest targeted for state Newport and Balboa Peninsula that met prov~mcnls ~I scltool~ Whldl tnlsl... part acquisition, developmont and Im-city requlremeoto.1 Lh.lnk could better ha\le been tncluded .in provement. In~dequate park~g. tratfic congestion several major remodeling plaos •lreadY c.ommbafoners meet tt 7:30 In City and mcre1sed density -all contributing on lhe _~rewing boanl. -Hall. to diminisbtiig public"'"'"' ·to beaches . . -' - l ... - • -have been cited as reasons• for the ac- tions. 'Ibe Orange-Los Angeles oomrty com· l1lission is one of si:r: created last Novem· ber -.hen voten paaoed Prop. IO. Dt!>u!Y Slate Attorney General Jeffrey Freedman bas told the commission It can oveltllle local zonllig ""luiremeni. ii It finds such projec:ts would have "substan- tial adverse envlmrunental bnpocta.'.' Jl<fore continuing eight Newport Beacll projects to June 25, the commission Mon· day denied a request by WWlam Nueen1 to demolish a si ngle-family home and build a ~lex at. 7402 Ocean Front in Newport O<iach.'-- The vote was 5-4, with seven votes needed for approyal. "' Commig looer Judy Rosen.or, who lt>d actions to deny duplexes fwd-ks ago. voted to approve Nugent's pmlect. J Newport Beach has issued a building permit for it. Executive Director Carpenter recom· mended denial. He said the dupleic would intensify land use and reduce curbside. parking available to beachgoen. Nugent said It took him 15 years to pay orr the loan he had lo i>ly the property. A friend of his, Patrick O'Connor of New· port Beach, sai d a master.planned park· ing lol is needed. Too many persons want to comt to Newport Beach beaches 0 to be served Dy blocking one duplex,'' O'Connor sa id. Voling against Nugent's rfNuest were Commlssiopers Donald BriehfO<La Hab-- rn , Art •fohnes or San Clemente, Car"1cn Waricho'lw of ..Los Ange.lea and Robiirt Rooney of Hunti{lgton lJeach, Among ~he proJeci.., delayed ~ntil June (See DUPLEXES, Page ti INSIDE TODAY There's a ,iew game in Wa.th· ington. Ever hear of t~ Long- s po n g-Fmio·Houg Kong.Pino Poug.Dlno Dono·BUl? See. 1tory, Paue 12. l .M . ...,'II •II C•Mt.nlll I c111u11i. , .. ,. Clrl'llCI tJ ·-.. °"* .... '"' • l'llltttl•I P•t• ,, lnt1rlllllltltlll 1•11 -=~ ate.;. l~ KIAIC-11 . AM lafllltn , --\J f • • ' I !! DAil Y PILOT Tllt\d•Y J11_ne 5, 1973 .. I NO BAIL .•• ! '300.000 figure set for !he FuDerton lawyer was "gmuly e.icesslve" and 1 Hhou·ld be tubstanUalJy reduceo. 'Gemstone' ·Link··· -Told • \. t G,... rtmlnded Judie '1bomson that . Angila DoYls .... lntd Oii •100,000 ball at a tlme when she was accused of bein1 Magr~r Paid Bill, Liddy Aide Swears . . ' involved in the murder of a judge and WASRING'l'Oll (UPI) -W1ter111e tloned 8ally Jacl!IOll HlnllOllY, Liddy'• Juan Corona had been (reed on bail when consp1.rator G. Gordon Uddy's form'r form'r secretary, a:bout "clandestine" ht 'was aa:used ·of commJtting between secretary testlfted today that Jeb Stuart activltlea carried out in Ni1on•a re-elee- 25 and 30 killincs of itinerant fann Magruder -after the Watergate break-tion campaign. workers. in -authorized payment of a bill for the J\.1rs. Harmony testified that after the •'Here we have no murder, no death "Gemstone" stationery on which she June 17 \V atergate break-in, a bill came PmHd by Bene Hcnrard-H. Baker Jr. CR·Teon.) u to why ahe rve the invoice to Magruder Instead o to the office manager, Mrs. Harmony said, "I thought he~ would know more about It.'' She said she could not elaborate. ' and Do Injury," Green commented. "I do typed _the logs of tapped telephone con-to the Committee for the Re-filection of Asked later why she shredded the G~em~tone invoJ~ Mr_!. H,,•::rmo~-~n~~~·~id~: ____________ _ -. -not.oppoae-a~setting=ol-bail..Jo:limpl~..traa1tl0ios.=.=-.---.,-~--,._..!j!h1W'.[gjSUi!d~nti..i6r the "Cei:n_~tone" Sta· pose that it be realistic and related to the It was the first time that the name of tioncry that s e saRl"l:Iaay or er charges." -Magruder, wh<;> was President Nix?n's printed. · agfffileraSked11eflO;Qoi . "l\1r. Magruder asked me to destroy ' Deputy District Attorney Oretta Sears d~pt.ity ~ampatgn manager: w~s cit~ . )3ecause Liddy already left the com· urged Judge Thomson to listen to the d1rec:t1y ~ the Senate comm1uee s .public mittee under the cloud of \Vatergat e, "I it." she said. "He didn't have to tell me why." series of tapes earlier scaled by Judge hearings 1~to the \Yatcrg11.tc ~reak-1n and took the bill for Gemstone to l\tagruder." Robert'Rickles who set bail at $300,000 othc~ pol~t1cal _ esp1~11age during the 1'972 ~rs. Harmony said. ··He (Magruder) '"Chen I'd like to know why." Baker said. after listening to testimony allegedly , pres1de~t1al campa1g~. :iu1horizcd payment lo ·11.A. Post linking Remington and Rollo to the Unanimously ~rt.1sh1~g ofC a request by Associates. and signed Jeb S. Magruder ''Because ~1r . Liddy had bee n discha rged from the committee ; because it had the V.'Ord Gemstone on it and I was familiar with Gemstone and the way I had used it," Mrs. Harmony replied. "I assumed that a lot· of members of the committee were not aware of it." asserted conspiracy. the gove~ment .s special prosecuto.r that to it.., Dlstrict-..attomey's Investigators claim the pubhc .he~r1ngs be post ~ned m the l\Irs. llarmony said she then disposed that Rollo was one of three men arrested name ot Ju stice. the com1n1ttee qucs-or the bill in a papershredder. by California Highway Patrolmen who said tbey stopped the trio's car ror a traffic infraction and found weapons in· eluding rifles and -hand guns in the auto during a aearch. It ls aileged that the two men wit h Rollo immediately Confessed they Were hired to dispose of Alfred Fehling of • Yorba Linda, one of a number of plain·· tiffs in civil actions filed during the past. two years against. a vendi~ machine company Of whiCh "Rerilingtori-is--preSi- dent. Green indicated in the courtroom ~ton. day that the two men with Rollo were Bobby Joe~ Hart and Jack Hewitt. Both men are'held in custody and wit! be used, the prosecution states. as witnesses against Remington and, if necessary, Rollo. Green also noted that information given to him by the district attorney's of· fice indicated that his client was charged with Rollo and 10 "John Does" of con· spiring _to . kill · Ned__De:Lancy:, a. _k_ey witness against Remington in a civil trial -scheduled to start July ltl. llemington is president of Cal Vend Manufacturing C.Ompany. a Fullerton 1----concem--1hatJs_no longer __ in bq§ine.st. H~ and several other executives in the operation· have been named with their company as defendants in five civil ac- tions. Bill to Toughen Ahortio11 Magruder resigned as assistant Com· merce secretary-designate in April at the height of Watergate disclosures. . J\.lrs. Harmony, who still works for Nix· on's 1naugura\., ~mmittee, -s a i. d 1\-tagruder called her from the Commerce Department this spring and told her he assured John N. Mitchell, Nixon's former campaign manager , that "he (Mitchell) \\'Ould not have anything to worry about Laws Undergoes Analysis SACRAatENTO {A--P) -Legislation aimed at stiffen-ing California abortion laws and curbing "abortion mill " prac- tices haS been sent to legislative Jimbo at a lengthy nigh_t co1nmittee hearing. The Assembly Health Committee took the measure under subml ssion Monday after hearing almost tv.