Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-06-13 - Orange Coast PilotI ~ ( I , Poli~e Frow--', ... •' ' Going-Bo.ttom-ess ·. WEDNESDAY AF'(ER._NOON, JUNE 13, 1973 VOL. ... NO. M4. I S•CTtoflS, IM PAO•S --2' Carloads Of Marine s· Hit;.2 -Die • • Boitomless Act,· l1i Lllgu1ia Bar .. Prompts Arrest A 27-year4d Corona del Mar man was aCTested in Lag~ Beach after he_allegedly dropped lns pants · in ·a bar and gyrated in front of a table of women Tuesday. ':I An unexplained headon collilibn in-Robert Le)V\s Iles, rr. of . t.11 volving two carloads ·of El Ten Marine Dahlia ;gt., • takeD into custOdy Corps enllst<d men near tho baae killed bY police calljjd to the Sor! and Sand · t,vo and left four hospitalized with ma}Or Towers, -1* S. Coal(i Highway Laguna-BeaCh. He was ·booked on; injurif<S earl)' today\ alleged indeCent exposure. I / -· Blast Fired . 1 By Governor On Remap The acciaent OCCWTed on ~aboco Police Ca..-.. David Brown said a .,~ From Wlre Services Road west o[ Sand Canyon Road, ac-man reportedly walked tO •table of Gov . Ronald Reagan has said~ can't cording to;tbe California Highway Patrol. women who bad been 8*ing for accept an Assembly reapportionment .. -•--the t service. CaP,t. Brown said the man "For IDD\e U1J.1 • .nuwn reason, eas · asked them: "How would you like 8 plan unJess 18 districts are changed, in- b<lund car entered the· Westbound lanes topless waiter," . and )lt'ith that · eluding one in Orange County he called _and ... ~ng!i'' remarked ooe CHP of-allowed bis trousers t~ .fall down the "worst example of deliberate ger- ficer this .morning. around bll ankJes and gyrated in rymandering." . ~'• depUUes identifted the dead front of the table. The· governor's strongest blast was · or the · Capt. Brown said the man then directed ar" the district draf:ted to mmi~.. in each cars ID· nd urned n~~ve ••-seat ol K--~h Cory of vol U J·-A --~poon Z5 end picked up his panls, a rel r-~ Q•~• na:1d 'E. Mit~t;i1, j9:1;:iiher ~~hose to the bar where he was aP:· Garden Grove, chairman of the hometowns were available. 1 prebended by police. Brown said Assembly Democratic ca1,1.cus. Investi-tora said tbe two Marines are Iles did ·not appear to be in-It has been referred to by other critics ~ toJU'cated' . as the "Cor·nl-" because it runs like a tn transi and not permanently stationed f :iuv. atthe~. · ; r •. .~· corridor through Democratic Inyeltiptors 41'.~;the other victj.ips, all neighborhoods. takesll.tb.Tu.stin QMrurian.lty Hospital with / • s· · The ·compromise bill, which is pending ma,idrlnjUri~oiie';~~ Dallj~M,~Kirkman. Schmitz ays· before a Senate-Assembly coo!erence -c1r· o1 a""·"~ 1.,., .. a.! ---committee, bas bipartisan support in ii: O-:: ... nc1 ~~; ""~!i: ,;.::.-it .L . ah. I both 1iowes. • ~' ot1 ~e~ :e ~' ai~.!\ ·µ,e"U -P rob y •f. ~ di!~dr~u~~ta~. &,~~ag:-~~~~ . 'Mfdical personnel at .~e hospi~_were 1 · r.. i . ·ed a proposed new district which w~Jd sUll Working on the m1ured. ~ and ,, Run· i'n 1974 . . stretch from the O~e County llne completing dla~s. this moanng. · . : -, , . • t through San Bernardino and Kern coun- --· ·.-.... . '• _,. ",· ·v • .,.,4._ •• :-··':":;· •-,,,.....::-; ,,4_!.'.IP~:I ........ · ,;1·-f ~·"'";;. ties.to Uie Santa.Bar:bara area. · . , --. r ·~· ~-i.·., ,.,...._.._Wlre ·~•Klfl':' .,._ • ,"' ·~ Other Assembly ·districts in Orange, \ ,,,.. •.•• ,.-~~-·ili~· .. • .. i 'iillil'llll61i"lilljj'""l "•"liililllilil-· ...................................................... -.............. , i 4·: " ·-· .-~Q~a-nd -Jnry Pr-ohe .: .. ~··, 'I . .-. • . ' . .· -. ·Of County Ja~l ' f ' Conditions Told- -· ., . · .. -... . ' . . ·. . . '··~·-.-~ ... , -t; . . . I -' ./· ' . :·~ " ,, ·e . ' . . · . . ·e .. .. Resumption l. • • • • Of U.S • .Aid ;,. Agreed On ' " PARfS (UPI) -The lour parties to Ibo I ·Vietnam war signed a document todaj' ' pledging the1Dltlves tf1 T1eW meuu;res t4 1 shore the Vietnam cease-fire agreemen\ through "strict and scriipuloua· Im> plementation" of ttie Jan. 'Zl document.·:'; _ The n:ieasures inClude a U.S. resumPf i tion of economic aid talks and removing ! mines from North Vietnamese waters~ j" --an ·end to U .$. recunnai!:sance flights, ' , · return of Saiglln ·alid Viet eoog· troops to their original situations and ·a pledg9 1 from them !ltrictly to observe . the ~ : £ire. _. : Saigon signed reluctantly and reported;- ly under U.S. economic pressure, and .( dispatch tonight from Saigon said Presi! dent Nguyen Van Thieu was disappointe4 thal the new agreement did not restont the Demilitarized Zone or require the North Vietnamese army to leave Souttl t Vietnam. : { OOicial &OW:Ces in Saigon· said tM. 1 ddcument gives even greater>concessionS I t()f the Conimunists than -the Jan. rr d¢wnents, ilnd 'little at all to Saigon. I _ A joint s~tement;is.sued af~r Henry A. • ·' ~1 ' ' f 1 ~· ' SAbn:AMENTo -John G. SCh,tdtz:. -Los Angeles, San Diego,· Sacramento and Or-IJe C.Ut !=r Orange County con~ressman end San Mateo COUJ\li!?&~~· bll .~. • i · •--UaI ciindidate, J>aS llald •re· will • ·'' "To"irtterlfMll"6'1"ciiriliitiin1ly 'liilerest' ', t/f ,' ~· \I ·~ost probably" run for some statewide to ga!.n partisan advantages in even ooe ( KCsSinger af¥f Le Due Tho of Hanoi wound ! ·• uµ negotiations by' initialing the lf..lrtiele ·~ document, .--r4escr;iJJ,M:I.. oificially .-as 1 a _ .... 11'! .. r. 'tMll"{-..*"';,i•r'iili 'fiil! · ''strict a scrupulOWJ implementation'" 1 or the Jan. 'IT pact. i ·; A ruu four-party signing ceremOny-thed I took· place at the Kleber Avenue c:on} rerence center in the same room where the original pact v.·as signed. ·' Weatlaer ;1.tore of the . same a;loomy low Clouds ·are on the agenda Tburs- dfty, with partial clearing in the I afternoon hours.., Hishs in the mid· ~ at tlie beaches, risi ng to the low 70s il!)end. -, INSWE TODAY ' "Aborti1m U big buiitttsa in C{ilifornia. Tlttre art doctors, l'l!1Pitala onil mid<U•men thol sp.?claltze in it. See /ir1t articte <\ bl Stf'ies b~ginnhig tQdou on Paoe 12. A~"!-hn'kl " J Mii LI...,. .. l .fW.. ...,... ,.. ..... ' ....... ' 11 ....... .... g:i::.~r-.,;<-;-=-·=· ~-': (.....,.... .,.,. Or .... c_., ,.,. c.... • ,.,.... • c~ " ...,.. »a o.M Mai 1t Dr, J~Nll!t_ II .,.,.,.., ,... ' Sfldt Mlruti IWt ~ ............. , Ttlrtl..... • ,,..._ -~-.....; •4' T•ttn--*41 -.,..Wll 11_.. It ........ -• 4 office in 1974. district is wrong; obvioosly," he said. 1be Newport Beach resident recently calling the plan "gross and iodefemible re-registtr:ed as a Republican, after run-gerrymandering." 1 ning for , president in 1972 on the It was Reagan's first extensive state- American Party ticket. · ment on the plan. · "The major "issue is ·gomg to be restor-While legislators have been continUing ing the people's c:onfidence in govern· work on the plan, a State Supreme Court · ment," said Sahmltz 'hle9day, referring panel of three special masters -retired 'to Watergate. "Right now.the country Is judi;es -Opened hearings 00 the in a real crisis." redistricting. Schm1tz' Tu.st.In •campaign office is still The court has said it would still con· open. (See REMAP, Pap Z) AlthoUgh the con~rvative ex.:coo- gresa:man wouldn't say what office he would see~ some Sacramento 10Urces said he will nm for secrelary or state. That post Is eurrently lleld by .Delnocrat F.dmund G. Brown Jr., who has expressed interest in t h e governorship. .. -,. • 1 Britain Notes , Greece • _ • LONDON (UPI) -Britainllas granted -.dl)>lomatic. nM:O(!lliLfon to. tile Greek .. Jlepublie · followlng · tile· constitutional · RENO. COUNCIL NIXES RlCKSHAJ1' . RENO, Nev. (UPI ) -The Reno Cit y Col/Jleil!.bjls 19'!1' ViUia~~ ,If forget at.x>Ut buying a rickshaw. 'The council unanimously denied r.1yers' request for a license to operate a rickshaw service along "casino row"' llere . J • • ... • '· ' • ;~Grand J~ry .Probe . 1 e~l~ A seconcJ sigliing ceremony w~ scheduled i'l'lvolving only Kissinger and Tho. The same -procedure was used ia thr (S.. VIETNAM, Page ZI • • • • j ' f].onditions in oc Jail CLASSIFIED AD ., " ~ . . ~ ._ •, . ,'Ttw~range co®iy-Grand, Jury releas· spected records and facilities," tlie itIAKES A SUCCESS <id •tbage report today on OOndltions report states. . ~M 1. ~ mate treatment at the Orange ~!rs. Bents said the i·ury' m· "cooi·unction At least one of ?Ur readers ia a ~ I . ~ . . . -thanks to a Dady PUot classified w·-· n Ja1L,.. • • ... ' •• .... with 'the distnct attorney's staff be.Id a d • ...... hite: ,epoft'. signed by Foremaa Marcia full panel hearing in which e,"iCienc:e was a · • ~'t: Birits. of .New~rt .Bea1h, !Qad\?.no .. heard /rom lhnfatesiahd .tlte'jall.stafl. RECEPTIONIST wanted for -.i'm~t on aUe~e<)·m)Jtre~tiilellt, bl in'· 1 ,~The ju ry,P<>r~,IJC ~.~st Q{ • lj'.J!,._ ~i;,,,.atm; '. {D. P · · , •. mate '"'the iatl ··~~~/ '' ,.t -,._ i'illi'' • ·••· ~ • .......... ~a ·~ ( '' -~ :(lf)._0"r'·1 >',.J ;.o! 'fl-~J , /1~1 · ~ . • '"'I " ·· • 'Mrs. '"" ... ac _ · . _ eedur~ and · fa~Uill .. _,1 tl)j! Jail. Tbe No. I for appt. . jury has recelv~1JfWn~ le.tf~ s'"from report did not critici~e the pr~sent opera----·---4 Inmates or the!~ families ' conceminf tion of the facility. ' S~c anS\Y~ed that ad and was bind. Jt I , alleged mlstl'eatment. " ' ' · "Since several a d ci t't ion a 1 recon1· rou re l~~tng ror 1 job, h'1 looMliirl at t "The jury hlis had cootlnuaL Vliils..to n1endalions are·still uhdel study by. tho tile classilied ads In the Diiiy Piiot lo-r the jail lnspecUng both tba men's-and Grand Jury this<should be coosiderCd an ·day. Tomorrow yoo &uld bo ~ · women 's iectlons,t'Ibe·JUJ'l4-committee& Interim report," ttfe forcman·.sa1C" 1;-mplo~cd. 1And 1:0 Place an ad of. YGar· l ..• ......... ______ ......,. ...... .wt • lln'k• n w.nt ,..... . • cl\Mgn-thls .month-..hich deposed . llli· Constantine, the Foreign Office said lo- day. He plaMed l.o pull a single:-scat ca""' riage hhnself, either on the sidewalk or street. have Interviewed complainants in the Included iii the rccommenc.Jmlo1l!I were . O\\'Tt. ~lal direct -The line .to~ -r jail. discussed jail Proctdrn'es "1th stair thosC -ort>as c tralnlng personnel. and -6~!;56i8; -----" member!I, eaten In the cafeteria 1nd In-· \ tSee JAIL, Page I) • • • ' .. • ; ) J \ • J • '---,-- ,_ - , --· • ~ Wrdntsda1, Junr 13, 197'3 I I --------........ S·tans Ignorance Said · Inc6nceivahle S~p~i·visq,~s, Ask Land \\'ASIJINGTON tUPJ) -Sen. Herman E' Talmadge \O.Ga.), told Maurie. H. StaM today it was "utterly in- COQCeivable" that Struts worried about bumper stickers and. lapel pins but not $1 nliUlon In cash disbursementa for unknown purposes in the Nixon re-elec- Uotl caihpaign. On h.irsecond day of testimony in the Sena1t Watergate· hearings, Stans, the highest rank.ins Nixon catnp3ign official --<•~•apptat"rlold-Tttlmadg~nd-his~ co\ lt'agues on the panel that he knew nothing about lhe \Vatergate buggi ng, an..v ro\·er-up attempt or any other political espionage. Stans. fonner Commerce secretary and prize-winning certified public ac· countant who is ,stiU chairman of the Finance Committee to Re-elect the President, portrayed his role as a fund- raiser who found himself in '·total frustration" over decisions being made by the polilical arm of the Nixon cam- paign organita.Uon. Jn his testimon y, Stans: -Said President Nixon gave him a "Pep talk" last August and told hin1 not to WOt"l'Y about the problems 'the Watergate break-in were causing because ·1jt will all be over.. eventually." -Answered "no" when Sen. Howard H. Baler Jr. (R·TeM.), pressed'him as to v.•hether he ever diS<:\.lMed what hap- pened at the Watergate bugging with fonner Attor:ney General John N. • ~l\1itchell; Frederick C. l..aRue, h1llchell'a ercl!led over campaign f11nds. certified public accountant, a member of control," Stans replied. "I go\ a daily assistant ; Hugh W. Sloan Jr .. !Nixon's "It W.ikes me as belng1 utterly 1n-the accountants' ffall of i-~ame, a !onner report of all the contributions ~ceivcd campa ign treasurer; former White conceivable that you can spend a large secretary of Com.me roe, who further had which I looked over every day. I even ln· House aides ll. R. Heideman and John D. part of your time 'i''Orr)'ing about pin been persona lly selected by President dicat.ed to the extent that 1 knew people Ehrllchman, and G. Gordon Uddy, label$ and bun_lper stick~rs and not wor-Dwight D. Eisenho~er to be director-of personally, thelr first namea, ISO tlwt the fomie.r finance counsel in the rc-electioo rylng about what happena 101arge Uft'fs -uie-Budger,-and--direclor-ot-the-com-letter of acknowledgement and ap. campaign and convicted mastenni.J)(l of of cash that are being disbursed by peo-mittee to raise $50 million for bis (Nix-preclaUon would be on a first-name Sale -Delay· the Watergate operation. pie for _ unknown causes, particularly on's) re-elect ion campaign, intended all basis. ·But many of the questions this morning .,.,•hen the law is clear on stringent this money to be spent wtlhout any o! "I got reports from time to time. t had Orange County supervilorl voted 1\Je.- came from Baker and Talmadge about reporting on di.Sbursements," Talmadge your supervisioo and control?" Talmadge a dally salf meeting. I saw summaries day t.o urge the ~le HJ~ay Com~ the conti'oT3nd supervision that Stans, an said~ • asked. of ~ reports th!t we_re filed with_ the_ mls.m lO delay d~l of ~Y , · eknowledged-!!.stiekler--for details, !.Lex--~.LYoil~r-e--telling-us\""Mr..-Stant-;--lhat-as.a -.'.!l-did-exer.cise.-some..-super.viaion-and~General-Acoountint--Off~;-so-1-did--ex---PUr~..awt . loc-the......nowM~ r ercise supervision. But I did not, senator. Coast freey ny . have anytlting to do with the day to day Supervisor Ralph Clark said the com· work oC the treasurer's offi ce." ntlssion was scht.'<luled to act on dccfar. Battin Names ' . ' Valley Mein As ftanner Cla~ce G. Casper. 53. a Fountain vatle)' private land use planning con- /Sultant, has been named to the Orange County Planning Conunission b y Supervisor Robert Battin. Casper will take the seat vacated by Adolph l\lolina, 41. a Santa Ana attorney. Battin said Molina, who has S£rved on the comm~ion since last January. quit because of demands or a ne\.\' job he had taken. i9g·such property surplus within the next few days and a wire should be sent re- queoting the delay. The holdup u1 getting rid ol the former freeway parcels was requested so that the State Parks and Recreation Depart· ment can study possible recreat.iOQ uses for the iropert i~. Clark said his request a pp 1' i e d particularly to a strip ol land purchased for ~i1e freewav betwem the Santa Ana River and Beach Boulevard in HWl., tington Beach. lie said this Property. some 90 aa-es, could be used fer ex· pansion of the !Huntington Beach State Park or for a travel trailer camping 1 ground as an adjtmet to the par~. -I Although the action or the supervisors, 1 as far as Clark was concerned. applied only to the Huntington Beach strip, it is obvious that the Highway Com1nission adopted-policy holding up sales of such parcels would apply to other Jarid. \ ' Clememe Police Arresi Alie11 Molina became the second plarming commiMioner to resiglo in the past few days. Last week Supervisor Ronald Caspers named Bart Spendlove. presi- dent of th~ Saddleback Area Coordinating Council to succeed Ron Yeo, Corona del Mar arcl_µtect . Newport Beach has been pushing a bil l 'throogh the Jeiiislalun>-10..baVUhe..Stal..__-n''--I Division of Hig·hv:ays declare surplus and -In Sexual Attack sell parcels within the city. The city \vants some of them ror park and open space Janel. '_-., '·f .. ·A 43-year-old Mexican alien ~·as ar- Tested by san C1emente detectives Tues~ diy on charges stemming from' an a"Ssault and se_xual ~lestation of a San Glemerite man last weekend -an attack which sent the victim to the ·hospital . _/ UP'tT~ SENATE WATERGATE COMMITTEE MEMBERS EXAMIN'E PAPERS AS TESTIMONY I~ GIVEN Sen. HoWard Bak•r (R·'f.•n.n . .)..J5.at-L.f.t-,-Wi-~n.-:.Sam Ervi.n (0-N.C.), Chairman h-1olina said Tuesday he ·wa"s taking vacation time · from his new job as a referee: with , the State Wo_rkrne11's Compens8tfOn Irisurance Ftllld in Long Beach to stay v.ith the commission until Brezlmev's Wife .~I • Salvador Lopez Rodriguez was picked up in the early afterndon at a Sall Clemente wrecking yard and booked intO t~e city jail on chargeJ-'-Of aggravated ass~ult and felony sexual mo.lestation. Ellsherg Prosecutor Goes L ;/'.'. To Santa Ana Law Firm . Police allege that Rodfiguez had been drinking last Sunday with a 45-year-old San Cl~menle man and late in the even·. 'rhe government's prosecutor in the ing Rodriguez allegedly ·suggested a Pentagon Papers case).s -'flow in private homosexual encounter. practice, having joined the -Santa Ana The companion refused and subse-law firm of Pas59, Y.ates and Nissen. quently was kicked severel'\Jfd then a David Nissen.-40, said today that the . forei gn Object possibly a le, police outcome of his prosecution of Daniel sa"id -was rain.med into his rectum. Ellsberg and Anthony Russo had nothing The victitn Sought medical help and to d9 with his decision to quit the U.S. was admitted to San Clemente General J.u~tice Department. Hospital for treatment. report,, said. "I'd plaMed on quitting the depart - Polict said that a woman companion of ment for quite a while," Nissen said. "I Rodriquez was atsot arrested at the really enjoy private practice." !Xrec~i~ yard on· Los M~lino~. _Sh~ was Nis.5en, however,. did admit he was _iQentifi~ as the suspect s wUe, m the disappointed over the government's country illegally. ' dismissal ol ·charges against the Pen· . Detectives turned the woman over to tagon·Papers defendants. ~er patrolen for deportation to Mex-'1Thel f~ experiences I've had of JCO. . 2 Packages Mar 'soviet Ari Fete LOS ANGELES (AP) -A priceless art fOllection on loan Crom the Soviet Union was unveiled and then the art gallery ·was evacuated v.·hen t\\'O packages that appeared to contain bombs were foUnd. ' Ho.,~ .. ever, the suspect packages were :Cietermined to be harmJess and a lavish reception ror RusSian dignitaries was held on schedule Tuesday evening. From Page I JAIL ... management. in-service tr aining, in- <:ident reports, inmate education, visiting plans, library service and exercise and J'ecreation . Also e-0vered in the recommendations were disciplinary rules -and pena!ties, forms of discipline and limitations on such actions . 01.Afrf_GI COAST " DAILY PILOT ' !lit Ot1nq ClleJI OAILV .PILOT, fl'flfl Wiiie~ 11 combl"lld tM N.-Pn·u. It .wb!lll'llod ~.,. W... Or1r.gt CNtl Put>lltl'llnt ~~'I'. S-· r.it tdtllon1 111' 11UllllJl!td, MorMHy ll!rouoll ,,ld•Y• !or Cost1 M-... NtwpOrl e .. ai. Hu1mr.g10" e11ch/F!Wfl!l!n Y•!l•v. L.1gun1 lffth. ltvln1/lktdd~tk 11'111 $an ClftM<!!t/ Sin J,,..., C.Pitltt!IO. A 11111111 tttlat11I lodlliorl l• M lltnfd :;..1urd1v1 11111 SurldtVl- fnt Otintlp.al WD!lll'llng Pltnl [I ti ~:JO Wt1t lit¥ Slrttl, COii• Mew, Ctllfornl1, '111t. l•btrt N. W11d Prt11dltfll tl'4 Pullll.,._r Jee• It Cutlt y VICt PrHllltnl tl'MI C-.-tl Mlnlt1r Tho1111t Ktovlt Editor Thorn •• A. Murphint Mlf\99111f EOI~ From Page I VIETNAM •.• Jan. 'Zl signing to pennit South Vietnam and the Viet Cong to disregard _each other's claim for oflicial status. The document broke little new ground, for the most part demanding new com· mitments to the original pact and pnr viding fresh dates for implementation. It had nothing fresh to say about either the fighting in Cambodia or Saigon's repeated claims of North Vietnamese in· filtrations into the south. In each case, it reiterated the Jan. 27 position -that foreign troops shoUtd leave Cambodia and Laos and should not be Introduced into South Vietnam. The comm unique called South Viet- namese and Viet Cong commanders to meet within 24 hours to agree to tempor- ary measures to aver1 conflict. It urged formation of a National Coun- cil of National Concord as soon as passi- ble, but did not specify that the council would have organization of elections as its main task. 1 Since the original Jan. 27 truce, war has continued to ravage South Vietnam and e a c h side blamed the other for thousands of cease-fire violations which have claimed more thousands of lives when there was supposed to be peace after nearly Mlree decades or war. President" Nixon-ordered Kissinger back lo Paris 'for more talks with Tho, suspended mine sweeping of the North Vietna mese li.arbOrs, broke off fafks on post,rar U.S. econom.lc aid to Hanoi and mounted arl intensive bombing campaign in Cambodia. This time, the agreement is supposed to bring peace lo Cambodia , too. ~ A Communist spokesman said the com- munique \Vorked out ·in a l{lst two-hour session today between Kissinger and Tho closely rese1nbled the 14-point plan made public in Saigon Tuesday. justice not being accomplished ha ve been disappointing," said Nissen. "And the Pentagon Papers case was one instance of justice not being served ." Nissen declined to comment on specifics in the case.but indicated that he had no regrets over how he handled the prosecution. The charges were dropped May 11 by U.S. District Court Judge Matt Bryne who cited government rµisconduct -particularly \Vatergale. related events -as the reason for the dismissal. Nissen's new firm, Passo, Yates and Nissen, specializes in business litigation . "I expect to do the bulk of their trial work ," Nissen explained. '1MosUy civil cases." Nissen had been an assistant U.S. At- torney for 11 years, working in U.S. Justice Departments in both. Los Angeles and Rockford, Ill. His best known case prior to the Pentagon Papers trial was his prosecution of the Friars Club gambl- ing case in Los Angeles. "I'd been with the government much longer than I had expected,1 ' Nis.sen said, explaining t h a t after graduation from law school in Illinoi's he immediately began his justice department work in Los Angeles., "I'm really Jooklng for\\'ard to my work here in Santa Ana,'' he added. Nlsson has known Passo and Yates for about six months. County Moves To Take Over Pink Bus J_,ine · ()range County moved to take over the Pink Bus line for its expaoding Rapid Transit District Tuesday, Jess than 24 hours after the two operatbrs of the service sued the county in a lawsuit charging unfair competition. . The county's Superior COurt action, authorized by County CoWlsel Adrian ·Kuyperr seeks;--tO. take over-the-operation built up by brothers Paul and Michael Kadlets via eminent domain action . The brothers had earlier demanded damages that could run as high as $70,000 from the county and will seek an injunction to halt OCTD buses operating on Harbor Boulevard. Their lawsuit also reiterates their detennination to resist OCTD sug- gestions that the dispute be settled by arbitration which CQU!d pave the way for the fixing or a price at which OCTD could buy their equip1nent. Cht rl1t H. loot Rithtnl P, Nill "'•ill•M M1r11tif\o EOl!ott Costt Mn.t: 1>0 Wttt l t'I' S1tttt N....,1 llMCllJ ll)J •NIWCIOtl llOUltvlnl l19WY IMCll; m Pll'rlll Av..-W t'l1111t1nO*''k«ll: 1711$ IHCtl tovltv~rd S111t c""'*""' au "'''" 11 C.mtrte •••I 515~000 Foolll l ........ ,,,., &42-4)21 Cl• .... .u ... tt•1 642-1171 , p-,..,. °""'" ~ C--ltlft -::--:-_, ... [Wf'fli!ll, lfl'l. °"'"" (Mil P'W!ltlllrle e.ii .. 11w. No -sltf'ln, "'"'"~lltl'tt, trdl!Orlll -ftlll' ., ..,.,.,,~ Plllttlfl INY M ~ wl!Nvt tPfe:lel .. , mlultrl tf CIP'l'l'llM _,, ftCOllll tllU ,...._ 1111 If Cotfe W.I• • (fll~t. Sllb\C!l~ltfi 1"I' CA""' U,'5 -llWYI 1W "'tit U.lt -t'flolYr l'lllllfWY .. ".,..,.,_ N ... l!*lffllJ'. - .. Clieck Flutters Away-Forever REDWOOD CITY (AP) -A HS,000 check was perhaps lost - forever Tuesday when it flullered into an escalator at the HaU -o r ~ustice and Records here. --.. Th·e-e~callltor was turned off for 15 minutes while a mecf\anic crawled inside to look for the check, But part of the machinery is in· ace~sslbl~ and the mechanic was unable fo locate the check. The t hcck was made out tq a man as part of a court property sale. "I feel.like a fool," he sa'id,-too embarrassed :to identify-himseU. • • \ . . • FronaPogel REMAP ... sider a legislative plan if one is enacted before the Aug. 31 court deadline. June 30. . - "I felt a moral"obligation to ~tay· until the 1eneral plan work is linished off," Molina said. '"1e county planning com- mission and board of supervisors are in the midst of meeting state requirement for open space and conservation elemenls by June 30. Won't Visit U ;S;- WASHINGTGI'< (UPI) -II was learn· ed _iElleadaY ,that Mrs.. Leonid I, Brezl\Kev, wile of the Soviet Communilt leader, will not cmie to the United States with her husband on his state visit ne1t week. No reason was given for her decision. President Ntxon invited Mrs. Breihnev to the-United Stalel during his meeting with. Brezhnev in Moscow in May, 1972. Partisan disagr~entslhave blocked legislative efforts to get new ·boundaries since 1971 ; \\'hen the law required the legislature to redistrict it.self based on , 1970 census data. · The cu rrent co~mpromise is intended to preserve the present 20 to 20 party vote split in the · Senate and the 23 to 20 Democratic edge in the Assembly. Casper, a private land use planning COOllU!Wit, has participated on UC Irvine's Project 21 Open Space leain. He ran unsuccesst'ully fOr FoW\tain Valley city COW\cil during tfle last elec· lion and helped In Supervisor Battin's re- election campaign. Brezhnev will arrive with h1I official party in Washington this weekend and be officially welcomed lo the While Houae , on Monday. Later, he will visit tbt 1 Western White House at San Clemente. The governor v.·as joined in criticism by former Peace and Freedom Pany state chairman Irv Sutley. He called it "racist, sexist and political.'' Jury Reaches 11·1 ln1passe in Trial An Oraiige County Superior Court jury that recently deadlocked on perjury and bribery charges aired against Newport Beach attorney Everett El'i'·ood Stone reached an impasse at 11 to one in favor of acquittal, the Daily Pilot has learned. Prosecutor Pat Brian, the source of a -·statement to the effect that the jury was deadlocked at 11 to one in favor of CQn· viction has confinned that he \\'as misin- formed \\'hen the jury returned from its deliberations. The Daily Pilot regrets the error. \I Duck Feet Fins Burglars Smash Glass · in Laguna Burglars who smashed the front win· dow of. a South Laguna restaW'ant to gain entry Tuesday night fled from the premises with neerly $1 ,500 in takings, Otange County Sheriff's officers aaid. Deputies said intruders entered Ben Brown's Restaurant, 31106 Pacific Coast Highway, via the shattered window after the restaurant had been closed for the night and then forced their way into the locked stor.age area where the bank deposit was hidden. - Officers estimated the full loss at $1 ,452.59. The restaurant lost $2,200 in cash two weeks ago when burgl•s used identical methods to break into the premises and rifle the cash register. Nixon. to Sll.oiv Economic Plt;1n WASHINGTON (lJPJ) -P,,,si· dent ~ixon will disclose Dew pro- posals tor f1ghting inflation in a na- tionwide broadcast tonight at 5:30 P.pT, the White House an.nounct(f, Details of the plan were kept secret, but It is expected to include soine selective price freeza 8.f. fecting some industries while omit· ling a specific wage freeze . Nixon has been concentrating for a ~·eek on various proposals of economic advisers and Cabinet members for stemming the worst inflation to hit the nation in 20 years. • Blemish 6.95 & 7.95 Regulars 7.95 to 10.95 Masks-&-Snorkles-- Water Winder kick Boards 4.95 Champion Handball Gloves Racquetball Racquets 6.95 to 37.95 Racquetballs. 1,.25 ea. Badminton Rackets Ping Pong Paddles & Baus Wilson-Bancroft-Davis-Yoneyamr- Dunlop Tennis Rackets Wilson-PenrHlunlop Tennis Balls Converse-Adidas-Jack Purcells Tretorn Tennis Shoes ' Basketllal, Shoes . . Ping Pong Sets-4.95 to 14.95 Yolleyballs-4.25 to 17.95 Volleyball Nets 11.95 to 21.95 Colored Sleeve Baseball Undershirts Boys 1.95 Mens 2.7 5 Baseball Caps-Mitts-Balls-Bats Raleigh Bikes-Parts q I BatebaU_Sboes~- All Pilrpose Shoes · •---Tns-Tub!ls-Re-.m-~-11'­ Racket Restringing ~ ' . Open 9 to 6 " • • - -. Closed Sundclys 646-191'9-538 Center, Costa Maa ,-- .. . ~ ' { I t . ~ I ,, I Irvine Council • At Your Service A 5uaday, Weclatlday ud Frld1y Featare By GEORGE LElllAL . Kurilko's asseJSJnenl of "needs" for °' "" a.itw ,. ... ,... park apace derived from an Irvine Com· OI Ille Dally Pllol If Irvine becomea: • city of 430,000 pany commissioned study by Sasaki, persons on 53,000 acres of land, ll,6l0 Walker Associates. Got o prob'-1 r-... ""'" Pct ~·Dtnm.. l\'oC 1DiU ewe red acres wlll be devoted to neighborhood k 1ss w'lh ·•· fin parks dedicated to the clly or private City couocilmen loo ue • u~ - tapl, Qd th• oMWCr1 and communlly associations bf developers. dings of the study and CouncHwoman City coyncllmtn Tuelday night aet a Gabrielle Pryor noted it ignored the half~ • action ' fl o u n••d to ~ ro1 .. lntqu> park dedlcaUon requirement of f.5 acres acre per 1,000 city standard for tot lots. per t,000 population. That means She observed the lrvine COmpany data developen adding hom"ll for 1,000 people su-ggeeled 8.8 pero!llt o1 the 1,000 IJOO!lle must give to the city or a nelghborbood are in .~ age range from one to f1ye . -m1111<11I and ....,..,....,;ty ~i-"""'8-ol-Jand.-Y":l·1a!J'~-~~dil!'."~vis-for parks and greenbelt.$. ion . anu ior . . 1>111i11<11. Mall ti 0 " ,. flUf• 11om lo Pot Irvine Company planrier G e or g e Kurilko responded by suggesting de- Kurilko opposed the sta,ndard suggesting ma..S for tot lot spaqe could not be "em- it exceeds the amOOnts of land 1 000 pirleally'' determined and that the Sasaki persons "need" for recreational ~ firm had accounted for tot lot facilities in Ouna I Al Your S<nrice, °"""'' CO<UI Dai!U PUot, P.O. B<n: I~. Coata and gel! lnto the area of how riluch the other acreage figures. city might "desire." Xurilko suggested The argument between city and major "'"" <:o., 92626. lnclt<df uour ititphon.e numba. land above 2.14 acres that 1,000 people landowner boils down to a difference of acluaUy needed. be. purcba..ed by the city 800 acres ol laoo which ultimately will be Prole••loaal Au to meet the "desires." required for dedication as neighborhood DEAR PAT: 1s .advertising u1ega1 f ... docton!, den-Last Tust;n tiftl, engineers, lawyers and like pro-&i fessiooal&: W.F., Mist.Ion Viejo -~ of tbeoe proleuloas bM Ila owa -.. 11rdlng odvrrllsllJI ud tbe Era Seniors !<Pl •pocll of odverillhic dlflrr. Etlllc1 ~a::::=u::=:.-To ·Graduate by advrrlllllls ID .... media, ... by .. , . . dhd mnu. Tbe CallfenJa Balhless ud. PnlleuloDll Code does net p-olllblt The last graduating classes of the advertilinl of "cthdcl" llDd dodon are Tustin Union High School District ~will allowed lo unouce a new pncOce tn leave Mission Viejo High and UniVersity' tH ..,. media, tr Worm cvrellt PB· High schools tonight. -GI a diuge t. -· Vlolalioel-N t the I school ·u he . _. examined and acted apoa by tbe ex year . w~ . s w1 m ,_ -..i of Medical Enmjpen. Dea-separate unllird dislncts: Saddleback lltll' adwrllllBI pradlcn ore l'(lllaled Valley and Irvine. by Ille .--..i of lleelal Eumlnen Uni High senior! will begin their com- • stated lD the Dental PrllCtice Act. The mencement ~xerc1ses at 1 p.m. ~t the Amtrlcu Dental Allodltlon'• code of outdoor music theater, located ut the eUdel tloes not allow adverttsi.., but It 11 ~~e:, of the campus at 4Tll Campus aot .eceuarJ for a dtetllt to beloag ~ The Mission Viejo High grads wi\1 WI IJ"OllP to practice ID Callfomla, make their symbolic march out of school =:..e:d'!::t.-:;-':1':: .. ~::. :·:;-'Jrl~.in th~.staJJiaun ~-·~ Chrisan- 11 Ille C.0.oltbJC -E~1 Aaoda-·Both high 9Chool cla.... lre going to of Call!Gnla aDow Vello'll P-llotlap, Oisneyland .(or the traditional jlf•d-night u ~ other profeulea, and the party. , · publltaUOlir of a buslnesHard-type The ceremonies willi-feature student ... _.. .... , la prol-•l ........... speakers and music by the high school No atnp.Pft' 9(1Vfftlsemeats are allow· bands. ed. De 1&ate Bar Anodatioe'• Rules of Father Thomas Gannon ol. Our Lady Prolallooal CoadllCI llrlc:lly I-"'!Y Queen of Aogels will give the Invocation type or iiltftrtll:lq or ..UCttatlon of at UnJversity'a gradualioh. cUeet1 by la'W')'ft'I. Vlol.U-c1n resalt After opening remarks by Uni Higti bl u atlilmey's .upeuitn lrom tile senior clasa president Donald Ross, It.ate": Bar Auedatloe ud all California valedictorian EVa Breuer will speak on aUenteys mat be memben of t11e "renectiom and Speculations." uaodatioll to jractlce la tlds st.au. Two other senior speakers Bram DEAR PAT: . I bovt a dichondra lawn, but I aloo have small children ~11o will he 'playing on it all IUlnnler. I'd like 90llle straight iilfonnatlon -.t how to maintain ' my lawn .-r lbe90 · cmdillons before ap. oroadtlna my gardening store and being told i. fOt of lawn aida that are not nece188rJ. I've beard yau can't ha}'e a nice dicbondra lawn U it receives beovy use, but I'd Hke to take care of It eo the clilldrm could play on it md .my wife and I can ltill enjoy ita loob. N.C., Coltl Meta Dllcb1Din lawn lllloaW be iuaqed as • ....... 1e11... srus. eccordlac to tbe Unlvenlty of Caliltnd:I! E :rte D 1 I OD Service la onqe Cwt)'. Dlct1allr1 will drvrlop a lllep -1J11em H K't ··--.ply ud DOt too ,._.tly. V_. deeJ, W.et1MDI water J'a11, l8lew prellkul1 are lea terialls. Mow- 111111 ~ ea var, klr dLtohllldrL Stace ,_ wnt to teep a Ugld, low dlcboadra ·-·-· belier DDder -· tbn Y"" malt saerUlce tome root l)'ltem deptb. nla ----,..,, .......... .... * ,..?., Iii_,... ...... ...... -· ap.r _,,,, lo --... Hes ....... ldallle ~ -...._ ......... """""·Ille -t}'llem .1~, ................... -Jen of • triollle pnl>lem, dlclloadra _ ....... ~lo-••­ ._. -~,-. EtlallUoldac • c1eep -ayAje ...... leUlq llNI '""' ,_ lllPllY before w--. A depl~ el JS 18cl9es of molllare le I realODlbl~ depdl ptl. Aa,... -lawn, K It well lo -ferdlhlatlon .... th bollttl -of!INl-mer, r.•llelt1' Pob1ttt• ifYou have volunteered to be publicity chairman for yoor favorite organiza\l<Kt and can't tell a ptess release Crom a monthly bulletin, don't d<spelr. A free , -1el, publl!bed by the Ocoldenlal Life lnlunnce Company ol Callfu'uio, ls-- •vtilable to 1n1Wer all your questions and give polnte111 on all pl.-o1 your job's duties. R<quest your oopy o1 "So, You've Been Elected P ub 1 i c It y Cllalnnan," by writing lo Occidental c.nter, OUve and 13th St., Loa Angeles, ll0015. SIUJ.kespeare Had . . Words for It . ' . ' Fridbandler and Teresa Nellon, will ad· cireoa the Slll!S. Principtll Vic Sbeir'mtt, Tustin Union District Superintendent Jack Schuniaker and Tustin Union trustee Dick.ran Bora- nian will preient the class and award diplomas. . Benedk:lion will he by English teacbe• Jack l'arnam. · At Mission Viejo High. student body president U.. Mbsbauil> will welcome the audience. , Annotincing honor ltudenu· a n d scholars!dp and award winners will be W.UUam 1.0gg, superintendent of ~­ dleback VaUey Unified District, and Vince McCuUough, Saddleback trustee. Two graduating senJon will speak. Cin- dy ThomPIOf'l's topic is "The Value of Self-Worth and Achievement." Talking about "Living or Mere Exiatence'' will be Michael Cheaelka J r.· Earl Carraway and Chester Briner, both Tustin Union District trustees aad Valley residents, will awant diplomas. NAMED NURSING DIRECTOR Marlene K. Bakke Nurse Director For Sll-ddleback: Hospital Named ' Marlene K. "Bakke, formerly with Santa h-1orUca Hospital , has been appointed director of nursing services at the new Saddleba.ck Community Haspital in Laguna Hills. The hospital at 23561 Paseo de Valencia is scheduled to open tllls smnmer. · The -amouncetnent of Miss Bakke'1 employment was mllde by hospital ex- ecutive &rector Leona,rd LaBella Jr. After graduating as a registered nurse from the California Hospital School of NurSing in 1964, Miss Bakke worked as a surgical nurse at Sant.a Monica Hospital f!r five yean. She spent a year op the. S.S. Ship of Hope, in Coiinto, Nicaragua, followed by graduate studies at Cal State Los Angeles .. She bas a bachelor of science degree in nursing a11d a public health certificate from Cal Slate Loa Angeles. Sets Park parks. Present city standards call for frvlne Company and other developera to '!OO&Je 10,750 acres or park land to the cny as I.bey add new tract... DAILY PILOT ;} is to the consumer, alnce the cosls oi the donated land are 1bared b)• buyers or Ille new homes. F'l~bach estlrpated the extra cost to be about $140 per home, assumma a $50,000 per acre cost of land. If the standard is not changed between now and Ule year 2,000 when the Irvine Company predicts_ there will be 430,000 persons living in a 53,000 acre city or Irvine, Instead of 10, 750 acfes being set aside, there will be 11,&10 acres of park landi about one-fifth of the future city . Pmently Irvine lncludea 2(,000 acres el the ultimate city. The present 2.5 acre per 1,000 dedlcaUon standard would pro- duce an unkown amount of. park acreage •• since the city's general plan Is not comvteted and it ill not known what populalloit projections that plan will P"" vide {or on present city acreage. Councilmen sent the city's interim .i .•• __ parks and open spa~ element back to the plarutlng commis.slon for In· (..'Orporation or the desired park dedica-. On questioning by Councilman William Fi schbach, Kurllko concede<! that the added park dedication acreage "burden'' is I~ a burden to the devdoper than it lion standards and a variety of other changes. -------------'-'"-'--JR Scenic Highway Plan OK'd Su-pervisors Adopt Ewmen t of Coul'ity Ge1ieral Plan By JACK BROBACK ning Commission. Trabuco Parkway from the San Diego °',... DlllW """•• Two years ago the supervisors adopted i'~reeway to O'Neill P¥fk, an(! Ortega A scenic highways element ol the « the scenic highway C01Tidor plan in con-Highway and Aliso Creek Road. Orange County General Plan was cept. It calls for a corridor extending one Corridors• included in the nature type adopted Tuesday by the Board of half mile .to each side of the highway. are the Santo Diego Parkway from El Supervisors. . The purpose is to integrate the highway Toro Road . to Canada Govemadora; The highways element is but One of with the surrounding environment. Canada Goverpadora from San Diego : many such ments of the overall generat p 8n wlilclF1bE county '"must A scerdc highway when-completed-County. u...Santo.Diego Parkway: Laguna adopt ,according to state law. ()then in-would include a buffer to screen out Canyon Road from the Pacific O>ast cll)!:le Open space, land use, conservatioo unsightly features;. parallel .equestrian, Freev.·ay corridor to Canada Road, and and recreation. pedestrian and bicycle trails; vista San Joaquin Hills Road from Laguna Ca· In adop\ing the scenic highways plan, points, roadside rest areas and parking nyon to Culver Drive in Irvine. ·'1 the Super\rlsors endorsed these recom-Urban.scape conidors include the meodatlons or the Planning Department. areas; and adequate right-of-way for Pacific Coast Freeway corridor and the They include: necessary protective . planting and San Diego Freeway from the Los AngeleS:· :....commit the county to develop scenic landscaping. to the San Diego County 1line; Oso ' highw.3.fS in the unincorporated area and Under the adopted plan there are three Parkway from Laguna Canyon Road to 1 1 to coordinate with the cities such major classifications of scenic highways: Canada Govemadora; Alicia Parkwa)' , rughw~ys throughout the county. -Recreation Corrlden. ·A route that from Aliso Creek Road to Paseo de J _Adopt the proposed scenic highways traverses a ribbon. of parklike devel~ Valencia, and San Joaquin Hills Road asf art\eodmenls to the Master Plan of. ment and a scenic corridor al high from MacArthur Boulevard in Newporf-j Arterial Highways. esthetic or cultural value giving easy ac-Beach to Culver Drive in Irvine. -DireCt the Planning Department to cess to a variety of recreation activities. The Planning Department reusured . develop specific plans for the oonidors of -Nature ~oi®r. A route that property owners t bat the (lllUOty , the proposed scenic .highways and to traverses a defi9ed visual corridor within bad no intention of acquiring the corridor ~ design corridor enhancement and pro-which natural . sceni~ resources, which space one-half mile .on each side ot the te;ction plans as parts of the overall open ' ~y be found m agncultural as well as scenic highways. It said the purpose ~ · space conservation and recreation wild land, are protected and enhanced. the plan was to regulate land uses in the '. elem~ts ot the countfgeneral plan. -Urblacipe Corridor. A r cru t e corridor and oot tO stop ,development. · ·: .._Direct the Road Departtqent · to ~rough ~ urb<m. area with ~ defined Ken Grobecker representing the' JrvirMt ( design scenic highway rights-of-way in vtsual C?mdor which offers a view of at· Company said that if the plan includes ·• accordance with the 'prOposed Urban and tractive urban scenes. . . acquiring a wider than normal .rigflt-Of-, · Rural Parkway typical sectioos. . Orange ~st area sceruc highway ~r· way that the county should buy such land . . . . . ·,. ndors which come under the recreation from the. owners, and urged that the cor· -~tabhsh a Scenic. Highway Design type include El Toro Road from Irvine ridor regulations be based on e:risting . Revtew Board responsible to tbe Plan· Boulevard to Santiago Canyon Road; land use zones in the various areas. ; Shooting Vi~tim Sues Policemen Over Bar Fracas A man wounded in 1B. barroom shooting that ended with the death ol a Marine Corps captain and the arrest of two off_ duty la wmen ha5.-aued the two ollkers anil"llie~ employer! for $000;000. 5"'" Paul Campise, 35, ol Tustin, lden- tifi,. Cypress Police 5(1. Tbomu M. Baroldi, 26, as the man who shot him in the -Jan. 5 dlliing a fracu at the · Bachelors Ill bar. Doctors who removed the bullet aaid it was an inch from his heart. -Named as C<Mfelendam In the Orange County Su)"rior O!<irl lawsuit is Garden Grove o!f1cer Jerry L. Gray, 21. He was hooke<I alter the shooting oo charge• ol assault with a deadly weapoo. Baroldi is charged. with the tilling ol Marine Corps Capt. Randall S. Robinette, 25. of Phoenix, Ariz. Witnesses said the dying ollicer told them he was going to the aid ot the two lawmen when one ol. them swung around and shot him. Both officerlll were subeequently in- dicted by the Orange County Grand Jury Md-ere scbeduled to go on trial Monday in Superior Court. ... Campise'• lawsuit .names the cities of Cypress and Garden Grove and Orange County as aubaidiary defeadanta. GEM TALK TODAY by J, C. HUMPHRfE$ Police,. Fire Emergency Unit,s to Be Displayed ,. ':1 ) '! ' l : ;1 Emergency vehicles and equipmen t will be dil!lplayed by five Jaw enforcement and fire·proteeuon agencies saturoay in ~-Sberlfl James A. Mualck an- In the display al the parking lot ol the K-MMI atore, El Toro Road and Rockl!eld Boulevard, will he 30 di!ferent varieties of police vehicles, fire and rescue units, ambulances and special World Gloomy; ' Youth Takes Life SANTA CRUZ (UPI) -The Santa CNJ County Coroner's office has reported that a University student killed himself after becoming despondent over the Watergate acandal and "the world situation." QJronor's deputies 'said Thomas s: Hamilton, 23, West Coviria, a jm.ior ma- joring in political science at the UC San- ta Cluz campus, was found dead Monday ill his panel truck. · Cause of. death was listed as carbon monoxide poisoning. • communicatioil Units, the sheriff said. :1- Agencie~ ~pi:_esented are the Sheriff's Olfice, Orange County Fire De~t,lf California Highway Patrol, State Olvisl"f"j of Forestry and the U.S. Marine C«f!S· Fire Fighters. 1 Sheriff Mualck aald ibe Pu'1JOSe of the , display is to acquaint residents with the'· various types of equipment available tO them in the event of a major disaster or any emergency situation, small or large, The Sherill said each piece ol equip- ment on display would be-on the scene in. any commwtity should there ever be a need. To add spice to the program there will j he demonslraticria presalted by penon- nel who man tbe unlu. Included will he I the Sherill'• spe<ia1 bomb dispoal squad and a "slide for We" showing • firemu. desc<ndlng by rope from a 79-fOO{ snorkel rig. Ffremen will also demonstrate boW' Ibey fight an actual fire. , The Marine Corpo will have -of i .. rescue helicopters on display. Sheriff ~usict said some 100 officers mid men will porticlpate in tbe procram from 1 to 8 p.m. in El Toro. He urged the public to "come out and see the meu who serve you." .. . I 'I Omega introduces the tota1 look for chronometers. The Omega Electron«:.• Conslellotion Chronomeler ln yellow 14k gold-filled top, .stoine u steel bock wolet ·resistcnt case. Doy/ dote·telling gilt ond brown dial. Combfnolion link gold· filled brocele! -$290 . • J.C. ..J/umphrieJ J ewe ferj 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVENIENT TERMS 27 YEAR S IN THE SA ME: LOCATION lenlrAmeric••d-Meher Qi,,,. • PHONE l41·l401 , ·' Wtdntsd.ty, J11nt 13, 197} -' , A DAILY PILOT 1~------.{ A·stionaufs Focus on Florida Growth · '·l!PIJOAST. OOWNCOAST, You have a '3;or development to J)OD;der today on "1>at's happenifl( to the last ol the virgin f(!.iterfront land alcag our Orange Coast. J;tai< Seo. Dennb Carpentor (R- Newport Beach) got h~ bill cleared unanimously by the Senate Natural I ~ and Wildlife Committee ~Y to preserve the op• n ~root between Laguna Beach and llewportlleadL , 'IbiS is perhaps the last natural stretch of coastline left in our region vi.rtually u¢oudied by die fumbling hands ol man. J Jt'is a ..,1auvely Mat otnlcb ol coast ·-lilJt· Wilhln it lies rocky tideliiiils, I ~adlands and wide-<>pen strands ol - I dy Qeach. The area includes places like , 1 Crystal Owe, Scotclman's Cove, and El . ¥orro Beach. ' 'CARPENl'ER'S MEASURE wwld ap- 1 -ililo $'1.1 millidn for public purchase of B.S miles ol this stretch, including 1 pne 1,IOO acres d. Irvine rancblands , fbove the high tide line. f NC?W all we have ·to hope is. that the senator's bill ·. will clear .the I lure and gain Gov. Reagan's 1 uie. It won't mean that this entire taguna-t<>Corona del Mar stretch will 1 ~in tu-ever in it& present pristine. lluoolic otate. But it could indeed I -: 'EVERY NIGHT, THE WILY JAPANESE, SAVJIGE INDIAN, fDIOT BLACK' - Marlon Brando, With Beginnings of Beard, Appears on Cavett Show u,,, ...... Brando Gives Leeture . NEW YORK (UPI) -Marlon Bran-and entertainment -to k°"' !lie·~-. do, graying and a litUe paunchy, drinking gtiy in his undenhirt from shilled uneasily In his chair, quipped changing channels." about network talk shows and lectured When the taping sessim started, oo Indian rights. muffled gasps could be beard from tbe ·In an uousuaf teleyisioo appearance audience. Outside, perhaps -l O O Tuesday night .on f.,BC's Dick Cavett per9Qfl.!, many of them teen.age· girls, smw, Brando, his wispy, nasal tooes waited for a glimpse ol Brando. M the still intact 'since they jolted a whole theater emptied later, one came "one can tee lilly renditions of tun.an behavior -!lie wily Japa'"R, !lie savage Indian, the i<!!«·black. . "MOit ol 1\'hat wt 'lmow about the Indians we have learned from Hollywuod, and tbooe portrayals have been incredibily un~." be said. "'.!be people who are hurt by this ..., not so much the adults as the Indian Photosensors Measure : · 1 I I Disney World's Impact :· 1 SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -whole .~ruled Stalos seems cl~red In 1 SkYlab'a;, aatn:myta, •knld~tbeir earth'· .today. , -*= Y'"1 r•J . . r_.... pholOlerilOr> at Cape Kennedy, BUT THE PRIMARY tlrget f(Jr the \ Fla., today to uiea tbe impacS ol Walt pa.5.$ was clear. 'lbat was Florida's Dlllley World on the Jl'OWin& area. BreVW'd County, home ol Cape Kemedy, After a frwtnlt:inl Pass: rNf!t the cloud-where tw~sensor-equipped re Se a re h rovered. mldd1e leCtioll ol ltbe country, plants were in the air gathering data to Iha ••Iller wu deer """' Florida, compare •·ith that collected by Skylab. i-••••c Paul. J. Web to es:claim: Dr. Vert R. Willmarth, Skylab's Mrth "'Ibere's the Cape. Coming out ol the resources project manager, said Brevard cloud.! I can eee Che Cape. County is an excellent area for land use "There's the Titan Jauncb compJex analysis "because or the impact that down there. From this distance it looks Walt Disney World has had there." like an ant," be said. Disney \Vorld is located 50 miles to the Weitz, O\arles Conrad Jr. and Dr. west of Cape Kennedy. Brevard County,, Joseph P. Kerwin oonducled their 10th like the rest o! Central Florida, hU felt · earth re!OUl'C<ll pass oo the 20th day of the boom. the planned 28-day mission. . "There are a lot of bir;d . ~ wil~µ-e refuges in the county and a lot of fishing BUT CLOUDS HAMPERED the study and recreation water," he said. "We across the heart of the United States. It should be able to get.an evaluaUon of the wa1 to have included geology..studiesoilL_enl'iromneotal e!J.e<Lof lb.e..raJ>ill . • the Colorado Rockies Ud Wyoming's Big tion growth." · Hom Mountains, water · mariagement The astronauts _ Tues(lay conducted as3eSSmenls in the Great Pla'ins and their first experiments In materials pro- agricultural surveys throughout the cessing, tests . that cool~ lead to ~ l!tidwest. manufacturing in orbiting laboratories l A!J the astronaµt.s looked _for 'l\lrt.le-late_in this centw:r. . 'i Creek Re2Mrvoir on the Kansas-Nebcaska 'I1te wUque weighUess and vacw.an border, Weitz commented: "It doesn't properties of space could produce very I · look too good. 1be clouds are pretty. st.ron.g materia~: perft;Ctly round bill r solid. Let's just Uy to look at a couple bearings, precwoo optical lemea, pww I holes in the clouds, shall V!-e?" vaccines and other materials not po&ible j "What Ines?'' asked Conrad. "The to make on eartb. because of gravky. Aide Tells How He Became t.r·the palillc; ' E" ' some of the best" recreational gaieratioo of actors 25 years ago, said ~ to !lie first group out, saying, bia: c~ !ll!:_a 18Jp_erstal' ~ ~ a -"My Go<ft-did-yw see him'? Isn't he ''nice living." He refUJed to discuss · gorgeoos! Im't ~gorgeous!" children.-T-h·e~-with-•-·B---~ negative image of tbemaelves from a d c c-~1 . : IN ALL THE TALK about public agen- 1 iles attMng to protect the envirqnment · · ind mtural resourees,-one small wtXd I I !!Jlcht be said for the Irvine Ranch qn • his film roles, Branolo, who ...ru..., to acceJ>I an Wearing a blue derum Jaclret and the 0scar·f.,; his portrayal of a Mafia don beginnings ol a beard, Brando told in "The Godfather," said be asked an Cavett that the press and all the InWan girl to substit~ for him at ·the ::S~;tr.~~~;~ttilii":! Ensnare : ·in . ov~rup ase : it's an art Is dellJding himself." He Said "we all act everyday iq order to ! ~s !hoceline area. · ( ~ f,'l. Since I was a IUd along this coastline, stretch of ranchlands rn questim ve remalned virtually WlCbanged. Oh, ~ Irvine Compapy did allow devel~ , media· was "big buslnesl" and that Academy Aw a rd s presentations Fi nl ol Cameo Sl*>res at the COrooa del ar end and Irvine Cove at the other r Laguna. But what of the territory between? ''The horse randl oot the... is new but 4ln be characterized u temporary at !Jest. & can 11he parking lots. Laguna ~ilt El Morro school. Beyoocl this, you , llave the same few cottages dotting the beacbline at Qystal OJve, the same orange juice stand, fresh fruit and vegetable place and the other little roadside vendor , where you can get a date malt, maybe. Thus this shoreline sectoi-has pretty much remained the same !« lit'Veral decades. The cattle graze above Pacific COast Highway and in season. the mu.staJ:'d 1 plants grow, turning the roadside' ind billy places into a fore;t of gold: Clearly, not moch has changed. The a~ bas '8.bo been virtually clear of any larp bi)!.~ "' placanio to enhance the land!cape. POINT IS HEJl;E that !he !;vine Ranch people could have opened development On this area at almost any time in the pest few decades. Long bef<re environmental impect reports oc the coastline praerva- tion movement that culminated in the passage ol Proposition 2D last November. The ranch prople waited, however, and now they are moving in rather deliberate , fashion toward a plan to devekJp the place. Reotrictions on what they do will be greater than they ~'OU.Id haVe ex- ~ at eny time In !lie past. And the ~unJty for preservation ol IOD1e of the best of this area is al'° greater than ever before. How mU<;:h of the area can be preserv- ed ' for public use by future generations now pretty v•ell depends on the"' Legislature and the governor. Let 's hope the opportunity doesn't slip by. Cavett's own talk show "asked pro-because of "what Hollywood has done vocative questions to keep the ratings to the Indians, and to all minority high." · groups." llE SAID mtPORTANT e-v'1tSi \VCre often ignored for the sake of "ratings Ii:!' itil~ "RIGirr JIERE on nearly every night," this network, said Brando, Morton Turns Down Plan ·For Power Plant in Utah WASHINGTON (AP) -f n I er i or Secretacy Rogers C.Ii. Mortoo Tuesday ann~ his refusal of pennlts for con- struction of a _giant coal-fired power plant in southen Utah "foF en- vironmental reasons." Morton offered to help utility ·com- panies find better locations for power . (..__I_N_S_H_OR_T._ ••• __,,) plants in the Southwest to minimize adverse environmental impacts. But he rejected comlruction o[ the pro- posed Kaiparowits plant, whlch was to be located near Lake Powell. e Two FlrenteR Killed PIIlLADELPHIA '(UPI) -Two firemen were killed and at least 42 other firemen were injured Tuesday night in a ~tacular eight-alarm fire and e11:- pl0Sidn at a South Philadelphia ink fac· toy.· • The bodies of the dead · firemen were pulled from \h< debris ol the block-long Frederick Levy Co. build\ng. e Inquiry Proposed IVASHjNGTON (AP) Contending poesjble "political and other crimes" cannot be .ignored, Rep. Bella S. Abzug has Called for a H~ inquiry into ' "'hether Prfsident Nixon should be im- peached. "1 believe there is sufficient evidence of deliberate ~d illegal activities by the President lo justify an inquiry lo ascer- tain whether impeachable offenses have been committed," the New York Democrat told the House Tiiesday night. e· Singer Goes Free • NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Singer Jaye P. Morgan has been cleared of mari- -juana pouession charges on grounds the drug was found through on illegal aearclJ. Miss Morgan and her manager, Peter A. Donald, w..., arrested March 14, 1972, after an airport search turaed up marl~ juana in their luggage. e Integration Ordered CINCINNATI (UPI) -'-A federal ap- peals court ruled Tuesday t b a I ?"'dominantly white suburban 1cbool districts around Detroit must Integrate in one areawide plan with largely black schools in the central city. The attorney for 40 of the 52 school districts involved said he wouJd appeal the decision to the Supreme Court. Heat Wave-in Ea8-t Eases, survive." "It's ~ a nice living," he said, "like beinj 'a plumber or a carpenter or an ecooomist, or anything else that helps you to get 00 and provide food and shelter for your family." Indians Angered As Week Named For Joh~ Wayne SEATI'LE, Waah. (UPI) -An Indian group, calling actor John Wayne "the na- tion's No. 1 lndlan killer," bu con- demned Waahington Gov. Dan Evans for proclaiming June 10.16 as John Wayne '·\feek. 1 "With overt racism toward lhe native American,. Wayne is the nation's No. 1 Indian killer," the group said 'Neoda.y, "Evans joina Wayne by boooring liihC' The condemnation came f r om Advocacy-&avival ol American lndlans A spokesman said that Wayne's Western movies "have created the image ol the good, noble white settler who wanlod to build a cabin and live at pemce. And !he healhen lndlan who raped women, scalped men and muzdered cblld...n." Crowds Angered By Band Action ITllACA, N.Y. (AP)-A-and a hall hour rod: and --. -enipled al O>melJ Unheidty ,.._y nllht when the rod: group Deep Pu.,.ie failed to llbow and no ezp!anatim wu given ·to the coocert crowd--tll 12,000, la university epobsi1M aid. Four per8001 received lltlnor Injuries durinC !he lndden~ !lie ....,.....n oaid. A l1l.lllber ol people began ~ ""'"'· bottles and debris -the univenlty's football field at about 9:30 p.m. when lnembenl al the Tycho Brake Sound Inc. began Ji!iOOVlng l(Jl1Dd equip- ment from Ille llage, the ~ said. The -. the flnl In • ·-sen.. ol Biz _.... by • -__ g!'Q!ij>, .1!!!1. lUePl . .i._tp ~ . ·-HCW 011LllAH9 ~MIA ... l.IOIND \• \ S1111, Moon, Tides . WIDMllDAY Stcond 1111111 .......... l :tf p.m. '·' Steond kM ,,,,,,,,,, 2:DI p.m. 2.3 TNUalOAY Fl1'1;t 111111'1 ........ 0. IO::tl •.m. 3.! Flnt low ••••••• , • , 3:44 •.m. I,, '.!be promolen, CongeJt Eut ol Island Park and !Festival l!lul ol Bullalo, aald IVben they cmtacted the poop's lead gultariat Richard Blackmore at a neaJby mole! he declined lo npllln why tbe group """1d no! l(ierform. the unlverslly spokeomanaaid. The promolert aald tlley wwld -responalbllty for !he refundt m !lie '5 and I' coocert Uckell, In a written atate- ment, lhe promoten ll8!d Ill aplanatim from the !he group wu "in order and necenary.'' S.Cotl!I """ .......... l :ff "''"' '·' r-------------i World krw • • • . . •. . • • 2:21S p.m. t.J llol1i •'-1:.n •·'"' "" i :os "'"' Mcoll IU•n 6:27 p.rn. ... J:S2 '·'"· llAILT P.&OT: DRIVERY SERVICE· ............ tf -.......... ... ,.,., .,. ... ,. .................. .. ........... .... , ... _ .... _ Pllll ,_.., ~ ... .....,, ............... .................... ~-·-,....,., "" -........ --.. .... c.tll .. -· ..... .... T-) .... ...... , .. , -........ .... ---.. . ...... ~ ... ... ... __ _ ........ c---. .... ...... .... ~""-.......... ... Princess Anne Nuptial,s Set LONDON (AP) -PriJaM Amw dauaticer ol Queen Elizabeth II, ;;jjj IJl4"l' Lt.' Mart Pblfllpo In Westminster Abbey Nov. 14; Buel<· u.tiam Palace anJlllllJICed today. The marrllge"WiU be pcifunn<d by the Archbishop ol Clnterl>ury, Dr. Michael Ramsey. 1l>o wedding daf coinddes with the 25th bh1May of Anne's brother, Prince Charles, heir to the BrtUsb throne. . W ASIIlNGTON ( UPIJ ~ Herbert L. Porter of LJagWla Niguel, the Conner Ni1- on campaign aide \\to 8dmitted, in Senate Testimony that be had oommitted perjury, said vanity, loyalty and a weakness tn his character drew him into the Watergate coverup. Porter, who wu scheduling director for the Qimmltloe to &elect the Presi- dent, testified la.st week that he was talk- ed lnto making a false statement to the _ grand jury and at tbe Watergale trl"1 by deputy-campaign director Jeb Sluan Magruder. RE'nJRNJNG BEFORE !lie committee for more testimony Tuesday, Porter was asked what had made bim do it. He replied: "I did not do it for money, ·r did not take a bribe, I didn't do it for power, I didn't dD it for position, I didn't do it to hide anything !bat I bad done because I didn't think I had ~ anything. And yet M the other hand there were three or four facton that probably weighed, and I can't put any percentages on which wellhed more oc which t'l!l'led me over to !lie other Side. ' , "'ith what I have fOWld out to be ~ ' weakne.5.$ in my character, quite frankly, j to succwnb to that pressure, all added up to my lipping over to that side ••• "Sen. Baltei (Howard Baker ()( TED-nesse~) used the "wd atonement ibe other day, and perhaps that is what I'm : doing, I doo't know, l'U let odier> ludtl• 1 that. But that's the way 1 feel and that's 1 \\'hat I'm doing." • ln Tuesday's testimony, former d:m-j merce Secretary Pt1aurice H. Stans I acknowledged that he provided $75.000 in cas1> on the urgent reque..i o1 Herbert I Kalmbach. ol Nell'J)Ort Beach, Nixon'« personal lawyer and "a man cl. in- tegrity." . The General Accounting Off i c.e , watchdog .arm of eoo,rea, II.YI -l:bat money was used hl pay off the W...,.. wiretappers after 'their an'edts. Stans said after Kalmbach assured him the moocy \\'&.s vita l for "a special Wblce House project" and cleared by "higher authorities," be lumisbed k fortlnrllh. "My vanlly was ~ppealed to when I N ff · was told my name had been brool!bt up , ixon; aig <.:ruise in high cooncils and !bat l was an honest. man ond made a good appearance and WASIUNGTON (AP) -P""ident Nix-J that 90ri of thing. My loyalty was ap-on had dinner Tuesday evening with his pealed to, to the Pre>ident • . . new chief of s!aff, Army Gen.. Alexander 1 . · M. Haig Jr., alioard the presidential 411 THINit AIL cl. thole things oou'Pled yacht as it auiJcd the Potomac River. ~--------=---'---'------------\ .Famil" Murdei-• . Detective .Ra)'mond Nuli examines bedroom where one or four ram • ily. members was slAln Jn . Wilton Manors, Fla. The b0die11, or Mrs. Unda Smith, 31, and three children-Christopher, II, Timothy, o, and Karen, 7, were discovered by another son, Willlam, 14. Victims w~re slabbed apd throats were slashed. i I DAIL y PILOT I ' • Wfdntsday, Junt ll, 197.3 I I Cirl, 15, . . Stabbed To Death ·Reinecke Says Aide ·Pointed· Out Error Priest, Woman Hostages . I ' .. I SAN DIEGO (AP) -A IS. year-old girl was stabbed to death Tuelday 100 yards from her high scb:>ol campus, sheriff'a deputies said. Officers said t w o con- stniction workers grabbed a IN'~•--Jl,!IJl6"tbeI 18W !'W!Dinllc the area and held him for an arriving highway patrolman. ( ,BRIEFS They aaid the man, Jerry R. ;,i Sctmlck, 24, of-San Diego, wai later booked for investigation of.murder. Carol Valkonen W.s •I· tacked as she walked to Monte Vl9ta lliah School, Spring Valley southeast of San Diego. ~ coroner's office said· her body bad ...... than .10 stab 1"llll1ds and her throat was cut. A hunting knife was found '--~~ -m·a11ellrl>yfield, olficers said. e lntllf'acllment SAN DIEGO (AP) -The San Dieco County Democratic Central Committee has called ' for the lmpe•Chment of Pres(. dent Nlzon, saying be seeks to establish "an aboolute tyranny ove< the -le ol the United _ .. Acquittal Toast Tho1nb Card? Panel Views Hitchhiking The committee passed • resolution Tuesday niR'ht ac-· cusing Nixon of obstructing · justice in the Walergate cese "by wilfully and deliberately SACRAMENTO (AP obfuscating the involvement of Tho.5e • thumbing t ri~ on his aides 'in. crime and cor-California highways could car- ru~ ---=--· -~ry-a~tate-:issued--id~ificatiorl • E•-pee Held RIVERSIDE (AP) -One ol 10 men who escaped Sunday from a Tijuana, Mex .; prison has been captured, Riverside police say. Clyde P. Evans, 33, was ar- rested eor.Jy TuOlld•y and held on U.S. cllarges ol conspltmc to Import cocaine, police said. U.S. Commissiooer Robert Timlin ordered him taken for lrtal· "' San Diego, where he was indi<Ud by-a federal grand jury in April. Seven other 'persont were arrested Jor investigation ol harboring a !Ugttive, police said. Instrument Protection more1s bill would require JN RELATED action, the owners of night spots who co~ttee voled 6-Z to kill a employ musicians to take bill that would outlaw hit- • SUdl Stell• "reasooabie means• IA> guard cltbiking except iii coses RIVERSIDE (AP /-The chon<ellor ol the Uriversity of the lnslrumeots againat !heft where someone's car has callfornia at Riverside says be or damage. ' broken down, the person needs will not '""1d dlamlssal notices Wbetrnore, a La Habra belp, or, the bitchluiung takes to.IO t.culty memben by July ReplbUcan who ,IJ bimself a ,piace in u r area designated by 1 ;!: ~ker said Tu.,. musician, llald Tuesday that in lbe local government entity. day' be wu withdrawing his the Age of Amplified iostru-1be bill that died three votes dedsion al last week and the ments such as the electric gui-short of passage was authored tXJticel will not be sent until a tar, mUSloans frequently by Assemblyman J oh n thortiagb review ol academic 1eave them ln <the club TbW'man (0.Modrsto) . .......,.,...-. ~lh f a cu l·ty .....U ... I '~·ad ~ •~~ng r~-w• .,, ·-w "'66' Kssemblyman John Dunlap participation. Hinderaker had all the electronic eQuipment (0.Napa), authored the sue· announ~ the" P e n d l n g home. cessful bill which he said was d:iBmWa1s in the face ol. a Whetmore uid some in-aimed at giving motorists faculty cutback of 30 due to struments. left overnight have some assurance that card-car- -dropo. been d•maged when imbibiog rying hitchhikers had been &R..te KUled patrons decide to bold an inr checked out bY authorities. --------- SACRAMENTO (AP) _ promptu concert. The stale would not be liable South Pasadena residents ~Jyu: now goes to the for any hitchhiker crimes , ICE Sil -''JI NG have woo a preliminary vie-howev~, Dunlap said. l\1l toey in their battle to reroute r--------------------.1 LESSONS ~ .... ~ii:ffci,~h FA.NS GO A.PE FOR A DAY - . . 'Ibo A s a e m b I y Trans- :""'~ ~~ l~e: ~ SAN FRANCISCO(Af)~ "Go Ape for a Day,'' sponsored by Assemblyman suggested the Warfield theater marquee as some John L. E. Colli er (R·Los 2,200 people formed a block-long. line for a aeat at Angeles) to wipe out the cur-the one-day showing of all five "Planet of the rent alignment of the freeway Apes" films. · through portions ol Alhambra. The complete showing, which included the South Pasad e na and latest and supposedly final "Battle for the Planet Pasadena. of the Apes," ran a total of nine hours Tuesday ·- longer than a back·t~back playing of "Ben Hur" Good Deed and "Gone With the Wind." . ..... "It's really something," said James Sutton, .~district 'manager for National General Theaters, as he watched the fans· pour into the theater for $1 a ticket "We ought to sell a lot of hot dogs." -----·~---· .New Clinics Now Open COST A MESA-HUNTINGTON BEACH I~ I,. ·medical, ' - lindoro's unique program is o safe and practical method for the entire family to lose weighl and learn how to maintain proper weight ... under the strict supervision of Medical Oodors. . weight • redudiOJI ' . Coll for information Monday thru Friday 8 A.M. to 6 P.M. UNDORA .... COITAMllA 55'7 1893 . ~J(AL cuN1cl . ..."'.a'•" •UCll .. NEWPORT BEACH GARDEN GROVE LONG BEACH ..tsADE!IA ORANGE ---64s.J74o -·s34.2os1 426-6S49 796-2614 s1a.21ts hctr ...... 11otMoi Pi•M ll,,.,.ulloNil C•tc•tl' T111t;,...ch.,_ ' -...... ,,.,, • .i.,..11i.1,. ..... '-"~ lldtl: ' ................ . WOODLAND HILLS SHERMAN OAKS WIST COVINA FULLERTON LA HABRA 347-564'1 789-7103' 962·3438 170·9S01 694-1029 w ....... vk--, Ot!ltffi.VeflOyl ,.,,...... Sttt.C~... Hillcr"9 • ~.. ..... .. •• ,.. •• ,.., .~. :_ lltft, ~·.. ..... . M..lir.i ...... . ' • Enhance your chlld's polH and poa tur1. A planned program of teaaon9 wllfl thp exclusive Ice Capadn' easy !earning method gives you · or your child healthy oxerclae In pleasant 1uperv11ed 1urroundlng1. REGISTER NOW MISA YllDI • SHOl'l'tNe CINTI~ 2701 Httbor llvd, •• Ad•m• Colt• Mett, Ctllf. f 2:626 Toi. (7141 '79-IUO • .. Ul"I TtllPt!Oto A First Freshman • Assembly· • m;m ' Frank Holoman (0-Los Angeles) had girls whi stling at him hll day whe11 he ap· 1>0ared before ·1egisla~ ti v e committe'es in walking shorts. It was a first at a public hear· ing, according to Capi· tol observers. NOVATO (AP~ -A;n ' O•kland man tool a cathoU. pries! and aoe ol b I • parish-.o -.. at .... point Tuesday in an attempt to rob the Central Valley Bani: here, police reported. ; ~ ~ostagea_ftl'e-niealeol --'l' unharmed when police seized the gun after being called i, the se<ne by bru1k ~ -authorities said. - Eug'll'e Louis Gray, 13, entered Our Lady of Loreto cltureh •nned With a .:is. caliber pistol, fon::ing the Rev. Leonard Ca1egari and Mn. Louise White, 52, into tbe prei.sts' car, police sUI. They said Gray asked to ~ taken to the downtown bank. where he sent Father Calegar:I oo ask fnr mooey and kept the . woman in the car at gunpoint. The priest alerted bank employes who called poliee t<i' the scene. Police said they ap-: proacbed the ·vebicle and. diverted G r a yrs attention. enabling officers to seize his_ W'Capoll. ' Gray was booked for In-, vestigatioo ol kldna!J4ng wi1h attempt to commit robbery. ~CONGRATULATIONS .. - wo1H1a •• SON euDUATD JESSIE ELINORE LOUGH .u,. ........... ,... Troff TecWcal Ceaete. ·'-A.1111• ....... ' MICHAEL GILBERT LOUGH u,.. Gr•ll•.rl-PNM Miio• Hlgll, Sdtool, H ........ .._. ', BIKINIS, DRIVE·IN MOVIES, THE WHEEL, DEVILED EGGS, MEDICATED POWDER (DID I SUFFER FROM TOGA CHAFING)! AND BUSMMIUS. WHEN THEY MADE IT IN 1608; 'THEY DIDN'T REALIZE WHAT THEY WERE DOING FOR MY LEIS\JRE HOURS! -BUSHMIUS .. . GEE, I HOPE WE HAllE A _LOT OF LEISURE HOl,IRS ! .. • • /• ------ ,• - • DAQ.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Reason If th•"' e•er was an Issue that called for calm and "'uon, it is the proposed building moratorium tor Arcli Beach Helgbr... The imie threatenJ lo divide the bill· top community seriously and that would be unfortunate. Simply put, the moratorium pits the people who actually live on the hill against thoee wbo have land for ,___ -de.velopme.nLo wll<LmaJLwlah-lo.-bulld IDlklbelLliv·~­ there. Pre.sent "'side .. -th• crowding, difficult vehicle access, hampered fire and police attention as everyday problems and want it stopped befo"' mo"' residents make things worse. On the other hand, persons with property to de- velop, occupy, or sell see a threat In the building f"'""'· This last view was expressed angrily at the last city council meeting. Expressing an opinion ts one thing, but heckling and unruly behavior such as that at the council meeting is foolish and gains nothing. The best thing both sides coU!d do is draft reasoned. documented statements tor )>"'80ntatlon at th• June 27 meeting. The councilmen have seen shouli11£ matches before, and are not impressed. When everyone yells, no one llsllens. A Bitter Lesson Jn a yet-unexplained cbange of attitude, representa- tives of the Santa Fe Railway and the California Pub- lic Utilities Commission have pulled the ru~ out from under San Clemente city officials over the issue of an at-grade rail crossing at !be city pier, and cycle trials along railway property eistwhere in the city. The audden shift In attitude now means that San Clemente's chances to replace a battered, ramshackle underground pier entrance are nil. The only alternative suitable to the railroad and !be state woU!d be a costly overpass. vs. Ranting k for the trails, the plan lo -k public use of lpl1"8 land flantlng the beachfront tracks woU!d only be allowed If the city purchased the reqU!red slrlps and erected miles of fe.n<*I to aeparate tralls from rails. During the latest aboritd "honeymoon period" city ottlc:lalJ we.re led to believe each project had a good cbance.. tor lllCOeSI, sojhay uaecLalll!ll.LU~.Q!)