•o ho u rs testimony. The bill by Assemblyman Robert Burke (R·Huntington Beach), v.·ould ·re- guire ~!Qr§ to inform v.·9men_~ti~ts in writing of the possible consequences ot an abortion - a penmanship effort one spokesman sa id could run as long as rrom your testimony." Tolstoy's "\Var and Peace." -''I knew nothing to implicate Mr. Lana Phelan, president of the National t-.titchell " Mrs. Hannony testified. "I said I w'as not ai.vare of any \vay I could Associatioil to Repeal Abortion L..1\rs, in1plicate him." 1nade the Tolstoy analogy when she told ~1eanwhile, a former aide in Nixon's the committee such a bill shouldn't be re~lection campaign, told Senate Water- put into state codes . gate investigators today th3t he put docu· But R(chard Turner, an attorney and ments labeled ';Gemstone" -the code spokesman for the Pro Life group, said v.·ord for pclitica1 espionage papers - the Burke measu re \VOuld move toward into a file intended for use at a meeting '''ith Mitchell. clirbing practices of "abortion mills" Robert Reisner, once administration that perform thousands of abortions each assistant to h1agruder. said .that during year.--the week prior to the June 17 break.i n Data released by the State Department he v.·as helping prepare a Magruder file of Public Health last week showed that lebeled "Mr. l\1itchell" which he said 'COO· 136,584 abortions were perfonned in tained "things Magruder wished to take California last year. One hospital -up with Mr. Mitchell." .0f ficial Quits:----=•lon in . Los Ang•.!e£_County,~~-Reisee.,;denlif¥iltg~a-tar11o.manil"-""'--- performed 12 ,percent of those abortions. velope marked "sensitive material" and Traffic Post The California Medical Association op.. a letterhead code-named "Gemstone," posed the bill on the grounds court said l\fagruder handed him su'ch papers deciSions already require doctors to and he put them in the file. make sure the patient has given her "in· Mrs. Hannony, \\'ho ap~ared ner\.'OUs A 'Tired' Monster Children climb over this unusual attraction in a TOkyo amusement park. The .fierce.looking toy is made con1pletely out of old automo- bile t ires. -· ' Dru11k Suspect · Blames Slioes Surf er Drowns Despite F;ff orts An 18-year-old Bellflower surf~ dro_wn· " • It is alleged that threats made by Remington Jed one plai ntiff to settle his case for far less than it waS worth and led another plaintiff to drop_ his action. District attorney's investigators claim At Last Moll)ell_t forme d consent" before an abortion is during her testimony and occasionally _ . performed. '''rung her hands, said she did not knO\V · ---Seve ral committee members \1·eren't the information Liddy ordered her to Newport Be a ch ' s trouble-plagued con vinced of the need for the bill and type had come from bugged con- MEMPHIS, Teno. (UPI ) Arthur Perry Jr., 51 , was picked up ln a drunk charge and appeared before City Court Judge Joseph McCartie MOnday wearing ne'v brown and white shoes with t\\'O- inch heels. ed ofC Seal Beach Monday night despite <it tempts by police to resuscitate him ~n ·- the beach and on th e \l°ay to the hospital. that taped statements in their possession support their claim th~t. the three men allegedly hired by Renungton were on their way to Fehling's Yorba Linda home when they were halted (or the traffic in- fraction. "It is only by chance that we do not have a ni.urder samplaint here today' .. 1'irs. Sears told Jl,!_dge Thomson. From-Page 1 1---_IllIPI.EXES . • • 25 were requests by Dana Smith to de- molish single family dwell!:ngs to con· struct duplexes in the West Newport area. Denials of two Dana Smith projects two weeks ago began the controversy. Also continued were a request to de- lllQlish a single-family home and replace it with a single-family home-apartment combination at 1208 S. Bay Front, Balboa Island and construction of duplexes at 28th Street and W. Ocean Front and at 28th Street and Seashore Drive. Commissioner Bright suggested the meeting with the city. Newport Beach "hasn't been comfort· ·able with our decisions thus far -that's clear -and v.·e haven't been comfortable ~1ith theirs." Bright said. Smith tried to coilvince the commis· sion that the city "is beginning to under· . stand the feeling of the oommission on beach access and parking. "The trend (i n the city) is to. consider what the coast al commission has been talking about," added Smith, in request· ing approval of his requests. Smith said he \Vould try to provide t\\·o· parking spaces per dwelling unit. a ratio the commission favors. That is more than what the city code requires. But Commission Chainnan Rooney said his l'oncems also focus on increased density and intensity of land Ult. OlAN•I COAST H DAILY PILOT Tl\1 ,Otu 101 Cot" 0A1L Y PILOT. •will! Wl'l1Cll 11 Cornllllled ffll Htw1·Pru1, II O~bllllled bl' --""""'=---__ ltlc Or•tlll!~~.J!!!!.nfl..L.om.Mll'l'.Jftlll·.---ril'Fiiftmc Mf PUfillihlT.Moiid'iV"tt.tiM.g11--,.,ld•Y· 10!' Co1!1 Mt11, Nri<~ IH<;ll, Hvnllf>4illon 911cl'll ,.,oun11rn V1ll1y, i..1un• ••cl'I, lrvln1/Sl'Cldl..O.ck ard S.n tlemtnt1/ 5'1\ J1Hn C.pl1tr1no, A 1inOl1 .-.glorwll .Olllorl It puOll11'1ed S.hrrdl)"I Ind Svncl•YI. Tlltl prln(lpo! P'.IOIWllllO Pllnl It 11 l )O Wtll 9•)' Sit"'• C01!1 .......... C1 1ilotnil, '16li. A1b11t N .. W116 Pruliltl!I •l'ICI Pllbfltllt• J1ck It. Curl1y V"-Pr•ld'"t •NI Gen1r11 M•nfflr -Thom11 K•••ll l!Oltor Tho11111 A, M11rphin• "'-11191nt Editor ' L. '•fi r K1111 "'"""' llfftftl Cltr Edit« NnpM a..11 Offlce lll) N1wPert le"l•••ril M1ili11f A.1111•111 ,,0. 111 1111, t266J ·--c .. ,. M-:·ttt W.t .. ., ltr .. 1 ~e .. eftl1 '22~IA'IWIVI "-"~ hlcfl: tM 9..oi 111V1r11re SM C~: as HW111 et Cimini 1 .. 1 T•1,t1n1 f714, MJ-tJJI C ...... .U.wth ... Ml·l671 --'-""•'· "" 0...,,.. C....t ~­~. Mt """ tllf'let. llhrttr•llMa, ........,... tNflw ., dfYlffltll'l*ltt ..,.... _, . ,..,~ "'"""' ...... , ,.,. ' fftllNft • Cll!Ortlfhl -· .-... CS. .... allld 11 COii• MIN, ~. MM;rfp11011 ~ tllT!w .... ._.,,, .., -It U.IJ "*''lllY1 mll"*"' .......... .,, .. """""''· ' general plan traffic study has been dealt asked Burke to go to the legislative versations at the Democratic party's na· another setback. The man hired to take counsel's office for an opinion on whether tiona l headquarters in the Watergate. Dead on arriral at Los Alamitos General Hospital was Enriqt.ie l\torales, 13913 RegrntvieW St., Bellno"·er. charge of the fina l y,·ork decided he didn't cou rt decisions already do what his bill "\\!ere you aware you v.·ere typing in· want the job after all. intends to do. Burke agreed and no vote formation obtained illegally?" asked Sen. "I was not drunk," he told the The youth was su rfing iil chilly v.·aters off the Sa n Gabriel River jetty at about 8 p.n1. He "''as pulled ashore by two other Bellflower teenagers ·who heard hi s cries for help before he became unconscious. Robert C.Olpitls of Mountain View \Vas v.•as taken on the measure. Daniel K. Inouye , (D·Hawaii). judge. _ "This pair of shoes was new to me and I was just trying them on. "l was' kind of weaving because I hit a rock and it was hard walking in them." supposed to.have Started work this week Another v.·i acking his bill, in the post vacated five months ago by Deborah Wig s, told the committee she former city traffic engineer Rebert Jaf· and six: girls r an an expe riment fe. Another replacement was hired this \Vhere they to lcf-hospitaJs they "thought week but he woo't start work until-Jllne . they were pregnant" and then almost 18. reached the point where they "lay on 1he He is Harry Thomas, a 30-year~ld civif operating table." -· engineer for the city of West Co\•ina. Colpitts, who was found by the city -after a-four-month search, turned the job down at the last minute citing family ill· ness ·and "uncertain economics." The city will pay Thomas $1 ,000 more a year than C.Olpitts \\·ould have received. ThOmas will get $18,900. Thomas, wliO 'j's married and' has lwo ch ildren , is a graduate of Cal State Los Angeles and Conner engineer \vith the city of San Marino and the state Division of Highv.•ays. He \Vill be in charge of finishing up the long-delayed traffic study for the city, wh ich is now in the final study phase. The last step is to decide on a single solution to the city traffic problems and begin im plementing it. The study has been delayed for months by persoonel problems in the consultant's office, by difficulty in gathering suf- fic ient da ta and by computer pro- gramming problems, city officials said.+ Office Machines Taken on Coast A bllrglai v.;hO ap·parentlY USed PHerS to twist off door knobs broke .into two Newport Beach commercial suites, it was discovered Monday, taking more than $600 in office machines. Consultant John D. Wilson took in- ventory after his break·in at 410 W. Coast liighway was discovered and listed a $614 Joss including an adding machine, tape recorder and electronic telephone an- swering device. Someone also apparently gained entry lo adjacent offices of the Glen E. Corning Construction Company but no one cou1 d be contacted to deter1nine what may have been stolen. Samng the Towel!'-, -_ This ldea to stop the eventual collapse or the leaning tower of Pisa· has been put forward by inventor Loriano Rifredl of Florence. The base of the tower would. be-encircled by a massive steel 6anil weaged into place by.lour blocks of concrete. ' \' Ne,vport Woman Discovered Dead· -' Tests Scheduled Circumstances surrollllding the-death of a young Newport Beach housewife who succumbed Monday night during a post- swim ··nap· .. were .. being .. probed ·today · ~y · the Orange County C.Oroner's Office. Cynthia. Bevens. 35. of 1810 16th St ., had complained of feeling weak and tired and told. her husband to wake her up before 10 p.m., so they could do the laun- dry. Invest~gators said he found her lying face up on the bed with her_ mouth open. He realized she was dead and telephoned police. No signs of foul play could be found and Newport Beach iX>lice tentatively listed Mrs. Bevens' death as due to some natural illness pending a coroner's rul· ing. Toxicological tests were being con- ducted today, a process which often yields no definite results for up to-three week6. Funeral services for the victim are pending at Baltz-Bergeron Funeral Home. Said Judge McCartie : "Any man who comes up here with ~hat kind of stOr:y deserves a brea~.'' "Case dismissed.'. Elma Robidoux ' Rites Wednesday · • Funeral servicts v.·ill be held Wed- nesday ror Elma V. Robidoux:, a resident of Huntington Beach for 42 years, v.·ho died Sunday. She v:as 65. Her late husband, Howard, was elected chief of police -in Huntington Beach in 1962 and died in office two years later. Mrs. Robidoux, who lived at 1020 l\1ain St., was a member of the Huntington Beach Women's Club and the Emblem Club. Services 'viii be held at 2 p.m. Wed- nesday at Smith's Cha?ei. Burial will follow at \Vestminster Memorial P3rk. She is survi ved by her brother. Jan1cs Sharrer of Santa Ana, three nephe"'·s and l\\'O nieces. They placed him aboa rd a surfboard and paddled to ,shore, where life saving attempts failed, police said . Measurements Embarrassing? LONDON (UPI ) -The metric system COUid: ·· efubilfra·ss··· 1tte .. ·buxo:m .. ·-1adles ·of· London. But not if gentlemen of Brjliah fa shion can help it. A spokesman for the K n i t t l n g Industries Federation said Monday that c J o t h i n g 1 labels would retain measurements in inches as well as cen- ti meters when Britain adopts the metric system next June. "We cannot believe," said John Ha,... rison, sec retary of the federation, "that a nubile female with ,,.ital statistics of 3&- 24·36 inches can ever see herself as measuring 90-60-90 centimeters. "l\1etric measurements make women sound far larger," he said. "and, in our ,·ie\v, PQSC significant psychological bar· ricrs." ' Thus. \\'omen \\'ilh a 40-inch bust might blush, Harrison said , if they 'had to ask for a dress with its metric equivalent of JOO centimeters. THE NAME OF THE GAME • • • 1 THERE IS A COMMON PRACTICE OF PRIVATE LABELING ' CN THE CARPET INDUSTRY. LARGE DEPARTMENT STORES, CHA IN STORES, AND CONTRACTORS AT NEW TRACTS HAVE·FICTITIOUS AlilES"Of.i TRFSAMPlcs>O'tFfAi TffFCUSTOli:f~ifS'-Cl(flNOT'=-·~--~­ EASILY SHOP BRAND ~AME PRICES. CUSTOMERS SHOPPING AT OUR STORE FIND THE PRICE OF EACH QUALITY PROMINENTLY FEAJURW ON THE SAMPLE BOOK, BECAUSE WE ARE COMPETITIVE. ALSO, BECAUSE WE FEEL THE CUSTOMER HAS A RIGHT TO KNOW WHAT HE IS BUYING, WE NEVER CHANGE THE NAME ON A SAMPLE BOOK._ THE NAME OF THE GAME IS INTEGRITY. IN THI HAUOI UIA llNCI 1fl7 . ALDEN'S . . CARPiTs e DRAPES 1663 Placentia .Ave. COSTA MESA 640-04838- Moo .• Thurs. t to 5:30: ~I. t to t: Sat. 9:31 to I ! • I ! I 1· l \ • ,, j • · Ora11de Coa8-. 8 , EDITION Today' Final • N.Y. Stocks V,PL 66, NO. 156, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES -ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JUNE S, 1973 c TEN CENTS or By JOHN VALTERZA Of Hie DallY Pllt Sllft A Soviet airliner laden with tons of communications gear and an ·estimated 50 technicians was scheduled to arrive -today at the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station -the advance guard for a possi· ble inajor visit to the Orange Coast by Soviet leader Leonid Bi;ezhnev. Several highly rciiable sources have r~Jl9rt.ed the impendi~g _arrival ,~r the Attorney's ' Bail Nixed By Judge By TOl\1 BARLEY Of flle i..11Y J"lltt Stiff Taped conversations described by the prosecution as '·absolutely dahining . ·~ evidence" led a Santa Ana municipal court judge Monday to rule that former Newport Beach lawyer Michael K~ster Remington be held in Orange County jail with 'bail denied. Judge William Thomson made the rul· ing and canceled the earlier .bail figure of $300,000 after listening in his chambers to what investigators claim are highly in· criminating conversations bctv.•een Rem- ington and a co-conspirator ~nd Rem- ington and a police inforn1ant .. The tapes are the cornerstone o[ the prosecution's case against ~he lawyer on allegations that he hired killers to remove hostile \vilnesses in a number of civil cases in which he \\'as named -as defendant. Remington. 