!! once budgeted for a pier enlrance facellil tor other proJects~. -- Now the oft-stalled "'furbishing must be launched once again and the cash "'budgeted. It is a bitter lesson for !be loca4 In their future deal· lugs with the Santa Fe or !be PUC. ~ Worthwhile Benefit San Clemente's municipal employes have long been at !be bottom ol the county list of salllries and benefits, and de.spite often heavy negotiations the workers have rarelf..";n any major increases. · year's public safety effort - a massive cam- paign for community aupport -won a two-year contract witb cost-of-living Increases. .Miscellaneous e.mployes were more low-keyed but won a slmilar package. Now, with the new fiscal year at hand, the employes are trying-one more ·time to win something from their e.mployers. · So far Ibey have obtained little. The major Item of contention at this point is the city a.ssumption of health insurance premiums for work· ers' dependeni... City officials said Ibis week !bat lhe cost for such a be.nefit woU!d be "about $50,Q90." Such benefits are commonplace in municipalities in other Orange Coast communities ind the request far from inordinate. · San Clemente city officials shoUld take another look .~t finding a way to offer this worthwhile employe beneftL s • ~ 1_;_ i IF I GO, WE SOTH 'o:• ·HoW Reason, Like Passion ... Can Ens'lave . . E~y-minded Driv~ Leaves Car at !Jome .. . . . ... Dear Gloomy Gus Two-hit Bus Line Wins Applause FNEY J.HARIUS) 'llolqbla at Lars•: 'lbere are two um of "reasonable" -'°' -who guide their lnotindual drl... -1'clllnlOle satisfaction!, aid the rar larger number who use reason to repress their instinctual drives; and the latteT" sort are jtllt 11 M mucll the sb.ves ol reasoo. as the libertines are the staves of passion. • • • . . The unknown, no----· la elways mono f<ered . than •'!mown danger; and since ...-age i.. """1tled into the unknown, on au fronts, faster lban any other, ii is scarcely wrprising U.t "" .,... more pul>lic fear and priv· ate amiety than any past era. • • • I "·onder how many persons who abhor "druas" PoP a couple of aspirins in their mouth the moment they feel a headache coming on, instead of taking a brisk walk in the fresh air, a short snooze, or aome other fonn of non-<:hemical therapy. • • • \\eethciven would rewrite a musical phrase a dozen t imes; Mozart woold dash off a page without a scoond thooght; how hard or long or con· The Senatorial hams are having a fine time as they wreck the buck. -R.E.D. • ._,.on ca:111•1-. a I .... .,. ,......... .......... _... ...... ... wt..,. ...... -........ )'Wf "' ....... .._, .... D9lty , ... . seied.iotWy you labor over a creative project has nothing to do with taleut, ..,. ly ·with temperament. • • • We campialn lllal tile yGUllf are overtlrnlng our valuol aad inotltutiom; yet since the~"""" of -limo, the yoong ha"' lincomplalnmgly gone oul to be slaughtered In <»DllJal to ~ 1ile pride, vanity, greed and "hnr'' ol. the old in every genenltion. • • • . People who use fool ~ 1'her"t II cioe<m't belooe should be min rebuloed for having an impoverisbed vocabulary than a "filthy mind." (In moll caW.is, the words have oo "drty" refereit, but are simply vert>al exclamaffon poiW to stresll Inarticulate feelings.) • • • A3 soon a we learn we cannot gt something we nnted, it becones far dearer to us in imaginaWon than it would have been~ p:aesaloo.. To the Editor: Hooray !or the two-bit bus line! In these times when govenunent.s are being so roondl:y criticized by citizens for not doing things, I think that loud applause should be beard !or tbe Orange County Transit District-The buses are clean, nm on time and the drivers are all oourteaus. 'Ibey an! scheduled frequenUy and the intenectioo ol. two or more lines is tiin- ed so pet ltlll do not have to wait for a transfer very long. • WE HEAR much these days about a fuel shortage an:l an energy crisis. It seems to me that a lot of people do not care. I have ridden the OCTD buses ex· lenstvely ml the maJorlty GI _.,. are lhooe who ettbor do not have autcnobiles for tc(D!lnic reuc:m or camot drlvo (eltller too ,...,. ar too old). I do have a car and am able to drive, hut for two-bill (25 cmts), I can't afford to take my car out of. the driveway! So, I me the OCrD whenever I can. I urge other citizens of. the area to do the same. If they need infonnation or schedules they can caU 547~ or write to the OCl'D. 1126 E . Washington, Santa Ana 92701. Try the bus, you'll like it; and save some money!. WALTER J . GRIESMEYER Resident'• View To tile Editor: Watergate Hush . Money Eyed for Tax Liability I refer to your JWle 7, 1973 issue .. herein the leod tllory •about the pro- pooed bllilding moratorium was head- lined "Arch Beacb Residents Fill Hall." The story began "Angry Arch Beach Heights realdent. lilied Laguna Beach City Council chambers ••. " I take issue with these statements. 1 have lived in Arch Beach Heights for over eight years and I know most of the residents by sighl I recognized more realtors, builder-speculators and vacant land owners than residents. 'Ille residents, 159 GI whom are members ol the Arch Beach Heights Association , were represented by their spot,.man, Mr. Douglas Wh;taker. Mrs. George Hitcbcock lives in Dana Point. She was inaccurate in giving her address as 1077 Bajil Street. Mr. Robert Earll Ix resldin( at that ·address. \VASHINGTON Those respoosible Cor the Waterirate crime may have to pay taxes on the $1 million in campaign funds that were laid out for break·lrui, huoh money, legal lees and poliUcal oab- otage. Tu experts tell us President Nixon hirnseU is Uable If be had knowledge ol the disbursements. Even if his aides kept hbn in the dark, he may still be held ~legally respt'l>'ible !or the lax obl!gaUoo. This is the import of a otW-oecret General AC<:OU!lllng Office study on the Nixon campaign committees. Quotfnc tu. nPes. the study declares that '1the ti· pendilure ol political funds !or _,. than campaign or similar Jllll'1JOl'M will be CODlklered 41. divers1on · ol IUc:h funds ~ quiring inchalkln a Income. 0 lonner Attorney General Joh1 Miicb.U, White House staff chief, H. R. Haldeman, presidential adviser ' John F.hrllclunan RESIDENTS GI the area know that the and eampaign aide Jeb Magruder. problems In the commun~y such as lack Our lax adrisen lllY the President • o1 fire protectioo which ~ens a vast may also be In 1ax lroUhlO·over the flnan. -lncieue In the overall Laguna Beach fire cial help he accepted from aeroool king Insurance rateo, lack GI school lacilitles, Robert Abplanalp to buJ the San lack GI porks, laclc GI convenient access Ciem«1te retr.al """"'· lack of parking, lade ol police pro- • lect!m, • etc. is rapidly making Arch THE NIXONS Slined penonal noles, Beach Heli!U an unde51rable place to whlcb Abplanalp later lore up, for live and • causing dea-easlng property lm,000. In murn, Ahphnlp 11 .._d values. U tile real -e •"!>loiters and to own moot ol the lJl.acre tract around tile buildeNpeculaton would realize It Ille preiklentlal compound. • ( MAILBOX ) Letters from readers are welcome. Normally writer1 .thould convey their messages in 300 word! M less. The right to condeme letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. All ltte.rt must Include signature and mailing addrets, but ft(lmes may be withh.eld on request if sufficient reason is apparent. Poetry will not be publish<d. given' time. the city could arrive•at nne solutions to these problem and cause corrective action to be taken. This tem~ porary moratorium would prot>obly In- terfere with une real estate sales com- missions for a few months Wt in the king run it would mly 1ncreaae the saleability ol proJ!Ol"!y becauoe It would allow the city to ilnderiake to proVlde Services to the neighborhood which 8fl" necessary to make a house a home. _ I would hope that before the real estate salesman and the builder-speculator pack the City Hall with emotionally charged peroons giving the fraudulent Impression that they are residents, they wtll evaluate the long-range benefits that they will derive from the city's plan. The staff has worked m this report for almost a year.11 woold oeem unrealistic to discard professional studlea of this caliber foe the exploitatioo of a few parcels of land. The boo< and heckles did oot lend any dignity to tile real estate profession In Laguna Beadi. I woold hope that thelr public relatlonl would tmpnve before the n .. t public asaemblage. WIWAM E. HARNEVIOUS . Fl-tlae Slobs To the Editor: Read with lnten!St you!' editaial, Sun· day, June 3, 1973 -"Inland Papen;, Please Copy." My i.m.nd and I .,. !run the East. We took a walk m Hunlingtoo Beach, Monday, May 28, -sh: o'clock In the evening. We couldn't believe our eyes. Shame, shame· on every one of you who enjoy the beach but walk away leaving It looklng _li~e a garilogo ~· I SUGGEST, to keep theta x pay e r from being the !all guy !or the9e slobs. you pool $100 l!tl<riog signs m the beaches just like they do on the highways . 'Ille lifeguards sit high """"'1l so that they could call the slobll' attentlori to when! the trash can& are located. II this !ails, prohibit food "'" drink ol any 11118 DRY language uplaD! row the Internal Revenue Service is ~ to treat .,._1gn funds that aren't spent !or campaign purpooes. The new re- quirement was adopted in 1968 after we reveoled ~I.the !&te Sen. Tom Dodd (D- O....) bad d!Yer1ed tens GI thousand5 of -!run his campaign callers Into his own pockets. Dodd was censured, and mladlrected campaign funds were made ta.table. The Filllt Family got the deol IP" ----------------------- Now Nllon's campaign collcetkw have been dlverfed Into lmpropor pockets and / 11><'11 r... W.Cal purpooes. Our tax ad- 1 vllen AY eomeooe mQll pey ta1et on • the f418,000 ol leMt that .... peld to the 1 Wetortiuutro to buy their •ii...,. end to eompmsate their lawyers. In a 11 Ilk-. the -ol thousand• apeet on ll~al campaign actJ vJtie& are al.lo taxable. Ill. THE--t can1 be stuck with the ta• oblJptl<in, then the caml>llan aides wt1o made thery-oots .re ci<.rly liable. 'Ibey woul include · Finance · a..Jmwi llboa!ce SMnl. ti. President'& -"""""1IJ lawytt ll<rbtrl . ~-ch. I I proved by the looal Intemal Rev"1ue GI· fice, but our ta• expertl luiJt Ille NIJ:cm llhould pay laxes cm the '82$,000. /4 they lnt<rpret tile law, the lelrlnc up GI the personei notes -In olber ......SS, the can- cellation GI the debt -maHi the 1625.000 -tnoome. 'Ibey point oUI !hot tile Nb:Olll ..... Ulling tho -• -that property record.!I !!how no ·t'l!d<llce ti. ..,,..,... has 'been legally dl'1cled .. d that tile whole deal •WWI to be a slmmlck to beslelit the Nixons • A SPOKESMAN !er tile President ass.!J'ed us, on the olller hand, thal Abplanalp II the legal owntt GI tbe land around the Nixon compound, thil tile land Is fOlng up In value ..t tl>at It la a profitable lnvMtment. lor Abplanalp. II anyone blrt the President were Jn. volved, Internal Revenue surrly would be in•estigating. A &pol<esman reruoed to tell us, hotA-ever, whether JM Ji ln- vestJsat!ng the Presldmt or any ol Ilia nides on tax mattm. · . • • • • kind to be carried onto the beaches. It's early ln the season -let's do something now to keep our beaches beautiful. Neit time, "Stop, Think Trash CaO.s." . MRS.L.KENNEDY point against ·one ol the baleful Establishment. I'm beginning to think that if you used an ernotional eoouah · tone, yoo. rould stand up in front d. an audience anywhere and be applauded for saying just aboul anything. ALICE VAN VLEET '811111 .Jack' 'Ol>scen It 11' To the Editor: I'm writing in answer to what a Mr. To the Editor: James B. Wood had to say about the Please convey my thanks to Rull movie "Billy Jack." Obviously. :r.tr. Wood ' Walton on "Obscenity" in the June 1 didn't get any meaning out of this movie, · Daily Pilot. but be seetm to be so close-minded be Ptly wife and I were recently tn San wouldn't understand it anyway. Francisco and "''ere Wlable to fmd the location ol the MUseum of Erotic Art. We BE SAYS Billy Jack ls full of violence, inquired ol taxi drivers, our hotel, which II 141ally ridiculous. Then! is a checl<ed the phone book and vi.s!Con br little. but if be paid any attention at all he ·formation sources -all without success. woWd: baYe notice(l that Billy J'ack never With Mr. Walton's colwnn, I'm .sure we carrled a gun '811d in a couple of In· would have found it. . stant"es waa fighting in self-defense. I have seen "Deep Throat", but hl-.e "Billy Jack" also has a little anti· not seen either the "Last T~ in eolahlialmenl In It so Mr. Wood prob-Paris" or the Museum or Erotic Art. I ~y reacted without tmnking. trust you will continue running his col· umn., as I will continue to look for further ·f'IR. WOOD says that humans cannot recommendatklns. be that evil and the human experience cannot be that hopeless. Billy Jack did all be could to protect the Indian and put his life oo the line doing il 'I'bil movie brinp out truth which Mr. Wood evidenUy IJ·alra!<l to hear. I ...,,.,.t he see it a few more times and open up hi.s mind a little and face reality. STEVE DELANEY . Cal'llf>otlrd Drama To the Editor: I have juJt read tile let!« James B. Wood wrote that describes "Billy Jock" u rm>ll!Dg. I would have to agree, altllough ii Is oot llO much the violence In this PG-rated picture that revolts me (There is vloltnce, but I think Mr. Wood e1aggerates: me rape, me seduction, would be more lair, !or emmple). For ;is trivia, chlldiness and the Insult o1 Its petty moral.ism, "Billy Jack" ranks as one of the three wont pictures I've ever seen -the other two, more ~fensive, being "Getting Straight" and "Claltle Keep." In all fairness, "BWy Jack'' at least had some vory clever -and !Unny -poychodrama ocenes (althoogil I've heard that moot ol tile\ material was botTOwed). ' .. I CAN'T agree that the advertising was inlsleading. Especililly the TV ads made this movie look like a combination Gidget Goes jllpple and Clint Eastwood 'Goes Indian.f I went to see tt out of curioalty, despite Ille ads, and later had to conclude, What you aee (In the ads) Is what you get! Whether the movie d...,.... tile amount GI publicity tt has been given isn't the questk>n; those run page ads were paid !or, I presume, 'Ille question ls, why are IO many people talk· Ing alloul what a gr'll motJon picture this ls? Violence or not, t can aomenmes enioY good commercial entertainment as mUch as a ''thinking per&00's" mo.vie. All I esk F. M. WHITE Liberal Plctators To the Editor : It is now happening in our great clty of Newport Beach. ULTRA·UBERAL outsiders or "oouveau" residents and other rn.i5guided beings in the name of ecdogy and-or peoples' rights are dict.ating the use to which we utili1.e our property rights. AU or this in'espeotive of city crd1nances or zoning. Their role purpose is to <k?st:roy our -way of Ufe here and elsewhere, and to bring all people down tn """ levd - theirs. IT IS TIME these people w""' eqiooed once and for all. To reveal to the """"l'O<llng the socialist and aimmunlot doctrines wh.ich these people embrace, while using the shield ol the Constitution and our BW ol Rights In the auempt to destroy 113. I ROBERTW.~, • ., l 'Figments•_ F.. .''I To the Editor: . , May I express my fcellnp lllaut Doll . Hale's "Figments?" -' My family and I get a lo! ol pleasure I from this comic: It Is so true to Jlfe. meanlng the imaginations of all. I hope 1 this continues to be in our Dally Pilot. I The Dally Pilot Is a line-· MRS. MlLDRED BIN'l'LIFll' I ---DAILY PILOi -Robert N. Weed, NU.her Thomas Keevil, 1'dUor is tl)at tile cardboard drama not be prf!lf!nted •n the guise oLIOcla.L Cl>l'"'--l mentary. Barbara Kr<lblc~ E~~,...,_~--11 1"9't editorial ,.,. Of the Dtlb' Pilot . ..,_, to lnlonn and rdm\llate For mo, the most depress~ part ol this movie experience wu havJng to si t In a Oolta Meal theater literally packed wid! people (not all ol them WI~ 15 clther). wllo were wildly appreciative everytlme ooe ol tile goOd puiks ICOred a Quotes "I .,., core U meol , ... te $1 1 poaod, I -1IOllnaP11111 aplll." -Pat FlathlJJ o1 Saginaw, Mich., who with her husband.and ihree chlldren rais· ed two steers In !be backyard aner get- ting mad about rising meat prices . "1 .......... "Y-•thla-d:lvone•conuntntuy' oa IDplcs OI tn- ,,_ by iYnclleat<d -""" c&r1oanilb, b)' FOYkftns a bWn, tor -· .......... .,,,.._,._.ou. -· opt ..... """ -do c:un"Oftl ...... n..--ot tho Dau, Pilot -°""' 1n the editorial column tt the 1np at 1he pqe. Oplnkrm: ,ftPfc•d by the -. .....---..... ... -.......... art1bttr6n and ....... . nRnt ol ..... -"' Ibo DaJq Pllotlllouklbo-. ' . - Wedneaday, June 13, 11118 ) ' ' 4 • • QUEENil B Phil lnt.rlanil ~~lling '?eetings like this is olie ol the adVaritages of oetng. chairm~n Qf the ~d.'' ·· f,. 1'f. Boyd Retired Fellow Has Travel Itch It's the .. u..ct man, not his wife, who warn. to light out fOI' some other port ol the country. It's be, not she, who's most apt to toy with the notion of. buying a camper, travel traller or motor home. And it's he, not she, who's in· clined to send off for brochures about national parks, monu· rn.ents, campgrounds, so on. Why this difference? Can you explain it? ' Statl.stlclans claim one In, every 400 bills sent out by the credit card companies iS Pl error_ · ..• Don't believe I mendoned the ruby throated huminingbird bas 940 feathers ... Whisky termed 100 proof In Great Britain would run 114.2 prool in the United States •.. An elephmt's normal walking pace oo level ground is about eight miles an hour ... 'Ibat .sunshine. sport IJlOSl popular in the nudist colonies nationwide is said to be volleyball. Incredible how much litter is picked up annually by the country's cleanup crews. Enough. it's said, to rill a gmdola train so long its locomotive could be in New Or- leans while its -caboose was in DetroiL auoE-on. -Q, "Ho~ much ot. a barrel ol crude Ou winds up as gasoline?" A. Just 44.8 percent ot. iL A.! fuel oil. 32.8 percent. As kerosene. five percent. As asphalt and road Qil. 3.7 peroenl As jet fuel, 3.3 percent /u lubricants, two percent. Aod as whatever else, 8.4 percenL 1 The Armed Forces qualifications test is reaUy a basic mental examlnation. 1bat place where the largest ·percent- age of young inen regularty fail It 1$ W~ D.C. Where the largest percentage ol men pass it is the state of Washington. PsychologiCal re9W'Chen at Colgate Uniwnity have insisted their studies prove the eyes of phony folk are less shifty than u-., bonost -· DOCl'ORS -Was the custom ·in China some centuries ago for a doctor to hang a lantern tn front ol his place of practice anytime a patient died. No, not just the custom, an edict by the emperor, it was. And said lantern was left out there for quite awhile. lflstory doesn't tell us bow long exactly. But long enough, It's understood, for the citizenry to get some notion of how successful or otherwise that doctor was in healing his clientele. If the young ·Ynan is definltely interested in the gi rl, he tends to blink as he gazes at her. Contrarily. no blinks. no interest. Or so the university researchers now report. And the faster the blinks, they say. the more intense the in- terest. These ·findings were made with hidden cameras i n campus cafeterias. But it's said romantic young men don't blink accordingly. if they're aware they're being watched. Address mail to: L. ~f. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660 . JULY · 12, 1973 AUCTION IAU NO. LOCALITY APPIOI •. AllA Z:ONI MINIMUM llD 7029 N'Ety ef C-iite C2A Jt,471 SF C•polstr••· S'·fy of t 12,100.00 s ... J .... c.-... ltd. •11d J . o,,_.Jt. "CM.off'' ''"'P to .... I fwy., 5•11 J1ofl C•pl•tr•110, c •. 7030 W/S ef 0r •• 5 fwy., 011 Av•. Si•rt1 before ' it turv•t Into L•s --f------i1or1t A1<1., Sin Cl1m•nt1, C1. 7011 N/W cor"•t of lrittol and Newport ll11cf., Coit• Mt••, C•. · 11.1 11,146 SF $7,100.00 11-1 ll,421 SF $24,000.00 Al W. .... M 1ecelui111 I• ... Dhhlott of Hltn.,. L• A ...... OfllM .t lit So • .,, ... Str.t M ..._ tflln 10100 A.M., hly ti, 1t7J. '" _. ....._ ltW ,.,_ ff'MI ... DhfllM of H..,._.. Office ..... _ .. .......,,._ .... .__ ........... IH lo, ""°' -· ... A-~., llr -6ZO.J70t Mr. Weet. . -... MlliMo H OiiHI. ..Oht,., SI0,000.00., -· . .. ' Wrdn,sday, Jun' 1), 1973 I ' ' ·A great Fathers Day . ·. . g~ dhis ·~ 1n_the sun. . . Sale1349 A ..... 15.H Comlortlblo i!lkJmlnum fnme lounger -vinyl tubing Ind wobblng. Comes In multl<olor stripe and red/blue/white. SaleS99 8. Reg.. 10.AI. Lawn chair In matching webtMng and tubing adj..W 38 different ways. Sale1699 c. Rog.11A _.g ... ile for mo<9comlorlobleonoazlng. Sale1444 D. Rog. 11.19. Maldolng rocar ---plootlc --- Sale999 .... 11 .tt Folding alumlnum • Chair wtth vlnyl tubing has front poet teg1 with levelers. Sale1898 .... 21t1 Chllae has double tubUllir anna~ Cornea in yellow. ' • .. Sale 9 49 Reg. 11.21; Folding aluminum chaise ha' lime. webbing. Sale S" ~ 1.21. Plutic webbing chair nu molded whtte plastic arms. eoo-In limo. lsavingson rmowers. ' ;\ 1 I .. .. .. Sale9999 -:1-~fili~rreel ,_, Feefurn 3 HP power pr<>1>91t-. tow tone muffler, sealed ball bearings, all steel con-lrucllon, low tone muffler, on-hondlo conllOll, 5-. JCPenney We ·know what you're looking for. Shop Sunday noon to . 5 PM at the following stores: ' . FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach (714),6+4-2313. HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington BeKh (714) 8~2-7771. .' ' \ ) • DAILY PILOT f ~ • • 1 .. ~ '· .. " ' . ~ ;. .. "';! ";'!; __ •""" ·<:<• ~-• ~; r~\:; •• • 'C • , . ••• ,, ' • ',. ' . •:.. I I I ' ' •• ·" • I " I • ., .. .. • ·. '. •• .. , .. • • •• • ~-· ·~ -·-8 DAILY PILOT Wt'dnesday, J·unt U , l«J73 ' t For l.Anlelfl (''I Newspapers Pvint Torr id Sex Ads ,.. SAN FRANCISCO !UPI) - ../.. telephone ehec::lt indicates l ~J ... Three Mo e Coastal Aides Authori.Zed· ,, 'l\\.'O mor~ planners and one secreuy;y will be hired by the South Coast Reglo"l'i Zone Conservation Commission to help • process the heavy load of coastal penni(. coastal zone and aid development of a coastal management plan by 1978 under provisions of Proposition 20, the coastline initiative passed by voters I a .s t November. appllcat~ns. 1 I The S~te Coastal Zone Conservatlon t The South Coast Commission has been Commission r e c en t J Y in Monterey r-the busiest of the five regional bodies authonze(l the three additional positions · , · ' · for the Orange-Los Angeles county com~ More ttian 1,100 permit appHcaUons niissk>n. bad been filed by June 1. says tile stale iso't ollerlng tn00gh money. Planners from Orange and Los Angeles counties are still on lo.iµi to the new com- n1ission to make up for the deficiency. \ • The actual South Coast Commission re- quest to the state last weekl was for a budget of $533,44111, up about 1140,290 over the authorized preliminary t>ustgel ol $393,178. " WITNESSES WAll'Ell ! .... -.--.. ...i1t ......... ., a. ........ H*1"1•1 •I Ml Vk.... IL, C .... ,. ... -.,,.. 1t, ,1'7S. ltt.USI CAU. -11,..,.2400 Bitel · tnany ot the ·400 advertisers f------1'""~--.· -·l!eley . Barb who &eek sexual en- home aren't all that rosy. Anybody who says marriage ls bliss after 10 or 15 years is oot lliogctho-ltlllh&" ~--.-! "'"""".(4 Mra. X, who doesn't always -'llfel\flrrCarponter;execut! ... directONJll-'4.il'. ""'addlu.....41-two-.!!!>ennil-proc>-· _ _.Thecne,.~pajd.b)'.;Jbo;.tn,--· "' _ · the sOUth C.oast Commission, has said he essors" and ooe clerical aide will boost come from .permit fees, Dooa14 !kight, F.ASTEE11f'PowJlc need s at least four more plaMers in ad· the South Coast staff to seven authorized commlssi~ budcet cbalrmab, said. , It lllM·the ~-.counters are kloely people ! .. tislled 1ritll. the l'<llllla. ~ Tll~ Pibllober, wbooe paper J ..Us Z5;GOO, 'bi eapeclally , satisll<d. f · ,LOCAL POLICE att skel>' J -tical, but satillli!cl !Mt the ads , -he1p thein mate some easy : prostitution arrests. ' Olbenrise, police Capt. Gerald : "-Shaughnedsy aeys, -the ads do • 1lOt create a pn;blein. .. ' ; ........... ~...,..._., :,:-'I eatt .eet more l pHple f•· •cb than • In • lifetime of : · eoclctail<JHU'.tfes.' ·-------Ji..~-....-..-......-...-.. r SOme citizens find the ads to 'be another symptom of !he 110Ciety's moral decline . Othen .. buy tbe paper solely for the ,, titiRation. " .. • Personal sex ads appear in ; several undergro.und • newpapers around the cou~ : • try, as well as in "swinger" papers existing mainly for ! that purpose. 1_ MANY ADS ARE too ex· plicit for a family newspaper. r many e x pre s s homosexual desires, and some detail sadist!<!' and -masochistic ilr terests. Others,· couched in gentle tenns) simply seek a friend. Mrs. X, 35, a married mother, seeks "meaningful relationships'' in her ads. She receives 75 to 100 responses in care o( National Rent-A-Box, and lollOWI up 10 of the m°'t promising. "Only five or 10 of the . responses are offreolor," she ' says. '"Ibey are almost .. all good people. I have met severa1 lawyers. a doctor, a minister, and a fire chief. 0 rr•s A wonderful way to meet people. I can meet more in the ads than in a lifetime of .murban cocktail p a r t i e s . They certainly beat going to bars." She wants to keep her mar· riage with her engineer. bus·· band but . says, "Things at· go to bed with her new friends, says, "Sex ~s not the primary motivation. l guess I am trying to generate some excitement." BUT SEX-AND money-ls the rnotiv8tion for ads like 0~t me entertain you on my waterbed. A nude session you won't forget." · A telephooe call brings the immediate response, "1 offer nude entertainment at my . J::..Ol' yours. I charge. $35 an Soule. tip off the motive_by asking for a friend who is "generous." A woman from Whittier responded_to her let.- ters with requests that writers send "$10 to prove your sincerity.'.' A vouNG woman, a college graduate, says she takes m<!Dey but "I give a man in· dividual attention. 1 find out what a person Is like, and what be feels." She sees on1y "one or two" a da'y and says she enjoys "a good life, good feelings about different kiaJls of p..,,le, friendship as well as passion." A gas company repairman, 45, says women answering ads he nms regularly do so "because they are lonely. ,,_lost don't know how to meet ·pe()ple .. They don't drink at bars, but they use se1 as a tool." THE REPAIRMAN says the women orten complain or sex , problems, 3nd "more than one has called while her husband was still asleep." Sometimes, he says, "I'll ren1l a motel . room near her house when the llusband goes to work." Typically, the male with an ad not too offensive receives 10 or 15 respooges out of which perhaps three interest him and One leads to' a con- tact. Maiiy of the responses are curious, suspicious or tea.sing, and end with phone liangups in midsentence. -· A male who advertised, "Girls: Free board and room with prof. man plus extras," iot no r~ponses. Sees World Official 'GOes to Wf!rk' HAVERFORD, Pa. (AP ) - When Dr. John R. Coleman wasn't busy as president or Haverford College or board chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, he collected garbage. He also dug ditches, cleaned barns, washed dishes and worked at a variety of other jobs -all in . an effort to "understand a little more about people with whom t do not ordinarily come into con- tact." COLEMAN, A 51 -year-old native Canadian, said he had been planning the experience for three years and during a Folks May Go to Jail KUALA L U MPUR , Malay sia (AP) Authorities want parents held legally . responsible tw<rmonth vacation he ·moved· from job to job on the East Coast. ''I wanted to get away from the world of books and words, from politics. from the com- pletely filtered information," he says. '"I ·wanted to relearn things that I had forgotten.'1 Coleman said he was just practicing what he long has preached to students and faculty at Haverford: Take Off from school, travel, work , do something quite differen t - anything but study. "l .UI NOT advocating that anybody do exactly like t did," he says. "It was right for me. It would be wrong for others. But the Idea of changing the rhythm of life is what is im· portant." Coleinan said that, in recent years, he has become "very · frightened about the split in America between intellect,.uals and those who work with their hands" and he wanted to understand them better. ______ forru-·Jd_drug ~il!Js< _py_ lilei~ .. c ren. He believes he succeeded. " "I learned that people do .JtDtk..h!ult -1 JilJ!:e Qi!l;-.and that they work harder when there is a meaningful job to do, and if they feel ap- preciated. I think t will be a · better college p r e s i d e n t because I have done it." .• Under proposed Ieglsla- • tion, parents could be fift..i..- ed or imprisoned o n 1 charges of negligence. n11· , Hunlington Center · · • 7777 Edil'f9tr-~'.vnliri9 !011 B~l!th ' Ptiont S~2·6&11 CHAIN FENCE SAVE PN CHAIN LINK FABRIC PROTECT FAMILY, HOM E AND rn s 500/ OFP FAIRIC WH EN .• 70 F INSTALLED IT WAR DS 0... ••"-'"""""' Mii Wlllllet M tltll'llW, IWr·-lfl~ ....... 11istd ff' pMll 'rill)'l.CNllll l•IHk, Wirt lllMk .. lllt4111 .. t¥1111l1• .... t11lr• .......... . ........................ .,. -4 ............... ...,. ..... _ .... _ .,.. ........... __ , .... -WOOD AND WIOU•HT llOll ALSO AVAIWLL ' ' I - • dition to five already authorized. pla11Qers and 11 clerk-typists. ' Bright had said the mra money could out of WI.mil The commission must act on con-Carpenter still hasn't hired two of the buy seven additional admqmtratlve posl· -' ·~· struction requests within the 1,000 yard five originally. authorized planners. He tlons and some consultant he~p. ' . . ' Great sights and soun~ds For Father's, D'ay at· Penneys. Sale 24~ Reg. 29.99 1/3 h.p. router operates at 25000 r.p.m. Features 3.7 amp. motor, built in spindle lock and high im_pact. non-marring base. sa1e 2499 Reg. 29.99. 2-Speed heavy duty saw oPerates at 25000 or 35000 s trokes per minute. Ti lting foot~ sawdust blower, switch locking button. Dou~ insulated. Sale 2999 Reg. 34.99. l.&" variable speed reversible drill with double reducti on gears. Speed range is Oto 750 r.p.m. Ball bearing construction. Double insulated. Sale 39ss Reg. 49.99 V." double insulated circuia.r saw. 2.1 H.P. motor. ball bearings, wilh blade guard ~ft • AM/FM:digltal clock radio with snooze bUtton . 8995 Black and wh ite port able TV.has • 12" screenj meas . diag.). Featur11· Quick-Pie ... ' .. • 3995 4-Band portable rad;. has marine, police and ·/-AM~.FM bands. 3995 Porlabie cassette lape f8corder has built-in microphone. JCPenney We know what you're looking for. 2195 Ste•e o headphones have 311.i" reproducefs and r 10' coUed cord. 6495 cassette recorder-AM/FM radio with microphone and stand. '>---'---.:..,. Sh op Sunday noon to 5 .. P. M. at the followl.119 s tores: 1. ... T . ' FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach (7.14} 644-2311. HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Beach (714) 0 892-777 1. • .. ' I ' • • ' ' • ' • l f .Property ~Brtners .. ·fu .Clash ·. SANTA ANA -Both sides ln an apparent corporate dispute over UM; proposed sale of IH -· .1/C land In San Marcos haVe'•tieen1 ordered to ~r June 25 ln Orange !' ty Superior Court tor a ' · !llll!>l~Uon of the entorprlse. -~Ing Jqe ·Bruce Su ~ QU" ·&I ODI oi 12 partners of eon ....... "Ehterprlees who ;, ~in ~ Jawauit to ·,actions apparendy aimed at seUing the property to a Colorado ski corporaUon for $1 million. THE GllOuP which Includes Be'• Top• • Judge Sumner, T h e o do r e Rodney S. Thompson Roblns Jr., Wllllam L. Bents, of Costa Mesa is one of attorney James F. Penney, four "outstanding grad· Dr. Arthur F. 'Ibompeon tnd · uating seniors" named Charles Prentice Taylor claim by the school of Phys- the plan would violate the 10-· · c year agreement drawn up 1ca~ Sctenc_es at U when Sin Marcos Enterprises, lrv1~e. He . ts a mathe- 133 Dover ·Drive, Newport · mat1cs. major. Beach, was formed · i n ----- December, UMM. They claim the •t million figure Is an inflated valuation that would provide an lnfiated ~!salon to defendants in the lawsuit. It "constitutes aelf dealing," the action notes. Bridges Will Be Bolstered Tax Aiq ~ Offered Oldsters Senior citlzerui may receive assistance In filing t h e I r Property Tax Ass ls tan ce Claims at various locations throughout Orange County during the remainder.of June. Callforoians who are over 62 years oPage7 bwn and reside in their own homes, have paid taxes for the current year and have income of $10,000 or less, are entitled to a reimburse- ment of a portion of. their prop· erty taxes under California law. The deadline 1for filing is October 1s, 1m, but the claims should be filed as soon as possible. REPRESENTATIVES of the Senior Citizens P r op e r t y Assistance ofrice will be in the following iocatlQns: Leisure W o r I d in Seal Beach., Thursday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.' ' Leisure World In Laguna Hills, Clubhouse 3, June 17 to June 18, 8 a.m. to 4 p.rru' Lakuna Beach. Library; 363 Glennyre St.,. '-'""UR& Beach, ..... J June-20, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. > 222 E. Chartres, Anaheim, June 21, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Civic Ce n t e r Conference Room, 100 Avenida Presidio, San Clemente, June 22, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. WtdMsda/. June U , 197) OAI L 'f PILOT County Trying Joh Experiments SANTA ANA -''Job ready" The study Is !>ting conducted are participating. resWts, however, were i.J>. goal bein& tbe p&.cement of welfare mothera ·m Orange by HRD to de~rmine bow to This Is the second part of a conclusive. welfare mothen" ahe said. t · belt combine the efforts of the two-part study undertaken by In Orange, Loi Angelea and County are being sent 0 more state agency with private HRD ln 1971. The first half rttRS. NEUON explained San Francisco counties only than 7A> private employment employment finns to reduce conipared the effect ivent5$ of that ·the seCond part of the . welfare mothers are lnchJded agencies in their search for unemplOyment ip Califorriia . HRO iwitb various private study is based on cooperation. ln the esperiment. San Diego jobs, Instead of relying oq Los Angeles , San Franc1sco employmen9 agencie! In a "HRD and tbe agencies are coun ty is including both male state Human R e S' 0 u r c e 1 _and __ Sa_n_D_i_eg::.o_coun __ u_es_a_1so __ co_m_:...pe_t_111_·v_e_m_a_nne_r_._T_h_e_w_o_rk_i..:ng:_to....::.ge_1_he_r_, _w_i_1h_t_h_e_and __ r.ma __ 1e_w_e11_ar_e_rec_tpc.lle_on_11_. Development centers for placement. · .--..--• "It is sWl too early to evaluate th e experiment." said Mrs. M _Ne!!?~, ~is-·•-~-­ tent man1ger orine Orange County HRD center, "but in a few weeks we should know hOw the private agencies are dotni." THE EXPERIMENT, which began May 1 and concludes Aug. 31 , allows the employ- ment agencies 90 days tO fmd the welfare recipient a job. If employment is round, the agency fee is paid by HRD. ,. Diabetics Unit I Pl.ans Meeting SANTA ANA -The Orange County chapter of t h e Diabetics Association o f Southern California will ·hold its montly meeting June 19, at 8 p.m. at the Santa Ana Com- munity HoSpital, 600 East Washington Ave. The film, "Heredity in Diabetes" will be shown. There will be no meetings dur- N..amed as defendants are Cuper L., Shirley S. and Howard W. Blackburn of the Blackburn Company', In c . , Albert w1 Bates and Jack W. Brobeck of Newport Beach, Jacob ,Allan Chapman , Richard A. Demmer, Elton Hallet! 11'4 JW10 M. Turley. other plili!llUl1 suing them are .1 idenlified 'as T.om H. SmUh, T.N. Tiberg, Norman W. Fleming, Suzanne C. Turner, Royal D. Tucker and Kennit Oorius. SANTA ANA -Bridge work over Orange Coitnty freeways will be earthquake-proofed in a $55,000 state Division ol Highways pr.oject for which bids will be opened in July in Los Angeles. BETHEL TOWERS, 666 w.,_m_g_J_w_y_iild_'_A_ugu_m_. _____ ~--------------------~-~-----'-..,------- 19th St.. Costa Mesa , June ~. • .- 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. "Various" bridges on the Orange , Santa Ana and San Diego Freeways in Orange County will be made "more . earthquake resistant, by in· stall a lion of restrainer units," a spokeSman said. Murdy Recreation Hall, 7000 0ocumeqll supporting the law,Wt · indicate that the San Marcos property was purchas- ed b)' the group in December, 1964, for between $350,(IOO and $400,000. Nonna Dr i v e , Huntington Beach, June 26, 9 a.nl. to 4 p.m. . Smokers' ' I Concrete bridge slabs are "hinged" together with steel cable. w hil.e expansion and contraction spa<.-es remain. The restraint hinges link con- crete slabs so they support each other, the spokesman ex· plained. In addition to the se loca- tions , infor mation and cla im form s are available al all Senior Citizens f'roperty T3.x Assistancr branc:1 urficcs. or by \Vriting Se11if)~· Citizen Property Tnx As·.~;;_nt·l', P .O. l3ox l!'l38. Sa•:-·?!,11~n10. Class Set SANTA ANA -A special stop smoking class will be held from 2:30 p.m. to 4 p.m. on Monuday and Thursday at- lemoons under the auspieces of the Lung Association of Orange County . This is the first daytime class f o rl smoken who want to quit , and is part of an intensified anti-smoking campaign i n Orange County. The first class will ,be he ld June 11 at 1717 N. Broadway bere. The regular eveninQ' cla!I will be held u wiual. For ih-t> formation on either the day or evening class , phone the Lungl Assoclatioo at 135-3837. THE MAJOR ANTIQUES SHOW OF THE WEST, DISPLAYING AN UNPARALLED SELECTION OF QUALITY ANTIQUES UNDER ONE ROOF. June 13th lhru June 17th, hou1s 1:00 PM lo 10:00 PM Last day.Sunday. June 171h. 12 Noon to 6·00 PM , . Draperies ,:Cleaned without worry .. I PHONE US •• , COLLECT (213) 728·7283 or 723·3311 I . . PRICES REDUCED.! LAST WEEK!!! , ·; r~ '1'33---· ·2· 33-----S-3· 33 , . 1'£R WIDTH PER WIDTH PER WIDT" ~ .,f to Ill IMI• CtWIQI: ITI Unllntt I' 10 I k>1>9. 01AAGI: ITI I ' , 1-... , :, PRICE.1NCLUDES 'taking· down and rehanging!! 48-hour service! The JCPenney Compan.y clea ns all types of draperies, safely and quickly. thanks to a re- volutionary clean ing process that has been patented. JCP~nney- custom .drape ~y cleaning service • • • • ' Super . ecial low price on bigfro free refrigerator! Only5338. JCPenney side by side refrigerator has 16.6 cu. ft. capacity. Features fu ll lenglh aluminum handles with vinyl woodgrain tnlay. Up front lights in refrigerator and . freilzer .. Light green vegetable and me41. crispera. Avocado Or -gold. Color costs no more. ' 16.6' side-by-side refrtgerator wf1h Ice maker ••• $31'. .. S199 JCPenney chest freezet has big 20.0 cu. ft. capacity and features 2 baskets. ~t drain, divk1er. Has sprjng ejector type lock and Interior light. White or avocado. Color costs no more. Save on compacts. ' · Sale569 Reg. 71.95. 2.0 cu. ft. refrigerator has vinyl woodgrain door. Temp. 1 control with Ice notch to make ice faster. 2 Ice trays, door shelf. SaleS134 llofl. 141.15..Compact 62 4 cu. ft. a-t treRer has 218 lb. capacity. AdjUstabte tempe~tura control, --~~~1 ~toµg)lac_ryljp _______ ··--· enamel n sh. 1 wo-toned colors. Sweep up the savin~. sae 3288 Reg. 31.IS. Our comp4ct canister features a 6--pc. attachment set. S.2288 Aog!•21.is. Ughtwelght upright will) a 2 speed motor • · JCPenney We know what you're looking for. ( ---- sae 3488 Reg. 31.9'1. stpc. canister YaCtM9 ~ features df!luxe attachment Mt. Sate pr"* ......... thru •• 2 5 . Shop S1lnday noon to 5 p.m. ot tlle folowl119 stores: 1 r ' ' I • f ' -.I-- I I F.ASHION ISLAND, Newport Baach (714) 644-2313 . HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington B .. ch (714) 192-7771 .-. - \ • , l I " • I I J 0 DAILY PILOT ... For the Record ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY r U7 E. 17ih St., Costa A-fesa 646-4888 • BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL DOME Corona del rtlar &73-9450 Cosll Atesa 64&-%4.U -·· •. __ .__ ·- BELL l,\ROADWA Y MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa Mesa LI 8-3433 • DILDAY BROTHERS MORTUARIES 17911 Beach Blvd. Jluallng&on Beach 342-7711 U4 Redondo Ave. Long Be1:1cb %1l-438-I145 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1708 Laguna Canyon Rd. 414-9415 • PACIFIC VTEW MEMORIAi, PARK ~metery P.fortu11ry CbP<I 1511 Pltcll.lc View Drt\'t lr...port Bi!ach, Cil om a 144-%700 • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 1801 Boloa An. Wtslm.btster m.312$ • SMITI IS' MORTUARY I IZ7 Main t. llUnllafl.Otl lk:1cb 51Mlll ~ 4 ' ' r Fll9d JllM 1 Morrll. Rooert o. 1no Cerolvn Am,$, C1n1le LI Verne Incl O<lnlld ·-~ Ku!kle, E!tle •nd R!c,,.rd Allt<I LHi.t', Gerald Edward 1nd CllrvUlnt M~~n1trd, OolorH Gertrude llld K.,,_ _, Hacken, K1ren Ltt 1nd !.t.lllWrl John \11rcias, Patricia k•ltlrvn •nd Yon-c:lo C1rmcn1 ~~t=e""'r .,.....~11 ·neat1is I' WILLMAR . Minn. (AP) A-tlchael J. ~lcCarthy. 97, father of former Sen . Eugene .I. i\tcCarthy ~J).~1inn.). died Tuesday. BOSTON f A Pl -Edwanl N. Gadsby, 73. a 1nember of the Securities and Exchange Commission during t h e E Isenhower administration and later chairman. died Tuesday. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) F\tneral sen1ces arc schcdul· ed for Thursday for Jeffenoo James Graves, member ol one of Galifornia famllles. ay nncm: a WOODLA ND HILLS fAPJ- Joseph Zlmulch, 771 a mUAical su~rvlsor for motion pictures. television, recording companlts and the Motion Picture Academy of Arts and Sciences, died Monday in the Motioo Picture Coontry Home and HoopiJal afte r a loog ill· ,.,.., General Plan Study Urged romol -low d<adllne ol JID>O :io was altacked by Superv\lor Ralph Diedrich of Fuller1'1n., ' RICllAaD E. l\AlllELLA, procram idminislrator r., the G...,.aJ 1P1~ l'IOlnim, told Dledildl that lbe deadline could be met by odoplion ol the ~ and land use categolie!. T,_,J&.troat buy. Get 111 the color combo• llQJ flko. Collon knl~ machine washable Cf9W tops,..coMon iJ lhorta, Sizes 7 to 16. s~oa 3 Jo 6't 2 lor $3 polttlool •-e ..-ere alJottred were for proc:esslng the -ol envtronmen al impect ... ., ...... , not ~ dtvelop • ""°nll plan," DI ck a• on n,toned. "We can meet lbe law'a deadline and if Ol1)'0lle obj<!'f.< to o.r ....mg or -r regulations they can go.-lo court ·as prcwided lor In lbe We ~g:~~~~ngfor. Shirt-top short sets in bright prints and IOlida. Machine wuh-- obfe sturdy Pilr- weight cottons. Stay1)Ut elutic back pants. SIUll 7 IO f4. COOi cotton seer- sucker set-ofls. Great easy-care boon for Mom. Perky lace or tie trim1 on the crop tops, pulk>n elastic waCat shorts.S~N310k Shop Sonday noon to 5 p.m. at the folowlng stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach (714) 644-23 13. HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Beach, (714) 892-7771. HARBOR CENTER,.C~sla ~,,. (71'1). ~5021. , • lllTa: If ITOO TO DEED IEAl PllEITY TO TIIE STA1E AU pt~ 11 111 tfllt TOMl•lllP SWth •1111 It...,. Wtlt of S.n !hrNnlllno a1w 11111 Mi1rldl1n. NOTICE No. 14 -s.te No. \$6lit, A"-n-.:M2·1', At(n 8Ndl H"'91!b Lot » •lk 2 incl Loi ,. 81k '· M.M Fauntain ·va1ey City No. lM -s.I• No. 156* .,. S).lll·Cll , No.·1 .. -S.le Mo. 41M1S .,. 1'T411 .. lrvlM Sllb Loi llM ""' SEly ll.U h NWly (formet"ly A" \U-UO•lt), p~ k< XI T j t«I n • lyl"' Nl!IV d wt fl,,. ot 81k S It 10 SWll, SE"'· SIM:ll.IO McKnl;l!h 1'Ad • Ex NEly W tt -, SJ.11 No. Ill -S.I• No. •Utt, .,. 10-512-0 No. 145 -~Ill No. ,..,., .. ,. •• 11-3111.1• fforme.-lv A,. 141•>-nl. SK '' T I It 10 (l«!Mrly .,. M-19).(W), Tr fjl Loi Id N j Ac$ IS N. MIL lil'I SE'4 SE\11 .. C• Ely Trl•Mi·:IO n, $7.JCI C~7m/MI QA., SIOti..k No. '* -5-1• HO. 1621 ... Prw A,. Ml· No. 19' -s-M No. ••n• .,. tll ,. A,. loll.OS tfir_,., AP 5'-Ul•l3), 5K 2A T 2 T '" ' .. -· It ' ~ Sl'I $K n Pl"' dd • 7llO'l/ll2 r ' Loi » Common ''" of prol-.:;I OR·, l1'J.» louffd on A,. lff.«Jl-G4, 16t7.t4 No. 147 -S.1t No. 1MS26, AP S~ll4·12, Tr 7'4 Lof IS, Ul.61 No. 1• -S•le No. 1"3SS, A" '41-012.01, Tr iNl4,.ot A. •.M No. 141' -s;-. No. 1'614 AP Ml451·lS, Tr 49lt LOf :a.t .it .. Ex w In dd • '1f47/ 550 Olt-, •.to No. 150 -S. .. No. 1•71)70. A" Ml-<11·10, Newport-Mesa Unttied School District Tr W2 \.of S, st.06 N 117 S ' NO \Sll-S.I• No. Wl27 A.P .. ,-,, o. -11• NO. !O:ll!i2, A,.11 .. 16241, T - , l .. ' ...,...., .. NIWPOl't Htllflll· Loi 231 SW!y 1111 07$ fl r of ... Por of I.of • ftt<: In dd • NWly K ft·EX SWly 16.S 075 11 N ,.. ' 1'1111™ Ollt .. end por qt lob 2:J a. 2' 11 • ' . c1He 1n dd • .,.,.,,.. 01t-. un No. U1-U. NO. 1Mll7, AP Ss-3114'. Arel! .. ld'I MMthll LI)! IS 81• d . 121.90 No. UJ -S•" Vo, 16'405, A" ,,_,,1 .. 17, Arth 8Htl! "4el9h .. Loi 3 Ilk '2 •!Id LOT• 4/S Ilk •2. SM.•2 No. 15' -S•M> No. 1"'55. A,. SJ.m~t. Arel! 8NCI! Htltl!ls Loi It 81k olO, M.:W. IJguna Beach Unified School District No. 1• -S... No. 5111", AP •7MI0·14 (fl:lnMr'ly AP SM61·1U, $« 1 T 7 It • "-Loi J 111 f'rlct he •s w dd.s.7/"61 OR•, 171.t' Newpart Beach City . PltO"i"ERTY soLDTo THI! STAT.I! IN THE YEAlt 19'7 !"Oft THE TAXES No. 1SS -S.-No. 1t041f, AP '1-GN-ft, ASSESSMENTS ANO OTHEJt CHAAGli ·N-llCW' kectl City Loi t 1111 2$, lt:ll ... OF lHE FISCAL YEAR 1""'1 San Clemente_ City Huntington Beach City ' . San Clemente City Nearly Everx~ne List.ens to Landers " 1 • • I Wtdntsday, Junt 13, 1CJ73 OAILYPILOT Jl·ll • Datta Bar bor Irvine · Dinghy Cat alina Fleet 4 ' ' . Sailors Fourth Yale Unlve,.,,ity took the early lead in the North American Intercollegiate sailing chaml'!:':· ships ln the dinghy competition held on Eagle e near Ft. Worth, Tex.1 Tues<lay. UC!, the defend ng champion, was fourth be- hind Tulane and New Vork Maritime Academy and ICLAJVM flllh..aftet 12-ra~es of the 32 race se1ies. tile dinghy competltionainongtbetof16 ln:- tercollegiate sailin~ teams in the country continued tqday. · Scoring after the first day's competition was Yale, 81; Tulane, 65; New York Maritime, 66; UC!, 74: UCLA. 80. Newpori, Europe Firms Join to Market Yachts Getting Awag From It All Racing Saturday \ The second in a summ('r series of races will be con- du,ted by Catalina 27 Fleet Four of Dana Point Harbor Saturday, nccording to rat'll ditec!or a1u· LMi1truoc--~ Murray said that a racing chart and starting instructions will be issued at a 10 a.m. meeting Saturday of a 11 Catalina 27 owners whose boats are anchored at Dana Point Harbor. , The meeting will take place in the Dana Point Yacht Club on the island whre directors and members will disc1:1ss a picnic scheduled for the next day at adjacent Doheny Park. BOATING Also on lhe agenda is pre-;~~'""'""'""'""~-===--~ Planning {or tlie""Ca a ina-27 -• national races to be held at Dana Point early~ in Sep- tember. Skippers are expected from all coastal parts of the United States to compete in the event. Some will come, <1lso, from the Great Lakes arc:i. At ·the present time there ar~ 31 cata'ltna-rr a'°°PS berthed at Dana Point. All are invited to join Fleet Four. Such arrangements can be ac- complished at Saturday's meeting, A1urray said. Boating Law Enforcement . The R a n k Organization Limited, one of Europe's largest entertainment a n d leisure companie.11 and American Marine, Ud. of Newport Beach, the world's largest builder of d I e s e l yachts, have formed a joint venture aimed initially at marketing American Marine products in the U n i t e d Kingdom and Eire. ·Europe. Th'e de8lership and all 8cenes like this will be repeated in many areas this summer as famil~es seek present personnel will even- solitude in island coves and mountain lakes. Trailerab1e "yachts" such as this tually be relocated to the Coronado-23 Mark II are gai ning in popularity as they can be trailered to vari- Mercury Yacht Harbor, where ous launching spots. The boat "11as internnl ballast and all systems are self-con- the joint venture will be __ ta_i_ne.::d.::,_m_.::ak_l_n,,g_i.::t.::•.::m:.:·t.::•b.::l_.:e_f_o.::r_in_l_a_n_d_w_a_t_e_rw_a_,y:...s_a_s_w_e_ll_a_s_t_h_e_o_,p_e_n_o_c_e_a_n_. __ _ rraining Progi;am Starred The Department of Naviga-distressed vessels and f.irst rcgulalions to obtain a copy or lion and Ocean Development aid. DNOD estimates that ap-the free pamphlet entitled (DNOD) has launched an in-prox imately 200 officers will "ABCs or the Ca I i r or n i a In a joint announcement. Rank Deputy Chief Executive Graham R. Dowson and American Marine Chainnan John R. Newton said intitial . plans call for the construction of one of lhe largest and moet modem yacht sales a n d service facilities in Europe, to be h~aled on the Hamble River near Southam pton. The Hamble River is one of tile irincipftl yachting centers in Enkland . operated under the name Solent Yachts . American Marine also has recently establishe d a dealership on the French Riviera. Dowson and Newton said that both The Rank Organiza- tion and American Marine ex- pect further expansion in the United Kingdom and are look- ing forward to a continuing association lhrough Europe. Products to be marketed in· elude the Grand Ba o ks . Alaskan ancl Laguna lioes of diesel yachts, built by American ?i.1arine at plants in Singapore and Hofig Kong and marketed intemation,ajly. . ' Costa Mesa Boat Sf;Lpply Firm Mov ing to Irvine Boating Law." tensive boating law en-be trained before the boating miiiii,.;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-i forcement training program season is over. \• • Boat Firm Expanding throughout California. John E. Bennett, depart.- The program is designed to ment direetor. said: "Our aim . assist peace officers involved is not only to achieve en- with enforcement of state forccment of our boating laws lxiaUng laws in every aspect ·but to prevent violations and Newport Supply Company sales forces have been in-·of waterway safety. hence promote safety through Following a recent training •the boating educational efforts president, Robert flfcCUrdy, creased to provide f u 11 ol bor trols " Willard Boat Works, Inc. ,of school for boating law en-our water ne pa . has announced the relocation coverage of tbe west coat. forcement officers in Modesto. "The patrols will be looking Costa A1esa ha s doubled pro-of the corporate offices and In addition to the 300 per· ~he department is dispatching first for unsafe practices such duction facilities for the centra! warehouse to the cent increase in wa rehouse j)etsonOO throUgfiijiit tile state as reckless ope r.a ti on , ~ manufacture of 1ts new line of 1-•--Jnd··~al Complex. ,to provide additional un-overload;...., and lack of re-• • ..... ~ • space the new facility will be '"& Vega 30 fiberglass diesel off-The move, to be completed der way tra~. quired sa fe t Y equipment," &re cruising yachts,,-ac-June 2.5, coincides with the an-convenient to two major Peace o f f 1 c er s are Bennett added. cording to vice president Jack nouncement of expanded freeways and right in the familiarized with proper Bennett encouraged a 11 Hochadel. service to the marine in-center of the boatbu'ilding boarding tactics, water search California boat owner s FATHER'S DAY • • . JACK llDWll.L MAKES IT GOOD l4'7 Yho UH• No~ - ...... •n-4111 '- 1 • The planned facility ls to be built, subject to planning com- mission a~val, a!,. lhe Men:ury Yichl Harl>Or, a developmen~ OD the H1mble River aperatod. by a ...i.tdlary or The Rank Organl1atlon. Completion is scheduled for the spring of 1974. Acali Raft On Course To Mexico In addition to its main plant ,..'d'.'u~st~ry~·..'Bo~lh>_ins~i~de:._and~~ou~tsid()I. ~e'....:ca~p~ita~i_'ol':!_.'.Sou~th~ern~C".'a':'Ji"'fo~rn~i~a:_· :..·~and"'.'.__r':'.escu~~·:..· -"."'~'":'is":ta~n~ce~:_<IO'..___'.'d()lou'.'b".'tr.".ui~o"..r _st~at".'e_".an"'d~l:"'oc:'.al~~~~~~~~~~~ In c.osta Mesa, the new 25,000-j ' square-foot production area eocompuses a two-acre site ' lmmediately prior to form· ing the joint ventu r e, Ainerican Marine completed the purchase of Solent Yachts. which has been the cprnpany's dealer for the United Kingdofn and the largest sales ouUet (or American Marine yachts in Nor.th Post To Cundiff Roy Cul>dlrr has Joined the North Sails loll lri fleol Beach, aoconfing to manager Dick Deever. ' CUndiff, In the capacity ol sail consultam for customer relatlool. Will 4)ttct the loft's Increasing •llorl along the West Coast' from .Oceanside to Va.-ver an4 Including the Hawaiian Islands. CUndiff brlnp eliht years o( Milboat rlulnl; prepa ration and sales expertlie to the North loll along with his Im. pressive 1 raclng record. He has a string ol victories to his credJt among 1whl~ are two successive Little W h i t n e y ch a mp l o n,1h ip1 and the prestigiolls Balboe Olp. Kids like To . Ask '.A ndy UT'S BE FRINllY . Jf you have new tt(!lghbon or know of 11nyone tnovlng to our area, plcaAe tell ua •o that """ m&)' extend, a f_rlcndly welcome and help them to become acquainted 1n their new ~urroundlnK•· Sa. Coast Visitor LAS PALMAS. Canary Islands (AP J -n.. Acall, a raft with a crew of six women and five men, bas sailed 1,0,3 miles on tts trip to Mexico. an amateur radio ope r ator reported Tueoday. n,. 50-IM raft left Las Palmas on May U for: the Yucatan coast ol Mexico. n.. purpose ol the trip, f111811COd wkh 1160,llOO from a Mexican government televlrion station, Is to record human behavior wider stress. n.. Mexican anthropolog!sl In charge ol the expedition, Sanlia'° Genoves. told the amateur radio operator the raft bad covered 212 miles in the past week. . He said the Aca1i was t,MO miles from Barbados, where the travelers are expected to arrive ln about 43 days if the raft's speed iS maintained. The Spanish Canary Islands are off the Atlantic ocast. al 11200 Condor Avenue in Fomtaln Valley containing more than $250,(K)O worth ol leuehold tmpn>VemenU '"" fiberglass lamination, bulk wr derground storage ol polyester resins and acetone, and a rilt<r system lo procesa fresh air at 100 cubic feet per minute. Three Tries And Out SCOTl'S lflLL, N.C. (UPI) -Shirley Haycock pilcked her canoe in the Volbw.apn and headed home for Helper, Utah, today,· having abandoned her third e£fort to sail her canoe to Portugal. "I'd like to try il again sometime when conditions are . right," she said. , The conditions inc Ju d e d ocean currents which were too strong for her canoe, dubbed the "Senior Citizens Ark," and adverse sailing conditions. She turned back :IO miles from the Carolina coast. Newspaper readers are watching _ television. Closely. "tARRl~S "ADVERTISING THAT CAN BE TRUSTED". Television 413 \ Source : Audits and Surveys, "The Newspapar and its Reading Public" For Response Ability Always Think Of lTEWSPAPERS FIRST 4'4-G57t • 4M-"'8 llDr Visitor i1--====---------1 _.,74 R ead the Daily Pilot ' • \ $5 4oz. ( . Jovan introduces \Musk oil after shave/cologne for men. , J-CPenney We know what you're looking for. Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the tallowing stor es: ,_FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beoch 1714) o«-2_3 13. HUNTINGTO~ CENTER, Huntington Beoch j714) 892·7771. . ' , • .. • . • > ". • .. . ) ! • I I l " • ! , ., I l I ' I I I •' ' .. IZ DAILY PILO! Ah0rtion Business Big • Ill By JOHN BREWER ... ..,...,,.,. .. wr1w Abortton has become big businesa in California. There are doctors, hospitals and ~--.....;;rru::'d;::dl:.:•::;:.men th~ specialize in • Jn California, which in 1967 became the first major state to legalize it, abortion amounts to more than $20 million annually. It is more than-that in New York, which legalized abortion in 1970. 1' AR TII:: UL ARLY IN CaliforTiia, changed laws have spawned practices I a b e I e d oontrastingly as "a tragedy" and "the best tliinf, that could happen to women. ' .(Fir1t tn a Series)_ This series will explore bow women· Obtain abortions, who performs them, who profits from lhem. It will examine developments. that could be crucial in the future, such as menstrual extraction and the trend toward abortion in of- fices or clinics. With the U.S. Supreme Court ruling iri January holding that wome11 have the right to abortion in the first si1: imnths of pregnancy. California's ex- perience may provtd~ an ex- ample for other states. 'FOR Mosr women in the Golden Stt!te, abortion is quick and simple. It can be arranged by telephone without talking with · a· doctor ·and usually re- quires 1()1lly a·tew hours in .a hospital. The ·average cost 1s $150, which Med!Cal, state medical insurance program, pays if a womanr doosn't have the money. In 1972 a record 138,584 abortions were done in California, less than half the number of births. Recently, a counselor named Patty took a telephone call from a UCLA student, Eileen, 19. at Problem Pre ncy Information Service in El 5egundo , a Los A n g e e s 'SUburb. Here is how both remember It: "llEU.0, DO you have a moment?" Eileen was trying lo sound casual bul stumbled nervous ly over the words. "Sure,'' answered Patty. "I'm efraid I'm pregnant." "Hurray!" said Patty. Eileen laughed, breaking the tension. Eileen was sure she wanted an abortion. She was eight wee.ks pregnant, well un- der the I:t.week deadline for a simple suctM>n abortion. IN LATER stages of pregnancy, the abortion is done by inducing a mi.scar· riage. It usually requires ' an overnight stay in the hospital. can be dangerous and costs California more than a suction abortion -around $350 • State health ofricials say they know c'lf no death.s in several years from suction abortions, ~·hile at least three w men have died in nine mon liS rrom-compllcatlOhs after late aOOrtiorui . . ~ 'It'• three titt1eJ1 ••fer than havb(g 11our tott•ll• 011t.' "The type of procedure you 'll get is three times safer than having your tonsils out," Patty said. "NEXT DAY I'll be rea.dy to go?" "¥ou'll. be in and out of lhe hospital in about four hou·rs.\ You'll fecl like you're getting over the Ou." "Couldn't be.,any worse than the way I feel now." Problem Pre g nancy Infonnation Service is one of ' about 20 abortion referral agencies that work w i t h California d o c t o r s and hospitals. Three out or every five women who get abortions in California go through these middlemen, the a g e n c i e s themselves estimate. Referral age11• ries take 820 10 880 of the a1Jerage 8150 a 11'011tall pa11•· GRAND OPENING! , .. June 14·, 9 a.m.-9 p.m. HUNTINGTON BEACH • I ring IM l1mlly lo h NEWEST Del 'r.c::o of !Mm 111-now open In Huntlntlon hacll • Wlft "c•lh dlte0unl1'" lrom tM Del TKO GJM l89-fft1Yerie'1 1 wlnn.r1 • fOf TASTY TACOS, lkmllOI ll'd To1Udo1, Ind Dl!LICIOUS HAMBUl'IOE"I, , ..... """ ltl1k11 • FAIT SEAVICf .t lfllhtf our Orl'l'e Thrv et 11'111ft Pillo Room ••• and ENfJ Ordet Mede .. Of'dtd NOW OPEN-2852 warner near Springdale-Huntington Be11eh • • ' .. .Linda Lovela~e ' Sale. 203 off all our women s swimwear: FJgure the savings. 'Doll not Include price rn1lntalned Pla)111X tufts. · Who could ask for a more timely sale. Now, at the height of the :11aaon, \ P«>neys 1la1has a whopping 20% off our entl~e line• ot. 1wlm1ults. You.GM \ select from doZens of styles that include print blk~nls, solid bikinis, one piece figure flatterers, popular swimdreas.styl1ng, and many, many more. All in the smartest easiest~f"'Care fabrlce, . in colors to rival the rainbow. See them all now, at these savings prices, you'll wan·t more th~n.on~ • JCPenney We know what you're looking for .. • Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M: at the following 8tore1: . • FASHION ISLAND, Newport BH~h (714) 644-2313 . HUNT)~GTON CENTER, Huntington ltOch (7141192:n71', . HARBOR .CENTEf(, Coat• M..<{714) 64~21. ' . ... ' .• • • I ' ,( . •· ' Wtdntsday, June 13, 1913 Marijuana--"What Doctor Ordered F'ORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. everybody thlnlcJ Is so horrible (AP) -Brownie1 splktd with Is pulect for glaucoma. It's m1r:!Juana were used to aid far better for You than glaucoma victims in a test on 1 alcohol." the 4 2 • y e a r • o I d 100 volunteers, a F o r t &1.1rg~n said. Lauderdale eye surgeon says. Blanton said ~ fed 100 Dr. Frederick Blanton 1ald brownies, each C51Dtalnlng 1/16 he defied federal authorities to gram.es of Ja\f'alcan mari· administer t h e drug-laced juana, to 50 vollfll:leerS ranging bro.wnles to both glaucoma In age rrom za.:15. \. sufferers and a control group He said he' measured eye of peraons not afflicted with pressure every hour and found -1--"'the olseise. --- -Ullit'lrl5egiur1o-droj!_ within an r"TurSl>'R~C fJlatoour andR'liAff aftert fie LBI Memorial This stamp will ~ issued in memory of Lyndori B. ~ohnson in Attstin, 'rex., in August. Basis of stamp ts portrait by Madame Elizabeth Shouniittoff. Citizens· Panel Rips ,:VD Study ' . . . . <\ ~ • ' ...... • • ;, i WASll!N(\T6i-/".(UP1t. -.)•" others suffered severe damage government .study jn wbJch 399 of the central nervous S)'!tem bllck men with ~ls were heart trouble and other Ill ef: left unl.rff&edJ for-W~ar,1, to , feels. let ~ 'slUd)' t°be ;dl~ 1 HEW officials said 112 has been declared _ 'ethically known survivors of t h•e unjustlfted" by .a citizens original group had beeil, 'con· panel 'PJA& also l&id .the same tacted and offered medical kind "!' thinf cOukl· jlappen · trepbnent. They said 11 OC· again. ., , _ cepted and that the offer re. The re~t .1'oQC~t.1he: nine-mained open to the othen1 member . .;.i,;,i ~"'""1 · by the U.S. H .. ltji.' ,Eilucation and THE CENTRAL conclusion Welfare Department to inquire of the eanel 's report was~ tbit into the (l'usk~gee syphjlls "in retrospect, the PW>Uc study waJ 1e11t Tuesday to Health Service study of un- HEW and Cqigreis. treated syphilis in the male . Negro in Macon County, Ala. THE GROilP'S chalnnf"· was ethically unjustlfled In Broadus Bul1tf, president of 1.932. This judgment . . . is Dillard University ln New made with the adV811tq:e of •' Orleans, dec:liritd to 'join In the hindsight acutely sharpened ~ and tYlO members con-over 40 year!,~ng an CUrTed wilh reservaUom. activity in a differtllt &ge with The study. started in t.m, different social standards." came to light last ,yeat: At the ~ The panel also mted that .. time , officials said it least 28 there "'as no _.hard.and.fast of the original 430 ~ack men policy that would' preyent 1uch partlcipatlng in it died u a a st!l9Y from being undertaken direct result of syph~, and again. ABORTION SElUES ••• (Coatlnaecl fnim P11e .UJ I which handles about l.!00 abortions a month, was look· ing over a complaint from an Iowa v.'Omaln "''hen he was iJl.. terviewed . She had returned home from the hospital and begun bleeding heavily, ~ wrate. "l went to a doctor and he f<Klr1d a great deal _(>! em· bryonic tissue left insfd'e," her leUer sald. ••n HAPPENS someti mes," said Barke. "When lt docs, we refund the woman's ·money." Ho add<d that llJdl tMeS are freaks. f ' Says !he Rev. J. Hugh Anwyl. executive dir9ctor or Planned Parenthood of . Los Angt1es: ~·r , knoW it• s . pnetlmes b '""' 101111, bul the .i!i<irtl'!ft:.lllul\1Jog, (oday Is the . bat tli!rig. th2!.couJd haPfl'!! to a ~ Ir ia no big deal lft1 moft.'' · Ell"'!I was In and 11111 ol the i hplpllll 'Ill l"I"' how;•. the end of the first trimester" (12 weeks). that throul!h tho next trimester a state can regulate abortion "in wa11 that are reasOnably related to maternal health" and that in !he "slage subsequent to viability" a state can ''regulate, and even proscribe, abortion except ~ h e r e necessary, in appropriate me<Hcal judgment. for the pre.i;ervation of the life or health of the mother." ABORTION IS legal in Cali£omia through 20 weeks, But some doctors here said Ibey handled "problem ca ses,,'' Y."Omen 20 weeks ·and beyond. Pro-abortion groups[ stDI active in C8llfomi1: t Jeast three have toll-free 'Save-•· Life" teles>h9ne number 1 . Cowlselors &dvi>o the woman caller to have the ehlld. brownies were eaten. I t JJopklns University, said the authorities, but on some silly started rlJin& a~aln after 1piked brown ies reduced the 1«hntcaUty they turned It seven hours, he saii:I. • eye pressure of teat patients down .'' Blanton said. "I said I . from 25 to ~ percent. had 'tO do it because l've 1got GLAUCOMA, A disease that Fi£ty percent of his cases glaucoma patients g o i n g affects about 4 percent of the experienced no side effects, 46 blind." population, damages the optic percent felt a mild sensation , 2 An agent for the U.S. nerve when pressure builds up percent were so disoriented Bureau of Narcotics and from fluid in the eye. In ad· they couldn't f u n c t I o n Dangerous Drugs Jn Miami vanced stage~ ·it causes normally and 2 percent suf-said he wasn'l concerned blindness. · fered abnormally low tension , about Blanton's case. Blanton, who has presented Blanlon said. ''l\farijuana in browni es is _tJ!talls · 9f:bis -f!D~s at::@:_ '11 _J ~I E D ·-TO _ get _f!.O real-b~ie,-1' the agent aclentUlc meeting at · Johns permissiQfl from I e de r al commente<I . DAILV PILOT i:J Art Work Loe a rod MOSCOW (AP) -A bus~f Victor Hugo made by Rodin was found 1n Moscow's Maly Theater museum, the Soviet news agency Tas.s repcrted. It said that wtUI · a researcher f o u n d a reference to the bust in a book, the IClllptor was wllalQlVll. -- • ,t • ~'TU WHOLE process oeem.a ·f!Jie on 1soembly·llne, but I was tneted ·wen," she .-Jlocl. "Ap ""°""°"' 111Xi· ety Wll. goqe. I couJdn't hl.ve gone thi'ouO nine months of preanancy i\rlth in Qr n I n g A c a rh 0 11 c gyiiecologilt, Jal}les Ford of Lynwood, SlanS up the anti-abortionists' view of the way abortion Is handled by doctors like /Allred and hospitals like Ava1on. "This t s mas1-producM1 unscientific and u n' e t h l c a I medk:tne," he says. "It's 1 tragedy. really. There is whoJly inadequate p r e · a n d post-surgk:al care and a · WOQ!an is t~atj!d like an ol> ject.1' 'fhere -are· 60-delightful stores for yo.u to shop at · Fashion Island-including four major department stores. · slckne81· 1nll having. kl drop out of'acJtoil only 'to give t~e bib)' ft'ay I "But, ,tor days following 1 n-.1) IO'tllk' lo people about '"~""' myself." • Alrneot ~.OllO abortions have ~· performoil In eam'""11a • 111>eranzec1 abort!Oi' went Into effect In 1117. '!'lie 111<1 ~llowed abor- tion• durl~ ttte.an~t 20 weeks of pregnancy In r•pe or lncesL cues or if a hospital panel or tbreo docton qmd dellver- 1 ng the child woullf'"'graveJy lmpllr" the -·· (lll)'Slcal or mental hHlth. DEBORAH WIGGINS , spokeswoman for the Student Pro-Life Federatkwl in Loe Angeles, says the g r o u p pickets abortion hospitals on weekerids "to atop t h l s massive baby·kllllng and deter girls who are lri1htened and have been duped ln(Q bellevlng abortidn Is the answer to their problems. U.S. Sens. James !. Bud<ley of New York and Mark 0 . latltel r-0tt111>n • r • sponoorlng · a consUtutloolal amendment which would ban abortions except In C'Uel A CAuroRNIA SUpreme where pregnancy threatens Ooi1rt rullll8 later ~ed·ou\ "the woman's lire. - 1111 pone! requlroment an<l'JC!t 'nie ' • anti-abortionists In tile matter up the \he woman Callfomi• olso rocu1 lire on and her doctor. the money being made Jn The U.S. ·SUP"!IJD• Court rul· • tbor(lon, especially by refer· big Jan . ZI l«ld 1hlt abortion ral agencies. , - JI a decision betwet"n a woinan . and her physician "for the T.,,,..,.,.ow: Moneu 1pllJ- 1tl(e prior w 1pfl'oxlm1tely ting. • I Bring Dad along just .in case you want to try it on him for siu. ''Exciting to Visit-Delightful to Shop" ' FASHION , ISLAND I • NEWPORT CENTER P1clllc Co11t Highway-Between J1mboree and MacArthur ' t 11 I . .• - • 1' DAILY PILOT 'What MppMed to el those good old nH» riots we used to hev•?' Bankers Stymied On Cards . PASADENA-Now here's a . bit ol airreptitious reSearch that'a best described as a mnter'I 'Bllbtmare -and a caution •tin for consumers. ~ banters face the pros· pect that their supposedly safe new magnetic credit cants aren't ,.ally sale at all, and consumers, as users ol tlaete cards, aren't either. THE MA(i.81'11IPE card system,belngiritroduced acrnss the country on. a limited basis, u t 111 <es , magne<lcaUy c o d e d "In- formation on a strip of • .,,,.,..... tape attacbod lo the cants. Bui hen!'• the rub. Some 22 students, working in teams at Caltech, put together at least -15 MVices tfiirWere Capa51e - ol cheating the credit.card syatem, and some of these were able to duplk:ate a card 1n a few minutes' lime "from scratch." TIU whole houlike ~xerciae WU dreamed up by a West Los Ancelel firm, Transaction TechnolocY, Inc., wh I c h , u~bly_J isn't say~ much a60Ut the project. DETAILS -GLEANED from faculty members and students who asked to remain anonymous -indicate , however, t hat Tran5action Technology, Inc., offered fin!· prize mooey of $5,000, second prize $2,500, 8lld lllird $1,000, for the cont•. plus $500 ex- peme money for each team. 'Ibe students, especially those worting m electronics ~. took up the ~enge, and one 0£ them ex· p!itined: "The idea was to show OOw the magnetlc-striPe e a r d system can be defrauded, and the prizes went to the simpliest. cheapest, and dirt· iest devices that could be lound. . "Since the banking Industry, the instant-money industry, is adopting the magnetic-stripe card a y s t e m Transactioo Technology, Inc., has been arguing that it \li'Ould be v .. ry easy to cheat it. 4'0BVJOUSLY, A1(Y system _ can be defrauded somehow by a sufficiently sophisticated . penon. But if It can be done cheaply, in some guy's garage, then you're going lo worry more about it." It was also mentioned that the caltech s tudents "completely, totally," beat the can! sy11em used by the Bay Arel. Rapid Transit System, ooe ol the businesses testing \)!e mag-stripe cards. 0 • WtclntSdly, June 13, 1971 \Jtdnesdar. June fl, 1973 PILOT·AOVERTISU .J White House Hard to Crack by Reporters . How did th• fW"tlglo"' Whitt Hou.st prt11 corp1 -conriattng of 25 day.in-daJl"OUt reporter1 and about 50 correspondents devoting a iub1tantial parl oj theiT time to 1600 P<'nmyl. ' vania Ave1tut -fail to ~t a hint of the Watergate story aa ft was betng plotted, corri.fd out and covered up flcient material to go on page one. J wasn 't encouraged by my paper lo gtt anything else. WMle J1ou,. -loe't still ........ aM reody it, tall<, bo,., tbto, are yoo IOlol lo IJad ... Oboul tbe bad -...... ? Q: Did you....,. Ille Slate Depertmeot S~EY. Watergate was un<ovtted by dlffereoUy? W Post reporters on a poUce BAKER: I never got a good State beat stc:ry. guy whp's done the belt angleo. -Ilion the White House Itself. If you Wert Jmown lo be a rough, tough invesUaaUve reporter, the W!Ute Hou'se staff 11mply wouldn't talk lo yoo, cutting you off from even the routine White House news -the President's daily ac- Uvtti!" -that your paper still wanls. teem tUt aortlafalll an melt a.e, tt be loud lo • deporllneol ........ ta, leN blbll loyally lo Ille Pr1 I! I _. mo<e ..w...-lo ttllkbo WMll ... aclloDlf HERSH: J'm ,a believer In ll1klnl lo • low-level ofllclals. A 11Q1 who II .- managing edllor ol me ol -ma)W papers once l<>ld me you pt Iba bl& stories ooly from the _.. GD lop. I ---,usta7eurree·t-ffcim fflt re t1ieJf s~ in the lobby. The editors of The Washington Monthlu intenriewed Neto York Tinu1 cotumni1t RwseU BakeT, who formerly covered the White Howe and the Statt Depart-- ment; Time magazine's Wruhington bureau chief Hugh Sidey and Pulit· Department st6ry from official an-investigative work for Tbne is Sandy nouncements. Instead, I always looked Smith, an old poU~ reporter who knows for Iha guy who had lost the lateat policy moi:• FBI, police and underworld Jight.ol' Iha ICftboacLwbo_wu_angry. _ c~acters than anyone I know. eoough I<> talk. I nev<T lool<ed for the · Q: We 1Uldenlaod tbe Howard u .. 1 sorehead at the White Hou,,e. I essumed pt.one number ~ wMch was tbe flnt real there weren't any, that they were all on llat bdween tbe White Heue ud the the team. SIDEY: The degree of loyalty ol aldes is usually much higher in tne Wblte House than in the other departmenta: Also, the physical Occe!S problem Is much greater there. Tholle fellows are really sealed off behind the Secret Service and all tlme guarded doors. I've always figured the best place ln the world for a man to get away with philandering is in the W,hite House. You can. control the environment so easily and all the Secret Sei:;vice Ups are sealed . ( WHERE THEY J , STNm ~---- The solution is to have one man work- ing on the conventional White House stories and several other outside repc>rters poking around the White House bued m.what-lhay-<an-leam-atJhe.EBI, Defense, State Department, etc. To some . extent, thls ls dme now. Half of the news from Capitol Hill rt41-lly concerns the Whlte House. BAKER: One problem here is that the Jarge papers are increasingly bureaucratic, so you worry about treading on the other reporters ' turr. Even though covering state would make It sensible for you to -also cover the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, in- stead )'OU tend to· defer to the Senate reporter. Similarly, the While House man tends to be jealous of what a reporter covering some other department ~ets on the Pr.esident. _<lvas Just about io -t !!!!!Ill~ The people at the top are aloo !bl - skilled at covering up ""*• !hoy usually have tile biiiell llallt Iii beplq mistakes secret. ~SIDEY: U yoo put Sy lknll m Iha While Houoe 1> .. 1. no -at Iba lop would talk I<> him. Can you ..... Haldeman or EbrtlchmM aaYinl, "O::me on In, Sy. I've got oomethlnc IOOd lor you"? • zer Prize winner Seymour Hersh as • to why this failure occ·urred. Q: How did you cover the Wblte House? WaU,..ate barPan --aat I-by o .. of tbe prhe.~ POii reporle<I but by E. J, Bat-himkf, a ,..War Post poµce ,.port«. Maybe. covering the u~derworld la ~ best P.re~ for covering the modern Preskleacy? BAKER: I was always fed Information by Jim Hagerty (President Eisenhower's. pre·ss secretary), so I always had suC· Q: Since you can't nm Into Russell Baker's sorehead in tbe corrldon of the SIDEY' I think Iha real, j>Oinl Is that yo11 have to come at ~ stm"y from Q: But despite this problem, doetn't It HERSH' That's why I have loll" lo the people down the line. Remember, the llt· tie guy who runs the xerox n\lcbine may be your best source. If he makes an O · tra capy of a document "'ind pes tt lo you, that may be all you need. ~.~, !:...r"" 0 '. BU_l.LDERS EMPORIUM SECOND BIG WEEK! JUNE 14THRU JUNE 18, 1973 [ I ~ . -·. elssen ~-> .~r--11- HOME . CLEANING AIDS , AT 'GREAT SAYINGS! Choose from a wide selection of household cleaning items: 22-oz. bottle of Bissell Rug shampoo, oven cleaner, 32·oz. upholstery shampoo, aerosol wax remove!" and floor cleaner, Johnson's Big Wally, 32-oL Step Saver, 16-oz. liquid Woolite, 32-oz. spray bottle of Fontostik and morel YOUR CHOICE 99E: WllTMl•ITIR ITORI OMLY& OPI• IATURDAY 9 A.II, TO 6 P. OPn M-AY\Tll•U IATWDAY t A.M. TO t P.M.-DAY t A.M. TO IP.& WELLER SOLDERING klT Eight piece kit includes a I 00/140 watt dual heat soldering gun, three copper soldering tips, tip changing wrench, f lux brush, soldering aid too! and coil of 60/40 resin core solder. 5•• lllllil•UILDDS EllPOlllUM COUPOll QUAKER STATE MOTOR OIL Heavy dufy motor oil in 20 or 30 weight. LIMIT 4 QTS. 'II COU,ON ........... ----------------~iTifB.'f§..~'7!~PiA£sTuNE 18.J_~~-~ • ' I BBQBRIQUETS IO·LB. BAG Easy lighting, long burni(lg briquets. For campihg, picnicking, beach .ancj barbecue. HOUSE AND TERRARIUM ' PLANT SALE! . ' Choose from ozalqm, ' hibiscus and many mOre' All healthy and beautlful plants in 3·inch pqt1.• o ', I -~ SPLASHER POOL 2CMNCHES DEEP B·foot pool, 20 inches deep, with heavy steel interlocking top rail and steel sidewall. Heavy .du vinyl liner with drain plug. 9•• PANELING BONANZA -3[16''x4'XI'. -· Prefinished on a quality hardboord.'Two beautiful wood tones-WALNUT and PECAN. Easy to apply over o solid surface using a panel adhesi've. (Simulated wood groin.) YOUR CHOICE ' I 29c \: EA. SPREADER 161NCH 45 pound capacity. Six inch molded wheels and po.tiVe action feeding contrd;I. fOr accurate coVerage. Most fY.pes of • commercial fertilizers can be used' in this sere9der. GRIAT GlfT fOR DADI ··~. Pll•Llll "WAIHIRLlll',' -4'' CEftTER,SE'I; WITH POP·UI!' A single handle lavatory fouc;et with pop·up. Just one knob contro ls water Qtld temper~ture floW. l1·f)Q·fl • ' • 0 n I \ It was undllntood from aeveral sources, but not OJO· firmed, t h a t Tranaactk>n Technology, Inc., is working oo its own "safe" credit card S)'ll<m, ,.pol1edly bued on 1uer technology. nu, too, is und<ntandabl•, llnct Iha finn Is a tubolcllory ol First National CMy Bank In New Yort. ~.AMERICA'S GREATEST HARDWARE STORES AND HOME IMPROVEMENT CEN A L UGH Trtnlcdon 1 ;!:".;i conslclen all the I student.a ln- wlVad coold rteall no .,;.. .... 11 for keeplnf qulel, and d>ey repoNd that • bon- qud. at wlllch the awards were paqod out, WU beld at Ille H~ 11oCe1 IDl'uodtna. • • ; - 11 PILOT-AOVERTISU WtdntSday, June 13, 1973 • ·-\. ;,.:~· '·. -., " ' '' I '4 " ... ' ' i I It\: • J '• : I ... " j · Short sleeve . .patterned -: .. t dress shirt. " ' ...., ; Wash and ' ' ·wear ' j . ' I . ~ ' ' ' polye~ter/ triacetate. 141/2-17. l Carefree polyester sport.shirt. Short sleev.es, many patterns and c01ors. $1M, L;XL ·~ Ban-Lon• knit wash 'n wear s.lil9rt sleeve ~,.i spbrt shirt. Front pocket. White, n~vy. Sb.~ig~t~*~~--,tM, ' .. ... I • '· I .. · tarry-on bag for ' gad-about Dads, 19.97 .. . ' • t ~ 'I • fl'! undor 1ny 1lrplane seat. Holdll t ibHi or ~,.. aull1, acceuories. , Two l#Df oUtsldt pockets. Black or chntnut vinyl. , ' .. 'I I· ,, • - WedneKlay, June 13, 1973 DAILY PILOT JS the . reasury . family store and supermarket ~----~------·-~----------..,, ___ , • I ' . ' I · Short sle'.eve · ·dress shirt. New-agaitl . button-down collar. No-iron po\yester/ · triacetate. ' ~ . 7 I . ' , . 7 Navy, brown or · ~ beig__e. 14V2-17. No-iron~. , polyester/ "\ cotton broad- cloth in .lots of patterns. Short sleeves. S, M:L, XL. Short sleeve polyester/ cotton knit golf shirt . Solids with . contrasting · trim. S, Ml.LI XL. ~~ . ' ' • .. -' . ' ' I Save 203 on Samsonate Royal Tra~ler7attache· case Butane cigarette . lighter. · .. now13.59 __ 3" depth Reg. 16.99 now15.19 5" depth Reg._1_8.99 Strong, lightweight rri agnesium frame , molded "4inyl shell In. olive or black . Don't miss it. · Now it's refillable. 87c • Compact liQftt8Tlfi great colors. Refills. pkg . of 2 17c 0'1N DAILY 9:30 to 9:30 ·SUNDAY 10 to 1 euNADA HILLS llOO Chltsworfh St. WOODLAND HILLS 21500 Victory Blvd, klVtRSIDt 3520 Tyler SI. SANTA ANA Norlh ol South Coast Plaza TOkkANCI Sepulyeda ·and Hawthorne tUINA PU:lt &ttch and Orangethorpe ORANGI Garden Grove Blvd. and Manchester lAKIWOOD Carson at Paramoui1t. . . . ' • •• ,..r ~ I ' .. . . ' I I I I ' ~ l '· DAILY PILOT 19.88 1. ltoyd'1 AM/FM dgll•I clock radio Wake-to-music or Slim-tine' cabinet. (Jll04) Wednt$day, June 13, 1973 • \ Wtdn6Sa1, June 13, 1973 PILOT·ADVE~TIS~R fl •, \ • J.~.9.95~~ 8. Sharp 19" (dlagonal) color portable AFT color controls. 2 separate channel indicators. (C1923 or C1921) 2. Solly 11 " (dlagonal) black/white portable Telescoping antenna. Illuminated dials. Plug -in or.. use baneries. (::rV-1 12) 9.95 4~~FM/ AM radlo cassette L, recorder Autom<ltic ,tape shutoff. Easy · alide control. 7825 1im ~.i111~iiiiiJ . . -. -. 21.88 1. G.E •. ca1sette recorder ·Automatic 1a·pe shulofl. 2-way power. Slide ...c~ntrOts, (M84A.0) - -- the ' 9.95 6. Soundetlgn AM/FM pocket radio Telescoping antenna for FM . Earphone. Carry strap. (2208) $6 a month -3:-sony S"-(CUigOna1r - "Power-Mite" I portable This black/ white set weights\7 lbs. AC , DC or battery operated. (TVS10U) .12.88 11. Otter 1t1•m wend Trigger control lets you spray just the.right amount of steam. (692-01) --,--. ' . ' ... lj<'··· "·"-' . 4t. ' 82 .. 95 -S~Panasonlc FM/AM 'J>Ortable radTo A"S or ~batt ery powered . A-frame ··design. Earphone. (RF561 ) 329.95 10. Zenith 12" (dl1go~1I) $J. 8 ). black/white portable Parma-Set VHF line tuning. Weighs just 17 lbs. (E1335) y. •. Py ·,,/'' . "f ,,~ ·,.,~ :~ '#'-' .. ,.~~ I ' . " $13 a month 9. Panasonic 13'' (diagonal) colOr portable Pana~Lock·ll touch-button color., AFT control. Earphone (CT301) Tl'lls •mount r•p1e1•nl1 tilt monlhly paymenl under the J, C. P•nMy . ' rl , . < Tom• P•yment Pl•n for the purch1$I ol 1hil ilem. No FINANCE .C~ARGE • will be lnc~tr•d ~I 1hl .. New e.1.n~•" O! th• ICCOUnl In t}ll li!lt b1Uing sl•lemenl includ•n11 the i:iurchase 11 P•ld In 11111 belo1a t,.,. ne~t billing d.it11 1hown ln 11111 11a1emen!. When ioc11rred 1 monthly FINANCE CHARGE will be de1e1m;oed by apply.n11 mo~thly P•uodic rate• or t.2•;. (ANNUAL PERCENTAGE-RATE 1,,, .... ) on the llist $~:JO and 1~~ !""'NUAL PERCENTAGE R.\TE 12'1'o) on !hat po11ion over $500 to 1h1 "Previous Balance'" without diductin11 p1ym•n11 and cr1dll1. ' . . ~~"~1~~~=0~~~)~0·~:~0;,' s29 I ¥: '1 AFC control fo f lihe • · tuning.(03721Ll Prices . Effective Thru Sunday 15.88 3:Gfftette Mia·tor men- 2-speed pow'er. Comb. ' b.rush attachments. (H03) 9.77 17. Q.E. wrlnklt removlf Low heat plastic faci: plate avoids scorches. -uses tap wateri;(WA-t) 1·1·.88 12. Schick hot lalhtr dispenser With 2 re fills. Dispenses · warm morning shave (3 00) !SQh~l~t ... 2 drying Speeds, Combl brush attachments: {336) , $12 a moh\b . 1 Ii ' I ' l I i . I . ' ' • • ---' ·.t ' •. l • l I ' 1 ' , • ! OP GRANADA HILLS 1800 Chatsworth St. WOODLAND HILLS 21500 Victory Blvd . RIVERSIDE 3520 Tyl~r SI. SANTA ANA Norlh of South Coast ' . . . ' •, ' I / DAILY 9:30 to 9, au tCJR~N 1 I ' -· " ' ' ' r • , ' ' . ..,,,, l ' ' • 1 l ' , L PILOT-ADVERTISER Wrdntsday, June lJ, 1973 DAILY PILOT 'j \ 24. Mercury 7x35 wide angle 1Mnocul1rs Lightweight. 7 power with angutarlield of 1!T. • ' .. . 19. Pro style golf b•g Large clothing pocket. Padded sling. Travel hood. La Costa leather-look vinyl. Special buy 18.88 20. Deluxe golf c•rt Die cast aluminum. 11''. wheels. Swivel bag brackets. 25. O.C. power timing light 25.· I 7 "Trigger actuated. For 6 or · 12 volt battery. 26. Petersen automotive repair manuals Helpful booklets for car owners. Each • 8.99 ,f'd•y,'6nly 59.88 21 . Pocket t11herm1n Rod, reel, 19 95 tine and mini-tackle box In one. • 28. Brocade Pl eat 'N Roll car seat covers For the front sea t of most 2 or 4 door mode!s . Vihyl with locin1 back. Snug tit. "qre?it colors. fteg. 72.97 22. ·GAF compact 35 mm. camera Takes slides or pri~ts. electric eye sets opening a~d shul\er SpeeOs. 19:87 REG. 22.88 23. Kodak.fJockel lnslamallc "20;;kit. Preset lens. Pack film toading. Includes Magicu~ and M~icube t extender. 9~99 31 . '"New" Black• Decker jig saw Cuts in wood. metal. plastic. Capacity: I " hardwyod. 11 2 .. softwood. /7504) -~-12.Qg_,~_ ~ 33. "New" ll1ck I D.cker {/,·· •irllllllo lfiod drll~,AII pu'!)Ost. Pul! 1<iggei'to Mease speed. Maleh ii>eldtolllt job. (7014) • I- " ' ' • 9.99 30. Auto mini mats F'ont3~99 ... , 2~99 Fit most compact.and imported cars. 32. "New" Bliek & Decker"'" drnl · with double reduction gear system. Drives most attachments. (7· 104) "· · 29. Nylo"n foam Car sea't -covers Fit the !rant seat of most 2 or 4 door, .. ..,. models. Bright colors .. 12.99 17.99 35. Blick A Decker 71/4 .. clrcula( saw 1 h.p. motor. Sawdust ejection chute. Extr a wide blade guard. Bevel and depth adjustors.~'7301) 3A. Black & Decker finishing sander For wood, metal. plasli~ One or two hand control. Flush sands on 38. 13 pc. high speed drill blfiet. : • ;. ·'• •...•• 5.49 37. 12 pc. Jig sew blade set. •••.• ' .. ' .• : •.•.. ~ •.• 4.49 38. Drill mate eesy·cerry organizer .;~........ 2.99 --39, Sawtaandennate eeay~carr-y o'f!l:a11·izer ,, .:-2;99. .~ 40. Drill powered self-priming pump .••••..... 3.99 3 sides. (7404) ' . -, '! 27 . S-port grip steering wh·e~I ~5--cover 4 __ Fits al l size wheel~. . · :• Prices ' . ) Effective Thru Sunday the :. reasury ·. , _ l ~~"."·ily sto.re and ·supermarket· · ) • ... .. " to '1 1130". UNDAY 10 to., UN IQ epulveda and Ha~horne .~UENA • PARK Beach and ora,ngethorpe ORANGE Ga rde.n ".7ve Blvd. ~nd Marr LAKEIWOOD Carson at ParamOunt . . ' ' " \ ., • . I • .JI DAILY PILOT - ... -#' ' ~~ ' ' .. ~·."' t ~~ ' '· '"t t . ~ ~( \~ .. 'r: ' ' ' • • -- Wod sd ne ay, June 13, 1973 Wodnfid , ay, Ju nt 13, 1973 - r)erl'eat· Sa"e 15°V.--=-o~ _t __ .. . -.. \_ •, + ." ·. . .;,::.,,.; ... ; • "t I • :.:.1:• ': ,• • . . · .. , .. ... . '·• .. ,' ', I snort s\eeve , \<.nee \engtn ·paiarnas. sott wash 'n wear po\yested cotton in great so\idS and prints . Button tront and pu\\-over sty\es. S,--M,L, X\:: .. , S(\le . 'l'Perso 'l'laTsJtor Your ' I - ' -. ... \ I . . . ' " " " " " " " :: l . _, --'' ' --i . . ~' -\· -cotton teff'Y snave coat. water-\ovinQ ' "" . . .. . • .. " wrap-UP 1n white, b\Ue or go\d. S, M, L,'f--L . . . . •. . ' \ \Jiny\ snave \<.it \n b\ac\<., brown or olive. 10" size no\dS al\ \liS persona\ needs. ,,: water proo' \inill9· \ • ' . • ' \ __ _ • •, . " , I ---- ~ ·--·-· OLD SPICE· ARER SHAVE LOTION 41101 .109 ENGLISH LEATHER ALL-PURPOSE LOTION " ' ... :3~ ' . . . -· • 1 DUTCH MASTERS , cADn I ...... of10 335 5 ....... .. . • -- I ---- OLD SPICE . . HAI-KARATE --- GIRSET · AfrER SHAVE LOTION Alt•• She,. 27 9 Lotion • Cototne •••.. 109 " 3•y,. ... 500 . ' ENGLISH LEATHER HAI-KARATE GILLITTE I Giff SET SAMPLER sn :.. TRAC II RAZOR ' ' """-· 375 Stick Otodof1nt 3 Piee11 149-With5 , .. Camillge1 SMOKER GIFTS FOR DAD! ELPRODUOO BOUQUETS :s':I 619 PHILLIES CHEROOTS l'tlg. of 10 269 -5-PKkl ~ - , ......... ... .... ... . KING EDWARD IMPERIALS Boa 349 ,of 50 - Wedoesday, Junt 13, J."J,J O,AIL. PILOT JI .. ' ' BRUT "33" SPLASH-ON LOTION 1 ... 1" • -. ' · AQUA-V.ELVA ARER-SHAVE LOTI !llOL 137 ) L ·ELPRODUOO BLUNTS llo• 619 of IO CRICKn DISPOSABLE CIGAREI IE LIGHTER ' -;_WHITE OWL HALF & HALF AMPHORA HIALIAH ., SPECTATOR ' INVINCIBLE TOBACCO TOBACCO • -• ... 5s9 14oz 2" • 14oz. 149 ' of IO -oPIN DAILY t 1H .. 9130 • SUNDAY 10 to 7 OIAMAOA HILLS 1800 Chatsworth Sf. WOODLAND Milli 'll·SOO-Vlctory Blvd. •IYllSIDI th l520 Tyler St. SANTA ANA North of SOuth Coast Plata TOllANCI Sepulvt(fa and e reasury H1wthorne IUINA PAIK &each and Orangethorpe OIAPfOI Garden Grovt! Blvd. and ' \Manchester LAKIWOOD Carson at Paramou~-tamtystcwe·andfood.centet • " . ., ' . ' PIPES GKt , .. loxed - aa~ • • --· ' L I I . ; -.- - I I DAILY Pltbr IQ Test Controls Rejected SACRAMENTO (AP) Gov. Ronald Reagan has vetoed a bill curbing IQ testing and signed-another regulati ng animal experiments. The vetoed measure by -A!Mlemblyman Willie L. Brown Jr. would have s h a r p I y retlrtcted the admlnistralion of echola!tic aptitude tests in (EDUCATION} __ public schools. In his veto message, Reagan said he felt Wtdntscl~. June 13, 1'173 the bill "kills aptitude testing. - rather than preventing its rnlsuse." Reagan signed a bill by Sen. Albert S. Rodda ( D-Sacrame'n- to) prohibiting painful ex· J)erim~nts on live vertebrate animals in public sch0:0ls. Girls Petition Singer "It is with some uneas iness tliafl sign SM'112;" h<!-sald . e Name Dropper SAN DIEGO (AP ) -A , psychologist says research in- . dicates elementary s c h o o I ! pupils with names ·such as Hubert or Elmer are likely to be discriminated against in the teacher's gradebook. Dr. Herbert Harari of San Diego State says his research· shows some names arc brand· ed as "losers' names" by ex- perienced teachers. ' Al Gree1i Begged, 'Dori'i Marry' From Wire Services "Please Al, don't get n1::ir- rled." That was the message fron1 a group of ti.1e1nphis girls tu singer Al Green . Upset over rumors that the singer might be planning a wedding, the girls went to Green's office to present a petition \Yith ire names asking -The dark and ebullient Liza darted out fron1 behind a pillar to clasp her 20-year-old half-sister in her arms. Lorn:i. \\•as wearing fadetl blue jeans.- "We are going to do cv·e r yth i ng and see everything," announced Liza. •·1 '1n going to take her out cin the town and during the day him to stay single. c J ''He's all we've got left PEOPLE besides Flip Wilson," said Gloria James, 17. '----------'· pub\ishC'd tantos ,jlrC in ltalian and extol Fascist dlcta\o: Ben;10 ~lussolini, tu whom they \rcre sent in the late years of \Vorld \Var IL Pound's f'ascist militancy led to his serving 15 years in a U.S. 1nental hospital after the \\'Dr. * Actor Jack lla14'klns ""BS repor ted -in ... ''('Qfllfortable" condition in a London hospital after becoming ill at home. The 62-year-old actor suffered a throat hemorrhage. Harari said the experiment grew out of research be and an uaociate did seven years Green, 26, reassured his fans. "Don't worry. girls ... -he said. "I'm not anywhere near getting marrled . . . As a matter of fact. I don't even have a steady gi rlfriend." v.·e plan lo go shopping. Lorna needs a new \Vardrobc." He recently u n d e r w-e n t - surgery in New York. hoping ---ago in Florida. That-study concluded that childrtfi bear- ing ,Unusual first names a re taurited by classmates mo.re often and are less likely to be popillar. Other names used in the first experiment i n c 1 u d e d Cecil, Blair, Riza, Gladys, Rhoda, Hillary, Perc y , Gertrude, Bertha and Adelle. e College Aid SA.CRAMENTO (AP) Cal~or­ nia's cunmunity collet:es would receive an extra $65 mil- lion under a bill sent from the Senate to the Assemblf on a 28--0 vote. The. measure, authored by Sen. Alfred E. Alquist {0-San Jose) and supported by Go.v. Ronald Reagan. also would provide about $13 million in property tax relief for tax- paiyers in tllo5e community coJlcge districts. Alquist's bill would raise the state's share of community college expenses from 34 per- cent to 42 percent, as of July I. ese:i: Suit SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -A former French pr ofessor claims San Francisco State discriminated against h e r because of sex and is asking reinstatement. Anita l\tander. who seeks at leas t $150,000 damages, said s he had been on the school stall from September 1965 un- til June, 1971 and been an assistant professor f r o m September 1969 until dismiss- ed. She contended in the suit fil- ed in U. S. District Cou rt that s he had been recommended 'for renewal of contract by her department for 1971-72, but was notified in November 1970 that she v.•ould no.t be granted 1enure and retained. Granting of tenure is usually decided in the fourth y,ar . • B11shag Platt LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Superior Court judge has directed the lnglev.•ood Unified School District to submit a modification of its integration procedures before a June 22 court hearing. Judge l\1ax F. Deutz said a district proposal to scrap its crosstown bumng system in favor of the neighborhood school concept was "ten- t.aUvely unacceptable." ~ .... But because of the city's ethnic changes since 1970, the present pai ring of schools through busing •·may not be in the best interests" of district children, Deutz rto ld school of- ficials. · I e S•le H•ltecl .. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The California Supreme Court has halted the proposed sale of the Jefferson School property in Santa Barbara pending its decision on the validity of a school desegregation plan. The stay order had be.en re· quested by C. Raymond Mullin and Howard Larson. who challenged the Santa Barbara tchool district's desegregation busing plan last loll . At issue Is whether the school board g••• proper noUce of Jts pro'Po sed oowegallon plan ii e I o re adopllon and whether the bolrd abuK'ti l!s discretJon in qrd,ring buslns: RI accompUsh Integration. • * Ose.ar~winning movie sli'Jr Llza Mlnnelli was wailing Ltt Heathrow airport when her shy, blonde half-sister. Lorna Luft, flew in for a week's visit. Both are daughters of the late Judy Garland. * The late United States poet Ezra Pound's two missing cantos have been fou nd. Historian Duilio Susrncl of Florence, Italy said they are among a quantity of papers seized by the Am er i can government during World War 11 . and just now being catalog- ed. Susmel said the two un- to regain the use of his voice, lost after an operation for throat cancer a few years ago. * . A co11ecti0n of photographs once owned bv Nazi' leader Hermann Goering will go on sale Thursday at the Christie 's auction house in London. The o w 0-c r of the photographs was· not iden· tified. ~= Wrench Kit OPIN DAILY •:30 to 9:30 ·SUNDAY 10 to 7 G•ANADA HI LLS 1800 (ha!sworlh SI. WOOD~ND HI LLS ~1500 Victory Blvd. AIVl•SID( lSXI Tyler $1. SANTA AHA Norfh ol S01,1!1l (o.\~I PlaZA TO••ANCl $epulye<111111\Cl H'!lwlhOrne IUENA PAJ»< Beach and OrangtlhOrl)t OtANGI G•rcc·n Grove Blvd and M•l'ICM ,ler LAKEWOOD Car~n 111 P.tr8movn1 • ' \ 'the I 59.99 \ 8 digit calculator $5 monthly 8 p~ce entry and 1eadout. Adds. subtracts. multiplies and divides. Plus floating decimal and coostant key. Operates on A.C. 69.99 Min~size pocket calculator SS monthly Handy baneiy opera1ed Features 8 digit entry and display plus !loallng: dec1maL Adapter tor AC operation 4.99 89.99 10 digit calculator $5mon!hly Tne-p;8)'ffci machine ror the biggest jobs. Features both cQ()slant and floating decimal and constant key. A.C. operared. •T!'to• •m11unt ••p·,.1•nl~ th• 11111nthlf ~·~m•flt un.ar lht J C. P1nM1 Tome "•rm1nt Pl~n tql !he Pll"·"•il ill 1n11 ·~•111.. No flNANCf: C•!AllO[ ..,,11 bt '"' "''~o ,, 1n1 • N~,.11.tl•ntt" l.ll 1h1 •CCl'!,.nl In 1111 ""' b+l!lno 1111111\to! ll'ltiud1no 1~11 1•11•~h11 .. '' p11d'rn lu11 !Mlo111h1 Tlt•1 hilhnQ noit '"'~""Ill ll!n! ·•~T•"'•nt ""'"'" •nC111 td. A "'011!1tlf flNAMC[ Cl1J•RGE ,.111 bt 11~1 .. m1nfo1 L1 •• ~l~•n!f m"l:l!ITll1f'llll!"l'ftl11IO•!tt or I~~ (ANNU,ltl PllACINT ... G£ RAI i • •••!on lh• .... 1 S~'Jll tnd , ... (AN ... UAl PlllC(Nl.1.Gf RAii; 11·•1 ... ~1~.11p(ll!•on0\1• 1~. 10 ,,.,, "P•t •IOUI ' .... ,~ ' • ~I· a -M• .tnd Cttd•I• I I . ,. • • OPIN DAllY f 130 to t i30 -IUHDAT 10 fi9 7 OUN.I.DA MlllS 1800 Chaliworlh St, WOODLAND MILLS 21~·Vlctory 61Yd, llYllllDI 3320 lyler $1. IANTA ANA North of SOll!h COIS1 Pltlt TO•tANCl $eputvtda and H&wthOrrie IUINA 'Alk Btllch and Or&l'l!lethbrpe OlANOI Gtroon Grove ~!vd. al'ld Mtnctw<Jtu LAl(IWOQ9 C•ruin ti P1ramounl. • • · f I I r ! ' ·; Wtdnesaay, Junt 13, 1973 u1,11ad bellril Illa Wife WU illlciwomea's lili, bbl Ibis is· ridleuloaL" ' f 739 to Graduate· At ·Golden West Golden West Co 11 e g e 's seventh commencement will be held Thursday evening when 7 49 students -the largest graduating ct8ss ever -formally cunplete their re- quirements fee the essoclate in an. degree. More than 2,00> friends and relatives are 1 expected tG wknels the ceremony in the college pavilion at 6:30 p.m. Dr. Dal~ A. !Miller, Golden West clean who will assume the presidency. ofl Shasta Collep I-lhls month, will speak to: the graduates on "Elect:lu&ic U. a means or an end?~ Hill WJk.~ mer to a r....-.t orticle about Golden West's uae ol rooJ.U media ui inslroction it the "Saturday Review." THE OU T ST ANDI NG citiun d. the year award will be Jlr"""'i.d by Oianc<llor Nonnan E. Watson on behalf ol the board of trustees of the ())ut Community College Dis· tricl The Rev. Edwanl C. Erny, of the First United Methodist Cbun:h, Huntington Beach, will· J!ve the invocation and beiptlon. Nil.r t ~ 1 10.000 I n IChdilllwbipi have a I r e a d y been n~ ao 12 or the ~·-·· Named ' •out s tand i ng studied" ~ Frank West, 27. ol llulllincl!NI Bea<h. who was --ollliestudent body. He was cho8ert as the student who belt demonat ra t es scholulk: a b I I i t y and leadenblp qu'alities. 011IER l.AICAL WINNERS and the apomoring organiia· tions are: ISO N Ch tllrouoll lft.e C•rl G. Aylln; tiNflno lmO<tlr~ SchOl•rsnlp. ROMMlll V•llldlcll., Hunt!t1111°'1 BHCll, $100 fl'Cff\ tile h"'•" CMpltf', N1tlon11 Stc;ret1rlt1 Auocl1llon1 Ollv~ Ablem•n, HunllnQtofl IHCll. $11111, Ctwiri.t Brin- "'" khol11'$1\lp; Robert M1lllon, Cos11 Miu, '*• C•lltorni. Congr1u of P1t9flll •nd TIKhtl"S 1111;.; Llw lmud•, Huntington keel\, $ l 5 0 , C11llornl1 R .. lrlld TffCIMrrt AUOCll• Hon, Or•llCll County '""''-"· Giii ltnlGn, Huntin;ton Bpel\, "°· A. O.rL1flM1 c-lfY Schol•rstilp; Glry Sll\ltf'I, Hunt1119ton &Mell. UO, ind Al L1 ....... wwmln$11r. UO, D•llY PllOll Loin Brown, Huntl119ton 9ffcll, $,,, Delt1 -~, EP$llon ol •et• SlvfN Pllh P1ll4 ~. Wntm1111te<. 1125, Ind GI-MOrlinofo; H1111ll119ton 8MCll, 1125, FOid MOtor Comp1ny. Ttrffl .Amin, ~t B11cll, SlOO. Far!Y end Elvht; Giiii Benson. Hun- tlngt°'1 8ffefl, d , FQllflllln V1ll•Y Wonwn'1 Club; S/\lrl•Y Overton, S11I BffCll, S20. Golden West Col.Lei!• FKf.llty; Robllrt Brickner. ,Huntington BffCll, Sill, Golden west Collf!<.le AcMmlc senate; Steven M1r1on, FOl.llll•ln' V1l11Y. l\00, Golden West Call~• .fl..culty Wives. Cynl'lll• Srl(tbuory; Hunting!°" B11ell. $10, H1<bour Ftllowslllp; Wllll1m Kten.nn, Huntington BHtll, SUO, Hun- llnglOfl B1ICll Art Le1gue; Niki Slli""'4l. FOl.lfti.ln VlllfY, $100, H- lngton B .. cll Bu 1Ln 1 s1 end ,.,,,,.,tlon1I WonMnl O•le Mullis Incl Cl111dl1 Brv1n, boll\ trom Hunllnoton a..c11, 1100 uc!\, Hunllt111ton BeKll Com~Wf. IC""""" Jaoos1, HUl'ltlnglon B11cl'I, uo. Junlof'" Wom•n'• Cluti of Huntlnv•on l•Klll Robin F~ts, Hunllntton BeKll, SDI, Rotikl F. Kennecty Scl!Gl1rllll# Socllty: Tim Sclllro, w ... 1m1n11w, Sito, 1nd fr1nll. Wirs1. HUl'lrlngton 9-.c:ll. SMO, Robtf"I J . MCC1utllnd Mem«'-1 Scl'lol1r111!p. Miry frtuHtf'I. SHI Buell. 1511, D11fld s,.,,_, Fount.tin V1llty, i!OO, •nd Lais s fown.·--Hunttnv•on Betcll, $250, ""'1"CU(Y $.IYl"4i Ind LOIA A11oc l 1tlo11 1 Mklltli Z1r9n. w ... 1m1nJ.fw. ISO. MldWrf c I I y w-·· Club; Lutllfr Wren. Hun· 111191on a..c11, sue, L. E•r•• Pl'lllllps M~tll ... A_.., ~"I P...vtwl, IN! ltiilCI\, SJD, Ind 01ry StrftM; fl0Ufl14111n V1tlty, 1100, •1nc:ho Al1ml'tel Rotary Club; $-r• Cllrh....,, fllllflt1i11 v.n.,., sJSO, ~rl• l •MUrll, HU11tt119ton IMCll, '210, Ind J11111IM Mun•• _Wf"1\'"'11Mle!J ~~ _ s1111.,.. Anc:tlor .r.u1Pl•rv· -Ktnnttll McMullen, H u n t I n It o n 1...:11. S\00, LQUIS Slr•C11'1 M-1•1 SCl'IDl1r1hlp1 1(1th1Mt1 Creighton, H11n.- tlnGIOn lllCll. UOD. arid Marilyn HOUMl'l'lln, Wlttl'nln•W, S200, Sisti tnd (pfllforl"" SltlCUH Memor !ll kllol1nfllp1 R1ymond AIY111'ildo, COii. Miu, SlOO, Socl•I Selene• Olvlllon kMl•rllllp. L.ols Br_.,, Hunt1"9ton Be•'"· U7..SO, Ind Juli• lllomton, Huntlt111lon ... ch. UO, TOSH-COFJ L. J'"'" 11r1thon Jr •• Hut1llnvl1111 Bt1en, l 1SO, Tvesd•Y C1'1&1 oA lltwPOrt H1rbor: K•lhY J""""*'"' Westmlnrttr, SIOD, E.A. Wit-ScWanlllp. Sttwn H1119«, Hunllll91°'1 at..:11. '150, Rlcl'llnl Snl.llhwrld, Wnl!Tlln•l..,, 1150. tnd Kl/rt Scl\nydef, HunHhglOfl Buell, s200. Wtlitrnln1ur Art A110Ct1· non; D•Yld ~11~. Cost• """'· SlOO, We1tml ...... COUllCll of ~TA's. Ardlit CKlloll. COiia Miu. S100. WOl'l\ln'1 Cltlb of Hut1llttC1lon Suell; Slllrl.y OYtrton. S••1 aucll, 1100, Wom•n'1 Ctub of SHI BllflCIU Miry F011t r, Hunllt111!0fl lffCll. S f 0, Women't N1tlon11 Farm •nd G1rdtn Anoclilllewl, GoldM Wftl Br1ncll, Stomach Trouble I ,i ' • t Common to All , By DR. STEINCROHN . "I have never had a headache ln all my lite." I've heard this statement from quite a few patlenls.. But I do not recall ooe patien't who has ever said, "I have never had a beliyofbe." . . , . There moy be the !ew who have never takta an •in !or the head, but you tan count on It that ll ta the ex- c.pdon who reaches odull Ille without having taken bicarb of' 90methiog 1imllar for the belly. Stomach trouble of one tlnd or another ii perhaps one ol mankind's commonest 1r· rllants. DEAR DIL STEINCROHN: Moot of my Ille (I'm now 41) I bawi had an Iron stomach. 1 coald eat lftYlhlng. Nothing -my dlg81llon. But llllOI' I ha.. been having boUYIChel. About an hour after t e•t I a•t crampe. Sometimes food ........ lo run right thl'OOlh me. I Ibo !eel naUMaled al limel. What Is the most c«n· moo eou1t !or beilyldlel! - M<. R. COMMENT: It Is not '° Im· poi1anl for you to know what's moot common. What you need lo leam Is the reason for )'OW' own bellyaches. I do not know just how long you have been having trouble, bul I think. you will agree it Is time lo quit guessing. There are so many possible reasons for abdominal discomfort. Perhaps it's nothing aerious in your case. , . How are your eating habits? Do you boll your food and swallow air? Do you. overeat? Do yGu fill yourseU with fried roods, fats, and rich desserts? How about coffee, tea, alcohol? Smoking? One or all can con- tribute to bellyache and other gastrointestinal symptoms. i.ET'S SUPPOSE your trou-. hie is due to something more aerious. How is your heart? People forget that a failing heart can produce pain in the gut. So can a faulty gall blad· der. A -I or gastric ulcer. Acute •ppendicitls. Colitil (Inflammation of the large bowel ). Ileitis (lnnam- mation of the third llegment o! the ·amall intest.lne). Pan· crealllls. Hepatitis, Cirrhosis. Growth in the stomach, 'ln· testlnes or rectum. Hlatal hernia. I could go on and on. But chancea are that somewhere tn this list Is your trouble. All You have to do Js give your doctor the opportunity to find the target to shoot at. Your bellyache may turn out to be due to green apples .. But that 111 not likely, Is it? • \ ·-Sale-54.88 Reg. 69.99 ss mooth~ - Men's 21( 10-speed bicycle s .. ong steel cons1ruct ion. Rac ing ,,and le bars. 10- speed gea rshift on support bar. Slide puU braket. White with black tires. Wtdntf.d&y, June 13, 1973 DAILY PILOT ZI I Sale 44.88 Reg. 56.99 $Smoothly Men's 26" 3-speed bicycle Chrome lenders .. slandard handlebara. with 3~ speed gearshift. . -iho~ ~~>o.nl r~o·•~"•:~ !."t 1l'Ol\ihlv p1yrner1 una" In• 'J.C. r~~n•; lon-c l"•<-i;ent 1>11~ for tie p~1~ro1t• or th•t '"'" N,) f 1:1.1,11c~ Ct;At-1(,~ -...,11 b• •n~u··~ 111ht · New Hlla'1t•"" r.r :he accoun1 •. ~ 1h• 11 .. 1 b•ll•AO ~11'""'•~1 1ncl11<1tng !h• 1><11e~1se 1s; p1•d 1n Ii.II l>f>lo,. m• -I b1U1n; 01te •h""~ m ma( ~!•lernenl Wh•n incu•11'1. a !l>Onfh!y FINANcrci-u ~ct ...,u b. detu- ••uM'd Dy 3llO!v•"il monthlv 1)41<iodoc raleJ or 1 ~·; !ANNUAL PF.ltcENTA.CE RATE IC•"") on 11'\e "'""' 1500 anc ,,. (At<N UAL PERCENl i,GE RATF. ,~ .. , o~ th.It l!O<han °""' S~. 10 !ti. "Pr'"" OU11 Bal1rc•"' 1"1f"'Xl!.de<tuct•"f! p1ynit1nt1 1no c•ec:mo. Then move on to our other hot buys. 12.88 4 Point Hammock ~~J~l0.97 'I Deluxe mulli-position lounger Padded head and loot, double ratch et positional gear. Close-web vinyl. Fasl color cover w1lh pillow, green steel lra1ne. •• 19.97 G.E. portable AM /FM radio (Model #P4810) SSmont~y Sale 3.99 Reg. 4;97 Table-top grill 18~ diam eter adjustable grill. Rustproof chrome·plaled grid. Sale 92.88 Reg. 109.97 $5SOmoothly Treasury deluxe 22"mower Self·propelled 31"2 h.p. engine. 6· position heighl·ol· cul adjustment. Front and rear salety ballles, 1ide 1..._-\l _chute deflector. 29.97 G.E. AM/FM and PSport1ble 3-bancl radio (Model # P4920) $5monlhly 12.99 Tubular Aluminum directo(s chllr. Steel strength, clauic styling. Canvas seats anctbacks. 4.88 ~ Cast-Iron doubl!t hlb1chl Two4--~tlon removable grills. 10"x17" O'ltlrall. ....... GRANADA HILLS 1800 Cha tsworth St. WOODLAND HILLS 21 . .IOO Victory Blvd. llVHSIDE 3520 Tyler St . SANTA ANA North of South Coast Plaia TOUANCE Sepulveda! and Hawthorne BUENA PARK Beach ondlorangelhorpe ORANGE Garden Grove Bl vd. and Manch .. ler LAKIWOOD Carson it Pll'-. ,. .... -..... '·-•lo ~·••· SllNP~Y 10 to 7 .. ( .... ' ' ! • I '• \ I I I I I I t I ,, { I 22 DAit/ PILOT Wtdntsdly, June 13, 1973 f'•11tll1J Clrc!IU ''Do I halto get the child's plate? rm SEVEN!" Booklet Offers Handiwork Ideas By JOYCE L KENNEDY DEAR JOYCE: I like ID do needlework and make things to keep busy while m y hus- band Js al work or flshJng. Some time ago I sent for a (Career Carner J booklet oa baodlcralt and ho!> by ideas that-you y,TOte about aild I liked i~ very much. Do yoo know of any more free booklets along this line? P.O., Allent<>wn, Pa. YES, THERE'S a new 14· pege booklet published by a wel l -known 1naker of household produCts. It includes creations for sewing, patch- work, embroidei'y -and "good earth'J recycles, 3Udt as Christm as · t r e e ornaments that can be made from bottle t<>p;. For a copy of "A Raft of Craft Ideas," send a postcard mentioning booklet title to me at this newspaper. Be sure we can read your name, address and zip. DEAR JOYCE: I heard that an insurance company says 1hat statistically speaking, scientists live longer than nc"•spaper reporters. How aboot business executives? How long do they. Jive as rom- pared with people In other vocaUons? -M.M., Camden, N.J. THE SOLE lludy of longevi- ty by occupation that I kno\~· about was released in 1968 by Metropolitan ·Life, and was limited to a sampling of prom· inent Jn{essionp.l and busi· nessmen Iiste9., in Who's 'Who. In descenaing order of longevity, here's how the groups fared (the lower the death ratio number, the Ionaer the life span ): Scientists, 79; noncollege educators and administrators, 83; church officials a n d clergyn1en. 87 ; college pro. lessors, 89; military officers (high ranking), 9'l; artists. Illustrators, sculptors, 9 8 ; business executives. 1 0 2 ; judges and lawyers. 103 ; engineers. 106; co 11 e g e presidents. d e a n s • ad- ministrators. 109 ; physicians, 110; government officials (ex· cept military). 119 ; ·editors, 121 ; authors, writers, critics, historians, 122; journalists and correspondents 207. Naturally, I'm not crazy about these statistics. DEAR JO\tE: Thls sum· mer I would like to try my hand at making origi n a l greeting cards and see if 1 can sell them through greeting card shops or any other way I CalJ. come up with. Do you kn3W ol. a book with shortcuts and tips oo making custom cards? -P.W., Cleveland, Ohio A PRIMER thal should se11d you oo your creative '\\'BY is "How To Make Your Own Greeting Cards" by John Carlis, Watson-GuptU Publica- tions. 1968. Check y o u r bookstore or library. Also, for readers who con- tinue to ask about selling freelance verse or desigfls to greeting card manufacturers, yoo can get a list of buyers by sending 58 cents to the Na- tional As!Ociation ol. Greeting Caid Publishers, 200 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017. Ask for "Artists and Writers Market List, 1973." TO J.N.P., Austin, Tex.: The U.S. Small Business .Administration's (SBA) new Management Aid No. 216, "Finding A New Product For Your Company,'.' should hi t the info spot you need to fill. It includes not only tips for locating products. oot a checklist to mat.ch a proposed product with your firm's capacity. The booklet is free at local SBA field offices, or obtain by writing SBA head- quarters at 1441 L St. NW, Washingtoo, D.C. 20416. ~ WHAT JOB fleld.s interest you most? Where can you write to find out about various careers or small business op- J>011unities? For ans\.\·ers to questions affecting Y 0 U R future, send career topic sug- gestions to Joyce Lain Ken- nedy at this newspaper. The most interesting and fre· quently asked questions will be printed as space permits. Mrs. Kennedy regrets that the volwne of mail ma k es personal replies impossible. .• In the Service Airman First Class SteV.en D. flemm-ert, son of Mrs. Ruth l\1. Tomlinson of 152 W. Palizada. San Clemente, has graduated at Lowry AFB , C:Olo., from the U.S. Air Force air armament m e c h ·a n I c course conducted by the Air Training Command. The alrmnn, now a specialist in the F "4 Pll.aµtom jet fighter. bomber weapon c o n t r o I systems, is being assigned to George AFB for duly with a unit of the Tactical Air Com· mand y,·hich provides air sup- port for U.S. ground forces. --Ainnan Mart S. Ward, son of Mr, and Mrs. Cl13rles S. Ward of 1209 Lake, Huntington Beach, has bttn assigned to Otanute AFB, Ill., afler com· plttJna Air r~on:e b a s i c training. During Ws six weeks at IN! Air Tra'lntng Comm and' s Lockland AFB. Tex .. he studied UK! Ajr Force mission. organtr.a11on and custom~ and received special tnst.ructlon In human relations. The airman has been assJgn- ed to the Technlc•I Training Cenier al ,Chanute for spo<lallzed training In alrcralt 1na.Jntenance. "1lllla m P. Carroll, 9011 o{ ~tr. William Carroll Sr. or 6242 Warner, has enlisted in the U.S. Coast Guard for four years. Carroll, Who enlisted under the 20 days immediate-enlist- ment progfilm. is now at the Coast Guar.d Training Center, Alameda. Dana A. Lewb, son of Gerald O. Lewis, 8 2 2 1 Deerfield Drive, Huntington Beach. has been promoted to ainnan flrst class In the U.S. Air Force. Airman Lewis, a n in· formation specialist at Luke AFB, Ariz., serves with" unit or the TacUcal Air Command which provides air support for U.S. ground fore... His mother is Mrs. Bernice V. Lewlf of 10227 Disney Cfr. cle, Hunltngton Beach. ftfaster Gunnuy SergeMt WWlam A. StW. ._tved the Navy Conunendattoo Medal f r o m Brigadier G~ral Wllltam R. Quinn. lie was cited for meritorious servk:e as auppl y administration and operallons chlol for t h • Manne Qirps Supply Depart- ment, MCAS, El Toro. He resides at 9621 caJthness Drtvc, Huntington Beach. This is his second commendation medal. ' B·radley Win Executive Sees Regional Boost By TIIOMAS D. ELIAS For th e rest ot Southern Cnl· ifornia , the election of Thomas Bradley may mean much more 41h:in jw;t. .:i ~b La c.k-man. in one or t he region's 1nost \'lsl b!e political jobs and a n1ore liberal philosophy in Lo!! Ange le s Cily llall. It may also mean 1he begin- ning of a real rffort to creale a strong planning organitation for the Soulhland. Thi s is something t h e Southern California Associa- tion of Governments, a volun- tary federalioo of more than SOUTHERN CAUFORNIA FOCUS 100 cities and the counties of Los Angeles. Orang~. San Bernardino, Riverside, Ven- tura and Imperial, has long wanted. But the combined opposiLion of the Los Angeles city and county governments to any strengthening of SCAG has stymied those efforts for years. Ray Remy, SCAG's ex- ecutive director, is one offici al who sees Bradley's election as a boon for strong regional government. 1 The mayor-elect is a past president of the regional association, serves on its executive board and has taken interest In Its work. He was also the founding president of the National Association of Regional Councils. Remy sees better prospects for SCAG's legislative effort to replace the present organiza- tion with a planning agency that would automatically in- clude every city and county in the region as one immediate outgrowth of Bradley's elec- tion. SCAG membership is on a voluntary basis, preventing the organization from taking strong a n d controversial stands on some major issues for fear of losing members who might be offended. Under the SCAG proposal, its successor would have veto power over any plans for development in the region which didn't con£orm to the master plan adopted by the new agency's ge n e ral assembly. "Bradley spoke eloquently on behalf of the bill at our ge1\fral assembly mee ting last year," Remy said. "But-he still had to vote against it because the city co u n c i I directed him to." The general assembly even- tually \tOled by-a-2'>1 margin to back the plan. Now, noted Bradley's top environmental aide, t h e mayor-elect will be able to take positions of his own independent of the council. He may even be able to sway the coun cil to his views. "I'm sure he'll support SCAG's le gislation strongly," sa id Norman Emers o n , research director in t h e Bradley can1paign organiza- tion and former executi ve direction of the Legislature's Joint Open Space Lands Com· millee. Wh ile outgoing r..1ayor Sam \V. Yorty never actively op- posed his city 's n1embership in SCAG. Remy said he never supported it either and went along with the city council's a n t i · regional government stance. "Wllh both Los Angeles city and county against our bill, as· they were when the bill was first considered last year, It was very difficult for us," Remy said. "If one or both ls either neutral or supportive, It has,. 10Jielp._1.great " .-- SCAG's bill died last year in the state Senate's Government Organization Committee, from which its Democrallc sponsor, Sen. Alfred Song of Monterey Park, was unable to pry lt loose . This year. Democratic Assemblyman Joe A. Gonulez of La ~firada is carrying it \.\'ilh prospects for Assembly passage good despit~ op- posilioo from the California Real Estate Association and Los Angeles and S a n . .Bernardino counties. Even if the bill passes, the new Southern California Com· prehensive Planning Organiza- tion~would-not involve parl9 of the Southland not now covered by SCAG. That includes San Diego County. \.\'hich has Its own Comprehensive Planning Organization, and S a n t a Barbara, San Luis Obispo and Kem counties, which have no wnbrella cou n c il s of governments. But the bill would set a statewide precedent for crea· tion of strong regional plan· ning agencies in areas which don't have them. 2 Complete Training At Webb .Two Orange Coast students have graduated from the Webb School of California, a college-preparatory boarding school in Claremont. Charles ~1cKinley of Balboa Island was a member of the California Scholarship Federa- tion during his ienior year. While at Webb, ~1cKinley served on the Student Council. the student yearbook, and participated in 10CCer, track and football. He was class president in his sophomore year. McKinley is the son of Mrs . Tina McKinley. Allan Hunter of Laguna Niguel served as senior class president. He was also active on the student yeacbook staff, belonged to the Chess Club, was a volunteer tutor and participated in football and soccer. He is the son or Mrs. Gene Hunter. Five It-lake Oklalioma Honor Roll Five students from the Harbor Area have been named to the honor roll for academic excellence during the spring semester at the University of Oklahoma. Two of the students - Catherine ~1 . Rossiter o;f I Corona de) Mar and Nete G. Em1nons of Costa Mesa - were cited for maintaining straight-A grade a v er ages during the semester. The other three, each of whom had grades averaging B or better, include Alvin K. Cook of Costa Mesa and Kimberly A. Rimpau and Pi.1ichael M. Schidlowskl, both of Newixirt Beach. I THE PICK OF Punch I H.M CUSTOMS 8 ~ ': • I I . WrdntSday, June 13, 197.l PI LOT.AOVERTISER ']&\ AU Stores Celebrafe Grand Opening -of Our New $to·~ '1 Pric:n Good th"' T-.lay W• Porticipote 1. PAID •lbum1 with Mood 1c.en11 on cov•r to •tho the f111i ng of yo11r h t11ur1d 1n1p1hoh . With 10 ••lf·1ticlting p•911. for brid• or gr•d. Hold lnstamatic: Photos 79~ Clear Lucite Photo Cubes e 3 Pc . Wr1paround Set of Cuff Links, Tie Tac: or Bar * Gift Boxed Cuff Links l•rgt gift 11 lection by f•mou1 Shit ld1· D•nt• for Did •nd 9r•d! f•1hion•bl1 n•w d11i9n5 in gold •nd 1ilv•t pl•l1d cuff lin•s , •. l•ilot•d •11d lion• 11! 1tvl•1 in wr1p•round1. ~--,----- j $134 Reg. $13.99 Wome,n's; 'Lucite Watches mov•m1nt in n • w I 11 c. i t• c.•11, with m1tchln9 b111d, Blu•, Red, Bl1c.• or Pt1in f1c•1. Shoe.It r•1itt1nt, •nti-m•9 n et iC. To w••r with •v•rvt+iing. ~ . C",, a ~.t~"'""~""'"" ... i!!!'---=~rx~~t~~'illl 2 =..t1 · !! , '•'" Repeot ii ! · -~:, ofa ,, ~ ' '!~ >.: Sellout i Regular ~ ~ S777 Hand Mixer ! c . Op ~ or an ener ,;,;~ sises ~ -.... ' e 20" Grandfalhen '1811 Men's Mick , "MllUe" Clock Styler llPY•: 6-Speed Hand Mixer °' Con Ope..,/Knife Sho- MoM'f·Saving sale of~ twa popular cpplianas. Buy now for yourseH , • , for gifts! see/~ Authentic reproduc- 1ion of o Coloriiol Grandfarher clock molded of walnut 9rairi & parquet. [)e... signed 104' marille, table or shelf. Pen- dulum plUs how crd Y, hour chimes. s9aa Popular men's moclel grooms -dries hair for a fuller, more ro- turol look. (ompleie ""'ith stylitlg brush and comb cttoc~ rneflfS. Great Dod'S Doy gilt! #336. S-$7.00 ~""----------'"""'"""""'"""''-"'"-'"-'""'"""""""_.,"'.""'·'· ~•a•• Draw Pokl' Macllll ~2·· ,..,,_ bot· ftry OPl'clted - dro~.1. dl•corda 6 <!row• CJQOln as mony·1ime1 as ploy',' dt>1- • ---Bl-~ VllllD-Gll-• Uquor Sale Fifth Gallon Q,oice of B\lfone or Regu lor ~ .. !fuel -gift light· ers with trans- parent fuel rese<• voir, 8894 Heavy Duty Tool Chests 16x7'/• x7 '/2" s444 Rvgged mttal chelt with lift-out 'orgon~ltr tr~·,. - Yt<N'J of H!'Vict' tor cfo.4t·)'OUl'Stlf °""'· "Stayshorp .. Never·bt!Ou!: Ptktt & only gt Thrifr,.. 2 yr. blade shorpne•• guarantee. lceCNOmW,,..YouWantltl [ Newl 1•1 lea Cre•Malll' 1 s" No t leetrtc ~k• .. !QCk JOit ...... me.u or Ms. , Qt. Ice c"'°'" al' t11clllng dtatrta in tnlnutu! , • .. ~. ;I I tP!LOT-ADVE~TISER Wtdnesday, June 13, 1973 DAH.Y P1Lor ,• • • • Bristol at MacArthur Blvd. Santa Ana WISTl!llN STl!ll:-tf21 W•lml"ti.r •I o.iftft Wnt HUHTINOTON llA(tt-fMI A•41"'8 •t 1'"6tllwrtl HUHTIH~TOH ltACH-fJ HlilllN ... IH Ct11ltt HUNTINGTON IEACM-21111 a.«11 IM. •I AtlHU HUNTINGTON llAC!t-all W•NW ' 44111 _ - BIRTHDAY I I • 4 Ounce -Regular Or lcH it-Spo ·irt -8139 ...._ __ -Golf-Balll--flHLD8d · ~: _L . .=.-:::.. .: s119 ... _ . , . ' /~-~ _ IJARATE ::~~~ ..... '-"-"-·. !-· 81 22_ 7 Ounce -Regular or Antl.Perspiront c BRUT 33 ~::::...IT .................. 91 v Y•n-ta-1'11111 S. Riii Sblrtl -I• SSS Morel , =.==. --· • "!!.'::" S 39 70unce -Re9Ula•o•Me•~:~;RIC -----·-----1, ;: 1 WILLIAMS SHAVE............... '1 Fmr Dimplu mens Grntu Distnce S 10-Edge Uniroyal ''252'' ~ 1149 GILLmE ~~::A:~~D ............. '1 28 11110111 Dimple GOif BBllS ' S . 18 F•• f••• R•l••t aonLE 91 FOR llw Prlc1 ~ Iron Tonic ·=;~~-=~--°': ' ~\i, FOR I s259 I ERITOL 40 TABLUS or 'I'' smart obstroct & geometric pot-f-2 0 Q ·~· "' t.q.t-& ~ ~-· ; ·-Golr.n .,..IOMg-. !he "252''fo<i" """"""""""""· . 1 • 1. LI UID ............. . ~Tapered & toiled, wnh fine ·--perfect ttojllciofy, great distonce, "cut-ttli5t" Cover. Peor-· -· ' "''"'• bandod """"· S-M-L.XL. I --polybu-con .... foctooy """· 11 29 T2 o• cr'":1n"' •. :~~~~<; ~~;· 99c ~ tt2•• Spalding ~I .. SHAMPOO ................. . I "Dof' Gott Balls 1109 DlScrc ·1stan NASAL aac ... 12 saee ~ I MIST ••••••.••••••••••••••• of FOR An toe id So.• 1400 during'"''-'' 0o, so•' 8189 MJIBDla 12.oz. LIQUID 111 .. 9 ,,.. RID SU ero or 100 TABLETS :··· .. ••• ~I , p s239 Bottle of 130 •188 __ Golf Balls ~ One-A-Day :i~~~~s ................ · , . . ; ... ,,::.-.~~~~R .S41:J 89 Pockol:2 " 28 " . ~ 81 Som1nex !~'-'-...... :.......... 'I . -Re • 8287 Men's 11rt Shirts The...., ""1ion -prints & nDYelries in short sleeve ~ poly- ester & cottons OT Birth· cloy Sole sO'¥ings of M.35 on every 5 Yo1A buy. F ... cut S.M-l...xL :81 · R• se11 4-Pc Metal ~ s 16 · 0 ··c· 'I'' .. • Ji 219 Life HAIRfREATMENT Tray Table Sets ~ II LOTION •••••••••••.....••••••••.• i c 130unce-DryStyllng Ho;•Cont.ol · . c I •3 99 M•'s No-lron-Pajamis S 66 . 99 Dep lor Men ....................... 84 Hoi• Col: l~tion • 8134 s 158 Clairol ~::~ng ............................ . s2e4 •211 bl__•259 Cll ol 3 TBllls Balls ® •WU-Wlllte • WlllOll Yellow • $flaldlng Enc- • Rawlings Yellow K"ing size rr'lf'tol troy tobS in bright mw ''St.w1gio" pot. tern witk non-tornsh bross tinbhed !@gs -one a self. storage hostess «Jrt with e:nyd ~ Fb con-- ~ td>le tor easy 5el'V· ing . hauti~ reproductions of fcmou1 boy and girl fig- urines that sen tor$$$ more -In candle 'form! Now or Thrifty at almost V.. less than tkeir eYerydoy low price. . . . ~78 Refnnhr.g, a.T'lnW' fro- gronce ~ In £wining in Paris, O"I the Wind, -- ''1 .. .......,1 R•CllllPI :: .. ::s..:s11 a tor 3 months. Sove big now. I; '1 '1519 4-Plllll Fl lcpYllC_llg_I '1299 Back Pack ff111 Ill Bag 1111. S511 DICl'1tor · €-11:1"' Ice Cream Kll'lml '-Fu•e ·cups $1.48 G.E. Magicubes Pack of l $J:18 ' ' . 81188 810 99 C='"1 s497 · -4'112 ;19~ Trodffionol design in ftn:l1clMI ktro· MM lant>S that con be used for •• ,...,cy """"""· a .... gloo globe ond bollt In dtcomtlve colcn. Com. ~•It with burntr unit, chimney, """'-""'~ )¥.a.Ounce Sia• ; Bifthdoy Sale 1P«ial on delklous lee Cream Fudge Cup'! F\11 up the frig for dMserts & parties. 12 f1•1h•1 -for 111 M1gicu.,• c1Meret, N•ecl ,.. b1tt•rie1. Buv ftOW j" Thrifty', l irthclev s.1. ' , .... rn i:-... 1 ... -•2~ 77 tHllFTY COLOI FILM •••• , •••• , : , • • 1 .. I \ i I . • I ' I • .. ' PRICE BUSTIN' l ., MET AL FOLDING TABLE ALUMINUM FOLDING BED- 6.88 8.88 Lorge MM, 24x60", three·fold metal table with sturdy carrying Aluminum-frame foldi ng bed with two loc king cen'-' ~' and handle ond supported metal legs. Folds easily fOf" fast, compoct '24 1. 7·2" ftWck urethane foam mattress covered with strip.d col• } ' ' ' . MOOtiP23 20 INCH 3 cp -. FAN: · 11.44· A ••f• breeM bo• f111 wiHi hi·ill'lpect poly1ty- ;,"' 9uerch. Rotert 1witch. Ene!MI rnefel c111' with h111cU1. J: stOf"oge. 'deal for family gatherings.~.........,.. _ _.. .. ...._ tott ticking. Fold s when not in use. Charge it. ~ ~· t:· r... .Zf:S '":.CtN"• -."!S": ~~· 1 ::z :!'4~--=<m""11'-'==:::ll"'°"'"'""'~""""""'"""'------=======-··--!I ) 3 ~ " 15 FT. OVAL POOL PACKAGE " UMBRELLA AND PATl.O TABLE SET 3 1/2 ft. deep with 42" pool led- der, sanitary foot bath & skim-97~ l · •• BOTH FOR 2500 '42" diameter all-metel umbrell• table with double umbrell• ~ rings. Braced alum inum le9s. White top. Umbrella has 7-ft., 8-rib frame. Aluminum pole and 3-positlon push ·~ Ii button tilt. Nylon plastic covering . Print one s-ide, solid • color on other side. Charge It ; ... - ' '"'""'"""'-• ·-,,.,,..._ •... ,,. .. ____ ,.,...._.._ .. ..l __ .......... , .. "'.',--:)ft -·•1 77V?521'. ..... ~ .. _. .. -· -··-·--.. ~ .. ---·-· --- 8'x20'' STEEL WALL POOL ' .• 7.77 - Round heavy-duty corrugated I • C::C>LEC::C> - 2 GAL. CHLORINE -97~ 2 gal. muriolic ocid for ph control or 2 gol1. Top Clor Liqv id Swim• Ming Pool chlorin•. 2 Gal. AFid ............ 1.74 \ :: · · . . EPLACEMENT CHAISE PAD SET 8.88 steel woll * with baked enamel · finish . Embossed vinyl l~ner 1 witn drain. o.40.gol. capacity. '> "I Charge it at K mart < 6-PIECE GYM SET : ........... ''""· ""'" 2988 1. o .... , '°' kwpirtg kich haj:opy. I SllHdy set of 11..t lll0in9. 7 3•1toJw1tto 11'4~ top ...... # .,n-;...i""" Ah. -. ·----~-' ~HARCOAl 3 Days •'67~ Cleon-bvfning briquet ~ to make aoy botbea.le a wre.flr. wccess. Get o suppfy! , • BARBECUE SET 3-p<.sef 97~ Stoinless steel ioft, tones and litter set with Jong wood•hong· up handles. Smoel Charge it. -· -2.88 : 1-4"!C25' Metol fHCewith ................... - , I • • mer. Coleco Aquamatic filter, U.L. appro.ved. 20-GAL. PLASTIC TRASHCANS 1.88 ' Double savings. large-sized, at· tractive cons -are easy-to-tote, have lock-l id coven. Avocado color. lle0t't:7•,,.. ••tan •rm I • JUNIPER TAMS ' ~57~. Stut'v, lteoltfly 9tllon 1i11 Junip.r T •Jnt, Shop K-m 1rt for oll your 9•r-'1nln9 llHCh. \ " T ltl QUALITY PATIO FURNITURE . 500 . 41000 DA~ CHAil DAYS 11 CHAISI Httt .... 1M polyvh1yl ehloridt twbing, tl11m inu1t1 ft•M•t. Hi.i1t1ptc:t plt•tic trll'll. 76" chti••· s .... 1 • .. • . I ' .. ' -~MEN'S 26". 10 SPEED 'BICYCL'E 46.8 I ,• M-'1. 2612, 10 1poH l'9htwel9ht. Shlfter le¥on on top of 21" frer.io, Coliper heft-' ltroko 'froftt I ro•r. Wide retio 901ri119 ]6 fo 90. ..... - . SllOID WACMCIU )24 ~_ ....... °"" Miiirlaot1 erfN wfth l•pc. ffip·top ...... ..,._ llrolto11 (hroMo r lt11, h•"•· • ' . CHARCOAL STARTER, 1 ·9T. 34• Ea • . . - ' I ' ' , ' I ,. ' , • r • ' I •• t ' .. -r • . Wtdntsday, June 13, 1973 DAILY PILOT 25 ~,-fHURSDAf-~RJDA¥~. ~ ' • ·' . . . SALE ITEMS LIMITED TO QUANTITIES ON HAND .PUSH -BUTTON l . BAND RADIO SOLIQ STATE 26 •. 44 ~ • ~ 18" Dlago.,al Picture* ~ COLOR TV 29900 Shorp, cleor color of Solorcoloreblock· matrix picture tube. TV of solid·1fate design in beoutltul Mediterranean pecan-grain cabinet; with cradle ba~. IEW 2-11· 1 SUD AID SURF • • PLASTIC SPOUT PAIL I 9.97 ~ Gr90t·funlortheklds n , lt'sa sandbox and awodlngpool IMadeola strong, weather· pr0ot.1paceage moterial. 46x36". Sove: 10112 -(j)T. 47c ,I FLUORESENT LIGHT FIXTURE ~-· Chain hun9 49" fixture with white enam•I finish. Two 40- watt bulbs. I d' e a I for Dad's worlcshopl . . ' " "'10 1/i qt. White , 9old, avocado, orange. Choose milk chocol-ate, chocolate with almonds, Krackle, Mr. Goodb1r. •SCUDS •PRINTS · HI-RISE PANTY HOSE • Choice of colors. Sizes sm•ll, med., med. tall & tall. Char9e it. GIRLS 20.INCH HIGH RISE BIKES .2666 SAVE . I ====~~~Shl11l119 chrOflle rlm1, painted L fender•. Girl1 9rakiber 9reen model hat colorH 1addla with 1tripe. Knobby rear tire, co11ter brakit. ROUND POLY POOL 2.66 • • " • 3~100 . ll "· "''''" '°' hud-lo-ho/J. ' Se•nted or 11n1eented. Your choic.e. MENS KNIT SHIRTS a•• Button or tipper front. 100 %.• polye1ter •nit shirt• In bl111, 9r1e11, grey, yellow, or1119e, end beige. S-M-L-Xl •••V eere, w11fo. 'N' we•r. RIGHT GUARD NAT.URAL SCENT I o:r. nah1ral scent. Anti~per- 1pirant deodorant. s • .,. at K-m•rt. U.S. FLAG KIT . 3xS' printed flag, 2-sectian polt,1 47··· halyard, brocket, Krows. • Mens Benrus or Waltham Watcfles -1888 Expo•JH'• control, builtain foCUl flesh, tltctronlC 1hutttr 60"xl0" tlecorated poly 1pltiher 17 Jew91. Handwind ~ calendar & day & iy1tem, di1tence find•r. S•.v•L • pool. llwe backqround wlth f11h da te. Ideal gift for Dad ·on Fether'1 1. ..... ~· .. '1. .. ,...,... .. ,....,,..,; .. ~~ .. !.!=·~·,.·;;[!!!!!!:;;;;;;::::!:!:::~·=•;?..:':'tt:•:'"·~•:•:••:l.:u:••:•':"·~.,....J .. .,.,.....,. .. ~::::..::::::.. .... _..O~y. . 2200 HARBOR BL VD. -Corner of Wilson and Harbor COSTA · MESA I • I • • •: • ............ • ., \ ! I I , • -' I ., ti DAI .t I Wtdatsday, Junt 13, 1973 , ' OPIN .DAIL y I 0-1 O; SUN. I 0-7. , WED., THURS., FRI., SAT. ...... 3 Wlyst• a.,. ..... 1t I Wirt SERVICE 01 AIR COIDITIOIER Reg. 11.40-4Days 5.97 • 1 Frton, parts and additior\9 al services at e xtra cost. Most U S. Cars SHOCKS AID ALIGIMEIT leg. 23.75-4Days 14.44 lnstoll 2 1landard shock ab- sorbers, oliqn front end. MDII Staallord/ Cm ...... '\ . ~·. INCl.UDED sElviq:!!i •.-........ ;~--~ 2 .............. . 3, fllMMld wtlMI cylillllers 4. hl.,.ct ...... cyli!!Otr .. 5. "--* .._. M11i1111 1.c.a--1.1 ... .,.. __ I. fflU: "" Ntllitlt l .M;.t ............... OPMPLETE BRAKE SERVICE lleg. 59. 96-4 Davs 39.88 All brake work at K mart done by trained mechanlcs. For most American cars.. SAVE ON A SET OF FOUR 4-FULL-PLY NYLON CORD -BUCKWALLS Reg. 19.94-6.50x13 OfARGE.rr ..+~::;aH....rl CAR WASH IRUSH 4Doya PLUS F.LT. 1.11 E.ICI WHITEWIW ZM IDIE EL ILL TIRES PLIS F.LT. EL II TIDE-llS llEOUllU Ill 27 All·wo.othor 2 I • super 011 .• Cha,.,." llUllTllll1IOl IUCll lllUSTIY lAICAITR LOIG IUCll -~-... , •... _ l ............. J._ .. , .......... ;o,j ··-• JUI ,...,.. I..., , ............ _,...., -.-... ~ ·sa1 l i U AIDlllO SAIUANA IAITAFI-$ $1111 VAWY -............ -11VllSIDI ......... , .. _ . .._"" ............ llUI I ........ ..., 11 1,1-..... ........ _.,_ ·--~~~~~/'-~~-~~:::.::'-~.A.......::.::::=.:::::.....A._ l -' JUNE 13, 14, 15, 16, 1973 11/z-Tll nn11uc JICI "°"" Foroompon, Simulalocl Ill troller1, cor1 Seather. Save. I • or trucks. ' -CU• -........ --- ~'1 -1 MART 1-1280- 2 GLASS BELTS.+ 2 PLIES POLYESTER CORD 78• SERIES BLACKWALLS .... s 29.77 C78x13 • PUS F.LT. 2.11 U WlnEWIU.S ZM IHEEIOI •• TUIE·llS IQUllEI All TllES PLUS f,E.T. EACH ''KM Radial SSK'' ' 2-PLIES POLYESTER CORM RAYOI BEL ID TUH-ID IQlllD AUTO TEST EQUIPIEIT 4Days 2.22Ea. Choice of .4 testers or ,... mote starter switch. DEWIE FROIT FLOOR IATS lffl.4.96-5.57 3.83£~ FuU, twin. Rubber, vrnyl. f"""oO..l..,c'ombo.1.H ""_,ea ... RllUn .. -.. ·--..... __ •n••Y -·---- Elll•E AlllLJZER leg. 41.88-4Dap 37.97 Check dwtll·tach,volt amp, reslstanc• on +, 6·, 8-cyL lnchtdel lnltrUC'tionL lupnd Coplod. SLOllED DISC WHEELS le,.,19.81-4,,.,,. 17.88Ea. 1A.:ic6, 15x6 1iz•a. lu91, cop. 14a7 Whoola •• ,, 11.H lo. amau u1111an l lMt-_ _.. ,...,..,._ ..... _ .. -.. , ___ -. SO.lOJAIKIW -tAU TMIAICI --·-------------VAUICIA .-ValRA .,.WIJTPllllYll tittn•-.... ....___ .._ __ . ,, .. , .... _ ---.... __ ..._ .. ,_ .. ·-·---·-....... I' ' ... . I j ·. '' 'jilake 1lad an Jlntel '' ·Contest KJOS, 9 to 14, this year's "Draw Dad" as you see him (shaving, watching TV, etc.) is a chance for you and Dad to fly wi.th the Angels baseball team, where both of you will stay at the Oakland Hyatt House. As honorary batboy, complete with •.. uniform, you'll eat, sleep and practice ~th the team, even sit in the dugout for all games. ,Runnersup receive bats and balls and tickets to the Twins game_on June 29th. Entry blanks obtained from any store, and must be turned into our Ca rousel girl on · or 'before June 23. Even if you don't enter the contest, why not TAKE DAD FREE to THE ANGEL/YANKEE doubleheader on Father's Day. Pick up your free ticket for Dad to this Sunday's game from our Carousel girl . No obligation. II Wednesday, June 13, 19/3 ' ' DAILY PILOT 27 South Coast ?taza BRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FREEWAY, COSTA ~ESA I OVER 85 FINE STORES AND SERVICES ••• DEPARTMENT STORES ... May Co. • Sea rs • WOMEN'S APPAREL .,. Albert's Hosiery • Al roe • Mr. Elliot's • Chr is' Fashions· •Finn's• ~ene's •Greta'~• Ho use of Nine • Hubbub • Judy's • Lane Brya nt • Lipian's •Joseph M agnin •Marlene Fabrlque •Miss H awaii • Sabrina • The Wet Sea l • Young Maternity • Zelig's Casual Fashions • MEN'S APPAREL .,. Carat 's• Chasin's •Gentry, Ltd.• Harris & Frank • H oe lsc her's • Prep Shop • Rebel Shop • Tie Rack • CHILDREN'S APPAREL , .. Bergst rom's Baby News •FAMILY SHOES , •. Gudes-Barnett •Innes Shoes • Thom McAn •WOMEN 'S SHOES ... C.H . Bak e r • Ca meo • Field's • Joyce Shoe Tree• Leed's •CHILDREN'S SHOES., , Cabo(s • HOME FURNISHINGS ... Golden N eedle •.House o f Fabrics • Singer • Udoff's •.VARIETY-DRUGS ... South Coast Drug • F. )N, Woolworth• JEWELRY-GIFTS ,., Chic Accessories • Galleon • Jewels by Joseph • Keven Jeweler's • Geo rge Murray • Pace Setter • Raj of India • Raj Internationa l • sunset House• Weisfield's •FOOD.CANDY · .. , H ickory Farms • Lindberg Nutrition• See's • RESTAURANTS .. , Coaches Corner • H arvest H ouse • Hungry Tiger • Kap lan·s • LePetit Cafe • Riviera •SPECIAL TY SHQPS .,, A La Ca rd • Cline's • De corator Lirye • House of T erry • Pickwic k Bookshop • Roo ten·s L uggage • ports Plaza • Tinder Box • Toy Cen te~ • Wallichs • Westcn's Cameras • ·SERVICES .. , Bak Portrait Stud io • Better Barbers • Bun N ichols Optometrist • Crown ing Glory Beauty Salon • H ouse· · of Tailoring• On-the Go Travel • Regis B eeuty Salon • FINANCIAL , .. A vco Savings /l. Loan • Bank of A merica •Crocker Bank • First Western Bank • Househ old Finance •Pacific Savings • U.S. National Bank• ·THEATRES , .. South Coast Plaza I and II Theaters • United Artist Cinemas I. II and Il l. . ·. . T ·SOON ... SOUTH COAST Y·llLAGE •. ~&6 u·NIOUE SHOPS AND RESTAURANTS -I I I I ! I ' ., • H DAILY PILOT WedntsdlJ, June 13, 197J • I Village Preview , Baseball, Garbenstarigels • Assistance Leaguers 'Open' Shops Gaggle of Garbenstangel Fans Assistance ·Leagues o f Orange County, inc 1 u ding Anaheim, Garden Gf()ve, Hun· • Oi'ange iiiil Santa Ana will sponaor a three-hour preview party from 5 unlil 8 p.m. Oil Saturday June 16 to be held at South Coi;st Villag~, Jocared ~y across the street from Sooth Coast Plaia. South Coast Village is a specially shopping <enter In Santa Ana, architecturally designed as a marketplace of distinctive shops, boutiques, flower stands, !Sidewalk cafes ~whidl will be ful o . business in A this year. Crowd turns Carousel Court into a garbenstangel ball as it stands around waiting for judges' de,cisions in one of past years' editions of Build a Better Gar- benstangel Contest and International Rallye. The 1973 version of tbe summertime ("silly season") event is scheduled for July. Garbenstangel builders are already busy building their contraptiops for the competition. Following the theme . "International· Festival;~ the South Coast Village Preview will feature an international variety of foods, including a specially prepared recipe of lima beam grown by the Segertsrom family, at ooe time the largest independent producers of lima beans in the country. Even though many of the stores will not be open to browse t h r o u g h , sufficient Kids Enter .., , --. 'Make Dad t An Angel' Traveling with the Angels ba:teball team and eating and sleeptng with the team, as well as participating in their practices and 'tUng in the dugwt on game ~Y bas been . a special experience for four Orange County youngsters and tbeir Dads these past four Father's Dey years. 'Ibey have been winners of the "Make Dad An Angel" -sponsored by South Coast Plaza each Father's Day and have been ' <:hosen from several hundred entries which have depicted Dad doing a number of things . This year's contest ha s opened the age group to 14 years and as in past years, runner.mp will Ile pres.med autographed balls, bats and tickets to the Angeis/'l'wins Friday night June 29 game. At this game the winner and Dad ol. South Coast Plaza's "Make Dad An Angel" contest will be,,;-~~~~~~~~ introduced at ceremonies on the pitcher's mound. The win. ner will also be presented with mi Angel baseball unifonn. 1be winner and Dad this year wµt fly lby Air California charter jet to Oakland for the July 4 series and will stay at the Oakland Hyatt House with the team. Entry blanks fur the contest may be obtained from any South Coast Pla7.a store. Deadline for entries is JUne 23 end they must he turned in to the carousel operator in the Carousel Court at South Coast Plaza. Free Base ball Tickets Offered For [)ad's Day South Coast Plaza i n observance o! Father's Day will gi ve away free tickets to the Ange l s -Ycl nkee s doubleheader to be contested on Father's Day at the Big A thi~ Sunday. The reserved seats will be given away without obligation and will be given on a fir st- come, first-served basis . A 6ooth is set up on the mall and will be manned through Saturday, or as long as the supply lasts. A1embers of the Air California stewardess staff will dispense reserved seats. The booth is set up in the Carousel Court. South Coast Plaza is open • dally from 9,30 until 9,30, Saturday hours are 9:30 a.m. to s p.m. For We~kender Advertising Pb one 6424321 special purchase! 10" ; shirted pantsuit I in doublekntt Yoked shlrti•c:ket belh ttirough teb buHon det1ilin9, over 1tr1ight pullon po1nt1. Acel•fe in grey, t111p1 or b1rty speci•I sites 14 1/i to 281/2 South Coast ?Jiu UPPER. LEVEL . BRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FR.EEWAY - PHONE Soi0-7717 STORE HOUR.Si MON. to Fill. 10·91lO SI.if. IO·t . SUN. 12·1 -,, DADS-GRADS OR BRIDES Bulova Solves Your Alarming Problems! A. Jewel-look -30-hour keywincl travel alarm With lumlnous hancls lftd time dots on · jad•ioqk blclcground; ..-, cosa $9.95 B. str11t1111 sphere-shaped pedestal alarm with white case, keywlnd. Luminous hands, lime dou,$16 C. Dlgttal electric alarm w~h inch·high numerals and lighted dial. Wh ite on black .................... $19.95 al'1' Wl.,,tN• -4 MONOGIAMMIN• 'lll 0' CHAI.I I stores ~111 men:handise their•-------------------- wlndows and the owners will be on hand to help make the ~;;::;:::====~:;:~~?:~-~~~ ·=-:~!~ :::~~Y of ~~ \ O ~~ ~ltf(Y~rLJ lii.'.<91' entertainment and fWl 8C• vu~~ tlv:lties at the same time. =-~~H=~ -24 pc. se~ce-for-8_ ::~=~:m Reed & Barton sterling Plans have also been fUl&li Z- ed to feature Ansell Hill and his Big Band Sound for both listening and dancing. The<e wilt-be door prizeo of gifts donate<! by the vatioos South Coas·t Village merchants. Approximately 2,SOO rare ex· pected lo Mn out for the preview. Only those with tickets will be admitted. Tickets are available from members of the participating Asststance League dlapt<l'S. When South Qiast Village hOOls its grand opening on Aug. 1 therewillbe80 shops in all joining the Hungry Tiger Restaw"ant and ·United Artists Tri-Thea\re which are already _, end ape<ating. ... Expanded lvfall Proniises Even JVfor e Parking ..-,,, Now you con lOve from 24% 10 29".4 "' on a ser of 8 knives. 8 forl<s and 8 spoons Clhe ideal buffer leiV!ceJlnOny Reed & Barron active srerling porrem, Special 24-pc. se1S n<YW jusr )246.00ro $318.00 -o full )100.00 lOvings no moner which lovely Reed & Darron -srening parrem you choose. Individual pieees in all porrerns ore allO an !Ole or a sirolghr 20% off. Sale ends June 30. Save 20% all pieces, all porrems. ~~~ttar The South Coast Plaza mall ex pamion (shown under \\1ay. left) i.s due to be completed before Otristmas 1973. It y,·ill mean additional close-in park· ing for customers. The three level parking structure \\'ill be one of the few of its kind in Orange County, wit h one leve l under ground, and one level above ground in addition to a ground floor ·that v.:ill provide direct access to the shopping 1nall. Total parking will be in· creased from 6,000 to 8,000 SOUTH COAST PLAZA ~ Bristol i1t the Si1n Oie90 Frwy. ~ ~ Coste Mesa Phone 540-2627 ~ A sclec1ion of 5 hand blended quality 1obacco1 from lhe Tinder Box people. Always the perfec1 girt for the man in your life , EROYAL COACHMAN -BE SURE TO SEE OUR FANTAST!~. SELECTION OF ROYAL MEERSCHAU~BROUGHT tN ,ESPECIALLY FOR •• e FATHER'S DAY ·e · · ' SOUTH COAST PLAZA--tDSTA MESA Lower L1v11-H1xt to May Co. .. -• •/ \ ' ' Wednesday, June 13, l <.173 'Guerrilla Gardens' Blossom in Berkeley SERKELEY (AP) -Neat priced supermarket produce. rows of l~tuoe, broccoli and / . ,. . DAILY PILOT 19 f O'tVS f O'IV Noiv Void MANILA (AP) -An.,. tomatoes are sprouting Where THEY CALL 1t guerrilla gardening," although it is ~nt. lawns normal~y would be strictly 1 legal, and dozens of ·u1 this university city. sidewalk farmers i n s i s t to wash it oil becawe of the. dogs and cats that manage to get into everything," said' Jeff Randall. Randall said his 15-loot square front yard garden gives hini a taste or rural life in an urban environment. , do this sort of !bing: to get a little of the soil witOOut leav- ing city living behind and movjng to the country," Ran- dall added. Linda Meyer also said she considers her curbside work an escape from city life, "People ,feel hemmed in by the city -cars, crowds and smog," s he said. "When T come out here to work I feel J'm in the country again ." OTllER8 'CONSIDER the vegetable gardens more a matter of survival. food ," said •larrict Robinson, member of ¥ political col· lcctive whictll does guerrilla fanning. 11Think of the p_rices and what chemicals are pumped into everything we get at the supermarkets. If1>0r code says empJoyerS no longer may require a pledge not to marry fr001 women seeking employ· ~ ment and caonot · fir.e ., women because they.mar .. , ry or beoome pregnan~ -.. ' ' NEW GRADUATE J1me1 Engli1h· 1 Sociolouy . ~ ~Degree Won • James HobaJ:1 English of I Balboa . .Island, has reecived 'liis bachelor'$ degrCe in • sociology from Geflysbtirg 1 (Pa.) College. He is the son of ~1r. a·nd i Mn.-Jamet G.-Englisll°OI 20.'1 - -A~st St., Balboa Isl and. , 3 Receive 1 '·Loma Linda :,Degrees , Three Orange ' Coas t 11tudeot.s have rece ive d ' degrees from Loma Linda University, two from the Sc1ioo1 of Dentis!ry and one , from the School of Allied Health Professions. Cary B. Simmonds of Costa Mesa received his doctor of . dental surgery degree. Sim- monds is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Robert Simmonds. Gail J. Brockett oI Newport Beach received a degree in dental hygiene. Miss Brockett ia the <laugh!« of Mr. and- ' Mrs. Claire Brockett. Carol -A. Kenworthy of Fountain Valley was awarded · a ·professional degree in a!Ued . health. Miss Kenworthy, wbo pla~ .to speclallr.e in medical tedlook>sY, is the daughter of Mr. and ?i.lrs. 1Maurice William I\ Kenworthy. • DOOtorates ., . • 11 Maorine llehn!os of CO.la ll-M---and-Sheldon-Ruda-of .. , H~ Beach, h ave ~ reoe!Vl?d doctor of philooopily !i degrees from the Claremont ~~ Graduate School. ! Mtsi Behrens, of I o 9 0 ; Corona Lane, received her ! doctorate in psychology. Her j prevloos jleijrees irelude a ~ bachelor of aci«tce from the University of Chattanooga, and a nla.ier of arts from C Florida State University. Ji\ Ruda , of 8782 Warner Ave., wu awarded a doctorate in ~ ~Previously, Ruda reeet~ a bacheklr of arts at i .Colorado College and a master ol. arts frclh the University of • Denver. 1 ~ 3 Graduate : ~ From :Coast i , ~ 'nlr<e Onu!ge Co a s t 1, .-ma have gndu.eled from 1 'lbe Prindpia Upper ~ in ' St Louil, Mo. ii · Plll!11P B. Braie, ol Laguna t. BMdi.. was a Iecne All.Star pllY<f In· baskelliall. He is the •oofol MI'S-Patricia Y. Brake. 1(Jren E. Burnett, of Laguna • Niguel, was a member o( ¢e • Cmn Laude Society. She is the ~ daughter o( Mn. 3ean B. Bumetl # Shari Weber, also a gz:8duate, HVes at 24 12 Fra· nclsc:o Drive, Newport Beach. 