33 •. is charged in eig~t r e I o n y e o u o t 1 filed. by the district at.torney's office of solicitin{"tO commit murder. Judge ThomlOn set Remington's arraignment for June l!. Also charged in the case . is Gat-y Michael Rollo, 21, ol Garden Grove, a karate expert who has 111'ide a number of guest a~ jn the television series. "Kung Fu,,. Rollo, held on $100,000, was to be arraigned to- day before Judge Paul Mast. Newport Besch attorney Robert Green argued for Remington Monday that the · ... ~l~.-~.~~~ •. ~;o.r. ex~1ni·1.'~r.~~·· should be substantially. reducea. Green reminded Judge Thomson that Angela Davis \\1as freed on $100,000 ~ii at a time when she was accused of being involved ·in the murder of-a judge and Juan Corona had bfen freed on bail when he was accused of committing between 25 and 30 killings of itinerant farm . \\'orkers. "Here we have no murder, oo death and no injury/' Green ~mmented. "I do not oppose a setting of flail . I simply pro- pose that it be realistic and related to the charge·s." Deputy District Attorney-Oretta Sears urged Judge Thomson to lislen to the series of tapes earlier sealed by Judge Robert Rickles who set bail at $300,000 after 1isteriing fo -testimony allegedly linking Remington and Rollo to ~be asserted conspiracy. District attorney's investigators claim that Rollo was one of three men arrested by California Highway Patrolmen who said they stopped the trio's car for . a trafiic infraction and found wea1X1ns in· eluding rifles and hand guns in the auto during a search. It is alleged that the two men with Rollo immediately confessed they were hired to dispose of Alfred Fehling of (See NO BAIL, Pap Z) • ---aT ezhntrs~dvance Airlini Soviet delegation but orders of strict secrecy about the event at ~I Toro have caused base spokesmen to issue a "no comm~nt" on the widespread report.!. The visit by Brezhnev has been men· tioned several times by White House spokesmen but the presence of the massive comrilunicatjons operation today reinforces speculation that Brezhnev will addre~ the American people on network televisi.on from the south Orangl: Coas~ Brp.tmev and President Nixon plan the main portion of their talks on mututal matters of diplomatic relations, trade apd other items on June 18 either at the White House or the Presidential retreat at Camp David. Soon afterwards Nixon spo·kesrnan· said, the two leaders will fly west for the stoJXlver at the Houston Space Center and then another round of talks at La. Casa Pacifica in San Clemente. ~ The White House has given no exact times or dates for the schedule during the westward journey. If Brezhnev indeed travels to the South Coast he will Pe the most powerful of foreign digriltaries ever lo visit the Orange Coast. Since Nixon established the \Ves tern _Whi}e House he has played host to now- Mesa retired Japanese Premier'! Eisaku Sato and South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu . The official reason for Brezhnev's trip to the U.S. is based in protocol. The visit will be a return gesture stem- ming from Nixon's trip to the Soviet Union where he han.u:nered out trade agreements \Vilh the leaders there. The only other Russian official ever to . vi sit the Orange Coast was Soviet An1bassador Anatoly Dobrynin, who ar- rived la st year for several days of in· formal discussions. During that trip the Russian wa s treated to some typical Orange Coa~t dining.· lie stepped out for sotne ~1exican food at a restaurant in San 'Juan Capistrano \ with his "host'' -_Henry Kissinger . ' Budget Up Sorsabal Requests Spending Boost Costa Mesa City Ma.pager Fred Sorsabal Monday nijht recommended budget ~~ditur~s of {!3.4 m_ill!on to the City Council , an increase of 13.3 per- cent over the last fiscal year. The proposal, reflecting maintenance of thC current _$1.52 tax rate, '"as ac- cepted for _study only by the council and is not scheduled for official adoption until . the June council meeting. Copies are available to the public _and may be checked out from the office of Mesa Sets $5.5 Million BondCeili11g City Clerk Eileen Phinney before the public hearing. The increases, Sorsabai said, are largely attributed to his request fof two additional employes and capital in1· provement p1·ojects amounting to S;J.3 million. In · addition lo the expenditures, Sorsabal's 417-page request contains significant personnel-related changes, among them : -The addition of a full;J.ime public in· _Che.eks for1nation officer to meet increasing deman.ds for information by citizens # groups or homeowoers associations. The"----'-'-I public information officer wilt be responsible fol'-working-with the media and to assist in th-e prepariltioD -of booklets, documents and reports. -Hi.ring of an administrative assistant to aid the council and ·manag~ment in decision making by providing in-deplh (See PROPOSAL, Page%) Arrive --,, __, 'Lost' Social , Security Recovered Score~ or retired Gos ta l\fesa residents mystery today, explaining that the Costa today were expected to receive their ~1esa mail sacks must have been sent to The ceiling for this September's park bond election was set at $5.5 million by the CQ,ta ·Mesa City Council Monday .1,,_~n.,ig~ht.,._about $1 mjOion_.below: original projectiOns. -=---~ · Social Security checks which had been aoother area. "We're guessing that the . h mail · sacks were mjslabeled," said Superin. mlSSIDg m t e , U.S. postal tendent Don Cluca. authorities re1X1rted . . A spokesman for the Social Security ~ "'fhe>"-iirl'ived-lhi...,.~idc -4'1ministratioltloday-apologized-forlhe--~1 AMistant Posµnaster Marvin Gtbson of delay. 11lt's the first time it's happened • llAReo~ SllOl'Pill!i CTR. .. PM:.~IJ6 ur dFF WldON sr: . . . . .. . . • :.<,'D,S ".1.111'.s..\ • . . . . . . . . ReC.,,cle It Recycling \Veek is u.nder way in the Harbor Area. It will run tbrou6h June 10. The Citizens to Recycle Useable Discards (CRUD) say profits 1rom recyclable materials received at their reclamation centers dur- ing the week will be ·Used to establish a fund -for a nature center, i~ Upper Newport Bay. Reclamation centers are at Westcliff Plaza, Eastbluff Village Center and Harbor Shopping Center. Liddy. Reportedly Made Death Threat to.M,agruder \VASHINGTON (UPI ) -Convicted Watergate conspirator G. Gordon Liddy once thr!atened to kill Jeb S. Magruder, former deputy manager of t~e Nixon re- election campaign, testimony by ex- presidential aide John D. Ehrlichman revealed today. (Related story, Page 3.) Ehrlichman said, Magruder informed hjm or the threat. He din not elaborate . -' on the circumstances or the date, but a~ He said he got that information after being assigned by President Nixon in April of this year to investigate events leading to the break-in, any possible White House involvement, and -any evidence about a possible coverup. That was after Nixon sai~.a fresh in· vestigation was undertaken because of new developments he had learned . Ehrlichman said th~ source of his in- Responsible for tile cut were recom- mendations by City Manager Fred Sorsabal to abandon plans for ~th the purchase of five acre.s near Tanager Park and development of the Orange County Fairgrounds property. After Monday's council action, the ~!J.i;i .package. to .be .placed.before .Costa Mesa voters is as follows: $2,519,000·for the acquisition of 70 acres of propertory in various ·sections of the city. This includes· four surplus school sites. $1,225,000' for installation or lawns. planting, and other development. $83,000 for the cost of the election and incidental expenditures. These items will constitute one-part of the package. A second question on the· ballot calls for : the Santa Ana Post Office, "and our in the two and one.hall years I've been inailmen will have them delivered to-here," said Allen Hildt, assistant day." 1nan;:iger at the Santa Ana office. The missing checks were _a mystery to Regardless of how the mixup occurred. all Monday. The Social Securit y senior citizens in COsta Mesa are reliev- Administration said they had been mail-ed today. ed. The Post Office in Costa Mesa replied Several hundred persons at Bethel that the checks hadn't shown up. And, in· Towers, a Costa Mesa home for the creasingly anxious senior citizens were /elderly, did not receive their checks on be'ginning to panic, thinking' that perh.:.ps time ~fonday and · some were beginning their sole spurce of income had been lost to panic. But Mrs. Zenada Davis, a or stolen. . Bethel Towers secretary, said happily Tl·! superintendent of mails at the San-this morning, "We hear th~re's oodles of ta Ana Post Offi ce cleared up the checks at the post office !" Mesa ·council Rescinds A.pprov_al for Church . $1.6 million for acquisition of 33 acres -of--vacant-Orange-County--Fairgrounds land for .. future development a s something other than a park. -Councilmen, were in agi·ee·m·ent-0 n the first part or the package but tllefe was considerable 0 p p~o si t i 0 TI to the-By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI \Vitnesses, discounted the claims by fairgrounds pl an, rt:islilti·ng rn ·a ·~2 .vote . 0'"" 0'1'' ~~ '"" _ · · __!.S~rlj!!_g th~ congregation of 125 on the overall proposal, with Alvin Reacting to ~mpla1ntrby_ 32911ort~ ,vouJd not create the noise and conges- Pinkley and Robert Wilson-dissenting. Costa Mesa c1ttZens, the city COWlCll tion feared by the~ neighbors. Wilson. who was working for a joint Monday night withdrew its_earlier ap-He justified the Jcv:ation of the church powers agreement with the fair board on proval or a small Jehovah's Witness on the declaration that more Jehovah's development of the 33 acres, was an-h h p noyed over the alleged lack of coopera-c urc on aularino Avenue. -\Vitnesses ate moving into north Costa tion he had received from fair 'Councilmen voted 5-0 to rescind a zone Mesa. authorities. exception permit for the 125-member "We realize we represent a minority The councilman said be wanted the church after becoming convinced that it and we realize we are building within an city to help the fair improve its grounds was'not welcome in the neighborhood. area of a Catholic church," said Buller. ·but that Instead the fair brought "nothing Last month city councilmen acted to He added later that animosity is nJt but junk'' into Costa Mesa including a approve the zoning variance because something new to the Witnesses. swap meet and a go-cart track. there was no significant opposition. Councilman Alvin Pinkley, author of , be b 1 1 1 d · h h _ That situation was reversed Monday the motion to withdraw the zone ex-' I've en a so ute Y e up wit t e ,n ight when more than 150 critics of the ceplion said he did so with ·igreat reluc-fair board for 10 years,\• fwned Wilson Newport,-Mesa church location packed cOuncll chambers lance" but that the church had not sho~\'n pirently was rererring to so~e p0int formation was Gordon Strachan. then an who, along with Pinkley' attempted to and their representatives Jon D its ability ·10 get along with the neighbor.s. bc~o:e June 17, 1972 because his lawyer aide to White House chief of staff H R remove the 33 acre purchase from the Schorle handed 0 rt· be . · 1lWiget .. Will -Go ...':l!,ld 00!=1tl~mrte1ti!Y;eJ~ even"!__.Raldenuin.arnL.iho.Wliite. . .Jfouse .pouli-0.i--boDtd ~ . . • ·...._.;_--1ttc-obJ~ctlons-.r;;;,~;cr.i,;T.?!--armg -0 -----------.,-.--af er tfie brealt-m at--ine Democra s contact fllan with the re-election com-Fair manager Jim PorWfleld respond-Schorle told .1 · that lb · Watergate headquarters. mittee. . .ed to Wilson's attack by-saying that a church wOutd creaC::r~~fFcerl-a ki" g ~ "Mr. Magruder told me Mr. Liddy had Ehrlichman said he asked Strachan joint-powers agreement on development noise problems and that:~ ~hW:h an Orange <:oast Before Trustees threatened him -had threatened his whether he had any personal knowledge of the property is still JXlSSible and that not in keeping with the e 'd 'i~j life," said E~rliehman, who resigned of any or the events leading to the cMy officials soon would receive a letter character of the neighborhood r si en ia April 30 as Nixoh's top adviser on Watergate break-in. outlining details. Dale Buller. spokesman · r" tbe ·11 be domestic affairs. or Newport-Mesi; school trustees w1 •• Weatller asked tonight to approve a· $37.~ m1lhon The Ehrlichman testimony made budget for the 1973-74 school 1ear even public tOday waS given .recently as a though they raised · some senous_ ques· deposition In the DemocraUc National , Uons about it last week. Committee's $6.f million suit against the Approval of ihe preliminary fiscal Commlt'tee for the ft.e..election of the document is actually only one st~p P.resident resulting from tha Watergate toward final adoption of the budget ll1 break-In arid bugg__ing. · · 4ugust, but trustees have. ~oiced some Earlier -testimony from several wit.- concern over several fundmg ,requests. nesses eslatillshed bad blood . between made by Superintendent John Nicoll. Magruder and Liddy, who both were Trustees pointed to tbe poesibOib' that White Houae staffers transferred to the a number of projects vetoed by them in campaign committee to organize for the lhe past had been reinserted In the bulk 1972.presidenilal campaigns . of the budget. ' Magruder, who originally hired, Llddy, Th<Y asked that •II such Items, and at one point Had htm transferred from oth~rs which might be. controvenlal, be the mafn re-etectioq ~mmittee to the brought Into the spotUghl and exPlained campa!gn finance c'Ommlltce and w .. in dell.it.