1'he curbside gardens can be they've never eaten so well. seen along many streets these "Nothing tastes better than da.ys as some residents raise something fresh from your crops at home to avoid high· own garden, even it you have "I'VE ALWAYS wanted lo ''People are going to have to leam bow to «fOW their own "\Ve have to get ourselves together and learn to do things on our 01wn." .. . . HONEYWEtl~PENTAX-SPOTMATlt=lt wHh F 1.8 LENS • SUl'lR·llUL Tl-CCfATED TA.KUMAR l[NS e THROUGH THE LENS METE RI NG e X, f P, HOT SHOE WI TH SHOCK·PREVENTING SAFETY SWITCH e SELf·TllllEll e ASA RANGE FROM 20 TO 3200 259.95 Mn . LIST PllCE. 341.50 SPECIA~ BONUS 'OFFER ~· _ue__ ~ ·1· . WITN_PJIRCHASE Of SP II '' .~ · A 90.00 Iur· ; .SDLIGOR MK-6 ANH HANIMAR 135MM. F2 .8 \. ~\ STROii I TELEPHOTO LEIS \'.~~ • R1char111blt Nlcad B1tltrits •Focus R1n1t from Infinity la 3. 7 '1_::.; • lt1c llldts tt.c:h111ln1 Unit • Fltld An111 11 -·~ •-Gu lde No . .i 21 · • f'lntax lllount e I/ 1.4 ZIMlll LlllS a Forward, R1vert•, Fast Forward, .• PLUS-ntw Slop •n Glow • 500 Watt ~lll•nc• ·e ·C•l'f1illl Ca11and400' RMI 79.95 MFG. LIST PRICE 124.95 I S . ST . OUTH COA _ _ ,i-_,__ PLAZA Costa Mesa Bristol at -San Diego Freeway Mll~A A'lllnl-ClJMPAtT STDllJ-SYSTllil~ . ... -·-·:.::;a"~ INCLUDING AM/FM RECEIYER PLUS 8 TRACK ' STEREO TAPE PLAYEliUTH BUILT·IN FULL SIZE BIR RECORD CHANGER • Bulll·ln,I Track T1pe Pl111r • Bltckout 0111 wllh Two lllumln1t1d Sc:annln1 Polnltts • ~· st1r10 lndlcatM Licht • cf1lu11 11" BSR Rtco«I Ch1nitr wllh Antl·Sk1tl Dtvlct ·• Stylus ·Gtalli Conlrol ·and Cu1ln1 · e Speaktr Switch: A, B or A+B e 8111 lt·ln FM Antenna MFG. LIST PRICE 289.95 KEYSTONE everflasli'10 with BUILT IN ELECTRONIC FLASH • Uses ln1tant Lo•d 121 C8rtrld1• : ~!~u~1:~ c~~~sc~,t~t~~nF~lc~~s • Up to 100 "Fla1h f'tctw11 11 per Set of AA P1n\ithl Batteries ~2680 SUDE mnOJECTOR • f/3.S Pftclslon l.1111 e 500 Walt Brlllllnt• • Po~up ~tlltor, for SlhS. Pr1vi1w ···-·• Car'i)'ln& Casi and GAF JOO • Slide Tra)' 9 R1111ott Co11lrol • Forward, Reverse , Focus 69.95 rllFG. LIST PRICE 114.95 ' ' 33.85 REG. PRICE 39 .95 KEYSTONE 60-Second 1 CAMERA USES POLAROID FILM • Eltctronlc Flash Bulll-ln • AuloiuUcall)' Adjusts 10 ·P&ctur11 ••- • Always Ptrfl(llf Exposttl • Uses R11utar Pol11oltl Fil• e -2-Dlfftrtnt Fiim Slz11 •• Starwll•ll lltclaft1l1 and L111 E1p1nslv1 ~II• 69.95 REG. PRICE 79.95 APF MARK I CALCULATOR wit { D~lACHABLE AC LINE CORD APF MARK V AC/DC CALCULATOR --·-~SOLJGOB-LINSIS -T4,MOUNT ~ 90 230 F4.5 ZOOM • I Dltit 1.,111 and Display a Sln111_Clllp Alpbralc Lotl c a Flutl111 or Fl1tll Dtc lmal Point a Constant fKlor • Overflow h1ellcator a MllMIS lndlcalot for T1111 Cr1dl1 Bal1nc11 a Ltaclhtl and Tralll .. I Zllt S.ppni11lo11 79.95 PIONEER ,CABSTIRIO TP222 • Auto• alanu•I Trick Chan&t • Tt111,1Yoh11111, and B1l1nc1 Control• • Sflltlttd Cap1t1n lor Trouble Frtt Tape fttd • Tr1ek lflllllc.tot Llahls a 7 .I Wtlll ·11.M.S. 44.95 MFG. LIST PRICE 54.95 'KODAK AX15R COLOI OUTflT KIT INCLUDES FILM, MUICilBE, l WllST STUP 12.91 UCTOIY FIESH I OD A COLOR -~~ FILM ·~ ~ 127·620 ·120 . 79C ptr roll SUNSET 1•35 ZCF lllOCULAI with C11t e Flt Id Yltw If J~l I I. 11 1000 yd's. 19.95 MFG. LIST PRICI. 33.15 AIFACOLOR 35MM 20 EXP. · CTll . •. ll:~G. l"fUCE 1.$0 · F1ctory Proces1in1 11cluded • I 01111 F1ou111c1nt Planar Display • Operative Switch In Cover • Battery Meter - • A1&1bralc Lo11c • Constant FactOI' • Fixed ind floallnc Dttlmal • Aulo matic Suppt111ion of Llldln1 and Trallln1 Zlfos 84.95 --, BAUER E201A ·~ :~~~t~ONIC BOWMAR MX50 CALCULATOR • 11 Element Zooca a Antle 27·12 11995 , . MFG. UST PRICE 117,tS 135~~.,~!:!T!,~~HOTO 6495 e A111l111 OUll 1.a• LIST PK•-m .ts .. !B~~ .. !2;,~!,,l~E AN6LE959s • Antll 74 OUll RaG· LllT PlllC• 11.," T·4 MOUNT NOT INCLUDED • with BUILT·IN Nl·CAD BATTERIES l AC ADAPTER·RECHARGER -.°:\ with BUILT·IN Nl·CAD BATTERIES .. ;::.' l AC AOAPTER·RECHARGER BAUER E161A ELECTRONIC STROBi with BUILT·IN Nl·CAD BATTERIES l AC ADAPTER·RECHARGER • "Tiit flflh fUKtlon : The MW " llty a Ptcllapd compltlt with dtluxt vlnrl c111 anti AClcllarct r • a 111111, •11p111 • F•ll float1n1 ffel••1 ' 99.9.5 HONEYWELL STROIOIAR IOO e Ll1htw1liht • • Nton Ll1ht lndlc11or 14.95 -vr:G. LIST-PRICE 34.95'" . ADMOR POCKET AL-PAIES PAGES FOR ALL FfLM . SIZES PLUS WALLET SIZE 5•7 8•10 16C per pue I • Computerlztd Ll&M Output • Aulo111allc Oplr1Uon e G•ldt ltumbtr SI for KodactrollMI 11 ASA 25 • tt1cyclln1 Tl1111: latt1111-10 S.c,1 AC 12 Sec. • Co11111uttrlz1d Llaht Outp11t a Guldt N11rnb1r 45 f« Kod•c:hro1111 II ASA 25 e ltttJClllll 1 11111: B1tt11y 1-10 Ste., AC 1$ St<. 54.95· 44.95 MFG. LIST PRICE 119.15 MFG. LIST PRICE 19.95 RDAD ••• PRICES GODO THROUGH JUNE 11 • e Atttptt All SLlt C•r11 an4 Acc't11orlt1 • 24.95 Rt:G. PftlCI 33.9S I al COLOI CASSITTI PRINT FILM -. RICORDllG TAPI 126 12 EXP . C&O 10 MIN. TOTAL PLAYING TIME 79$ ,n roll . Sic llf_G. PlllC! 1.2S REG. PRICE .'$7 "Thi color you ltt I• lht color · • t." I ' llfi.il•iil HONEYWELL· PENTAX ·SILVER tLYER -~35Mll Leiitlc.i•r F3.s ... ··-· SCRlll e Wtlnklt frtt Plctllt't Attl MJ111t1 ,It AnJ Pt1ltlon Dtllrtcf 14.95 . llFA SUPER 8 COLOR MOVIE FILM 187 "EG . a Pll\Cl 5.1 Factory Processinr 1aclud1d .. \ ,J -' SUPER·MULTl·COA TED' TAKUllAR BLIPHOTO LllS 109.95 CABLECRAFT SD106B STEREO HEADPHOllS • Mo11t/SltftO Swltctll • CtfVlllllll C1'tt1MI Vtl ... 6.89 ' .I 11 I 1 I • < I 38 DAil Y PILOT Wednesday, June 13, 197:3 Bartender Honored Ftui iJt 7Ji 8~ for Your Favorlt• ue~s a Great Mixer DON'T PANIC! DAD -GRAD or BRIDE BEGINS AT MISS HAWAII HONEYMOON, Al SUMMER TOUR r-OR DA D(S DREAM TRIP, •FIND YOUR ISLAND WEAR HERE I •. By TOM GORMAN Of lflt O.Hr l"li.t Sllff A former aeros pa ce engineer who liv.es in SeaJ Beach 1has been named the se- cond most talented ba11cndcr in tM nation. Jtick T. Sherwood, who was e ANGEL MUUS e ALOHA SHIRTS .-=.. e SWIM WEAR --l.-IL-laid off twice before going lii\hlM'tM'bal''llrta~lll1quein Huntington Beach. woo the title in l'Ottlpetition sponsore d recently by the United States Barteroers Guild. ' e ACCESSORIES ,IM (IJltlllf & JltMrt WHr lw M• & Womn IOUTM COAST l"LAt A l rlstfi & 'S•R ~ ,.,, c .. t. Mnl ..... M> - THE MALL OF OllANOIE ._,.,. ... ....,... ,.,, Or•n,e ~7·:mG ms_.ORJGINALc..crution "Satin Sheets." was con- sidered second best among the 107 drinks presented to judges in the contest. ••• 'I got siek n eo11ple of time s trglng to p11t it together.' It marks the second time a bartenaer-trom the restaurant has won · national recognition for an original recipe. Last year, Al Repetty won the national championship for his "Cool Banana." SHERWOOD, oil, said it was not easy coming up with the winning combination o{ in· gredients. P•ll'I Plklt $11!1 Photo For the lody whose busy sc hedule does n't permit o plo nned reservotio n .... o'r that un~x­ pected im portant d le • , orwhen oul·of.town guests com e unexpectentl~ . .. you con wolk right in! 01 • ~¥BEAUTY SALONS South Coa'st Pl11111 540-8888 Bristol and San Diego Fr~way Dad Rates Something Special •.• A Gilt Pak Of Tasty Foods From flicbrJ t.r1nr. NOii/ti "I got sick a couple of times• trying to put it together," he said. "There was no rhyme or reason. It wa.s all just trial and error, and it fmally came out. "Ninety percent luck," he added. FORMER AEROSPACE ENGINEER JACK SHERWOOD FL YING HIGH He's Shown With 'Satin Sheets,' a Concoction That Won High Honors The recipe calls for an ounce of rum, three-quarter ounce of liquore galliano. a quarter ounce · of grenadine and one ounce of half and half cream over cracked ice and straineil into a cocktail glass. _ __8HERW.OOD. SAID working in a T'eStaurant which boasts o! t\\-'O awanf.winning drinks can be difficult. -"We've Cre3.ted monsters." he said. "Those tY.'O drinks really slow us down at night when we're busy since \\'e have to measure every single drop. "It didn't hit me for a while that two of us from the same place have dooe so "'ell in the contest," he said. "Do vou know the odds against that?" SHERWOOD'S FffiST ex- perience behind the bar was during college, when he need· ed extra income to supplement his G. I. Bill. He spent four years in the Air Force before working for McDonnell Douglas. He was laid off there after several years, tried his hand in sales. then returned to the industry with North Amer ica n Rockwell , where be worked on the space program. "I got laid off there. too, because of the cutbacks. I said, 'I've had enough of this ,' and went into bartendering." 4th oi July Mesa Schedules Real Fireworks A full day of actlvitics has been planned (or the Fourth of July by the Costa l\1esa Bicentennial Committee. Li sted on the Independence Day calendar are a box luncheon by the Daughters of the American Revolution, a baseball game, and en- tertainment, all -between 11 , a.m . and 4:30 p.m. at Costa Mesa Park. M TER, FROM 8 to 9 p.m., there will be a pre-fireworks show and entertainment at Orange Coast College stadium. Ge ts Degree A Newport Beach woman, Christine D. Nackwokski, has &een awarded a master of science degree in industrial engineering at Virginia Tech, in Blacksburg Va. The fircY.'Orks display bl'gins at 9 p.m. Tickets for the fire"·orks will be 50 cents for adults. and 25 cents f()f children, at the stadium prior to the di splay. Try Saturday's Nl!Ws Quiz ~-~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~.:..--~~- . .. - ' decor-ator line . . ' 15 beautiful designs from which to choesc • • • Poly Optic.Ii ••• iruly tht •ltt•nl 9;~! f •1ciRttint tc11!ptu1n t f ••".'• «lr•p lik• li9hb o •• • «lrt111.t1c 1M co•1t'11•+io• pro••kint id11, fh 1J1 111ini·fir• wook lll01pl1ys ••• cirturtd by ;ht 11'li11tl1 of fib1r eoti'' , •. t+.111 4Jlfttful 1pr1y1 of ,,ft lit hl th1l d1ul1 th• ir1u9• illtlf«i. 't he TOWER GLO A fftOll "l'Ut•f 1'11"'4tl, witll th "Crylic t11bt on • .._rn111 t111'9ll O•M. IJ" l•U, 0·10), " The NOUVELLE \ Mall of Orange 2210 No. Orange Moll -Tustin ol'ld Mtots Ave, 1'rongf . 637-7777 ' " I • ~) ·\ Advance Payment Offered TEXAS SPREAD $10.98 One lb.BEEF STICK. Edam 81r, Mild Midge t Longhorn, Belle Fleur Cheese, Smoky (smoked cheese bar), Gouda plus Imported Cl.ndin. \1et'ei8.ns planning fu attend Orange Coast College this fall V:i ll be able to r('('eive advance payment of G1 BilJ benefits if they appl y by Aug. L \1eterans \\'ith early requests will be able to pick up checks covering Sept ember and October when Uley oomplete registration. according to Fred Garcia. OCC's associate dean or adntissioos and records. In the past, veteraM often had to u·ait several months after the beginning of school 1 for the first check. Tills is only one of the many food gift paks on display for you to see! flitkdt7 te1r1nr. . OF tHllO WESTCUFF PLAZA I 17rti l 1.rwl• -N...,.,. leecll 0,... MM.•M. 'ltl t ; Sot. 'tH 6. s ... 'ttl I AtM: Ttwll & C-lry Ctnltr-Ora119t U 1'11111tft 54uatrt -U H•Dra TllE AMOUl\'T of ll)e ad· vancc check will tie determin- ed by the number of units the vetefan ffitefKIS to ta.Ke.->Jiv1 _ _c ____ =---- adjustment will be made iii the No'(etnber payment. To request advance pay- ment. veterans should contact the OCC Veterans Office in the Admissions and R ec o r ds Building. or call 834-5854. Nearly Everyo1ie Liste1is to Landers FROM 1HE G~ARJ.ED FINGERS AND DUSTt. CATACoAt6S of THE" .Mi"I> OfTHE~M'PH, - GIVE HIM A UN19UE DRINKING MUG A most 1nn11ol nMctlo11 of 1tOM WGte creotlett ••• M091 oMI tefllt• arch, wlHt ,.no .. Uty nd charoc"1, yoo WM't ~lfto. A rMllY trHt tlft ltelR for Doell. You'll fh1d ... to .. tt °"*1 ti• yolll' 9lft lht al10. A fow .,. How11 IMlow. · CROSS·IYED TANKARD s9 so W. C. ,llLDS TANKAltD- Saoo. MANY FROM WHICH TO CHOOSE HANGOYll MU• $9.00 decorator line . \ . SOUTH COAST ....... COSTA MISA 540-7777 -' '. ·' " ~' &. t/ 'l " I i J MALL Ofi OU.Mel OUHl.CA, "'""" • • ~ •• • 1 ' -~ •• • . • • . ' . ·' • . .. TAKES COMMAND Joo.ph J. Sulzby . • Valley Man In Command Joseph J . Sulzby J r .. on astronautics engineer -froin' Fountain '/alley, has taken command of Naval Reserve SUrfa~ Division _ll-3 (L), .. rhich trains ·men and women throughout Sootheran Califor- nia. 1be reserve unit, based at the Naval Reserve Center in Los Angeles, trains veterans returning tl'Ol)t active duty, and other reServists. 1in both 1nilltary ~ n d professional dulled. SUlzby who lives at 9321 Grack1e Ave. is employed with ~fcDonnell Dou g l as Astronautics in 11untington Belich. Two Vote<l Against Smog Bill Both Or~e County's state senators ~lped defeat a bill ..which would have relaxed legiSlation r e q u i r i n S in- stallation of s1nog Ldevit't!S on 1966 to 1970 cars. State Sens, Dennis E . Carpenter (R-Ne\\.'JXlrl Beach ) and James ·E. Whet.more lR- ( C~PITOL ) la' Habra) opposed t h e mtlasure which failed on a tie 14..J.4 vote during late ~1ay. r ' I ;} I short fa mous maker swimwear in many styles and colors Fo r men of all ages, a collection of swi mwear at sav in gs. In stretch n,ylon or polyeste r and ~, tton, siz~ S to XL. Shop soon summer won't wait! , 99 reg. 8.00 mach te 83 ~· ·rf. ____ _.:;, __ ----~ f' ' Burlington's no-iron crisp percale sheets Garden fresh Lo ve Knots sheets in Kodel• pol yeste r and cotton p e rcale. Choose pink, yellow or blue -beautiful sa vings. 3.49 reg. 6.50 twin or flat fitted 7.50 full flat or fit . 4.49 10.00 queen flat or fit. 7.59 13.50 king flat or fit. ,.49 4.50 stand. cases pr. 3.79, 5.20 king cases pr..4.29 sheets 34 I .... '~ - '~ .. • Wednesday, Junt 13, ic;73 .,,, ;~'?!""!:~(·; ,,. ~ ,,, .-. 'I'~ '.,~ "'~-,_.' ~,,,..:~ • ' i ; . LOWEST PfiCES OF THE vEar DAILY PILOT 31 splasher pools, 3 sizes for a cool summer Heavyweight corrugated steel walls, vinyl liner a,nd drain. Comes in three sizes to fit your back yaril . 8. 99 reg. 11.98 6'x15' 18.98 8'x20' r,ool 14.'19 29.9810'x24 'pool 24.'19 toys 42 " IN ANOTHER recent Senatr vote, Ylhelmoi-e supported a bill prohibiting medical refer- rals for profit. SB 428 passed on a 26 to 1 vote and was sent to the Alsembly. 'i1ie." measure iS"aimedarl-1-''.:.:__:.::::;_;c.,::-';"-'-C.:!;,,....-J prohibiting abortion f efen-als by profit-making indJviduals or or ganTza t ion s . Sen. Carpenter \.\'35 absent from the vote. THREE ORANGE County assemblymen supported a suc- ce11ful Senate appropriations bill granting $1.3 million state loan to Del Mar racetrack for improvements.. Voting yes v.·ere Assemblymen Robert Badha m rR-Newport Beach J, Jotm V. Briggs (R-Fullerton) and Kenneth Cory (D-Garden Grove). No vote for Assemblyman Robert Burke (R-Huntington Beach) ~'ns recorded. Graduate Hon,ored ~ Papiela SUttoo of, Newport Beach has been p:raduated from 1the UC, San Francisco School of ·Medicii:te, receiving from her claSll.nattt and farulty*. th e "Gold..J-leaded Ca ne A•rd'.'. The ·liw8rd . ~oes to the graduating senior who best ex- cm pllfies the qualities of a , true physician. Miss Sutton. who attended Corona del Mar High School and Pomona College, is a member of Phi Beta Kappa , Phi Delta Epsilon and the Gold-Headed Cane societies. She ir the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Paul M. Sutton. \. I • TOP QUALITllS, Ptm•ft Sutton ,. . " ' • ' " ... " .. · Adoria pantyhose in two styles Choose e ithe r in beige, tan, taupe, or brown, sizes pet-ave- tall. Actionwear sheer stretch, nude, heel, reg. 1.95, 1.69 pr. (3 for 5.00, 6 for 9.90) 1.19 pr. plain 'knit she er, reg. 1.50 , buy 3 pr. for 3.50 , 6 pr. for 6.90 hosiery 7 • ' .. Van Raalte, Vanity Fair fashion slips and sleepwear Fas hion sav in gs o n slips, sleep- wear, bodys hirts in your favor ite colors. Shown: lovely long gown by Van 'raalte. Sizes 32 to 40. 5, 99 reg. 11 .00 sleepwear 10 i " : I ' . '! ' ... • .. ~ ! . . .. .. .. ' 1 • ' ... , ... .. . . " the light cool look of polye ster pantsuits Th e traveler's travele r! Easy pa ntsuit s in pretty tweeds or unusual jac- quard pat te rns . From a collection by a very fa- mous maker. Si zes 8-18. -17. 99 reg. 22.00 boulevard dresses9S SHOP MONDAY, THRU FRIDAY IOA.M. TO 9:30P.M. SUNDAY NOON 'TIL 6: SATURD.AY 10 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. '""Y co. south ca.st pine, san diogo fwy. et bristol, 5'45-9321 • colorful cuffed pants propOftioned for you No belt. No zippers. Eas y - pullors in white, pink, blue, yellow, re d, beige o r bl ack rib polyester, sho rt 8-16 , med . 10-18. 9, 99 value 14.00 · ~levard sp tswr. 16 -· MAVCO .J I I I I I' I I I ' ' I 'I --.---c- 3f OAILY PILOT Wtdntsday, JUN 13, 1'973 NEW '73 DODGE CHARGER - $175 40 $66 85 DowN - ~763.JOis'ftlt lofaJ price indudino lax l. !ictn$t. Dt"ltrred ?<l'flT"'lf price, ll3&UO including lax. Ileen~ l all c1rrying .ctwir!IP' lor'4 months on our •oval of your 9QOCI Cf1$1~: ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 10.1'1~. NEW '13 DODGE PICK-UPS COME IN NOW AND SEE OUR HUGE SELECTION . CHOOSE FROM 54 TRUCKS IN STOCK INCLUDING Y2 AND lA TON, 4 WHEEL DRIVES, CREW CABS. '70 CHEVY CANKI : ~aor ~•r(llOQ VI iMllO<'lolt•c lflll!i· .., u on. IO"'I~' 1'"''"'9· •. ~,, '°"' t1c:Qf f i •I C(Wl!l1ho1,,,111, Till stf'Pring • ·.~·. uaie I "N1r<". (l:lt·BEW.J $1788 '68 MUSTANG Yf. ik:to. lf.tM .• _. ~1ftfillg r•~. "'"let, Lit. No. Xl"IW -NEW Buttble Top YAN CONVERSION lut.Ole ~· pctMlj"I, c.rpt'fl, ,.., lllineft•, r.••lia, l !l'·lly facto·ry •.ii11 ippod . (11·1AUl10406lJ' ~ $·4:18:~ -' •llJ!MIDIATI Df.U~ '69 FIREBIRD V-4, 11.11om.ric lrt11S111ission\ PO'W'f )1Rrif19, ·IKIO!"f l if conclili(l!'ling, rdcl & hfflier, --lte 1idew'1ll !Im. {VZL110 . ' ' " '70 FORD C.Untry ...... Ire 110 pas"'1!1fr 111~. va, 1irloma!ic 1r1nsmluion. pc111er stttring, 1119' Gt91! rKk, 1..:lol'~ 1lr <anciilionirig, (.$211516) ' . '$1988 . '•1 .·719 '68 DODGE ..... 'haluo :..,:~11 Le~~ 6!'0 Pick~. Cij~ NO, lo'>$, ~ ~. ""'llY INiy ~)1 rljlm. ljll)i8 1 '71 CHEY. ..... , •. V-t. IUIO. Ir-.. -:lkolf ... ' rl(l;a, "'lltr. J051 lri lirN ltr Jllt • De•~· lie. Ho. ,..21H . ' , BRAND NEW '73 DART SPORT for th• ..,Ort minded family wt.. want1 the be1t of both. 1'te Mk of a tports tar plu1 thti r90mlne11 and lOmfort of a lux ury cor. OIDll NOW. FAMILY SIZE ., ' Wodntsd<>', J .... lJ, 1973 PILOT.AOvt RTISElt J~ ~ ... ' ' . KEW '73 DODGE COIDKET STAT/OK WAGON ' .. NEW '13 TIOGA MDTORHOME ' ' NEW 4.STAR MOTORHOME ·-:u-:.--...... ' ............ .. :13 Mii-Mir MOTDRHBIE .J ICNllM, ............ ..... .....,1.,.....M-. .... ........ _ .. ._ -------•-*'' w/r•ck if1clwlll•1 1teel ~· h.11 , ........... c_,._ I ..ttr.s. J2 ,.U.. ................... _. ... .............. NOW ON SAil AT llG DISCOUNTS BEACH CITY Will UNCONDIT/0/1. , GU:AR:ANTEE 100°/o ft Mn• ......... ,,;Mn l ~ ....,, f-.; & ._ l!ill WMI _, ..... -.... ii:., ... . ... 1:1; ....... ..,.~°" ........ -.......... ._...,.,. .. .,..~,, .......... . .......,. ........ ,.,.., ....... ~ ...... ,.......,.. .. ~ .... ,... . ..._ ..... , .... ... • .,...llF I 'tt.'= • 'j ' ' -, r ,-;;.-,. '69 CADl~IJC _.,, ....... L~,•-..y llOWff Wiil. llOWf' llt.ilfi, jllllllel' -~.lit!~ '69 OPEL. S11:ion 't/19011, 4Ulffd111nsmission, taKktt se1!s. rldio. a.• iwmr. !19 gage rtck IYO~J .. s7aa 1$1088 ', • '12788 -.s2-·~J!~l~:t.~~~~=~~~~~~OTf}B HOME ., •• ' ' '&l''JW ·~~ ' ' ' '69 CHRYSLER JIMW YOlll,I 1 ot ltAIDt(W f«11111 •ir Ctl'IOi1iorung, .fQWff tH,,, l»fltr wiMQwS, -r Ii(!. 1r1M. i.tled ... m tfff~ ,~,v~ oel\irt lt.ivr• W\lr\171• $1388 ! ' ·seaah" · Dlty ~ '69 CHEVY IMPALA V8. a\llonl,J!ic tfansmissron, PoWf!f ,1f«if1Q, faoor'(I lir cl)IU!itionlng, 1YZT\6I) $ .... ' '69 BUH:K <. ', llVMU ·v-e,•autcm•llC 1r,nsmiHial, powtt 'stnring, vlnyl f'tllll, t11Ctoryairµ.ncli - r10rii1"tQ. Utt .steering vmHI. el~tr!c Y..iftdovlS. 1mJfm 5tt'l1'0. 1 riict cir. tXTJ328) " • • -i'ilfilM. litiitl~l ~•itchinWith.,.l"bliPMr 1N~;'9rcM'Vrilt -• --: ·~ l!Mt, chhni:e it.th,....,, to..., ._.,.ry, Mrffn 4eor IJftd 9thw luxuriu . (S-391:1) • . IMMIDIATI DILIVUY \ • •1088 I . ·10 Plfa. wan. (.-'' - Vt. ... 1tr•-..,.J'~ .., ......... Wt'.Y: •• . . ' •1411 --7 '7ltlORD - CUITCIM HI 'JI. iMl!Ol'l'lli\' Utmm'iSiOl1, f)OWff steu i119, ••clolv 1ir (Ofld1lioni119. 11t!KJLl s991 . '68 tDDGAR ~ V.f, ~torNlit·lt•nillliuioll, ~, l......,i&i. -~I \00, r.a'i0 & hHfe' IVtl"':tll ., •• I • ' l 11 I ,, ' • ' .. " . ' '·' .. ' • : I K.C. Quits .: ~ I SANi DIEGO -K. C. Jones, who · coacbod tl>e" expamion San Dlqo >Qin. quill .... lnlo !!!! Ameri<an Basketball ~playlilfs ~ ·seum, lu.quit,' ci!lng ... ;Cloioh ol opinions Oil policy" with G1!!i« ~"Bloem. .. Jooeo; Jli; a'bi!CkCOiJil rilamstay Of •i&bt ~ Booton Celtics teams. r~ ~ with two y~s left on his *-year .coalract, wbi<h '"""Id bave ~ blm a~ $40,000 a year. He said be Wu -in tho : eoad>ing vacancies ' at Wasobin.g.ton; end Pbilodel.a& in·.ihe Nllional Balll<eOiall Al!JOdltim~ . • ' T-olfidals1 did not i.. a' -ment. tin acUoo Jones said be cooalders ''a bit 1trange." Oallel'.J to Bloun's office were lold be was going out ol' town. "°"Cl""'~ _.. Alex Grooa said be· . 't --tl>e mi(plation. Leads . NEVl ORK -Catcher CJarltoo F"tsk of Bost<xi ;op vote-getter while -City )>14yers 8lllOllll ~ i_.,. ·uoo leaders In ear· • tv bolljlllng fer tho major leaaue All-St>r Gime •. Qxnn"f Dlf. · ~' KUhn an· ~ Tueldl.Yo I• : ., Jonie.. to, SD '\ SAN ''DJF.GO -Randy Joneit, ·a.. lormet" -!llF and Chapman Q>llege .-. Was purtNsed by ttiO Sail Dleco '.Padres from A1euodria ol tho Teus·Leque. 1' Jorw9 WU tile -· flllh.rounll' draft dJoiceln the 1m free ..,a draft: .. Newhouse Wins ... -- Wedntsday, Junt 13, 1q73- UP'I Tlll.iiotes TWS RUNNISR. IS SENT FLYING.· BY ASU'S DENNIS KENDRICK. .. Wild ~in for ,vst . " It's Barr ~g,mst "B~e ~roj~~S~k, Cro~ . . . . ' ' ... Mental Lapse Pays Off Big . I For Red Sox Carl Yastrzemsld figures K's bef1'!r lo take than to recei.ve. It is not that Y~ IS greedy. He is comfortably in; the third year ti a three-year rontract calling for $115,000 per year rrom the Boston Red Sox. But Nolan Ryan gave Yu a foot Tues- . day night and Carl stole· 00-feet,. ,When Ryan did . not botl1er lo hold \*' astrzemski at. seccnd bare in the eighth inning. Y az stole· tiurd and was ln posi- tion to score what proved to be the 'Win- ning run Qll Orlando Cepeda's sacrifice . Angels ·slate I AN ....... 1111 'KMPC ·(111) JUM IJ 80!lton 11 C11Hflm>ll J11n11 1• B•ton 11 CeHtomla· Junl lS Ntw York 11 ~Ill~•· June 16 Ntw\ YOl"k •' ~•\I "'" JlJne 11 NIW York .t,l.111 1'111'12) 7:55 p.m. l 7:.U 11;m, I 7:U '1·'"· · S:SS •·'"· I .l2;S!I P·"!_• I' ·' . fly as the Red Sor shad«l tl>e e.uiorn1a. j Angels, 6-5, at ~ Stadiwn, ' 1 Jt was the siXth.win in severi games1for Boston and llfted them over tile .500 mark for the first time since. April 17. Meanwhile, the Angels are going in the other direction. The .bs waS -thelr 13th in 19 games and they have fallen into ftNa place in the American League West •(Ypu've: gol?to try and piek up the er .. ! lra.l'Ull," Y~~khiaid';Of his ttieft of I ~ . ,, .. ~ third. "The AiiBel>;are a pretl,y good ~ biub 'ond•tl/#;.i;.Y1!'.._I. give ,. troUbJe .in their own }&'k. • "J!")'.lin didn't ~IC me "Olld'I Wis a~!i' ! to~a .J>retty ge0ti1W" ~ '·' Yastrzemski was a source o(_iqitatioo.--- !<> HY"ll moot ol ~ nlgbj, ., I , He ~)led a-~nin ~!in_~ " Iii-st jnnin~ ~ t'IJas ~ e; lnnint d'<lllble that ... u~ bis sloloii-. Ryan's ·failure to bold Y_,,....kl ~ close was.one .of the "little tbiqrs'> that OMA~:., :Neb.:· (AP), _:. f\.J1it9esota's to Minnesota, which blHltOO 'iate ill the perturbed· ·Angels Jl)aMger B o b1b Y baseball teem' learned t.he fh8r~ w;ay -ban game apparei:itly to score ·more runs WinkleS. · ' · · · "ThO .;...ii . 'mlstal<es iilled us " I e~y·night·-·ReVet"--prov e--a~~j~. _, hen already-leading-7-0. ·--. , -.,_ t I The resu)t: an eight-ninth-inning ! 1 ·"That started a Jot of bantering back wiDkl.es 'izlsisted. ·~e shOuldn'l~.be • College -~.orld' ·Series v· ry and ,an ~forth," continued Dedeaux. "Nothin~ ihg th.?6e 'kind d. mistakes at the~-I , almost· tmbelieyable: los arid ouster for . ·serious -just clean fun , but our players · ·teagtie · level.'' . ~% Minnesota. / ·g~.mad and that might have helped." ' ·The .Angels . skipper said ~ it Cbt ·' USC'S DARYL ARENSTEIN GETS HELP TRYIJllG-"TO GRAB F ... ' . ..-' , ;"~.-/)'; Defending three-time champioo USc ~ta, 31·1!)-2, .was Oll:tbe verge of Angels" c:ontiriue to play ~ he can wrap up its fifth collegiate title in six throwing the annlial CoUegiatei'claslic in: . ·will begin a series of mornmC workout,, ; years tonight with a victory over top.. to a ttiree'..)Va)'.'.sCrai)i-for ttli¢ltiue "'Wben to refresh their baseball Illfll:lOl'ies. -rated Arizona-State: the Tri>Jans.i.fudied.,eigpt S\Ugles,t ·.Ry.., losing'for the fourlj(lillie,ln Im! . , .' . ~ Answers t; .. arges .. ,. . / I~ ~ ,. ' . :.NFh"}f{illing ,to Ass~t · . . } . . . ' Clyde Sigli-s Arizona State, S!H, earned · ~other Minnesota errD'l!, • sacrifice fly"'and""'--~oos.;:,.s:;~~~•~ ::::. ::.: j shot at the Troians by ousting T~xas 6-5 :.ken co~ba~~~ ·the ·~ 1~ame-iwµt· by, fa8hioning his ~tt;:"lt:nfa;ts,~ on Clint Myers/' twG-OUt , ninth-~ .]he storybook finiSJi.~.a ~.t plete game. 1 single. -Jliti;hing performance. by 14innesota's ... ton ''' • l c•tlftnlla 1s> · CLEVELAND -David Clyde. an 18-/ , .. ~~F:!heS~i lnAny :~:rugVseProbe Two former orange Coast area stars ~OIL Winfield. -· .. M'i rbl •It r II fM . n., ;'fl!us ~. IUlllOllllCed the · I ' slptinf oi:)laseball's NoJ 1 draft Ctiolce in · NEW YORK I Al/-The! National a news ~ tiere before their Football League, )4h1ch has bid to C011+ g~ ~ the lbdians.. tend with four of_ Us players being ar- R ...,~ B k • rested for drug possession. is facing a onmson ac new crisis: charges by nan:otics agonts 1 that at least four stars are dealing heavl· • W ASlllNGTON -Velean linebacker ly in drugs. ~v.e ~· after less ttu,u'l five The NFL denied any knowledge of mont.bl(111 retirem~ has decided he Tuesd~'s reports that %several players lln'I rUdy IO be air ei-pro foot boll l ljl"e: tinder surveillance fQr ~ckiJig 111 p_layer;_3' ~· { ~ ~ ,... • ' . /ttrugs1 but s:iid it is "readyrahd 'WilUng~to ~. a 10.'yeat veteran of the . coOPerate" in uncovering! such activities. year .eoiitra/;t will\ the "W · cording to federal,' ,state and local Green Bay Packers, has sigjied~thr ' A New Yo'rk T~meS story s8id that, ac- Redskibs, • traded . a 1975· l!I d-narootlcl· agents, two teammates are 1'0UDd draft ehol:ce-fw,,.blm., · , believed tu be dealing in a multimilllon-- ' ' ,Sentiment a Big Faetor ' ~ !J 1'/. / ' ·'··1 •t • '1 .~,-. •• •· 't . • \ ' 1J; .,• · )• ~ 1·0 -~-U~S,1 Op1_! ~ou~n~y . O~NT, t>/i.AP) -The locl;H ol Oaklnont," .Palmer said today. "This is Jacks;ldous.-ancl AmOld --my country. I am very .ager to redeem NClil. 111 -we juat ..,.... from m)'tOH." each ~ _.., ~. f.,._,ied "Winning here in,J11611Was ll!l<<ol the apetaln ;loc!Jer room o/ lhe aged Oak· ~test things that ex~."llP~ .)p1· ~ ~. ·I · . 1 • .~· • , .... ,,. MM Ijicktaus .. 11Natuta11i.1 die1"re . s •.As Jtck ..ft•• on their = : ~'feeling, on my part about the -·-the 73rd U.S. OpaJ Goll 'I CoiJne alld the people." , ~. loot !IP. r llld .;fllld Qoe i.md<ed-~:ruty of the .world )! ~~Ill ;. !, • ,beet ~ -137 an<f 11 amatedro ; ~We • -.e -~ ow..i: ·~ C0111prbe~he fiel in iol.M'IJI~• llOthtnq ~ Olher'• .,i," Raimer Jlu( ooe woold ,,.~to ,\: coliJpletciI§ aid. 1J .-~ l\lh. 'li._ 11 ~VOid Ot senUment "11to·=1"" Bui Us• bf# .IOR to-!%:'~ of _\!Wlle ·.inn. of a new Nic!klauo-"'!< --Idol Ill ~· "froniatloll. C. . .. ~~!&:._ who • 0a11mon1.. big, .undu1alln(. wtttng e -..... -~alJpf Sui!ICM -r8ted ·!he-fasteot'l\iJl!'1"11' lo fl hall<lw· lttlcherolJs In goll. , • g ~--· _.... .Ntcl:laus,, bidding for his 14th major <;;mpedtl!pj~ , ~Ing victory and a ~nee to overtake •."Ever illic!e'l lol!·la' lllt:IJlYe ""-1t!le r<eonI of.the ~e Bob,,..,.., iai~ ~ .W 'ilio Oplil to cair4 !)acl( to overwheltnlnt favorltd. · ·' ,vill pitch against each other tonight. into the ninth, ttie &-fOOt-6, 221· R.Mm.r, rt • 1 1 o A1om11r, 211 s ' 3 • USC will seOO· former Golden West r had checked Southern-California =i!~1~· a ~ ~ : : :'.~ .. ~ ~ ~ ~ College star Mkrk Barr, a junior right· Oil one hit and struck out 15. , Y11strztm11t1,,1b,. t I J E~t.in, lb • o ' 1 he C1ps111, dh'. 3 l 11 2 R.Ollftl'", rt 4 0 1 • hander against the Sun Qevils' Edflie i "If David had anyw re 1. near his P1troc11111, 3b 3 o o o a.rry, cl' • 0 0 0 . · d0Ua~ cocaine operation. ~i~ber player is suspected of having hel~ finance 1a cocaine·dealer.'s operation and r.he foutfh playfr, reporte41Y a hea vy S!Vo.ker of hastj~h, is, believed. to, be involYed .wilh la~e amounts "Of it. Nooe of the r~r wits Bane, the ex· Westminster High standoUt· ormal ~conlrol i1'i w~d have breezed ~~~-~' : :,,: :, ,:_.~ • ~ : ~ : who is ASU'~~ce. hrougti ·tae~g~in ·,shoi't OfPer," said · "j1r . .-.. "·' 1 1 o,Tortlin.· c· t .• o o Barr, th~therof ""'nner USC stand· Minnesota C6&ch ·cit' Siebert.' J.K y,.211 3 o. • o .L-...,. • 1 • to ~., Tl p 0 O"' 0 O-;StU•ll•-"''e 1"' • o O O'Ut Jim · , (who now pitches for San 1 But he didn't. Wilifje)d walked nine and , P o o o o N.llyiin. , o • o o Francisco), stopped Harvard, 5-1, on fixe by 'the riinth hail' thrown more than '160 ·Jot•b lO ' •, s Tot111 • '1.1 ' hits in a first round game Saturday pitcheS. " ao.ton • on 110 -t · ht "H be •• labo I th -c1111'ornl1 tol • 002 -5 rug . r 1 e gan .., , r as cary as e/ Bane, a Jen-hander', has a 15-1 record fourth inning and.it was ooly a matter .'!f' this season, time," continued Siebert. ''Considering USC beat t b e Sun !Jevils 3-1 Monday the odds it was one of ~ guttiest named. , ' E -G1ll111hlf, DP -C11llfiDmll; 1. LOa -Boston $, C11lltomlll 7. 28 -ll.. otl-, 'Y•"-"'ltl. HR -Yestrzom1ld 11), F. Rlbl..-j OO), C:....,. 110), Pln.-in f•J. SI -Alomlr, YMl'nM1wkJ.. I -J. Kem.d)', Aperfclo. IF -~ "As always, as has been the case in, the past, we are ready and willing to cooperate with any law enforcement body or bodies who may . have i~ formation beyond what we have acl cumulated in this or any other matter!"' night 'in the double elimi nation Cou.ma· peH'onnances I haV'e ever seen." ment. An Arizona State Victory Would Win!ield left with, one lout and three Tlllnt tw.1 .. , • '!', ~ ~ •: ~ , send the tpuroemeot t01.a climactic final runs l!l ,(b'f-~·.lw~o .. (e11er~rs·~rum~ed 1on.ly '.-.. ~n ""' 3,, t . .,_ •• z . •. 3 game-Ttnlrsday night. . ~ ~ .~ ~fqr~, Cre1ghtdi . TevJli!l.A""! •nY~ tWl-71. '~" -·.-·~ •-"11ley probably made us a little mad,'' smgted'~D>rtterpiDCbfrunner Marvin~ •• _r.._ • .,,i;... 10Hri 1(3J. H8~\~'tfr!Ni...,. ~ · al'i NFL spokesman said. In the past two years, there have ~ CMeS of drugs involving Lance Rentzel. Dell. Parish, Duane Thomas and, most 'said USC coach Rod Dedeaux, referring with the deciding' rµn Y . · ....... i. •Y N. RY~ IR. MHJW1. WP ~ N .. llY•n. ' ' ' . . . -1.~·.' It pg -.,:torborg. ti"" -2;3', ... ,~ -11,130. -··--• ·~--· -' -!-----... + - re<D!Uy, John Reaves.J.nd a suit against UCI Golfe1·s t.he-_·San Dfego Olargers'filed by former defensive lineman Houstm \Ridge, ~ ~·1 ' claimed drugs provided .~y. 'tl!e leapt .·.' _-\ ii 1·: .. _ .. p'_ ur.... ney .,.. wrecked his career, resulted in ~perts~-~ widespread drug abuse. , L '. 1 t' The NFL insists its s~cy P.f'OBl:8-' • I )-r hellded by fonner FBI' _age/it J3 k ·. Spoclal 10 iJie Dally Pilot Danahy, has been used as a !model y other prot'esslonal leagues. "We spend RrvERSI,DE -Dennis Foster fired an ··-~-f the even-par round of 72 to lead the UC upw~~ 0~ 13!J!l,llOO a year . .cJnc pro-Jrvine gq!f learn t9 111" lirst.dayi lf!itil in gram,, _Jlfld that asnounts to -one of our the NCAA College Division l Cham· ~Zan~itur.es:."~ tf'e 11_~ague .pionships be ing played at ~ii .Ifke "'l'be\> we lhaYe a security· cltntact in . Country Club bere through Friday. , , eaeh<'frandtiaeJcity. Jn •mosl cases, they Foster, a JU~, oollege ~ansfer ~, are · fi;fmer FBI aaents .Qt Jaw en-. ' Santa Ana, was e stroke ahead of tJUiee fO~ peOpr'e of M e sort ~Ith cJO&t , teanunates_, ·all t at 73. . 1, , ~udS wllb law enlorcefuenL group.1· .. : Competition ls er 'r.l bo,la wltrJ'4he . ~ .....,11411)> •report to Datilihy or iJ>o four best scores ol'.five p1a,... C00!""'8 Vestiga\e at .'his or CommisSiQl'l(!r Peta I In each day 's total. . Rozetle's dir&lil)\1. Any rumOt~ tio n1at,.. Stev.e Robel"tson, Gary· Singer. and ,.r 1-Juell~. or any (ep6t't;l!O mat' ' John Brizendine all\ ilred 73 1"'11• ter 1-tmpolltble, U..y chcclt out." rrcshinan Joe Gerard had ,a ~-· A ,)oeview of the NFL· program is ex-UCI I.eds C.l -stAle (Northridge) by pcctf'd later, this, month at tbe .league's two strokes and third plice UC Rlvenlde ant!ual)O)'llll'fl" mleting, ·perhaps· prompt• by five. ed 1D part • ~ LJday ll.Jstatement, by --· l!C~A 'r.Mt!\o'll llDN Rep. &rlcy O. S\oggeis (IJ.W.Va.J, who LP"< • " spoke with more than 100 coaches. playus. ti'aiOOrs 1 and ' tenm physicians. ;!hen (8!led !Oi". grea(er self-rell\J]aUon by pro-sports.' .. UCI Bags Team _LOOd; ' 5c.hfl!Jider Eliqiinat:ed.~ , . I ,_ ... . L ~~ ,S~afto the Dally Pilot "'•ST'ST!lqUDSBERG. Penn. -UC Jtv.ibe tOok 1~ tea.hi le'ad in the 1NCAA College , t>1vJsion temis championshi ps TUesjlay )>QI lost lourth slng\i:!' Player Randy Schni!ider due to heat prostration in 100-deg~e humid we41ther at East Stroodobe~ Oollege, here. ' UC!' 15 points after second-day matches . th Cal Poly (sM Luis Qbispo) and <he lhuvcrsity bl San Dieg9 ti ed for '""""'daith 12. Defending <»-champion (with )IC Rollins College of Florida and -Harnpt 1h.;titute of, Virgi~, were tied for founh with nine. ·, • Scbne1der won the !ir;tt set ol his motdt with Bob Nina ol h o s t . 7-6, then d._t a4J•aec-~ Et. -lllng $t In the lhinl .et. Sc:lbtlticr was forctd to fOl"felt lhe match becat\ek of the heal . llti wos given medical old anti - -oboervation Tueodoy rilcht . UCl's Bob Chappell wm hit elacles match and'teamed with Gletm Citp1,1o1 post• pair 9t <loubles vkl«lel r... ._,i Myron McNatbara's Anteaters. UCI's winnln8 .Jotal last ,_ -Ill [ and that m.ay 6e good ........ to win ag£!.ln lhls season, aceordlq t-o McNamara. I NCAA COLI.• .. OtV11ION .Tlllilfllll CMAM,IOMIMI" , - UA.11 Y l'ILOT Neidhru1: Sl1oots £01· 70 Feet, Bertl1 on U.S. J1urio1· Squad Ne.-port Hartor Higlt shot putter Jilll Neidhart "ill compete next at the Goldeu. West lnvitaUooal track meet Saturday af. temoon in Sacramento and if he does "·cU hre's a $45 trophy waiting for him. junior l8·years-old and l.mder cbampionahips ... At that meet the first two finishers in each evt.>nl fat--e their Soviet Union counterparts Ju. ly 27-28 in Kharkov, Rus&a. · "We got this giant trophy.'' explain.$ track assistant Jini Hemsley, ''because we "'ere 1-..;•._._s_ur:e J\e!~ brea k Terry Albritton's s c boo I ~11:9.Tlu! fiil·~lOn'fllOI! ·•If be does better than 67-9 this week, l 'll ~y the trophy n\yself and give it to h.im." Neldhart has a best. of 67-S~• but came "We think Jim has a good shot at that~ ond spol," says Hemsley. "He's lbe No. l !Ugh school puU.r and we didn~ see aoy ~ior·coUege·marks thlit'were·a-ttreat. "The No. 1 man fiiur<s to be Albrlttoo. 'n1en it's wide open with USC's Mike Bucful. cich the biggest lllreal." '· ;-• . . . ,, ' • ~­> STEVE BRAND · withln'a finger lip of an oCficia1 76-footer last -~·eek. "'Jim had one measured at 69·11 on h.is first rthtow at ihe All·American meet in Des .Moi nes," says liemsley, who 'vitnes.sed the . t.o6s. "On his follow-through, however, his ·fingers hi~ the kick board. and the throw was disallov.·cd. "Twice In pre-meet practice and once at school 'he's hit over 70 feel." Hemsley says Neidhart "'ill ,throw both the 12 and 16-pound shot in Saturday's meet. '"He wants to get the feel ci. the 16," says the assistant coach, "Because he's going back to Gainesville, Fla. June 22-23 for the .AAU \\'hat of Arizona State's Ron Semkin or UCLA freshman Dave Schiller? "Semkiw turned 19 this year," says Hemsley. "and Schiller 1.1 20. No, Albritton and Budlncidl. are the two best on paper." Albriuon's best ol 11-'1> Is a Stanford Uni· versity school record while Budincich has an early season toss over 58 feet. Recently, bow· ever, his range bas been 5&-66 feeL "Neidhart is strong and quick." say! Hemsley. "We believe he can adapt to the 16 quite easily, although U 1s my theory never to allow an athlete to try tile 16 while he's throwing the 12. "It all depends oo how he adapts," AIKltbrer entrant from tblt area in Gainesville wW be Erle Hullt of Lagana -lllglt, -wDJ 1'1111 the :i.mu.. llallt really ii net one of tbe favorites since he'll .be going against lllhkla like Dllnola' Craig Vlrgla, who set the Nalloaal Hlgb S<bool z.mlle roconi lati weekend, l'Ullll!llg 1:11.t. Bat the experience be eaa pin wDI be iJI.. valaable. By tbe tlm.e tbe ArtUU freshman Is a jwllor, It's a fair bet be'U make tbe trip to Rmlla, U they still have tbe meet. Artists Speed Makes Akins _Optimistic Aft,er Grid Drills take better advantage of his r •• Holmes' PJay Pleases Gillis By ROGER CARLSON Of ttie D .. tr l"lltl ll•ff Newport liarbor H t g h ' s Jaime Holmes will be highlighting hi s basketball -ca,...,. June-t.1-in~ eiehth I annual North-&>ulll Ail·star ' classic at Orange C o a s t College, And the 6-3\I Newport star is twpe!'ul of leaving the acene in a bii way wllll luture athletic activity slated for Cal State (Long Beach) under former Marina Hlgh coach Lute Olson. South cooch Tandy Gillis is impressed by Holmes' ability and desire to take the charge oo defense. "He gets right in thei;e without any hesitation and he's a good hustler," says GUiia. Holmes' tutor at Newport Harbor, Dale Hagey, echoes those comments: "He always took the 01>- ponent's big man on defense. He's one of ·those guys you never see but be gets the job done. "De!eme and rebounding are his real strengths." says Hagey, who also points out that Holmes connected on 58 pereent of his shots from the field and 12 percent from the foul Jine, "'111at's the only pme that really sticks out ror me/' aays Holmes. It remains to be seen where the elihlh 1Mual All-WI wW rate ln Holmes' JftP memariel. The Sao.lb continued preperaUoo for the duh Tutsday n!lht with a -· m... al Santa Ana Collip, The South leads the -· 5-1. Champion Picks UCI Over Pros By HOWARD .L. l!AtlDY otflleoe1r .,.....,. Mike Champion ol Fcdhlll High Scbqol and Ii leadln& can- didate •for f.ll-CIF baaebaU honors, told UCf coach Gary Adams he would attend UC Irvine next year In prefermee to signing a professiooal co~ tract with the San Diq:o Padres. Olamplon i.. one ol the - sought-after preps In Onace I County with USC and Ari....a State al90 expressing earlier interest in the infielder. "He's very fast fer a big man," Adams says. "I th1nt he's as fast as Clart Schem 1 right OQW and he's a lot bij:ge.r -more on the type .of Rod Spence." By HANK WESCH Of ttlt D•llY l"llllt Sl11f Hal Akins remains oir timlstic, and his son Kelly re- mains sidelined as a bit· tersweet spring p r a c t i c e .session draws to a close this WeeK-ror the Laguna Beach High football team. Spee~ ----~---------------------~ Holmes b not entirely un· familiar with Gillis' man-to-- man defe(l!lve ways. M a junior he played junior varsity 1 basketball at Newport for Bob Sorensen, currenUy the head coach at Costa Mesa snd u.sisting Gillis in the South"s. bid for . a third straight triumph. "A lot or Sorensen's stuff waa patterned along the same lines as Gillis'," says Champion hit .311 f o r Foothill during the pa!t lel!IOn and becomes the hlghest'.ctraft choice to attend UCJ. Terry Stupy, the Anteaters• starting catcher for the put two yea.rs snd most valuable player In the NCAA l'OIJege division v.wld series, was drafted fifth hy the Dodgon when he graduated from Les Alamitos High in 1'71. I I "I'm an incurable optimist I guesa," the senior Akins (Laguna's head .£98.ch) .say_s. ''I think we 'll be stronger oext year, and we should be a pret· ty good ball club." . Akins wasn 't so optimistic early in practice. In the first weeks there were discipline and personnel problems to contend with, and then Kelly, the top quarterback candidate, suffered a hairline fracture in his ankJe during a pickup basketball game. . But things improved \\;Ith time. "By last week I felt we showed progress," Akins says. "The overall attitude is im· proved, and I think our prob- lems are just about ironed out." One area where there never were any problems is in the starting backfield. There the Artists have a potent pair of ruMing backs. Junior-to-be John Carlso n, . the Orange League 100-yard dash champion, is set at one running back spot and Pete COttam returns for .his senior season at the other. Carlson, who ~laycd on the I El Niguel ' ' The Artists will have good size in the line and will be counting on juniors John Wills (200) and John Kramer 1205) and transfer Larry McCann (230! who played Jut year in the San Diego area: All three will probably be two-way starters, as wW rrn:m of the Hosts Golf Tournev . Laguna crew. Returning letterman Chris White (170) will st.-c. at guard " on orfense and linebacker on El Niguel Country Club in defense. ' Senior Eric Heard (150) fills Laguna Niguel will host lhe an openihg at split end on of· 1973 Southern California Golf fense and will doubR at A s s o ciatioo champlonship defen!ive left halfback. Mark finals on July 28-29 while Big Johnson (·155) is slated . for Canyon Country Club i n tight end and linebacker duty. HAL AKINS sophomore team last year, is a 5-7, 160-pounder with 10.0 speed for the 100. Cottam (-160) has run in the.Jow. 10s also. Akins said the passing at· Newport Beach is one of eight tack waa progressing well up. regional course sites to be ti! Kelly's injury, and although. utilized in qualifying rounds the Artists will be generally, July 23-24. concerned with the rushing ·~AU eligible individuals with game next season, they should . . be able to~pass well enough to-ndi~~ of 24 or less. will be keep the opposition honest. penrutted to play m the To complement the speed, A.kins has switched senior-to- be John ~1artin, a Z»pounder, from the line to a fullback spot. ~1arti.n's blocking ability wi.O be utilized fully from the position, but Akins expects he'll get plenty of opportwtity to carry the ball. Two t r a n sf er s , Kirk regional qualifying roun~ this Greenlaw, 5-11 150 from San year. Regional play "ill be Clemente, and Dave _Willet over 3&·boles with action in from Rosemead v.111 join Stu . . . Foster to push Akins for the four flights: Champi.onshi p (0. quarterback position. Willet 4); president's (U): vice-- will be ready for the start of president's ( 9 -1 1 ) ; and f~ drills, but has not prac· secretary's (12-24). t1ced this spring. At conclusion of 36 holes the An All-League selection on defense last year, Martin will be playing out of the midde linebacker spot in the fall to Akins says Laguna Beach . . . ' will run a wishbon e fonnation cbamp1onsh1p Oight will be cut but not a true wishbone of: to 52 players with 24 .surviving fense. in the other three flights. Baseball Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L Pct. GB 35 23 .60! Chicago t.1ontreal 26 25 .510 51> St. Louis Pittsburgh New York Philadelphia 'J:IN<& 7 " 28 .462 8 24 29 ' 81> 23 34 .~11 1> , West Dt~lon San Francis<;<> 39 24 Dodgers 37 1 23 J~ouston 33 28 Cincinnati 31 27 Atlanta 25 34 San Diego ~o 40 TMtll•'ft ...... Done•s 1. PllU.cttlpl\I• 6 Monlr~et 1, S•n 01"° 4 ', New York 5, S•n Fr•nclKO A All•nfa '· P!ll,bv'lllh 1 St. LOUl$ 11. Clncinnell 5 Chlato 3, Ho11,1on 0 ,. ... , •• o ..... .619 .617 ·~ .541 5 .~'H 51> "" 12 .333 171~ ~ IJCllMI .$·11 et Phl1Hlldll• (lrtll 1-2) S.n OllllO !Arlin 2·l l II Mani<"••• (Moof-• J.Sl Sen FrM>CltcO fllrl'd!ry 5-31 •I New York !Se .... « 1-4) Plll$bt.lr.ii !EUI• .f.., at Atl•IQ (ltN ).)') SI, LOUii (WIM 7.JI " CLnclnne\ (IHllnoh•m .,, Cftluoo IP•i.M M l .i Hovl!On (Wiiton "41 -·-Sin DI"'° et MOflll"•I Cn tc-oo ltl Mauttoft 0.. I 1 111 rrMf l{Mlkl ltd. AMERICAN LEAGUE East Dlviliou W L Pct. GB 30 26 .536 Detroit New York ~tilwaukee Baltimore Boston Cleveland 30 'J:I .526 I> 29 27 .518 I 26 25 .510 I I> 'J:l• 26 , .509 I I> 22 35 .386 81> W•t DITillon Chicago 31 • 22 Minnesota 30 24 Oakland 30 28 Kama! City 31 29 Angels 27 27 Texas 18 35 ,......,.. ...... CIM!MICI S, Teu1 4 8•111mO'r• 6, K•nwis Cit\<• .. ~roll''-ChlaillCI s Mllwt!Jlctt 6, MlMMOI• l Oflklend •, N-York 2 BOiton 6, ""9911 S ,. .. .., ... ...,... .5&1 .:;56 11> .517 31> .517 31> .500 4\!o .340 13 Ttllil (Siebert )..!!) et Cll"ll1llnd (P .. ,.., a.n K1nws City IDr•llO Wl 11 811llrnorr !MCN•UY >11 Ch~ IS!ont 2-1) 11 D.iroll flollCll WI Mll'W'M" (Colbum 741 •F Mlnntiote (Hindi u 111 Decllit 1-(1) Boiton (Culp 0-0) •I bltfs (Wrlthl UJ NIW l"ortl; (Ptf«'°" .W) 11 OllllW (Hollnn•n 11.JJ -·- I Ex-GWC Catcher Holmes. And It's one last shot at some of hls old rivals in the Sunset League -namely J.Aara's Kirk Parge and Steve Pe tenon. Dodd Called Up Holmes was matched against Parge, an AJ.l.Sunset League selection, twice in circuit play. play. Champioo was d r a f t t d 1 1 fourth on the 1teond round of' the recent free -t draft by\' I the Padres. ' Quickly by Pros "I thought I played him even," says Holmes. Holmes most vivid recollec- tion in his senior year at Newport does not involve one of/the Saik>rs' victories. Adams ldds that the young · Foothill lligh star may be n1ovt.--d to the outfield next season to utilize bis speed and baiting punch more ef· fectivel y. He will aulst the UCI coach, assistant Tom Spence and Jeff Malinoff in I conducting the Anteaters I baseball camo that begins By CRAIG SHE~F Of tlllt D .. ly PIMt Sl•ff t.1 ike Dodd received a rather '"""" .• quick ifitroduction to pro-Rather it was a one-sided loss to Corula del Mar "in a practice game. Gillis' Se a Kings devastated Newport on the latter's floor after the Sailors bad fought CdM on nearly even terms before fall- ing in a ck>ae tourney game. fessional baseball Monday. The former Westminster High and Golden West College f star, signed a contract with f, lhe ~innesota Twins Friday night and played bis first game Monday night in New York. lt wasn't suppose..to.be tbat way, though, Dodd expected t o go to Florida for a couple of weeks of drills before moving on tC> the Twins' Geneva, NY club in ~he New York-Penn sylvania rookje league. But when Geneva's starting catcher was injured SUnday, Dodd got a call and was on a plane for New York Monday morning. He started Monday night. Although he was one of the better catchers in junior col· lege baseba ll this past spring. Golden West coach Fred Hoove r doesn't think the Twins will keep him al that position . "I'll be surprised if he stays a catcher. I think the Twins Rustlers Fall To Cerritos 1 LONG BEACH -Golden West co 11 e g e • s basketball team dropped !ls second slra\g~t game In the u..t Beaeh City College summer league Tuesday niglit, falling to Cerritos, 71H6. The wlonlng Falcons led through most ol the Ult. The RusUen' last edge came with five mlmtes Jell in ttle first half (25-24) bul c err It 0. outscored coach Dick: Stricklin'• ~lub, l:H to talte a 37·26 teed at the half. Sofflomore Taro Yoong l!ld fresftman.ll>be Gary Andrews (Westminater)' had 11 points eadl for the RusUen willle another -~ K8dl Stowers (L<I Amigoe) ctmed JO. Brian Sanders topped the Ruatlers with 111: re~ while AndrtWJ, Stowers and Paul Stewart (Santiago) bad five. MIKE DODD Monday at UCI. i Meanwhile. Adams was . scouting a widely sought bJgh ! school pilcher in S a n 1 Bernardino ~fonday night. Softball----f-r~'~i~;-~°:1~-=-= ! year'" Adams states. "Re I SI. gnups plaved with the Cincinnati 1 R~s iMtructk>nal teem In winter ball and WA! offered a 1 Final registration ror the full scholarship by U9C .• , Costa 1fesa Miss Softball Norman was drafted on the America girls soCtbaU pro-13th round but indications an: 1 gram will be held June IS at that he would have gone Davis School in Costa Mesa. higher if it weren't for hll Signups begin at 7 p.m. in desire for an educaUon. the s c boo I 's multipurpose "I don't k~ if we will gtt 1 room . him but the ICOOts hive told will evaluate him and utilii.e Girls aged 9-15 Jiving in n1 e that if we do, be will be I his, speed at another position Costa Mesa north of Newport our number one pitching ODd Boulevard are eligible to sign since the program wu started I -maybe left field or se<..'Olld up. Pt'bot of age is required. here four years ago." base," says Hoover. and a parent or guardian mlLSt Thal takes in a lot oC ter· 1 Dodd was a catcher at be present. Registration fee is rltory including the three Westminster High where he $10 per girl, with a reduction pitching stars or th1J year's ' earned all-&mse.t Le a g u e fer more than one child from championship team -Ray honors and played in the a family. Humpltri ... Jerry Maru and Play begins July 7, Gary Wheek\ck. orange County all·star game f ~iiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiij at that spot. Ii But because Golden West EASE ( • I h&d a W!r'/ good c•lcher In Bud L a ont1nenta Bulling coming back in 1972, • • • Hoover shifted Dodd to second base. "Because of his speed and his 110rlt at second base be gets rid of the ball faster than most catchers," says Hoover. "But I think tlley're going to want a bigger guy catching. After they siee him run aOO h3ndle the bat I think they11 probably move him around." Dodd, a 5-11, )115-pounder, broke the Golden West career stolen base record this past season -an accomplishment almoM unheard o1 for a catcher. He swiped 16 bases lo give . hlm 21 in two years with the Ru!tlers. Dodd also batted .353 for the oea90ll whlCh eime<l him Ont team bel'llls on tbe AIJ. Soulh<m California Con- ference and Al~I team11 and a aecMd teem spot on the All·slale unit. • LEASE ••• Mercury Full Molnlenlnco Leaalng ••. Your Chol .. , Nowt 540·5630 1 • ' \ ' ,. . . ·-. . • • .. Lehman~ Wood Vie For President's Cup Rich Lehman and Jim Wood wiJI meet this week for the president's cup championship at Fountain Valley Mi 1 e 'iP'--;sq~uar;;e:;::GO!rcou ... !o!lowtng semifinal round victories last weekend. Lehman defeated Ra o u I Quezada while WoOd toppled Frank Fem to gain. the cham- pionship round. In the aeeond !llght, U was Bart Barton over F re d Wheeler and Covel Allen defeating Dave Jorgenson to gain the finals. Frank Smith defeated John Au>ilio and Jules Schoolcraft topped Red Atkinsoo in the third flight in the semis. lrrine Coat ... needs skill? " Chiechl says in ty C1ub with oompelition in the amazement. event for 17-and~vcr handicap In1 the~ anooal Robb-Bobb golfers beginning nert week. loo~4'1't last wee); end . ~-...... 1 ~ • n-·'-• SIN -Viiirl!Olt-..n<rWalm'e'--'=---~ ~ 80• ""'""' W won the two-day, 36-Memorial l a th e r ' s day hole partner's better ball oom-toornament will he staged pelltloo. Saturday at Santa Ana CC. Nert big e v e n t at Twilight golf begins Friday Me~lark i.1 the Potlikker and continues for the next six lnv1tattonal on July 4, 7 and 8. weeks with com....,;ti<>n A 54-hole event, the com-.,..... , on .a petiUon is in iits Z8th season better ball of partners basl.S '8Dd is a medal play touma-or t\\.'O low balls of fcusome ment for all SCGA and over nine holes. Ad.loo begins SCGIPA golfers. at 3::\0 each Friday alternoon. Mes• Verde Bfg C••8a. Jn the emuaJ two jocks and John Hardy Is the new head a jUl tournament at Mesa pro '.'it Big Canyoo Country Verde Q)untry Club this week , Club in N""1IOl't Beach. the winning teem had a score Hardy-was previously asso- Fred Meyers and Myron or 112, 30 wxSer par for 36 ciated with Los Posas Coun- Sheward posted a 121 net holes. try Club in Camarillo. score to win the 19th annual Using h a n d i ca p s to Gil! d T I b On June 27, a member stag ~ or eep e m e m e r • detenni.ne final scores, the d mep-iber tournament at Irvine team .......... --.......4 o( .Dr. Ted ay tournament will be staged Coast ~-untry CJ b the ........ .,...-.u with a noon shotgun start. It is ....... u over Nehrenberg, Donald Smith and Wtclnesday, June 13, 1973 weekend. Sylvia Pranauski bad 2 2 :v:~~ an play the new pro In second place at 123 were birdies aDi lour eagles. IRVINE CO ........... Nlllt Lynne Frantz and Jim Twilight golf ~gim this AST CC WINNERS -~ "Whitey" Brimble with Norm Ourston Santa Ana week on Thursday . A nine-hole Meyer (left) and Myron Sheward won the Gifford nd B'll Blant 1 ing third event, 1thecompetltion will run H. Teeple trophy in the 19th annual member-mern-De11Y l'I ... St.ti l'Mf9 SURFING CHAMPS -Edison High's surfing team, which recently won the Southern Califor:nia championship, is pictured with trophies it won. In front, trom left are: Vince Cole, Gary Wurster and De:s Whelan. Second row: David \an Druff, Larry Stradley, Carl Haywan\ and Marty Miller. Third row: coach Denny Moulton, Gary Platt, Mike Allen and Dan Rice. a 1 on Pac Excl"•1"ves qual1"fying ends for ·the bala-of the summer b lf at 125 Bob Opp and Bill ...., · .... ,., er go to11rnament at Irvine Coast Country Club · th1"s ·-ek at Santa Ana r-un-t Bl Ca Cowan also had 125 but ___ "' ______ ~ ____ a_c:g __ n.:..yon_cc_. _____ r_e_c_e.::nt.::l:.Y...:W...:i.::th:...::l.::2.:l ...:s::c.:or:.:e:..::fo::r_3::6::..:h::o::l .. :::... ------ Spring Outlook matching scoreboards placed them in fourth position. ln the low gross action, Tom f Cunlmings and Art Daugherty \ posted a 143 for top honors. Two holes-in-one w e r e scored on the eighth· hole at lrvine Coast CC recently. . Bemal's 865 Paces Elim Field Kicking Strength Bruce Olien used a fiv~lron to cover the 1979-yard distance fi'om the men's tees for his ttce while Mrs. Nina Hannahs scored hers from the 135-yard cart M<Cullah wlll ctlebrale the return of the Big Mac out al~ Beach Pier with i... ~ ti'lps on Monday and half·fare ntes Tueoday on a flrlt-come, fitst-9tf'Ved baSls with a limll of 15 pa ssengers. McQillah has · pul new <ftgines in the Big Mot. It will return to lliree.q..rt.r day filhing saturday and Sunday prior to the free nma Monilay. For further Information luid ..-rvatlons, ptl1 53&-9772 or ~ between 6 a.m. and 9 p.nt. I The dally thr«-quarter d&Y run leaves the pier at 7 and retuml betwffn S and 1:30 with IUIJbt runs to start Monday lnxn ~:30 1:30. MeGwhllei I t h e Orqe Coast, y 1 11 o t a 11 flohln( -lood the aU..S.ybools. Art'• Lmtlng r.,,..u IS an1len brought 11 llsh aboonl Gil Monday. Gives Tars _ Edge "Coastal fishing is , picking up with a few bonito and bass on the half-<lay boats. The San Clemente trip bas b e e n loading up on bass and sheepsbead," an Art's Landlrlg spokesman says. -Don Hamen at Dana Wharf reports big counts of yellows on the all.day boat for the past week. Hansen says reserva- tloos are a ·mu.st on the Sea Horse out of in,,. Wlwrf. DANA WH.t.•P --:113 ¥'1fltn: SOl banlto. •1 btrr.c.UIM, 4.ll beM, SI flifowt1n, 2S rock coo,.1s1 llt9Ckll'el. 2 w!lll• .. '"-be••· 2 ht;lllM,ll. lllltn"OltT (Al't't LllllfNllll -Hit eng1.,,: 1211 .,..11owt1ll, J Mrr1<1JQ, 1J llOnlto, .. °"'' 23 roctl cod, 12 ,,,_.. l'l'tl. ,.,....,._ UdllrJ-tlO ....-.n: "° IM!'rk\18, lti llON,., 17 t lllCO bll11, •I r-'1°"'-''»· 1 ,.!'Nit -...... ,,. roctl Oi:IANSIDI -111 tllOttrt/· l• IM•· fKUO., 3'1 btfl!to, fl tt ICO. Ull WlloWft'ltl1 I "p IAllill Dll.O)ZE .... , -1'• lftQltt•: J.:»6 low1•11. 110 blu. ""' lllllfl. U11Mfli, I -llJ •lllltrt: 110 VilllOwttll, 205 t=I 0 ~I I NlllllUI, f.s bOnl!O: 1 S m1ttk , )IS DI!# btl .. LOMO llAC" I .,,._, ,...., -.. tl'IOl•r•: t 11111 cf'd, m rocll: tell. '""" -'3 •nflttt: 2SO llonlto. ,, MrrKUClt. lf Miid btU, 2' Mf(bVt. ,....,,..... LllMlllll -U •nal,.t: '° 1•0owttlt, J rrKUCll, ff borlllO, 21! ttllto bl11, 1 r~ toct. iimiiiiiiiii IANKRUnCY lloats) s...I !Ilse .... llMt -or ·-dosl ... s.IK- llwlllfery ef oow ..i -"pedol" .... "Koyelc" bMh loft""'· MOit .,_ i.,t-$500. Sale 11 _.,, ,,_ "· 1m. 10.00 ..... to 4:00 , ..... ,.. 1920 '-' Pce1111, ...._"-I•-......,., .... Nowport "- wyl. Fer ,_..., 111000.....,, cal Dan 1-. tnl,. ..... -'· 1714) 147-1417. women's tee . · Father's Day Sale. Save up to $60 on auto air conditioners. saveseo Reg. 25t.95 •. s.i. 199.95. CC-T~mnne air conditioner for Amerlclan and lorotgn cors. Tiie ultimate In lllmllne atyllng. Featuret preochlll, dW awttch•s. four louvera. Save'30 Reg. 229.95. -1tll.ll6. CC-30 auto 11r --· our moot ponffld ... 1i tor lull ------...--bor--.llftlouwra. Save'30 Reg. 259.95. Sale 229.15. Ford pick-up air condltlonerr. Features pre-chm dlll awlldlel, 3 rectantulllr front IOUYWL Style tor your 'g..72'modet ' CheYrolet pk:k-.up air condftk>Mr. For '68·72 models. Save $30. Reg. 259.95 . 8ele 221.11 Dodge plck:·up air condlUoner. For 72·73 model•. Sawe $30. Aeg. 259.95., •• S.le 221.15 Ford pk:k..up air condHloner, For 1973 model1. S.ft $30. Reg. 259.95 ...•. , • S.le 229.ts Chem>lel pk:k·up air conditioner. For 1973 model•. S.ver $30. R99. 259.95 Sale Z21.15 Sate .,,_ •llec:U.. lhl"OUllh Solurday, •• 41ors79 pluo 1.11 led. tax --871-13 (850-13) -,.. ,,, , .. Ground Gllm.re. 4 pll;M Of polye.,.r cord. In the wide-~71 Mrie1. No trecte-ln nqulrH. 1099 Tin Life S.V.rSpeclal c;:an•k"whMI ........ t,four ...... bubble b11'8netd, ... lnopec:tlon and adluatmen~ 4 1ors95 . blackwell tubellle on theH otaher 1lna. FTl-14. ori-14i G78-15, plu1 2.37 to 2.IO fed. tu Heh tire. Whltew11t1 only 2.50 rnon per tlte. AddlUonal whltew811 sins nllllllle. 3~-. Spin wheel balancing Helpo .... ,... a ... -ble rtde. ............. ... Induced ....... clflkUI• Prk:lt kidud11 ... •llhtL We know what you're looking for. ShopSunday noon to 5 p.m. at ttie following stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beech 1714) 644-2313 . HUNTINGTON £ENTER, Huntington Beoc~, 1714) 892-7771. • • •• • • I • .. .. • • I l ·- 3$ OAILV Pll~ Go1n1a11 Lack of Depth Forces Vikes Rallies To Cancel Spring. Grid Tilt For Win ~ Ulgh's \'ildngs ·ha"e t~ cial spring lootb&)l drills saJ. nt111· roach ~tike Heniga n "'~ pleMUre ~·ith his :.e.an~s progress. although lhe N O'M'IN'GHA.\1. £:n;llnd ~,gamt \lo'ltS called off. ~---IAP ).-U.S.Jl:l\is..Q11uur.-•·we.. ju&Ldotl°L.ha' -1 Ton1 Gonnan of Starue.. ('Qll)o depc.b lo e\'\'n take a chance pleting a good day for Amtr-dUring a spring game." says ican player, raltied for a &-Henigan.~·™> takes over at 3. oH~triumph O\.'er lsmael ~larina ( lowing a three-year El Sha i of Egypt iQ the sec-slint by I n Wheeler. bnd 1\Jesday of the In 10 >•ears of l\1arina foot- $75,000 ~ohn Rl[ayer tennis ball , \\'heeler produced the on· tournament. !y \\"Inning season (5-4 in 1!>70). ~1rtrina gridders can expect more ot the same non~tact philosophy in the fall. "l don't believe in too much hitting dw-lng p.r as U c e.'' sa s l·Jenlgan. "I'd rather con- centrate on techniques and let the hitting take place during the gan1e." J1e admits wme of his reasoning is because the Vikes only hav e 45 candidates out • Jimmy Conno ol Bello- ville, Ill .. was also taken to three sets by Australian Ian Fletcher before emerging a 6-0, U , 6-4 wiMer. quarter Horses ' • Erik Van Dillen defeated England's John Feaver 6-1. 6·2 while Dick Stockton used a strong volleying attack to oust Colin Dibley of Austra!ia, 8-6, 6-2. Alamitos Entries LM Aleriillcrt Entries tor WfdneWa~, J1111t 13, 1973 -1!fl nlgfll ol 79-nighl Mi~$ ear L!>!ta fJ : Wardl Go Louton Go IR. Adalri for the varsity and junior varsity. "Our No. J problem, without a doubt, is the lack of depth but we'll ju!.>1 have to survive wilb..tbal problem--~- "Our goal during the spring was tG instill an attitude that we felt was needed for win· ners and we're satisfied with finding people for the right places," adds Henigan. As for the low turnout {normal fOl' Marina ) Henigan says he isn't discouraged. "\Ve contemplated the problen1 but we also feel o u r Wl· dcrclas.smen are going to take care of that in the near future," says Henigan. Alamitos Racing Results T_,..,, J-11, nn c ... r & •••' PllllLIC NOTICE • _, ,ICYITIOlll •USlfll.llS PICTITIOIJS •llSIM•IS SUl'llRIOll COUltT OP TN• fliA.#11 liJATIMllfT NAM.I llAT'llMllllf ITATI OP CAL.ll'OltMIA l'Olt Thi fvllclwll'IO ptrtcifll 11 lo1nt 1AAlntu TIM hll k>Wll'IO IM!'tOl\l tr• .iolflt THI COUNTY Of' OIU.NI• •~ '*'IMM 11; ...... ,_. HEFLIN'S T.V. SERVICING, 1tJ1 NEWH011'£ JT~AGI UNITS, !ltt NOftCI Of' HUlll•e Ofl ,PITIOfll Newport Blvd,. No. 0., Cotl1 ,.._., Ct. Qupo111 Ori.,., l!'YIM. C1lllonll11 t'HiU l'O•· l'•OBAT• °' WILL AMO •Oil tu2' Unkt'"9r-J,,._,,1-. l11e., I CllJfW. L.En••• TQTAM•NTA•'f Wllll•m V11'1 H9flln. ns "A" nfl corporation. 2lt1:• DUPDfll Dtlw. lr- E•l•I• ol HAARI$ LEE ALE.XANDeR, M11ro111rll9. COl'OM 611 M1r. Celll. *" VlwM11-',''•"""" •• ~,!!!"',, '''VI• ,,, .. , •. Otc:Httd. lhlt '*llMta I• conduct9d o~ en I,,_ "" .......... NOTI CI!' IS Hfltl!IY <;JV.,. tllel Cll11ld1NI. Newport •Heh, Clllforllll .....,, VIOLET L. ALl!XANDER his Hied lltttln Wlll!1m Vin Hffl!n Arlllur G. Llf'lki.ti.r, llot 1191 Air • petltlon lor PrOO.t1 ot Wiit Ind tor Thll 1ltl..,.,ent Wiii filter with 11'11 (OU,,_ ltotd, LOf A1111tl .. , CtllfOmll fOOl.t 1n 1,11t'Ct o1 L.•lltr• T .. 111M11t1ry to the ry Clerk of Ortnt9 Gol,lnty on M1y u , Johtl Ytltend. S.U A.I•,_, LllUft9 petlll-r ,..1..-..ic:t to which la made for lt7' INCh, Clllforl\ll "'51 111rl'llff' 1111rtk11l1rt. In.Ill tNt tllt time Mid I'·~ lhll tNllMtl It toncruc.d•W • Otf'lltllf OI•<• o1 f!Htln.D t11e 1o11rne Ml *" Ml P11tl111\ed Oren~ C0911 Dall'( Ptlot M~v ptorJMralllp. PIRST RACI! -0 v1rd1. ) Y"' tor Junil 2', ltn, et t :OO 1.m,, In !hil )0 lfld Junt 6, 13. •• 1f1) 1 ..... 13 Wiibur 0 . Lty!Nln I ... C Old$ & vp. Ch1lm!1111, PurM su•OO. Q)Urlroom of DlflHlrln'lltll No. ) ot uld Tiii• 1111-nt wtl llhd W th °""'" o vnarno P•lrol courT, 11 700 civic Ctnllr Drive W•il, In PUBUC N011CE l'f Cltrk Of Or1n01 COlll'lty" on J-C8ank1l 1 . .0 J.00 3.20 ,,_City o1 s1n111 An•, Celllornl1. 11, lt7). ltotifl 40•ev ... 1 t .eo S.60 Oettd J1i1nit •, 1tn. f'UN Hu~y...IK .. Oh ,_. -Wlt:l"rAM r. ST-"JOHN;--PK-1'1TtoUS-•Uttfllffl.---l!l.lblllhld-Or•no--'8Ut.....IMUY,. Piiot. T!mt -20.11. Couf'llY Clerk •AM• ITAT•MINT June 11, 20, '''•no Julv (, 1tn lm•n A!!oO tllf'I -Camawflfrllno. Al•mllot JAMEi A. P'OOltf Thi followl119 penon Is dlllnt ~l*I Si.p, On Ti.. Be•m. Mr. Altro lttlee ,,. '°""' ,,...1111-,., S1tllt 1SI 111: PUBUC N011CE Bl111at11, Kerr M'Gee. Terr If I ' I Loi Anet!"' C•Nt. tlll' AIRl'OftT FLORIST, *-S1nt1 Af'I• Cowbll'f. Til: (21JI ,11 ... 11 Av1., hnla A!'la, (1111, t2107 1-----~---cc-c::-:----- Nll ~rlltchei.. AHWMY for petill-'Etltn Oev..-ltll, l&M a.n111 Ana. COllll PICTl1'10UI IUllNlll PullllJhld Or1111Q1 Coast Dilly Pllol Junt Miia. Clllf. '2627 HAM• STAT•Ml!llT tt l~1ct11 -16-0YMIM '•'rol & S. 6, 7, 13, 1973 1117·73 This bu!lntM Is CCIMllC.led 1JV tn 11'1-Th1 followlng Plf"l«ll .,_ doll'l9 ROOll, P'llCI 111.QI. dlVldvll, 1)1,11111111 11' EUtn Deverlch Sl!"A LANCl!"ltS MARINE MAINTE .... Sl!COND RACE -350 v1r1H. 2 Y••• PUBLIC NOTICE This stalitmtfll wei file<! wllll th1 Cou1>-ANCE SERVICE, 201 £. COllll Ht1111w.,., okH. Cl•fmlng. Purse i UOO. ty Clerk of Orene. C1111n1y on Jun1 1, lt13 NBWllOl'I BHth, C1I. Wlnkln Moon I SUll PU7M S1~ford W. French IV, 27'0 Orlon Mo. (DreverJ 13.80 $.00 3.90 HOTICI! TO CRIO!TORS PUllll$hed Or1nwe Coasl 01Uy l'llot Ju11e •, Sani. Al\1, Cll. Tr(ll)lcll Bar CKnlghl) J.&O 3.00 lUPERIOlt COURT OP TH• 13, 20, 21 al!d July .. 1t13 1133-7.! Ted V. l'trl .. 15'31 Ven ,...,...,, Mldo Flv M11c Fly IWrlgf!!) 1.80 STAT&: o• CALIPORNI,\ ll'Olt Wl'f City. Cal. Time -11.11. THt: COUNTY OJI' ORANOl PUBUC N-CE Tf!l1 bu1lne11 ls conduc!ed tlY 1 lllnll'll Also r1n -L..t.ite Sis, Ellabo Miu. v • 1 SPOrtv Silver. Miss TOI) L!11k, F1lretl Ho . ..,._7J2M ' P•rtm•l"Sfllp. Pa!leo, Lii Nlr.er. 5Wetf Alyea. ,,•,··~~To~'. o~~a~i::w J 0 s E pH •ICTl1'10UI 9USIH•ss Thi• .~1'f.:nf~~~~~lltd wltll Ille COllll• " HAMI STATIMIHT J THIRD RACI! .00 yirdi 3 ve•r NOTICE IS HEREl!IY GIVEN lo llle Tiit fOUOWlllll .,..,._ II lfolM bullrlfll IV Clerk ol Of1nge CPUl'll)' on IJnit 1, 0105 e. up. Ct•lml,:;;. Pur~ '1.00. t'fd!IOl'J ol the abo111 n•INd cSlctdenl 111: ltn. Pinn Cocky Kid !hill 11! per-s hlVl!lll d•!mJ illltlnit llll DRAPERY DESIGNS WEST, 16.m P'U~f,n.i Orll!lll Coast Dll1Y ,ltol, llreasure) $.20 l.llO 2.50 111ld de<:eden1 art requlrld 10 file !Mm, OOll!ilrCI .Suitt "G", Hunllngton &Ncl1, J\lnil ,, 13, 20, 21, 1973 l~JJ Palleo Ro.ilf tWarcj) 1.eo o oo wltll 111e ne<:e1s11ry vovcr.rt, ln the Ollk• C•. 92•t7 . Gold lngol ~M~l•t) ,:60 ol the cttf'k Ol lll<t 1tlovil tn!Llltd.court, or ltulh <:. Crowt, 17411 A11111ctn Ln .. Hun-____ P_U_B_LI_C_N_OTl __ CE ___ _ Time -20.os, · lo pre,tnl them, with 1r. necnsery 11n1ton 8Hcll, c1. f)M7 Also rim -Oulnns Allbl Cus1om Art vouchtrs.. to 1111 undlrslgned 111 1111 offlc• Tl'll1 ·11u1lr.e1s Is cl>l!d\/Cled tty an 111-l---------------Lolla!-Ofl. Me Oav!d, A;.-;1'1 Sure Mike~ OI htr a1torne'f5, TRYOSTAO & ODELL, dlv!Cluet PICTITIOUS •USl•fSI __ 1130 Wnt Olymp{c 9oulevtrd, Sull9 JOI, Ruth c. Crowl NAM• UATIMIJIT FOURTH RACE -350 yards. ~ '(lllr LOI Anotles. Calllornla 90015, wl11ch Is lhl Thie 11•1-I w11 fllld with lhl Coun· TIM lollowl11g .,...111111 It dOlftf IMll'llft l l ~ ~ Brian -Gottfried beat Alan Stone ol Australia 6-4, 5-7, 6-3. Jim McManus was the sole American eliminated in t h e second round, losing 6-1 , 6-3 to John Cooper or Australia. summ...-mMll1'Q. Clltllr & lilSI. Flr1t POSI 1:'5 p.m. tt execta on flo t rice. s.s ex1ei11s on 6th, tit! 1rid "" r•tel. PlltST It.ACE -400 old' & IJP-Cl11!mln<;1. Claiming price ,2,QO(I. Oogla'• Boy (J. Ward) Jerico (0. Morrl•l yardi. 3 vear PUtK $1,900. Lai.1 Card !R. Banks) , Oarldy's Exprei.s '"' WlllSOll) Wllchfn' !'tour (I(, thtrll Quatttf' Bend"'° (S. Treasure) Pace Maker IJ. Rlcfl11rd1) SIXTH RACE ---419 yJrds, olds & up. C!•lml11g, Pu•~ Clalmlng price ,~.ooo. 3 vear $2,l«t. Despite the Jack of ·in1- pressive nu1nbcrs, Henigan has some talent lo mold his team around . - Leading the pack is quarterback Greg Foster, a two-year starter. "\Ve'll try tO rtlll some sort of triple opticn to take advantage of his run- clds. Anowel!Ce. PurK l2000. placs Ol lllltl-• 01 tlle·under•'9ned·ln-.. l 1y-c1tr1f o1 O,..lllf'I cou11ty-on M•Y 25, ••: Win.ci t Of Spt!ng mitten; pertalr1Jng lo Thi lslall OI Hid 1973 CU IJICO CURTAIN AH~~O\'t'ARE (Smltfll 1.20 4.20 3.20 dOC~I. Wltllln four l'mlnlfls tfltf' the P·Wll CO., t7! W. 15th St., N •tildl. E1sy Ftytr (McCll11!1ck) S.00 3.80 lfr~T f:b~c1ll<t ~9"3hl1 notice. •ubllslltd OrtflQt C<Mltl Diiiy PU(>!, Ci1111. t26'0 M..-ry Bar Mlsf tOr..,...-J S.lO 1 RU'~ A CREIGHTON M1y 30 et\d Ju11e o. ll. 20, 1913 1661·13 1..-ry A. ~frd, 2.U1 Marino Or., Tlme -11.-12. · ' Newport B111ch, Cellf. 92'60 Also r1n -Miu APlll Love, Mick's Formerly RIJlh TllOntr. PIJllLIC NOTICE Thl1 bu1l,,..1 Is (:OflduclM ~ lfl ~ j !\I I In women's first round play, reigning Wimbledon champion Billie Jean King ~eatc;d LesJey Hunt of Australia 6-1, 6- 1. Dorf/ Advances BECKENHA.ti\1., England Bjorn Borg, a 16-year~ld Swedish tennis star, defeated Sherv,•ood Stewart '6-4. 6-4 Tuesday and advanced to the third round of the Kent Open tennis championships. In other second round men:s singles matches, Bob JlitcKinley beat John Smith of England 6-3, 6-4 and Doug Crawford ousted A1unawar Iqbal of Pakistan 9-7, 6-4. Gal l.o1es HAMBURG, Germany Linda Tuero defeated Heidi .EisteTlehnei-ol Germany 6-2. 6-0 Tuesday, the second day of the International West German tennis championships. Ro.ar11111 Roc~e! {J. Wal~) ear Tooter {H. Page} Trlp!e C Trul\I IL. MylM) Come On Dll'Ck IS. Treawrel Jonny Boo {D. Sm!tn) F•lr Blarlr fD. l(nlghll Rapid Fllgflt (J. Richards) Charglfl!I Cherll' IM. Bk kell Al•O EU9illle Tonto's Guv (J. Richards} Sl:COND RACE -:lSO yards. 2 ye.-r olds. Clalmlng. Pur}e $2.000. Clalml1111 price ,5,000, Pappy's Re<iuett (R. Adairl M01sha !J. Richards) Prlmabella CL. Mylesl G1I Red Fox (I(. Hiltll Super!l<ln (C. Smith) llllY OeacOfl Sar (J. W•rd) Go Ncle Gt> (0. KfliQhl) Mr. Arraway {S. Treasurel THIRD RACE -::t.SO -,.ards. 2 Ytar glds. Allowance. Pur•e ll,tOO. I Am I Said (L. WrlghlJ - Llgflt Lime IR. Adtlrl Thtl Olhtr Man CJ. Ward) Smok.'n Gal (S. Treasure) Rei.lless Ch•r1111 (I(, Harl} Mr. C•prl IC. Smllh) Tlnv 6e Mine rR. Saleml Fre11no Oeck Charge !J. RlcherCI$) ~ FOUR.TM RACE -350 yanlt. 3 year olds. Allawan,e. Purse $2,100. Gyp's Cute Ber (0 . 1(11lghl) Gabb'f TeKllS (J. WlllM>fl} Rhyll!m Mlln (L. MflHJ F•lr's Filr tR . B1nksl Brown Noretn (K. Hartl - Win a Jet (R. Adalrl sunshine Roc:kette (S. Treas1.1re) Jl'IFTH RACE -3SO yards. 1 vear olds. Allow1111ce. Pur~ '1,IOO.' Gaberlno (J. Ma!sudal One allCI Onlv ID. l(nlght) Onto Llf'lks (H, !'age) Mandella (L, My1e~) Fu!I Moof'I Maf'I (S. Tre;osurel 811 O' Bar (J. Richards! Pro~ous ~I IL. WrlgM) Calltornla Sar.cl! EC. S"'lthl Ali.o EU11111e FlflV Grand (R . Adair) SEVENTH RACE -J50 y;ord!. l y~~r olds & up, Allowal\Ce. Pur5e u:;oo, The Wllmlnglon Optlml•I CluO. Nuevo Mucfl•cflo IS. T•e1surel Mr. UP~! co. Knlgh!) Agenda Cfl!ck (J. Wll•onl Bu•v Wiiiow (J, Wllrd) AntolOPf.' Mike {D. Cordollll Drlvlfl Man (J. Richard•) ~ ning ability," says Henigan. ''And we've got a real versatile backup player in Chris Hawn.'' Ha\vn was a starting rover on defense as a sophomore and had an excellent spring. Running back is a position with depth and providing that are Jim Straube and Rick l!IOHTH ltACE -3SO yards. 3 ye&r Men·gold • p111·r or 1115-pound olds. Alll)Wance. Purse ~2,100. The Doc· • ; !ors HO$pl!al ol Santa Ana. ers. gj~;, ~aJ:rlH. Pagol Jim Wendell iS Henigan's Rocke1ta limits cc. Sm!tfl) No. 1 asset at tight end and The New Look (L. Myles) 1· b •-hil f 11 b k Dl•~t copy (R. Banks) 1ne !C11...:::r W e u a c Elghlh Wonder {R. Adlllrl Mark Link (195) will be a key COPPtr Co~ (J. Oreyor) f · M · ' t k Trhh's Moon or(ll) fJ. Rlchidsl actor 1n ar1na s at ac ·. Three individuals in the in-NIHTH RACE. -lSO yards.. 3 year olds & up. Fiiiies & mires. Clatmlng. terior who must go two ways Purse J?.ltr:i. c1a1m1ng price n,ooo. for the Vikes are Charles Truly Marge (H. P111gel Rock Elle Lee (R. Adal•l Tweedy (220), Mark Nichols Oella Sands (D, Cllrdoza) (205) d W 11 S II Lone's llar Lady (C. Smllhl .an a a er. Miss Bannon Bar CL. MVl•~l Receivers Andre Lopez and Miss Rock'•nl11..