• . ~ering iiri.ng him. " Bcsid .. llems lonnerly-n>jected by the Ehrlichman said he also-Ielf!l!ld that board Nicoll is .. king for bulldlnc·lm· Magruder lnlonned the White Houae at provemena at schools whlcb trustees one pofnt thit "an intelligence oper~tion'' llilnk could better have be«l ltlcludad had been-e81abllobed-by the-,....lectioo several major rtmodeling plans alreidy ~ committee to Obtain information about on lh< drawing board. Oemocrab. Mesa Couneil Action Here, in capsule form, are the major actions taken by the Costa htesa City Council h1onday night: NUD!E BAR: Delayed actlol\ on a theater license ror the fo~irQ House un- til complete re1X1rts on the controvcnial night spot have been rumished by--the police, planning, fare and building departments. ' BUDGET: R.eceived !or .review City Manager Fred SOrsabal's budget re· qutiil ol $~:4 mUlioa !or fiscal 1973-1171. -BOND 18.!VE: ~t a 15.5 mllllon celling on lhe parks bond election this fall. Th< overall package was reduced by 'about· II million. -- atURCll HALT£b: Rescinded an earlier zone exception for constructiM or a Je!m'ah'.! Wltne" ~gJ!!ll on PauJ!!i@_A~~ ~(er hearing ob- jcctioo• of no1gliboi" • Burglars Strike Delicatessen • Employes of Costa t.1esa 's Li'1 Pickle • delicatessens inay have a delay ln receiving their week's wages, following a 11 .117 burglary Monday that 'Included their payroll. Ted H. Metzger. owner of the burglariz· 00 shop at ~ Fairview Road and a sec· lt'll be lair on Wednesday, fol· lowing the usual low clouds in the morning hours. Highs of 6S at the beaches will rise to the low 70s in· land. Lows tonight 55-65 . INSIDE TODAY Tliere's a'tiew· game in Wash. ington .. Ever hear Of tlae Long· Sp on o·Fong·Hcnt(J Kong.Ping Pong..Ding Dong·BUl? See story, Page 12, _ ond.one on Park Avenuej teld police Jhe L..M. ••v• .1• C1Wt.rril1 -s 111 l•rvlu t Me¥1tt 1t int""er must have had a tey. c~"" ~• He and police ~tttrmlned there was ~-"-+-,~=.,.. ~ forc.d entry to the building ltsell, ----, although the bu\glsr pried Qpen a cash ::~ .. !:: 1•1t drawer with a hammer once.-he was in-1111WM« -'"n 'd llw tM lllt<."11 t. at -SI Ml't••• 14 fl.1ettger said lhat besld(ls t cash and "'"" "'''*'' 11 check&; a '250 stereo radio was taken. • Mtl.;.t 111.... • "'''~ .... .,.,. ____. ~MM~ I IMr1t Jf.tl ''"*' Mlrlett »n T....,.,._ U TllMtws 1t w_.,.,, Hl'Wt 1>1J Wit .. ..._ 4 ;t DAll Y PILOT Tu1ida1 June 5, 1973 'Gemstone' Link-Told Magruder PaUl Bill, Liddy Aide Swears WASHINGTON (UPI) -Watergate conspirator G. Gordon Liddy 's fonner secrttary testified today that Jeb Stuart Magruder -after I.he Watergate break· in -authorized payment of a bill for the "Gemstoneh Stationery on which she typed the logs of tapped telephone con- versations. fl...---lt.:w:as.the first time that the..name htagruder, who was President Nixon's deputy campaign manager, \Vas cited directly in the Senate committee's public hearings into the \Vatergate break-in and other pOJitical espionage during the 1'72 presidential campaign. Unanimously brushing off a request by the government's special prosecutor that lhe public hearings be postponed in the name of justice, the committee ques. tioned Sally Jackson llarrnony, Liddy's former secretary, about "clandestine" acUvltles carried out in Nixon's re-eJec .. tion campaign. Mts. Ha."lnOOy testified 'that after the June 17 Watergate break·in, a bill came to the Committee for the Re-election of the Pi-esldent .for the "Gemstone" sta-· . lloneey lhol she said Liddy ordered prlnlod. Because Liddy already left the com· mittee under the cloud '6f Watergate, "l took the biJI for Genutone to Magruder," Mrs. Hannony said. "He (Magruder) authorized payment to llA. Post Associa tes, and signed Je-b S. J\tagrudcr &o:Jt !' -.. Mr~.-H3nnony said she then disposed or the bill In a papershredder. Pressed by Sen. Howard }{. Baker Jr. IR-Tenn.) as to why she gave the invo ice to J\fagruder instead of to the off ice manager, Mrs. Hannony said, "I thought he would know more about it." She said she C'OUld not elaborate. Asked later why she sh redded the Gemstone invoice, ?\.1rs. Harmony said J\1agruder asked her to do it. "Mr. J\tagruder asked me to destroy it." she said. ''He didn't have to tell me why." "Then I'd like to know why,'' Baker said. . . "Because -Mr. Liddy had' been dischargM ffom the committee; because ' it bad lhe word GemrtOne on Jt and 1 was .familiar With Gemstone and the way I had used it," Mrs . tfarmony replied. "I nssun1ed that a lot or members 'of the commHtee were no t a\\'are of it." i\1agruder resigned RS assistant Com· merce secretary-designate in April at the height of Watergate· disclosures. M'f's:-lfarnfony, w · s 1 wOr s fofNix- on's tn1ugural Committee, sai d !\.1agruder called her from the C.Ommerce Department this spring and told her he assured John N. Mitchell, Nixon's former campaign manager, that "he (Mltchell l \VOUld not have anything to v.·orry about from your testimony." "I knew nothing to implicate t.1r. Mltchell," Mrs. Ham1ony testified. "I said I v.·as not a\varc of any wi.y I could implicate him.'' 1feanwbile, a former aide in Nixon's re-election campaign . told Senate. Water· aate investigators today that he put docu· ments labeled "Gfmstone" -the code · word for political espionage papers .. - into a file intended ro~ use at a n1eet1ng with Mitchell. Richardson Says Decisio11 Robert Reisner. ·once administration assistant to !\.1agruder, said that during the \\'eek prior to the June 17 break·in he was helpiJlg~prepare_a Magruder file lebeled "Mr. Mitchell" which he.said con- tained "things Magr'!JderWiShid to take -- On -FBI Leader Due Soon up with Mr. Mitchell." /,. Reisner, identifying a large man ila en· velope marked "sensitive material" and a letterhead code-named "Gemstone ... said ~1agruder handed him such papers WASHINGTON (UPI) -Attorney General Elliot L. Richardson ·says a perltl.'!-nent FBI director is expected to be named in the near future. , "The search which bas-been very ex- haustive has been narrowed down ex· tensively,'' RicbardSM told a news con· ference Monday. "I can't give you a ~decision-.on-how-8000-aomeone w!Jl be named, but I would like it to be very soon." Richard.son made his comments arter the White House acknowledged that Kansas City, Mo. Police Chief Clarence M. Kelley is wtder consideration. Kelley is one or at least four candidates apparently being screened to fill the post that the late J . Edgar Hoover held from 1---'·ts.creation in 1.92(..until.his~death-May..2 1972: -' • .;___ The Kansas City Times satd· today "there is every indication ... that Ke!· ley is about to be named permanent Tattooed Dancer ' Nabbed by Mesa Vice ~Detectives A tattooed teenager at Costa Mesa's nudie entertainment nightspot, the Fire House, made no bones about her occupa· tion when ~~IJ into custody Monday. Robin Gianelle, 18, of Huntington Beach, listed her occupation as plain old freelance stripper. She was booked into Orange County Jail and promptly posted $200 bail. Miss Gianelle's mid-afternoon per- fonnance at the former beer bar at 177 E. 17th St., was interrupted when vice detectives Rick Johnson and Dick De- Francisco dropped in ·to catch-her act. They clallped her hips were undulat- ing sugges~ively forward and backward irf full View of all patrons. Miss Gianelle. a green-eyed blonde, "·as booked on six separately Jisted charges under a new city law, accusing her of perfonning in the nude. being nUde. plus exposiifg Dreasts, buttoCkS and genitals while doing so. Arresting officers noted under the data category for marks, scars and other 1---Jl:Sentttymg characteristics -for future crime file rercrence -that she has a tattoo of · a broken heart on her left shoulder. A teletype record check through Sac· ramento indicated Monday's infraction is evidently Aiiss Gianelle's first brush with the law. OIAN•I COAST CM DAILY PILOT ~ director of the Federal Bureau of and be put them in the file. Investigation." Mrs. Harmony. \Vho appeared nervous The Kansas City ne\\'Spaper said il during her testimony and occasionally learned that Kelley is th~ only man being \vrung her hand s, said she did not know put through a security check for possible the information Liddy ordered her to -selection to the post type had come from bugged con· Contacted by telephone in .Washington, versations at the Democratic party's na· where he is being interviewed by federal tional headquarters in the \Vatergate. officials, Kelley said, "No offer ha,s been )_ "Were y.