-(J, wat5onl M.k W · ·11 ·d R1mnlng Musk (R. Banks!, I e etzsle1n Wl prOVL C To sir Wi1h Love !D. l(nightl most of the targets for D\1111er Ma~er {L. Wright) Bold Re>qe (S. Treasure) Foster's aerials. M0011droe>. Chtrtahundrecr, Hlckery E•Kutrl• 01 '"" Wiii 01 Ille Qlvldu•I. Smoke above Mmtd decedent TlfTY A sn.wird . --TRYOITAD a ODELL •tCTITIOUS •USIHISS Thi• sl•lwnffli Wll fll9d 1111111 ""c°"""" Flll'TH RACE -l50 yarCls. l ye1r Hlf Wfll CMyll'lplC •lllf., Suite >04 NA.Ml STAT!rMINT ty Clerk o1 Orino-County on Jllflll 1, 1m old!. Clalmlng. Purse SZJOO. LOI A-1••• CalH. •1s ·TM followl119 person II ctoCng llusl,,.., Ptsm Three Hrats Tll: (1111 ...,.... 111; Publ!stwid Or•no. C11111 0111)' Piiot, ITre;uure) 2?.60 t.«I ~ 20 AllDrM)'I tor lr•tclllriJ GENE PRICE CO .. 2112 Prlnc11on Or .. JllM 6 13, 20 27 lt7J 1720-n Azure llar Go (Hart) 7.80 ,:.a Publllhld Ora11111 Co.st Dally Piiot. Cotll M1w. CA 92626 ___ • ___ • __ • -------- M1d11lghl Speed (Adair ) 2.llO Ju~ 6, 13, 20, 21, 1913 11S0.13 E110-H. Price. m Pr1!1C9t0f'I Or.. PUBLIC NOTICE Time -17.9!. CO:lt• Mflll, CA 92,26 Alw ran -Sam'• wonci..-Man. PUBLIC NOTICE This buSlf\tts II (ond1JCl9d by in trt-NOTICE"TO C•IDrTO·.c1--- SnNk A1t1ck, Courageous Kip, Fine N dlvlcruel. , SU•••••• COUOT 0, TN• Finey, Tl)Wn DNcon, GIT II On. Eeer1v -E11111ne H. P'l'lct Charge. SUPERIOR COURT OP CALIPORNIA. Tf!I& 1taltmtn1 was lllM Wl!h Ille Cou"· STATI OP CALlf'OINIA POR COUNTY OP ORAHQt" ty Clerk of Orllrl(ll Coun4' on M1y 25, TM& COUfll1'Y OP OltAllOI SIXTH RACE -350 vardl. 3 year 100 Cl'llc C911tll' Drive Wftt, 1913. " ' '"-"-D* old~. Clalmlno, Purse $1100. Stnlat_Ana, C1Hlernla P2sal E!tfle ol PATRICIA ICATHLEEM Badger's Bou CASS NUMIER Pullllshld Or1111ae Coa11 Oally PUel. CLEVELAND, OIC"lld' (ll:lchards) 13.80 1.00 7.llO on°'' May JO 1r.d J1>111 6, lJ, 211, lt7l 1636-13 NOTICE I!. HEllEBY GIVEN te ''" Faze 2 {Ad•lr) 7.&0 S.90 $UMMONS IMARRIAGEI crlHlltors ol fl'll lbolll f'lllmt'd dfctdlnl Favs Joy (H1rl) 7.40 In r1 the marriage ,,i Pe!lllone" PUBLIC NOTICE th•I 111 Pfl'SOl11 htYlll!I cll1mt t9ll111t Tiie Also tiln ·-Joyou1 V•lenllne, Teko MARIA LETICIA TA y L OR i nd WICI dec:ldenl 1r1 requlrad to fli. !hem, Chic, Flame Jei.!et, Scorpio Biilr. Oh So Al!POl!Clef'll: FREDERICK w. TAYLOR FICTITIOUS IUSINlll -;;1\~"d~:C::~~z -=~~11:..i:.::1: Ooctd. Forward Pl». Chon.a Win. To the Respondent: lr. petlllonef" P\a1 NAMI STAT•M!'f!NT lo priHnl ltMm, "'1lh Thi MCtt!~ry • tlll!d a pell!lon COfl(ernlng Your m•rrlage. TM followlne peraon Is «ii/II b\1~111111 vouchers lo 11'11 unc!eii•Md al tM offlc• ts E•1cl11 -10.-•-...r'• •on t-Vo11 may flte a written rnpons• wlthl11 U s· • ' P111 2, Paid $2U 00. di VI ol 11\l elate fllll lfll1 summons Is II . "THE VAMI' SH~' NEWPORt ~ '":;!1s~:~c:rn~.!i1~~.,;_s ~l~~-1~:; SEVENTH RAC-e=-«JO d 3 servld on YOll· If you 1111 lo fill I wr11fln SHORES BEAUlY SAL()f<I, 210 UNI St., Anoele!. C•lltorl'lla !'0017. Wiiiett 1J l"9 .yar s. year resp0nt1 wltfllf'I tueh time. Your d1fau1t Newl)Otf •••ch C1llf nNO plac• of 111111,_ o1 ltlt '~ll91*1 )n •II ~a're!' pu:rseA~anf~~ &:iiy·'~111" & m•Y be en!erfd •rid Thi courl m1y otn!tr John e . Souilck J~ •• m Jo.nn St., ..... 11..-i ptrlflr1l111:1 IO ltll ui.tw o1 tald 1 Kno.:. Tiii! Girl · · I l!IO\jment conlalnl"'IJ lnluncl!ve or Olfler COiia M~. Callf. tt6'l7 Oec:Wenl, within fwr monlfl1 .nu t"9 IB k 1 4Cl .0 2 orders concerning division "' prop1rty, Tlllt buslnus Is condUCltd by '" In· f!rll pulllfcitloro ot thl• r.o11ce. -an s •· J. ,;o •P<>Uwl •upP«I, child custodv. clllld 5IJI)· dlvld1J1I Dt!llCI June 4. 1'11 111 S11re Moon (Hl•tl 3.00 l.60 port, attorney's IMS.. COi!S, ellCI sueh john E, Solllltk. Jr, KENNl!TH ltUK•LL Ru:1Y B~r~1;1, !Storey) 2.10 olMr rl'llel a• m.<y '?" gr1nlad by IM Th11 !lalemenl was t11..S With !flt Coun-CLl!:Vl!L.ANO lr>d me · • court. IV Clent ot Ora~ CO\lfllY on Jun1 11, MARGARET •aN" If yow wlsll to ...... "'• 1Clvlce of 1n •I· lfT.l. ,.,. '" EIGHTH ltACI! ·-400 yardi. l ytar olds & 11p. Clalmlng. Pu,..,. UOOO. Dvn1111<> Gtt (Adair I s.eo Oon•t Look; 6ack (WrlghlJ Spur Cl!y (karll Time -20.40. ,., ,., 3.00 ··~ 100 lorMY In "''' fllllltlt' yeu IMUlll • ta ,.,,,.., E11klllors ol !tit Wiii of -·• ' ritt I . ol Iha allOl/1 nan\ld dec: .... 111. 111"1tmJlll¥ M '""'' your w "1 rnpOflll, I Publlshtd Or1111t Co.ti D•llY PllOI. l(AltfllS & l(AltA•IA.N •~Y. m1y 111lllld1111 llrne. Ju11e 13. 20. 21. 111\Ci July'• 1t13 17'•-n tOCI Wlllhlrt 11'111 Sllf9 .. DATEO June 1, 1913 -·• WILLIAM E . .st JOHN PUBLIC NOTICE L01_A1111111, c11111. •n c1er~ Tll. cnn ••n l!ty M. 8. D&l!:RST JR.. Al'-'ft It;/" l111c:11tan Deputy Jl'ICTlflOUS •us1•tss ll'utlll1hlcl Or1111g1 COMt Delly Pllolf. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!!! iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Also ran -Go Isl• Go, Mf, Mars Bar, Hy Strahger, MOii Royal , Lee i11r Watch. Llltle Go Flee!, Moon An Bae~. S(ra!chlld -lnm~n·s LO!(I Two, Dou· CSEl\ll fllAMI' STATIM•NT J11n1 ,, 13, 20, 11, lt73 1"1·1'3 Puollsfled Ore1111• co.ast oenv Pllol June .,;he folll)Wl"g perton I• doing buslMU 6. 13, 10. 17• l97l l13'-73 LINI( PROPE RTIES. 219f Dupont PUBLIC NOTICE .,,.1....,""""""" OO:lllWo• .. \C. • • Get behind the wheel of a Honda Civic and give it a whirl around the block a few times. You'll see what front-wheel drive does for cornering. What rack and pinion does for steeri ng. What 4-wheel independent suspension does fer road-holding, Test drive the other economy cars and the new Civic':' And drive your own conclusions. Introducing the New Honda Civic~ 30 MIL·ES PER GALLON! BIG SELECTION-IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! • ' ble Poc:o Bid. --· $S E•ac111 -2-0Y"•90 G" & 7-0on'I LoolF: Bick. 1'-'11 sin.a. PUBLIC NOTICE Llnklelltr Entll"Ptilff. lllC •• 11 Calllor-PICTITIOUS •USINISI Dtlv•, trvln1. C•lllornl1 9'l'6A 1----c·========---I nl1 corporation, NAMI STATIM&HT Tflli bu!lr1••• 11 concr.:ltd bv • cor· lhe 1or1ow11111 per1«11 ere dolnt 1 NINTH RACE -lSO Y•rds. 3 V'ar STA-12" porellon. bll'Sl"'H ••: llld•. Clalmlng, p11r,1 SllOO. NOTICe TO CREDITORS Llr1kllll« EnltrprlW"I, Inc. CREDIT INSURANCE 911:0f(ERS, Rocket Hvg Nela OP 9UL.I( Tit.Ai.SPEit Wilbur o . Lavm•n olOOO l lrch Slrtll, S111t1 2ln. N*""'POl"t (Adair) :n.i.o 10.60 1.10 ISKs. 6101 -•111 u.c.c.1 \/Ice Pres.Iden! ltach, C11lllor11l11 t2MG. Markel (Smltf!) 5.00 •.OO Notice rs tiereoy given lo the cr.onors Tflls !lttem1n1 wti Hied w!lll ttle Covn· Jolln T. loyl1. 665 C1ni.r11vry llottd, AllCly DOM II (Harl) 1.ao ol John W. Sk!ll,...n, Tr1nt;leror, whose Ty Clerk ol Of1ng1 County on June 11, Sin M•tlf'IO, Celllorntt 911• Timi -u.... bu!lneu ilddrtt! 1• 2300 Harbor B!wl .• ltn. Jollf'I H. Dal•• S«X1 Tr. Tolt«i. No. Al~ r~n -J im Oooll11. 'Tom's B•r. Costa Mei.a. County ol Orange, Slllt of •nff' .JOO, Long Bffc/I, C1Ulornl1 ~ LU Amlgo, B.O.Vllt<I, Sonnev Gel, Miss C1lllornla, that• bUlk l•enshlr h •tlOUt to Pul>flt.ht<I Orang• COlltl oa11v Pltol, Wl111am F. Harptr, '* F•ll'Cl1Ko1 Dynei.peed, Roc ke! Bar Chick. be m·ac1e ta Harold E. Riiey ancr e11rt1er11 JllM 13, "20. v. anrl Julv '· ttll lnt-73 Orlw, Newport &e•cl!, C1llf'llnl4• nMO • Scratcfltcl -Ll~ln Oo!I, Nlgh11ng11le, E. Rlley, Trtntltt'"l' Whose business ad· Surplus Eqully Corpor1!Eon, I H"'ICI' Luckv Mui, Deckablr. dress 11 lll B•vwood Orl111, Ntwporl PUBLIC NOTICE Carportrlon, 110 Wtt:I "A" Sl\"til, "" 1 Sa.ell, County of OrlttOf, Siii• of Olego, C11lllorf'll1 n101 + u E••cti _ S-Rocliet H .. Ne!• a t-Celllornia. Thl1 llull,,.11 11 cOllduC:ltd !IV r -1 I _.__. f'ICTITIOUS •USlflllll 1111rl1>1rahlo Mllrilel!, Paid 5295.00. Thi Pf"(lplrly IP Ill tr1n5fllfTICI I toe...... fll&MI STATIMtiHT Wlili1m F . H..,... ----,==ccc=-cccc~~--· :•I 2300 Harttor 11¥(1., CO:ltl Mio, County Tiii follow!ng PlflOl"I l1 do4ng bvtol-t Tl!l1 t!•lwntfll 111111 Iliad Wiii\ 11•• C-PUBLJC NOTICE of Orange, St1t1 o1 C11florni1. 11: ty Cltrk o1 Orino-Covnty on ,,..)' 15, Said P~rtv I! dffcrlbetl I" 9'!111'•1 ST ... TE LEGAL p U ILIC AT I 0 N lffl FIC11TIOU5 •U5tNESS llS: All stock In tr.ere, flxturis, eqvlpm.nl SERVICEJ STATE SERV ICES. I.SOS No. , ,-.IJ611 HAMii STATEMENT atld OOOd will ltf lh1t Glfl and Card Slloll l!troadwiv. Santa Alli. Ci llforr1I• n702 Publls.l'lllCI Ol'M!ft' Coatt Diny ,It.I., The followlng Ptri.on Is dolll!I bUS!MSl b,ui1~ ... ·.:,-,,. H,•,~M.~-,",,,1 .. ~nd Btrlon H11l l,'lll!er, ., w. l!t•Y· COlll M•~ ... •l!CI JUM •• u. 20, lt1) IQt-l') as· oca ""' ""·• 0:1 • ,. .. uo, Mtw C1llf t2626 1-::-:::c;p;;;;-.;;-;;;;;r;;;;;;:===----_..:.<:ONTlllOL C:AREER EM'"LOVM'"NT .County c'-0~1111/;M· Stall of-C•Ulor~ 111:r'1nr.11..Ms h ~ by-111 In-"TM"fDLIC NOTICE AGENCV, ~00 lrwlr>e, s.iue 111; 8, The bulk tr1111ter wlll bit conwmmatlCI dlvldual. i-vo N 1 11 h c 111 91660 on ar 1111~ '"• l'lh d•y "' Jurie, l9TJ, '1 larton Hall Fl1her ~~~ El~:'vcv! •• "m 11 Ola!'la. Apt. lO:GO A.M.. 11 ••Y E1crow Co., lllC., uoo ThlJ "1111!1'1"11 WIS nt1111w!lll1"9 Coun· PICTITIOUS •USIHISI 8 Dana Poln! Catll EaS! M1vl11lr AW .• Orange, County of ty Cltrk ot Or1111111 County on ~y 23. NAMti ITATllMINT v1!t~~-buslMS1 'tt caridooe.:1 by an lf'ldi· O•~lllf~r s;:1~:,;.•~l~~··Tr1ntltr", all 1m1 '1J&M ,,Tr. 11111ow!ng person 11 doll'lf M l,_ Elhel Ellis Youde busl11eu n1mei •nd addreues llS<tCI by PUbll$helt Oran~ C.,.1, Oll!ly Piiot, PREMIERE STUDIO, tsn H11'111"°"' Tflls stet-en! wa 111., 1,. '"' C . Tr11n1ftror !or !fie l~ree ye~rs lasl pas!. JUM 1J, 20, 71 allCI July '· 1973 lltl·1l ,t,ve., Hunll1111ton BlilCft, CA t'l6ot4 I v•" • w " oun ••e· None J1m1t1e A. eeutul, 2027J Mltrl1'°"" Ty Clerk g/ Orange Covntv on May U . 0·,ltd: jlJne ~Ill. 197). PUBLIC NOTICE Cl,,.. Huntington 8111Ch. CA ~ lt73. Harold e . Riiey Tflb bull!lfls 11 conduclM DY •n ""' 1'·255U Tr111slere• Olvklull. Pullllshed Or111111e Co.st D•llY Pllcl May Put>llshfd Ora11111 Coast Dall~ Piiot Jun-e PICTITIOIJS IUllNESS J1melu A. lellltll 1 30 llrld June 6. IJ, 20, 1913 1'31·1) 11, 1913 1192·1:1 HAMI STATIMIHT Tfllt sratemenl w11 !Ue<I 'Wlltl 11111 (- Tfll lllllcrwl/11 Pl<"l«I 11 clolng busfntSs IV Cl«k ol Or111119 Covnty on J-1, •t: 1t1l. THE PLANT INN. toll) Newport PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSl•IUS Center Orlv., SuCll 1:n, Newport &each, NAME STATE.Ml!HT ll'IC:TITIOUS •USIN•SS CA f26'0 Tiie full I t d I . NAME STATl:MENT Patrlclil A. Ltllllll(, 4$2 Pl'Oll)KI St .• ow ng person s o ng bUS•f'IHS The fcllcwtng person' •rt oolng Nl'#l)Ofl Be.ach. CA n66Q PUBLIC NOTICE 15: bu1inei.s as: Thi• bus.lllK1 Is tondlltlld by en In· STYLEMASTER FRA.MES, 1006 Aay-SEABREEZE ASSOCIATES, 1U1l dlvJduil. 1-~=~---=------- rnond W;oy, Anal\elm, Cali!. t:ISOI Mldwlck Place. Gard"' Grove, Pitr1cla A. lt•laf'IC lfOTIC• OP fllON.tlSl"O•t1•tLJn Rober! Emmett Downs, 9189 El Tengo Calllorflla tu.o This sla!emenl was fl ied wllh the Coun· N!>!lce fl .....,.lby glvtn 111111 tllt -Circle, Fount•ln V•lley, C•llf. 9270$ \, John c. Ca!llol.fn, t76t Ch11pm1~ IV Citric. ot Oril\'ll Cour1ty on Junt 11 denlgnld wil l Ill)! ~ rt5pPnsltll• for •llY TM1 bu1lrie11 Is concr11tttd by an 111-Avenue, Garden Grev•, Callf. '2&11 11n ' C111b11 lllT ll1bUlll11 conlracll([ _., ltflWIW JlvldUIL .. ~ 2. Jot>n Fei~e, Bo•. w, G1nlen ,11 .. , Olfler INl'I myMU, on or •l"'r thl~ date. Rob9rl E. Oownt Grove, Calif. 9Ud , Publlll'IN Orllf'IOI Cotti Dilly Piiot. Dei.d It.II 5111 d.ty ol JUM, ltn This stlllemtnl w11 filed 111!th Ille Coun· 3. Edw;ord Gin~, !77 Wnl 7th Junt ll. 20, 27, incl July (, lt13 lUS-1l RICHARD C. MEAN$ i ty" Clerk of 01ang1 County Oft M•y 11, S~. LOI Angeles, Clllf. f001' 16UI Vlill/lXlll'll Ln., Apt, Ho. 11 1 1973. '· Jamn w. Jensen. 1135 Tth1cftapl PUBLIC NOTICE Huntll'l(llon BMCh, Ctllf. ,,..,,. ll'·lllM Orlvt. Long Be~cfl. C1Uf •• l'OI01 l'Utllllllld Or111191 Coall Delly l'I~ Publlsn.ed Orange Coa11 O•llv PHOI M•Y 5. Natha11 Singer, 11411 Mldwlc k June 1. t, IS, 1913 171)..n 23. JO and June 6, 13, 1t73 US.a-73 Pl1,e, GarOen Grove, C1Hf. tJMO PICTITIOUS •USINISI 6. s~etdcn S. Slngtr. 1~12 Kone Line, NAME STATEMl!HT PUBLIC NOTICE Garden Grove, C•l!f, 914'1 TM fgllowlng plrl0tl1 •r• OOlnig , ___ =°"'=~--------7. l(aftll"f" KrlJll!f'lt Wlcll. •ns EMI bolllnttl Ill I PUBLIC NOTICE Seaside Walk, Long B911Ch. Calif. 9000) It I. C MAIL.ING SERVICE, 6:J.15 P~ZJ:~O~lA:~i:::· PICTITIOUS BUStNEIS t. Al Solomon, IJ823 l!tltllCh 9ouleverd, lrldutlry Wy,, w .. 1ml1111•r. C1lll. '2613 Tiii foUCWll'IO d I NAM• STATl!MEHT WestmlnSTtr. Call!. Charll1 1t.-,mond CllllTer, 1902 W, bl.os.lnilS$ ,.. PtrlOlla •rt 11 f'll ~l~S& ':':~wing P1t~11s ar1 doing t. L" W1U1r1, 115-11 tlh Sir.el, C"1trlll A~., Sa11I• Ana, Ca!tl, 9211M FOltEV.Elt YOUNG, t6tl Mf'lll Drl .... MARTIN AIRCRAFT SALES, Or1tf1119 Gr~~:~i:' ICl~rng';,1>41,.,,, Sl1nlorll It-id J-Gre.n. n1:n 8l1111co. Apl, E?, 51111111 f'\nt. Callf. '2707. County Airport, Santa Ana, Calll. 92101 Roed Garcler1 cirov• C.111 924'1 L1gun11 HUii. Calll. t1653 Oon11<t1 LoulM $1'111'(11', lilt! MIM Earl E. &•~tr, 17191 M1nchMl1r, This. b\ISll\t!S' ,; co1iih.octtd II)' Tl!t1 busln111 II ConClllCtld by II general Orl111 Apt. EJ, 5•nl1 Alli, CaUI. '7701. lrvin1, C1llf. 91105 P•rlner!h!P (general). p1rt,,...1hlp, Bonnie lr1n1 Llf'ldrus, 4136 !I.E. ""' Robert F. H•tlnau. 2~ Vii Coneh!l1, Slgnecr: Nalhen Slnotr Ront1CI Jam.1 Gr1111 Ave. Portltrid. Or19on, '7720 or 1.,1 M11s1on VltfO, C1llf. 91615 Thli sliltfT>lf'll Wiii flll!'d wUh the COUii· This ,7:t';'.,'!.~W~s~l: with lfll Coun-:~~ 10rl~1·,1~:) El. Stnll • Al'll, (1llt. 7, ":i':~br~°f.iu~~:Jl· Garvey, ~pt. ~kCl1trk ot Drano. County on May :n, tv Clerk ol Oref'IO• Coun1v on Mev 24, Thi• b:nitU 11 eonducl9d b)' 8 ...,.... Thl1 llut.l'lllSI II conducltCI tf 1 •tn-· "2S4U 1t13. partner.nip plus 11 llmlttd parlMtlhlo, tral partnerlhlo Attwfltf P·"U4 Oontlcra L. S1wyer I e I E i k O'l(M+I a lttcllt Inc....-.... Publl•htd Or•llGl COii• D•llY !'!IOI M1y llOl!fll• I. L•nclni• This 11:1~me~I !,,~' tllfd won the coun· pu N. ,,..._.;., Sult• 411 :IO •llCI Junt '' 13• "21!.• '"1'13 lUS-73 -lhts sllttriienl w61 l!led wllll 1119 C°"""" Cl9rk-ctf -Oraf'Dll <ou,.,"' on M•Y -11, htll• Q.1,..C.1it.1tl1 .f17N -PUBLIC "OTICE-~,,f1"1\.. ~t.?,'..!1111' J:_ovnty Ol'I AorU.JS.1 1913. ·• -. · T .......... 1714) GI-II• i.. · -·-lDU 17"-0C • ,....,.. Publl11\ed Orange Co.asl Delly Pllol Mav Pvblirllld Or1ro. Coast Delly PltQt, I MMt ,.!,Ub,'llhfd,, ,."'. ,',"'°. ,,1C3otil Delly Plklt, 2t :.:. ancr Jul'l9 '· 13, 1913 1S77·n IMV n. JO •rid JUfHJ •• 13, 1t13 160+n sutt:ltlOll: COURT 0,. THI "" .. ... lt'6-l') STATt: Of' CALIFOltlflA POlll THIE COUNTY Ofl' Ol:A,.01 Mo. A•lUG -------------·!---:-:=::::c:=--:::::::::-:=--:o:::--:--INOTI CE OF HEAlttNG OF PEllTIONl----====-c=,----PICTITtOUS IUSIHISS SIJl'lll:IOll: COUll:T OP THI F~ PROBATE OF WILL ANO FOfl. ••woRT-M•SA PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE If.I.Ml ITATIMIHT STAT• OP CALl•ORHIA •Oil LEnERS TESTAMENTARY UNIPl•o ICMOOL DllTltlCT Till followtng pert;.Ofll ••• dolt111 TMI COUNTY °' OllA••• EJ11119 °' WILLIAM H. EKBERG. tlso Hlfkt l11Yltlritl ... butln••• ••: "'· ....,,,. known ,. w. H. El(l!IERG Incl ti NOT ICf IS HIRE.BY GIVIN ""'' "" COFFEE SPECIALISTS COMPANY, OROIR TO SHOW CAUSI f'Oll CHAN•• WILLIAM NOWARO EK&ERO , Oec:Hltd. eoero °' Ed11C•llon ol the Newport.ffltu 1240 Logan Simi, C°'I• MIM, C1. OF NAMES NOTIC! IS MERf8Y GIVEN 11\til U111111d kllool OJilllct o1 Ori~ County, t261' 111 Int Mttt.t" Ill Thi Apl)tlClltOl'I ltf SU! fl(9E'ltG llal flltO fwtlll I lltllllon C•lllornl1, w!U r'i<:el111 Mtled bids uo Ni D.ttvfd F0$1'1' Beach, 121 e . l!talb09 OEl!IORAH I(. PERRY •ncl STEVON ~ ProlHll• ol Wiii and for INUlflCt Ill' 11:00 AM on 1111 11111 di)' of llunt ,,,, •• Blvd., Bltlboa C•. 92661 ROGEltS P EAR Y teller• TK111nt11111ry to l't'llll-r Iha office Of Mid kllool Ol•trltl, loeiotM Rod11ty Allen At111p, 102 C1llt B1lbol, Fer L11~e 10 Ch•nee Tlle'lr Names to r111r1nc1 to whlcfl 11 m •dt at 1151 P'IKtnllt Avenve, C:O:lll Me.a. San Cltmtnle, ca. OEIOAAH I(. LOVE Incl .SlE\/ON for lurlhar Polfllculan, Ind Intl '"" !lmt C1llh3!'f1l1, ., Whlell lllM ••1d bid• wm be TMs business 11 conducl9d bv • O-ntrfl ROGERS LOVE. trid OiKf OI hltlltlflll the Hmt lllS 1:1ttn pUbllCIY opentd and retcr for; p.ertntt1hlp. WHEREAS, lhl tPCtl!cllfon o I HI for June 26, 1973, 11 t :OO 11.m., In ll'lt NAll:lllOW AISLE lllEACH lfOftK LIFT 01vld F. 91t11ch . DEllORAH K. Pt:llli.:Y tfld SlEVON tourtroom o1 0.0.rlml!ll No. ) 01 11!d All bids 11'1 to W In .Cc_..l'ICI wtllil Tftll 1Ulemt111 Wll fitter wllh Tiit Coun-ROGERS PEltltY for Clllf'l!llR ol llllTlll court. Ill ?00 Chic Cen.llr Drive Wflt, rn Concrtttons. I n I Ir u ( 11 0 l'I.. •nil Ty Cltl'k ol Ore1191 County on Ml\I 25, fllll tlttf'I duly llle'll wllfl Ille C'-rll ol this TM Clly ol Stnl1 A11a, Calllornlt, SJl'(lflc1tlons, wnlch 11rt now Oft fllt tn \tn Courl, arid 11 tpi:t11rl110 from Hid •o-OtltCI JUl19 t, ltn. lh• ~lea ol thl Purclla1Jn9 "9ef'll ol s1!d P•U.11 OllCallon lllftl llld IOPllCtf'lll lletlre IO WILLIAM E. SI JOHN, Scllc:tol Ol!ltlcl, 1151 •lttlnl!I A,,......,., Publlsllld Or•"ll• Coast D•llV Piiot MIY Miii Their nem9S Ch1"91d 10 Ille prOllO:lf(I Cou~ty Cltf'k COiia ~ C11lllorr1lt "'--'""--"-"-'-'-·-'-'-· _ .. _._,_m ____ ,_ ... _-~_,,,.mn ol OE&OAAH K. L.OVE 111\Ci VIit.TUi ANO SCHICK, INC. Itel! bhtdtr 111U1l .ubmil• llldo.o.i1 h• .STCVOH, ltOGEltS L.OVI!; ly1 J__.. C. OMtl 1111 form of 11 c1rl!fltd ct CIJflltrl check PUBLIC NOTICE NOW. THEltEFOA£. It It lliftOY 1611 W•tcllH Drl.,., t•ll•,. or 11 bld bond ~ual 10 11111 CSJ !*"Cini ltf ---------------!ordered arid dlreded lhtt 111 l)tnon• lno ,.......... INdl. C1t1t. ftUt ll'lt 1mount ot 1111 bid, 1nH1 PliY•blt lo U 1e ... 11ecr '" tn. wkl metttr of t h•flll' of T•h cn11 ..,.,,.. ffMI ordlr o1 1111 H..,.,,_. "''''°' PICTITIO S •USINlrSS nlmtt 1i:ipe1r l:Holort ltiovl entltled C111,1rl, A"'"'9YI f9t ... tllltNt kllclo4 Olflrlct. A Ptf'lorrnli~··Ond 11 •AM• STAT•MIHT 111 OH>arlmtf'll S 11\tttof, lo¢1!1d a1 700 P\llllllllld Oranpe COllil Dt!lY Pllol bl requlrtd •I the lllt(ftllOl'I oi' "}n! Tl'lt • followlng Otl'tOR• •rt CIOlllO Civic C"11tr Ot1v1 w .. 1. 111n1a Ana, J1,1n1 12 13. 19 1t» 1110-73 Olttrlct In 1111 evint o1 flll•-~ -Dllllnhl •s; Ca!ll01'!'111, O!'I tllt 241'11 O•'f 1'f Jl,lly, lt73, ' ' • ' '"' "' NliWll'ORT COAST-COM,ANY, '1'2 11 fht flout Of IDHIO A.M., tl\tn 1rld'1""'t PUBLIC NOTICE In~ 1uct1--co11trHt:-t11t l"llCWd• ol .,..- DllCIOnl Dl'lvl. ltvlf'le, C.lllorf'll• n ..... ro .riow ca111t, If •nv thtY tllvt, Wfl'I' fha check 11¥111 DI forftllM. or In c•11t Of • Arlh\tr G. Llnklet11r, 1100 le! Air 10Plfc11lon tor Cl'llllOI Of """"* 11\ould bond, Ille tvll 1um lhtrtol 111111 l:Ho ill;old. LOI Anael11, C.lllct111• '°°'' not tit or1n11d. , f'IC'TITIOUI lUllNl$S IOl'ftllld to Mid SCtwiol Ol•lrld °' OrMlfl JK• L.lnkl•lt«, J 61 l!m.,elCI Bay, IT IS-FURTHER OllOliREO tlllt t MAM• STAT.MINT Coun'!; .... . L19un1 9"ch, CelrlOmlt 91611 • eopy ol 11111 OJTdtr bl oulJllSl!td Tn ~ Tile tollowlno ,,.,.IOl'll sra llolllO No ......... r m1y wtfl\6few hll bid ,., 1 01ntll 0 . L1t11 6S E~•ld 98y, 011lty PllOI, a l'ltWlfltPtr 01 o.ntr1I bllllnhl 11: period of torty-flve l4SI d1y1 lltlf 1"9 L•oun~ 6 tKh. Ce1!1ornl1 tUSI cJreu11non prlnltd tl!d 11Ubll1Md 1ti Ille MAJISTIC &NlEJl:PRISE.. 11221 •• d•lt .. , fOt lftt oPtnt.,, 11111"101. TPlctf'llO!I Lldd. ' NOl'lh t.• ~Ind•. COlll!ly of Orlf!Ot, Sljlt of (1llfornl1, 171" SI., Slnlt A.I'll, Calf!. 92104 Tl'lf herd OI lctllctllon Of tllf 1111 ........ Sou"' LllQ\11'111 Bt•Cll, Cll!for~I~ on<• •tell Wftk tor lour ('l lll«tJtlvt Rootrl Miies.. 2201 w. tlll Strftlt Stn-MtM Un1f1.-:I School Dl•l•lct rtttrm IM Jllllfl F. l(tlMY. lM Em•,81d B1y, .,...kl orlor to Iha dlll • ....,. 111 tor the 11 Ana, Calif, right lo ,..Itel •nr ot •II llkl1, llMI nQ'1 Laaunt lttcft, Clllforf'lll 't6" "ttrlf'IO Of 1tld 1pp11ct110n. J~l'I I', Aektr Jr., ms w. O.hl ntenMrlty ec~eot the iowttt trkf, lnCI to Ortvtf' c. erown. Jr .. ic M0111rt P! DA.Tl!D; JUM ti, tftJ, LIM. S.nlt Ant. C1H1. mo. , walv. 1ny lntormtllty or lrl'tOVl8'11y If! tay, Ut\lfll NIOUtf, C1lltornl1 CLAUDE M. OWINS Tfll• 11\11l11M1 11 condUdld by 1 11111er1I MIY !Md ttclllved. ~ Tiii• bu1lr1111 11 conoucttCI bye g1ntf'1I Jl,ldoe ot rtlt S1111«lor Courl Ptrl~tp. Olllld J1111t,•, 1m 1111rtntr1hlp;-IL,., llobtrt Mllll H&W'°RT~MeSA UHIPlllO Jeck Lll'fkl•tltr ...........,, ......... '""· J-Ofl P. ACk•r Jr. SCHOOi. DISTRICT Thi• lllltmertl WIS fllld wlll'I !ht COUtt--1(,,,.,., a 1t*11•11 Thi• lltltl"Mfll WH flltd Wiii! ""' Coun· ol Or•• touftty, Ctllh:trnt• ty Cltfk Of Ort"" Coun1y on JIJl\t 11, MS Soulll """"" ,,,..., Ty Clerk °' °''"" COIJl'llY on Mly 17. IY DOl'Olhy Hervey Fl111tt lt13. LK Aft .. 111, CllHWl!lt fCI011 l'7l. P\ll'(l!hlllO Ai'l\I 1'21 ... Ttlt (2111 •H·l'U 1112PIS 64$-1100 Pllhllst'le'll Oral'IQI Co••' D•Uv P]lot. P11Dll111td °'"~· CotU Ot11r Pltol, hbll•l'ltCI Ottll!lt C'Olll 011!'( ,llot. ..lltlfllMd 0011111 Cot1t D11ly ~ ... JvM n . '°' ,,, •nll July 4, 1tn 1m.13 Jllnl 1i, ~. 27 •f'lli July 4, "11 1121.r.i Mir 2:1. :JO 11'd J11nt •· ll, 1m IS'6-T.I J"'"' • tftf 1J. 1m ,· 1101-n 1 + ' i ' I I I I and his family reside in Ir- vine. * George Olsen bas been .nam- ,, GM Backs Antismo g Devices SACRAMENTO (AP) -The most recent crop of antismog devices ror new cars will help overcome BOme of t h e Antitrust Suit Texaco, Refin e1· Cl1arged by U.S. Wtdntsday, J1.1nt ll, 1973 DAJL Y PILOT OVER TIIE COUNTER NASO Lilting• for Tuesdoy, Juno 12, 1973 ~~~~....iu.. ..... ..., .• -· . TIMM! QU0111~ F r;.,..i 1c:: :ui~ U "l' •u1>1-'11r 11.. IYI 11•110 FCI !'~ ~ •UPPllll<I by Ille Ht · Fttch .R 1?~ I~ Puln C~ ~\• t l.1 ally Crp l• f{4 1~1 Aii.oc:l1tlon of Froi FCIE f t lti lQnOr r-;~• f -"mQaX S«urltl.. Oe•l«i. Fuller H I \Ii 11 l\11k• 11 14 'l1ti• ,.. 111\'I nE quOllld lw •~•t·ll\e-Gal•JtY C '"" i .~1l11r 0 6 ~'"m clll.lfll•r dHlttl to t.HILl>flh ll~~ ttl4 t1vcm \ ll1n'f' 1ACh olhtt' 11 of G1fflnk u-i• 1~ lff 1t1 '"' oc arit Dtcll I/Id oH•,. Funk $H UVi ··~· ~ • ) l'r.'~ w 1i t/!!,' (E11ltrn Gtll LrJ t\it ·~ ~f1MmdPtc: J~U. lt~ f ··r Ml ... ~ \ li:,'·l 0 T:;, 1~~ ~'1111'0 ~ Jr" f9(0CI Eq l \lo I r~!'n'cu It) 1;!-"' WASiiINGTON (AP ) -The THE SECOND company is '"''' ~rt\IO, rur11 Gtt A11t~ 1tv. 20v. ::H Q1~ J:~ /4~ f·'" g:sP l~ l•i. ed director of corporate com· rnunlcaUons for E s t e r I i n e Corporation. -'-He-"WiU-be-responsible for communications a n d ad- vertising of Esterline, which consists of a number of technology-orient~ operating companies, including Babcock Electronics in Costa Mesa. draw~k!.!!f =~l!Ui.ID'~t--- -such as low mileage and FINANCE- JusHce Department has filed Coa5tal States Gas Producing :=r ,°rid C:'".!:t 8n1e1''~~ ""~ 2;~ .~::n ~,~ ~~™ r~~ ~~ lj\% \~ an antitrust Suit .against Tex-~fr .......... , .. 01ristJ Tex rwOHnt Kt11•I Gold M~ 21• •" itrvt i Ml 1 ' \I ~\on CS!! 1 ti 1lYI ,....~ --. . ......,_...,....., i • tr•n1•.wr•· G'11m ~ 10 I~ R~ 6f. ~ l'\Art Th _!Oti !} a~. ·v--· a . 1.nelipetiferit ruifCfaims lfi3 an A1:o ui1'r.,f:.-~::"At,:;-~:: 1~ ~o1un1 11 1 i 1;.. ui fr.: N~ 1~ iJY.~----41 ref1ner, cla\l1llJlg1they entered \ agreement batween Texaco Tutsd•r. H1c:11 '" 2111 30 ~ou~ co 1 v. ,. ~niv Fdi 11u. i•w. a.,alllle Ftdtral Silvlngs' Laguna Niguel office will open June 15 with l'A'O female -managers. Pauli ne M. Garcia hy been named assistant·vice president and manager or the new bank and Marie Drumm joins the branch as assi!tant JieCtttary and assistant manager. TM bank has regional or- 1\0es ln four other cities and is headquartered In Altadena. • * l'rl1* W. Caf'1" has been named vice president ol con- struction 'for Kendall Deve5op- meat Co. He will 'be responsi- ble for all building operations in Orange County. He was previously general manager for the W.J. Burke Comtructlon Company. Carr * David H. Drinkwater has been appointed presiden t of the new Bank or Irvine. He was form- erly t'«J>" orate vice pr esidcnt and corp- orate bank· Ing officer of the San Diego re- gion head-_... quarters o( DIUNk WAT R United California Bank. The Bank of Irvine received its charter from the state in April and a new facility Will be built ·near the Walnut Village Shopping Center in 'Irvine. l>OOI' perfocmance, a General Motors Executive says. ln a speech Monday, ·Harold G. Warner, GM executive vice president, said the '8utomobile indust ry will be able "to restore some of the dri veabili- ty and fuel eoonomy to our prOOucts" with ·help from c~lalytic conver1ers. These mechanisms spark chemical changes in exhaust ru mes, producing suc h relatively harmless substances as carbon dioxide and water. They are slated to !be iinstalled on 1975 model cars in Calitomia and nationwide in 1976. Using conveners, the in- dustry will be table to "modify some or the things we have done previously rto the engine to achieve lower em~ons - things that have cost us in both driveability and gas ntileage," Warner said. LouisW.11a OKs Fu1uls For Clotlies 1 Calculator Firm Operis At Irvine A large manufacturer or Oesk-top electronic calculators with printers. the Ricoh Co., Ltd. of Japan, will open a Ca.lifomia subsidiary in the Irvine Industrial Con1plex .Fri· day. The California flnn. Richolt Electronics, Inc.. hopes to employ some 200 Americans by June, 1974. Its desk-top printer calculator is expected to be the first such Japanese product fabricated in the U.S., according to Dr. Hirosuke Yamashita, president of the Irvine firm. Yamashita said !he Irvine operation, with an authorized capital or $4 million . includes a 40,000..squiire foot plant with additional space for future ex· pansion. He said that in ad- dition to assembly. the California company will con- duct research and develop- ment and will utilize U.S-made CQmponents for its products as much as possible. into an agreement to restrain a n d C 0 fl S ·t a 1 S t 3 t e S J11t1t 12 ' ~~3 Alk ~::r ~::. ii~ ii¥. :~w:r ";~ jl11' ~ti ~:M ~ ltt a th I of I' I • Acw l'lflt 20\'J 22 Htmll Br J'J\1 ~ l1111 srov 2 'Jt~ V•nc• Sn ~ e sa e gaso me o m-unreasonably restrains the Altl! Al• n 1Ro Harlvn P ! Jin ~1r,• 11.:11 1 "'V•n ov11 '~J' d pendent . . Aiko l nd 15 li~ H•r~r R i 'A H• •• •m (II , 7111 r.n Slw;ll I .,,,_ e s. sale ol gasoline and fuel od, AUtv fltv 2..., 2u H1w111 Ft 1·. '"'° ~•n1sntt 11 111.-r v1~101"1 s1 10'.' 1 lil The Ju s ti c e Department and that it may substariially ~:I~': I~ 1~~ 1~~ ~:f1'1o1111M~ J~ :~~!:Ir rn ~\;, ~~ ~1=1 s;~ :~' ~ described Texaco as the na-lessen competition or tend to :mA~n 1~l! 1!"' ~::~~°;" c 1~~ l~~ se:risl 1"8 \~ l'tt ~1115m ltt; ::~· ~i-'s \ead'1ng oil refi·-and ~-___. by al'-•" ..... AmEI Lb 2'• :M~ Homwd • ' Sc:••l>PS H l1'11i It\) IV•1I• Ml ,, '° "'' ' .,_ i.;1~ a .,_....,_y wwu'6 Am Ea11r 5ol, ~ Hoo .... r 21"' 211• ~rl11to I n l ,j"" Wl•mn I 10'.11 J~l 1narket.eer Texaco to ,..,..,,uire Coastal 's Am Flnc:I 12 ... ll H11n1 Al/9 11>.4 11\'> !•• .r'rht n11o \~ N-lilt 4U I" • -, A,m F11rl\ 7q e Hy1ll C 11'~ 1?,,.. v "erch IJ'ili ''"' Wetdt11 l \.lo assets and opern_Uons UM!: Am GrM 1™ :il\#1 Hv1te• c 21-1.:i 22u. ~:C"•nr. 15\.\o 2'i\ tk11 w1 '' li San Diego Bank Gets New Chief Special to the Dally ~Hot SAN DIEGO -Richard P. Woltman has been elected chairman of the board of directors of United States Na- tional Bank, it was announced Tuesday. \Veltman, who has been vice chairn1an , succeeds C. Amholt Smith, who resigned May 25. U.S. National a 1 so an- nounced election of Harold Jurgensen as chairman of the excecutive c ommit t ee . Jurgensen. who has been a member of the bank's board of directors for 17 years, is rounder and board chairman of Jurgensen's Markets , Pasadena. , ' AMlrc Sy l S 16'~ ll'Cla W11 lttlo 20Vo s11efn .,p 11 '\"4 Well1111 M UW IN Justice Departnleflt sa\d. Am Ttl•v ?SU 2''111 llldl NIKI '11 2'1" ~"°'Ir Cl! 2 ..... WstcU Pt !!llo ill' The 't filed • LJ s Am Weld lllo 11~ .n,;i(eX VliJ 9~o Slm:w 16V. 1 Wsr P11bl 1•'-1 .SUl , lil .. Anhtilsr 19~0 ~ l~!el Cr11 36 37 ~ne ~ I n ellr Fd 20\lo ~ ~~~ct ~.~ · M nhatt Anllt11 In ,,~ fl) 1n1erc: El'I s1~ ~ !;1.,3 olJ UV. 551'1 Jll•mt I 11141 11~ """""'' VVUl'I< lil 8 an, Apad11 E 911 !°* lnlml Gs IJ.\lo l•ll S1>KtrPi11 H i, 1$14 lln Ii J 1•\; IS\4 ···~-Temco .. ft_ l'nl'TYV'ate APS l~p u u !nl Alum ••:. SV~ sr...::t I II "' lt!Ji (,n1 PkT 16'"1 ,,,, wu•;.1>;: I~ -·I"'" Ardn My! 2'0 ) tn BkW A 6'• 6\1 1"C Pl If.', lN headquarters eileges the Ano Aul i•"'1 16 1n1r11 CP 12•1 13''• Std Jt9cir1 x/1~ l1v. w::'O' l~ J~ IN 1 , Arr .... Hr 15"" 16V. lrellnd R •l'O .... Stk H A.It ~ 1 1~1 W '~ lj agreement deprives Coastal Arvldt 10('.; 10>,o J.,n~o 91] 10 SlkN flrw 14 l'MI '<~.-c o ~~ 'Al of · h ll AHO COii 21"1 n\I Jsl Flrr '~' Sii; Slffk N S t f l<) 'l'tllo l""i I I States the t1g t to SC All Gs LI 1•\.<o UliJ Joslvn M lt'llo UV. Strge Tee )4\\ IS !lt11lr {0 °'l~ ~ '-ined ....... ~. t ofh · Altlo Trn 12li ll~ K•lst r SI 10\'I 1011 S1101r Et '* ~ loti. Ulh 261-'1 2I f CU J:t'""'uo.;;14 0 erS. ln· fl•lrd AIO 5\0 6\1 K1lv•r C 4'J 4to Svner (fl llh !1•i d vz chlding ind_......,.,..w.ts and 8elrd Wr 17''• 1'1'o Kearn T~ Y"• 6t~ 1n1c <>t""'......... I Biker Fe 32 l?·lfl K~llWO(I 16h 11\• deprives Texaco ........ .........,;tors 1111ctwn L 12\~ IJ'" Ken Cohn 111~ ll ....,. .. ,....... l\Bll~ Mii '3\IJ 14\J KdY Oeta 6<> I of the """"""..+i1njty to buy Bnk 81dg 161• 16-"0 K•VU Fb 14\;,. U~O "l'i""" "" Bank Rel 2i'"" 11~ K•v CuO ' a ; substantial amounts of those a,,,.., H 1~·• 101~ Ktvu 1n1 11•r. 1' '--;;::::"":::--:7':::--::c--:-c:---,--••• ' F ,, > 'KMS In<! 4\• 1~1 1 Ntw Y • l"Pll T Products fl"W\a'T'o n~nstaJ States ss • 1 Kl'la!>C' v1 14''• 16'1! or " -he followlna fist ,,. .. \,AM • 81ylsu 1 1 \~ 11 Koger Pr I~ 'XI IMIWt IN llOC:ki lhill hlVt OlllMd -· Bttllnt F 4'1> 4'" K 7\• I '' ,.,. THE CIVIL SVlT ks h Btll!n Cp 7\, 7,~ ru-ecierEI ·•mo.I Ind laet ttlf most b.lud on ...,.ct"' 3S t e 81n!ly L• 72~; 2J:i! ~~~~m Pt! '\'" ~'1 of cht no• on lht Ovtr·lht.Coun!w ('Ourl to dissolve the agree-Btsl Prd 37 3&~~ L•nC a!t 13"• 14 m•rktl ti QllOf.-1 bv the NASO -~ nd to d' · T Kr~~ L~~ 'Ji! 'i~ H:'i:r c }i ll Net 1nc1 11t1rcen1ao-ch•nGt~ trt ""' 11..::1n. a . 8 JOIO ~XaCO Bio Df m l?V• ll:\:, ll•Y Bov l'"' lJU dlllt rtnct IMl\lttll'I Th<t 11rtv!w.. 1•11 bid from selling crude OiJ to Bird Sons U 25 tH!Qel Pl J\i lJ~ price Ind Ille o"~, I 1111 bid prrce;, • • • 80b Evns 26'4 27'h lberlv H l'i 3 A Nl!ltl anyone Wlt.h the condJ(Klfl that Booln Np 11\:. 11 LU Chmp 7~• P• ~~I" P1rodllc'l_ll 1, t '• U11 *1 Texaco be ll'i ven nrPference as 8•!nc• I 71•.• '1\~ Linc B<ttt 7\'I • 3 P:r°T':1 cg 3 '+ ~· u o to· r.• r ~ flt1nk1 In 11 11~ Lian CtS• 4\~ ~ 1 Wt11choislr c 6 + L 1 tl: 1tl'. a customer for its refined =~~Ar 111! 1~;. t~~~e co ~~~'I.I l ~°""'\~ Ff~ r;_f ~· up 11.1 petroleum products. 811ek1y ,,_. 11.:. Mad Gis 1•;• is, 7 ~}~ 1nvn w" i4: .~ Ull IL! 8urnp SI 24 74i,.,M•I RllY •·• 5 • 1 m turv L.atls l''o , U11 lt . Tilomas E. Kau~ ass.is-au11., M n" ~~ M1Hckt ,1117 12v. 9 oorica1ch ,11 5 •? u11 1~.t r-' C1m TtQ X24h :IS>,., '-\•rlf Frt UV. l6 10 Mdl«&l'I I!: 11 419 ... tlp l ~ tant attorney general in c11>1 sow ·~-s ~~'"'cn~'l11 ~lh ~!"' 11 R11tt1r Pl'l•~I 21 , u: 11:~ charge of the antitrust ~: ~.Rs :~~ l}~'. :~c"~"' l~f-' lf"' li i~::l1rW1 G.:: r· ~ 8: \S.J division said the number of Chmp Pl 12V. 13\~ MecHtrn '3 • ,.. l's •,ocJe•r Atse j '• u11 I • (htncr A 20 7011> Mtrld In '"° 7l'I •d •ton TKll It. Ull refined prOOuct supply sources Cll&nl co 5 s•.4 M*Ver Fr 21;i.i, 'llllt 16 PtKhtr Or .12 11~ 1 8': \ Chem C11 U~ ~\II MllUpar ""' 501.· 17 AES Techl'IOIQ f~ :i.. available to independent deal-~~i1B•~!.! ""' 1s\12 Mp11 G•• 1•~ 2•\t IS i!~.:.c1n_}'J 21tt ~ u 11 h sho ked 1 .-... M'nn Fii) i'9 •~• 20 G~Tc SC:ltn ru * U ers as wn a mar .,, 1661.'J: 176'"? M011u1 11 1r 70 21 1n111rm111c1 1n l'lo9 u ' "··"-· 'd th' Cl l U A lB\1 J9~1 Molex In 3S 3' n T 1\io P uei.;.uu.:. Kauper ~al IS was C ••ept 11 ~~ 11"'° Moort s1 "''~ 731; 23 w~f:'9~!,o 1:f 1 ~.., }. u11 1 .5 due to m-gers and a~ CClow Crp I~ 1•~ Morrl.., U\'r 20~'r 1, MorlHmC .37b l<U' 4 80 ' • .,. .... -oc1C LI 17'Jo ·llV• Motor Cl 9\~ 10 2$ Sii" I ' 1 o 0 ' 'ti · h ind Coml Shr ll 26 MSI Dala S' 6~~ 1111 nc11 i. U11 11..J QUJSI OnS Ul t e UStry. CmwTI P 23 2' NII CnvSt a\Z '\II 1 De iloMtd ~lOS•~f,._ The suit ~ys the agreeinent cont1111 ,. lJ!~ 11'4 Not LIOIV 6~~ 71) 2 icM'cMvt . .~ 2~• Tij Gainer• & Loser• BATON ROUGE, La. (UPI) -Sheriffs may buy deputies clothes for undercover assignments as long as they aren't made by Hart Schaffner and Marx or Hickey-Free-- man, under a blll approved by the Louisiana Senate. Channel Tunnel Cost r-Cou•lni 18 19l!o NI MdlCr I"• ti~ J Comtllc:•llY rt 1~ 41o ff fl1i has four p.rovrisions : Cross o ll'h 19':~ Nt Patent 61/• 6" , MtQ Trlltf wl1 ...__ v. rt I . Cr11lch R ~ s~t Ne.dhm 10 11 , Oliqn011rlC o1 10'Jt-J• " I -THAT COASTAL States b~':1 ~~1:1 ~Ut ~ ~~~ JG 1!'1 ll~! ~ ~;.,~19~1~: !~ ~ . • ~nly M 114 t~ NJ Nil G lllS::o 16* I ~&bric halt ~--~ will sell refmed products from o.rt Dr11 ~ &'14 ~Iii?~ I~ 37't,,) ,.'" ! c R cto r.,.1 ' -\ I HUGH MYNATI 25 Years with Richard's Lido Markets QUALITY -.COURTESY -SERVICE Now ' Repr ... nling)· • • The Senate approved the bill Monday night after adopting an amendment by Sen. Ted 1-lickey of New Orleans stipulating funds could not be used to buy suits from either of the excl~ve men's brands. Continues to Climb · r,., ....... ., re...-:~ fi to Olla Ots llit J\oli NI 1 • • 1 0•'1 COf'll'l'r•I 1 -j its ........... .,...., '""-11i;:iu re nery 0111 c;e~ 32-!~ lll'J • stn 37 _ 31VI 11 oz1tt . cor11 s~ •• 10· . . . OKh Di 9~ lO'' Nord~lr 20'0 10~• lj Am BIOl'Mdlcl ?Vo-Vi. 10~' Texaco Ul aJl"IOUOts increasing 0.COf In •'h .t NWS NIG ttt ~ l ltahlll COl'flm l"-~ ,. f 14 400 ~-Is d this ~lllb AR 411 ff• Noxell Co 14 Clttl!orr " I;... rom , lkU1e a ay O.lhl inn "'1 w. x4~ •1,. 1s H1l'lfl EW . 1! _, I I UNCOLN.£0NTINENTAL & MARK IV Johnson & Son LINCOLN . MERCU RY "Home of th e new car "Golden Touch'' 540-5630 2626 Hori.or Blvd. CostoMMa --. "Adopting it (the amend- ment) will ridicule the bill as it should be ridiculed," Hickey said. Sen. B.B. Rayburn o f BogaJusa contended it is 11C«65ary. "Jfow are ~ going to catch a dope pe\ldle< ""3ring a uniform anr;l a .45 on you r side?" Rayburn said. The TALBOTT Ti~ ... • LONDON (AP ) Cost estimates are rising by the minute as supporters work to m·o v e a ·much-discussed English ChanneJ tunnel front the dream to the construction stage. AN ENGINEERING report due for debate in Parliament ' later lhis week says It will cost $2.125 billion to have the plamed twin railway tubes in operation by 19«>. The tunnel wouJd enable traim to whisk Jl6S811tlltfel s, autos and freight between. @~@@)~@ 44 fashion Island, newport centet 644·5070 ' . London and ·Paris in 2 hours, 40 minutes, less than half the present time by rail and ferry. In 1963. experts !lad talked ol completing the .tunnel in the 1960s, at a cost or $470 million. lronically. high =ts were one reason the British govern- ment delayed --tben. The same argumeit .is being heard now against lhe .tubes. But supporters argue .that, if Britain and France continue to hesitate, it will oost still n10re . · A PARLIAMENTARY green light Is needed fur tl1e project to move forward, even though the Briti.Al and F r e n c h governments last. August e.JP- nounced arragreernent.-on finat- preparalions for coostroctioo to start this year. The next phase is building of tunnelheads and short pilot tubes near Folke s tone, England. and al Sangatte, near Calais, France. During .pr<paratioo of the latest !24 million report by ooe BMtish and one French con- sulting firm, all the tracU· tional agroments were raised against linking the ~WO coun- tries by undersea tubes. And sonle critics came up with a new reason reflecting the times : 'Ille tunnel c8.IT'Ying rmst of Britain's trade wi1h Europe, ll'OO.ld become a target for itell'Orists. ranging from ,the Black September Palestinians to the I r i s h Republ.ican Army. OVER THE DECADES var- ious proposals were shelved, mainly out d.. strategic con- siderations. The British always relt safer behind the large moat they call the English Channel. But this is illogical now that Britain bas joined the eotnmon Msrket, tunnel advocates say. · Year to 106 000 barrels a ~y Dellll!I C :Jt'lio .ov, Nuc:lr Re 2 ?,~ II HoulnOSVI a -7. • ,... Diam (r l l'l•llVI O.kvrd H 1 •Yl 17Mo..,Ad .Oil ,,._ ' in 1976 Ol•m H~ l04t n i-. Oct•n Or !•\Ii SS \li 11 Mtl>ltl'rw ·J 3•4-'A 1. ' Dk ll A 8 ™• :!M. :ktlt'I Ell 1 '1o f '19 !& AVM Cor11 . S ~ Vo -'lbat O>astal States will Olvr1 Sc:I 13 14 • Oc r L';'~ t~a :'Ji E ~~:J:hl~ ~ ~ " ...,,-w,...,.,, crude oil rrom Tex· ~, 1·~-J.1,1\ l5 OOi vy M ll\1 20 lroem1tlon ln ~-~ ..,..... ..... _.... ....., r ......., 7"1o ~ "/"o 71'> 114 •nll.wh w1 34-Vi. rt aco at Teuc:o's option in ~1os U'\ :tS \• 11 001 u .... 16VO ii L.!1lf1Jo;CpCI " ~ >A r.I ....,.. Jons 29~ JO•~ rmont ~• nil 25 Sttrner Llatll lv.-~ ~ amounts increasing ( r 0 m Doyle 08 1114 14 rmyr 6-'.4 1\~ tnd y1an1c ' Dvnkln D 12~ J \1'1"1 NA •14 ~. J; 16 400 barrels a day this year EcOl'I Lall 37\.', 37~ ite C'l) i V1 S1t ~ ' Ed\IC Ex 2'1~ 31V. P1D<!ll Br UV. 6t to 121,000 barrels a day in El "•so -13~ ll'O Pac:c:•r 3'l~ :is·~ 10 Mott Aetitie 1976 El Nuc;tl 5 SV. Pie: Gam ll:U 19\\ • ENrgy c !1h 6 PK L11m lJ mo That T has ,.,...;,.,. EQU S&L. 12Vi 13 P1So 8rd ' 10 I-=.,.,-~~..,.,~~~----exaa> an "'l-"' Elhln A 21\'J 2''h ,..,n OcOl 14Vi: 1~ HEvri YORll; {U,1)-:mlO -O<ftW I -L ~ .... _.-ij Elltc11 In SV. ~ P•ul Rtv 16 l'V. 1toc:l11 tl'tdtd OI'\ the rMr1!et T- O e.J:i.;u ange .. ..,.,."&", ~1uui:: o EZ Pelnt 7 ·~ ~.u1.., ,. sr .. '"' d1y •• .IUOClllltd tr=AS . for ,~·c -·~ oil 'th F•lr WM 6'1'! ru PvtM Cl• 16 16\11 . v ;ttr-uuu ....... 1 '-TtNll:l Wl Ferlot1 Er 2S'M 26 P•CN Sv U:1 1t ~ran o.r. jl Ii I C.oastal states. l't rm er 17 12~~ ~:, '.ta.: :J\' :1 A~kGOro:'c iti• 1 • i -1bat Texaco also bas an ~r,:;rt1tDro 1~ 1,m ~r'~ sl w •~ ·~• s:11n11:111~11 11 1-.: ,. , n.w>on to purchase n--~-1 Fii Blllln 1!¥ 16~~ PJ~llrtn ev Ji~ 2~ ).'i:i"bJ~ Am 12'16.~ ll..! »lo "t'" ~ l1t T•Fln 71 77"" P __.W !Vt 9 Nlll'thKll'IO C if:' \Co r ~ States refi......v at ,.,,_._.., ltl , WstF lli '!lo l1>tr 1nc:1 1 111'.i ~..,11t c 0 "" ~ -.-~ ......... _.,.... Ffotc:o Inc: ' ~ Pl•rr Mk 11\4 11, II 6. +·;u. ~' which hae 8 crude oiJ ~~di!~~ ~~~t ;!~ ~:l •t: 1~ lf~ P9nn 11 SI ' -Mi capacrty o(_ 135,000 barrels • F-1 OI llY! I~• Prof Golt 2~ , Mv•ncn 115· ~, Fr•nk El tVt 10 Procrrrs I~ 15\~ O.Cllnes 3"t" day, Frtnll.t 24 24\.'> PSN Cir 11\'t 11\'J UrKht f!QllCI lfS7 New--Bank-e-.· MUTUAL-FUNDS-lij 'Alliance' Iv"' ,-, ,Fo:I; E'll~ Gr. 6M 7.S.. '"" Fund 1.n '·" ...... ,.. .. 1,fll , ... ~ l'IQ s • I "' l!ATON j • G..., 111 •i Rlntrt '{<t ~· <-'·' to ••· ~"y Pilot nd tllltd ptl-MOWA•D:" 1nu1 Fd 1 .02 17 i"ar l lif "'I"'"~ '8oi::: u.u CH on Mutval B•tn Fd t.t.1 l0.$2 JHen !J' :ll I F<J U t SAN FRANCISCO The Funds 11 ciuoml tlY Gwth F 13.4'0 14.lt JHen D I • 'I Sii 1 ... tA ,t -, .... NA D Inc. Jncm@ 6.13 6.10 Joht'lstn \'' 2-,,l, UDD•ll '""' !- tio, f · t · I --siiec:n F 6.90 1.s.. k•n1 1 lntr, Inv aail'R crea n o an m emat100a Jl/llt 12. ~Ul,... s1c11 Fd 12.n 11.,. '* 1 ·t& 1t.11 •inc 163s !i.l.I banking alliance was an-ADM1aALr17" §~'l~sz ... f:!:~:~ :1 1 1 . j ::l om., ~:t:,;:U oounced Tue9day by Charles f= ;:~ !~~ -{~~ 1.fs•'.:. ::f 5 6 ... 1cul:Ttv1.{. 5:0i ~ De Bretteville chairman of lnwn'I ··~ •,.a.. Ecrf'I" Pr t.•• . . . 11n ti ~· ~:fl 1111117 3.:u il:ji . • Advlw r 4.-· ~ Am 7 M • wt 1 :JI llVft 6 10 1 the board O{ Bancal Tri-state ~~ ~~ 1p 11:31 f~ fr\ ll:M 13~ ' . .:..1 S t°/J.o 6~~!· I Corp., and Edmond D e ~GrFcr .:: !.'°' ::~v 1f·~ 1t. 1o, '·:t s~· 1.1• • ... Rothschild, in the fonn of an A1111•te lj,2' 13~ 111111v F 1'.31 ~· j· l·ll i»" ~ 1'~·.:n ··• lh izat. to -" 400 000 Aloll• Fd 1 .19 1,1 •lrfld 1,07 ,.. kr Giiie ·ij t. 'iintlntl 1o"M au or IOC ~ , Amc•11 F •.ff . Fm Bllrt r.u • n<1mrk ' '· 1rv ,. u ' 1.:..., Sharel of Bancal Tri Stater" Ovn ':n'::,,:m.~~ ''21 .',. L.ft/rfovi·17 S.!7 ~::,,HLD,' r'i.si co.mmon stock to D e i&ND?"··'· 0a~ut'o t .111 i·· ~~· 'l:H 'I:tl -~·rPl'Fd j n t~t'l Rothschild as a personal in-~·111•• 1.¥1 =~ ga11111 11.f.' 1; R"reh 1 .Ji ii"! li•rtw ~A5 I" , ncom 1.'4 ontr• fi z L.lbty Fd .60 .I l"4!f ;t 6.12 ' c, vestment through a whotly nvstm 1~ 1·&5 v ss.c '· 1 • L,. 1n1v -tt t ~1 "•~ " · 1~" sf:c'~ ~ ... 13J ~:~ l~g • ti~ ~ ilS {;~ IH•Att '\,. •. owned corporation to be form-Am Grit! s.61 6.to Ev'"I 10.90 11.tl ~O&lir' 11 1 t: 1'~ 1 :Jt ~ ed. :~ \~~1 : ~ ~ ~ ~~Win 1i1: l'~ t~nbv 12 ... 12.• s~"i:!.., J:rl f:n .,. Bancal Tri-State Corp a Am Mut 1.39 9.11 Strem F '·°' '"' M~I 1•.76 14.76 jlde Fd t 04 1jl , , • AmNI Gr ?.:it 1 SO Tntnd 13.'3 U 1::1 LD All: IOMA l'UWDS .. San Francisco-based holding ANCHOll FINAN CIAL All ., •• S( 1.tn 1·11 $tw 1.•1 """' o aou,: ,.ttOOllAMS: Am 1111 ~.cM j.30 11v 10 •s11 ... company owns lhe &nk ol 0111•1 •.52 •.•s Fin ov" • 16 t.16 end .. r.•• 1-1& .. 1 itt I ,· , • ' . Fnd ll'IV 7.'5 1·)1 Fl!\ Ind •..Jt tuttltln 10,il .g Vffllllr 1J l ' Cahfornia, National Assoc1a-Gnwlh 1.1s .#t Fin inc: s 73 s. u~ In r.?i 0.4:1 !!'"' 1 ,_... 1. , lion. Tbe negotiation sates ~=r '~ '!.lO 1~1J'J Vt 1::~ 1i:~ ~1111f PVf!'13.tt B = 1J·U l,· "' pr' . -sha We Nin 11 .t• 11. INVl!STORS: llJ(Oll'I ,.74 'f '#If Inv 1:li: t ice IS ,.., per re. ~~~ 3.62 • ~11e Fd s.:n s.1• 1>111rro1 .o. 1 ilnv G lj De Bretteville aJSO said that ~·X F l.12 .SS Jt'c:'11 Fi ~~ ,.n ~rr"3'w1 :.oo f II'! I I • • HOUOHTOM· Ill Multl 1.a I~ MAU CDI .H . p Ir• 4. negotiations are underway for ""'nd " 4.u s.as ,, s1 .... r 111 tzi F~ 7.90 1 ... s ".!~:~ • .:~ . the purchase by 0e Rothschild f,~ • s] I:tt "1~urnd0'r.~",~.n ~f11 ",. 1T·~ 1!~ YMt'i" tt · of ·an addittonal 200,000 shares ltc' ~\, 11•;4 '!':'ll1 ~o~~r>e1 I.II Ii;~ '"ct11~· "i!' I'~~ :·1~ or Banca! Tri-state stock from ~ 1 .971 . u Fllnd s.u 5.14 Ml lj I' I Fr lfl( ,;S:, ..... avrllC .29 t.16 Fdn Gr •.SO •.n Ml J . • s. 1•'4. Str ..., '' the executors of the estate or evrt; or 10 •.11 POUND•tts MFD J. I'~ Tl:AOMAN 11 ~ I R I h K Da I flMCt'I HI .l3 9.!J GROUPt ' MCI.> 'i'! 1· Am llld 2..1 the ate a p . v es. BtlKOll 11~7 11. Grwlh S.26 5.7$ M•lft Iv .1 • AIM Fd 1 8..,,.., K 11 ll.2' lncom 11.tl lj.02 Matl'ler l ,1 I ,I Jfit f ' 1 fltrlllllr :· ·-~ F Mtutl '00 •• Mid Am l'fi l il Tl I •D• Dll I t K::1P4n .I~1Z.s1 lou~~ 1~1i~~~" ~~ 1. lj: &1;f fl· ... 1• C d t Pl Off d Br~ 3.21 l.st F•ANKLIN Mii llnG 1 ,, ~ 11Ja ••• re t an e ·~~D~K Otl:OUP• MIF Fd 7~ ,, I ~,..;;t;'OUP• •·• .,, er ·~,,,.,~ '"" "" s:~c •. l:ll I.!! ~:®::·r : j~ r-ill ~ '6?: fr,~ 2~·tt 71·~ ~~ b~~ 11• .gr 1 ·~l ~u' ~11r~ i:·1 1.:u ~= ::n t Nltwlf JS·o' 11.01 u11nrte , .... n Mull Tr' 1 1.tl v11tro p I"' T E D l P . N'I' Vtn .St 1160 Rts t •11 ·G ·°' ~ .. 1nau t .14 9.74 'MR AJ1. •• , 0 ase en ta a"n if!"p;.,. Ill 1!:!h'~l E.~ ,1:,, .:11 "',1,l,' 'fll ')' :::! ~ 11: . II 111 Trln J0,6111.t~ F Ml di! f.33 tli iOrw:i Sr •.t7 S ,.., CIP I enl Sh$ 2.66 IJ.-I' NDS INCP Dlvldn 317 '· rtVf Eq HANNING GltOU,: Prtf Slk ·~ 1· H ·a· UNOSI Comm ''" •.so h~ "'· co Special to the Dally Pilot card account. e~ncid 1~.Y Iii: lmD'lc" ~·ll 17:!' iroc: Sr :: c f n.-.aft~ 1 Jorn Siii 1.31 1."3 P~ 7H JE f& NO L • Heel SAN FRANCISCO -You I u~ J>C!'son uvcsn l have a ~rwth s.26 s.n Garen; 1.Js l ciul~ 't· 113: n ••• con get your cavities filled and BankAmericard account, he or = 'i!i l·r1 B:n 5·~: ~!. I. ,~ lt· 1 • 1 the credit to pay for it on-the-she completes a credit ap-v•n'"" .t.1 1.s OlitOUI" sic : Nll!A Ml t. • 1 " xi3• 'fJ I' I If td . CM~Jll Aiie.-,,-~·" 1.16 N~enl 4, 4. ft!",..lt'lv d.• spot under a program unveiled ~~ca~ °"Qwck a=~e a~~U ·~ C:.l: \i 'i:'1 ~:11! ~\f\1 ~.~ll f'~ 11: 'ii ~,.. " Mi he~ phm, introduced by from dentist to bank, the i~1 61 {:}' ,:Il 8f'll'lr Ind ~ 3 D:·l? Nr:'111~ l .s t lftD Bank of America , offe-rs amount of the bill will be €~.."d 10.n 11.n "rM?LTON Ari' N..i iwtr i . i,. ~ 7. I . I f charged to a special non· 11U.ii>'i~AL. 101 '° i~ ::H 1:!t Ii"' t: . "' f.: rcvo vm.g credit to pat ents or card.holder BankArnericard i;g: I,:~, ,1,:.a ~.~', i:'! •l:.r. • ",unMlt,'I· ,I - dental bills rrom $50 LO $300. It account wWch Is then subj ...... &~rn ,!I ,"ti i;' l '.:! 1jl ~~ 1 • 11, ls a supplerntnt to the bank's ~~ 1ncom '° o.n IOQt l"' Fnd . 1 regular dental loan program, to the .same ch3rges and ~"oi~r o ' :I 11:M ~=-ia:i; ~:~ o c Tt': I ' and will be aval1able here this re~yment terms aa a regular DM~MWL.TH Jmllli c p • r1 1oj·'' p.,I"" . Ba kAm l~...1 l:\llT; lftll Gr !-In .&7 Peu RI" t month. Partlclpatlng is the n er i.;mu account. ~ & 8 l·'' 1.21 tnc 1c1Am 1 ..36 ,~~ "°"'~ ,i Ciilifornia Dental Associatfon In both cases, the tranuc-C'&r.11 !r f3 j:H Ji:. I~ f:l: f: i:n" ~ ~ which has more than 1,000 lion ls completed by fllllng out ::=a: 1:11 :8g 1n~~n 1 ,.::131' 1',.''J" t : •• , __ In Sa I I I omp Fd .•s ti~ nwrfl ,,,, •• Ill n '2i member ~nllll..., n Fran-a s mp e, tear-away sa ea: Ol'IC:l"ll 1·1' .lj ~nv C9 11·1"1 '°" \ I-dralt at ••• ·~ or • ··~· I °"'' lllV ' ·'°I .• n'I G . f ~11111 II •. 1 c ;,,,.u. u-.;: _,,... ~r-.... 18 n..rn 1w '93 j .39 IT'tl I I< .U on 1 '"~'I J·(crc's IJOW the program Will form, The lower patt 'Of the =!111n i:r .,. ~'tr.tr ~O'dJt·i! I•°"'' I t: ft V work: ' form I• a standard dental In-~•.,;.5 ,,,,J ,.:ll i ~krn'i 1 "1 Patient s will be able to stallment ,., •• contract which ·m· 1)1, j:" l:l! ::i,m .. tF,u l:l! o!Sb"' ~Im I .ii t.12 ti:lf Sh , 1.&i Nw t , , receive up to $300 of revolving may be used should the pa· All •00,••T oR 11; N.... • credit In less lhan five tient desire to nnance dental R!f."' "'"'" 'lit 1·1 11C::.~ :I! • minutes via a verification' bills exceeding $300. Credit ap-imr. ~ ttt 1tY J,C~ ~: j · ~~sf~ 1 :fi 1f· telephone call from the dentist pHcatk>ml for amounts above r ;.,hc11 ,:,} ,:M I~..:\ 1j. . ~~~ to the bank. ti the pallerlt has $300 will be a<:ted upon within ~x 5 ll1J li .. 11~:J."•v 1fl s. i~1,.; 1~' a BankAmericard account, the 24 hours. Ir approved. the ~~I ~a' 112. ~1.•1 ~;,. U1 '-"' ~ . amount ol lhc bill~will be bank will purchase lhe sales rv, l• ~.n 1t" '~f\11 •·11 .._.. I~ · .j,,ftru....I 10 his or ~1 -·-d • r.;i 1:1! ,.-n lr•t Ml 1f:ll1· ""'' • , \.'.Ud o""' UTill '-"''" n • I al! M-w 'ij 3jJ l\ltl Fltd 1'4J I 1 V11¥ICI I 11 , 1 t ' -, I ' Distaff Carpenters Janet Huck (left) gets instruction in use of a circular power saw in New York from founder and teacher of Lady Carpenter Institute, Joyce Hartwell. The in- stitute is .graduating its first class of 34 students Thursday. All the women were beginners who knew nothing of carpentry. Miss Huck is a magazine re- porter by trade. Selective Price Controls Probable, Sources Predict By HELEN THOMAS WASHINGTON (UPI) President Nixon orobably wlll go on nationwide television Wednesday night to announce some new economic controls designed to cool boiling in- flation, administration sources say. THE SOURCES say Nixon is expected t'o tum to man- datory, selective cont r o Is :rather than a sweeping across- the-board freeze on prices • . wages, inter~si01ltes and dividends. However, t h e ·sources said the program the President is devising in the face of steadily increasing prices is expected to go beyond wage-prize stabiliza- tion. , There had been · s o m e speculation that one of the ;devices Nixon might use to combat inflation -and at the sa1ne time to reduce the heavy drain on the nation's short gasoline supplies -was a 4- cent a gallon increase in the federal gasoline-tax;- THE SOURCES said it is now doubtful the President will ask for the gasoline hike on grounds it would be • ' t remendously unpopulai:" INVESTMENT Ol'ftORTUNITY , .......... c... Si.6M. ... +- with consumers a~ would be particularly unfair to low-in- come groups. Pushed though he is, Nixon apparently is determined .to so~d out a variety of views on a wide range of possibilities to bring more stability to·the economy. He was quoted as tell ing his cabinet last week that he feels he has three op- tions : to do nothing, to impose a rreeze or to impose selective controls. 11u,, .. ,c.... ......... . ...... -· .............. .. • °"9f' ...... S.. Cal"'* •••I••• •• 01 R I' u, ... .__ .... l14llaa·I HAY ~SHI lllAL TY , ... 6.Ja.JIH ·Complete New York Stock List • . • ' • I ~ " • . • ' . • 1 • • ' . · Buyers Hopeful Nixon Will Act ' NEW YORK (AP) -Tho stock mlliket moved ' ahead in light trading Tuesday as Investors ex· preaed some confidence that President Nixon wu , about to come through with •new · antl·lnflaUon ,..... lnealuree.,. -... ' It's 1 market ol great expectations, hoping ; ~mothlng Is going to !inally materialize," said New· • ton Zlnder of E. P. Hutton & Co. "There's a lot of ' inovement around the White House, con!erencH :.and such, and there are Indications something is :: com.inc aoon." ;': Reports circulated that Nixon would go on na• • tionwide television Wednesday night to disclose : new moves to curb inflation, but the White House declined to con!lnn the rumora. •• • . . .• ... . Junt 197) ' . DAILV PILOT I • • f ' 40 OAJLV PILOT Wfdntsday, June 13, 1973 TOMGH'rS TV IDGffi ,JGHTS KHJ CJ 7:30 -"Ni ght and Day." Cole Porter's music highlights this 1946 movie with Cary Grant, Alexis Smith and Eve Arden. NBC U 8:00 -'-Adam·l2. Officers Malloy and 11"-d catch a klll~with the aid of an unlikely wit· ness whose tale a most costs him his life. . ABC 1a 8:00 -'Thicker Than Water." A broth· '-'-•a.'"·e~r -11"1nd..'11.!~Richard.J,ong,.and..J.lllie llw:is~ reunited by tb-eir wiley father's promise of an in· heritance if t hey run his pickle factory together. TV DAILY LOG Wednesday Evening JUNE 13 1:001111u111 m llil m - (])llOJ .... -laucft "No Si1n of tfl• Crcm" (R) An ancient reli110!Js cross, bein1 'tnnspofted by car from Mexico to th• U.S., is stolen and lanactk b1- 1ins the bsk of flndin1 thl valued object, Btcrt's Back J UCI's Juda Superb In Piano Conce.rto Listening to Dr. Arnold Juda's superb interpretation of Stravinsky's n\aSSive concerto for piano and winds last \\'ee~end. this critic cou ld not hcl wishl~that the Universi· y oc-cau rom1a, rvme:, pro- fessor could have a top flight orchestra at his elbow in any fulure rendition. No slight to a valiant and hard working UC I r v i n e orchestra· is intended or im· plied by that obseivation: they gave of their best and Dr. Juda was the first to recognize their efforts aM those of guest conductor Newell Jenkins. But it wooJd be fascinating to have Juda at the keyboard before, say, the Loe ~eles Philharmonic Orchestra v.jth Mehta !)11 the podium to ensure the ful l\ backing and liaison that his stravinsky most undoubtedly deserved. TOM BARLEY MuslcBor anything out of the ordinary, at least from this critic's seat. But the emuing largo and the conclud ing aUegro-agitato put this perfonnance up there among the most memorable of the 1972·73 season. critic's presence, missed Uic ta rget. Joe has a splendid board to work wrth him: treasurer Marilyn Armstrong of Dana 1 Point, secretary George CUn· ningham of South Laguna. vice president Paul Hance and two publicity co-chairmen - Kris King Meyers of Laguna Beach and Barrie Stannan of Laguna Niguel. ENTERTAINMENT '.,,:· '• Censorship: ·.'. i ,., !f Law Costly ~ ' For Olrlo t COLUMBUS, OIU. (UP I) - An old Ohio· movie cenoorship 1aw, thrown out by the U.S. Supreme Court In 1954, i,, post· ing .the slale $323,226. { t ........ O @@(DA IC WMnnday llcMe: (C:) (90) "Sir C...,. M11· ... Cell" (R) (drt) 7 1 -SUUn Hayward, Darren McCavln, Michael Constantine, Michtlt Nickols. A 11· ctnlli·widowed meardl cloctor, In· tem: on rebui!dln1 het lilt, returns to 1e11eral practice oni, tt fa new heartbreak. "Dan August," a poLi ce series whicfl ·had a brief run a few years back, is being aired again each Wed· nesday at 8 o'clock on CBS, Channel 2. Starring a re (clockwise, from top left) Burt Reynolds, Norman Fell , Ned Romero, Ena Hartmann a nd Richard Anderson. TIIERE WAS nothing about the opening largo-allegro lo suggest that we could expect Juda simply reveled in the largo-scored second move- ment, a portion of Stravinsky that is regarded by this critic and many others: • as most representative of the com· poser at the high w-.iter mark oC his career. Jenkins en- countered a problcn1 or two at this point but it in no way detracted from the delights of this magnificent movement. Tragically, the .J uM concert will be the last with Jack Krefting as the Chorale's director. J ack Md the lovely Judy are reloca ting in the East and this colurru1, with h a pp y me m o r ies of memorable performances in Laguna Beach. wishes them all-the very best in the world. State A'uditor Jo s e'p'h Ferguson says he has '"r'elnC· ta ntl y'' agreed to send--:nte , sum to 10 Hollywood moVie companies for fees t hey paid ,the state between 1951 apd 1954. I Maestro Jenkins and his orchestra wer~ · much more oo c.1111W' " YIH•'• rlthlr OW..W .... ttAlht mn.-.... , ... fllil.el ,.,... m_...., Ill--l:JG (J) ........ "' ..... ID ... ,. Crlffi1 Shew llll -· t:oo II (j) Dl11 Atpst (R) lh• sister Df 1 city councilman is found dead t nd Dan's leadint suspect is tht leader of 1 militant dtlzen's 1roup. m Dnan•t comfortable in D v o r a k ' s Symphony in F major, a work that can not offer us anything of tremendous significance un· (iJ the final two movements of the four scored by the great C2ech . Watergate W ar111up Station, SltO'W~ Old Mc Cartliy Tapes Jenkins and his orchestra splendidly caught the spi rit of Herald Tribune during the the allegro scherzando and the J\.1c:Carthy Era, Meyer said. final allegro molto to close -We have seen very litt le credit go to a man who played a valuable part in UC Irvine's fantastic "The FC1.ntasticks." Maurice Allard. who else, stepped in to show some of the b'llYS and gals how to use their vocal chords and the results rated rthe san1e as the show - superb. Movies were screened {>fWr to public showing in Ollio by..a Movie Censorship Board established in 1913. The • panics paid $3 for each rtel 9f film sub1nitted to the board. .. l\fetro-Goldwyn-Mayer i.1 .to receive $72.954: Univusal, $64,805: 1\1.·enticth Century f<'ox. $ 4 4 , 3 9 S : Paramount, $39,874; Columbia, $K425: • D _, IC) (10) .,., • I ...,.._ .. 1'1rt I (dt1) '57 '-Alan l.Md, Clifton Webb, Sopttll Lortn. Cl) CIS NNs W11t1r Cronkitl 0 tint 11111 Wffl Tt1wtl fB NiM Ef) Ja,antM ............. . By JAY SHARBUTI NEW YORK (AP ) -KCTS, a public TV station lin Seattle, \\lash.. is airing a -n'ar111up a Mm l tfftln Show m..., ... ,. t :!O 0 hllfkl• AMatm "GJKill' show each night it broadcasts Climbinr Scttool" a videotape of that day's flD kl, •• , fl11 '" m JNn111 ClrJM .. alNowla IJ""" Senate Watergate hearings. It precedes the Watergate GI 5lt S.mt show with reruns of selections @I) MucbcM lhllln• from the Senate's Army· QlTbo ........... l!Jllltlt ~II l'il D Clft ff ltll l1n;tt J\1cCartlly hearings in 1954, 1t00 e rn 11 m -11 llwlq t.r IWlm ltO:OD a (I) e. ... (R) Art111e Golonka uith a three-man panel on fU1sb as 1n aspirin& tctreu who hand to contrast those hear· (j) Tnitll « C.11,.11- CIJ Uolo• - becomes the tool in 1 plot to t1k1 • ings with the one currently un- owr 1 nst rt11-cst1t1 empire. .der way, e Mal"• .., u.t D 9 m SEA11CH "A Honeyrnoo11 The 1954 hearings "''ere lo Kill" (R) Wiien in helrm "'"'" televised live and lasted 36 m 11 .... ""' . Clt l .... 11~ ishes lfter an 1tte1119t Is mtdt Oft htr life.on her wtddinr day, her turbulent days. many of them brid&poom lliru C.R. Gtovir to find bitter and tense. A few months UI-"'-bw. after they ended, the late Sen. g1 p 1cw1ww II t• 1llill. a mm ._ Jo.seph R. 1'1cCartlly (R~\Vis.) ......, "Lost Puppy" Second lil111 became the first senator in a .. sltUltiontl It hies for dllldm .. 0 (}) 00 m 0.. llarUllll "Who '------------li(l'llcl to bt Yltwtd ti, tlll whole Saw Him Die?'' (R) A man aoq11itttd ft mlly. In tht dulh et Vinc.nt Th1Jt1(i son is shot while In th• courtroom IE M-a and Thayer is dl1r1e4 1111111 his ES MkiNft .. 19 C......, murder. m Liln' aui. " .. : (Dir) ........... (com) I!) s,.I ltMIK '48-G111 CooJ19r, Ann SlleridaA. 1"_.BWqWNtll lf .... llM•Wll-fBLaMlllllfl tlrs Shiw Nll11 pests. GI YartetJ Cil ....... , Hma IO:JO D Ta• IKl Q Walt TII Tllll' FltMt' ltb Hlllle Q) Malone's KHput "M•m•'• ldtnlity" (R) Irma llber· III llpn Co$ll Comtdi MriH 1tn htmff .rid btc:omn 1 worklnt --..,.m:·-tti)Jl!!'!/jpttb a -' (2lw) "'""""' ,_ lltOO 1111 D III !II C!J -.... PW" (fr•) '3r-fred M•· Cl)(i)Oj ,..... ltlurrlf, Htinry fond1. g OM Sit• ltyeltll (J) T• Td .. Trwtll r&I MllWI DllH (I),. AsW"' tt ~ 0 -I """' ttl 11><1 m T~ w ...... ....., '11iCM & .,.. (mus) '46 _ C.ry CE MM: "De Killlf Is ......,. Grant, Alexis Smitn. [ft Arden. (mys) '5&-.loseph .Cotten. Wendell ~WIW ...... Ctlrl)', Rhorld1 Fleminr. GI TUt lift 11:1511) CIM1111 34 m-m,..., DJ. ll:ildl111 11:3010 ({} CIS Litt MoN: (CJ "Otlty"' aJ Titb h y.., Uh (com) '69-Tom Courtenay. Romy m Adda• fallffr Schneider. 1:00 II ()) IHllf 1114 CIMr Jimmr Durtnte ind Gllbtrt O'Sullivan 1uest. 11 @I !!l 1o11r1., .,.,., e ... c..., 0 (I) (j) (E Dtck C1wtt Bette Davis is Dick's only 1uest. fl'lln'lllll''Tll.1~~ "LOYI AND PAIN.. l llJ "llti FAUSS AND LITTLE HALSY" Ill) All Of HIS Gll&f j~ ,r.-1 ~ SMOllS INClUOIJ.IG ~~.:.~~ ,,r-~~~:~~. ~~· ANAHUM 956.4070 CJ lfj) fr:) Adi• 12: "Htrry No- body" (R) Offlctrs MtllOJ i nd Retd c1lch 1 ~Hle:r with th• aid of 1n unliktlJ witness wllose lit• 1lmost costs hi m his lilt. B Mowle: (CJ ""'"" I Nici Cirf" (dr1) '60--llstlotle Pulver, M1rlin Held. 1----------- m Tt Ttll ... Trwltt D New Comedy Sorin tztOO m ...., ->-• * TH ICKER THAN WATER u rn oo m '""''°' -1~io o "'"""·...., • n. W* Prt1P1r H1llle PaiM alld m M11t1. AdM ~ Ara~ (adv) her 1onf absent pl•rt>oJ brother, '4~11 SM!dm. Vir1ln11 Bruce. Etnit. art r•unittcl by llltlr wily old m Iii Cosbf dld's ~ of •n lnlltritPCt if 1:00 ru a a 0 (j) .... they rv11 1111 pk~ factory toflttltr. Julit Haf(11 Md Rk:h1rd Lonr stir. IBTmi •~--­mn.-'"' m-"'"' m_....,,,. 111 a.1.;;.n111, Wrntfhtf m ~ .... ,....,,.... •:3011 llj m .......... ., - Thursday DAmME MOVIES t:JO D (C) "'11•11 the Dlft...r (dra) '62--Alte Culnn.u. Oitk Soaaide. 10:00 CI) (C) "T1le ClptM'1 Tlblt" (com) '~John Gr1pon. Ptm Cummins. O "jft Atttd:" (dr1) '53 -John Aj1r, A.idriry Totte1. U:IO a ~ltlN ea ... r (•d'IJ ·s1-Lo111t Reynard. {C) .,....,...... (aft} '52-VillCI Edw1rd1. 1:45 fl Mb: (C) "'Qu111ttz" (dfl) '57 4rtd Mdurr11, l>ofoth)' M1lon1, Joltn 61rin. 2:00 ID ""'""" Dow: "PrillCI .. Folts," "Rttvrn If JICl SIMI" 3:10 II Mow6e: '1111 Stltl Clnr" (dra) '614il0fp Monta:omtry. 1:00 ID "hrldbe M.,i" (eom) '61 - Hu10 Haas, Marie Windsor. 1:30 c;J "Joh11ny C..I" (mys) '~tn· ry Silva, Eliz1btth Montcomf11. ltOO (JJ ·-...,.. Cone!. ldr1) '51-Kirt Ooutln. ONllOI' P1f\1r. ®l (C) ....... Is • , .. ,.utt.r Wo~" (c:om) '68-0trid W11ntr, l :JO 0 "S.OJ , Cont Clltfd" (1dw) ''2 -R1tp11 Brrd. Bela Lu1osl. 4t00 11 ltl ""'" Dkl" <•"'> '56-Grtrory Ptck, Orwn Wtlln. 4:30 rn -.. 11M11 - KOCE, CHANNEi, 50 Orange County's UllF television station, KOCE·TV, has sche:tuled tile following special programs today. Dl:lalled listings or Channel 50'.s programs are carried Jn the Daily Pilot's TV Wffk each Sunday. '100 Ml•tw ... _. Ntl•,...,.. ... !Cl f fvc:•llolltf ••ri.tv IOt cidlClr..,.,. P!oilM 111 flirtd ..... , •. •:1IO •Mdl'k c.,....... ICI SCl11e•"". tor pr~ to !tit l\lllt ol humor •nd mwle. S:OO ~ '"'"' !Cl Educ•IJOMI •N mwlul ..,.,19ry fol' orlrMrV •!loot cNldtw1. 4:30 Tiit Ch.I-•• Wtl' ICI Debut, lntrodllCll()l'I IO ball<: pflltMOph'f' IMl'ltnd Clllflne cul•lne •l'l<I culrt.1r•, plus 1n1 .,.tic Ultr,tlb, NOW PLAYING RESERVED SEATS 011 SJle Daily 12 'Iii 9 MARLON BRANDO .itL rpai1s lx.,J ""Uorf~•(lli~ • 1•4DM•nto U111lrd ~~l1il~ MO H. JHRU IHURl . 8 P.M. fRIDAY 7 I 9,45 SUUROAY 1-7 I 9:45 SUNDAY 1·5 I 8 All SEATS S•.oo W-DAYI l:•J UT. I JUN. l·Ji»l1tJ "IAnlr ,o. PLIN(T Of AP(5" ' 1.10:11 P,G, f.&f,. WN. J,~ · 7·111111 "llG JAi((" Joo1• .. -~-........ .::-=·=-·-ilu ~:; .. ==,.,·- / 1&f. I SUltrl. ~ilJ.J:lM:4J "Urrll CIGARS" 11'.q. t WllOA fl 7·10111 UT.• klN. ltlOJ1JS.J1ll ·I012S "51Sl(IS" It ' . ' -t :W .... ,.,..,,. f() lAM!ltki"°" Fl"""J Aduf11 Mid •'""*'" lofl•"ll'IV 1>Wf1 IN'--•'-~ llf~ •r ll1t1 lo.I"*'-lfl1f ~' .... ,..,~ Fetf ... 7~00 Momtw'Mlf (Cl "J•tl '" !tit ROlll!d" SWlfllll)g trlbult to I lg &•I'd Er•. llollM bJ Cht llH Cntmoll". Lo• AllOfl•• TIMei llllM'lllnmtnl H llor' 1100 Mft~ TMllltl' IC! v~"llr f •lr -"Ve"Utl V•nlltf\lm" Ptrl V -... _ t ;OO Al'll#kM Of~•Y IC} Oebul. "Olf to the $.-Agtfn" Docvl'l'ttfll•l'\I II" Ille 11,,._ttvi. ol Ille .. tty Mtrlltt'I ""°""" IOflO. (.0 '"'"' , _____ ----~-- quarter of a century to be censured by tlls Senate col· leagues. "WE'RE N o T spending their season on a triumphant ' much tim e talking -just a lit· note. It has been a good N. 0 'Tango ·tie bit at the start and a little season, we might add, but this bit at the end to put ·it into concert. \vith the exceptiop of For Peru perspective," Meyer said. Dr . Jud a ' s st e I ,a r performance, can not go ointo UPI United Artists, 21 ,292 : JµCO Te\cradio, $19.TTO: Waroer Brothers, $18.693: .JnrlYQ P£c. lures. $5.742. and Imperial Pil1ures, $2,272. ,., "We're reaching a new au- dience which has never seen the i1cCarthy hearings," says Richard Meyer. g e n e r a 1 manager of KCTS. "The young poople who have called up are just completely fascinated. He said the kinescopes of this critic's record as their l:.IM A. Peru ( ) the Army-McCarthy hearings best offering. Because of possible censorship ,.,.'Pl' were suppHed by station problems. the fil m "Last IL!I.~~ "AND SOME of them have never even heard a b o u t J\.fcCarthy, if you can believe it. .. Meyer said the A r m y . McCarthy program of KC"J'S starts an hour before the videotaped \Yatcrgate hear- ings. The 1954 heari n gs originally were recorded on kinesoope but were transfer· r ed to tape at KCTS, he saJd . The panelists on the pre- \Yatergate program he said. are himself, Bill Shadel and Fendall Yerxa. Shade! and Yerxa are professors of com· munications at the University of w asbington. Shadel was CBS' chief corr gressional cm-espondent a t the Anny-McCarthy hearings and Yerxa the city editor or the now-defunct New York KING-TV in ScattJe, an NBC CHORDS AT RANDOM Tango in Paris" will not be fftli t h. h found them · sho"'n in Peru. a . a e w ic lll Hearty conuratulations to Joe th base. ment I ·1s ~ .. d· ·-e· A spokesman for producer e o 1 ;:, .... lrOS. Wood, who was -ntl" ~-·d J broadc · lb ............ -• Alberto Grimaldi said he was i 1n.: J ea ..,. asting e e1-~-.1 ..,._.;..1ent of t h c' t he · ba k lo ba k ~~ ., • ...._. withholding the film from wo armgs c c Laguna Festival Chorale. l£e countries where censorship came up when the Watergate takes' over ~·hile the group is problems could occur. hearing first began, ~teyer putting the finishing touches to 111e film was banned earlier said. its final concert of the season. in Venezuela wi~llout censors "Everybody here was ask· Schubert's "~lass in G" and even seeing it. It also was ing, 'Is this going to be another Vivaldi's "Gloria" will be of-banned in Colombia and the kind of McCarthy hearing?'," fered on a date to be an· Ci!nsorship board there was he said, adding that his col-nounced by a choral group dismissed because it approved leagues also ma de com-that has always aimed for the "Tango" "i lhout pr i o r parisoos of the i.ssue of ex-stars and has never, in this government approval. ecutive privilege then and l:i===========~==========;I no~~ menUoned it lo Eric TOGETHER FOR THE FIRST TIME Bremner, KING's g enera l manager, and said things began rolling when Bremner mused, " •rt see~ to me that we carried this (the Anny• lifcCarthy hearings) some 20 years ago ... " ' ' ' -~---~j SUR\~ l ID 0 NEWPOOT BEACH lN!tAMC'f IQ UDO 1~11 ~·1 qJSO Cowtht11011S Sohtrdoy ud Su11doy froM 2 fli11'itli ---M ...... Wttcl1•d9Y 1 , ... 19tll &' ~lWPOllT 54t•ISSZ Ht'l4 O'ltrt Clint 111twtocl "Hl(fH .. LAtNS Dlt l,Tf:ll" ''EX TA E/lr!E CLOJ&·UI"' UA "°"'" COi i ! Clfltmo O•llY "''""' OvN!Mr A.cl¥tfl!vftl "Tht 1"'911 Tl,.<" (II((, St111, • &Hol.I -•t- ll:4J IO "llYO Wiit' 2100 p,m, 11,00 : Wlllft Do1lll" l t!ll 11'1 Ct lor l Cit) GtN H1<k11Mll E. &11rtltl"e ''Tiit PM.WO.. Adwtlllll< .. ' • -~-"Ve11ltl'llrlf "°'"'" 8oth Ctlorl (f"GI ;:~ ltlll Color! !GI '" ' . " 11111!!1!'!'!!!!! ~%::::::· =; UA ·:" ll!:I01m City ' C.011• Q MmH ''TAADEll HOI N" "°""' ll•llt "COlllCY" ,,0) ;: .. All... ••llCl'ffl 9}.: °""~ ..,,._ "' ··::: IC•!Mrifle ... , t • -, .. , ~~ .,...., ... _,._ .~· "Cffflll ~:~ 11(_1..,... .. 111c ... r1•1 .. : '• Dally ftl<, sv11. a Ho1.1 11:30 .. 1:0011.m. 11:00 ..... VlllC9111 '"'' ''THIATlll 0111 &LOOO" ''MEPHISTO WAL n " ""' Ill Ctlerl (ti) """' '""'*"" .. • "L ln L• CIOAllS MOI" " 'ISISTl ._S,. &•Ill i. c111r '"' •Two v-.. In th• Making .. Oneolth• o .... t••I Wiid Anlmal Adventu-Pllm• olOurTlm•I" A GLCllff ffltRMATIOfolAL FILM 'IVMtd . .wl Olt9Clted 1i71l'kfllid tltftl" t MA.!UTIO INTEJIHATIOfolAL RELEASE. ST ARTS TODAY CITY WIDE SPECIAL SHOWING -ONE WEEK ONLY 2ND FEATUR E AT MOST THEATERS pLUS "BLUE WATER, WHITE DEATH" So•rch tor the Great Wh ite Sh8rk. OllANOI -l tlllllum Dr1¥t Ill #'J -~.,. .. COJTA MllA -UA c .. 11 MtN #1 -S4HJt 4 l'OUNTAIN VALLI'( -11Wftl•111 V•llO't' t t -IJ0.1500 l"OUNTAIH VALLI Y -l"Mlfllllfl Dtl\ot In -,124111 1•11 DI ... l"rwy,, lreollh11l'll 1Soulfl) LA HAlllA -I • ll•tltltll '4111•fl -ftl ... lJ OtlANO• -UA City Clntmt :"J -l»•nl STANTON -St111""' -"4-IUJ l inc•lll AN, ..... , , ... , 121-4011' ' ClMIUN'OOI .• HIGH PLAINS Dllml If kUlt --....: YOU'LL Lll(I MT MOnt8 OOWU CIM WfWOOl .UIOWI HIGH PLAINS Dltml 111 ., + JOE KIDD 1N1 , ,;.. " TOM SAWYll Ill . ; GIOIGI THI DOG 111: ., ,,....,..,,.1i..1.•n • fl••ch •1 .. 11. & Morbcu l"'1l. 171·1 z. "°" 11¥\0l TU.DIR ffOIN 1"'1 . ... Uncol<\A• .... •rot •I lll>Oft .S11·2t2J. UIClll SU. M:IUll! ,....,_. •., NIPTUNI fACTOI • ~ CULPl'"I CAMI CO. f"1 Sanl• An• '••rway n••t C~•Pm•n Ava. .55&.7022 • • ........ ·~ -• ...---,,_j .. • WtdM,da.y, Ju~ 13, 1973 t ~ngmar . Berg1nan Edges Shyly Into Spotlight ... '111 LOUISE SWEENn ~we-......... I CANNES, Fr..C. -One "' he .... -111(-...at he C.... P'tlm Festival was from a lllm but !run a esa ooderence. It was the ppcarance ot s....itsh dlreo- lnglllll< ~!Illy, the f,.Uval. Tht man who Ills .-some ot the moot .,... tlonally vlolmt films ot -Umo is geoUy looldac. with an, ncodlnc hllr ...i c1att: e)'& He ii dreaed ~ .........,lyina~ -oportshirt, -... • 1111 windbreaker. The audience o f in· Ibey know how to behave when ting "Cries and Whlspen" had ed up I thouaht It wts 1 sec-He also apoke oo the dif· tbey go to direct 1 movie. brought to hi:s own personal cood., and 1 am feeling that ferences between his work in Jl"esthal'1 11Grand Sal.Le" or mam tbcat«, done up Uke a ,..._ro Gorden, w I t b grass, dozeoJ of hydrangeas, fJ:r'"· llaploo6, grass and d'Alllrshubbery. t have a Wg collectlon of reflectiooa on de a th, he death ls euctly that sort of Sweden in the theater and films myself, Includlng Ford answered : experience, to J have lO!lt the tihn. ··oh. I am just one and Fellini and Bunuel. I could "WREN 1 was younger 1 whole terrifylng feeHng about person and I try to use all my list »-30 directors I admire was always afraid of death deeth and what happens a!tcr· powers in my efforts for both . BERGMAN WAS asked to and have learned from.. I don't following me like a shadow, 1 ward ••• " Film.making is very relaxing, .. DAILY PILOT • lttilllir' ig, &Pl*abttisl•e, at GDe . of his rare encounters wltb the ___.. Bergman appeared w i t h three ot the~ f,... his .film, "Criea and Whbpen, .. l• shoyn oot ol competltion at lema!IOlllll 'iourDl\lists was almost as nervous 's be when the questions began in the graod-.. ne,-the-huge film theater at the festival where alfidal -'"' -The C<llllemice .... held .. cnmment on ihls~allltudes feel we directors are some was thinking ol it every day, He was alJO asked whether working in theater is very about directors _ lY s it true sort of ~putniks in outer and there always uisted the tt was difficult for him as a unrelaxing. You can live with that be felt John F was the space, I thin~ we all depend on question or what would happen man to make films 1bout it more than with film. Jn directmr "par excellence?" He ~c~ other, live togeth~r, aod to me after death, would it women ( ' •Cr I es and fllmmaking you make about began slowly, with pauses. "I ~p1re each other. It lJ very seem an enormous feeling of Whbpers." "Persona," "The three minutes ol film every· have •.. my favorlt.ies . . . unportant.' . one of . t b e looeliness after death. Then I Passion of AMa," ' 'Th e day, of the real film. In u e-m one-' of them. 1:ite-chai:,.,acterist1CL.of-1D0\1les.-a5-had-a-smeU---raUon,...and~IJl!!ITht,:':_' ;:." a Silence" He theater we just rehear;se a.10 RARE APPEARANCE movies more than anything, r art. was under anesu.;. (here be answe 'iiiie y,-saymg "f eeks<1n-dit-its-noh'ery-good· --0 1...:ctor-Birf""min•---'----4-l am a passionate moviegoer. 1 Some of the quesliom asked stumbled and II.id "very~.. like very much the way Agnes we say perhaps it will be bet· ---------- .. ' the IUte of the Palais des blow' directors who never go were as probing as Bergman's plicated word"). I was sleep-Varda (director cl. ••L e ter tomorrow or the next day. -~'II!("· to movies -I doo't know bow own films. Asked what direc-tng five hours but when I wak.· Bonbeur," "Cleo from to 5 But In filmmaking there is 7") handles her actcn. I thJnk the enormous pressure that's ~'i{I £ sbe has no problem working so fascinating ond t<rrilyingli:ilr:a! Ill • with aotrePes. But I most of When l 'm working on a film SUlflNG IY HAL JIPSIN all woold Uke to work with there is oft.en great stimufa· "A SEA FOR YOURSELF" good actors cl. all sorts, sexes, lion the demands of making it and ages." are just a part of the film lt'i All Colllpl•t• Now & ON SOMEWllAT the same everyday. But I tell you as .a lt1 All T•"'lflcl l•t'41 fGI' Writers Strike Perils TV Season BJ lllCK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -It's : op.ly June, but the television 'ne~worb are worrying about whether their µsual grandiose !plans to start the new fall l·:aeason with a bang are going " ' to he -Ible. . process of making, I prefer dates for their various weekly have noticed that the network subject be said, "I am sorry the theater work... 7:10 " t:Jt lealt 1 ... 1 .. the network is Slying it matter bow A.BCTV decides figures, a.s of now, that its · to handle the start ol the re- autwnn kickoff will be delayed mainder of Its series, this one vacation-Orne entries. One is has already begun weekly that we do not have more. i"~~~~~~---"1~~iii:iii tempted to contemplate bow rerun1 of the old series "Dan women directors. It is craeyll CBS·TV'a {lnanclal coffers August," wbicb. stars Burt that 99 percent of all directors might beneflt fmm thi9 hick of Reynolds as a small town are men. If we had more ABC-TV may be ~PPY. 00 summer serie s production police detective. women as directors they could the the one hand that it has no outlay. give us so many interesting -.Muction -i.1ems with -a · impressions, so many great t-"" "'""' -1N THE PASI', one might J sz• and "inte . . of series like this, which takes up also consider, CBS-TV im.. UTY •ts resting (vtews) a sizeable chunk of its prime bl " them, just as women poets time each week. But oa the ported such nota e summer and writers CaR give us in mini·series 81 "The Six Wives other hand, If the netwO<k haa of Henry VIll" and "1be Life 'Throat' :n literature. I would Uke to , .. to start some of its other of Leonardo da Vlncl.,, Al any " at least 50 percent oc mOre series later on a staggered does women directors!" s a Id rate, the network have at will proceed as plarlned. several weeks or so. Result: ~ J'outh Coa st Repcrtor;' Hlit..O O\/Ellt t TWO BRILLIANT SHOW91 "IN. THE MIDST OF ·LIFE'' A zeily, '""9it M111lcal! ---"THE CLOWNS" A Slapstick Symphony of Mime, Music aocl Lautltler_ Wodallday & Thundoy 1827 NEWPO RT BLVD ., at Harbo r _. pie· "'"'"" 1be •!led ol the wrllen' 1trlb. Some r future lftPllllTilng bas been ' up In the air. And getting a new vklto aeason off to a carefully planned -1, lull of stra t e1ic nmnatau pro- r•mot.ion (which requira cer-- •talnty In the program scbeduJ. THERE HAS been talk in the video trade or t h e possibility of starting the new season with some series that would be ready for airing, and then following later Jritlt -that are behind llCbed· ule. For example, some lhows are produc:ed by independent firms tbl.t agreed lo terms with the writers. In addition, there are series with stockpU.. ed scripts, wblch means they can work ahead-until the scripts n.in out. basis, the initial, overall, new.' least le'9el'al excellent sum· p• b h Bergman, precipitation some season lineup impact will be mer ~--m· volv;n• -..a-.. ttts urg cries and whispers of his own _.. ._ ~-. the d" l11i.nneli0ft/AHMVl!lons ..._1J4J I P.M, C11rtll11 diminlshedbyhavingaboten--~'"~~·u~1enc~=•·:__ ___ __!I~~~~~.;....;.;....;.;...,;.;...,;.;...,;.;...,;.;...,;.;...,;~.;...,;.;...,;.;....;~~~~ -lt plans to move the week· try Uke the football games ly public allairs program .. 60 PITl'SBURGH (UPI) -1be b e g I n n I n g somewhat in--Mimdes" fn:m , e9ri1 Slmday Allegheny County grand jury dependently, even with some evenings to prime t I m e bas returned. a 14: • count other shows ready for airing. Fridays for 11 broadcasts ind.ictmeot against T o p a r · Ing), Ill important lo tho 1net.worb In stirring viewer in- •tirlll for the season ahead. '·' Al the moment, NBCTV is 1 P!tnnlnl to pootpone the start Of' Us trn.74 seaaon, which "'ea. 9Cheduled to begin Sept. 10. And although television ~meprtnts can change as rapidly as Chicago weather, Over at ABCTV, there ls a unique situation involving the network's highly popular Mtn- day night pro football games, which are scheduled to begin Sept. 10. The-word thus far is that this lineup ol glll'les is not go ing to b e changed-which means that no AND mEN there is the starting Juoe 29. 'Ibeaters, Inc., of Los Angeles, situation noted by the show -And, beginning July 8. it whim leases a downtown business newsruiper "Daily will offff' a ti.week series, theater for exhibiting the X· •· r ated film "Deep Throat." Variety," which reported an "CBS News Retrospective," eucadve as sayblg many composed of 11 e l l • k n o w n The finn must face b"ial by · spcnors want to sell 'their documentaries prestnted. by jury on charges of showing an products early in the fall . the netwcrk in the 1950s and obs'cene film because of the M for more immediate up--60s. These programs will be showings of th e movie from coming programming, ABC-seen in the Sunday evening Apirl 25 lo May 10 and one ~B·. F TV and NBC-TV will put on a time slot being temporarily charge of obscene literature. l~ ' en, Morr; ... , arouk numher of new vacation-time vacated by "60 Minutes." An Judge Loran L. Lewis ruled r ~ series, and there are always executive at the network says, the movie obscene. °'"i various summer specials, and "We hope the {CM News If a guilty verdict is P A d W • sometimes unexpected live Retrospective) series w 111 returned, Topar \'VOuld have to ~ at.sy . war . inne ... s video happenings like the become. regular part ol . . . pay $2t,500 in lines, $t ,500 on -• ' Senate Watergate bearings summer programming." each count of an obscene ex· t . , • (whose television tenure is in· , Among CBS--TV 's other sum· bibition and $2.000 on the f..: LOS ANG~ {AP) - A by bis-.:...owner and trainer, J\1oe deflnite). But, unlike ABC-TV mer season ideas, you may obscene literature charge. \fat, followed by a cat. follow· Di Sesso. Tralntr Robert and NBC·TV, CBS-TV saysr1•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiil l J ~ by a doe trotted off wtth Martwick accepted b Morris that, at this point, it does not i o.e· sWuettel Wt the American and Carl Spitz. owner and expect to have new summer Cotun.t.o. Pict11ru pruc:nu umw Amociation's 13rd an· trainer, accepted fo r FID"OUk. series because of the writers' ROSS HUNTER'S M,isiul~af Paby awards broadcast strike. ....... mE WINNERS"""' acceP' cm ~ <Yil!l/R\l"?)l!JW~ . '•, n -.~~:· _ his __ , ted with gOod ...,runal13blp by It seems curious that CBS-~ L1 'l..nJ\l::!ill~..,.. ua• -,_ ........ -.:vi:11..1 other TV maintains it is not able. al ·~-far his__,_,,..,_ in the ncminees. Hardly a .MiiacborBURT&ACHARACH · L~ • ...,HALDAYD I • .:..--' ~':.~_~.. growl d n:s::ntana• was letil lhu.s far, to come up with I / "...,.. .,....._.., uai new summer aeries al the ....-.:um-. ~mue "-":DWUSMUT fGt '~~dlecmwon.aspede.l beard. same lime that NB<rTV and EXCLU SIVE •, attv -In Ibo We-Patsy Is an _,, I« ABC-TV are announcmg· air "T ' ~~-Animal .,,_, Star ol ENGAGEME NT >Coritnmdolo ..... y. '~' .,,,.~,.{;;,.;;·~~~~~~~~=:iJ o •tLY2 00 7 -10"' -:1 f,ara* the q won tor ta the Year and for ~loiroif1: ~ : ·•=-G · =-· : i:lieri,._,,. In an epbode ot Animal Television Star ol the ~ · -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! '1!IJ.c•• .. ...,.de." _v-~·-~--'----~ ';~-. ~ PATSY awards •·'I' 1.terttldl)', taped &lnday night ~. -::'..::t" Nl!W MUSICAL VIElll:SION bef«e a black-tie-.,..,. at """""' "Tom Sawy•" IGI --.U.:"1-U!Lh .A CtNIUOMf JO, . •.J(NXT..TV, waa • lltmoraus wu11 JtflllwT Wlllttbr ~air ...... delplle lbe -all •iif:llii DOlllll !! I ...... ilt......i iiltbeir best f\SI. .. ~~~ --_:__. L.;,J • .J NO ··-~lll:VID sun "CAMll.OT' "" "On A Clear Day" Betty WbMe and Allen I.- -of the """'100lly. tiiey Jmes, Barbara ~F.Jdon, Julld ""°"""· Gr<11 I lonio md Ted Kntght as ~pi:•s•1. The Patsy awards, the dilnal equivalent of the >Ottdn md Emmys, are for t1be -· -and pro-·11ueer1---ale rih lbe A In ~ proper ..... r-e handling "' animal& ... allil otf <WTl<l'L r" :Ben'• sward was accepted "fUZ:Z- (PGl JID 11• Wllll Liu Minelli "CABARET" and Diana Roas "LADY SINGS THE US" • , . .,.,,,,,, -r::t..uJ.• CtNIUDME ll ii:. '-~--<"7"". -:-.:.-=r~=.., _ .. -.. S f4D1UM ' '.',' 1o. ..oll:"-"l'"·Y.:U.1>-IJ '1'~ _. .... ,. -".l!Olo STADIUM •J ,~ ' .. '-'' !•XJ f\~. __ ,,,, --a.r • "llRy Jade" IPGI ... "A Flslful of Dollars" ''T"-"• of lloocl'' ... """"'ihlers of Salao" __ .... , + ~i;;iiii:iii:iiii:::;:.,":.1::1.._W!!-',.:.!'~ Deotti" IG1 • .................. Of n. .. ,. .. ,., SIAD/UM J.:... ---~!!..l;O'-W.!:ll!.• _,,,, -···· •• "111e LM C...._. .. SIAD/UM J :~; '-.41;•\Ht"--1;.Ll.hL ... ;l'JI --~->%'>""""' ....... , .. JIOOGDtS_, H_,MMEllSITl.J\"S ~ ....,;,.,, .d ,,g:-z;~ ~;-'OJJ.f>J~~-- -•utANDRE\VS · """"""'PWMMER r.-RK:HARD JIAYOO J ... _":.•.~::-.::~·~! E°LEA:'llR PARKER::::... I.'"='°~ - -· I -· I -· I ._,.,. (Iii 0£R'l'WlS£ RCIARDRJX;f"Jt5 <ECARll.'i~l\1ERSITJ:i ll • f.JIN"~ll.EH~N ..--.............. -.. ......... ,.....,A<,,i.~-. --"""''"" .. "•"l•·f-... -....-...i--..J t,,.-.. ., .............. ..J--•··-lfll-"""""-·-c--·-~TI'.IDJO· Cll1Jl•lll:lnll IGi--~ THE ONLY ORANGE COU.NTY:__:R=--U=N• LAST WEEK! · .:rrim.u: ' , I • : Mllfl SOIJT" Of SAIOI OllGO IW'f ALSO CALL 646·3266 fOlr~nB Y'llJElilll\l 111111( PRESENTED IN 70 MM & = • Khedvle • MON • .fll.• 7 I 10 P.M. SAT., SUN.• 1,4-7·10 ,, -TOM LAUGHLIN :DELORES TAYLOR ·•-c""' HtlWll """""'"nw.:.,,.lttlSAOM!lll · ,,._1tlW:l'GlSl).ll • ......,1tl t ,._ , ....... ~, .. c.-.-~·llCllllCl~ IN! -.... --.-·-...... m·-c--c-- MONDAY ·THURSDAY • 7 .9.11 FRIDAY· 7·9·11 SAT.· 1.3.5.7.9.11 SUN .· 1·3-5·7·9 16" RECORD WEEKI [ .. Pf •X:-· .• ~-,..\ • • • • • • •• • • • • • • < l\l \I\! •\HR .. ~ ' ·1 I• \: ' ~·A~~U~ i>l AlAt.,.1) 'tl"•A •,.1 t)A • '<1?4141 :1 • • -' • I I\ 'l I 0 I I I - • \ , . ' • . ,, - ' • ... • ·-· . . ' . •, • \ _, 3J DAILY PILOT Wtdnnday, June 6, 1973 . Wednesday, Junt 6, 1973 ~~-'-~~~~~~~ PILOT-ADVERTISER J f DUNTON FORD'S 561h YEAR Serving Orange County , T 0 'N.' . . BRAND NEW 1973 PINTO 2 DOOR SEDA .... I WITH THIS AD ONlY YOU MUST PRESENT THIS AD AT TIME OF PURCHASE YOU CANNOT PAY MORE THAN · B.RA.N Q NEW 1973 .MAYEIRICK - -2. DOOR SEDAN 320 CID, 2 V-1 fYI. •"fine, Collf. l"'i1Non C.t~ Sy1t.1, AM lodlo, delua• burnp1r 9rwp, tinted 1'-''- - 1600 cc 4 fYI •ftflM, 4 ~ •fldonl tnlnL, C.lif. hiiu i911 Sys--. llft. {ll1 0W17S3Cll)1S.J1 '99 TOTAL DOWN PER MONTH , (ll91fl ll19t)9SSt '99 TOTAL DOWN PER MONTH PATMlNT, O.A.C. ........... ,,...M. ....... _,,.. __ .... 7J...._ ................ .,,,.uii11t1w4I-. ....... ,.,....,n.t17t1.11•.~'-.......,,....,,-n .._.,.,,...,.. .. ~..,w.-,,nc.n s1111.1i. w-..-. '7l lb-..,.... lllllC8ftMI un 1i.iN. BRAND N EW 1973 FORD LTD $ THAT'S RIGHT FOlKS. , .$99 OVER FACTORY INVOICE PLUS $90 DIALll PRIPARA· TION, FACTORY· RETENTION Fii, SALIS TAX AND LICENSE. THE FOUOWING CARS APPLY ONLY: PATMINT O.A.C. Sfth Jltll .. ,,....$71.1S k-.1-,,....1Ml •'71 li-.1 ... "-tdw;tti111.,,..•l'lllt"'&a - o.t. .... n""· ,OC. SlS1t h•d . .ii f11111111 a.,......_, 7J .._,"if,_,..,... 11,.,. ..J.. flll .-11 pric1 ii 1114&.20 Mct Ms tu. '71 lie-AHINll. ...afn'MI Ult l:l..2~ ' BRAN·D N,E:W 1973 ' ·GALAXIE 500 COUNTRY SEDAN WAGON 351 CID 2 Y Y-1, •ir cW., r•li•, CCMI--• ....,,, WSW tirM, lint•4 9la11, wh••I cav1r1. (.JJ62H1S406S) '99 TOTAL DOWN PER MONTH IGALAXIE SOO's I TORI NOS IFORD LTD's Air cCMMfit~i"I, Mt.. 3S1 Cto 2V v.a, tintM 91a11, 11a.1s "'''" •h i t tw a ll tir11 , •I~. (lJ74411ff23)1 4$6. $99 TOTAL DOWN PER MONTH PATMINT O.A.C. , 5" is ....i .._.,,_, Sllt.17 11. ..... _ ,,.t. w..-. '1J .._ & .. .._..,..._,,,,tMJtt...41- .._ ... ,.,... ...... tsS7'. '' iMl. _. fi--,..--.. '11 ~ "If ,_,..,",_, -WI ... priet ii Ml7'.St i..cl 111111 tu. 'JJ U.-. ANNUAi PllCINfMl IAft 11""- fO Pass Sta Wagon V·8, auto. t~ans·., factory air', power s· .steering, ~er JEisc) brakes, .power windows, radio, heater, 'whitewall tires, tinted glass, wMel covers, luggage rack, low 'miles, save No. 'l01C~ ·1970 Country Squire 10 Pass Sta Wagon V-8, auto. trans .• fa ctory air conditioning, power . steering, pcr.ver (disc) brakes, radio , heater, whitewall tires, tinted glass, wheel covers, lug- gage rack, low miles, extra clean No. 511 AYL . '$ 1970 FORD 4DR. Sedan YI, 111ta. tren1., power 1t11r· i"'I, r •d i o, h11t1r, tint1d tl•11, low mil11, 111c1ll1nt cond., !602DFC J $11 99 . 1_973 Continental Mark .1v q FFER VOID AFTER MONDAY, JUNE IT, 1973 :_1961 DATSUN Pickup 4 speed, redio, h1•ter, •hit1w1lls, com•• with cemper shall, extre cJ1en. fVGYl06) ' 59 99 1966 CHEV.·NO,VA 2 dr. H.'lr. 6 cyl., 1uto. tr1n 1., red io, h1 et1r, 111tr1 good condition . fTAY-46'4 1 ~899 PATMlNT, O.A.C. • '" .. ~ .. ,,_.s11•.13k....,_,,...._l..ct.•'71.._lel.._. ....... .,,,.ll'lllltt.r41-. ......... ,,... ,.let 5'11.24 Ind ... ..._ tt.,n.-. '71 ....... ii,..,,.., .. ,.., ... ,,.._.,.,.. •'411.14 Ind ..... -..1i ._. ...u.u. NIC9fl'IOl 1Aft 1l.2N. l971 'Pontiac 4 dr Sed: ~ V;S. auto. trtns., poyter st~ing, power (disc) brakes, radio, hea ter, Whitewall tires, vin'y1 roof ... tinted glass, wheel covers, low rililes, extra clean truly a melody in metal ~424FOI $. ' .. . • • I • !198!l Camaro '350 SS Cpe .. · 'V-j, ' speed, ~r $ . • steering. radio, heater, 1, ~bitev,ai'I tires, vinyl · " roof; tintM glass, wheel cover:s, 391792 miles, ' .. ;. • ·tight . green, .a· :cream ":-....... puff YX F702 - tory air conditioning , power steering, powe r brakes, radio, heater, Whitewa ll tires; vinyl roof, tinted gJass, wheel covers,_me1a111c· copper with fawn top and in· ter ior .. 1136749 1966 MUSTANG Coupe : ', . . ~ 899--_J8~l.9n .. !~VB ird __ t .andau . 6 c.,I., l •P••d, stick shift, rid w/d1lu111 interior, 1 r11I tr••"' puft IRZYl7'4)1 ' ' 460 V-8, auto. trans., auto factory air condi- tioni.ng, full power, AM FM rad io, .heater, ra- dials, vinyl roof, tinted glass, low miles, like new,' dark blue No. 001 FTL $ ___ "!"'_ ..... ..,._, .. -----...... -----.air conditi oning, power 1970 'CHEV~ NOVA 2 dr. Sedan ~;~;;~?~.~~;"~~~'. $ , ,15. t9 power seats, radfo, hea-. · • · -1er, whitewall -t~res,. 6 cyl., •uto; tr1n1., po·~-.taering , r.dio. .. -· vinyl roof, t inted glass, • ha1t., low mil••• llk1 111w1 '66 1 A~Y I · • ~ wheel covers, tilt wheel, • good miles. 217AOR • FORD . ' I 1 I 1 • ' I .• • I I ' / Wtdritsday, Junt 13 1973 N PILOT·AOVERTIS ER J9 ~--------~= Ap.petiZers Stretc Into Dinne r . " ... dlya -.....,,.... and """" Ind beodi """10 .tay to watd! Ill<! I 1111111e1, !l's lime to tel<e advantage ol bot appotlsoft. A iar,. enooJ{h -ol canapes, meety -fOlo, clloue puffs plus vecetable clllnka for 'dlppjng ~ suffice !or a lllll>t dinne!'. , In S~ hoes ,~'oeuvres are called taJ)ll, whlm'lbeans '"'~erings 'liCcaUSe ol Ill<! cuatoin of' 8en'ing them in little dlsheo set on. top ol sherry glaoses. For ywr own bot ~ try ·spicy albondlps or miD&lo -, olive and bacui_flavon. They can be 'served with the !ollowtng ookl ~' Marinate lllllOted salmon I>i!>ces and cooqd 'artlclloke heartJ• ln oil and vinepr salad .dmsing wlJh sherry odcled to taate. O!ill To serve sprinlle willl a -ol crumbled oregano and basil. Seo:ve smal\ clams .oo ·the hall shell sprinkled with· lemon juice and sherTy and topped with a mixture of diced green peppers, red onions and pimiento. Thin mayonnaise with sherry, add a' lit- tle trated lemon rind and use as a dip for chtpld shrimp. I For only. $6, six guests can enjoy PraWn Platter plus wine. F r es h .._,!'!-are the budget slretc~r aD<j ' Pistacilio Ma_.we is the intriguing EGG-OUYE APPETIZER dip. I envelope unflavored gelatin Egg-Olive Appetizer ti hearty fare !or \I cup cold water any cocktail hour. Surround the mound l can (sq~ ounces) pitted ripe olives, \vilh crisp cra~n and melba toast or drained spoon portlona onto lettuce leaves as a v .. cup drained ,capers tempting side dlllJ salad. t clove garl~ Chilled molds ore ready to be served 1 bay leaf anytime by good ...l"!"_k• who know the ad-ll_ ~ dried lei!!~ van age.s Of""tffifliiU'e<rgelatin anii fOllow 'I• cup mayonnai.se lhe.e ruleS to llwlJ lls aucct!S5' I tablespoon Dijoo mustard Use a lar .. ~ pon. Instead of a Y, teaspoon lemoo juioe !l))All. llUCtPVl, uee a medium, I.quart in: cup parsley leaves size to prpv!de more liquid surface area . ~ teaspoon pepper This Jets the gelaUn dlssolve faster with 'h teaspoon brandy better heat distritdlon. 2 teaspoons salt Sprinkle the gelatin evenly over the 3 bank.'ooked eggs, divided entire area. Avoid pouring the envelope Sprinkle gelatin over .water in small contents lnt.o the cold.liquid in one heap. saucepan. Place over low heat; stir con· Allow more time. ror milk. Gelatin stantly until gelatin dimve.s, about 3 absorbs water almoSt. immediately and niinutes. Remove'from ·heat; cool slight· dissolves in 2 « S mkiutes over low beat~ ly. . It does. not absor;b '"milk 'as-readily so .,,. In container of electric blender com- sprinkie and let stand a few minutes to bine drained olives, capers, garUc, bay soften while me&ll1liDJ other ingredients. I e.a f, thyme , mayonnaise, mustard, Stir steadily, not ylgOfOU!ly:, l40til all , lemon ju.ice, j>ai'sley, pepper, brandy, the granule'.. are dissolved ena -have salt and 1 hard~ked egg. disappeared. III you &qr too briskly, some Add dissolved gelatin. ~ver and proc- of the gelatin will be lost on the sides of .ess at medium speed until pureed. Turn the pon and the gel oootent al the dish mto bowl. . may be scanty. Finely chop remaining 2 hmkooked ~men • BEA ANDERSON, Ed itor Wedtletllay, J uM IS. 1m ""' ., Served with sherry or cheblis, hors d'oeuvres can double es a light dinner buffet. Guests may choose from hot Spanish tapes (below) or chilled Eg·g-O(ive Mold (rig ht) .. f;or a h eitlt~y happy hour, nibble - on shrimp and crisp V<tgetables. ' . • I • .• '· eggs ; fold in. Turn into 3--cup mold and chill several hours. UM1old, garnish with lemon slices, parsley and chopped olives, and serve \\1Jth ~ckers and Melba toast. Yield s 3 cups; J2 appetizer servings. PRAWN PLAITER 1/3 cup chopped pistachio nuts. I • \ hutterml lk blscu\L< r,orce Jnto mayonnaise : then blend un· I pound small shrimp, cooked, peeled til thoroughly distributed and spinach is and deveincd "' 1 well chopped. , If n1ixture becomes t'>O 1 1 cup 1nayonnaise · thick for the blender, add "'ater, a tea· 11 cup grntcd Parmesan cheese 2 teal)-poons minced oniop spoon or a time . Sesame seeds 1 package {about 12 ounces) ..._ shrimp ALBONDIGAS Salce biscuits according to directiom onl frozen (Spanish 1\1ea~ Bulls) _ packa~. ool biscui~~ -~" n -mo or O>lffi'er,-;geiaiFlr 1c-tally. t basket cberrY tomatoes I bunch ·asparagus, trimmed l zucchini, cut in loog spears Panley Pistachio Mayoonaise Cook shrimp according to package directions; drain \\'ell, then cover and refrigerate until chilled. To serve, arrange shrimp, then tomatoes, zucchini and ~paragus to your taste on a platter -or for whimsy ar- range asparagus in a pitcher as shown. GauUsh with parsley and serve with the mayonnaise for dunking. Pistachio Mayonnaise In a blender, mix 2 egg yolks and I tablespoon lemon juice: Then pour in 113 cup melted butter in a sl0-w sleady stream; then pour in ~'.& cup salad oil. Stop 61ender and add 4 torn spinach )eaves, 2 tablespoons ehO-pped chives, and .- .. -.. \ t';'. . • • , navored sausage Put several shrimp on each biscuit. I pound ground lean bc<.•C ~1ix mayonnaise ~·ith Parmesan chee.>e,. 1 or 2 garlic cloves. crushed aod onion. Spoon some of this mixture I tablespoon minced parsley O\'er the shri1np. Sprinkle with sesame· 1 teaspoon salt seeds. ' ~~ cup fine bread crumbs Broil Wltil golden bro\\'n and bubbly. l egg. y.·eU-beaten . . 2 tablespoons pure imported ohve 011 ENSALADltLA DE ACIENTIJNA Place ground beef in medium nlixing (Olive Canape) bowl and set aside. 2'.1 large pin1iento stuffed olives Remove skin from sausage and put ·~ pound cheddar cheese through a food grinder or chop f~ly or 1 ~ pow1d slieed bacon grind in blender nt low speed. Y.•1th re-~Ialve large stuffed olives leogthwi.se. maining ingredients. . Remove pimientos and chop finely. Grate Add mixture to beer and \\"Ork \Vllh cheese and mix with pimientos. Stull fin gers until thoroughly mixed. For1n in-oli Vf! v»ith mixture. Press two halves to 24-20 meat balls. Saute in additional togeUier. olive oil until crlsply brown on 'all sides. Cut each bacon slice in half and fry on Serve hot with toothp icks. Qne side (not crisp). \Vrap olives with ~ SHRl1t1P CHEESE BROIL bacon slice, cooked side in . 'Broil untit' 1 package refrigerated bake-and-se rve crisp. ' - ' .. !., Bagged for Summer S·torage By, OOR0111Y WENCK -<wtltYN-.~ Have JOll ever taken a wool ganncnt out of~ c~et tQ wear a'f\ei\ it's been. '""""'!or a'whllc and '!oun<l,'one or more holei...:. u.sually right In front? "MOth~' holes that ruln in othenti~ weanble garment ate both costly and find cozy places -such as dark closets, bird and insect nests -to lay their eggs. And it's tbe larvae that hatch out of these eggs that eat fur, wool. hair. feathers and do the damage to your clothlng and household rumishings. Home News be attacked by insect Jarvae.J.tthey ha ve I especially around the cracks and comers. food .such as rice and cereal (to ket: l A spray cdntaining '3 to S percent out the insects)? deodorized malathion or roru1cl ls ef-t\. 11 1:i bc.<11 to store food only in plast feot.ive -agai11:5t both clothes moths and containers \Vhich were de!lgned for foo. car:pet beetles. Thl·rc arc slrlct rc~lations of foe QUESTIONS WE ARE ASKED: :~t~ngrr!~ast~u'F'~~ the~ Q. t have some wool inlant S\Vcaiers nli,i:ht be nboorbed by 1hc food, PLast;.- bag or the plastic dry cleaner bags whi~h wlUc~ I washed . 3!1d treated with a molh-packages not intL'ndcd for food do D• and Views • I 11 avotdable. . 1;1ie insect. that cau"' this aonoymg --· a'""110t"on!Y'clothes-moths bot allO earyet beetles. In C8l~ornia ca.,,.t beetles eeem to be more common lllan The, larvae are about v, Inch long aDd .have a stubby, furry appearance. They leave cast off, hairy skins as evidence ol their presence. CJotbes moths are --sman, 'winged in· !eds wtict.-somedmot c'lln lie-. m - ting around poorly llgbled areas. Again, It is. the larvae which damage clothing. The larvae are caterplllar·llke, about % Inch long, and usually white In color. -food S'pOts. Since food spots are usually right in front , where Oley show, lhls is ·here-you get boloo.----- To avoid this damage, take some time. you tape shut. tr closet space is proohng hlscc1:te1de. They have been come under these regu]attons w.i limited, you may prefer· to store off stored for sev~I xears a~ve -fXl88ibly. .. <!9uid-bt--wl&ar&.---------,-1 ~ason-garments ln .. large--boxes that-tan--De10nn'8atlac Cd by insects. they are clc.'ln . . clotlleo moths. ' ca.,,.i beetles are small lnS<C\S slmt1ar tn lllape lo lady,blrd beetl ... The aduk beetle is most nctlvc in the spring. The beo!Jes gathec ,ln large nllll)bers Oil flo"'" ~ they Iced OI\ pollen. You may '•ioo see them collecting at windows. ' . . Bl: roREWAl\NED ,_ odult beetlel do not eat llibrics. But II you seo them. be !orewemed. They Usua lly clothes moth Md ca rpet bee tle larvae prefer protein fibers such as wool to synthetics such'. As nylon and polyester. However, they ho ve been known to attack the synthetics, especia lly ii the la bric-has a spot ol sptlted food. • FOOD A'ITRACl'.8 Woolens, too, are mu ch more likely to • right now, to lake care of' your woolens and other off.senson gannents. Check th& garments for cleanlines.s,.or better yet, have them all cleaned oororc storing them for the summer. lf yoo use a cotn-op drycleancr, you can have a whole load of ganncnts cleaned for a relatively small amount or ,money. Store them clean 'Ind then ~ring them out !tr pressing next !all. For storage, use a zippcrc,:l ganncnt slldc under the bed. Seat these shut or and do not smell of insecticide. Are th..,y Q. l ve had iKJn1e baking J)O'Nder an v wrap them In plastic JO insects con't safe for a baby to wear? -cupboord for several years. The 1ut tin: crawl in. A . .With Infant apparel. blankets, ·etc. t 1nade mufflns l had the feeling th: And while you're at it... now's n good ll Is best to lau nder or dry clean thcl_ll they did nol rise properly , Could It l: tln'lc to clean out your closet, too. The be.fore putllng them on the baby. Thls is that \he baking powder has J~t ll motlls and beetles love 1o lay th C'ir eggs to remove af! traces of the n~oth p~f· str,,ngth" in soft little nests,o{ ru1.zies in the dark -Ing w~tch. could ta h..1_rm fu\ if it canic in A. Y~. tlll klfi$ powder will 10l!t l corners Of your closet. con{nct with the by s .skin. leavening power if it has been ilored tn A good vacuµrn lng wi ll help remove Q. I have a collec.1.ion of plastic con-long. 1'o test it, put a tcupoon of tt- potentia l rood sources for t~e bugs. Yoo tatne:n ga thered from various !JOttrces. baking Powder ln hall a al.ass of M might nlso v.·ant to use an insect icide f\10!!t have contained nonfood products. \\'&ler. If lhe water bubbles actlvely, 11:: spray or dust on the closet floor -\Yonld It be sarc to use theS{' ror storing baking powder Is fresh enough to use. 14!' ·DAILY PILOT Goop Therapy Psyched Out Lido Isle Yacht Club Soiree Charted Checl<lng Lhc setting (or lbe Lido Isle Yacht Club's annual Commodore's Ball are {left to right) Mrs. Ted Himhaw, S la Ir Commodore Bob Paley and Mrs. r Ever been green with envy for so# skin or glossy hair? If you aren't hoarding avocados for 11 special salad, they are said ·to be good for smoothing By CAROL MOORE Of ... .,...., P'll•• ll•tf Slather · yoursell w i t h avocado t Sounds. like something a 3- year-old wQUld do. And a pretty rich tyke at that, considering that the soft, _i&lLJnllt..x!! .. .ll!LlL=l> each. But avocados are not limited lo the guacamole dish. The first release from the California Avocado Advisory Board extolled the virtues of homemade avocado beauty pr tlo.ns for women. For pre-bathtime, there was the Siity Avocado Tub Rub - half a peeled avocado mashed with a cup ()f table salt and rubbed over all trouble spots (knees, heels, elbows ... and natal clef~?) · Emerald Night Cream }¥BS said to provide even 'more satiny skin for those whet blended equal parts of avocado and night cream until buttery and smoo.thed it on for 20 minutes or ()Vernight. We held back for awhile. What with the high cost of food, how would readers spare salad money for cosmetic idiosyncrades? But the board persisted, advertising Avocado Body Care for Men. The man ()f the ho.use could mix the other hall ()f the avocado and a teas~n of oil and use the goop a&..shaving cream. Perhaps a retaliation for her green .masque at bed- time? Then came his and her Lovocado Massage. Mash half an avocado with a half cup of sour' cream and a few drops of peppermint oil. Rub e.ach other's backs for 15 minutes: luxuriate in a few moments of deep rest; refresh with a cool shower. We were weakening. Then came t h e Brob- dignagian budget buster. Three pages described how avocado mixed with i,.t food enhances Fido's skin tone and hair quality, too. "One half avocado. supplies a 25-pound dog· with all its dail y re- quirements 0 r potassium, magnesium and Vitamin 8 ." It seems a far, far better th ing to splurge such goodness But the advisory board in -or on -humans.' won't quit. Perhaps we v.·ere remiss in Even leflover peels can be passing up the earlier Avocado ''rubbed vigorously over Softener for milady's abused neglected areas where hands and feet. rough skin is obvious. Dead "Cream 4 tablespoons of ' skin cells _will slough off and butler and hair an avocado the natural oil "ill lubricate " Sorry. folks, I'd still rather spread that on pumpernickel. the skin.'' Go ahead . l'U be green with ! envy. rough' knees, ~-'----~.,.:;.,;,,.~.::. fOrflfYrng nig t cream, or setting up a shave. If there's any le# over, it might help Fido's coat. ' Roger Brown. A nautical theme was chosen for the Saturday, June 16, event in the Lido Isle clubhouse. Waite( Gives Tip for Service - ~ ' ~ -' ·~ / DEAR ANN LANDERS: Thank you for spend thousands (sometimes million s' of printing that splendid essay, "Remember dollars every year on \\•hat they call "ad-~ Our Best Friend -The Customer." I am vertising" to get me inside a place when sure It will be tacked up on countless I was al re<idy there and !hey didn't pay bulletin boards around the country to re-any attention to me. -J. Q. Consumer mind salespeople of their obligation to DEAR J. Q.: You'\'C undoubtedly employers ia.s well as the people they are struck manv n raw nerve with YOUR paid to sen'e. essay. I'm ·sure It wlll be clipped. ond DEAR And now, how about working the other sent to the appropriate people. And I'm ANN I .ANDERS : Several ol 111 side or the street? t whipped it up myself all for It. Thank you. poker playe rs read your column regular-- and plan to mail it to the appropriate ly and \\"C n«><I a yes or no answer. people, a.s l encounter them along the DEAR ANN LANDERS: I jUBt returned \Vhatcver you say goes. way. I've caUed h "Remember Me?" from the funeral or a dear rriend . The \Vhcn the jciker is used as a wltd card, Remember ·me? I'm the guy in t.he man who died had '8D adopted 12-year-old limited 10 aces, straights and fiwbes, is restautant who sits patieoUy aod watts son. Shortly after the adoplion his \vi fe there such a hand as a double-ace flush? while the waitress does ev~ but became pregnant and they were blessed Some of my friends say fueTe ls but I hew acknowledge my presence and take1 my with another boy. never heard of It. With all the poker l'te order I wu standing near the casket speak. played in my life I can't believe there'• 1 , · the who . w depart ing with the two boys when a woman g;ime I don'! know obout How aboul tl Im M 8"andY l ndsg°1trsml 'one foot· came up and asked, "'Which one of you is AM? -WELL SHUFFLED IN BUF:: TllfJl\l inore 1.~ on ' the REAL son Md which is adopted?" I FALO ·1 then IDOther, ~Una for • ~lespera<1i couldn't believe my ears. · -~ finlsh_vlslling wTth a fn~ -o_r _ I!! .... tell me-llow-peopl an be ,. __ l!EAR.SHU£F, Ji:very commally ._ another .iiJespenon. Sometimes it takes cruel and dumb. Thanks ror an answe:r. some games no one ever beard of llllkle . a very l""I Ume. ·~. I am -DUMBFOUNDED AND thal town. Lei's Jlllt II tillt !'IY -la I'm the guy who drives into a service FLABBERGASTED Sioux City the~ wn11 no doable-ace ftuaL . station and doesn't blow hls horn . I sit As for nurfalo -J cnn't 11y. , qulelly unt!! the atl<lldant flnlth<s his DEAR D AND F• People can be ex· , •· comic book or a telephone COb-tremely cktel and lncre~lbly cumb. But Discoyer how to be date bait without ~ ......um wtth his girl. I'm eoft.sp<ikon mosl ol all tjlty can . be thought!•"• laJllng hook, Unc and alnUr. Ann i and easy.going. t don't gel mad and I especially at funerals, ptrhaps because Landers' booklet, 110aUnt Dal -~ don't complain. I never hassle anybody, they lee! lhe need lo say something. Don'IS," will help you be more polaed ~ and I don't go to the manager. . Wbe9 Ute atmosphere Is ten&e they often and sure or yourself on dates. Send ss i I'm at. the py who never come1 say the wron" thing. r don 't believe th'e ccnt.s in coin nloo g with a long ltemped. baek. W041MD meant to "be unkind -bul dui&b sclf\addressed envelope and' your ,. It amazea me that buslntsa people 1he Is. quest lo lhe Dully POot, I • Wednesday, June ll, 1973 DAILY PILOT 45 Your Horoscope Tomorrow Leo: Frieads Provide Misinformation THURSDAY JUNE 14 By SYDNEY OMARR 11Don't you like cancer? Pleeae let 111 Cancerlans hear more about OW'!tlves!" - Elizabeth Garrett, j ol penon11 la a Cancer, Della Spe<::la1 call or message is Adju.Ument in domestic atta fed. Proceed wJth c:onlldence, ; Reele, a fan and reader of featured. la indicated. Key b to tolerate not arrogance. O l d er in- mtne, Is a Cancer. Art Linldet-TAURUS (April 20-May 2D): foibles of family member. dlvlduaf Is lendJnc 1Upp>rl In 1. ter, who grudgingly admUa I Money situation could be Don't point accusing finger. wio'-•-··tve manner. I am "81 percent right" about You gain most through Ln.ll.llt him, ii born under Cancer. df.ecepti~et. ReaRelidze ~and stutdhy diplomatic approach. Avoid LIBRA (Sept, 2.1-0ct. 22): "' Mony under this zodiacal sign me J')IJ1 · a _,ween • sell-prescrlptioos. Keep medl-~-•-• rother ,.__ ...... • tU •·--restdence this lines. Protect yoursell in 1 point t '·-· -· ~.... l ·~i!-Wublllltoft,-D.C. -a-•: More penona in "Wb!i'1 Who In Commen:e and lndultry" are born under C--than any ~r zodiacal s l g n • Cancer harmonizes w 1 th Scorpio, Pisces, Taur1JJ and Virgo. Cancer Is dnwn to Capricorn but the relaliomhip poses a challenge. N1tives of Cancer should exerci.se cau- tloo in deJillng with Libra and Aries. I do "like" Cancer. Merv Griffin, who has brought me and astrology to mUIJons w c.-.. :.:.U,. :ill cllncbes. Someooe Is aiming a ca ap men · . round out and complete pn-~=Y Inn N:v~"li&ymAker"-at Yiilr.l!efi!Se-to'-U:O-(Jllly-23-Aug. :12): ject:-Oti!ililOvei'ill view. cancer can be w arm , give up something of value ror Friends may be well-meaning Ignore individual wbo m1pes, 1 aemltltve, evm pessk>nate. a mere pombe. but misinfonned. Obtain hint complains, singl bluel. Your l Maureen Boker, design director of Susen Smell, ' -will create Princess Anne's wedding gown. Elizabeth's Daughter · - Shuns Wedding Frills By MARGARET SA VILLE LONDON I UPll -I f Princess Anne has her ¥i'ay - and she ;. as strong.willed as anyone in the royal family - htt' marriage ·to Lt. Mark Phillips will be the most unlMUal royal w e d d t n g c.«enOJY Britain has ever ..... hoosie supplying stores all over , Windsor, then a honeymom Cl\ Britain. the royal yacht Britamla. Anne does oot want the tiara But the chapel holds only a that tradition.ally holds the hUnd.red persons at most, and wedding veil in place. !She few of them would even Re prefel'6 a head-dress like a the·pucesslm becau&e (I( the banded cap. She does .not want )()cation of the altar ecrem... to can'J' flowel's either. Thus, the Queen io likely to in- Qiurt ...,,.. who reported sist m Weotmloaler Abbey f<r Ame's wiS)es f<r her wedding the weddq. . also said the -of a bevy of bride6maids does not appeal to the Princeos. •A -rl. 8ir1I trailing behind -"' taR the at• t-<ii the tnle," she .... bean! to __ she""" a guest at a oocidy -'ding rea!lltly. Anne plam to give Marie • new car for a wedcUnc: insent. His curred., ,modest foor·yelll'-old BMW • e d a n broke down recently In Budt· Ingham Pelooe ysd u be - leevlng for Germany. Two rt lhe Queen's chauffeuro had to repair the ignition to I"( him awa~. And some al the beat chefs In GEMINI (May 21.June 20): from o.nIDI message. See potenUal ls vealer than JOO the world are Cancerlam! Acctnt-ls-oo..fonn of illusion persons, situations in light of might imagine. Now yea are ARIES (March ll-AprlJ 19\: comected with partnerships, reality. Places is In picture. due to get lnklJng al holJ far legal agreements, marriage. Refine techniques. Romance What appean a m a j 0 r Be analytical. Get facts as could be tempc>rarily stymied. you can go. obstacle to lmmedlate plans is. the 'st not I ) due to evaportate. know It and ~•:mp : :.. a~~~ VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22), SCORPIO (Oct. :JS-Nov. SI : 1 proceed accordingly. Be Dex~ penon niight figure pro-You achieve and advance. You One who performs Rr'Vicea Ible.High Ii g b t versaWity. minently ' hand I e responsibility ad-may act in unumal manner. Have altemaUves available. ' mirably. One who attempts to Key is to undentand without SacJtlarlu ls In picture. CANCER (June 21.July :12): downgrade you wtll be rebuf-being weak _ be ~ By JO OLSON after slide showed brown bag ot ,... "'"' "'"' lt•ff luncheons or gatherings at Jo Smith ls neither an aspir· George's restaurant (where ing politician nor an ag· much business .is wiofficially gressive woman's rights ad-transacted). vocate. MEMBERS CAIJ..ED She's a quiet, "instant friend" h-(you feel at home When support ls ,_ied or a ''"" testimooy ls r<que>ted, local right away), mother of foor leagues are coot.acted by Mrs. 1'!ld graduate al St2Dfonf who Smith and the oth« volunteers plays 8 key roie for the who work in a tiny office on League of Women Voters In Sacramento as legislative the !Dlh floor of the Capitol dlahpeuon. She commended the league In Orange Countyl to meet memben for the letten they with the Orengo Coast League write to the legislators. of Wooien Valeri, she offered "Leque letters are reed and in§ights Inro the league's work respected," she •"Plained. in the Capitol and her own "They are accurate and fair." life as an advocate. Though th e Sacramento A league member for 20 re.sidem seldom travels to years, Mrs. Smith volunleered local leagueo to speak, she for the Position two years ago hopes to begin accepting more when there was m me else to engagements because s h e ~· ~~~I~~ believes ·~t·s very Important but never considel'ed herielf that we tal1t to local leagues an authority er even a penon 88 much as we can. with greet sltlll In the field. "The 9'lqth al the league "fve learned on the job," is that they are well-informed memben In each district. CM she ~ed. adding that job ls to facilitale action by she was """ faaclnaled by the local leagues and to testify at legislative JWOCOSS. hearings. We're speaking for NEWSLE1TER 14,000 ri>embers.'' Her ,_ •tills also are pot She believes the league's to good uae In the leglslolive gnetelt wort is to educate nenletter she edits for league the pobllc by uslog the "grass members, "Capttol Oxridor." roots efforts of cltizem to ex· Along with a paid staff ' plain the measures." member ond eight league Mrs. Smith Is eager to let volullteers, Mrs. Smith keeps league ~ know their tcack al oelecled bills lrom the contrlbutioos are Important time they are -to and their knowledge i • the time Ibey are -to oom-~ In Sacramento, alld mlttee and ... to the "-nilly she is ....... to let people and Senate floors for con-know !he Is optimistic about sideratioo.--govem:nent"in Ca I i for n i a Jo Smith I• quiet advocate of LHgue of Women Voters as legislative chairperson in Sacramento. but don't aet tied In com-, plicated tangle. EmphMls is : on work, heelth, new way1 to I • move toward goal. ~ SAGnTAllll1S (Nov. :12-: Dec. 21 ), Malnialn low profile. : Mean! don't push or be too ob- vious. If discreet, you learn. Otherwise, you could step into embarrassing sltualloo. IA&al affairs need review. 'nle same applies to partnership and to special relatiooshlps. CAPRICORN (Dec. :12.Jan. >j t9 ): Move beyond ._,. limitations. Break barrlen which block ~· You o could inadvertantly o b t a i n 1 privileged information. ..,... • tarlaa may be In [iicturo. Be I cooperative. But alao know 1 that you have right to live your own life. ' -I 'AQUARIUS (Jan. SO.Feb. 18): trfend may be overly • enthusiutlc. Romance is fine l>ut so are facts -go after the latter. Check thoroughly before committing younelf to definite course. Leo, Scel'ple penons may be In pidure. Review spending program. .. PISCES (Feb. It.March 20): Do some additloncl reading. You gain if perceptive. One In -habit of making promises should be ll)ade to provide backup lnformatk>n. Message wtU become crystal clear. Gemlld, Vlrp and 'hmu I -coold be --L "I do my own t hing what.eyer peopie -.y," ii one of the fawrie ooyinp al the 22-yur-old daug!Ur al Queen Elizabeth. And ewn before the Queen had -ed .., her daughte<'s engagement to the 2il-year-old olrK.'E!r', Anne already had chosen her 681>' phire and cliamOlld engage- -m<nt ring. The price of the ring lo believed to biWe b e e n somewhere between t h e equiv$nt of 1570 ond ,1,000. Acainling to tradition, the Queen shoukl give her daug!Ur ber wedding gown - designed, of counie, by the al- ficial court dressmaker. Besides, Ame does not have any l'08lly dooe girl frlends. Sbe Im never given colfee- and-female Chatter .parties or lbelike. "I'm not the ror.y type," Azt.. ne has ollen said. She always has preferred ou«toor tile 'Md sports. often with Prince Philip. her father. Her friends have always been predominanlly male. The more than S,000 bills In-because of the talented slaf! troduced each session are members, both young and old, carefully acreeoed aOO every l\"Orking behind the sct!De$. Be/ore be-met Ame,-Mort -btll-1atinc to-.......-..... .. Vl!ry---fnlm-her- lMed to escort a D 0 t b e r gr11DS is earmarked for IC--ar:t!stic work as a nifiiie ll· equestrian, pretty -tlon. llJSlr-and duties as a Ann Feowick, a4. Eve<yooe Alter a lcrmal position ls hou>ewile and mother, Jo believed they would beaime eslabllshed by the league, Smith's new -Id in engaged. llllis! Fe111ridt -Mrs. Smith and the league Sacramento, populated by not Giscuss the matter now, volunleen go to w<rk, testi-"good guys" (lobbyists for but the ridina world is fying at hearings and talking social and humane causes), wondering wheih:.r she will be with legislators, their lltaff student Interns, legislator>, invited to the wedding. memben Md lobbylst.s. professional lobbyists and She showed s 11 d e s 11· other intere.!ling people, is a 70 .....,._,..._, .......... _c......-- HUN'TUIOTON l•ACM 1 .... 1 ALeottCIUIN It WAllN•R _,,,, JUNE 15 -1:00 P.M. Instead, Anne is having her own gown made by the designer or 8 ready-ro.weer ' Anne ·would 'like a quiet wed- ding, a mmtlng ceremony, in St. George's Chapel a t Rec up At Home Advised NEW YORK (UPI) -The best place for a , child to recover after minOr surgery is Justrating the process, ex· fascinating one which she plaining that "there is an believes should involve every awful lot of eating" u slide ciUr.en. COSTA M•SA HtON ICNOOL M$1 l'Alll:YlaW llOAD APP•AltlNe AT TH a L YC•UM DONATIONS: U.OI ADUl.,TS, II.JI ITUb•NTI a CHILDll•H • a hospital right? To avoid disappointment, prospective brides are reminded to have their wedding Wrong,' accori:ling to Dr. A. Dad and the crocodile Gi&:a ...togallll'OftWnol7th, -court hi I h t Fredet1ck North Jr., at the stories with black and w le g ossy p o o-University of Pittsburgh graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's De-Schoof of Medicine. partment one week before the wedding. He thinks kids should be sent Pictures received after that Ull)e will not home the day of )he minor ; he used. ..,., 2 ·-->--•ourgoryr notlne \ffoopitalsi----•·----.--_,....."f."+ll.iil"""'---11 ~-'"""'U •are dange~." For engag~ment annQuncements it . is imperative that the story, also accomparued • by a black and wbite glossy picture, be sub- mitted six weeks or more before the wedding date. If deadline is not met, only a story will be used. To help fill requirements on both wed- ding and engagement stories, form s are available In all the DAILY PILOT offices. Further questions will be answered by Women's Section stall members at 642-4321 . THE NEW LOOK! The kids are in high, un- comfortable beds from which they're likley to fall. They're always threatened by medica- tion errors. "In most cases the parents would be better off spending $2il to get a housekeeper to help out the next day rather than •pending •100 to keep the child In a hospital after surgery." ·1 56 LB. LOSS IN 40 DAYS Under Mtdlcol Supervl1lon ., the 11 at ••• Wal6"~ Omega Cllnlc WIGS ' ,& 811uty S1lon -.,,L 1'ht1St. C....._-MW446 lo HI-- -------------, HOURS: 9:00 -7:00 • CALL.FQR AN APPOINTM~T • COSTA MESA ANAN•IM IANTA ANA llvll1rf•·L•"4ltr1 1 I ... W - 1-T .. l•A" nt W. LINltrl 11\ld, 1169 "°"'"" . . ~·· 1714) 170.9347 646· 1633 nMMI S47.6329 (213) "7·1791 I / I I 11 .. -· -~- l-' -·, From 00 I • I!jE lhirt..,...,.gott.n.r -...... -tho Mi,por.-""'" I th& ....... ,, rwhU. Wlllllh. . ' and dry '' 'thuod1.,cuohionloot tmmisbog by..:lidoo 44 fllllion lllmld, ..-port center . 644-5070 -... .. , I I I I I ! ' I I I Time for Relaxation Signaled A time for relaxation will be designated by Del Cerro Elementary PTA at 12:30 p.m. Friday, June 15, when members entertain the school staff at a lunch- eon. Already in the mood are Phyllis Mackey (left), Warren Grueniiand Holly Hain. On the Coast Ca/enddr End-of-year Honors Given Secretari es Scholanhip wb1ners were honm'ed guests of the Orange County Legal Secffiaries dur- ing a dinner meeting !n the Greenbrier Irm, G a r d en Grove. Winners Mt! Karen. Sue -odega:ard;--"11 ....... stment --a~ Fullerton Junior COilege and COileen Joilnaon, a Tustin High School student. AF Moms Conventioo report& Including !he adopted POW·MlA reoolu· tiom · will highlight the meeting of' Flight It, United States Alr f(lro! Mothers. · The group~will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, JWle 14, in Hyde ·Park Mobile Estates, Santa Ana. Speakers will be Mrs. Charles Williams and Patricia Nellis[· A rummage sale will be con- ducted from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday, June 16, at the Irvine home of iSgt. Bill G~. PWP Sun.set Harbor Ch apter . Parents Without P·artners will meet at 7:30 p.m. Friday, June IS, In Meodowlark Coun· try Club, lltuilngWn Bead!. Dancing will lollow t h e meeting. All single parenl4 a r e welcome lo attend. Al>O on Uie board are the Miila. Robert L. Sauler, vice praldeot; Loll Cltambers, tm111rer; H. Ellis Walker and J, Temple Hollman, secret•ies. Rummage Sale 'Ibe lJnitedFOU r I q 01 r e Women of the Costa Meaa Founquare Church w fl I sponsor a rummage and beke X• Et • sale Friday and Satu.nlay, I • Xt Mrs. Jaycees June 15 and 16, from a a.m. lo A-c~drete""io-Mni cro.-iiqe -111--1;~ p.m._both daJ'!A,,lbe,,___ benefit !he Stanford Kldney staUed p,!ldellt of H... church. Foondatloo Is being apoored Beach Mrs. Jayceee. by Xi Eta XI Olapter, Beta 0th.rs iJwta1led are the -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ji Sigma Phi. 'lbio special eveul, Mmes. Cltuck Halm vice " directed by Mni. Steve Star-pr«ld<tll· Rebert J e ~se n ling, will take place from I -.ry'· John -· a.m. lo 4 p.m. Satunloy, June treuurer: Gaey v e r g 111 o 16, at Huntington Seacllff dlrecb>r; • Walt« Peterson: OlunU)I Club. junior oouncil, and Sa I Salhnam, senior cooncil. SC Jun iors Saturday, June 16, has 1-1 designated u Hus b a nd• Appreciation Night by the South Coa9t JuWor Wcxnan's Club.of· Fountain Valley. The RM Careys' bQme will be the eetting f<r the luau themed party. . Interfaith Mrs. George Dibs is the new president oi the w.o m en Assoclala of·lnleriaith Foun- datim at UCI. SPORTSWJ!All Receimg awards were the Mmes. J ense n , David Garofalo J am es Zelthing, Tbornaa: Wilkie, 'Hahn, Steven Whltsoo, Jack Brant and ·Pel<!rson. Wmcli~l'lm.171h .ud Irvine, Ne:wport Beach,Califomla~2660 Festivities Mark Year's End Fairview Recognizes Volunteers OF COSTA MESA Editor's Note: This is the last column devoted to Newport Beach, Costa Afesa Laguna Beach and Mission Viejo pare1it-teacher organ- izatiO'tls to appeaT in the Daily Pilot for the summer. Bear PFO Mrs. Robert Ballinger President REPORTS: Bo3rd members 49st~ a skating party for " HB Units fifth grade students and a luncheon for the faculty last ''"eek. Student council was hosted today at · Halecrest Park with a picnic ... Mrs. Everett Beiger, b o w 1 i n g league secretary presented the PFO with a check for $404. Funds realized from the ways and means pro- jec.f.s and the bowling league \Viii be used for educational supplies. Eastbluff PFO l\.lrs. Eugene Ko vach Presiden! REPORTS: PFO has presented the school with 100 books for use in l'Ofl- nection with · the scholastic reading program · for third and fourth grade students. Also cklnated was a new electric primary typewriter. Graduates Honored youth activities chairman, and Edv.'ard Lavelle, prin- cipal. Schroeder PTA hlrs. Richard Arras President Ka iser PTA l\.1rs. Gerald F ults President COMING UP: Promolion ex- ercises for eighth grade students will be at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow on the quad. Dance for the graduates will start at 7;30 p.m. NH High PTA l\lrs. Earl DeWO!f President REPORTS : Mrs. Earl DeWoH, retiring president installed Mrs. John Scapple as presi- dent for the 1973-74 school year at a salad luncheon where 250 guests, faculty and staff attended. Paularino PTA It's Best Outstanding volunteers at her answe r to serving the Fairview State Hospital were hospital, while staying close 'to honored and given certificates her responsibilities. m apJreciation dutjng a lwicbeon at !he OOopital. Sherry Klemherg of Hlm- Certificates wefe presented tington Beach devotes about 20 by n-. Anthon y Toto, hours a week with M acute superinttD:lent and med ical medical ward. A pre-med stu· director, while M'rs. Enid dent, me works with bedfast Lathrop, director of volun-Patients on a planned program teers. told of their ac-with toys and games. She also complishments. mes sensOiy-inotor and music Robbin Lensdown of Hun-equipmeat with them. tington Beach, at 16, works with the deaf children as an Reci!lving an award which assistant to the group leader. r ecognized the worth of a She serves ~µi 6:30 a.m. to 3 volunteer on a limited time Saturda assignment was Mrs. Doris p.m. every y. Harria ~ Mlssi v· . Mr "She is enthusiastic, always Ul on ieJO. s. ~leasant and anxioos lo help Elizabeth Casper of c..ta and learn," said Mrs. Lathrop. Mesa was honored for her "We feel thi3 is a two-way work in support services in the MRS. PAUL DUMAJN street: Robbin has benefited offic:e a t the Behavior Ad· President and 90 have we!' justment Program and doing A member of ,._ Red ,.__# some extra administrative COMING UP ' Harbor Council -~ ~· ~ will conduct their executiye Production Unit at Leisure Job8. a delightful bud get salon where beattti fttl hair styles begin. PRICE LIST ll•tr• a.,... .. ltt ...... Mair) MONDAY TH RU THURSDAY FRI DAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY PRICES SLIGHTLY HIGHER Shampoo and Set ······-···-····················-·····-$2.50 I •P Permanent Wave ........... : .......................... 7.50 I ., Tint ························································-·-5.50 & op Bleach Touch.up --·······-·-··-·······-···············-·10.50 I ., FrosHng ·········-·································-········· 14.00 &-"t Se .. i Permanent Las hes ·············---·-····--·10.00 haircuts 'I.SO 1695 Irvin• Ave. -Costa Mesa Comer of E11t 171h St.-Abovo Lo Cavo Ro1tauront 645-1050 548-9986 O"" O.lly, lnclutliftl SunUy1 EDITOR'S NOTE: This is tflelast column devoted to Fout~tain Valley, Hunting- ton Beach, Ocean View and Seal Beach School District pm-ent-teacher organiza- tions to appear in the Dail y Pilot for the summer. Kettler PTO Mrs. Gary Wright President COMING ·UP: T eachers' luncheon will be hosted by the executive board Friday. June 15, in the multipurpose room, according ,to Mrs. Robin Fisher, chair1nan. board meeting at Paularibo World. Mrs. Helen Anderson Cited for lnwlvlng the com- school Monday, Aug. 27, at has for almost -three years rnunlty to heJp ·meet more ..---------------------. 9 30 · h ulti devoted spare time to dressing needs was Mrs. Nancy Sarvis Fulton PTO Mn.-Herbert Yomogida President COMI NG UP : Awards lunch- eon for the PTO-sponsored bowling league is scheduled \Vednesday, June 20. '00MINGUP:Mel!IW•"1u--Park-View PTO chaperone a trip to Disneyland tomotTOw for the eighth g r a d e graduatirig class. REPORTS: Uoit presented hooorary life memberships to Mrs . Darrell Vamier, Mrs. Jay Beagle President COMING UP: Unit will host a graduation party tonight following commencement exercises. St. Francis of A_!si sL e.EA ~ J\1rs. Justin Judd President REPORTS : f\1ewly elected of- ficers are the Mmes. Arthur Griese , president : Nlartin Hicks. vice president: Dar- rell Gallear, secretary, and Jose Ybarra, treasurer. : a.m. 10 t e m ·pur-hundreds of dolls for the of Irvine; Mrs. Lois Sword of =ti~~ ~~Ji~ 'fa: hospital. When she started her corona del Mar, coordinator Frida· J 15 t lO husband was very ill, so it was of the Preschool on Ward 18, in t~' mu:Jti ' a a.m. necessary for her to stay close received an ad.minis~ative purpose room to home, reported Mrs . vo1 unteer award , and the Mer· _to _approve~-chaoge ~~·oressmg-c1ons:-was-TY""·Menders-ot-Anaheim-were P!ans regarding the expen recognized for their weekly diture of funds. sewing session!!. REPORTS: P~eeds from~ I Also honored were Long May paper drive totaled $185 . Sa· ety Beach Emblem Club for "con- ... Eleven tons were col-tinuing and outstanding help:" lected ... By-law changes J · 1 _ • r M ~ Lo \\'ere approved by the ex-unio~ ~gwn ° . a.1 , s ecutive board. Alamitos, outstanchng ~th Program group--0/-the-year, and/Miss Youths' Ears Trained to Hear Mary Cleary of Santa Ana who "proves there's something right about our young People Shown today." PALO ALTO (UPI)-An I I· psychologists. Then th c y year-old boy disrupts his class receive assignments to counsel and picks on other students. students \'.'ho need them. An 8-year-old girl is too shy Kindergarten students to to talk to her teacher or high school seniors may apply classma tes. for a peer counselor to v.·ork A 14-year-old boy v.·ants to with them . leave home. CllANGES These youngsters have a Mrs. Barbara Va renhorst, unique place to take their cGnsulli ng psychologist 'rho trou bles in the Palo Alto coordinates the program. sai d. Unified School District. They "We have evidence that peer can turn to "peer counselors." counseling has changed kids' who relate to a child as only lives in giving them self-con- another youngster can. fid ence and helping then1 to Any student in 7th through deal v.'ith othe r people." -f2 lb gradei may befome_a._ The .diSJrict ma injains aduJt _ peer counselor by unde rgo ing counselors af ·\\'ell , but peer a training course with staff counselors provide student-to- OFF LARGE 15" PIZZA NEW SUMMER . HOURS TUES., WED., l'HURS. & FRI. 10 A.M. To 8 P.M. SATURDAY & SUNDAY 10 A.M. To 6 P.M. C l.OSED ON MONDAY ofucci .;;J)efi ITAllAN DELI ltlSTAUllANT IAK l:ltY-OROCElt Y 1111!.11-WINE ....... ~-.... Wlllll clMlnt, Ulf/U 891 J Ada mi et M .. nolla, Huntington Beach, OM et fM i.nittl Dtll °"'''..,_' 11'1 Calittl't1I•. In 01nttn• •~ff 11 ve•r•. --.....,lllt H11ntl111t• IHdl. ft...,.•ln V•llty, C•tt• Mht, ""'"rt " 111 ., o,."', c-tr Delly "TN, ttlr11 ffl, -10·1 ht. & S.• 10-6, Clowd Mon. A slide-cassette presen-student communication about needed to run it. n:iutual problems. So far , the-pr-0gram-has pro-tation of suggested safety ;;Our targets are lonely duced about 425 peer procedures is the newest facet studen ts. ne\1' students in counselors in the past three in the nationwide Safety on the school. those who fi nd it hard years to serve in the 13,327· Streets program sponsored by to make friends,'' explained stud ent district. the Women'.s C:Onference,1Na- Dr. Varenhorst. ''The unique aspect of this flonal Safety Council. "\Ve often help those \Vho program is giving minors pro- need an older model. such as fessional training and using The SOS packet includes a boys ·who 'vant a relationship them as a reso urce in a men-I5·minute cassette narration , with an older boy." ta! health situation," said Dr. a series of 40 color slides. Other typical assignments Varenhorst. script booklet and program include drug co u n s e I in g, She stressed that peer guide. Sources of the material welcoming foreign students counselors do not-deal with were civic, govenunental and Md -helping them w i t h severe emotional problems. law enfOT'Cement agencies. 1 language, showing students They refer' seriously disturbed Some 60 national WO.men's how to study, ass is-ting students to professional help. organizations, representing 40 etementary tcachers ··in the -The -peer cou·ns-e l or·s million u·omen; .• are ·urging classroom or playground and themselves are enthusiastic \Vomen's clubs to use the new working \~·ith physicall y han· about the program. materials to generate corn. dicapped or mentally retarded "Jt was the most important munity action on street safety. youngsters. thing I did in four years of Further information Is high school," said one senior available by contacting the GRANTS girl. National Safety Council, The program began in 19?l "It ha5' made me a lot more \Vomen's Department, 425 N. IVIN DAD I NJOYI SHO .. l'INO WITH Ul l Wt wflll ••lhl & lf'tlM ,_ H rt• N ¥1 M y ~ ...... GllOCl llllS l'ltOOUCI MI ATS ,.AY US" A Vll lTI --COAST -- SUPER MARKET Wt DIN¥., Y"" l"lff'CMMI Wt'rt .. dtll M .,..,. llMftt 673-3510 and operates under a federal sensitive to the · needs of Michigan Ave., Chic a go, grant of $150.000 from the Na-h , d d 13411.COAIT HWY. ti on al Institute of Mental l.to~t~e;r;;s,:;';;s;aai;;;a;:l:;;Oth~g;r;;a ;;e;;;bo'Wiy.;;;Il:;l;;inijoi;is;;;, ;;606~11~. ;;;:;;;jiji;;;;;;;j~~~O~RO~N~A~D~E~L~M~A~~ I Health. The n1oney partly pays the salary 9f staff members and the computer FATHER'S DAY • • • I>. llDWELL ·TRADITION J467 Yla Lido. Newport lncti l"tiOM l •7)•4510 BELLY DANCE CLASSES Add Allure While You Trim Your Figure Beginning -lntermedlan -Advance Classes Starting June · CAU NOW: 545·1088 COSTA MESA M•r111• "'' 1• .,. .. " ., PAfl,.....,,, 1111y ~ ••l'lfftM• tflllWlfil """"9 • c""'°" mm Mlf ft eo11t ant Ctflllll. kvtt•I TV .,...... tllCt 1•1111111 t:ll .... \ ·~ .._ ·~ ;,Bl'.UDA'.L-=n~H· _ ··- GOWN . . . CLEARANCE . I ' ' ~· " ""11 3 T O 1/2 • OFF J ....... A BEAUTIFUL. COLLECTION OF .._ FRESH SUMMER STYLE; TJ.T• WE.1VE D ISCOtlTINUED, A DELIGHTFUL F IND FOR JULY . < THROUGH SEPTEMBER WEDDINGS1 MANY FROM FAMOUS DES IGNERS, t~· WH \'fl: OR IVORY, 8 tZES8 •10. REG, $140, 'l'O $400. NOW $4f,99· ¥ l/ 'l'O $265.99. HEADDRESSES, WHITE OR IVORY: REG, $36-$80, '!OW $17 .99·$39.99,,. • BRIDAL: SALON. , . :U1'il}- I -. ' ' • NEWPORT 2 FASHION ISL.AND 644 -2800 • Knowi I arts, degr :v:,.~ii'it ~~-iiiiiii*- Why Not Clle .. -----Grandparent-S~ By GAY PAULEY NEW YORK (UPI) -We obeerve a Mothers Day and a rathen Day. The time bas come fer tba nation al90 to celebrate a Grandparents Day. Heldlnl tho campoiln to ba'" gnndpa,.nt& _.ued IS ID lntqral parl ol the family unit, to be gt,.n stallll, is Mn. John Barklnl, who bas rured five chlldmt and now bas ftve lfOl1dchlldren all Under aven. . Evelyn Barkins, a practldDI attorney 1pec l a I i 1ln1 In domestic .... 1auons, said that gnndJllftDt& .,,, being lho<tdlanged In today's llOci• ty. "We baby-ti~ help with finances and all thot rul>blsh," the said, 11bu& we must never b!.terfere, never touch. It ls 11 II we ,..... dolni enough )ull 'by belnc-I -IJ'andPI~ ...,. stt In horror, but In • 1llence that is auPPJhwnan, at oome of the things ~ '" the ,i""I up to today." EXPERIENCED Yet, Mn:. S.rklns aald, 11Gnndperentl have a speclal vtew of. chlldren which atems from their recent experiences with their own children and from the ·mellowing that ...,,.. with maturity and oge. 110Ur culture, unfortunately, neither honors por mpecta thla enrtclunent. 'Surely 1hls Is the era ol enllglrtenmeot when American IOclety will revene Ill 119. "Sunly the family ll tnlly the bocl:booe ol this n1Uon '.'l. G cliJl1.e4 jn . ,;r.i'aJie II one In whi together. I would be Mothen ol To push Doy' •he !lid touch with OU around the nation busy~• grou will ask O>agrt~ reso lion on the -matte I first beard of . Barkins because of her books. She'd written four books fqf,f try one "Love Poems M riage" written aft~ den deoth of her bu"'8Ml)a physician. She aloo luf.1aa publlshed five boofis of · PIANIST wod I Mn. Barkins Is a former concert pianist and still play for her IJ'andchildren. . - Her latett book, due shortly, ll "A Grandporenl'1 Garden Vents." It conalttl of potllll about grandpormll and IJ'IDdchlldren, lookl111 ot their · relatlollship in i\s m a n y upecta. One, u1n His Image,'' renect& the llJ>lrtt In which she writea. It describes w1tchlnc a chlld's loving care of her dolls or her cat and concludes: "'ll>en once again, I find H odd 11To even doubt you come from God "And lllliy feel • deep cha- grin .•• "'"'3t u you arc, Man llloul4 have been." 1---~. ---..-it ll t be IJ'andJll"nla who ore the base upon which this bacllhone rests. 11Let11 1top belng I youth ..----------.1 oriented clvillzatlon. Le l ' • For · pouoe Olli clay • yur lo rt1Uure the hidden 1111t1 In · 9Uf midst. Let's atve th• old WeekencJer lolu 1 day ot thelr own." Ad . . In • telepllono Interview verti&1ng from her ouburban sc1rsd1ie, Phone N.Y,. home, Mrs. Barklnl chucklod 11 lhl l~ lhlt this 64.., A !1 21 notion baa 10 many other claya ~ -"cuc:umber day, ullld dl7, '----------'' ' . ' 10 ~ii -· ol ltlM lf'-' 10 ..., ,lmlot dfiw l10ioo ,,....__ J-M-t •Iii .a"'ilj:ll' ~ .. ., ' Phone 894-3314 I STOlll:ll HOUM~ MOflll;tf tllnl Frlcl1y1 10:00·•:• l•tar•.tV: t 100 •100 kll'•-tf: 11 :te 1100 r rs. Arlie \Vaterman and ~1rs. Leon k. Insley. Proceeds will aug- ent a scholarship fund for 111ed.ical and paramedical students. --- Eitpf!rt help fM •11 your projects is available at all 1t0fff. Daily de· mon,t1at1ons arid rtQu~dy sched· uled WO• kshop1 rT*ke 1t 111nv to do it voursell . No ........ ot M•ll 0 ....,,, P1eoK A* Nr yo•r frM C'lltoJ ... .. I I 11 -• ' I • • t • ' . I ' l POLAROID · COLOR eACL.~- FILM ·English· Leather -·-This fa10011s name in ·i ,' ~ ,... cosmetics has pleased · L · Fathers over the years , • on his Day and .... 7. OZ. Sli Dry IJUM,f : Hai Karate "ICED" AFTER SHAVE ..,.,.~ ... ~: :\ia:~L4.00 . Hai Karate GOLF Bill sn. AFTEI SHAVE COLOGNE 4 11. 11. j USGA Approved 'Golf Balls. "The Derby" SET AFTEI SHAVE 4 "· lllff. SOii' ·3.50 "The Best Bet" srr AFTER SHAVE COLOGNE 2 IL II. 3.00 . "The Daily Do.uble" ' .. -Arni SHAVE COlOGllE 1· 4t l.11. l''i/-.. ,, .. -~' ~· Ii,, ' ' I'\ '·; \. •' ~ 11 !~·7 < -,,. ---6.00 ' "The Entry" SET Arni SHAVE COLOGNE hz.-11-. --- Gold fin\sh Trio-Knife & Nail Clipper by Trirri. '5.00 SPLASH·ON LOTION The Refresher ••• with 1l1e · great smell of BruL 3\> II. 7 I L aer. 1.21 •er. 2.11 ggc 1.69 LADIES' Bikinis .· .3.99 Moh Hi,. A.llftM la His . -British \ . ' ·AFTER SH'AVE 211. 2.50 ~.1. 4.00 GIFT SET AFTER SHAVE 4 11. SPRAY DEODOUNT 2 11. Imperial Sa GIFT SET - Combo ~ce1sory_tase___5- AFTEI SHAVE COLOGNE hz. 11. " Imperial Saber " GIFTSET 5 5 COLOGNE41L lape S11J • Russian Leather 2-Pc. GIFT SET Beautiful 21 karat gold hand decorated '::~HAVE, 2 ... 4 ·oo C81.0GNE 11. • hz.ea. 7.00 f.1 r.; ·w-· .M 1; 100% Acrylic or Nylon in bright ex- citing-prints.-Halter ·neck1ines:-·com-• pleteii lined. Get the most •out of the sun in these alluring bikinis. ,- 3.44 ia. I i I . ,• ... , ·V Assorted sizes.5· 5· 6 ••r. 1·99 ~ • ea ... G••Ls· 2-Pc. Suits . · Just like grown-up styles! Brilliant prints with adorable trimming. Little :girls can greet the sun fashionably in these suits. Sizes S.14. 3 44 • .,. 3.99 • ea . LADIEJ-Pc. Suit 100% Amel or Nylon in "hot" colors ••• solids, prints or polka !lots. Assorted styles aim sim. le&. II.ft ME N's Trunks Prints and solids with .. comfortable elasticized and draw- string waists. Great for s1mning. too! Si1es S-M·L ' • ler.UI 2.66~a . 9.66ea. 1 • " . ..- \ . Polyester and cottoft in ·deep m1sc1li1e colors with 1,111115111 detailing and handy fl"Cket. Sizes S-M-l. '11(,3.M 3.6&ea: zip or s-s novelty knits in a!sorttd ·styles 111d colors wilh round. crew or tanl·l!llf necklines: Siles S·M·L ' - PILOT-ADVERTISER J ' lib 4 h BOXES .. ~ FOR ~.00 ..... ' ·' • . • . ~' • I • 4 ~• ......;-;• ;:-... . - i=· ''"Ill ' I ~~ -u~~.a I • Song" ., P lll(E MA TCHAIEUI-• s~l'~s1 C1l1&11 ,. 2 "· 5.00 3.00 .,. l 2.29 • I t ., " ' . ' • '· ' - • • 'JO PILOT-ADVERTISER I 15 OZ. CANS Fri skies ' CAT FOOIJ . •.C-.XEN '•llilMEY • •UYER •MEAT . Mlll'S Watch Bands .19PPS-Choose from 'lea- • !her or metal types in ""d or trad ilional slyling. SAVE 25% Off REGULAR PRICE ' ~ FotoiNG Patio Chair I Redwood arod alumimJm i wilh heavy rolwood slats. Versatile· ind·attrattive. , llf. IJS 8 • 88 CLAIROL Long & Silky ' 'CDNDmONING FORMlil.A ••• for elimlnating tangles and split ends t10111iong.hair. 99c ll(.1.2thr. llYLOll Hair Spray Choose from Regylar, S11per or Unscented folllllJlas witll HOLD· POWER! 69C 1311. I ~ ! ,, ,, , 12 or. CANS 11, OL SIU SOL SIZE Canada Dry· Rise aov .spray 'n Vac Airwick AMIT1i BiUfolds SOFT DllNIS· FACE 110 SCRUB 1 ALL FLAVORS LATHER Rue Cleaner su11r Fr11 Cle11sru1s 1r'R111lu. di•••· CASEOF24 ••• wit~ut scrubbi11! 83c '(\...M . -• • "' ""• . FOR SUNDAY, JUNE 17thAT " . ~~LJ1i~ "EH" CIEAnONS Place To Shop!· ' SOUllDISfGll 'AM/fM Stereo TUNER , .J-:PI Wine Caddy SET High slyled wrinkl .. proof Polyester ties fully lined. The latest designs and colors are sure to please the fashiOn-1'-1:'.'1~" minded Dao. LIBBEY -Six 617 oz. wine 4 69 glasses with a half liter d .. • canter and holder. • ...... • • ............ ,.,;>C';"' LIBBEY "Gold Coin" Wit~ Blilt-11 1-lUCl PllYU ••• (;ii 0 "™ • . Com• 1 equipped ; l with 2 1pe•ker1. llf.109.51 #4492-109. lot:. 2.59 · 1· .g· 9<" ~ .• -- SOLID AIR FRESHENERS tlorar, lemu or Natural! · 77~ _.Old Spice AFTEI SHAVE · • 'LOTION Regular or lime .4l4' 11. -ft A£ 1 ~49~ ~ .9~11. 12 OZ. fiEYWSE.SET ... Aotiquid-gold coins emboss· 5 29 ed on a setting of rich. leatllery texture. SET Df 8 • - """<I'"' 2 29 ,._._,", ""'"' .. "'~ Old .. S~ce · · "· 88. 95 11!smem""""-......"""""'85f,ei ' .) -... "' _,,_ # # ,,' .,,,,,-, .,, _,. . ...... Dnuxr Travel KIT Juinbo size with flexible ban· 2 88 die and 3-sided zipper tor · Dad's personal needs. • Attaclle/Tmel CASE Black spooge vinyi ~ith zippe"- ~f,, 5.29 ~r,. 5~89 ..,, . · ·~o 1. Nostalgia Plaque$ , . · Reproduclions of old signs 119 on wood. Fun gilts! , • • 11. • Decanter SET CIGARS & '."r1is1r1 Clltst" ••• Walnut fin-· JOBACCos· ish dies!, 2 amber 6 88 decanters and 4 shot . glasse~ l1f. 1.15 • • , P LUES e Grooming Dryer :~~.n 3·35· BOX OF 51 a HUITIR cOld Spice· 2,,csrr--, ___...,_. ~ir1;nar 2 35· AFTH SHAY[ •.• For Full, Nallml Hair s1y1es1 400· watts °' 12_6.6 powerw/1 heat setting~ . scH1cK Flexamtic ELECTllC SHAY!I .. • 24 88 Precision iii I-screen head for closeness: #411 • .. lot:. TUI #SD·2 a llMlllGTON 600 SUPER llAND·KELD DRYER • , • High/low speeds, 2 combs & styling brush 15 88 1or expert slyling. Rer.17.11 • IOX OF 51 • COLOCNE ' -, WTA FE . 4'!41i ..... FAllllOllTS lot:. U5 IOX OF 51 7.75 . 2.99 ·. WHITEHALL Cuslom Pack 2 49 Assortment. .. ,. 2.11 • WHITEHALL LEE · Oil Filters Witll acid-lighting fe\idium iooje! • lF1 • lf25 • LF3 • lF21 • lfl • Lll4 • Ll24 Old ·Spice "L•nt1n1'' ·Atter Shave Lotion 6 11. 111. 3.H 3.39 • Lil • lF141 1 59 lot:. Prtc11 T1 2.39 . • 11 . I . • • :Jfl UAJl. 1 t'ILV I Fire Alarm Sounds NEW YORK (AP J -Textile and clothing manufacturers are still having problems --~teying --to_mee ne.w-goY.C[ll ment standards r e q u i r i n g children's sleepwear to be fire. resistant . By July 29, all domestic and imported sleepwear up to size 6X . must meet federal re- quirements and withstand 50 1 normal machine wa s h ings while retaining fire-r'esistant qualities. One major problem is find- lnr a fire-resistant treatment effective ·and usable fo r all fibers now used in children's sleepwear. Each fiber reacts di[ferently . to [ire. Synthetics ate usually less Oammable tha n cotton, linen and rayon. But syn- thetics such es n y I o n , polyester and acrylics often melt as the~' burn. The sticky · IUbs:tance that results pro- duces k>calized burns. Fiber manufacturers have found that fabrics treated to be fire-resistant need special care. tor example. treated cottoo flarinelette cannot be washed with bleach or low- pbolpbate detergent or sent to a commercial laundry. Costs are another problem. Textile experts warn that con- sumers ul timately will have to foot 1Jie bill. They fear added costs could run into millions .of dollars. But in 1967 when Sears Roebuck ~ntroduced and pr~ rooted fire-res i stant sleepwear , customers disliked the smell, feel and durability. They felt, also, that they were being told they we re not good parents. They refused to 1 spend the extra dollar for treated slee~ir .... De. Enid Tozier,· president of the Association or Colle'ge Professors of TeXules and Clothlng. believes the federal standard is bad be C au s e "1bere is 110 100 percent ef- fective treatment for fire resistance." One company which says its fibers can pass the flam- mability tests ,is A 11 i e d Chemical C.Orp. J a m e s Houston, director of apparel marketing, says n y I o n ./ .sleepwear made from their fibers is not flammable, but that seams and trims applied by manufacturers cauSe prob- lems .. All Cl'11Sm«tts, appliques. designs or other exposed materials applied to children's sleepwear is expected to pass .-~the-government tests. B~ecausc of this, sea~ are being made from nylon or polyester to eliminate a "wicking effect," Houston said. Tbree possible routes to passiJl& government standards are suggested by Monsanto Textiles Co. They are fabric finishes. fabric . construction and fiber modification. But Monsanto has found !hat fabric finishes have var~·ing longevity and may wea ken the fabric and have toxic side ef- fects. Fabric construction points to the inexplicable fact that some norma lly flamer et a rd ant fibers fail to pass the test in certain construction w h i I e marginally acceptable fibers pass. The fiber 1nodificetion \vay seems to be the surest long range solution to the problem. But Monsanto says there are not enough varieties of flame ' retardant fibers to meet the demand. At a Spring !\1ills conference on consumer protection 11nd flame retardant fibers. br. Ruth Ho~e,i__:malc of \\li1!lhrop COJJege, ·s.c .. rcvi c\(.'ed factors which affC(:t consun1er choice: durabiUty, care, allergies and odor. She said that in areas ha v- ing water with a hig h n1inernl cootent . the fi re retardant .. characteristics of fihers are ·often destroyed in laundering. Sidney Edelstein, pre!ridcnt of the Dexter Chemical Co .. says his company found after a two year stud y that residual •tracesJlLfhelnicals r~nu1ining in a fabrlc after scouring and dyeing often contributc.-d to flammability -even those agents originally pul in 10 check it. "We have discovered that you have to a ct u a I 1 y nameproo( your chernicals." 'Edelstein says, "otherwise you nlay be contributing to the problem rather than reducing it." lo wttil July 29 -ond prob· 1bly after -the bes! safeguard against burns, ac· cording to •lans 0 r i g e . technical consultant for the National Safety C o u n c i I • s home deparuner1t. is clO!c parental aupervisfon. \ 1 .rt1nt'~ilf, J.int t ,, !'IJj You'll ' rat • The 94 DOUBLE DISCO -.-- "You'll like the produce better at Alpha Bet Alil'llA llETA OISCOUHI '"" fAHTA SllC Ol~COU NTS EV£R Y DAY 64· 34• WATERMELON RED RIPE c WHOLE LB. SWEET• MILD BERMUDA ONIONS c LB. HAWAIIAN GROWN PAPAYAS L t,~~E c EA. ---FIRSTOF (; ....... '\ THE SEASON ~ IMPERIAL •. ,i_ · .· VALLEY CANTALOUPE c LB. GARDEN FRESH LETTUCE ·."JSri'~' c HAWAIIAN GROWN PINEAPPLE Lt~~' c EA. 4-tQ THUR. th1u W[O. -- fA "TA Sl!C DISCOU NTS l'i'lRY DAY ALFHA Bl 1-DIJ.COUNl FlllCI © ol.\l"sHAMPOO 57• @ DIAL Ri~ii~P;Sp1irant 99c 10: •w...,i,..,,,., ...___,, NIBLETS CORN o ... -s: °'""'" c~ .. D•"~"' GREEN GIANT PEAS © R'tii"C'Hili"s'AuCE I~·• IJ °"""~ '-'"' EVAPORATED SKIM MI LK AtPHA en~ DISCOUNT F~IC[ 22· 17• 17• 35• 17• RED • RIPE FULL OF FLAVOR .. '!SOllifD COLOR GLADIOLAS ..