~u_aware you wec._e_ _typiJ'\&.Jn_7 made to me and I don't know if it will be i....., formation obtained illegally?" asked Sen . nor, i( it will; when it' will be." Daniel .K. Inouye, (0.Hawaii~:. -t Ex-beauty Contestant Has-Pfust-ic-Su-rgery A onetime !11iss Costa J\lesa beauty pageant runnerup. \Vhose race \vas mutilated in a midrtight motorcycl e ac· cident that flung her head-first into ' the slashing branches of a tree, ha s un· dergone extensive surgery. The mishap that disfigured Lyiida Lund, 22, o( 887 C.enter. St., was one of t\\'O motorcycle ·accidents that placed riders in the hospital Monday. · Miss Lund \vas listed in satisfactory condition today at Orange County Medical Center. roUowing major plastic surgery that consumed much of the morning Monday. Patrick A. Miller, 16, of 21752 Pacific Coast Highway, Huntington Beach, was recovering at Costa Mesa h1emorial Hospital today from surgical repairs on Measurements Embarrassi1ig? LONDON (UPI) -The metric system could embarrass the buxom ladies of London. But not if gentlemen of British fashion can help it. A spokesman for the K n i t t i n g Industries Federation said Monday that c Io thing labels would retain -measurements in inches as w.ell as cen· timelers \vhen Britain adopts the metric system next Jw1e. "\\'e cannot believe ," said John Har· rison, secretary of the federatiorr; "that a nuone female with \-'i tal .statistics of 36· 24-36 inches can ever see hersclr as measuring 00.00.90 centimeters. "Metric measurements make 'Yl'omcn .sound rar larger." he said. "and. in our vie\v. pose significant psychological bar· riers." Thus. v.·omen \l:ilh a 41J.inch bust might blush, Harrison said. if they had to ask for a dress with it s metric equivalent of 100 centimeters. severe leg lacerations and a .possible dislocated hip. He "'as injured \vhen his bike collided \Vith a van on Superior Avenue at its Y· shaped intersection with Anaheim Street. but motorist Gary 1\1. Andrew, 17, of 1845 Anaheim St., escaped injury. Miss Lund sustained her injuries just be£ore midnight Sunday, when a motorcycle operated by Steven A. Marshall, 21, a neighbor in the same Center Street apartments, went out of. control. The brand-new bike struck three otr jects along a 200-foot path at Nationaf Avenue and Senate Street. hurling rider and passenger through the air to the pavement. Residents came running out at the violent crash to find the helmetless Miss Lund lying in the street, bleeding pro- fusely. Marshall suffered fractures of the rib and collarbone. Elma RohidotL-x Rites Wednesday ... ' . Funeral services will be held Wed· nesday for Elma V. Robidoux, a resident ~· ·HwrtingtOO -Beach ro·r 42 fears~ who died SWlday. She was 65. Her late husba nd , HowarO, was elected chief of police in HW1tlngton Beach iii 1962 and died-in-office two years tater. h1rs. Robidoux, \Vho Jived at 1020 f\.1ain 1 • St .. was a member of the Huntington Beach, Women's Club and the Emblem [ Club. Services will be held at 2 p.m. Wed· nesday at Smith's Chapel. Burial will follow at \Vestminster ,..temorial Park. She is survived by her brother, James Shaffer of Santa Ana, three nephews and two nieces. ' Bill to Toughen Abortion NEW BATTALION CHIEF Robert E. McClollond Mesa Rejects Tlieater Lice1ise ' - GETS TRUCK COMPANY C1pt. Mich1el T,..1nor Frob1P .. e1 NO BAIL ... Yorba Linda. one of a nwnber of plain· ,I ' FIREFIGHTING SPECIALIST Wllll1m H. Hilley Jr .. •,.~" ·.i>tt\'1 ' '\~!. Joh Promotions .: ' Received by 3. E E tiffs in civil actions filed during the past · or i· .... n Haus---~---•:wo years agl!_inst ~ ven~trng machine :11.,1"...,... F'--~ d'""'-~ " ---company OT wnich-Reriiington"iS prcsi:-""lT.lCS3-lre The Costa l\lesa City Council Monday night unanimously refused to grant a theater license to the city's sole surviv· ing nudie night club. the Fire House. Councilmen said they would net act un-til they had receivedd "complete reports" on Fire House owner Ray Rohm's conversion plans from various city departments, including police. fire , planning and building safety .. Rohm is seeking a theater pennit because legitimate stage productions are exempted from prosecution under. the -city·s-ne\v anti-topless and bottomless law. l\leanwhile, dancers and doormen at the embattled 17th street nudie club, have piled up more than 26 arrests for their alleged violatioos of the statute. Reports received by the City Council on the theater conversion proposal w.ere termed "impartial" by Vice Mayor \Villard Jordan. Included in those reports \Vere reoommendalions by Police Chief Roger Nethand Det . Dick De Francisco in opposition to the Theater. 1\\'0 additional reports. by BWlding and Safety Director Richard Hanhart and Fire J\larshal Ed Le""·is. cited no particular objections. Rohm. in the meantime has fUed a Superior Court application to obtain relief on the license issue. He is seeking a y,·rit or mandate for the immediate issuance of the theater pennit. An ordinance similar to thc-COsta h1esa nudity ban was enacted by the Santa Ana City Council Monday on a 5 to 1 vote, witti·?t.tayor-Jerry Patterson.objecting. · Pattersori said he was against the regulatim of conduct in a private place.~ ' - Sign Ordinance Meet Slated for Thursday Sign refonn·minded residents of Costa Mesa are invited to attend an SOS (Sign Ordinance Support ) meeting at 7:30 p.1)1. Thursday in the Glendale Federal Sav· ings community room , 2300 Harbor Blvd. Maureen DiDomenlco, spokesman for the citizens group, says the main topic on the agenda is the proposed city sign ordinance. It will be explained in detail during the meeting. lt~or additional inforniation about SOS, call 545-2797 or write to SOS, 491 Coronado Dri.ve, Costa Mesa . Liberi;tn Welcomed WASHINGTON (UPI) · -Liberian President \VUliam R. Tolbert received a \Va rm welcome from · President Nixon at the White· Jlouse tod~y. dent. - A trio of Costa Mes,~ire Department personnel 'vith a combined total of more than 21 years' service have "''on pro- n1otions to higher rank . Green indicated in the courtroom f\.1on· day that the two men with Rollo were Bobby Joe Hart and Jack Hewitt. Both men are held in custody and wil! be u·sed, the prosecution states, . as ~·itnesses against Remington and, if necessary, Rollo. Green also noted· that infor1nat ioh given to hi'm by the district attorney's of- fice indicated that his client was charged with Rollo and 10 "John Does'~ or con- spiring to kill 'Ned DeLancy, a key witness against Remington in a ·civil trial scheduled to start July 16. Chief Robert Marshall announced ap-1 pointment of former captain Robert E. j ·McClelland,' 33. to the rank or battalio!l 1· chief, assigned as 'administrative tX· eeutive officer. ! Remington is president of Cal Vend J\.fanufacturlng Company, a Fullerton concern that is no lo·nger in business .. "He and several other executives In the operation have been named with their company as defend8.nts in five civil 8C· lions. From Page 1 PROPOSAL. • • research on questions. -Establishn1ent of a full·Oedged personnel department. -The addition of six police officers and six motorcycles to help with traffic en· forcement problems. The COsta P.