-ou:+ff l'l MARGUERITE OASIES fRlSHCur CARNATION! r~AGRA,.r STOCK S fMISti CUI POMPOMS 121 "· 1" "· 1 !~. 97:, 1" .~u. I '147 "' FAll l EMON U A~ ANO HQllAl l>A" <' '-'ifl< ~Ul<CHASl Of "'I' ("'q f1 ( V>' • fANTISTIC DISCOUNTS IVIRY DAY Alf'll-Sl I~ 01sc~r ~~!Cl 35• 6.5-0•. • Aln<0<id c ...... i.. """' C:t>oc. NEST~E'S 1 KING SIZE BARS 39• 36• 49• 61• 33• @~Uqji~ji~~~:A~ 38' © M'i1ff·1eLtv"" 25• <§ i>luNE'ili1c't 58• 19-0t.(Clfllily l'"- Bf;!t • ChoaP • ~'°""'' VAN DI KAMPS ENCHILADAS ©BJt1Dcf'OiOii'no M0<1c.-.'s • 10·0t. • f'°'~" ""-='-' MAC. & CHEESE ~o.o._ s,,, • r.,,,.,, "'.'.::7 Johnston APPLE PIE © BR'AUN~swEraE11~.d °'"" 1.1..t,., ... • so~ Pl..9 "-C .• ""' All BEEF BOLOGNA ""-=""' ALL 'Mi'Ar' l ot:ocNa '<:.'.:::::>' A'Lr 'M1Ar'WiE'Nbs °""' Ml!>'t< • 1? 0; P•<) "'--"'-" YARIEIY PAK 41• 81• 10• 73• 71• 67• 95• 12• @ DIAL Sith ~B'~f ws·~·a·;··~ 21 c r.E?::i C'HBPANCA KE ~ WAFFLE SYRUP -3 1-0u'I<" Elot•I,• ""'- ~--- 31 c ~~)~~~::~~CK I,~~ ~---J.0•.• 1,,,,,,,.,1 l""' I.It 85• 43• 47• © cucuiilE'• ·i:ii1i>s 41 • ·---------------- ' ~~\~t:~:H ·123 -------------~·-i<2fsi>of 'uFTER l 61 11• 97• ]j 0....-.:· li<>•:I· "'n""' • Bor••t>l-<-~'l' HEALIH AIO , -J APPLE JUICE 59• e o, • 100.c"''"'. ~1,,.• "'.'.::7 LIPTON TEA BAG S ~ LimttLEMON ~ICETEA MIX hJ 1 ..... 1u,,.. .• 1-t- r8 sliiAwe!RR'Y ~ PRESER;,;.YE,,,..._ ·----------- r.E?::ii.v'Notff:s CHICKEN 45• ~ NOODLE SOUP ©wiioi:f oYSTERS 63• ©ifALIAN·•a'iiE'SsiNG . 36• @oRrssliicMii'' 33• 99c D.,.._ w.·~•,,,.,..·llO• I\,)"'~ \',","'.'.'·. ·,~~·:"~1',1"'(1w,"'"'""1 •« D .. ,-., llALIAN DRESSING 35' AMERICAN CHEESE 87• 59• @ l<llcii£ii''BOUQUET 29• © Whipp~d . cream Cheese 51 c YOUR Al.PttA BETA NEIGHBORHOO~OIBIUT~C·H£~R~PR~l0£111MIAlllllN~TH£111Rl£DIAIPR~OINIPRIOUOl•YIOf•fEIRSi !UTCHEl\'S Pl\IDE MEATS 119 ©wtssoli"o1 L 58• . © s'Ai"FiDwiil' oil' 7 O• .i' Ml.A. TS YOU'LL I( PROUD TO SlRVl QUALITY & SATISfACTION GUARANTEED • DISCOUNT PRJCEO rf::.::. GLADf'A'1fi"'iiiESHENER 48•; g.,,,..,. ·' Witt• .. r_:,,,. D .... U~! SPRAY N' VAC ~ Ot C••• • ['),.., "•'""!< ..... ~ "''"""'J ·(.~ ..... ,,,., l.i'>O<vllil• f..,,,,. 0;···~·' SEGO SPOON·UP D~~ c,....,., ••• °""'-' D·•••~•• ANT CONTR OL D~~ 'Jo o.,. .... • ij.,. ····-~· TSP CLEANER © lllPMll IETll • • Or ,;., GROUND PEPPER <5> MoitoN'sfu ' , PEPPER SHAKER '-.../ 1ALPH;i'(IA BLEACH37• rl.-;::; 1}TRoENT IABLErs83 • DOUlll DISCOUNTS ..... ~ o ....... .... ~ Di, ..... , ,o..,t,1,, dl-11111• ••• eJClra ...,'"•• 111 Hditlo" It ..,., '"'""" ltw 4ik0""' prlq1, Tit.Jr ti• ·-d• ,..Wblt by ,,,..,.,.,,. p111CheM ellew• •~<M fttll'I tht -11..fot1u••t wltll 111!, t 1,lrt .. .;"' , .. .,.d tll I• 1t ut . . W•\"""'' • l'.l~ 01 Cft» CHILI W/BEANS r~.01 • wu._.1 e.n,., J \ 10• 113 35• 89• 23• -35• 32• 45• ... 12· J LB. PACKAGE fR ESH fROZf,N • MEDIUM SIZE SPARERIBS "GREAT ON THE ROTISSERIE". · HORMEL BEEF CHUCK ROAST RED LABEL BACON BUDE CUT BEEF ...... fAMtl Y PAX CHOPS ~ f•t sti tMOlUI NOlllHt;MN FRESH l'l:l".::.·:... SLICED 97c FILLET ORDUNO sac PORK LOIN LI. OF SOLE BEEF _. ~ ,. ., ALPHA BET A IUTC ,1 T·BONE 188 . STEAK LI. I I BlAOC CUT OUBUOUE Ml$$1M~AND 16-0l , ~ 149 fR~~~iTBEEF , 1 ~9-~~~It . · fffuJJsT'fll taK~ e 66c L1. 80Ni\£S\ ,.1~• t•m w1u•.•s SAUSAGE SMELn 9·9c ~~i~y C~~fK 1 ~9 98C @ 138 LI. J'1rna;r1 nm LL LL FR~SH MEAf LOAF 89f1. COSTA MISA-ntO Mtrt>ctr e1._, totTA Ml~I 9. 11fll $1, MUNflNOTON llACM-tt4• All•ms HUNTIMIJTOlf llfAC"-lNll N. M..h1 SI. MUNTINOTON llAC~4J1 ll'Mlll!Ur•I LAGUNA MILLS-»MI C• .. M It Lllfu l'OUNfAIN VALLIY-Int W•rJMr lltVINl-1 .... C11lvtf', U11lvef'tlty Pt,_ SOUTH LAOUNA-tel•U f, Ctt•I Mltft.,.tv I . I • ' I ... _, ..... _, .. _.. ......... . ) , DAIRY CASE FILLED WITH TEMPTING VARIETY Wednesday, June 13, 1973 OAILV PILOT 5J'' Cream of the Crop Skimmed We salute June as Dairy Month with some colorful creations developed by the California milk industry home economists. Aft~r all what is 4 teaspoons baking powder 2 envelopes plain gelatin I cup sugar 'h teaspoon salt I (8~• ounceJ can crushed I egg Oallh nutmeg pineapple 1 cup dairy sour cream 1/1 cup butler t cup creamed small curd I teaspoon vanilla % egg yolks, beaten cottage cheese 1h cup semi-sweet chocolate 2/3 cup dairy sou r cream I cup plain }'ogurt bits June, or in fact, any other Butter 3 tablespoons lemon juice Mix flour, cocoa, soda and ,___, .-.lllOilllL..!V'.l.P ... L~l@j".,~.Y_..._..!_ ~strawberries, I tablespoon honey sa lt. Beat butter and sugar un- season without a 00fuema'de sugarea --------Walercress -----tll fluffy. Beat-1·n~t1re·~--< strawberry shortcake. 1 <ryJP whipping crea1n , Sprinkle gelatin over I cup beat In sour cream and The biscuit base for this "''hipped pineapple juice to soften. Stir \'anilla . Gradually beat in beauty is rich and crusty with ?ttix flour, sugar, baking over low heat unt il dissolved. nour mixture . Stir in dairy sour cream and butter powder, salt and nutmeg. Cut Combine 1,:: cup gelatin mix-chocolate bits. Drop by tea- making it a real short cake. in butter until consistency of ture "rith remaining 1 cup spoonfuls on lightly greased Do it the old-fashioned way by coarse meal. Mix In egg yolks. pineapple juice and undrained baking sheet. splltting the biscuit and but· MJ1 ln sour cream. Spread crushed pineapple Chill until Flatten cookies if Yoo terlng the bottom half. Then dough evenly in buttered 8-it begins to thicken. Turn into like \vith bot to m of glass fill lavtsh!y with sweetened inch round layer cake pan. Id Ch .II 1 1 1 dipped in sugar. Bake 51.rawberries and w h 1 PP e d Bake in ~ degree oven 15 fi..cup mo · 1 unti so 1 y in 375 degree oven a to 10 cream with more of the same minutes or until baked and set. nlinutes or unlil just done. 00 going on top. golden. COmbine cheese, yogurt, KOT OVERBAKE. Cookies The two layer salad la made Remove from pan and cool lemon juice and honey. Stir in may seem slightly soft when with yogurt, cott age cheese, on rack about S minutes. remaining Y.r: cup gelatin mix-removed from oven. but they d I 11 ture . (If necessary, reheat to firm up wh ile cooling. Cool on honey an emon as we as Place on serving p I at es liquify). Spoon over fruit layer crushed pineapple~ pln~p-Carefully splltjnto two laye rs. In mold. Chill at least 3 hours racks . Makes-about 5 doi.en I Jul"" The refreshing · l 1h·inch cookies. Pe . --~· . Lift off top layer and spread until firm. Unmold and gam-combination is Just right for ,8 bottom layer with butter. bh with watercress. ?-.takes 6 warm summer -day.-There s Spoon--berries -and whi--' servings. nothing seasonal about thiJ ~ because every ingredient is cream between layers and on SOUR CREA!\1 readily available all year top .. Serve warm. Makes Iii round. 1 servmgs. COCOA COO KI ES tee cold milk is the begin· PINEAPPLE CHEESE 2 cups flour ning for the tall refreshing SALAD MOLD Y.r: cup cocoa mocha cooler. Trim it with "'1 teaspoon baking soda whipped cream and pair it 2 cups canned pineapple 't!t teaspoon salt with some homemade sour juice 1i2 cup butter cream cocoa cookies. CALIFORNIA Sl1IA WBERRY SHORTCAKE 2 cups flour v. cup sugar TALL MOCHA COOLER Dissolve 113 c up in11tant cocoa mix, 2 tablespoons in~ slant coffee powder and ¥4 cup sugar in ¥•cup hot water. Add I qua rt tee cold milk and stir until blended. Pour into 3 or 4 tall glasses. Top with spoon ful whipped cream if desired. 1.1all:es 3 or 4 servings §;:THOUSANDS OF _, .. 1.u.a.- foot STAW 9'_, .. "'.&.Co ... ' ) ( ..... ) LJ ,.. "';~ ~~~~fUlrc! CJifD'ilfllm1fl 1YC1 nr.fl \YR(j'fJflDl li?fA\ID)~o~~~~i .. e. os:3JUULS Ul.JU~IJUU Ut?J LJU\J U~ UL:JLJ' 1~sg 0 -~ ----Q--~~ ~-~0--: C:, ~ -:-f" ~ ': '! COMPAU TMI COMPLlTl COST OF YOUl lMTIRI DISCOUMT FOOD OIDll ';: ~ ~ ': c:; ~ · ' . ~ ' • • . FIOM MAlllT IASllT WITH AMY OTNll FOOD STOii! • • • · ' · ALL MARKET BASKET STORES ARE M.B. DISCOUNT ................... ..... ..__, """ WILSOl'I TllDll MADI BONELESS CANNED HAM "llW'' , unn 1A111n BURGER-PRO n.oz. ca• 121..(T.IOLl ... · VARIETY i+LETTUCES WIOU Siii PIODM c:•MI11Ct:m•nnun n-• 111% ORANGE JUICE B! 6..(1 ..... ··~-"''" '"' 'l'""'"-1"'.__.,., ·-•~ .. llU""-•ll-Oo '"""''_"_ '-""'""'"'''-~" '"'"''"" l'l••ol,...,• ·-"""""''"""""''' , -+o .__ o ,,_.,ijfl ,,,,, .... ~II • '°'""~' o•' ~· __ ,.. ', ... ,,.!,It~'"-· .... ',, .. 0"fl'I' ''""-'" '"""" ""' '"''••· • 0 '"!'-""' "'"-''"· 0 ,,,., ....... ':-C:::"" :-· .i;:,~--: ::::-:::.:-::.~'0:1 :r.= ..... ·:r.:1:::.:.::... : : ... "'a: :.Mt:..-=:.. :~:o~~:~'!.m:-.~: .... : =:-.:.·::::.:.:•::... : :::.~r.~ ~1~':~.::·" : :.:;""..::",.'.:.''.!..'::::.::·.· • ....... I .. ,.,.. 0 ,,_ t!t' -·H ......... -... ""' _ ......... t'.:i ....... ,_.. 0 __ ,,, ""'' ·-· "" • ,,_, ... ,. ,.,,,,,._ ..... , ......... '"'' ....... 0 .......... ,_ .... : == ,.1~::""-: :::::.~.~,ti:.;;:::. .. · : :-.=:-,-:::'\!!:::-: ·::~"'"" "'\;"::... : r.:;o:~ ..... ' .. "':';'.O:-.!;• : :;'.:!,"'..,\~~\:-.;ri'-, ........ : :::::::~·.:::::.::r.::": :!".: .. .,:;,:-;~ ..... , •-•• ,,._.. ·•-,.,. -•H ·"-'"·"t1l1 •-••• • ~ .. .='l\\'1\':...,1 ... r.. . '""'-' j,..,_ ._,,..., • _,,,.,...,,, ,j,,., __ • '"''""'"' \,.,._,,., • '"""' '" " __ WAIUI 'f0,11 MAil Hit .. t:;;,,-;:.:·:.·.;;-... , ... ~o.:-:::i =-= .. ........ _,,.~ .. ---·"' ,_ ........ ,.~ ...... __ _ ---·--... .. ,,_,_ ,,.,,,.., .. .,,, ._ ........ _,_,,""',, .. ,, ... _, ._ ... ,,. . ...._ ...................... _ ., ....... -... ·--............... -........ -...... ,,._ .. .. ·' - . I • . . . . . • DAILV PI LOT Wedt1esda1, June 13, 1'1 • Selection Most Varied French Cuisi . I ne s Not Best ' Fre nee' s number I food criti.c, Robert Courtine, says wo men ere best cooks, Franch I By ALIN E MOSBY f PARI S (UPI) -France does not have the best food in l the \\·orld. And "''01nen are better cooks than n1en. Having dropped these tv•o --+-'bo'°in1bshells4 Ro_be_r.t f-O~ine settled tack In his chair to order his 15.300th meal as 1 France's No. I [ood critic.' Courtine is lhe restaurant 1 eqitor fo r th~ . newspaper Le. ~Conde of Paris. the '''orld's fdod capital. Yet, he said, "1 i do not consider French food I the best in the \\'orld. I "Ifs the most varied, not tl\e best." he said. "All coon-. I tries ha\•e good dishes . Why, I efen like English food , if it's , made correctl y. There are J t.liree -0r f-0ur good Itali an j dishes, some t>ortuguese. In , Ll>uisiana there is marvelous ·1 f<lod .. \ -The greatest cooks in, all · countries arc \Votnen, he went t on, because "they do ·natural r cooking for love; for their"hus· I band. their children. When,y-0u do it for money it's not ·as . good. Anvthing y-0u do for love l is'better~ •· ~ "''the 'oiity r eal cuisihe is the · · .... cuisine -of the -country, the traditional food of o u r iti"andmothers made with local products. Male chefs com· plicate things. Tile genius chefs such as Paul Bocuse In Lyon or the Troisgros brothers in Roanne are in a class apart. But in general, l prefer women cooks. They know how to hold ·ba ck. Too much butter, sugar or alcohol de stroys the taste." EATING 'BEAT' Courtine possibly has the world's most deliciowi job. To cover his "beat" this journal- ist eaU: lunch and"' dinner in the restaurants of France five days a. week, 800 dif· ferent restaurants a year "although l ate twice in Max- iro '!last Ye41f'·" Io additiori, he drops in on a dozen other reslaurants each day to find out what is cook- ing. One night be ate two din- ners. Each Saturday he visits the wholesale food market. He eats alone, never with hi s "~fe because he!s on the job. and at home "I never eat on "·eekends, just ham and a salad." Courline is not !hifl but has a tri m, healthy figure. "I never have been sick." he said . "One must pay attention as to what lo avoid. Never bread. never sugar, ne\•er desse rts. Courtine, writing under lhe \Vhen Courtlne and I lunched cludl>d "·ere fresh, not fro1.en . ary crititism in 1928 and was cookt tlnd h&d ttlught me a for the purpose of thi s in· Ile had bouef a la fice lle -struck by ho1v great 1'"'rench lot." terview he ad1•ised "don't boiled beef In a sauce -\\'titers often wove food ·in· Cotirltne began 'his food col· order the roa!:I lamb. It's folk>\ved b)• 11 salad and umn for Le Monde 2ii years banal.·• \\'e started 11•ilh an cheese. He ordered "u nice to their plots. Balzac wrote of ago and •has v.•ritten. 30 books estofinade de n1or11, 0 r ,1•irrc" froin the Lyon region. his 01nc lcts. Flaubert of the on cooking. r ' scrambled eggs. fish and si pped it . and pronounced it \1•etlding feast of Madan1c llis final b o m b s h e 11 : potatoes cooked toge th c r . "\\•ell rounded.'' Bovary. "'rhcre's no such thing as the ~~.d_e,.ye.a,u__e,lll1·.L-~ " n1 interested_ i~cr__nt__ooe li ttle restauraQt. sweetbreads w hi ch flt Pi\ '--Yon-QttA·trTr" 11•dting about food. fl! y even in Paris any more. To cookin g isn't the best. CourtineJ examined and con· Courtinc began writing~l'..'ite:or.:_-~g'..'.'"'.'.:"'..'dn'.'.'1~ot'..'h:'er_'ha.""'.d..'.be'.':c:'.'"'..'"'...":C'_'.'".'"''-."'ge"'.t..':q"'.ua".'l'..'it~y !.you~ha"."..'.v.".e'..'to~pa~y::_.'_' --========~:::_==:=:...:====----------- ' I START SAVING EVER'!J ~ Y WITH LUCKY'S LOW DISCOUNT PRICES/ SIOIED HAI FULLY ClllEI &ROUID BEEF ROUID STEii IOIE·ll llNCON:~l~~N~Ll,.Y s 123 Ill SIZE PICllGE 77! ' •ONl)ll)1'01 QU4LllY .t.NO FL•v o• La I I OOIELl!55 I EIF 11.U Lit AlllllCH CHEESE SPREAD 91'SLICED COOKED HAM . '1" ~~J..~.E~Aii· ~~~D~~iili . : .. :11:: ~s'p1'BA .. R~E.!~R~l~B"s""'""'"' .. s,.1•• ~;~17'';;;;;:::: .. , osc~i'"M;;;. w11NE•s '"' ,RIB FILLET , ., iiN·;·sAiisAGr ''s 12. -"......... ······· .. •· EYeryday Low Priced Deli Items: i11-0z •u ltlfA1wi:1t1:.tSvc1 .. 1~•"a l7'.t.1.Lw•r011 •u•EH .. 1-t•P1Ca97 =~~~ .......... I •01111.01e•1-'~ ......... 1,. .. G TURKEY ROAST :::';;.s3H PtllSIUIT llstUtTS OSCAR MAYER BOLOGNA CUBE STEAK s 1" """'"'" "" 1um~LK£XlU.\IGHt a.oz 12' -'tl i.t:Al •EG o~ 1Hlo:~o 11.oz n c; 91' SIRLOIN TIP •••• ................. · · .1.1 OSCAR MAYER BACON $112 Alll. .. All Bllf BOLOGNA ::,:.~'" s1•• EX. LEAN GROUND BEEF s123 """'""'·'"''"''""0 '""' ICAI CHEESE FOOD 93' 99' 1••' •••••••• I.I •llY51ZA fACll:AOI .... • LI .""'"""'·"""''"'" ""'"" ''"'~"' ·······"·""' BONELESS STEAK T·BOllE STEAK s1n TURKEY ROAST :~:-.:. s3oe CAllEI HAM LI $,,.corro SALAMI s11• lOll'll•LOIN sits ....... ,... ... I.I WNllll D4•11 ,,.IAT l·l l ~ME\~.11.l. 3 u,. osc•~ M•YrR 11-0z PKG =:::·~=-.~ .. ~~.. !.~~ .. !~~~SE STEAK L• s i •• ~ .. ~,~0NYWISE BA~~~-1.ll'llG 89' PACKAGED GOODS KEY BUY CANNED FOODS PEACH PRESERVES ............ ~~ 79 ' PLANTER 'S NUTS ....... .,.~~;-:,:: 98' WHOLE KERNEL CORN ....... ~!~; 23 ' CUT GREEN BEAN~ ......... ~·~:: 20 ' I SJ•.t.Nll. •O•T!ON •OC• •IOllO~ID CROSS RIB ROAST ..... 1•ll• lM .. o~~~~: $~ 19 SAUSAGE OR PATTIES ........ ,,. 3• .. IW.flllll..Mllf._I ROASTING CHICKEN .:. ......... .':..'.:: J 5• ' ~·BANANAS 13~ ·· 1·, .. i ;o111ois14~ ~USHROOIS :~!~'6.'"""'84 •11 RED SWEET OllOIS ~~~i~"" . 24•11 ¥1LEICll ORllGES :~~ .. 4~59• pen name La Reyniere , reviews-restauranl!-with-the-- fervor of a music critic lighting into a new opera. FROZEN FOODS P.AgRAMl-SANDWIC-lb=~~j-7-5' ORANGE JUICE ................ '.·r:;:: 28 ' BIRDSJYE ZUCCHINI.. ........ ::"<; 23 ' KEY BUY HOUSEHOLD ITEMS .,.-CUPS FOR DISPENSER ..• ~:'.:: 71' I 'STII.J.. TOOD' In one review he roared. "the krated cheese dish does not exactl y reach pinnacles . , .. " In another restaurant tie found ''some dishe..t still are timid." He blasted one eatery for "a menu \\Tilten in completely il· legible handwrittng" a n d another for being "too (lark. I like' to read my newspaper while I eat." Courtine receives around 200 letters a week from readers "''ho ti p him to g ood restaurants or complain of bad meals. Occasionally in comes an outraged wa il from some restaurateur he has v.·ounded. One threatened to punch his nose: another sa id be "''ould sue. But neither did. Calories Counted Thi s dish should please die t· "'atchers. t1llNESE-STYLE }'ISJI FILLETS 4 labout 1 pound ) flounder or similar fish fillets Salad oil 2 tab\~spoons soy sa uce 1 tablespoon sher ry 1'2 teaspoon sugar I teaspoon minced fresh ginger root. if a\'ailable I scallion (green onion ) v.·ifh green top i n c l ud(d minced Brush fish ll·ith salad oil and broil. Into a small saucepan turn 1 teaspoon salad oll, the sox sauce. s11erry, sugar. ginger root (lt used) and scallion and heat; l)Our over broiled fish fillct..t. Makes 3 to 4 servings. Sunday is Fl1L1BAY in the 1,@1q;1r.11 BRUS.SffSPROUTS ........... ~~-;; 63 ' .,.-KLEENEX TOWELS ........ :~~ G1 ' .,.-GLAD SANDWICH BAG~.'.~.!: 47' .,.-FACIAL TI SSUE ............ ~\7;:: 37' .,.-AIR FRESHENER ....... ~·~:,:::_ 51' K2R SPOT LIFTER .............. ,;;;.: 77 ' WHITE KING SOAP. .....• ~;:: 71 ' ZEST BATH SOAP .. . ...... ::~ 22 ' MR . CLEAN LIQUID ........... ~;;;:. 75' COMET CLEANSER ............. ~'~ 28 ' COLLI ER S BRI QUETS .......... :~ 87 ' .,.-DISINFECTANT.. ............. ;~;: 59 ' ... LIQUID BLEACH ...... : .... ;:-;;, 31' PEA S & CA~ROTS ............. ~::.'; 38 ' STEW VEGETABLES ..•..•..... ;;~·;; 62' .,..ME XICAN DINNER .... ,;;~:;:; 51' WHITE BREAD DOUGH ...... :~~ 63' 9,TOllTO SAUCE i;~ f 7c LOW EVER YDAY PRICE CANNED FOODS KEY BUY STRAINED BABY FOOD ...... ~;:-: 9 BEECHNUT JUICE ............ .,1o."~ 9' JUNIOR BABY FOOD ......... ~;:";; 13' .,..LEMON ICE TEA MIX ..... ,:~~93' .,.+COFFEE CREAMER .......... ~::: 69 ' &BRIC sogER ""'"' l . A OUNCI ... '-'' ORANGE JUICE ....... c~..!!.~1i;-:;: 33' ... JENO 'S PIZZA ROLL. ... '.'::.';.'; 89• COCONUT CUSTA~O PIE.'.'.'.';;;~ 95 ' Ir we wtlcomt -11-1110••••• LEIOllDE ff C .,.+DRESSING ........... ~'.':"::~ 36 ' -~tron~.:'!~.!~e!,!.,~O,~~J. IOX .... 92' !!~~!,~~~~~1~!.~-h 17S<>~IOX. ............... S.3°2 ~.:'§.~ .!;~!! ~~~! E_~!_il~!4!, ............. s 4 85 ~~~~~~!,.h~I~~~!~,~ ,ill~.GE~! ... . 9 5 c ~~~.r .. ~!~.~~~.~~~~~~~TITL ................... 8 2c EVERYDAY LOW PRICES ON HEALTH AND BEAUTY AIDS PRELL! SHAMPOO •SECRET ANTl·PERSPIRANT for coo1 comfort. SECRET DEODORANT Sproy-on dffdoront lor extro protl<tlon. SJ It 7.0.. l CREST TOOTHPASTE Fomlly ll1.1orld1 7 6 C lorm1,1!0 In mini ?.0.. °'~,di . • COMPARE OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICES SPLATTER GUARD Sl1orns/1tra in1 11 C & 1top11plaff.r. PORTABLE BBQ Gr1<1ltok1·along 88( w/chart"oal ln1ld1. 12". x 18'.:_ COOKIE SHEET ''°"'"'°";,, 68' and mvch mor., MIXING BOWL 'n;. ..... ~. SET 31>fM• ... ............. l:iowl1b •t. s1 •• • 9" x 13" UTILITY l!AN ~ MOtl THAN A SUl'tlMAIKl1. A DISCOUNT ClNTll Ofnts ... VA. lllTY OJ NC>fll·POOO IT IMS ~ WIAllNO A"ll.tfl 10 TOYS .INO GAIDIN NflDS,AT MOtoll'I'· • SAVlNG lVftYOA,Y lOW ftlCU, fll1ii11 I .. ftllr JOM 'AllA1111M . 111 \lo, Jt .. , (.ilt" ..... . lllllllllM · 110 W. I• ,,._ Au. artn•. 111.1. c,.,.,_ 1•••t lllDWlll ''ti · 1~41 ·-11•4, (lllOGI ''" • 1J)4 MoN• i tt. W. (DYllU • I• ..... 511 .. , ... Uo, OOW•l • IUD fW•tlff• 11•4. C.110111 (,10¥1 · 1l07J 1~•114 \t C.AtOllf C.IOVI · 11011 ~"!l•tllt It GtlfllDlll • llH W. C.lt-h ll•f . GtlfllDAll • 1000 S., (,.,.,.1 I •• lllGllllllO 'All • IJJ W. •••. 4J llllllflll(,TOll tllCll ·•051 AtlM!o I•• lnl11Ttll(,f011 lfi(ll ·U6Clll t•to C~kt J1 ll C.lllli lllHS· s.,. 00.p "T·" h '"' ta •1tao1 . l• """'" "'"""'' C••. llDIWOOD • ltl"'"'' 1~"""'' (I• lAWllOlLI · 1101 Se. M.oi-t~''"' 11•4 _wtllOI • IOIOlJi.,., '"· , n""oot.....JJI U Ar'-•tk...I• tOMG llACll • t?JJ f, s,.i., 11 I ICIJ &llGl\ll • J•IH I. 1 ... ~1,. '" MOlllOYtl • 4Jt W 11\t~"f'*" Otto• M0111ltllt0 . IJJ llt. ll'lku 111WW111 • nm •1t••• "'' otAKI • 11JI I. <~.,...... 1 .. ''''°'"' . , ........... "' u.• ""'lQllO . lJ'4J .. " ... h l,UllGl .. tfl • t» I. lOI T-o ilk4. Mii HlllO • ll:M n1~ St. UllTI 1111 • JJ1't S.. Mt!tl lillll MOMCl . 1t.f1 tilot ... ""'· W\llll Giii • 1111 llt011t• ftt4 1100-00 ffl(ll I fill i tt1• llt4 IOHUt(I · 1'10 rtflllr (Mot 11w,, 101t11KI • JtM '-""'"'' tr•4. IVMGi tUO lfffltlll l lt 4, TIIJllll . lJHt .. .,,,, l •t. 4' h! I• Wftl(ll1Jtf1 • 1101 llltffltl ..... Wf1TMllllTll , 1 J011 ~rlftt•lt It WUIMlllUll · tteD Wn1.,;.,,,,, WlllTTill • IKISJ t .. 11 '' l•t, Wtl!TTitt • 11110 1, Wflllti• 11•4.• or "01•· ....... WOODlillO 111111 • 111 .. "'-'•'' th4. M I •-• 68' 'll'llllU.01011 • 1n1 llf, ........ or llQ wortMf' '------' .STORES O'ER 10 Ill 20" 2-RING INFLATABLE POOL 3S"i:6"' ncool·'pool"' tor ho1T11 or tok1·olol'lg. 12,, 97c ~.~~~1.~~~~~~ .. 5 9 ~,,. 27" x 67" AIR MATTRESS Dcwl't 1lnll or 1wlm, fl !OJ: and float! -=-9~t~27t7 ..... ," 16" BEACH BALL 22' For kld1 of oll 0911.... 1116 w.·t . " i" )' • .. -~ . • • • "'» . . ,....._, ' , .. , • ~ J ,. • 35" x 60" JACQUARD BEACH TOWEL "'••ort•d color1/ •h•o••d collon, s399 PRINTED PLACE MATS In Of 01.1tdoor 64C wlpe-cl1<1n vinyl •• , , DAIRY PRODUCTS .,..soFT MARGARINE ...... ~::::: 41' ... PARKAY MARGARINE ..•• '1:41' CHEESE SPREAD ................ '0:'.~99' PREMIUM ICE CREAM ...... :-.:<:: 79 ' BEVERAGE 1 SPIRITS BUDWEISER BEER .......... .,,./! 1.32 PINK CHABLIS WINE .... '.':'.':;:1:2.35 GOlD SEAL GIN ............ .,~,:-;:7.11 w if Von de Kamps ur AN OUTST-Vlllm Of FWISlt IAllOY GOODS -~ I ... ,, ~· :a1a.. 11u u11•I STP OIL TREATMENT 93' HI-FLO COOLANT · NO:boll coolctnt a on11.tr .. 11 conc:enlfot•. $139 L-c.~ 1.0AL ~ -=... -LION'S"JIEAD-- WASTE BASKET s 148 ... -.... _ .. ,. doe. I ~llOM" Iott. MEN'S WALK SHORTS Coflon/polY"ler In 1olld11 1trip91 and ploldl. l'IHl'Ml•pree1• 11111 M ..... s3•• • . • .. Choices G~lore With vegetables green. red, salisractiti1 plus worthwliile white, yellow ; meat, fish , nutrients. Fortunately, unlike fowl, cheese and a long row of so many fa \•orit c edibles, their seasoning ingredients, an im-· calorie count is wa y down, aginalive salad-maker needn 't under 100 per pound. I egg \Vcdges , if desired, in 6 portit;ins. r.jUSHROOM-CHICKEN I SALAD .)~a~r t::.-0.same salad for 8 l\1USHR00~1 CllEF SALAD one of the most delectable 'l: pound fresh mushrooms •J pound fresh n1ushrooms 1 cup diced cooked chicken 'f.t cup diced celery salad ingrcdielill is thinly slic-•,!z cup olive or salad oil 1-3 cup mayoMaise ed fresh mushrooms. 3 tablespoons lemon juice 1 ~ cup chopped parsley Just rinse them briefly and •,~ clove garlic. minced I tablespoon lemon juice ~. teaspoon salt • slice. (You don't peel modern 2 tablespoons sugar cultivate<! mushrooms! I I teaspoon salt 1-& teaspoon g1'm1nd black \\'hile their texlure is cri sp l/16 teaspoon ground \\'hitc pepper ,. and c~hy, they are porous pepper so that they blot up salad 1 l pound sliced cooked ham. 4 hard-cooked eggs dressing in a most appetiz.ing cut into I-inch slivers Rinse. pat dry and sli'ce fresh mushrooms ( ma k c s about 2 ~? cups): place in a large 00..,·1. Add chicken and celery. rashion. I cup Cheddar cheese. ·cut It's a good • idea to marinate into ~~-inch strips the sliced mushrooms In Rinse. pat dry and slice dressing a half hour before mushrooms (makes about 21h you add leafy greens and to!s cups ). Place in a bo\\•I. Com· tilt whole s.1lad ror serving. bine oil , lenmn juice. ga rlic, lt't a sn1all bo\\'I combine mayonnaise. parslc?. len1on juice. salt and bl ack pepper: mix '''ell. Add s e a so n c d ma vonnaise to mu s h r o om 1niXture : toss \.\•ell. Cover arid l"hUI. Serve sal~d on lettuce leb.ves, if desired . Cut eacti egg into 4 wedges. Arrange ;iround salad. Ser,·cs 4. You can use r re s h s~ar, sa lt and white pepper. mushrooms in almost any non-l'our over 1nushrooms: ·toss s'>'·eet salad : v.·ell·sea soned an-"''ell. tipasto, l'afy mixed vegetable, Let stnnd for 30 minutes. protein-rich chef's or aspic-stirring occasionnlly. lypc party salads. Gentlv s1ir in h:im and tfushroomii have "satictv-cheese:· toss lightl.1•. Serve on value:" they contribute eating lclluce leaves surrounded 1\•ith On Stage, In Kitchen Actress FolloWs Dad By JOllNA BLIN N NE\V YORK "~'ty d<1ughter Tatum pnd I don't have the usual fatl'lcr-<laughtcr relationship, because "'e 've only lived· in the same place together for the last tv.·o years. "Before then, she was always in the background . somewhere. But now. since \ve're tr)'ing to make a home together, I've had lo learn to cook!" Ryan O'Neal was talking about his n i ne-y car-o ld daughter, who makes her rnm debut in her 'father 's new movie, "Paper f.l oon. '1 Ryan and Tfl~U.flJ. live in a Malibu beach hous<. He is a partisan .of health . food , and does most of the cooking himself l although he sometimes delega tes it to a member d hls "fnmilv " - friends who are staying St. tbe house . "l ·have one of those hibachis that have different heating levels. I use charcoal briquettes and hickory chips. "P'irst or all, I believe in using just a hunk of great meat, so I don't even marinate it. I just pepper It up or add some navored salt. ''We also make plenty of fresh fruit salad's and use a lot of leafy green or yellow Vegetables. ••vou know what's very --simple-and-ta9tes-vel')' good7- Corn on the cob, wrapped with bacon and srllled over the coals! 0 1 like plain, American cooking. I keep my food as simple as possible. We have a maid who comet in a couple times a week to clean the ho<me, but I keep It clean and Tatum helps me. We don't have otlier ~Ip, Hke nannies or cook1, and that'a the way I like· It.'' \ Tatum 'is wi!llng to try her '•hand .In the kitchen, even though the results often Jn. elude 1 messy kitchen, "One morning Tatum and 1 friend made breakrast for me. ' And "·hat thev did to th e ground blnck pepper and a kil chcn is ·not to b c dash of drv mustard . then add remcn1bercd! a good piiich of oregano and "But \Yhcn it romes fr om basi l and a tiny pinch or love and it's brou ghl up to me th yme !ix' sure it's just a on a tray. I can hardly com· stnall pinc'h. Thyme adds a pla in. She fixed me toast good navor. but it is strong.) and jam. and there was a trail The &ecret to a good salad is of jam all the way down to the in using good grade of oil kitchen ." t Spanis h olive oil or light Rya n O'Ncal keeps in con-vegetable oil are fine ). dition by eating right and Pour on some. just enough '>''orking out dail y with five-to coat lightly but not noat, mile runs on the beach, fre-then splash with wine vinegar. quent Frisbee matches. two-The amounts are basically im- man volley ball games and material. as long as you use tennis. only about one-fourth to one- "l'm a semi-health foods half as much vinegar as oil. person . but to go all the wa y is Toss this mixture to corn- too hard a life. bin"e tlioi"oughly. "I'm sure eating healthily Then carefull y set on top the does accomplish som'ethirig' in' · W"aS!led. criSp, cut-up greens : your head. lf your ~4 f~!~ . Jl.llhJc.e. esc.arole. curly endive like it's gelling good food , the •and ' al falfa sprouts. Cover rest or your body will respond with transparent wrap and accordlhgly. refrigerate. "I itake a lot or vitamins, The vegetable s will some organi~. and do a lot of m'arinate and take on a good exercise. Everything at the JJav<k . .\II you have lo do at beach is on the run - we all servlhg time is to toss the need ~xerci~ to work .~ff all · vege1t3bles and dressing mix - thc poisons in our jxxly. ture on the bottom with the Many Californians are con-greens. sumcd with health food fads , rttAL(BU BROILED STEAK Rynn feels, and he says, "Thnt's only because they're 31h o 4 pounds steak , cut 2 not satisfied with their health. inches thick "I take care of 1nyself and Salt (or garliC salt or onion do everythlng in moderation. l salt ) don't drink coffee and drink Freshly ground black pepper only wine occasionally. Liquor Choice of ·condiment {op. ls very destructive . Besides, t Ion a I ) : p r c pa red you can 't-dr.ink. it and run fi.ve .; _n1ustard,.... Worcestershire. _ .miles ey_ery day. ~ sauc:c. Angostura bitters, "One of our big staples is all soy ~auce etc. different kinds of honey. We Rub steak with salt , pepper: go through a big jar at least Jet~tanq at room temperature every other day. Honey's a for at least 2 hours. great source of energy." Throw a handful or hard· RYAN O'NEAL'S wood c h IP s (or dampcnc<l TOSSED SALAD hardwood sawdust) on the Here's an easy wa y to have a sal~cl and dressing all made ahead ~ time, ·ready to toss . just befoic serving! Put cleaned raw vegetables, sud\ as sliced scallions, sliced peeled tomatoes, diced green peppers, cucumbers and sliced carrotJ Jn the bottom or the salad bowl. Sprinkle with salt, freshly 1 I coals In a smoke grill or •libachl . Cook over direct heat. When steak! are half·way done, slaltler' v.·ith choice of condiments i! desired. Con- tinue c0oking, turn, cook on second sjde, spreading on codiment again If desired. Cook slcak to de s I red doncness. Slice and serve at once ! ~ . - \Ytdnt$day, Junt 13, 1~73 DAILY PILOT 5:J I 'A chef's salad is a natural showplace for colorful, crunchy, flavorful condiments .• Sliced marinated mushrooms add to the satiety value of the cheese and meat strips. -- -. ····=---· -IT Extra Large CANTALOUPE o,.. 9 •·"'· .. 6:00 I'·'"· -7 D•p • w .... -601-E"A"ST B~LBOA-BLVD., BALBOA- REFRIGERATED OELIVERY SERVICE: PHONE 6n-1310 S,ICIALS POI THUISDAT, FllDAT, SATUIDAT, JUNI i4, 11, 16. California NECTARINES '9C lb ' letty Crocker FUDGE BROWNIE MIX 221;, 0.. '•mlly Size 59~. o,.. ' ...... •=•• , ... -1..,. •.... LIKE ICEC We w1nled to bring you all the cool, full, rich taste of ice cream in our tee milk, and we w~'t aettle for ~ else. So we waited till now to brine you Lean Line. It only hu obout 90 caloriet in • 4 """"'• servinc· And our revolutionary new fonnula makes it taste like ice cream. Li'lte Chocolate ice aeam. And Vonilio ice cream. And Strawberry Parfait ice cream. And Black Raspbeny Ripple ice cream. And Dulch Choc:olole Bib ice cream. Try ~-It's Lean Line ice milk, We mode it tule like ice awn beaniae •• think :iour tule bucb ..., 11 impo<llnt •• your waiotline. , I , . . • , . . \1tontsoay, ..1unt !.>, i.,,_, I ore 0 .. ··' , 1 I =IE.1s.-M -t~-·~U_ncl~_S~m l!elps us ove that food ::?t cost less at Mayfair last week than ~ RETAIL FOOD. PRICE COMPARISONS · BASED ON U. :!i· DEPT . OF LABOR, BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTI CS ITEM LIST, IN MAYFAIR DISCOUNT ,ANO IN .OTHE~ STORES, EFF EC TIVE JUNE 1 TO 5 Los Angele1 •r•• No. qt Unit$ Tot•I S.'iings Al Competitor M1yf•ir-Items M1vt•1r Comp1titor- Discount Chain A Discount Ch•in B Discount Ch1~n C .... Low-price Chain 0 Discount Chain E Discount Ch•in F Non-discount Chain G Non-discount Ch•in H Non-discount Chilin I ·Non-discount Chain J 76 ""' 75 80 84 78 ,76 '" • .79 85 48.82 47.43 47.64 46.98 54.37 44 .90 45.65 47.85 45.50 52 .41 51 .61 47 .58 49 .87 49.04 56.01 46.55 48.46 54.38 51 .31 59.32 2.79 .15 2.23 2.06 1.64 1.65 2.11 6.SV- 5.11 6.91 at 10 other top .chains.'' W. com pa red prices with su- pe rmarkel chai ns all around town again l<tst weeh.. Again \\'e compared " specia ls'', ''total diicount", and all kinds or prices. This week, Yl'ithout ex- ception, Mayfair's overall food prices were loYi·er. 1·0 make these comparisons~ we used Uncie Sam's list, the same items the U.S. Department or Labor uses to measure food prices as part o( the cost of living . As shown, the savings at May- fair on this item list ranged from $.15 to $6.91. We don't just sa.v "Food cost less at Mayfa ir." We mean it-- and v.·e prove it! Mixed Fryer Parts 3 HINDQUARTERS WITH BACK 3 FOREQUARTERS WITH BACK 3 WINGS. GIBLETS ANO NECKS INCLUDED Sliced Bacon MORRELL ~ 12 OZ . PKG ... LEAN ANO FLAVORFUL Round 8teak --·BONE-IN - PAN FRY OR SWISS Chuc]( 8teak BLADE CUTS - MARINATE FOR BARBECUE {}round BePI' FAMILY PAK, v J LBS. OR MORE ... LESS THAN 3 LBS., 89¢ LB. • • Doc-11!•"" ol tM pric1 ~-r•1on1.,..voy .,,._, ~rl, "''\h 1lor1 ...... II, ol IYl•l•lo by .. ,,h"'J: Con1"""r A!f1•r1 o .. t M1yl1or M1r-1J1 2~ S. GlrloolO lo1 ""91111, .C1i.f.....,;1 tOCMO' Cantaloupe FIRIT OF IEAION • LOCAL LAJll:GE llZE Mayfair~st ~uys-in-Produce- R~~£E¥..~~e;!~?e~~E 6FoRJ.OO Brown OnionsusN0.1.JSLa. Papayas TROPICAL TREAT .39E;. Wate.rinelOIZ WHOLE RED RIPE • 09LB. WJiite rrrapefruit 6•0R1 OO LAg ·SIZE COACHEL LA VALLEY '.le VALENCIA ORANGES Sweet Juicy_ 8 lb. Cello B•g ..•.. ••.. 91 WHITE GRAPEFRUIT Coachella V•lley 8 lb. Cello Bag . • .• , e• .• 89 ENGLISH CUCUMBERS Gourmet Delight ••• , • e• .• 29 APRICOTS Canny Scot -I oz. Pkg.••· .69 HOUSE PLANTS Assorted V1riet1es ., 2 1/4" Pots ., .••• 3 for 1.00 MUMS Floral Ou•lity 6" Pots. , ...... e•. 2.49 MUSHROOMS Fresh S1vory· .... 1/2 lb .• 49 RED BAND CELERY Crisp Tender ..•... ·••· .16 LEMONS Tangy Juicy ... , •••• e• .• 10 CUCUMBERS Cr-1sp Tender ••• , .•• e• .• 18 HONEYDEW MELONS $wee!, Mellow .• , , , .. lb •. 25 CARROTS Crisp Tender 1 lb. Gello B•gs ••••• ••·. 1.5 VA LENCIA ORANGES Sweet, Juicy .• , • , S lb•. 1.00 PeacJies YELLOW MEAT Mayfair ~st<qjuys in· Meat %p81!"o!~!~~!~:'!~CUE 1.99LB. FresJiFrJ!.~f.~oov . GRADE .. ~ ..• 47... f.~!s <;!:, !:.?.':,.'} :~;ci~S: 1/2 ROAST 1. 38 LB. l{l!o{!f?'!.!T §.!~~~BROILING 1.58LB. Rump ~?!~!,ANGLE CUTS 1.19 LB · 17'481iceaPoiliLoi- 11 TO' 14 CHOPS -CENTER ANO ENO CHOPS M~O 1. 08 Le. . ~eel Rib ~!~t~BECUE 1.44 LB. ~'!~~'!apfo~~~£1J.'!Pv!FUL 1.38LB 8tllil.ding£tRDB~'!~!cuTs 1.47~B. All Meat Fr;,'!!)~~z. PKG •• 66EA. BONELESS HAMS Armour 18n Brand Whole or H1l'leS .••• , lb .. 1 .48 COOKED SHRIMP Alask• Pink Shrimp Gre1t for S•l•ds or / PORTERHOUSE STEAKS Cockt1ils -8 oz:. Pkg. e•. 1.09 . PHILADELPHIA WHIPPED CREAM CHEESE T•ils Retmoved . Broil or.B•rbecue •• , lb, 1.85 OSC~R MAYER BACON Sliced 1 lb. Pkg, ..•• e•. 1.18 12 oz. W1fer Sliced •• e•. 1.18 JIMMY DEAN SAUSAGE Hot or Mild , 1 lb. Rolls .••••• _ • ea, 1 .09 · CUT UP FRYEAS Tr•y Pa~-Gr-lde ·'A'., .lb •• 54 BEEF STEW 1ti:1EAT Bon1less -Good So Many W1ys ••••• ,, ,lb. 1. 19 IU' CUBE STEAKS Quick Fry-Fl1vorful •. lb . 1.66 Kr1ft -Pl1in or Onion 8 oz. Pkg., ••• ,, •• , ea .• 49 BUODIGS CHIPPED MEATS Assorted -3 oz. Pkg .•• ••· .49 AMERICAN CHEESE Ardfll Sir1gle Wrap Spre1d 12 oz. Pkg ...•••••• ea" •• 75 •. -SHARP CHEDDAR BARS Crtcker ·e•rrel.-10 oz. e& .• 89 . ARDEN SALADS Potato· 15 oz .• ,,, ,3for1.00 M1c1roni -15 oz .• , 3 fo r 1.00 Sl1w -14 oz .••. , • 3 for 1.00 • <111· • Clzucl( Roast BLADE CUTS '. BEEF POT ROAST • This ~ek'S'"BestCJJuys in G~ries Mayfreslz.~everages NONI RETURNABLE BOTTLES 112 GALLON 0 39 COL A -ROOT ~EER -ORANGE -STRAWBERRY .. ---· MeJisCJJress ~!~!~E 3.99eA. 'Velveeta - CJieeseFood 2Las.1.J9 ' . . Hurit's KetcJiup,. 0 ,. ~ 21 Italiari CJJress!,~£E ,0 , .• 35 Royal Occasiori . ' <:rT......3f.aCHARCOAL FILTERE0 -3 59 -J"Ulll\.1 80 -PROOF QUART • KAL KAN M.P .S. Chunlt1 •nd M.P .$. B•con 1ttd Ch•••• 140:r. .•••••.•.•••••••••• 31 ORE IOA H1sh Brown Pot1toe• 2 lb ....... --........... 37 ANACIN T•lets 100's ••••••.•• , • , ••••••• 99 FROZEN REGULAR SIZE . FROZEN I INCH ROYAL OCCASION Knty. Blended Whilkey -IO -Proof Ou1rt .. , •. 3.t9 ROYAL OCCASION Ch1rco1I Whiskey -5 Y11rs Old-to-Proof Fifth .•••..........••••• 3.41 ROYAL OCCASION Tequil• - IO-Proof Fifth •••.• , ••• , , .3.tt \ J Wessoll. Oil 24 oz. BOTTLE Lady8cott Facial q'issue 200 COUNT Price• Effeclive 'Thurtday, JLM 14 thru Wtdnttdly,•JLM 20 / U.S.D.A. Food SI-Wolc- COSTA MESA •OPEN 24 1 HOURS l ' • • Fillets Stuff Turban • l/Jrdnrsday, June 13, 11~73 1Jt.1L V PILOT 5 \/1\1 11 ••1 1.1, '''''"'N , \l L•,'l!l t l \lt•i '<)N MIN. PURCH. COUPON -- - - ----• - - - - ---~J BEST FOODS •• : • ti~~~D : IR~~~ ~~~~G : cr.=~~JE, ~~!1;,a~~~1;: . -. M~!~~~ISE ~· iAGGIES .. ... 19' I ! DETERGENT 2inc I 3/3'8' I • serve this dish )IV)th heated With this coupon, •nd witll $5 minimum purch·1~. Ejud · SANDWICH IA.GS 1 -~GIANT SIZE I 7 I IA.TH SIZE 7 I _f.tt..¥h bread bec..J ots t IJ'!.t.~lcohoJ!sJ.nrwu._h!f!i Fluid Milli •nd C1 •r•tl••· I sau~goes with the fisll fillets Limit I c•n per cou pon -or1• coupon p•r cu1tom•r. 1 ill. til<t-Coi.pon,-no mini11111"" p•.irc.h•••-•eciu~edd, li1mit ... -.With tlilrcfikl'pon, no rriliiiii\ull'I purch•it-rtqO'tf• , t lmf.-1-WitJ... thi: ~011~n,-"o-minill'luin puic.lt.1• i..-.ui~•~e--.1 and e sauce la,;tcs delici'JUS \lold •fltr Sun d•y, J une 17, 1973. S p;• c~upon1 7 ;;; coupon P•r cuitom•r. 0' a 1'' I p•• coupon -one coupo~ p•• cu1loll'I••· Vo1d ,ft.~ I l b•r1 p•r coupon-on• '0"P0" par ""'10"'•'· V•id •ft•• \ with he bread. GOOD ONLY AT \IAl•AIN IASKn un '"· un• '1 · I Sund•v June 17 1973 •'1•• Sundotv, Jun • 17· 1971 Add a green salad and you'll $5 MINIMUM PUROtASE ISJJJ) GOOD ONLY AT IAIGAIN IASKn 161os1 GOOD ONLY AT IAIGAIN IASllT I 163271 GOOD ONLY AT IAIGAIN IASllT I haveafinemaincourse. - - - - ----------·....., _ - - - - - ------• TURKISH FJSJI TU RBANS :-- - -- - --@iifi!:J(l!iliJgiJ:t - - - - -ij!lliiji:lll(1JJlll-- - - -- - -:13 ?.~!'"t~~gplan\ pared l CASHMl~E BOQUET I ULTRA ~AN : >"~'~=i GRAPEFRUIT ; QUIP '1 2 ':'.:,drg~u~ons. linclt chep-1 I ANTl·PERSPIRANT ~-~ SWEET "N" JUICY I PUDDINGS 1 ~e car1i:f mjnCi?d . I :::M'~1~: 4/'tac I ::~·~:.·~~~~.~~~o. 49' I 8-cif~o 49' I : :~:;~~:co;~~coLATE 4/$1 I 1 1 ~een ~per, fil!ely chop-I. 7 I ..,r.-~.~ 011: POWDER . I • LIGHT CHOCOLATE ~~pound mu s hroom a,I • . d ,. . w-1:--,~~· . . ._ I . I w ·L L · h · d L' ·, I coarsely chOpped Witll thi1 co~po~. no minimum purch••• r•quir• . 1m1t 1 1 n n11 coupo11, no m1n•ll'IUl"I purcn•1• required. Limit With ihi1 coupon, no ll'linilflul!'I purcnas• required. Lilfl il it .. '"" co upon, no m1~''""'" pure a11 r•quir• . 1m1 I (" ds d 3 1 4 bar1 P•• c.oupon-110 coupo" Pf' cu1tom••· V'id •ft•r I P•r coupon -on• coupon per cu1tom•r. Void alter I baq per coupon -one coupon per cu1lom 1r. Vo id alte r • lbt. p•r 'oupon -on• eou po11 per eu1tom•r. Void •ft•• can " poW1 an Sunday, Jun• 17, 1973. Su11d•y , Jun• 17, 197). I Su nd•v. Ju11e t7, 1973 . I aft•• Sund•v. Jun• 17, .197!. I ounces) plum tomatoes , partially drained • 163201 GOOD ONLY AT'IA••AIN 1.ASln I GOOD ' ONLY AT IARGoAIN IASKIT GOOD ONLY AT IAJIGAIN IASKlT GOOD ONLY AT IAIGAIN IASKET 1 Bay leaf;--erumpled - - - - --v----------- ----------------- - ----- Vz teaspoon oregano t 'h teaspoon pepper 3 ICaspoons gravy season· ing and bro\\'nin,g sA uce y, cup grated medium.fine Swiss cheese ~4 cup packaged herb- seasoued bread stuffing, crushed fine 2 tablespoons salad oil 6 Larl(e fish fillet s In a lar~e skillet heat the butteri add eggplant and cook gently_;. until softened. Stir in onion , M:arlic. green pepper and mushrooms: cover and simmer about 5 minutes. Stir in tomatoes, ba~· leaf. pepper, oregano and 2 teas- poons of the gravy seasoning and browning sauce. Remove about 1h cup of this mixture and reserve . Pour remainder of mixture in to a 3-quart oblong glass baking dish or similar utensil . Bake. uncovered. in a preheated 350-degree o\1en for 35 minutes. fl1eanwflile· mash the reserv· ed 1\i cup vegetiible mi~:1111·e with the cheese. v, cup of the bread stuffing and 1 tables- poon of the oil. Spread the fish fillets fl at and pet dry with paper towel- ing. Brush with remaining l teaspoOn gravy seasoning and browning sauce. . -' • • • • SQUASH Fresh Local Italian -------- 19~ CANTALOUPE Large Vine Ripened 15~ ONIONS ·19c ) . lb Italian Sweet Red PEACHES Yellow Meated 29~ Orchard Fresh Divide this stuffing mixture among the fish fillets and spread in a thin lioi)'er. Holli"""""-,;;, fillets and secure. with wooden ---------------,,_.--'. toothpicks. Sprinklt tbe r e ma I n t n 1. bread stu£ring over the egg· plant mixture in the baldn~ l dish. Arran gE' stuffed rolled fillets on top, pushing them in- to mixture so , they stand upright. Brush fillets witll retnaining 1 tablespoon-oil and return to 351).degree oven. Bake 1mco\'ered until fis h flakes easily when tested with a fork -20 to 25 minutes longer. Remove toothpicks betore l'oer\'ing to six. Cabbages Contrast OJrT&nt jelly adds fine flavor and colot . SWEl?T AND SOU R RED CABBAGE CR EM ORA llQ. 22 OZ. JAR •••• ff¢ -1----~~-~~--- YUBAN COFFEE ~r.AWl\SBARU!il GRADE "A" 'HOLE BODIED I medium h_ead (about 211 FRYING' pounds) red cabbage. H£Al TH & BEAUTY AIDS RIGHT GUARD 2/99' 5 OZ. AEROSOL C"N REG. 1.2S AT OTHER STORES PLUS WHITE-- ~=,; TOOTHPASTE •J14 OZ. TUIE PALMOLIVE RAPID SHAVE 2 OZ. AEROSOL CAN 49' 15' ------------\ ORE·IDA SOUTHll.H Hash Brown Potatoes :.":· ------- RIAL ICE CREAM DRUMSTICKS SPRINGFIELD CORN PKG. Of ' 10 oz. PKGS. 3/$1 59' ---- 6/$1 ·- 12 OZ. REG. 01 11 OZ. CRINKLE CUT 49' 69¢ VALUE GRADE "A" FRESH DRESSED HEN LADY SCOTT BATHROOM . TISSUE FACIAL TISSUE 4/$1 -R-A-L--5-TGN'S NATURAL HEALTH GRANOLA 1 LB. CELLO BAG 3~ COCA COLA WHITE KING D OETERGINT FULL lj)UART BOTTLES s i $1 Plus ;Deposit Giant Slit 59c TURKEYS r,:~;::~~.r -CHICKEN ·:~ cup wate1 • 1 e 3 medium apples .45~ • • • .69~ CRISCO OIL JI ''· Oz. lottl• 93c 1~ cup red currant jelly I teaspoon salt ~~~':~ui;iip1:':icr leave• IAR M HICKORY SMOKED . from cabbage. Cut head in BONELESS - hair and with a sharp knilc cul TAVERN each • half Into fin e shreds, dlsc:IB'ding core. WHOLE (Finnly packed shredded HA (Firmly packed shredded HAMS OR ~F cabbage will measure 2 to 21h quarts.) ' · · · · · · · · · · · · · In a large. sauce pat over moderate heat melt butter; ~% 1nc!~ar~1~:~gi.11 ~:;_"::;'s; BSAMROMK HICKORY SMOKE.D minutes. ED Mir in vinegar and water. HAMS Cover and cook over low heat for 1 ~ hours, mixirig oc· Casionallf and ad'3ing a small amount or water u needed. Bun At end of cooking time, peel and core apples and cooraely PART chcp (there ahould be about 2 cups); add to cabbage with · currant jelly, salt and pepper. r - - - - - - - --, Mix imt11 jelly Is dissolved. FREE DRAWING ,, Continue: cooking. uncovered, I nboul :!O minutes, mixing MANNING'S FORMULA FED I 1~:_r•I times. Makes 8 serv-1 HIND(j)UARTER • ---------A•ID. CUT . WlAPPID .. 9UICI ••OZIN I K:..J_ i:ke To 1 "-.. : ....................................... i ""8' .. ..,,.. ........................................ . Ask A1idy L"'011•D;~~1,;.·;;5·::·54·,;.-,;.·;a;1;;;·:i ·o·c:: .. _J .. I hft"" Ct.,.. At Mw C.....,... -------- MANNING'S BONELESS TOP---SIRLOIN STEAK ••• • l'-1LLET MIGNON .• $3.19 LB. FA.Miit JOHN 9-8' SLICED BACON . .. .. .. ... .. ' .... . . LI. f~ltMllt JOHN ALL MEAT WIENERS .............. .. OSCA• MAYllll ALL MEAT Ok ALL lllF ·) WIENERS ' ... , '' .. ,, .... ,, '' ,, ............ . FklSH LIAN GROUND BEEF • • • • • • • • • I • •I • 0 • • • ' • • ' ' O' • • • 0 • O • • • • I • • ' ' I • • • • o • • o • P•OTllN ILIND MIXIO WITH GROUND BEEF I ....... ' ' ' ' . ' ..... ' ..... ' ... ' .............. ' ..... ' IA• M IULI .STYLI WIENERS ........................ 89! .. IA• Ill IULI STYLI 9a.r SLICED BOLOGNA .... .. .. .. . .. .. .. . . 711. . .{ ' 8~. 98! .. 89! .. 79! .. LlllYS PINEAPP'LE JUICE ANTHONY'S SPAGHITJI ' • f -~.~-6/39c 1 L .. 4/$1 C911o Prices Effedive: Thursday thru Sunday June 14, 15, 16, 17 Prices subiect to stock .. "-'t· WE GLADLY ACCEPT U.5.D.A. FOOD couroNs COSTA MESA PLACENTIA 19th and Placentia 710 W. Chapman I r ' ~•'\l••I +--, . . !B DAILY l'ILDT WtdMWiy, Junt 13, 1973 WtdfttSday, June 13, 1973 • Facts Sweeten Sugar Substitute Case • llJ llAllMRA GllllONS sponoored other studies, In ceeded In developing tumors, -'!be FDA 11 not oure tho -Al90, the tumon lhowed -And finally, no human pressUre from self-styled ccn- W. aaccltarln pellets were Spurred on by these reports, tumors are cancer. FDA uP nMr the ead. «the animals' coa•lf!W cloee to a half-pound sumerists and letter writers soo.dd. JOU 1l:M • u C a r implanted dJrecUy into test the FDA conducted teats at Bureau ol Foods Chief VirlU llfe span when many animals, of ""Charin a day! who are d e m a n d 1 n g lm- 11.1bltitatet! Should otblrl be animals, but the tests were even higher levels, 150 times 0. Wodicka stated that .. the hunuull included, dev e lop Acoordlngly, the FDA has mediate "prolection" from pe¥11111ed lawn uliac tbem? ruled lrTelevant because many the normal daily use. first question it: 'ls it reallJ tumors. withbekl actJon, p e nd l n g i other people's right to use Before JOU reach • dtdaloa substuoes can cause cancer In the FDA study three out cancer?' " (However, there were no review by lhe prestigious .,ar subsUtutes it they bued on headlines, let'• tske In that manner. ,. '8 rats developed tumors: -"Se<'Olld, if II II cancer, tumorl In the FDA control Academy of Science. choose. a doler: look at the story, However, they did achieve "presumptive evidence" that did saccharin induce it?" groUps of normally fed rats Jn the meantime, however, 1 1 PILOT,ADVERTISER JJ , pl1'Ucularty the role ol the some success with feeding high doses of saccharin can That 's the next quel:ion, ac- Nor in the cyclamate-fed con-the headlines are a happy (Chicken ls the dieter's IUll? industry. studies: 80 rats were fed cau se tumors, but 1Ull not in-cording to Wodicka. It may trol group, either!) harvest lor the sugar industry, friend. For de ca l<p r l zed 1----:-Sadi·-heedlinel-a....ueaneer -m •'ve--amounts---l he conclusi.ve.-e..videnceJ!L.LMC..:__,""!v '-"""'f--"lhe'¥-"-'-'"'ta"'on"'-..._.._ __ __:=E"'i'-'le.,v~en otbet:..._ ma r sac-as lrichteoed . dieteg .and bkken favorites • aend a iJnu Bring Prasure for S.C... equivalent ot. 875 bottles of charin-cancer link. such massive doses. cbarin studies are under way diiheiics go back to spooning s am-pea , ;-fr:~- • . - . \ charln Ban" atrtte fear in the diet IOda a day, every day of INDUCES HEADLINES Or, a contaminator in lhe in tanada, Germany, England sugar in their cotree and envelope and 25 cents\to ~ heutl not on1J of the oc-their lives -more than 100 The study did, however, ln· type of saccharin: the and other countries which, ac-saying "no, thanks" to diet GOUR.MET CHICKEN casional diet..ada drinker, Wt times the ,fnount normally us-duce headlines. But these chemical "OI'S." no longer us-cording to an FDA spokesman, soda. ' RECIPES, In care of Ow Dally diabetics and othen on 9'11at· eel by !anNm, facets of the story are fre-ed in American saccharin pro-are failing to show any cancer-. Also, the FDA and many • Pilot, 50 Welt Shore Tr&tt. lrH diets u well. 1 _ _:And=---12=---o::f_:lhe:::__::80:_::r•:::'':.::'"::c-_q:!:u::en:::t::ly---o---ve::r.::Jook.=ed.::.::_ ___ _:d_::_uc::tio_::_n_:__. ________ c::•.::.US1::-ng:::__e:_:_[f::ec.::ts:.:.. _____ _:Co_::_n:_gr:_ess:::_ma=n:::ar::e:..-r==-:hea=vy:!.!.'---S:'.parta:=:::-•_:N:;_.J:::._:'llrl::.::_1:::-l:_ ___________ _ All no<?llor1e ..........,. 1n1- dlls country .,.. -Oil ...,_ cbarin. -..-. JI yoo 'i can't me 1111ar and if aac- cbarin II banned, lhere simply is no other substitute now available. Tiie story cl01ely parallels the cyclama&e issue of a few yeoro bact. The eovemment war forced to ban cyclamate sweet.men after studies -paid for by the '"'" lndUllry --that it wu possible to Induce cancer tn test animalS' by • feeding musi .. doles. Most medlcal oblervers saw Utile probobillty that cyclamate could came eanoer-ln humans. Newrtbelell, the ban was requbed by the Deloney Amendment, which permits no leewly for tclenttfic ev1ula· tion: if an item can be shown to induce cancer -at any dole level -i t must be outtawed. ('l11la law, Incidentally, does DOI .,..., cigaretleo.) llespile strong opposition to the lnflexlblllty of the Delaney Amendmeol, ther was no outraced battle to 1 a v e qdmnotes. Aller all, lhere wa another sweetener on the morbt ..-safety was con- lidered wiquesl]oned, • YEARS The other -..er, ol coune, was saccharin, in ase for more than ao years with no -· amnect1n1 It with --In Ill lllJO report on aao- chutn'• safety, the National AeadeuJY of. Science cited heavy use of saccharin ln Europe during the sugar-ra- tioned war years and a recent ' mortality llUdy of American dlabe.tlcs showing no increase la ..,_ -_saccharin -~; Many use acdwin as a tot1I """" repilcement an -lhelr lives. · But the cyclamate ban was .' to be Ill Incomplete vi&ry for " the 11111ar Interests. '!be diet lndmtry did not die. Saccharin toot cyclamate's pla<e: ita Ille grew to 41> mJDJon pounds I year, up !rom 20.000 pounds In the mld-llSOs. So tbe sugar lndu1tr1 Swedes Copied One of the best SwediJh dbhes is a combination of Pol•""'"-onion, lllChovy fillets and cream. It 1J often served as part ol a smorgasbord and bas an in- terfllttng name -Jansson'a Temptation. Now a _good cook In the United States has taken a ~t with this famous dish. She ..,. a package of ocalloped potatoes and puts this offering together In no time at all. Everi men who are not given to ask~ for recipes wanted to know how to make it! JANSSON'S TEMPrATION, AMERICAN STYLE I package (5~ ounces) BCalloped Potatoes I can (2 ounces) flat an- chovy lillei. 1 medium onion, sliced thin and separated Into rings 2 cups boiling water I container (8 ouncos) heavy cream 2 tablespoci1S bulter Place potato slices from package of scalloped potatoes bi an .._...i l'h<!u•rt oblon8--Rlau---bKlac dilh (10 by I by Iii lnchtt) or llmllar .-n. IJnln ll!ld>o<ry J!Uets: cut lnlo ....n _J!looa: dot OV10r ..... ...,..; ........ Onion itaP ..... pllatoel and ..,_ ..... ••*'"'lrilh-ingmi. -....-... ol acollopod ,....._ ME bolllng ·nttt- 111111 lllr ""° ' to dlatrlbutt -.... .....,. . .... -.1n. :-.:1111• ....... OVID' for ~­----In.II ..... , ..... ~ .. Ill ....... Pour .... mnl1 -potato mlxiin. Dal lop wltb fllmei'. .. · ' -•· -. dllll lo-.... -lloldnc. --. unlll pol•-------···,, Lit-........ '•---. ----,- ) ' .,. hing Suaer ...... _ ....... ·auper 'lunjer · FRESHNESS DATED MEAT MASTER MEATS; .... 89 Hm .. 7-Bm .Roast Poppy-Clllonlla °'°"" At Ralpho we work all DIJht to brine you fruhneH each mornlnc, from freshne•• dated Meat Muter MealB and dairy producta, to 1unriee freah frallB and vegetabl .. , to our own bakery products. Sunriae frMhn ... I• oomethinr 1uper at Ralpba. .... 98 DELICATESSEN DEPARTMENT AIMHtorAU .... Ralp.'11 Weiners · ...... 43 PRODUCE DEPARTMENT -lcall&-, Lettuce _.29 _,..., Yellow Feaches A APIQAL COMltfllA'nON OF M'-'HI °"°""'D IW MID IOY NOTllN CONCINTMTL Fresh Junior Turkeys C•lltaml• Grown .... 79 .... 95 .... 89 ,;-,59 .. .• 98 ... 1.45 ... • 99 ..... 82 -·-Brown Onions ...... 28 ...... 16 ...... 19 ..... 12 fl'llh Fryers ...,_ ..... eut Chuck Steaks ...,_°** CUt 1·2~ lb. ..... • Booeleas Beef Roast hef-LolltC.. Braising Sb1ps ...,_"* Qll .... 45- Fryer Drumsticks Young,llutr Turkey Drumsticks Calfonlle Growa ... No Glblllts - Split Fryers 11b.Packiap Breaded Veal Patties R•lpttt-Mltd CW. Corned Beef Round , lb. 8'cM-HtdmrJ ........ Ralphs Bacon SEAFOOD DEPARTMENT .U.Men-IWMlllfft Cr•Cker l•rrel CllHUr Sharp Cheese Sticks P•rktJ-2 'tUb Soft' Margarine R•ltl "Tendr-lllkl" -''" IKCHI otter canned Ham Mrs. Flltert1i-1 1\lb Soft Margarine ..... 89 "°" .97 .... 41 .... 8.59 .... 41 ·--Valencia On1nge1 ''""'°""' Cucumbers --·-~--Fresh Canots 1"'-.::z .. 16 I~~~ Slock -.97 ....... ~Bouquets -1.21 Bottom Slrtoln Steaks .... 89 ... 1.33 ... 1.83 ... 1.85 ... 1.59 ... 1.48 ... 79 .... 78 ... 1.15 ... 1.88 .... 89 King Crab Claws . NllflMnl-o.tdof.11 Fresh Perch Fiiiet ... 1.89 ... 1.19 DAIRY DEPARTMENT Rtctl a TMl9Y I Gladiolas -1.a ~ Plslla ... 2.87 FW&..-..LMl.-Pa t._11el,,_Olll:Pkjb& ............ , Family Steaks ---llMeteN-fulC.. Round Steak ,,...._ P'lcnk Cgt Pork Shoulder Roast Delciou• s.oncl ........ CookedHam ,.__lftoutderCut PorkSteaks C:..Cut Ham Slices ,,...._ ...... Cut PorkChops ..... - LIQUOR DEPARTMENT t.blhh Gift Of Sll\di'i Vodka .... ._ ..... __ _ Sb'aight Bourbon "°Jal RagllnMl-M Proof Imported Scotch f .. C.11 of 12 OL C.n1 Amber Brau Beer 2.99 ... 3.79 -4.28 2:.: 3.39 Ralphs Buttermilk ,. ..... 43 Pv,. •l'ICI Oellcktu1 Ralphs Orange Juice ,...i. .83 HOUSEHOLD-VALUES l1ttul11ff FOii• -30 Qt. Sli:a Ice Chests W1lllf'P'OOf-VlnJI ~BabyPants Au~ld Covered Pitchers 111.,ubllc-PtHtlc Lettuce Crisper ' . ... .88 .... 89 .... .... 1.43 .... 88 BAKERY DEPARTMENT ,.........__...,.,._Cnct;_ WltHt B•"ll Bread ..... _ ... ......,.., Hot Dog Buns --.. --.... 6off9rs Gakes ..... _,,...,Of ... ,.,.. Pound Cakes :.:.43 ..... 82 -·· Prtcn eHectlve June 14 thru June 20 THIS IS RALPHS SUPER CENTURY 1873-1973 llalllha Ice SlllllllOt AIStlr a.1111ttm'alfllm Milk f1'0Z8ll .... !.l:!.49 Potatoes ·~~.29 Halves 43 SllMI _ ... ........_ -· Ul:va911'11 ... 38 -· r. .. ..,,., """'" ,,, •. .... focturers S,.Ciel AllJw-o. HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS ---Binaca "" 59 ...... , .... T.-CS..Nr-.110ffhdl 4.2-. 57 Dentu-Qeme ..... ""9u11r ""UNhfllff 1.1 OL 84 BanRolOnDeodotm11-• .,_,.,,_ Polldent Tablets ..... 89 .... Palflfll....,., Excedr'•• Tablets ''::: 1.19 °""*" ....... 1,.ot. 73 Poll-Grip Cream -• .• ...,,....,, UMCeMH,Ulfttteld 49 Style Hair Spray "... ... • --c--11.15 Mies VOS Concllloner.:;; ,, FROZEN FOOD ._,..,,._, Ralph& Sherbet GrMeAF-r Freeh Pact Pm& ll't....r-ADl'ldll Orange Juice a-Oiat!t-'Mltl...., hue• UmaBBB11S PANTRY FILLERS HOUSEHOLD NEEDS !! .91 ~--..... 19 forWMterW..,._ .... • Pun!x Bleach ... 83 ....,...._IGMoMJltle -• Aluminum Foil 4ta. n D1111111M1-Der1Me : ... 'sa ~ Diapll• ..... • .Sandwich Bllgl .,._ 58 vtwa..;....,_c.... -• ~ N1lpklna ..... 81 .... . -• Snowy Bfucfl •r:; 1.97 r:=w; Bllgl .... .... .13 ~--..._.a&. ,.,,_ 86 .... ':.: 1.66 .... -.... •!IN. ,.. ... 38 ..... ""-43 ..... .... 49 ..... +19 EVERYDAY LOW PRICES ---::.n --, ••• o..--... Frutt Drtnka ""........ . ..:: ... ~,...-"""". ••bf ..... .._ ~lplnoc11 --":;A3 ---...... -.......... "' ..... ,... ............... ... .. ----aonlCldyM---.M . °''"'"" .... _ .. _ 1.:1M ---DeMMX Foot,..., .... -°"'fOM~HtC 11•• Cteem PIM ·.: .10 _ .. ..... --~ .11 ---Block..._ ::.n -----· 11.: ... --Jujy Frulll ..:.-.._ ........... M- ' ---K.: .f7 ---•.:..n ---, __ :: .12 ............ ......, ... ia .._ . ...._ .......... ·.: ... ..-. .... " CllllCottClmo ....,._ .. ,.... •,: ... __ ............ •,::.-""'""""' --. .. _: .47 ",: .39 "".; .27 .. Dllllill • ....... A-1 .. uoe .:.:: .n --....... ~ , __ .c.--· ~ ... , __ ,.. ... ~ .... -.... Ground CoftH =-'.: .17 .. ~--=i.78 _ ... _ .. __ ...,.,...,. ... ,... I The ................. ._.,,_prlc11 c..,.. ... .-.M ... ,,_.lt . llCll; 15471 S. BlllUIST, IESTmlSTEI; Slim 1111$: 9-11 DAY. 9-9 ..... -- IAlPllS 'iTOllES ~ UICATED AT: ~O £. 17tll ST., COSTA llSA; .. WIS I.ft, lACllA lllS, 24117 PISEll DE VALENCIA 1721111' SJ., MJI . 4D. i · 1 .. I \' \ ..-' .. -JJ -l'ILOT-ADYERTISER Wedntsday, June 13, 1CJ73 Wednesday, June 13, 1973 ' l ' He'll love a fine wine with ,dlrinerl He'll enjoy» Paul Muac>11 'o-z1nfeiidfL. •• ,2,, not ~ dry, ,.not too - 1woet •. ' • fi!lh _ · ' . . . . ' or ~ lll81!'U,m ~ tPe new • , we•bel.i Tri~ .. ,. , 215 .127, 1allon ·. Bufi\lildy, Vin &oe or Chablis. Super•Sltopper Grocery Speciolsl Ice Cream .. 79< Royal Hoet catering quality, in fl.avors to please particular people! Half-gahon Mayon1111ise4t Big value on this popular spread and salad dressiOg! Try Springfield and be delighted! yogurt I OUNCE ••• 19 4 Com1>9re the ·price -then compare the quality -you'll be glad we offer Springfield! ' . F"-it Drinks ...... 29c Instant Yuban .... s139 Hi..C ••• all flavors • • , 46 oz. can · Hearty brew in _seconds! 8 oz. jar Snap-E-Tom:iz ..... ,49c Instant Rice •.•... ~-ge 6 oz. 1ize .•. 2 for 25' 10 oz 5 for $ l .M.J.B. in the big 24 ounce package Jell-o .••.........• 1ge Hi Ho Crackers ... 3ge Bis 6:pz. package ..• all flavors. Butter-y goOd! Sunahine ••• 16 o~. Marshmallows ..... 1ge · Campfin Miniatu,.. ••. 1010 oz. pkg. Black Pepper ..... 39c Schilling's, 4 oz. -(8 01 : •• 75') Salad . Dressing •... 3ge ~ Bematein, 8 oz. (Rocquefort excluded) Toilet tissue ••••.• 3ge . Coronet Ultra !V ... , -4 roll pack Mazola Margarine . 39c _ Lifebuoy ....... 2 .. 35c Made with Com oil! l lb .. carton Choice of colon-bath aize ~a_n! MJ.B .• Coffee ..•.. 93c Rich Olvor ~enjoy! 1 lb. can ' Days EaseFIDHl~ •.• 69c Gets rid of odbn! Floral or lemon lime ( .. ~' _, Dad's Day-irSunday;-Jttne'-17,_,l--~, RIB ' · BOIES · 69! ROASTING . &i. 9c. CHICKENS U BOIEUSS HAM ~1 .. ! ' ... Barbecue or Broil-U.S.D.A. CHOICE beef Oven ready-stuffed with dreuing- average weight 4 to 5 pounds Fully cooked-.Serv'Rite 4· to 5 ii.:· (Hormel Cure 81 .. halves 1.89 lb:\• SELECT SMALL END U.S.D.A. Choice beef, naturally aged and ·the close trim on the small end afford more good eating for your (his?.) money'! ... . ' He probably doesn 't expect much ... a new tie, perhaps; and a kiss on tlie -~heek •.• tirtd he'll be a little bit embarassed if you make too much fuss over him and the fact that· it's . . . "his day." But, wouldn 't it be fun to ·say "thank you" in a very special way?' And·the; best place to begin it all is at El Rancho . . . where this week's Super-Shopper valuu· ·die . ' . . . ' ,,. planned with you in mind-as well as him .. For valu e, for variety, for convenience ,. ; •. let . ' your plans for pampering Pop begin at El Rancho! . ·, Ground Beef ...... s 11? London Broil •.••• s 1 s~ Sliced · Bacon · ~, .. ;/:'.Pt Extra lean! Fresh bulk or patties. Boneless rib cut. U.S.D .A. Choice beef El Rancho's thiCker raiicli. ofy!e! . ''·; -. ,. Meaty Spare Ribs ~~~~~· .. 8~ They'.re so meaty! Dad will love them barbecued, with just a touch of that s~oky goodnesa of Heirl.z'B-B-.Q~ ~u~~:. --Chuck-Steak ... 99: Beef Romt ••. s1 5? . . .. ~ . Economical! Flavorful! U.S.D.A. Choice beef! Center Cut· Boneless rolled English cutl U.S ~D.A .. Ci!Oic.er.··. · .. ."" U .. S.D.4. C_HOICE • :;, . u ·~ :· .. ; .,:• , . • ' I • . ,. •. • • • • Man sized satisfaction ..• palate pleasing tendemesi! Boneleu steaks ... the rib eye of U.S.D.A. Choice qwllity beef!~ r •• •. frozen FoOtlI .Orange Juice ...... 59c Minute Maid, from Florida! 16 oz . Shortcakes 11ciHn HIGH • 55c Blueberry, Peach, Strawberry, 16 oz. · Jeno's Snack Tray 79c Pizza flavor hors d'oeuvre&! 7 1h oz. Shoe Strings ...... 29c Ore Ida's potatoes • , . 1 \\ lb. package Homly Helpers! CLOROX BLOCH Liquid get.a thinp whiter! Gallon Fofmula .409 ... ; .. sl39 ~ousehold cleaner ... half-gallon size. Liquid Gold ....... s1 39 Scott's restores beauty! 10 oz. aeJ'OIOI . Glade · Deodorizer .. 49c Your choice of fragran~! 7 oz. Delicotessenl Farmer John35:i FRANKS . A California favorite! 1 lb. package Sauerkraut ........ 35c Homemade 22 oz! great with franks Italian Salame . ; :.sl69 Gallo-.-13 oz. (8 oz. size ... 1.19) Luncheon Loaf ..•. s2'• Rath 3 lb. can-pure pork! N.Y. Cheddar ..... &ge Kraft-8 oz. pk1. Good oo many ways! llleos for Dolll SHAVE 69C CREA~ Noxema Vt oz. fteroeol for traveling! ' -~ -- Gillette Blades .... s1 •9_ -Fa;o.; Pl.-tin~m Plui.:...pkJ. of 10 • Witch Hazel •...•.. 39C Dickenson after shave lotion! 8 oz. Listerine .......... 99c In the big 20 oz. apothecary bottle!· ,, . ··-. • • r. Rner Seafoodf. -·· m:RESH · ~$1 SALMON . _ _ • King aalmon for flq\!or!. Wbole ·Or : half! -St ... s ... I.It "- Fillet of Safi'·, ••••• 169 '.English s0Ie for mild taste! Turbot fillets, ~ • ; •. , J9i From icy 1watera .off Greenland.I· · Cockt~il ·sllrimp • ;si'! ·Fully cooked for convenience? ... CRAB CLAWS . . More meat, they're ·Alukan King! Smoked Sausag' ~:.Silt Wilson'e-old fuhioiied 1tyle! Fresh Sausage ~ . ;: 89i El Rancho's old fuhioned ~ipe~ --·-__ .._ • " Uquor hp't Voluesl Super freslt PrOtlucel ' ·whiskey .. sAVE$1 ••• ~4" Cantaloupes J .. ,s1 El-Rancho11 own lippi!l' style IOur maah ..... 1ix yean old! Great value! They're large! and sweet! because vine-ripening brings them to perfection! Gilbey's Gin ..•••• sg99 Half.pUon reduced 58' . , . now ! Tuborg Beerm,.. : s1 3• -Premium beer-made in U.S. 12 oz.cana Fresh Pineapple ......... 49~ Maturity fruit from Hawaii average 21h: to 3 lbs. Cutty Sarlr ...... s 16" s-n:oo·hal( pllon thll week Champagnelf~•(. s3io Fresh Papaya ..........•. 39i Almaden Extra Diy, Pink.or Cold Duck 5th Ruoh•¥•re from Hawaii via air freight! Pric., in •/f,cl Thur. thl'OU/lh Wtd. JUM 14 throUBh June 20. Open doily 9 to 9 , .. Sunday 10 to 7. No ••I•• to d .. ttrs ARCADIA · s,i:'r' ,,,~ H111':>1·!'1c11 or / 1:M. PASADENA : 1 11:iii· SOUTH PASADENA: /1liii· HUNTINGTON BEACH: /1/f1i. NEWPORT BEACH : 2P1 ''"' • •• f fi1,1l • .i 1,~1:f1 .. 370 West ColnrJt11' Rl.1: · frt1111J,1: and H unt1n~ton Or .. W,irnr.r anM Al~o11Qu1n Boardwalk Center " :J'·'i [,l\!Llu !t Or [a~tblull V1llJ~f' r1 " ( • ' -I .. ~ H DAILY PILOT Cycles Needn t Running • Keep Picnics ~·1 00 better way to 1 tablespoons lime juice Slft togelher nour, baking orange rind and pecans. Tum BroW11 Sucar Glut 2 cups orange Julee tle. Shake before serving. recomttuded the advantage of the wanner Put raisins. orange rind and powder and salt. Combine into greased 9 x 9 x Z.inch 1a cup brown sugar 1 egg Vleld: 4 servings. 1JS cup IUPI' weather tl\ln by taki ng to the pecans through coarse blade orange juice and lime juice. baking pan and bake ln 350 21!.i: tables poons orange jWce I pint orange sherbet Pour boiling water UN" ta. of (ood chopper; set aside. Jn Add flour and fruit juice mix· degree F. oven 35 tO 40 Combine sugar and orange Have all lngredJenls ice OR.ANGE WARMER Steep S minute&. hllr •lllD outdoors on 1 blke. b tu-s al'·mately to egg mli · minutes. While hot, s~ead Id ~-blne II · d. · t • bolll I N••eh bowl. Heat•-........ 1 large bowl, cream utter; '" K r juice and blend untll smoolh. co . ""m a 1ngre ien s .. cups ng wa er r-· ,.... .. It's a great way to exerc se gradually add sugar and ture. Beat until smooth after with Brown Sugar Glaze. Cool in blender. Blend u n t i I 3 teaspoons instant tea with aua:ar. Add to • ,.... and stay ln shape, to see: \he cream until fluffy. Beat in each addition. and cut into bars. Wrap each BIKER'S REFRESHMENT thoroughly mixed, about 1 1 ca n (6 ounces) fror.en 11\to large inaula&ed Jue. Yllld: country's ICSllc areas at a eggs. Fold In chopped raisins, in plastic wrap. Yield : I cake. 1 cup mjlk minute. Pour into vacuunl bot· orange juice concentrate, li~ cup serVinp. 1111 leisurely pace. And. In keeplng 1_:~:_ _______ :_.:.::_ __ =:_:_:_:_==::...:=::...:.:::.::...:...=:::__:::.::.:..:::::::_ _____ .::::_=~=-=:..::::::::::.:::.:__....:::.~~=....:::.=:::.:.:::_....::.:::..=.=......::.....--- wltlwlut emphasis on cle:.aner air, cycling is the ·way to travel without adding to the l c11.,...14001ar-.. .--,..,c11-•1e1 ... -____ ,,__ __ \ \ pollution proble n1. \ U :iou plan to do any long di.stanct cycling. study your route on a delailed map and know the type of terrain you'll be crossing. Or U you prefer going with an crpnlled group, you 'll find that bicycling clubs across the country, u well as tile youth host.ell, sponsor organized tours. some of which also in- clude camplng. Bieyde picnics are great fun for all ages. They can be 11s cloee to home as your local park or far out in the coun· tryskle. And the beauty of it is that the ride back home will help take off some of the calories you may have added to yo'?" picnic reas l. A good hot meal Is ao welcome arter a long ride and this iii where a campii:ig stove comes ·in bandy. lt's small and light for e1• in carrying and in nO time you can whip up a quick, beart:Y Savory Meatball Stew and sit down to an a~ petizlng meal . Britllb "3-SPeed'' Ban, •o'ith raim, nuts and orange rind mate a sublJtantlal dessert treat as well as a filling snick during the day. For a beverage choo6e Biter's Refreshment. a cool, rich drink made with milk, onmlt Julee, an egg and orange sherbet. When it's chilly out, Orange Warmer will hit the spot. It's a blend of hot tea and orange juice cooceDtrate whl ch can be carried In llll insulated jug. SA 'l'Oll'\' MEATBALL STEW 1 can (15V" ounces) red kidney beans 1 can (15 GUneeS ) meat balls 1n bnlwn aravy 1 CID (8 ouoce1) tomato uuce I pocbce (ll'o ounces I ..,mng mix for Sloppy Jou ID a %-quart uucepan over camp stow oombine kidney lieus with llquld, meatballs in brown grav)r. bnlto aauce, seuoning mix for Sloppy Joe1; miz well. Bring to a boll, ttlrrlnl lreq u en t I y . Ytekl: 4 cupo; 1-3 ltn'lnp. ll!!m!l!I MPl:llD BARS y, cup rallinl Rind oC 1 orange, cut in pie<ea l'o cup lhelled pecans 'ii cup butter or margarine 1 cup sugar 2 qgs, beaten 1 cup& silted all-purpose fiour I tablespoon boklng powder 1iii teaspoon saJt , 14 cup or&n&e juice Popularity Not Dated When Chef Jim l\.l:arquez came to Furnace Creek Inn tn Death Valley in 1958 he deftloped a recipe for date nut bread, using dates from the resort's 1600-tree date palm orchard. He began serl-ing it to the inn'! guests at breakfast allJi _ in picnic lu nches, ac- componled by jam, jelly or ·crtamed cheese. This spring, 15 years and 100,000 loaves later, the bread is n1ore popular than ever. FURNACE CREEK DATE NIJ'I' BREAD ~ cup while granulated sugar 'i!a cup brown sugar YGllS YWIE MEATS W• INturt USDA Cht'Jlct StNr BHf txclualre/'y In all our ttorw. USDA CHOICE CLUB STEAKS .._ 1 • • ... 1.19 PlrllrllRU Stith lpmCW Slllkl ~°:?La. 1.99 ==La,2.29 USDA CHOICE ROUND STEAKS.._ • • leAlm R•llll 1'.:'.w"m'fil ... 1.49 llHlllll T1f Rtnf Stith:, ... 1.69 8111111 ,.., ... ""..:::"'.::t:' ... 1. 79 USDA CHOICE RIB STEAKS CUSTOM TNMMED ..... , ..... ,111n11 11111111 Cllllt ..... ... 1. ~~t.• = L& 1.45 11111111111.,..... ~ ... 1.49 ' ,AJIM9il..,.. ft.L11MN9lMAl.I' 7 FRESH 1 .. LA. ... \ICl.WT. LEGO'PORK ,.. • Ctulter c11 1111 Pen cu,. l:ll ... 1.39 cnr Cll 1.111 Pert Clllp ~ 1.49 Cllllr Cll Pert Lii Slllkl ,.:. ... 1.09 Plrt "" Biii ~'31111 .. -r::~ .... 19 HORMEL=.. SLICED BACON .... VmT•1tK111Blcll ~ ..... 91 Cllllr Cit • SllCll .... ~ ... 1.59 -·· ... 1111 Him .~i':i< .... 1.89 AHi 11111111 V1tl l'ltllll =LL .19 FANCY TURBOT FILLETS .._1 llll1lllnl Hdllltbb = ... 1.69 flllCf Cloklll ArlllP "&"' u. 2.30 Ft1lll Dnlr Stle Rlllll ..::. ,. 1.69 llra.1'1111 Flak Sllcb ==-.95· €rt•') BUFFERIN TABLETS 60::.. Colgll1 Dlnt1I Cna• C11lrol long 6 Siiky • 1 teaspoon baking IOda l t c a p:ioo salt 1-Y• powll( cube margarine 8lrW INntr Ill& I _ounca ~-pitted _ _ 'ACKAOI .... .11 ,1t1ate1 ........., 1n Alk1 2 All111f Tdla ,. mp c • ..,....._ wa ut ·~.42 1~ 1.41 -'" .. c:ap Ill~ flour .. cup cab flour l ..... Wiler Ulln& the leClOlld 1peed of a -add IO(<ther the -· boklnc soda, lalt and JDUJU!De. Add the date1 and MIDIH...,111111 lllpr Cllllrw'a Alfllrll .. 1111 Hllr ""'· BliUTE "33" 3'h :1i. AFTER.SHAVE .JIWIL. .,_ __ ,.._. -·-· -~.-· .32 • i FOODS ~FROZEN' Mn• Cnn Piii UbllpDl1.n VoaQIU 1::'f" .27 .65 CAL FAME ,. 1 ORANGE JUICE 6 ... AMnlWI~ • Prt-lda SllMllrilp lira Eye Slmliltlrla ClllYD A11cdo Dip lrldgelonl Ind Dtqll Wligbt W1ldlln Sell ""'""" 35 ......... 1~.49 "" ""'"""" 59 ~... . BIRDSEVE ' .. Mllf.DVlGETAILJ'IW/ONOMI, 7 N& lllCl"l "-'IW~W&, • '"" 45 "" . ~ .89 - Rtllrtll Melicll Dl•r· Dlt lllQ Fiil *"' Sm .... 8rnlla .~2~~~ .79 SnlltPllllllClb 1111.0l.M:ll: 73 "'""'" . Cllllll• Temll l'llle ·~ .14 ... ~~---~~__. JER YMAID 1... 77 BUTIER "~ " . Clllckll llollllt SHp =~ .16 ScMlbl BllCll p.,,... ·~ .39 TSP H1111111i. CllllW "=" .. 25 Zll .... ~ Tlll• = 4:.-:t :31 l'lillllll llqlllH 01111111 ":.1::· 1.55 111ry a... Size Ill' S.., ~ .12 Vea lli!ll• llllU ~m. .37 W1ml llHHrlzer ""..l:.'1:1:" .49 KlarFINrWu ~~~ 1.10 Ill Wiiiy Wiii Claatr ~ 1.39 IJrttDdllls,Hle ~ .19 YOllS VALUE DELICATESSEN VONS FRESH i:.:,o;; CREAM CHEESE I ........ CWf1rCMat.= ... 1.19 Vm Ulrtll Cllla1 ~·:=., .85 ,.....,., 79 '""""' . JERSEYMAID GOTIAGE CHEESE ,AMttfM,OCM..C~MlD lllff'I' •• VONS Yr t~ ENRICHED BREAD ~.s..nkffll'?'EJ. -• !U 45 --· VONS CAKE DONUTS Vea K11111111le Riis Via Clfl 1111111 .:. •• APPLE SAUCE GREEN BEANS . DEL MONTE TUNA SCOTT TOWELS CHUCK ·srEAKS CENTERCUT ~ UIDA CHOICE • HEN TURKEYS ,., ..... GROCERIES 0Ur11tr Dfanend *-Mid• to •-......,.ow·- 1111111111 ... -=-.39 Ml111te llcl --~ ... -.14 Sllnll..... ~ .45 lmyl Salll 111 "'!:"Al Pl111ln l'lmlll '::.."':[ .75 U1lltrnlll s,nH '== .47 FANCY FARM 29 .. PE;'R HALVES ""• -·33 .... 111H9'11 l• •u• Liit 1111111 8111111 llU\IUll.'9Al,lM 39 1lo0l.-• VONS SUGAR GMMUl..A I L& .... Ken-l ·RlllOI Dtl F1tf K1n-l-lllllDI 1111"' P11111 Clll• Cn1•w 11i..oz. """ .96 ~1.11 -11.ol. »II .59 PETUNA CAT FOOD l<IDNEY' Ti.MA W ,, L 0< CH0~'6iD JiUO(lllll. 'fZ CM • S111UIH llDllf Bnlllm ~=.35 WlrAllllUln Sllct 't'~~-.41 lltliy Cl'lcllw Pdlllll Ila ~ .69 =.z1 Mn CM:l rift ••• A IUllD aw YOlll In , •• San Juan Capl1tmro MU1Jon Vlllage Shopping c-t1r1' . Whalllllil •••• To moat 9hopp1ra. ~ -loW prtcet tor qu.atr praduaaa. Tlllflwt.t Yalue mune 1t YON. IWl'J .-- lldf•11oo _..i 1ow ...-... -In a11 tour belle tooc1 .,.... ...ea 1111: delrJ' produdli frulta end u11sllbl11; -.... produell. lul .. 1uo -..-.a much men to UL When rou ohop In tho ctoon, IMlghl on-of v-.. think ,...,, -lhot ... .,._ lo '"' -···-tor ,.... .._.,. _, YOfll lo tho-- _..... In town. rr---.. 4*'1'11t ---~ iB DOUBLE Bi I IUE CllP STAMPS l!"JI I WH ANr GIOCll'I' P'UllCHA• I ~ \' I ..... u.-.r--.wow,,....,. I i.a====-~Q!~! ---~ I I I I t3) V.SYWIE ) ~PRODUCE . HIWlllll l'IJllYll .':..~ ... .39 VlltlCll J1lcl Oc ... la'-.1:: I.:!. .18 Wallla or 8nt11 Ollw ..=. "' .10 (~~~H SWEET _ o /j Fnak Cl11ft1W1r .... 29 FATHER'S DAY SPIRITS M!WIOflroomplef91quot~llDt d your,_,.,.,.,,..., ROYAL VELVET KY.BOURBON .. " RllllllUPlllllll -:-... ~ • 12 RIJll Vmt Vlllb ...... .... .,,,. a.• .... 8 .. 1111 ".:."" -.....:...-· ..:.":..1:• llllakl VIAi "'0:.-'i:'.:t" 1 .• ..... Mw 1'11111 ':"-..::=" Z.19 Fnak Cll'lllflll '="'...::::' ... :n ~Id 1'11111 FeN ~ ~ ... 7·DAY AD COLORADO CRYSTAL BEER -""'""" 4 •• • •• 7.71 VETS DOG FOOD MOUU.11 • VliMTY ....... .13 VONS nlnul meats. Blend t 111 tboroucJilY m1Md (about S mln-). Add the flour , blend· la( apln Ull lharouehlY mbed (about 7-ID mlnulel) . Add the ,..1er Ille! blend .,aln WI thcnJUohly mixed <•-i mbllel). lJiie the bottom or a Id" (one-loaf ) baking pon 10111 ---poper. Fill with 1111 mlllwe. Boll.• -bollt 11 34111 .......... Adams Ave., at llnlokburst Huntingt11 Beach Doheny Park Drive, ~ Beacll 5922 E11n1er Ave., at Springdale, Huntington Beacb Uguna HUis Plaza, El Taro 21082 Beach Blvd., Huntqtan Bea 17950 --F•tin Y•y , • \.."' ,'l .. Wtdntsday, June 13, 197 3 -........ -, -......... . . ...,,,. ' , , Wedn~da~. Junt 13. 