-iesa Police Department does not cunmtly employ motorcycle officers. . Affiong Lbe . ~pital improv·ements recommended by the city mana~ ere landscaping of parkways and medlinS on Newport Bo4lcvard, Bristol Street, ·Adams Avenue and Harbor Boulevard. for a total of $70.965. Expenditures for parks amount to a total of $441,710. Sorsabal proposes to spend the money on several e1isting parks and construction of the Tanager . and Gisler Avenue parks. Also included is construction of handball courts at TeWinkle Park. l n c I u d e d among the many" miscellaneous capital expenditures are a security wall around the police depart· ment, $3,550; relocation of the Rochester Street fire station, $25,000: bus benches, $6,000; land acquisition, '250,000, and city welcome sign's $10,000. B:lltalion Chief McClelland joined the department :n July, 1961 and bas lived in -Costa P.1esii Sihce his family ·move<! to the city when he was ao infant. Michael A. Treanor Jr., 29, of Arlaheim, ~·ho joined in January, 1966, was· promoted from fireman specialist to fire captain in command of a truck com- pany. William H. Halley Jr .. 30, of Corona del . f\.far, who joined in February of 1989, is promoted from fireman to fireman specialist. TONIGHT J\'Ew'PoRT·MESA SCHOOL BOARD - Regular meeting, Costa Pio1esa High Lyceum. 7:30 p.m. COSTA MESA REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY -Special meeting, City Hall, 7:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY, JUNE & OCC SPRING CHORAL CONCERT - OCC Chorale, chamber singers, college choir, Auditorium, 8 p.m. No charge. Boy,· 17, Guilty In 3 Slayings ln his budget message the city manager indicated that the city has a rps ANGELES (AP) -Robert projected inoome of. $13.5 million. ex· G~gsby, 17, of VaJencla has.been found ceeding proposed expenditures about guilty of first-degree murder 1n the triple $121,00>. knife murder Nov. 'l'I of a Valencia Of that-income. it-.is estimated-tJiat--hou!ewtfe-;-her-son and a neigh~ boy. revenues from sales taxes ~·ill again ex· Mrs. Linda Greenwood, 24:, her son. ceed property taxes. Sales tax es are &Jt-Adrian, 3, and Scott Murphy, 3. were pect.ed to generate $3.8 milliori and found sJai~ in the bedroom of the property taxes sz.2 million. -Greenwood home . l THE NAME OF THE GAME ••• THERE IS A COMMON PRACTICE OF PRIVATE LABELING IN THE CARPET INDUSTRY. LARGE DEPARTMENT STORES, CHAIN STORES, AND CONTRACTORS AT NEW TRACTS HAVE FICTITIOUS TM Ort-C...t DAILY rllOT, wllfl Wflid'I 11 ~mtll""" tllt ......,.r•u, It M!Ff!Mlf w lfl• Of•lll• Golf! Pub!ltllk'lf (Ol'ftPlllll'. I'll"· r11ti wnfi9f• Ml~t'MMftY·~ Frld1y. for COlll Me,.. HtwpOtt l11c11. Huntl111t011 l1Kll/F01.H1t•i11 V1ll•I'• llfUM IHCll, lrvlnt/Slddlelledl; Mod S.11 C~ttf S.11 J~" C1p!1tr1no. A 1l11tl1 r"lot>ll .o!!;o,, !1 pul!U51Md Slfvrdll'I •nd SVndt\"S. Tf\9 ptlncl.,.I llllbtlttlll'IO pl111f Is II lJO Wt$! 1•1' Sir"'• C..11 M .... , C.!llornlt, 91111. ·--·Laws· Undergoes Analysis , ~ --~-----NAMES._ON.:THE_S_/.MeJ.EUO.<Il:l4Ul:;IE...C.VHQM~S CAN,!jQ,_,_T ________ , __ Rot.•rt N. W•.d "'"!Mn' 1nd Publl1ller J•clr: R. Curl•y Vkl ,.rfllffnl •nd 0-tl.MINt)W' Tho"'•• K••"il ElfllOf' Tholl'l•I A. Mur,.t.111• Mlllttllflt ••t• Ch•rl•• H. t..01 1tid11r4 r. Niii Aultt•11I M-.tlnt 1E~llOn ----JJO W•tt l•y Stre•t M1ili111 A441•1u·P.O. l ow 1160, 92.16 .,_ ....... H...,.,. -..ell: JW H....-rt '°'-'_...NII L9"M l..ctl: 7" '""'' A"'911W .Hll'lllnftln ltedlt 1117l IMCll ee.i.v.Nll $ell ClemWlltl 30J NIPrlll ll C.11'1'"9 lllMI , .. .,.... f7141 641 ... 111 Clu1tlW ~111tlitn1 '41·1611 (Ofllllffl'll, 1•n. On• eo.u ""4111111nt ~,. ,.. ,.... ........ ,,..,""""' ..,_.., ,..rttr ., ~1tt11-a ,_. l'M'f ltt' ,..~ WI"-! tf*llil ,.,. ,,.,......, ., ~ ........ . IHlllll ~ ....... Ni.i •I c..11 MIN. ---11--''~· MlcrltitlM. .., ~ltt.._ ~ """""'"' .... 1M11 N.IJ "*"""' "'nl!WY .... IM*N QAt '"91'1ffllr'. S1\CRA~IENTO. (AP) -Legislation :>Jta released by the State Department aimed at stiffening California abortion of Public I-Jealth last week sho":ed that IJ\\'S and curbing "abor tion mill '' pra c· 136.584 abortions were performed in tices has been sent to legislative limbo at a lengthy night cnmmittee hearing. Ca:ljfornia last year. One hospi1al - The Assembly Health Committee took Avalon in Los Angeles County - the measure under submission Monday perlorrned 12 percent of those abortions. alter hearing almost ty,•o Jro u r s The California Medical Association op. testimony . posed the bill on the grounds court The bill by Assemblyman Roberl decisions already require doctors to Burke (R·Huntington Beach), would re-make sure fhe patient bas given her "in· quire doctors-to infarm __ women_gatlgn~ fQt.m~d consent" before an abortion is In writing or the Possible consequences cf pcrformtd. an abortion -a penmanship effort one Several committee members weren't spOkesman said could rWl as long as convfnced of the need for the bill and T<.1lstoy's "War and Peace." asked Burke to go to the legislative Lana.Phelan, pre!ldent of the National counsel's office for an opinion on whether Association to Repeal Abortion Laws, court decisions alre ady do ·wharh1s-blll made the Tolstoy analogy whtn she told Intends to do. Burke agreed and no vote · the committee such a bUI shouldn't be 'vas taken on the measure. • put Into state codes. Another ·witness blCil.ng hls bill. But Rlch•rd Tu!'ller, an attorney and Deborah Wiggins, told the committee she spoke\man. for the Pro Life group, sild -and six young glf'ls ran an eiperiment the Burke measure would move toward-.-where t~-tolt hosptta.IJ ·they "thought· curDing praCtJCeS of "aborflon mills" they were pregnant" ·and then afmost that perform tho-osandS of abortions e cl reached the point i,i,·herc they "lay on the Y,ear. oper'al.ing table." . :r ' - EASILY SHOP BRAND NAME PRl<;ES. CUSTOMERS SHOPPING AT OUR STORE FIND THE PRICE OF EACH QUALITY PROMINENTLY FEATURED ON THE SAMPLE BOOK, BECAUSE WE ARE COMPETITIVE. ALSO, BECAUSE WE FEEL THE CUSTOMER HAS A RIGHT TO KNOW WHAT HE IS BUYING, WE NEVER CHANGE THE NAME ON A SAMPLE BOOK. THE NAME OF THE GAME IS INTEGRITY. .ALDEN'S " CARP-ETS-e DRAPES·---• IM THI ' KAltlOl ~llA --s1Nc1 1t11 1663 Placfftia--Ave.- coSTA MESA L "' ------ 646-4838 Moo.· TINn. 9 IO 5t30: Fri. f to t: Set. ttlO to 5 I I