197.) Project Jonah: Whale of an By FR.ANKUN DUNLAP campaign to get women to pose. stop wearing rur coats. ,;Saving the whales was BOLlNAS, Calif. (AP) -Now she has created Project specific and clear, It was ln- Margarlne, lipstick, pet foods Jonah, an international. non· teresting and it cou1d be and shoe polish have one thing profit society devated to the done," she adds . in common. protection of whales·, dolphi ns She p1·esented her ideas on Joan Mcintyre will tell you and porpoises. the whales to the Stockholm about It as her sea-gray eyes She had been special pro-Conference on the Hwnau flash: jects (OOrdinator of Friends or Environment, where she con· "All of these products are the Earth , a major in· vinced the chairman to make made from whales, and all t ern at ion a I conservation the whale the syntbol of 1he could be easily and cheaply orgahization. "But early in nference. authority on the subject and lives in this coastal town north attended th e Jnt crnntionnl of San Francisca with her 12- \Vhaling Commission meeting year-old son, Ian. which voted down th e ''I was never basicilly a moratorium six to live, with housewlre," she says. "I was Canada abstaining. alwa ys into things that in- But she is not diSJnayed. terested me. Since 1.trs. 1'1clntyre's ef-"l was political at 13, into DAILY PILOT GD ·- Idea begun a children's crusade: through the United States, Canada and Western Europe enlisting the aid of school children to write letten, . , paerils and draw pictures to be \ sent to Japan and Russia re-,, questing their Did in sayq the whales. l • < --mJde-rrom other-sources. The-J9?2rl realized that-it-wes-im.,-'t-""'>-'lhen ---eonvinced 1 Continued slaughtering of portant to locus on something. nited States to support a 10- whales may be the ultim ate "There was too much -the yea r moratoriu1n on coin~ nonsense of the modeirn Alaska pipeline, the SST -mercial "'haling. forts began, the United States youth organiz.ations . social has closed down its whaling causes, the A-bomb. I always industry and banned the im· saw my life as be ing involved port or use of ingredients of with the v.·orld. lhe-eigh"-speciu.of-whaleti on~J'fhe~women's..lib.Jnovemenl !he endangered list. did not change nly nttitudc Letters may be sent to Pro-~ ject Jonah, P.T. Box 47S, ...i Bolinas, Calif., 94924. ,, Irs..lll1!1nt~,...ayUltaLlll0-..4"--ll whales must be saved within . , -· Potable Pa rtners Wines Flavor Rich Dessert Our current wjile boom ts of I (IO ounce) package frozen great lntemt In the dining raspbenies rooms and kitcheruJ of the I cup whipping cream oountry. But just how much of 2 tablespoons s111ar Dash salt the wine we buy goes into Bate and cool pie shell . glasses and how much ls used Heat port and water lojlether for cool<lng, nobody knows. just to boiling. Add gelatin and In I:>ecember, Canada an· tcward men. but toward nounced a ban on con1merclal won1en. It has given me their lhree years, or it will be too · late. She wants to establish a center to s l u d y com-world." and you find you are being In rive months in Europe, Mrs. Mcintyre initiated a directed by the system you op-she consulted virtually every mooication between whales. ~· \\•ha l" . oompaoy." Ii her · 30s, !v . il1clntyrc Project Jonah has now The more uou feed 1;~:.~.~=;~~11 [fAlllls®J I' ~, ':1 '~ SUNDAY. JUNE 17 # ~ ' I j V· ... Father's Day takes on a very special meaning at lhriftim.art ... because Thriflimart is the Big Family Discount supermarket. Dad really appreciates Thriftimart's over 14.600 discount items that stay priced low all the time. They help stretch your food budget as tar as possible ... Shop THRIFTIMART THE STORE FOR FAMILIES WITH MORE REASONS TO SAVE. :·'' /~ ' : \ OUR POUCYGUARANTEES THESE LOW PRICES to BEIN EFFECT AT LEASTf DAYS WED., JUNE 13 THRU TUES., JUNE 19 ::~:g~~~:,C::. II':: 10-0z.cAN . 'II'!: s-oz.-cANs I II'!: 11.oz.m .. II'= ~~'"'•~ l~ .~.6'1" l~ ~ fr 1~ ~.r ! .. ~.......................... .....••............•.............. ·••••••••••·•···•··•·····•···•···· ·························•···•••·· -~S••jllf~ 00.-..•CllNllO • D EGG ROUS ........ ~·:·:-.-:~ ••• 59' ~ BOTAN CAL ROSE RICE •• ~!'-.. '3" D DOLE SLICED PINEAPPLE --~~:~'. 40' ~TREESWEETORANGEJUICE!:\'~4111 >•l.lllf l\ -N.Olt·ltlA GQIOINGll.... .(.fii!:\ D POUNDCAKE ~ ••••••••• ~!<:'.79' D oHOESTRINGPOTATOES ••• ~ •• 38' O RICEMIXES ••••.••.•••• '.'.'':'-•• 31 1 ~KLEENEX DESIBNER TDWElS m 31'· CUN•10t ~· ne<1t1>•~ t::!il:\ TISSUE -' 7" O PERCHFILLETS ........ "!"!":~.93' D APPL.EPIE ......... ~~!"'::~' .. '!" D CRISCOSHORTENING ....... .':<.11 "~KLEENEXFACIAL :>!'~:~"%' MIRACLE WHIP ,, i ., • I ,, ·~j • ' .,~ . ' •l I ,, '' 'Ibe aales of wmes are "•ell stir over low heat until oom- documented -for alcohol tax plete!y disool-Add nupber- P'*}JIMB but once-the-wines-rtM-and-allow-them-t0-Ulawf--- are carried home, statisticians co~pletely, stirring gently become frustrated. Who really once or twice. cares? Meals are fri~ndlier. Cool until gelatin thickens food tastes better, thats what slightly, then set aside 1 cup cowils.. . . for top layer. Chill remainder Port ts a particular favonte. \U\lil very thick. Spoon into It's a sipping wine, a wine .for baked pastry sbell; chill. hospitality, a great comparuon Beat cream with sugar and for a good cheese, 8 pleasant salt until still. Fold ln the partner with a fresh apple « reserved cup of gelatin. Spoon ~· It complements dessert, over the clear gelatin layer. ot. it serves as the dessert Chill 4 or s boors belore cut- Jtielf. It Is even an effecttve ting Atakes 1 (9-inch) pie thirst quencher when mixed · · with ice and soda, perllapo Putry Sbell with a bit or lemon . In addition, port is 8 Combine 1 'ii cups sifted all- lovely flavoring for m a n Y ~ flour with % teaspoon foods. The raxpberry-porl pte, sail Cut In \\ cup shortening. below, Is one luscious ex-Sprinkle with 3 to 4 table- ample. It's a two-toned beau-apoons cold milk, ·using just ty, a year-around specialty e: to make dough hold became U 1' made of frozen toe · rupbenies and ruby port, Roll to a cirele about ~ inch both readily available every thickness on lightly floured month of the year. Obviously board, and fit into 9-inch pie raspberries and port have ~ plate, building up a fluted flavor harmony w o rt h . edj:e. Prick crust with fork . discovering. Bake in very hot ove~ (450 degrees F.) 10 to 12 minutes, LAYERED PORT 'N until lighUy browned. Cool RASPBERRY PIE before fllllng . Not~: If desired , reserve a few whol e raspbe1Ties , before they are completely defrosted, to decorate.. top.of pie. To keep their s&pe until ready to Use, place tnem in freezer. 1 bated 9-indt pastry shell 1 cup ruby port 1 cup water-~ l (6 ounce) package raspberry flavor gelatin Bucket of Uses -Appliance Recycled Don't complain nbout all the shelf .. pace your oeldom-Uled party acctSSOrles take up when you 're not entertabllng -put them to everyday use .. How Jong his it been since you've made your lee bucket earn tts keep ? tractive enough 1-o m a k e decorallve kitchen counter ac· cesaorles. · For Instance, think of it a.s a container for fresh or dried flower arrangements. M an insulated puncfl borl for hot or cold beverages silch as hot chocolate or Russian tea, Sangria or egg nag -or ea a soup tureen -tJ1e ice bucket performs superbly. ~ gure to clean the contain- er 1 well after such u 1 e s , especially the rim. • ' I Consider lbe style of the bucket. A vivid vinyl Ice bucket might be just the thing lor a floor display o! colorful zlnnlaa. Or ltlnllorm your ice bucllet Into an attncUve cookie jar. It'll pi'eterve the '"""'ne'" of )'Ollr home-l>aked coocJles for days. Many Ice btlckets co at· Even when It's on your shelves, the Ice bucket lhould never ,be Wti!Sled apace. All thO!e llKle bar Items now clut• lering )'Ollr kltdlen drawers can be stored Inside the bucket. 1ben when you're setting up ba:r ror a perty, you'll waste no lime searching for cocktail accesaorles. "Fine Quality At Low Prices" • • • • • • e ~. D PAMPERS DIAPERS ;"."1-: '1" .~,;::;'fB!I' Liquor Values! Vodka-Quart 90° GIN-Filth RUM-Filth •ROASTS• 'STANDING : . :~R'!~: VOOKA 'I'' ! ~i • 90 PROOF • LONDON BRIDGE GIN ,ACll : • LIGHT or DARK YOUR : RON DE LEON RUM CHOICE! : D SCOTS MIST SCOTCH 80' .•. ~.·! . •4• • : D DON CARLOS TEQUILA 80' •.•. .:."'~14• ROASTl o SPRING BEE~'!""''· s;ag. $ ! CHAMPAGNEWH•"~""''l77 ::::~:.7 ·1~~ · l~~· f21 ... ~ ! COLD DUCK .:~:.f::;: SPENCER STEAKS .... '.'!'?\ ..•.•• •z::. ROUND BONE CHUCK ROAST •.•••• 11'!. • -GIFT lllMHOR DAD OH FATHER'S DAr- CUBE-SlRLOIN TIP 6 CLUB STEAKS •• 'l ll. BONELESS CHUCK ROAST ....... 'l ll. o JIM BEAM ..... ~-;;:;:::~:::.•1 i• .. ""°' WWOl:O G-SEAGRAMS-7 CROWll-..~'."l'.'!'.-111" ~...,.,.•Vtri.Q.•~ia. D EARLY TIMES ...... "!"."'.":':·.:~·~111 • iLlcioiA'coiif II! ·-0 GILBEY'S GIN ............ ~ ~-. • '9" ·-0 CROWN RUSSE VODKA •••••• '. ":"; • 11• Fresh Produc~ at Discount -----DJELMARGFARINE ~~f.; 45 ¢. in'\'lflCini11Cnttu~11h1nlior 5 1 ~ • !"Wf.•.t JAS I T:"i G-l F.l.1.0\\'i'lt,Ar I ,.,.. . \INf .• Hllt. l,l)C \I~ • i\ll Meat or Beer ltoi. ' : --h C 't~ I . · BOLOGNA ... i e_ac es ~ i 1 f ~ .. i1n.1.~ oup!s ~- OUTDOORPIARTI :· 9,, -~ 9 .,, . RA~rf w i _. Lb. i . ,~,,>-_. 6'1" i '211~. ., : --2 . TENDER I 'I : t>.•,,. ,..,, •• TOPS OFF f : ~::r..J~rr : CARROTS :~~ CORN °'i:,';~ fr l . ___________ ..;.._ __ ,. ·. "'1m-.u••f1'. 491 • ~ i;.7:i.=:· 49, : Large . 10' Juicy "'"'"'"" I Ji · ,: .............. 59• • Lemons ""0 ' ... Grapefruit ·i~o .: ·-..tr111wt1.•1 .-.Ttll"t••lllllf llMlt •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• IOI.It HlutT • f ll ' U 2701 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa e 13922 .-rookhurst. Garden Grove 1308 W. Edinger, Santa Ana -· 5858 Warner, Huntington Beach e 23811 El Toro, El Toro • ' . ) I I , . f0 OAILV PILOT AMILER TUMBLEWEEDS I see ~y 11lE PAPER 'JJ.IE J!Jl'Gf. WANlS 1ll GIVE 6RIMY 00!.CH A. NeW NAME! HE WANiS ALL OF US Clm'J:NS ro Stil'Mlf 5UGGfS1JONS MUTI & JEFF . SO··YoU WANT 'ro MARRY MY DAUGITTER · IS IT FOR L.OVE OR J?~::J MON5Y.' YES, WHAT? WELL.. ~IS OTHER. GUY, J oe, WAITTS TO MARRY+4ER FOR YoUI?. MONEY! FIGMENTS IT SAYS, ESKIA\0°" KISS WITH THEIR 1 ll06!:S. NANCY TODAY'S. CIDSSWDID PUZZLE . ACROSS 46 Body of watltf 1 W•sted no 48 Sc1nered time 52 Record 5 Communists collectors 9 OuU flnlsh 56 Beverage , 14 Flat 57 Fast .receptable 58 Jn a line 15 Cry ofrevelry 59 Onthe crest 16 Fielder's of mist1ke 60 Sports 17 English river palace 18 E•ist8d 61 Pan above 19 Grass---·· theshoulders 20 Number 62 Cucumber, 21 N·. Americ1n for one bird: 2 words 63 Brought in to 23 Apple pie, 1he open e:g. 64 Transfer 25 Cord•ge property 12 You ng 'uns 44 Gadget m•terial 65 Transit 13 Irish-Gaelic 45 Unsober 26 Out Or the damage 21 Give up 47 "Old Pal ordina1v allowance 22 Get ··-· " 21 Onewho DOWN 24 Wiseman 48 Hillside doee:Sufflx 1 "lshould'1 27 NYSE unit 49 Mostof 29 ·Corn unit ·····in bed" 28 Camping earth's 32 Nam• 2 Dried fruit item· surface 35, Afr_lc1n tree 3 lessens 30 E. Indian 50 Marry )6. Advantage 4 Hair cosmetic carpet informally 37 Rev.erberate 5 Bonus 31 Authentic 51 Where tr•in1 -38""0nFl1igt11 -· -"''6mcutrence-32 Honaurat come-in 39 Eur. coin .W Mutcut 41 Overlyterse 42 L•et match 43 Feminine name· 44 European 45 Remlin inactive • 7 Dickens port 52 Arrest character 8 Progeny I 9 Business union 10 "."··With a View" 11 Entered in a body:2 words 33 Image: Prefix 53 •••• avis: 34 Onionakin: 2 Unique words ___.. person 35 Stupefy 54 Pa~ of the 36 Cream of. the body crop 55 '"Din ····": 38 Indian Dav of Wrath trophy of old 59 Ex1ctly 42 Treits sultable ,--,,.-.,.....,,.-10 I ll OH, MISTER ··· PLEASE THROW UP .TH.AT H AT ! ! ' • ' ' • PEANUTS MISS PEACH n DICK TRACY - SALLY BANANAS GORDO by Al Smith by D~le Hale MOON MULLINS by Ernie Bushmiller , ANIMAL CRACKERS by Charles M. Schu!z ..,........-~~--.,.,,..,, ........ GOOD! KATHERINE'S 6RINGING A6BEY INTO TOWN AND I THOU6HT WE'D JOIN THEN\! WHY DON'T YOU COME 'OY HERE SHORTLY BEFORE NOON ? AS A ~AC:.TICING ATTO!fN8Y, 'llHA"f WOULD A Fll:U:·WHaai.Ni-1 lMAE.lNAT/VI!, DIVIL·MAY·CAl'8 Plilt60N LIKI! M£ HAVE TO l.COK FO/l'WAll:D 1'0 ~ \ by Harold ·Le Don: WHY? IS IT NECESSARY IK"l'\TtNG ME? THAT SHE BE FOREWARNED? WELL, .. IT'S JUST TH..a..T I DON'T SEE.-\\ i O 8E ONE OF HE:R FAVORITE PEOPLE THESE DAYS! by Mell F"OIC ONE T-, THl!ll:i'D lllf TMf ""AS ION AL DIS llAll: MllNT ~~ll!PING-. , I i· by Ferd JohlllOll . ffEY,~va.! I JUSTMJt.~ ~}t..~!! by Roger BaDen THE GIRLS . "Well, so mu.ell for looking forward to stuffing oanetvea wlth~Frencb pastty out·nnrdayln Plrb:" - DENNIS THE MENACE " ' ' I .- ~·. 'lfFAU GET lHf Nf(K oUr OF Mf sruFF •• •• • lHAT$ WHAT l $M:¥(M SAID.• 1, I , • ....... . ... ,.. ~ ... . . . ~ -. ~ . . ... . ., .. 2.J ··-· -Wtdntsd1,1, June 13, 197.) DAILY PILOT •t McCOY 8·0Z. l'.4.CKAGE PURE BEEF 45c LINKIES ___ _ MORRELL All MEAT OR All BEEF SLICED 7gc BOLOGNA ___ 12 oz. MORRELL'S PRIDE 12·0Z. PACKAGE ~~:/:l____ __ 75c All MEAT OR All BEEF • 1-lB. OSCAR MAYER ggc WIENERS __ ITATllBIOI. MOlllY BACK GUAIAllTH 011 QUALITY illiATI IVHY P•QOfMlATIJ UftCOHDmOHAU Y GUAIANTllO TO llUAU YOU , .. 01 TOUt MONIT WI.I. II CHlfltfUU. Y llfUNOID SLICID -aoTOliNA-- OSCA R MAYER ALL MEAT OR All BEEF ' BEEF IS 6gc ggc '"0' '" 8·0Z. 12·0Z. THICK SllClO a&nn ANY sa1 PtlCl 7 sc , SLAB BACON --··· ...... _ u. FRESH EROZEN WHITING ST ATER BROS. CERTIFIED BEEF 23 POUND BONE-IN D D CHllCK.----t~~-RIB._ STEAK ROAST STA TIR BROS. aRTIFIED IEEFGUARANTEED c LB. RUMP ROAST STA TIR BROS. CERTIFIED BEEF• BONE-IN $ 23 POUND ST ATER IROS. CERTIFIED BEEF • GUARANTEED I-ST THRU 5-TH RIB ··--····-LB.11.31 GROUND BEEF FRESH • DELICIOUS ANY SIZE PACKAGE c " LI. UAN •TINDll•GU~ANTIED • 139 STATllllOS.CBTlfJIDlllF•ll.ADtCVT 97c RIB STEAKS ........... -.......... u . CHUCK ROASJ _ ................ u. OllFl•CUT $169 OllFSHOUlDRCUT 93 CLUB STEAKS ' 'u . ROUND BONI IOAIT,,,,,,,,, .. u. C,, STATllllOS,CllTlFllDHEf•GUAIANTHD • 169 IONWSSlllFSHOULDll • 139 o CUBE STEAKS ................... u. ROLLED ROAST ............... LL ~~~~D 49c PANJIY LI. I McC0T • 1 -ll. IOt.L PUii IRF 7 9 . ~ . !~.'-!!!.!!:ii .. ... u . s 11~ 1-BONESTEAKS ........... u. TURBOT PORTiiHOUSE STEAK u .5 I 8 5 FllSH FIOJ:IN 79~. LIAN•,TINDH•GUAIANTHD ·snA• • 1 s9 STATllWOS.CIRTIFllDllEF•GUAIANnlo 99c. SIRLOIN TIPoaaoA11 .... 11. 7-BONE ROAST .. . .. u . -..ss---• 1 •9 FAM& y STEAK ......................... LB. ""'" MOUllL'STOllCSHllEt-1.1.PAOCAGI 89' LIAN•IONIUSS . • 119 SLICED BACON .............. ·u . STEWING BEEF ..................... u: IOYAL•ASSORTEDFLAVORS 9 GELATIN .................................. -.................. ~~~: c GOlDENGRAIN 4 5 SP A GHITH __ ..................... ~::: c CINCH ASSORTED . ~ 2 7 C '. CAK-MIXE~ ..................... ~ .... ~:g: . PIANUT ~"""61c ' ~~a!.'15TINGS t~G 27C KA:~;';PS·~~~."o';~ ,.oz.31' · ... v. . .: ................................ PKG: DECAF INSTANT ___ _:_a.oz. '1.76 Wl5HIONE BLUE CHEESE PEANUT CANDY '"'""" __ ,,•-oz. 65' DRESSING a.oz. 45c ~~~~~~~~'J~~~:AK-~'.~'~,2li~ , ............ ., ........................ BOTTLE JIFFY CAKE MIXES _ •oz.12' MADtONLYFORTHEWEST 91 MIB INSTANT COFFEE --10·0Z. 'I.IS MJB COFFEE . 1-Le. C ~Plu~~t'fii;i;~:·;•'.~~~·;~;::1'.1; ......................... -... CAN BITS 0 303 Si GRAIN ASSORTID 2 5 GREEN BEANS HONEY CVT CAN 24' Ou. p MIXES . c DRESSINGS g~~~., •• , __ .... 17' · PKG. STOVE TOP ~:;yJ:~·c'<l~"""" -· ""· 42' ·······-····-····· OF 2 GLAD BAGS ~:;~:, . . ___ """ 57' • DDEODOIANTl·AsoLAP S 0 A p I 9 C CCHHEEEESSEE !~~~~~[~;':t'~--·--•o,z2.6997' . BATH SLl!:EO ~MElllCAN --: 3-l B. '"""""' ....................... SIZE HUNrs CHl~t.!!.~NS -""oz. 20' . TOMATOES STEW£0 ....... __ ..t.._ .. 2'·0Z. 38' ~-------LOMA"LINDA NO-CAF ____ ,;.0~11:39·- .t-.&,,, ~ 1• ~ SMUCkas. •'°°"' -97c APPU PIES ................. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,. 31.oz . .UlOltTl.Of\.AVOltS I Ac ' TIP TOP DRINKS . . .... ~Ws .v..~ lm>llYIOtOCOi.ATI 4 7c THICK•F .. OSTY ........ -•o-oL . MNITIMAIO ' • 6 7c r !!~NGE JUICE ................. ?.·~~ 1 , ,, SIRLOIN TIPS ............................... ~·:~: I - µRGESWEET YELLOW MEAT c LB. CHERRIE · LARGE FANCY RED BING c LB. ·· · LAIG~ sw1n YINI llN . ~t.a~&Z'~M.~' PA.-. SCHICll IUPm TOOTH ,1111 CHROMIUM BRUSllU HAMBURGER . FIXINS ~·A•L•lf-'JA10UPES:.: ... ~ ... ::::::.~~-1 -5-c 0 OX 53 "-"' ANCYWASHINGTON it.fcH ________ _..L c APPLES ~:~ci 4 $I CORNED BEEF """ OUS ............................. , LIS HOSE ----'" -TU.HOCM.titACfllS HA'" UGI 66' $1 Z6 39' 4"°' llGIOHN1 47c •KG. ARMOURS .. _.w., 1514 -0Z. 4f lOHG RNOlltCltSPGllflN • AISOITID lllD !-"""-"-"'--"'"-"--+-"'-"' ""---""-"'••...:..;;"'I_. J A7NDC70LOI;' cu-::r:u /A: ~ ""' • 1.20 :.... 68' PRIME VARIUY DOG FOOD FRENCH DRESSING '"'"--· ,..oz 51' ' CUCUMBERS '2 29c CATALINA DRESSING <RAFT. 10·0Z. 61' u ...................... FOR FIDDLEFADDLE ----•oz.33' .8· .. a"°·owN ONI 2 29 . WELCH'S DRINK g~~)!~uic• ... "oz. 49' ONS LBS C " " YO·S CLOSl.UP YICllS l -HAllflPRAY-·tOOTHP:liSTI llNIX ~ 99• ::£:.. 65' .::::. 87' -SCOltl . BANDAID 'PRILL -- MOUTH WASH 1111&•11 .. s CONCIMTltATI "'=' 97• "':.'::" 65' .::::.. 99• 11.ollJCt Ml. ... M'I JoOl,INQ ' ' 100 GLAD TEXTURED WRAP ........... ~~.~.! ....... 2SC PEN & QUILL 'tOPPING ........ 1.5-oz. 41c VETS DOG FOOD REGUl.AR .... -15 1\ ·OZ. 11' BEAN$ I FIXINS e1GJOHN'S ...... 20\4 -oz. 35c • • 71-DUMCE-s 19""7 0 •ACKAH I - GOODWINS 2 • c AMMONIA I or. DAYS EASE SOWL 62' .............. ,., • CLEANER ············--·--5-0Z. . AERDWAX FLOOR WAX ···-,,.o, 51' SPEED STARCH EASY.ON ·-----220Z.. 55' SANDWICH SARAN WRAP · ---------· ,..,.,, 33' GLAD BAGS FACIAL TISSUES CH1,,o•--<ou'Z'i 25' ,,.. 46C TERI TOWELS o''''"''" ~---""· 35' DEPEND-0 ~~~" ---·--·-12-oz. 55' '""" BITS O' HONEY PEAS ' "' .. elf~ 21e PEAS & CARROTS ~~~g; . .. . t2~ 20' .. BITS O' HONEY SPINACH .... t2~ 22' CORN 81TSO' HONEY CREAM 303 21c STYLE OR WHOLE KERNEL .................. CAN CHIFFON TISSUE FABRIC SOFTENER ~~l~~~-EFFEC. THURS. thru WED .. ~UNE 14th-20th . , 14600 s. .• , ...... ,.. ..... ........... ' 707 W•t Nl ... '"'1l'tl ltTHt, Cothl M... 1100 Im ColllM AffftN, 0....,. 6162 ldl"'9r A ..... , H• ...... • IMc.111 llZZ w.-.1-.r llwd., W.m.I ..... IA THllOOM TISSUl GOOOW1NS ' Wt Rtdt.,,. 2603 Wett s., ........ Sn.t, hittCI AH 1410 Wtlf LIM.0111 A.._., A_... Food S11mp1 1111 CllepMll A""•• .... ..... 26l0 14',.er Ant1Mo S.lttcl .... tr AH U60 Norttl Tllltlo A.._., s.t. AH 1210 McfolUM A.,.._, S.... AM ~~~ 25c 1:~ 73c 21+-4w.. ....... , ....... 21 •o Maw,.., lt..I., C... MeM 1171 .... Strwt,C .... M ... 14171 h4 Hiii A....._ T_.. 14112 MIMs Afff111t, WMttlet • '. • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' t " -' • ·- • . n u"'"'·' ,., ... .,,. .t,tQrtUUa7, .iune Li, l ii'' WANT TO Kl4JW THE HONEST · TmH ABOUT GROUND BEEF?. I l PllCIBACON • --!!$_THIS"·-~~-,--,,--:-.C7"-..,.-,-.. ---...i body con fvcttonfff its ••act lot content. H"""ol·lyTho ! ~-,-. ' The,.'1 IMe" .. ., ef tolk 1c11.iy olMut tM fat /l.a ,.Mir• .. und ....,, S. why not label eocn pocko,.· toHM X% M fat? Lei 1,11 tell yMi why. e''t• W.n makin9 9,.und M.i ju1t obowt as Ieng a ,.-oM w• knew ther•'••ftO way to mok• tw Wehn that•• enclty alik• .. Two ampl" toke m the ICt"'9 N ktt {., e'ten the wtrM•pockog•l c iff..-in retio of fwt t• &.on. l••n with meticw&ou1 cor · Nlodint in9r•cUents1 the,. or• -riotions i al/loon ntl'9. Inn with our "'°'' modern grindin IT'illint •quipm•nl. l ven with wse of the Ms '5obM fot•IJl"suring device•. et we iln-..,... cw1lomel'\ won! ~ ••pe:ct us t rewide them with• choice of ground bnf products t their -rying preferences, tostH ond Duclg.ts. After loftg and coroNI consideration, we hove con uded that we can bes! meet owr cuUemers' nffd f oriety by effeting j1.11t two ground bee rHucts-lfGULAlt e1nd l'ftlMIUM,-,W• moko l:lot mch f,.m fre1h chUftks ef Hof,. We pr•pore bot kinck with .cr.iol ,.,. to molnt•in the top quoli hich hos' helped aorn ...,, fine meot 1ep .. 1tation. r lfGULAR i1 mode th• W•Y we IMlie-most iii .. prefer their ground beef. It C011lains enoug ·1 to .. ,.,,.-NII jvicinns-in the cooked meat. It molce1 morvolat.t1 hamburgers, meat loaves, meot INills. .,.ghetti sauc•, Solilltllfy steak altd ether .lic:iw• di.Mi. NEMIUM i1 made lo pleo&e familin that want o Metter gtound beef. It shri nks le11 in cooking and m41ke1 wonderful ground beef dishes of all Mtch-ploin •nd fancy. y not try beth 1Und1 ond aee which i1 profered by he t.lk1 at your heuM? {YMi might even wont to 1M1b • mix with Nm• el each.) The famou1 Safeway _....,.._k 9uarontM appl.ie1, Gf coune, to ou Fo< Wholesomeness 1o12...-, .. .._ .... Cornish Game Hens ·USDA Gfode A-Ma M t Hitute ftcnh·frioPft, 11-ei. N•t Wt. _,_9gc Fryer Chicken Parts und MGf ,as te aH of aur eth.VProduct1. , __ .;_ _______ ~ USDAO.....A·Thigt.., "' Dtw""ticlu, Wt.I• ....... ... 95e 9-LIVES AT FOOD "Your Cat Witt Love It" ........ ""' Soft Ancl Abaorbent SAVE AT SAFEWAY Farmer John Fully.Cooked Savctf'Y-Smoked In Flavor. .... Fresh Beef Brisket USDA 0.ok• Gn1d• h ef Fla¥orful Point Cut 7,;,Bone Steaks •leltlfs-Citttl.,CutJ USDA CMke IHI Chuc\ .s 118 .. 98e CRAGMONT BEVERAGES In Pull Top Cans · HEAL TH & BEAUTY AIDS • uso•<:h4 Gtadoloof -' . Ffavodvl And .... Hen Turkeys · .._,._111e whit.· unnr 69C Check~,.._. 12·H,. .•. Smoked Pork Chops H.mel CenffrC...IJ. S.voty- Smokmd..4n na....r. ._$148 · MRS. WRIGHT'S . . CAKE "Ml·x layer-For Delicious Moist Cale ... > , • SUPER SAVERS Piece kt Random Weight......................... · FRANKi . , Soloway All Moat 89• or Farmer John · •·•· All Meat Fra:nkt ....... "•· Pork Chops sac ~ 11.b EndC11tt ......................... .. ~.:~..°.~~~!~~~~-..• tac ' - t'.-=c~~:~~'.-......... 51'1' l b Ch l .. olw ll•C" -I am ops uSOAp.oo. . • -,-- Pork ci\dps-.!:':'.!i'2."~ • 91' Boneless Sleak ~~'it::,";!, •~I" B"f Rib S1111k "'°'~ ...... ~I" Sliced BCKon sl;:;."k!~~ •"" Horine! Cure llc..o.":it::!::.'l.-.. 1" Cooked Flshslicks CC'' ~ 52' Cooked Salmon Citk1s • ":... .!I" Sole Flllels °!..;'"',:'• ,,_•11111 Safeway Ca..d Ham le.. '•"' SNOWllAR . ICE CREAM, Half Gallon Certen . -· . • . • • ' " ~ -. , ' ~ r;: I! ' ,, ~ ; .' ' . ' f • I 1 ~ i ~ .. ! lafew.ay Coffee ::::.::.. ~ 86c ~ t ARRID - · " EXTRADRY -99 'Grade 'AA' Butler ~::.'J::,:.~ ~:~ 77c ANTl·PERSPIRANT c c 11.oa1H1 .coa : Iii=== 4,;:k ,49' t ,TRASHCAN if."" i' LINERS s1 59 ~~~~ .~:f!apacity :rJo , 9-ounce Can .... Nu Made Salad Oil ~;;:., '!;,· s 59 7c e !.~!'J!.t ,.!_ 127 ~ dW B .. c .. " .. • .-oo rap ags ..,,;" ~!; i~=~~.~'!81nlenslve '~·· 82( eGraham Crackers ::;:. '::: 33c (jwe11a Balsam shampoo .... s 131 elalad Dressings ... ':~h!':;~"t:: ••. •;:.~ 35c a;;;;,~:;·~:~ ••• , .... :~.96 ( · Effe,•t<•nf CINn;nt Adi-ol 40 !»~~!!..~!'·~e ~~, 22 c Detergent::~~ •••.. 59c Hea"Y Duty loundry ''-duct . _Bu _ itColgale Denial Cream , .••. 7 6( With MfP..FIVOl'id•. Tub• Bread ·Detergent o •••L 97c TIDf Heavy Dvty Jillill.. ,lr.9. HUNrs STOCK -UP BUYS' !!.~ ... '!!.! .... ~.!.~~k .:!:~.49c HUNT'S Cheese &.n,hom Styl•-1,, l•ncl. WI. • fi. Friskies Dog Food '~:.: 17' ii Clorox 2 Dry Bleach ·;.~L •• s1o5 fl Lysol Deodorizing Cleaner ::.-.s1 09 @. Coo~book Sauces'°"' ..... ~:-354 • @Chocolate Milk °;'.':.:~7' '~;·-89' _@. Bel·air Peas · . ~·. 5 gc Scotch Treat Lemonade ~ 11' l fiMacaroni & Cheese=-;;. •. 42' , f&Bak~d Potataes....... ':.,;· 29' ' 1 II Oh Boy Garlic Bread :.-;-35' ··· } fiBel·air Sausage Pizza :':' 67' Lucerne Cereal Blellll . ::: 23' " .; 'Margarine e. lb aac ,., .. 23c t~ ..... o~! ... ~quld@_ •:;.·'I'• ~~SNACK PACK Full of ftavor. low In Calories. C.I•••• Ideal,_, c..ki"I Ctn, FRESH BAKERY BUYS! --• • ~~~~~~t~'~ ·~~~ 33~ lW5'· Cinnamon Rolls .. :,~::~·,, · 79< ,;f'jr·· 9. Fresh Donuts ~·.:.:t.-:.. ''; 691 • • Ho••'o-T ... FM 5 9" "'-Lu nch loxn or 'o<kag• 1'11 'Snock· Tim•t of 4 • !.!~~~~._Ketchup '!;;:· 24 c !~~!.'!~,~Inners ..... ,. 79c · · ii Peeled T omaloes J J-c _ Hunt't-Whole·l ich Fto .. ..-21·••. ~ • , ._ Can IN OUR DAIRY CASE ... lb. : ' ' -" i • • • • • 3 . ' ' := •I i . . .. ~ . -~) COTTAGE . For A Oelicioul Treat For Dad On Father's Day-Safeway Has Beautifully Decorated Fother' s Day_ layer Cakes! Fancy Quality. ldeol,for LunChe• ~. .~ .• ' t~ • I :II h ! Cllrlstilln Bros. "cO:::.S:...":: ".! 1" larossa Vallif~~":ti~;.i•n:s2s• FA.,IC FINISH .......... 21-o •• 49·. .... .,.,. _ ""' . • \iii ~ .. ~.··~· I Alich:E1baG.odne1t T~ "· .... c .. ~ ....... c..o. ... '""7 • ""'-•~--Papayas YODKA _~P~~~~!'!.!l!~~·ts ..... ~ 1~1~-......... "-·· .... lb. , ··1~!!!~~!~ , .. :.!:n'-G:~~~':. IJ99 Luceme Dips ~.!·~:~r ..... c1n. 37c HALF GALLON • luc1m1 C.lalln Salads "· c ... J9' i Old Calhou . .:;;:, -'4" MacNalr' s ScoJc.h ••..::. ~6~' IVORY SOAP •Yi:'°l 2C l "AA" I _..o·rho A.I• arw IP. C,..,reth l·~··.c"'·~ ... 19' Yellow Peaches , .38' :.~:, 8;'!;69• Pineapples ,::',,·= -5'4 a ~ 98' Cuculf!bers · r:! ~.=-2::..3'9• -, • 1000 Bayside Dr., Newport Beach • 211 E. 17th St, Costa Mesa • 24 Monarch Bay Plaza, So. Laguna • 636 N. Coast Hwy., Laguna Baell • 801 l El Camino Real, San Clemente • Santa Ana Freeway at La Paz, Mission Viejo • • Wilson & Fairview, Costa Mesa -1 .. ' I ! , .. I --r I • . . 1 J ' '·· .. ... ·---...... , .. ,,#~ .... -- J P1LOT·ADVUTIS£R W1J11•. Mt U, 1973 """LY PILOT Gl_V~ YOUR Fi MILY ~W~~~ 00~@ sn't 'it< time you began enjoying t~e comfW-. privacy •.• & fin11nci11l 1 security which 1--H#--..,..,..-;,.-~om••-with....o.wning_youL.Own..home.1 HEi~-ESTATERS-in:vite-you-to-discun"You•r-­f~·niily's housing needs with us. We've menlcexclusive listings to choose from ••• Re - me mber we ere the lergest locally owned eel Est11t11 firm with over I 00 profeuionels to help you every step of the wey. Please rop by, we will be happy to answer' e ny of ; your questions. "It'• f'11• ',. Be Nfc!e to PJ;,,re" ' .•. " . , , ., ON THI' ,_NDLY STREET WE'VE ·GOT n ALJ..2r _ ... 3,500 T--2'ft..IER IN MESA VERDI Tw ... to<y home; featurtn• 4 bedrooms, family VWlii 1 n room with flrepkce, formal dining and 3 baths. It ~ all )"Ol.1 ever wanted; huge over:st.~ lot Manicured yards. very aharp 'and neat through· with~b 'tlmum acceaa fOr boat or'camper, apace ouL Situated on quiet street. with friendly neJgh· _ . . _ bon. Ideal for famillea and. children, very close for and games. Delightful outdoor'~ to schools park and tennis courta, beach paved.- ,HILL-TOP HAVEN This view will la.st forever To the valley-to the sea High atop a hill Where yoU'll a:Jways want to be. A trl-level Mediterranean With Spanish style fee.ling Priced at $125,000 See this home, It's most appealing can 546-2313. READY-FOR-A TREAT? RAINY DAYS AND MONDAYS This greenbelt located Carmel Model in Harbor Still have a way of being good lf you're Inside View Homes spells real comfort. Corner lot, this dollhouse looking out. It's so sharp and clean three bedrooms, 2 baths, lovely family room, fire-with a big pretty yard 60x120. It's ideal foc a place, formal dining room, a gorgeous kitchen, young family. Priced lo\v, low at $27,500. two pri~ate patios. Lovely upgraded. decorating 847·6010. thruout. Priced to sell at $69,900. Fee Land. Call 673-8550 foi: •Pl*>lntmenL s cboklng center with covered patio. Luah shag bike trail' and shopping. Existel)t 6% VA loan carpeta. freshly patn_tpcl. Nothing to· do but move ·may be assumed. Pleue phone 546-2313 for addi- ln .. enjof IL Pri...t at 138.tM./Coll .548-2313 tio<la!J nfo. ~~ , . ~======================:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;] . . t -I 1 -~ ~ . uu >"'I aee lL 3 'bechocms -largest kitchen~ Colla W-, R·2 }ot $23,lll!>. Call "646-TI71 for pcoot'. • • • • OLD DOG LEARNS NEW TRICK This started out a short time ago u an old 2 bedr oom ·house on a large lot. The home has been completely remodeled. It haJ new plumbing, new wiring. new everything tn. cludine an attractive new look. At the rear of the lot a new buUding has recently been oompleted which contalna a fine 2 bed.room unit with marble aho\\·er •tall a"iid-a nifty 1 bedroom apartment, plus a double garage 'QL1a .11 the first time our , new trick has been advertised so h WT)'. On1y $59,950. Call 646-717L BACK BAY MINI VIEW $57,850 ' SecJuded. cul-.sac pr~I ty in prMtip nta~ area ot tlntt hoines. Dramatic ca· ~ .... thedral ~ in Uving room with crack· lln&: woOd-bumlna fireplace, open plan tamJlY room, 11pilcTous garden view, fonnal ~ room1 4 large bedroomll, and gour-m'et kltcht:n with bttt.ktut bar. Peek.a-boo ~ of NflrPort Bly, .Aik UI &bout.'....tbe • 'tntere.tlng poatbllltierfor future Increases in ~ue. PIMH call toda)r for an. appoint· mmt to inspect this hlchlY desirable pl"Op. erty. Call ~2313. ON THE WATER =• .. -_ NICE FAMILY NDGHIORHOOD IN In prestiglOUI Huntington Harbour. Maximum )UXUf1 ii yours with U>O aqlllltt feet of living area and 92 feet on the water with .bc:Jat dock. You must call now to experience th1a fantutlc bolne! Bf.7-6010. . -;.. EAST SIDE COSTA MESA A lovely borne that has been remodeled. You'll love this warm coi;y kitchen and the shag carpeting and rich panelling. Has so much more you11 have to see it, ao caU now for an appointment. 847-6010. PHONE US FOR A IONUS A ahady street Ia such a delight When You fwn:·a two-story That (iii you Jw:t right. A cn.ckllnc fireplace And f&mUy-tOom too, Priced $31.~ It't perfect for you. Call. 54&-!!J13. $32,900 "l'.ARI( HUNTINGTON" CLOSE TO EVERYTHING -• $52,950 ' . Schoolo. ·-· and ..,U ,..,.. are clote at band. The owner has bought another, home aQd ia anxious to sell this U you're looking' for a ~ 4 bedroom· 3 bath lovely sunshiny dOllhou&e. You can see it home Wltft.'?'. l6x2'l tamUy room,,. 22x26 bonus right now. 847--6010. room. finl8htd. a formal dlnln& room, a!_ld a 3 .... ~ ear ,prage, ~k up the phone now and call 8424535. • •• HI•" C)N ~'.~ILL OC£Atil V-.W 2 BEDROOM HOUSE How would you llke to Ow.''!>" mqnlflcit\t R·2 LOT home that ..... on • private street with Park-Uk• ASSUME FHA LOAN surtoundbtiPf~lookJna: the Paclftc ~1 YOU !l'hia.GON M ... home wtth beamed-ccdllpss. and mlOlt ~to pay ~ tiUryou--huge be.:ck yard la an 'Ideal starter home. Note wolld be 1urprlaed to learn that lt'11 onb' $29,500. the FHA &Aumable loa.n + R2 rezoning, Priced Hurry and call842-2535. ••m.~ F0< 4'ta111 ca11646-nn. l $36,450 BUYS YOU EVERYTHING You could desire In this llke-new.,4 bed- room very modern home. You're goin g to love the fl oor plan. Located on a large cul- de-sac lot. the landscaping is a 6eautiful sight to behold. Call now to see it 847-6010. IMMACULATE BAYCREST $ .. 8,900 One of the neatest, cleanest 4 bedroom homes you Will see. Dining room and 3 baths. Fee land. For further information or to see call 646-7171. A RAA.E_FIND But we did It This wonderful new 3 bed- room in Corona del Mar bu clear ocean vieoN. Swisl chalet designed with vaulted ceiling in living room W!_th fireplace and walls of glass to enjoy the water view. ~ns.tve w/w carpeu-3 baths. It's 'va~ ~J["Sfa~~ ri&ht now. Price ·$110,000. ASSUME A VA LOAtl A fantastic 4 bedroom 2 bath,home that's been overlooked. 5%. % VA Loan that can be usumed. with owner carrying a aecond T.D. Price reduced to $38,400. Located within walking distance from beach. Call now 842-2535. YOUNG FAMILIES Will find this to be a perfect starter borne. This 3 bedroom house on a large corner Jot in a quiet neighborhood clo.e to schools. Priced at only $26,950. Call todq 842·2535. TREE SHADED ROOM TO ROAM Cozy, Ideal, 3 bed.room home on quiet, se- cluded tree lined cul--de-sac street for boats or campers. Quality copper plumbing, ataift. less steel divided sink with new disposal. Neat clean, move in ready. $26,950. call today, don't delay. 546-2313. / KEEP THE KIDS AT HOME Lovely 4 bedroom, 211' beth home on quiet, end of cul-de-sac street Room for two pools plus playground in giant backyard Short \\'&lk to grade and high schools. Priced at only $41.950. To see call 842·2535. PLEASANT AND PRODUCTIVE Ow..._,..,.. tell n..., ......... .. .... .. ~ , ......... ,. ......... Tiiey .., ••• tM c••P•r•lw .._ iphft 9M ,.. ......... ""' ......... ,.. ...., ..,.,.. ._.. ,...... fir ..... COHlmtNT prffM • -· l cn .... ,. -Mfft Mftlf. THt ars •oO,M AT THI TOP. •ett•lnW bl I......, 9M ............ __ ,.s... .... !a ................ .. 54'-16ot SOMETHING SPECIAL A most unusual 4 bed.room home in choice upper bay location. Has a 22x13 a~parate formal dining room -...huge park like rear yard With tree shaded ·yard -pe.Uo -out· standing living room with com er: fireplace .. w/w carpets and drapeS. All electl;c bullt- in kitchen._Many built-In features tfirough· ouL Only $52,500. Hurry. 673-8550. 20 STEPS TO THE BEACH Bar-B.Que Steak'.s and watch the surl' from the private deck of your luxUry duplex. 2 large units in like new condition. U ve in one unit and enjoy Income from the other. $90,000. call Now!! 646-7171. PRIVATE . CLUBHOUSE AND POOL \Vhy not live where your children can en- joy the neighborhood. Large 2 .story 4 bed· room home with plush C$.l'pela thru-out. Home shows and looks liKe-a modeL Act now, call 842-2535. Price only $44,500. PRIVA'l'E BEACH & BOAT RAMP $55,000 Charming N f!!W England Clapboard. Beach Cottage with exposed beam ceilings and crackling ll-ood burning fireplace/ Only 1 block to secluded tree shaded park, private beach and boat ramp. Cozy f~Jy kitchen overlooks your covered private patio. Great summer rental and appreciation potential. For an appointment to view this Balboa_ Peninsula Point charmer call 546-2313. PERFECT FOR CREATIVE FAMILY Room for every hobby and interest in this channing 4 bedroom home. Convenience for Mom in the outstanding kitchen, sewlng- laundry room combination and central vacuum system. Workshop, study, large family room with out.aide en~. play yard, access to private beacheL Sunny deck adjoining kitchen, dining and' living room. Seeing is believing. $107,500 - fee and ocean vie<.v. 673-8550. CHAMPA(iNE TASTE? Here's one with the champagne extnlll and the beer prtce. Spacious kitchen has lots ot woodgrain cupboards. Cozy fireplace in the rlch1y ~ted llvfifg room. Deep pretty shag in all 4 bedrooms. This home even 4 BEDROOMS + POOL Pt-estige development -the moe t desirable area In beautiftil Huntington Beach. The home match- es the area in charm and spaciousness, Only $44,950. Hurry before it Is too late. Call 8(2.2535. I / EUOW'ROoM ls/wha t this super home will a:Ive you. The floor plan is extremely efficient with a super kitqlerl .and large eating area. It has a large separate family room with 11' bath.and wet bar. Call now to see IL 847""6010. IMPRESSIVE SETTING IMPRESSIVE HOUSE IMPRESSIVE NEIGHBORHOOD has a shuffWboe.rd court in the backyard! This exquisite custom Unda Isle home has every- You'll .w_ll_J!_t to take advantage of the · 1blrlg your most discriminating buy~r could wanL 847-6010. Choice water front with pier and allp. 4 bed· meager $33,500 price, so call right now.;··,-.::::~ CHOOSE YOUR HAPPY HOME rooms, 3~ baths. No expense spared on interior • furnishings. Huge separate muter bedroom - view -private bath. Sundeck. Ir you want the 0very best call 67J.8550. Price $278,500. NEW BALBOA DUPLEX You'll reti.lly feel painpered and comtortable 1n this quality 3 bedroom, 2 bath hbme in Coeta Prime Newport Peninsula location. Spacloua 4 Mesa. Many custom features as delu.~e kitchen and 3."\ Delw.:e lea.tu~ include floor to ce:fllng built-Ins, tile an~ marble bathrooms, brick fi re-brick fireplace. Lavish use of tile in kitchens 1e~rs' y:',:OO.~v~~~:U~°::ti~::;1fe~n11Ditlis. VA1R1ncl6!!~~~;nr;;n:- yard. Ctill us for an· f ppolntmenL 673·8550. Only Laundry area for each unit, S teps to the be9ch. ~.500. $109,000. call 646-7171. "It'• F•n to Be Nice to People" T H E REAI51:ESTATERS- oneN :·r 1L .9 "~":" . ·: , .: NEWPORT BEACH 1700 Nowport -· , 646-1171 • COSTA Mt:$A 21.to H-lllrd. 546-ZJU """-j • .• ~ ' ' • ,' ... ' B lJ NTINGTON BEACH O Hi -11.d. 6014 w .. er An. 142-ZHI 147-6010 CORONA DEL MA R JJZ M"'9•1rite 673-1550 JNVF,STM•;NT S :1to --.. Stolt• 201 C:O... M-546-1600 f r] ' ' ' OAILY PILOT w.ct....i.,, -u, 1973 Wtdllttdat, -IJ, 1973 PILOT -AOVEllTISEll ' ~ •••••• 500•$14 The Bluest Marketplace on the· Oranae Coist ' .. ---w. ... 12S -W9 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS ,.,...,.. . • • . . • • • • • 525 .. .5f9 ,... ond -· •• '' .ll0 -199 ... ,_ "'"'""· ' ' ' '1lO -"' ......... ' .. ' .. -~'"" SchMt oM lndruction , • • .515 • ,.J09 ~ lor Sole • • , • • • 100 -114 Lmt & found ••••••• ~SO • S74 : ' ~hanciwi •••••.••. IOO · &49 You Can Sell It, Find It , Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678] One Cal I Service FaSt Credit Approval -............. 6001-1119 lrtnpOI tu1U1. • • ; • • • · 9tS • M _,.,._ General Genera l A"4ti#-~ ~ NIDASSOCIATtS REALTORS -2828 ll!AST COllBT HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR.CALIF. 644·7270 ••••••••• e FOR THE YOUNG FAMILY .... within walking distance to school s and shopping? 4 Bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace. Has assumable VA loan -All for only ................................ $29,950. • •1• •••••• e MOVE·IN-ABLE in this two story, custom built, with many deluxe extra features. Open beam ceilings, fireplace, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, GOURMET KITCHEN, built-in sewing center and study. Two decks plus 2 landscaped terraces. It's a real value at . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $79,500. • • • • • • • • ••• • • Beautiful ... tr~e-lined street in Old Corona I · de! Mar. BOTH DELUXE UNITS HA VE 3 f · bedrooms, den, fireplace, 2 baths, builtin kltchen, PATIOS, 2 blocks to shopping and schools. Choice location. . . . . . . . . $98,500 .. •·• ..... WE CAN HELP YOU BUY, SIU. OR TRADE. A HOME ANYPLACE IN THE NATION AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES REAL TORS . 644-n7o General ' . .JJartor Uew .Jli/e l ' ' ' . ' l 3 BR-family rm.--ocean view, pool. $99,000 W1 have listings of many other homes Call us for your needs CORBIN· MARTIN HARD TO BEAT '29,95q. H a If circular driveway leads to this sharp 4 bedroom home. 2 baths. Patio. Dining room. Big family room. Air-conditioned. Nicely landscaped. S<ID-1720 PARK LIKE SETIING · Picturesque yard high- lights this lovely 3 bed- room, 2 bath home. Boat & camper access. Cozy fireplace. Built ins & dishwasher. Dining room. Patio. Forced air heat. $31,950. 540-1720 4 Ul'lllUJI: J-l()Mf THE SANDPIPER -If it's a single story four bedroom floo r plan you're looking for, the Sandpiper is it! Two fireplaces, beam ceilings, formal dining, a · sunn y breakfast ·oook an honest·to-goodness powder room a big chil<Jren's-blith with double siriks and a fee lot that affords room for a pool ln front or back of the home. Whew, \vbatta new price! $87,500. but owners are anxious to bear what you think it's worth, so make an offer. ' UNl9UI HOMIS OF NIWPOIT IU.CH, 64MSH A ..... ef l sy G•• YOU'LL LOVE THIS Crisp green landscap- ing. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Patio. Dream kitchen with built-ins. Dining room. Central air'..condi- tioning. Tastefully dec- orated. Gas BBQ. Great den with built-in bar . $33,500. :i<ID-1720. LOOK tjO FURTHER For that special 3 bed-REALTORS room. This home has it l~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!i"i!ii'1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1 all. 2 baths. Formal din-General General ing room'. Modern built Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ins . Fireplace. Rear liv- ing room. Plush carpet- ing. Lovely yard. Quali- ty construction. $30,500. 540-1720 - 2955 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 540-1720 Genera l "A HOME FOR ALL REASONS" Excellent Mesa Verde cul.de-sac with room for boat or trailer. Bright and cheerful \Vith dream kitchen, large family room, 3 big bed· rooms, 2 baths and covered patio. Don't wOrry about the gas shortage here -walk to shopping, schools, bus, etc. Ready for your inspection. WOODLAND .• KAISER • · HARBOR if you like these schools, we have the home for you -large ~ bedroom, 2 bath, family room home with beautiful front kitchen, drive-thru garage, boat or camper storage. 1800 sq ft. in excellent condition. Price only $38,900. First time advertised -won't last 546-5880 Open Eves. .-_f, .. HERITAGE REALTORS ****** * TAYLOR CO. * WATERFRONT-BEACON BAY Hurry for this one! Just right for small family. Quality built 3BR, 3 bath home on sandy beach. Air-conditioned. $105,000. * * SACRIFICE * * LA ·cuESTA VERDE HOMES in Laguna Hills has 2 homes back on the market because of credit rejection s. Both have cozy kitchens and family rooms plu.s 3 J!R's. & 2 BA. One has a fireplace. Qwck possession. Excellent conventional financing available. General $31,000 ond $31,500 MAKE US AN OFFE'IU.1 Call Jerry Hardin or J oe Wilhite 714: 544-8012 Genera l I OKISI I. Ol \O\ /.'{A, 'VA' "0..r 21th YH r" BAYSHORES REALTORS. Call Anytime 644-7662 WESLEY N TAYLOR CO Realton ,,,;, '' tho reai N•wport! 'l~!!!!!!!!!!l""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"'I • •• Private streets and pnvate ''Ge ne ret General 2111 San Joaquin Hiiis Read be-aches. Cozy \•:ell maln- "OY•rloolclng Big Canyon Country Club" 18;1ned homes ea<:h ~ed NEWPORT CENTER N 8 644-4910 ~'11h cha:rn and individual-, • • 1ty. This t"·o bedroom Gene ra l "c-utic'' \\'OUld ruake a great lllllf._,......,iliili.,""~1 0CEAN VIEW iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ~~~~~ os~.~.1" ~7'1~~~ I I J • 4 BDRM, 2 BATHS 'ho""' Dr;vo · Open Hoo" 3 + G t $25 950 PRICE REDUCED Thun<lay J.; p.m. GJS.Tlli. . ues • Owne. ..,,, "Sell '"'' house C Wl·ll([ll ?, Ill English Flair Ultimate in California UvillCJ. We h a\'e 4<XXl sq. ft. of custom prHtige and qualltj on 1, ~ acre. OUerin&" total pri\'acy with prof~slonal l a n d s ca ping. 6 big beclroo1ns, 3~:i 'baths, 2 love- ly fireplaces, triple car gai:age and a view of everything, You've got to sec this home! $73,900. Phone 5-15--0-\65 for showing. BElTER THAN NEW This new listing, located on a laq;:e lot at the end of a quiet cul.<Je.r.ac s t r e e t otters 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, In one of Collta Mesa's prln1e 1 neighborhoods. Il's onl y 2 years old and has been l11stclully landscaped to give you time to enjoy the ""'!U'n1 months nhead In the shade of . a spacious patio. It's priced at only S39,950, with an assumable low lnte.rest loao. • ·co:Ts WALLACE REALTORS --546-4141- (()pen E•onl"fl) HOME & BUSINESS 4 Bedroom, 2 baths, double garage. $30,IXX>. . Best of terms. QUIET STREET 3 Bedroom home fully car- peted, recently painted. Large enck>eed 1unporch, fenced front &: back yard, room for boat. Quiet st~ct. $27,!00. Roy McCordlo RHltor 1810 Newp:lrt Blvd., C.M. 541-7729 OUR 24th YEAR Offer ing 11rvlce only eaperi•nce c1n provide WHITE WATER VIEW Beautiful Laguna hillside h ome with har- monious · color scheme thruout -3 BR. & den, 2 baths plus powder room. Absolutely charming. $89,500 AUTHENTIC SPANISH 5 BR. The ocean & jetty view from both levels Is superb. This very large home is completely redecorated inside & out, and newly car· peted. The 6 baths also reflect the Spanish decor. ,A full size pool room, large formal dining room & huge mstr. bdrm. add to the comfortable living. Shown by app't. FREE: value estimate of your home. Why not get our evaluation on today's market, a1ong with figures on your net after saJe. Cou1d mean extra d o 11 a rs for you! Call anytime - JlnJa ..J6/. PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT' Lindo Isle ,Wotwrffwnt Custom 4 bdrm., 41'2 '.bath home on lagoon. Fully equipped island kitchen, waterfront family room, billiard room ...... $245,000, For Complete Information On All HomM & Loh, PINN Coll: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 lloysldo Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 67U161 General General DEEP BLUE SEA JUST A SHORT BLOCK from this near new Newport Duplex. 3 & 3 bedroo!lll, 2 baths, upgraded owners unit with ocean view, shag car pets & beam ceilings, Yo'u couldn't replace it for $105,000. J ust listed.· JUST LISTED QUALITY BUILT East.ide Costa Mesa, fresh- ly redecorated 3 bedroom home. Hardwood fl oors, cozy fireplace, new carpets, near shopping. $30,750. • f , •. HERITAGE REALTORS 540-1151 Open I m. MACNAB IRVINE A PERFECT HOME! Tur~erock ! View ! 4BR's, FR, DR-over· lookmg park & pools! $911,500/lncl land. Laszlo· Sbarkany 644-8200. (UIS) . ! AL L WE ASK Pr1y111c c1rcul11~ strt'el of imn1cdlatcly," close t ol-:-;;;;!j!I line homes. Paint and &~Ye shopping .~ Estunci11 1-1.s.ll A bit ot. New England nestled in a forest oi U'CeS. Spacious """"'""'""'""'""'""'""',..I Int erior . 3 bedroo1ns includ-Convenience ' · Ing SIUdio guett facility, " Prl BLUFFS-GREENBELT LOCATION Lar~e immaculaU. 4BR, FR-den conde>- min1um. ldeal family home. Close to pool. Priced to sell . Jack Custer 642-8~. (UIB) .,, : i ' •• • ' ' ' " f J. • • 1. ,. . . . is you see what we feel is one of the finest W sk H.V. 3 Bdrms., offered in a long lime. $88.000. Fee. It's a beaut. Call now. Jiin.l\'Iulier BUY-LEASE-RENT G o o d assortment fee bayfrop t hom es. $197,500. $79.500. Lease 4 BR. -den year round $2,000/Mo . Rent 3 BR. $400/Wk. Bill Bents PRIVAT E -PRESTIGE New Lake Forest Jisting. Popular Deane 4 bdrm. 2·story chalet, on select estate sized lot. Air-cond iLioned, too! $55,000. P. Hallock .PCEANFRONTI Surfside colony. Private, ga ted comm. Two hu ge rock fireplaces. interior wood paneled . 4 Bedrooms, 2 baths. $82,500. Carol Tatum lVAN WELLS -BAYCREST Lots of charm in this 4 bdrm .. , formal din · ing rm . ho1ne. Bright !am. rm. overlooking pool. 31> Ba. Courtyard en try. $87,500. Va- cant. Mary Lou Marion EXCLUSIVE IRVINE TERRAC E A lovely 4 bdrm., 4 bath super sharp family home. Huge poolsized lot. Lo vely gardens ~play yards. You own the land. $94,000. Cllll Geo. Grupe --... ,.. ColdMll,Banlair ~ 550 NEWPORT CE NTER DR., N.B, I ) t h o u s a n d s • S1,·ecp1ng 1 Nt'l...><ls son1e TLC . grouod• w;th room for boat. $25 950 3 bedrooms I n c luding • • library, ll.lde-a-way master vate courtyard, teMls, suite wilh hogc bath. Ele-Pf:k. Walk t~ !IChools, shop- gant parlor ,vith fJoor 10 P g 1and bicycle to . the .ceiling raised hearth fire. beach. 4 Bedrooms with 2 place Pub tavern kitchen full baths far only $25,360. hldc-a-"·ay master suile. sepnrale gue!f. !acillly, den "•Ith sliding glass door to 25' entertainers patio. Brcathtaldng view of can- .yon and blue Pacific. Bet· TER 1-I UR RY!, Ca ll 6'5-0303. I Oil!\ I L Ol \O\ I t ~ (J ~ CUSTOM BEAUTY • $72,500 Counll'Y atniosphert• 11ur· rounds this 3,000 sq. rt. CW1tom charmer on extra IArge lot. Fonnal dining room t;ives the Atmosphere you need for those VIP funcUoru.. Cul-de--i;uc street gives you privacy and quiet solitude. Our exclusive Realtors 646-7711 ~ We,tclUI Drive Open lil 9 PM * S34,500* > CALL 642-1771 ~21 rJn NIGEL GAILEY 0. ASSOCIATES * TRADE * LArgc "'";,, ,,, '"' ""'" • * RmREMENT * l<>P «xaHoo E.'sldc C.M., -SPECIAL....;. walk lo shops, for molel In OranJte County or L.A. arcn. NEAR·~E\.V MOBILEHOME e CALL ANYTIME e In prime locntinon. ()v.•n. er \\-OU!d like lo acquire 646-3928 or Eve. 64J..5253 2 or 3 bedrrn honle or L'On· • n-H.. • Or assume FHA loan with 2nd fireplace. F ... "? game payments of p)B, includes room with bar ove~ waaher /dryer A: 9eeluded rear ~ and fr! tor I culat lighted 25· patio $37 IXX> Te gera . mma e Call 66-0JOJ · • • · home inside a out! Phone · ~ for more de~ ~ •I .......... ,t . ' "IRYINES" ORANGE ORCHARDS Lachenmyer do, up to $?(1,000 In Ute EASTSIDE Harbor .,... _with \heir equl-COSTA MISA ty. Call "'5-804, SOuthO> • R_enJto~. • 3 BR, 1% BA, hardWood HAPPINESS IS ~~!~~:~~= Rt_• ll! 01 ~ A great family home. 4 B<I· 19 x a; deck wl°' JlBQ over· Out-of.town O\vncr !M!ekJng OLDER nus., largo pool w/1uper klOk1ng fish pond and water· immediate &Ille on hi1 EAS'J'. · entertainment att:a. Ont y fall 2 Car det.ldied ~· ENJOY OUR VERY OWN SIDE 3 bedroom, 2 both BUT SO NICE ~2.500. w1tli separate ~-or!< -· ~. ~ 8 P ~I n I non10 with all the oonvcn· -P\us f!Xtrl o>tJCT't'(e PIJ1rl1'11 :iici.rlc, 3 Br, r ba ~ tl'Tlces. Spaclou5 ynrd w/ m 8'1· ft.. 3 br. home -not •'**•• GINNY area for ~rs" 'bont . alley homo in excel adult com· &.lmoat 10,000 aq. ti. Anxklu1 lust a hou1e -\.\ilh full din· *1\11. * MORR ISON acctSs. \\IU redccon.te tq mwilty. Lux u r 1 0 us ap- . •'Orne and s('(' . rubmit ng room on quiet free-lined *.~ * REAL T ORS 1ult • extcrior/ln!eriOr. potntmentJ. Call Otnlton trrm8.. CALL !; 4 5. 8 4 2 4 '1reet. O\l:·ner SAY$ ''11ell" al ' ~.. •* 551 ..i130 $31,500 Q\vner. 894-8437, "-, before It's loo la'-, SouthCo Realtors. $30,000 *** "" ~ "" \VALK£R & LEF. Realtors '=~==---~= Fa.st tt11ulta al'!! jus t a phone 673-ml I 546--0022 CLASSIFJED ...... ,64U61J call •Wt.Y 1142-Ml8. Sell Idle ttem• , , , Gi2'ii1i Nttd a "Pa4"1T Place an adl \ DOVER SHORES Magnificent Ocean & Bay VIEW! Beauti- fully decorated-4BR'~1 4 baths-formal DR, FR, Truly a presuge borne. $125,000. By Appl. Evelyn G_ray ~-C1:!1J) HARBOR VIEW-NIWLY LISTED Only available 5BR Somerset m odel-fea- tures extensive use of woven w~L~­ um floor coverings + exciting l.......,..ping ideas: Cati Butier 64U235. (Ull) CHARMING CAMEO HIGHLANDS V!cw_of ocean & .canyo11-Enchanting 3BR & den (or 4BR) borne. Fabulous FR - kitchen combination. fll.,500. Charlene Reichmann 642-8235. (U12) BAYFllONT LOT Now you can build that dream home on Promontory Bay w /pier & slip privUeges- you own the land. $132,000. Bill Burt 644-8200, (U28) HARBOR VI EW HOMES-CARMEL Beautifully upgraded 3 BR, family rm. hotne on quiet cul de sac. Adult occupied since new. '67,llOO. Fee. Tom Qu-641 6200 OPEN Wed. thru Sat. l~. 11186 Port Ed- wards Circle. (UllO) . [ 1rv1na I --.~--"'c..-1 IOI _r _ 141•1UI ll«-144·1100 ·- .. . . ... . ,. ' . • ~!3~P~l~LO~T~·~~OV~E~R~Tl~SE~R~~~~~W~~~n~o~~~~,J~UM~lJ~,~1~<f1:~3~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~!!!! Wednesday. June ll, 1973 J ~tar-I~ I _,,,_ I~ [ _ ... _ I~ I _,.... l~ ~I -~,...-~l~;;i.;;;;;[ ;;;"""";;;'";;;'"' ;.;I~~ ( -........ I~ [ _...... J~l~I -~-~, .. _1 ~-1 Commerc1el General Getierol II To"' El T0<0 Huntington -h Huntington Buell Laguna B••cl• PROBLEMS COASTLINE VIEW t I NOH.1't-I END SEWNG YOUR 5 2 8 .. 2 Ba .. own yoor own I' U6 f00 apm1m<nl $52,500. Wallaeo HOME L Nell Realtor. 494-9318. TRY BLUE Lngoo n condo, just in Elev•nt 2 story home with gorgeous deep ltnle fol' iieasun, p1·lva1e ''EQUITY 1ha9 carpeting, custom draperl .. , t unny lx:acll. pools, te:nnls, l Br, 2 kitchen an~ pool table 1111 family room POOLS Picture yoursel ~11~a. 167.500. Owner PURCHASE oyerlolok 1.,0rkllng heated and filtered pool. PLAN" Tit• 11 a .tunning docorator ho-. S.. to * LA CUESTA, BIG 4 BED-\ living in this Laguna Hills Pr\v.,,,. "·t"""· , .~ .. Back By • reclate. $56,900. ROOM 3 btlth, San Miguel, Meredith Mansio\ ' " .,,.. .... ~ ........ ~"' 837 9400 ollly 18 1nonths old. Quality . Newport llffdl PrOf;!rty 151 STEAL THESE TWO _ ___,.,. ~~1(x·,li! 1i~k 1'~:11 ~;~r;~ CHOICE ss;;,PORTSMEN * COMMERCIAL. Price reduction -tired ON 1mr STR1':Jo~', COgrA bui;hlP,~inlen ww1t to get l\tESA • .... Lnng tem t 1e~-t a1,1·1ly lrotn II all • , , come rt.'1um 9 10 011 53Jt11 price ol llve hy the wut(.'r wilh uit. $3 9 0. 0 0 0 . • BARf,,ETJ' Condo wllh boat sliJ), will HEALTY 6'12·:>200. Ask ~ aCCQnlO(lut e 35 to Jg Jt. Mort Po~ws. , Pr\ 178 500 .... -.-_ -----...... ce , ~-: JONFS REALTY INC. * M·l * lz.l' x 150'. Choice LocaUon * C-1 * "lt!illl)'.liootn_, ow~lll, 1~· .,..... ...... -fftrd, 4 Ucdt'OOnis, 2'Ai Baths, \Vnlkcr & Lee Real estate, r. ===~~~~~~~· ~~~~"""·i·;ccoan':l~:et~ "'if~ slide, ONLY $49,95~- --.t-<F"'--.Iace:. Call , . 2291--SNth-Bttttol Avtn~ "Colf.o I . CA!J ,,..,,,~ •• , '"' -172 II ~ al t c us1ve. • ~~·....,, DO .)'RrtJV,<;,<; ·our ~v ua ion . * BIG PRIVATE 15.' x 35• 3 BR, 2~~ BA, laundry room, 3 BR, 2 BA, "~tAORID." Popul<1r "l\1 is5io1L'i" tu-ea. ""'"'----2 fk'dt'OOTIJ home phll'--' 24 " M rt. imop RIVIE RA REAL TY ' ' AS THE ROMANS DO Services) THIS POOL with lots crf decking lge fllnl rm, brkfst l'OOnl, Enjoy the seclusion or this OLDE HOUSE B·B·Q, and CO\'ered patio: ~Ol'1nal dining, ~nlry J1aJI . Large Lot. $36.900. (714) 673·&210 I 2001 w.a.ii.o.81vd. 1'19 Broad\vay, C.1\1. Ma.stf'r lk"<ll'OOrn Suifc wllh EASTSIDE 2 BR , · goes wiU1 U1is v•a.im paneled 1~macul1t.tl' grounds. Call ihl sunken balh and iilldlng BELONGS TO A BYGONE 3 bedroo111 home. Sprinklers 963·56tl. NtWJKWtlM"'·c.Ji10fnl1112&to 642-7007 645.-5609 Eve1 Newport Heights Condominluml dool's to the garden. A tf'r· $26,350. EftA. Detailed exterior of and even a view-aJI for l'a't7.0 entry lend::i 10 this 4 t..arge lot with alley entrance clapboard siding, lge. pie· $3-1,9:i0, CALL 96S445G. L•guna Niguel NEWPORT HEIGHTS for 1ale 160 bedroon1 Deane Garden Kli-localed on tree lined Lillian ture windows, long, flowing .,. i'hcn hon1e. Play croquet, PlaCe. Price is right • the veranda porch entryway. PRESTIGE CO~DO. 2 BR, 2 BA on Golf 3 B~ 2 BA, fantily rooni NE\\'POR°T-:8,\ y FRONt 1v/J1repl , 111.•\v . l' rt r J) c I s · u 11 0 h ~ t:ructed ~·ute1·lront dra~-s. b I t 1 n s · CC?OI vie1v, 5th floor. Deluxe 2 br, n1nn1curcd ya.rd on qu1e l 2 ba, 2 lt'lTttces, 2 level cul-d e-sac. \V alk . to all parking. 642-8931 or 64&-8316 badrnlntot1 a11d volleyball In \(.'r1us are xlnt, -Call now! ~ed ~~.ldiNsec:~~ '.A RARE FIND! LOCATION ~-· lflsL ......... St. co rse, bltns, bertut vu, ten· ~~~ !,~~:~1 J>~~~~~eY~;n ~~~ Ntwjaort SiZ£ LOT OF APPROX. Very Exc:lusive Area PRESTIGE HGME :!!:,7k:M~~ Ca. 92708 ~l cl~~· lOf'/o dn. $36,900. ftai:nuet Club. All schoolg 9000 SQ. FT. This home has everything, ._ .. 714 963-5611 . ., II un;que 2 BDRM. FLOOR even a lib<ary will> ""-uet Immaculate adult 0<.~•P•= L'1d Isle Ne\\'p()rt st·hools, b1k£> 10 the . bt•a{·h. $41.500. c 1\ LL PARh.l.ll-.C: Slll'l'OUnd1ngs, and shop"1~·· close by. ~· 3 bed "" f al Jin I"::::!!:!!:!!:!!:!!:!!:=!!:=: ::;.::;'1-';;c.c------,.. ... 'li> PLAN, features OLDE floora, dble BBQ, overhead roont Whu orm < ·1• 586-02'2:?. P•lrvlew FASHIONED PARLOR htrs in patio, hcated/'filtered ~ci st!p :n~~t!ivi':ic:'~ •GI NO DOWN En oy This Summer 645-7221 (Xll.1!, NB, 3 BR, 2 BA,, H • $-13,000 or will rent w/opt. 646-1111 TYPE 1.JV. RM., apPI:'.QX. 25 seU cleaning pool. and ja-1 d Solidi built, bayfrnnt ~'ith ft. long, with COZY" LOG cuzzi. 2 Mast.er betlnns, 4 atrium. Landscape< ~un s. Upgraded 4 BR, 2 yrs ne\\', pier ~ float. Spacious 4 BR/ (1nytlmt) BURNING TIREPLACE. bathrooms, yuu must see it $43,!f'.il. CALL 968-4456. vaulted ceilings, huge fain bnths. 3 Cat• garage. Sandy !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ Spai.>ious farm.style kitchen. to believe U! ! All or this· COUNTRY KITCHE. N 1m, fu-epl, rlin rm. $43,900. beach{ocean vue. $225,000. This olde house has "ALL is offered for only If Llpo REALTY EASTS.DE REPO KINDS OF POSSffit!J. $67 000 FamHy problem• • pri<oo 3377 Via Udo, N'•I Bea<h ~21 1~~:·:feroEN" TIES." It '>''OUld make an . t under market. 4 Bedrms, 2 * 673-7300 * 1733 \\lestcll/[ Dr., N.B. Beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 bath excellent rm.sr HOME for This palace is shown by a"(> baths, PV z;tone fireplace, 96Z..4471 ( :::~J 546--1103 San Clemente UNITS residence with large family newlywed~. or RETIRE-pointmentonly,.,call 963-5611. formal dining, block tence,1 ..,,~..,,.·..,..,..,..,..,..., Mesa Verde -;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;1 INCOME PROPERTY room and fireplace In con· MENT HOME for Senior heayy shake roof. Prime Jo-l ir ine 1---..,,------• \Ve can substnntlate P & L 1. i<'our srores tn an AJ1>ha venient Eastslde location. citizens. We doubt that you canon near Douglas, tree-1-;;•;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:, 4 BR. 2 ha, crpl, drps, bltns, ROOMY beach house only 2 ligures on this one, .as ~ Dcta shwping ct'nter . Full price only i32,250. v.'il\ find anything like It, way & shopping. CALL1• 2 car g~rl~ l~-g yru:d. $36,500. Llks. from ocean. 3 B<lr1n, 2 mllnrtge it, Beautifully ma ID· Gl"O£S $l,025 a month, a!.>k-for only 893·8533. NEW LISTING O\vner , ::H!t-l.l7+i. Ba: \v/co,nv: den. Ne\vly tainerl in every respect. ing: $99,S(X). $22 500 FULL PRICE ~, · 111~ ~ • Popular San Miguel 4 BR. in paint~~ uiSJde and out $495,{)((), Principals Only. 2. n>O' t>lorc in San Cle. o'F~~R YOUR O\"N 17187 lrookhufst St. $30,000. Th Ran h Loe 1.... Newport Beach Carpeting Uu"UOut hot h • incnte _ roorn to expand. Realtors f>W-7nl 'r r.. ·Y fountain e c • ·a·"'-' on s pa-i;tories. Good for rental, too. Spar I Ing Investment ,.,__, DN. PYt.IT. Valley Co. 92708 4 Lovely bedrms, 2 baths, cious co111er lot w/lovely FASCINATING ~··<> ""'" 662 ~~~ :.~~~~'l -1c~;~1u~~ ""',!""",~"-~..:~..:,i..:i~::.~-u~.,v•~-co-CA~1$s~Otfl:E~r;~ss! 714 963-5611 ~lle!~:.e si!1:cf~st~a~~J ~~· A good buy at "'GRu·s:E~L~s co. ~D~E=~~~,;r;,,j,o-' ~~~p""~"'E"X"E"S,...1 mil offers! F t ti' Fi 11 985 So Coa ., La ,,.ood floors, bJ tins, block v· . NEWPORT 3. 37 UniL'I hi Ba\d\\'ill Hills -an as c xer.. . m: wy., guna FAIRMONT PLACE wall fence. Our best listing 1s1on-CH·ARM 2863 E. Cst. H\vy, Cdl\'[ Only 3 Left! Best rental area. Gross $58.776. /\.s kin g Bring: your han1n1er! Perrect Phone (714) 49...0731 at this price. O\vner trans· 67:>-7080 AU units have fi'Plc's, dsh· $.'l,6."i,COO _ \\'OUld trade rental cottage on hu;';e unit EXECUTIVE HOME !erred. CALL 893-8533. I 2400 sq. ft. 'of charn1 !11 "'hrs, forced air heat, air/ $200,000 equity for large lot. Best Co.<1ta Mesa si!e! 4 BEDIM + POOL . red· h·111 Ne\vport !-!eights not far Santa Ana l.'Ond. closed garages. Pool sailboat. O\vner \\i ll can-y n1ortgage $30 950 (but oot too Closel to Hoag avail.' Walk to shop'g, schls .f C · d djo-• $23500 Low d OK'' llere's !he imniac pool honie • • Jtospital on Catalina Drive. BY O'vner -3 BR, 2 BA, & park. • ,0rne1r st~rc "1.o" a n~~hg Bat_.... 'h · " c II "64•840()" you're looking for w/htd & POOL -POOL 4 Br. fonnaJ dining & huge cpts, drps, or nam e nt a l Sparling Investment OWlJe:-< 111 ng ~ · "'''tt urry .. a . J' • fltrd pool, fonnl din nn, Irg 3 a~,-,. 2 "·'"' fo>mal R..,..A'LTY r 1· r t ·Cross $745 a month _Mk-7 " RV! y !O"ENflt 9 n• .. .. uo.ui , r...n recreation roo111. Ocean & cnce, gas-1t m en-Corp., 638-5662 I $63 ~ d 1 fam rn1, new paint in & ~t. dining rOOm, lots of deck-Univ. Park Center, Irvine bay view., \VALI<ER & trance, ve1-y a I t r a c. '-=='"'--"'=""==-! ni; ,vvv • 01' tTa e or .V. r I"· n1· & Co xtnt idscpg, oon1er aslung ,·ng Pri""d lo< quick sale. Call Anytime. 552-T~ ~"""""" Re-dee., <'ncld ,patio, 2 C" NEW TRIPLEXES Ot·angc COWlty t-omnier-• r... MM'a -• 58 950 Call f . '"" LEE Realtors, ~6 ... <'ial. ...._. r.-.u......._ Mesa Verde Special $' , · or appt. CALL 8'12·93TI. Office hours 8 AM to 8 PM WE$T(LIFF gar.· S29.900. 979-5767 (Msg. IN COSTA MESA Ca.JI 675·72'25. 4 e• & lam rm lor.r on.ly I' --E ,. I h 3 BR 2 I 1~"'~i>-~300!i!!3~>~~~~~~~1 3 Bdrm., l% Bath HOME AND INCOME " 5°/o DOWN IRVINE TOWNHOUSE xcep iona onie, • 2 Bdrm., l~~ Bath * TWO UNITS S33 950 1 h , ~"" l\N\ BA. frplc, din rm. Front & 1 Bd ~ B ·th Tu·o 2 J{Cdroont tlon1es. 531·511D ( :-.,,,) 53]·5800 P ayments ess t an rent. * UNDER ~w,vvv * back patio, co nip I e t e I~ nn ... ~ a . (ZONED i<"On 5 UNJTSI ' Sharp 3 BR, 1~~ BA, \\'ith L~ke flC\V 3 beds, 1,150 sq. Mablettom. Eml 10% DOWN Ensti;i<lt• Costa l\lesa. \Valk Bet\vcen 1' .. airv!ew & Jlarbor 2 ,, ti . d h 1 privacy y,.·/slump stone .,.... Orange County to shopping. !{eated nnd C•ll '63-5611 ti.rep\, cover.,... pa o~. feet, all' con , s ag cp g, "·all, wrougfit iron gall'S, \ 1;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iii~\ fil1£'rcd pool, lots of trees -Gr~at location. THE quiet stJ:eet. flurry, this redv."OOd patio, near pool prof. ldnscp'd. \\'alk to Ap•rtment and ~hrubs. $515.00 (X'r mo. PRICED RIGHT at .• $.')S,fiOO, FRIENDL y STREET v.·on't last! 129,950. CALL and park. 01vner selling this \Vestc\iff Plaza & schools. Realtors 547 ... 791 Int'O!ll». $:>9.500. Ca 11 400 L17• 1 FOR ALL features this 4 BR family 842445L unique, A 1 Pin e· st YI e Will sho'v by app't. Prin· Mobile Homes 646·05.i.'>. All.AS home with eat-in kitch, tov.'nliouse in W a In u t cipa1s only. Wknds or Alt. 6 For Sale 125 SIX UNIT -apartrnenta with C.M. • -:r.1om & Dad will enjoy the COUNTRY LIVING Square, amidst the Orange wkdys. 646-4219 --"-'-'-'------ocean bree1.es. Spe.ciQUS 3 privacy of the kingsize Huge lot \Vlth tall trees Grove in North Irvine. -~~~~===--Motor Home Rentals Bd~p"d1.~~~~ ~.lS'a~('~ Victorian Manor . 2 Story $21,000 i\Jassive 2 story Victorian. 5 bedrooms, parlor & mlL-dc RACE FOR SPACE? roon1. Formal dining. Wind· Not tn this lal'RI' 4-Bedromn , ing staircase. Park-like 3-Bath, .1-'or tnnl Dining Roo1n g1'0m1ds. Agent 66-030.1. anrl hui;e Faniily. P.oon1 with SUPEll 17'" 1 v.•e1 bar! This is a t1i·lcvel · · ...., sq. t • n1odel '>''ith .,;ew of n1oun-to~·nhouse-occan vie\\'-good tains frorn t\\'O Patios and area-$4.i,OOO. Cardiff, Ca. Large Bakony. can 586-02'22 GUNTHER REAL TY CAMEO SHORES TI <-7>1-6395 or 714-750-1151 l\fagniHcent four bedroom 24' x 2'2' Family rooni, 3 hotne .,,,.ilh hoth n "·hitc bedrms. Cute .and clean. \\'1ll£'r and canyon \'iC\V, $ 2 5 , 5 0 0 . CA LL linlque indoor phu1rlng, sun· KATELLA, S4i~ roofs, sparkling pool and B k B sauna, nuL'i.~ive siiiiken !Iv· -:o•:o•=--=.a;oy,_ ____ _ BRAND NEW HOMES ~$1. --\lalley Ca. 92701 714 963-5611 i\laster bedrm w/a private rust~ing in the ocean breeze $29.900 firm. Please, no * OCEANf;.RONT * - bRth, There's another bath s_um>und a gorgeous con· agents. 551·5151. PARADISE grammar sehool. $1050. ii'l- Ct'lltt·aUy locnjed to the teniporary 1 BR _ 3 BA Laguna &each 7.000 Sq. ft. of wood & chru·m SALES & LEASING L'Otne. Asking $ll5,000. b\lt other bedrn1s and to the lrg home, Country Club living\--"---------duplex. $320,000. full service facility ntak~ a2 2ii~r. KINGAARD S 0 S famny rm. TI>0re ;, room to w;Jh commwtity pool, CALL UNBELIEVABLE LIDO REALTY Danmar Motor Homes DRE.LEU. x··E-Du·p0lex (2) 3 bdrin° • • • garden on this large lot. TODAY to see this one-Of·a· 3377 Via Lido, N'pt Beach Distressed seller now in Ken· $35.900. i... kind 842'.44.SL Ocean vieo.v from every room * 673-7300 * -2600 sq. ft., 2-baths ea.· ~l lucky due 10 transfer. hn-For .t'ERFORMANCE of this spectacular 4 ·bdrm. 531 ·6800 amenities included', near med. poss. on this new ,(3'.6 l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;963-1;621"'1;iiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o; LOTS..0.LAND home. All rooms have ap-*WATERFRONT* ==,,---,.--,.,-7.0-0\ shops. 514 Clubhouae Ave. mo. )'Oung} 1730 sq. ft. 1 • l/'J acre on quiet street. proximately 15 ft. of 'vindow Channel Duplex OWNER n1ust sell ' 7 2 $90,000. Nelson S. RobinlOJI. Greenbrook "Marin" • 4 TREES spacious 4 BR, '2 BA ho me space. \Ve'IL calJ this our Balboa Coves ho1ne Sheraton Manor 2 4 x 6 5 Broke\', 6T.'l-8ZJO. BR, 21,~ BA, larKe family for TREEHOUSES with 2 patios. Lots of iwm "house in the round," be-*OCEANFRONT* w/screen & fam. rin. & CLOSE to ocea n. 3 BR. 2 be.. rm., fireplace, P ant r y' \Veil located 3 bedrni., 2 bath to ramble. P rice just re-cause every room is in a l.fomes & Units n1any many other ex~s. &. 2 Bit , 2 ba. duplex. crptg. and d l' a Pe s · house fully crptd & newly duced:hurry on over. CALL pie.like sha(X'. Large pann'Y, BALBOA BAY PROP. 1<18.5l Jeffrey P..d. Sµ33::1, $73500 13y o\vner 4915-17 A"sun1able 7¥.t% loan. Ask· ,,.,·nted. '"alk to sch! ... 842-4451. li;wely1 'fanlibealy ~J m11 w~ * 67•7420 * S.kA.nd 551-2828 aft 6 ,'(-RiVer Ave .. Newport Beach: ing only $44,900. Owner's 1 " "' flrep ace. ulJ u Y ~ ~ w e s. Prine. only. 6nr3906 Eves. comPfl!IYanxious.m&keofr, s¥">_ps. AN ·* signed n1aster bdm1. with STEPS TO OCEAN NE\\'PORT BAY I I I • * KASABI ' walk·in closet, plus many ... TENNIS, POOLS, CLUB . 11 UNITS. excel Con d. arw n rM ty rnc:. R I E t t 962 ... ._.. Custom built beauties. _ $120,000. net 15% on ••nnity. 96S-4405 (24 hrs) ea S • e ._.... more extraordinary features. Very clean 3 BR, 2¥.. baths. 2 BR. 1 ~lh, $~6,500. Assunie 7~~'1o 1~~-or OUR BEST BUY $105,00J. Fanilly rm .. , frplc., bltns, 2 BR. 2 Bth, sunde<_k $26,500. terms. Prine only. 4m-2l69 Huntington Buch ~'O/i/Z.~ carp., drapes. $47,fiOO. Adult park, 540-3672. Light & airy 3-BR. 2 ha. cust. CAYWOOD REAL TY 10X47 ' l\fOBILE H 0 me lndu1trial Property 161 bit. rontemp. home w/cui> .. JUST LISTED .* 548-1290 * w/10"20 cabana , :<Int cond.l;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;~;;;j board• & d°"'ts ..-. 5 REAL E$TA':fE 1741 Pomoua, Spa" 41, 4. ACRES Yn. young. Comp. privacy '" HARBOR Vi<'W Palormo 4 c '! in 2 patios A parklike yard. Gl~n r.iar 3 BR, 2 BA; f:irepl, 1190 Glenneyre St. hr, 2~ ha, 28' mast. suite. "' · Ing roo111 nnd thl"e(' sc~ aratl' be<lroo111 "'ings. See this lovely hon'lt.! today! CaJI 67'1'7225. lam rn1, bllin range, dbl EXEC. TRANSFER .• ,..9473 M9--03l6 d h .. _ '73 BUDDY 12x40, 1 bdrn1 Grrat Eastside Location g:,~. Eastside area. Only oven, dsh"·shr, p 1 1enty of Shows like a m~~J. 4 BR., 4 .. *,.HARD TO FIND* ~~;:::~!u~i~gbi=~ J:~~ turn. Costa l\1esa Adlt{t Well located corner. Present 1252· :om. 27.t •22nd St., CM BALBOA BAY PROP. cupboru'ds, new w w crpts ba.; formal duung nn. & . 1.'0urtyard, Jandscpd. lm· Park. $4500. income $1400. per mo. G1-e!ll .tU"ge 3 BR, 2 BA, t am rm, & dtps, covered patio, J•-•'ly rm. u P g rad e d Close 1n, \vaJk to beach. 3 1 · .... ~~"" American 557-9390 potentiaJ _ will divide. A~ f1>lc. Apflt'Ox 1800 sq. ft . * 642-7491 * Id '''-t d •'111 900 _.. B<I 2 b 1 Lag nlC{ • possess10n. ~. a d.r J d cpd Jncd scpg . .u.o• con · ~. · carpets & drapes. Excellent mls., . a! is; · . ~na '6.IJ SKYLINE 20x52 bdrm, 2 prox $1.25 sq. ft. ~fils.inciu':~. n ~% 'tinanc: [·SID[ DOLLHOUS[ 1·p, SlsraJ total dn paymt. H.B. location. $49,950 chrum, \\•1th den & d1n1!1g 401 FELIZ, N.B., the Bluffs. hath, Costa Mesa Adult Roy McCardle Realtor !u,g?! Diivt> by ! ! ! Payn1ts less than rent. Xlnt Call: 673-3663 675--8886 Eves. r ms.; Jge. fenced yard \\'Ith Condo, 3 BR, wet~· beaut Parle. 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. 646-94.12 or 64a.6177 location. nice trees! $59,500. decor, cor unitJ on lg American 557-9390 2••m9 Owner moving out of mare If ."-bJ:Pal, greenbelt. Open H o u s e ~ Corona del Mar must sacrifice 3 Br, 2 ba, ~ .... nft_,\ every day 11--6. Owner, SAN Juan Capo, Adult Pk.l!'!!!""~""~!'!!!'""""~!!!'I o.......;...--"'-----blt frp\ t ~ak ~·· 64{)-L197 1972 2'.lx60· 2 BR, 2 BA fam Lots for Sale 170 12 APARTMENTS HOME ~~·1600 c~ it".1 ~ "$J.ss0 t•Z..4471 ( ::::.J 54M103 ,, HARBOR vu 1-lomes, 4 BR, rm, d1n area, cpts/drps, ali1----------1 Many alternativ£>i; to financ-down. Call BkT. 645-6646. ,.,9•1100 1 sty. Lge. Vu lot. Fan-appliance'4 Owner 493-4107. EXCHANGE ing and vv.•ncrship. PLUS O\VNER sparkling 4 Bd, ]~ BEACH LOVERS 49•-s•11 tastlcally upgraded. Pri<.'ed MOBILE Home : "Viking," R-2 LOI/will take 6 Units, ~::Y ~ft~~le Do\\11 for Srnall-INCOME Ba plus large 14 x 25 ft. LOVE IT1i Top Of the World below mkt Open Silt/Sun xlnt 4.'0nd. ?tlfoVlng out of Huntington Beach. Family room w/fireplace, $36,500. and you wil! when you see High above the Pacific. 5 '°1"-'=:·"'64'=<--,.7~""'-·-,;-,....,....,...... state. A-1 P.~:rk 1n Nwpit FOR: 10 to 15 Units in 1'.lay Trad(' kir. Lai~rl suit· Just listed, a duplex residence builtins, forced air, fully l\tanimoth two story Calif. this neat-as·a·pin 3 BR., 2 bedrooms, 3 baths. Large DUPLEX, oceanfront, 1 yr Bch. 890 W. 15th St., No. 14. Orange County. able for 3 lo ~ wnts. v.·ith a rooniy 3 bedroon\ 2 carpeted & drapes, I~ Ranch \Vith glass garden BA + lrg bonu&:. Lovely landscaped grounds. Fan1ily old, close to school, all 8 x 35 FURN. JI.lust sell! Best Sparlint Investment May Carry~ Znd.1'l'ust ~· bath ground floor cm·rwr's fenced yard. Close in to kitchen, walnut cabinets, covered patio with firepit. rm., fireplace. Dream kit· amenities. 714: 673-9001 from offer. 2 BR, a\\'lling, good Corp • All Uni ts i; urrush\"d. GOOd unit and dcsirablC' 1 bedl'oom schools, ehut'Ches and sho~ big pant ry nnd patio pass• Bonus & patio \vired for ch!'n. Lots llf privacy! 9 to 5; after 5, 673-13(6. cond. /\dlt park. 548-0980. 631-5662 'i R~~ll Schedu le. l!C'ated and l't'lltal "1th separate en-ping areas. Only $29,900. thru. lluge ranch-size farni-stereo, dish\\'shr, sprinkleni $56,000. brk. 494·8003. Waterfront ProlMlrty Fillt>red ~\. !!.12,800. Call trance. Across (Ji:>m tennis 838-ll.57 ly rooni with ro a rin g and a \\·eU-kept low main! TARBELL r--~ * R-4 LOTS * anythne ~oc;:,:1 ....... d k fireplace. Winding staircase front & rear i••rd. ·~.=. 3 BR, 2 BA, priv slip. beach, 1 . . oo-~ nn gmssy ""' -. TR'l.EYEL, $44,000 " •~ ,~ 'fl L b Bal~-~---.. ., •--, AMIGOS! $92,500 t' leads to niaster suite with for PERFORMAi~CE Magni cent aguna Y owner, uva. '-"vt:S. Cane:;• • 3 Adjoinlng lots 60x300 ea., Si dt'sean vender o <.,-omprnr CALL 641--7211 vanity bath. 4 Big bedrooms 847-3584 Spectacular ocean views, cus-675-4217 for appoinhnenl. Eastside Costa Mesa. Zoned propiedad " IOli n1ejon-s 2% baths. Heavy pl ush MEREDITH tom quality t.hruout, 3 BR, Duple:-<es near the ocean for 6 units ea. $32,000 Ea. tenninos posiblt'. favor <le 4 Bd. 3 BR, 3 car gar. Den carpels and decorator 2 BA, secluded patio, decks, l\liles Larson, Realtor CALL '-"-• ,,,.1, 14 hablar con Ai;iiando Vas-W/\\·et hat'. 6% assumable drttpes. Still smells brand GARDENS tri·levcl, \\i lh niany eXcep-* 673-8563 * Acreage for sale 150 9'!.~ qu£>i, agt>nle de Mila aC'red· Joa! "1. $251 ~r n'°c· Q\vner, _oe_•_'_. _B_KR_96~2-55~·u=~~" Upgraded thruout; split level tional (~ture:o;. 01'.ner in NE\VPORT SIIORES BUILDER'S A~NTlON 1 •l'L '·1atla ofic·ina . i\.'f u c h a a w 1 CIU"l)' 611<1. all Bkr. WIFE SAVER I I I 3 BR, 3 ba; fan1Uy nn. & La=1na until Sun. 494-8566, BY sh 3 b 2 ,._ • •r.. t'9 ...., 645-6&tS. • • • dining tnl. \Vire<I for Slereo. E ~· 305 owner. a:rp · r, Ull, Choice location, Tustin. Ap· REALTY =? ~El Toro Rood. * NEW D(f PLEX * ----------'.·Pin sharp 4 BR, 2 BA, on In $:>3 500 xt. · $38,800. Prine. only, &16-3718. proved for 45 units. Near Newpor1 Pos l Otrrce NE.W OUPLEX Now under -rot1structio11. De. D•n• Point landscaped corner lot! {lJush m1ac. ·G, EM, DUPLEX BY O\VNER OCEANFRONT DANIA RE/l.LTY CO. ZONED A & B' tu.xe 3 bdrm., 2 baths: 2 crpts, bltns, formal dining ---Close in. Min to beo.ch, shop-Duplex, ov"ner /agent 673-9'266 * 642-6560 * • r-i. Large ne\\' Duplex, handsom€' 1hree bedrornn un lb;, bewned 1..-ellings, nll shingles, 111c Lui\rl t!r \\'Rn ls <\clic111? Asking $U9,500. <.:all 675-72'1.'>. 2 BR. 1 ~2 BA, 2 story, close 1 d ~ N . 1610 w. Coast Hv.'Y., N.B. ping schools. Just upgrad~ C I 1 Corner Jot 80' x 115' • Good bdr1n., 2 baths. Blt-but: 2 lo marina, cpt/drps, lg sun -newy ec:orato.o. o n).ru1t-REALTORS 642-<1623 large gar. $49.500. ?r will You don't need a gun to ommerc a b ii Un 2 bait! Redu¢ed ~'Pie~.· sundeek with \'icw. deck, $37.500. 493-5029. lt!nance proble~ls h~~ ~'<------~===~• consldt'r exchange 1n LB. "Ora\v Fast" when you. Property 158 1: $~ ~ $; 500 s.down 00 'MORcf..\N1~~AL TY El Toro ~ub ~:;~e~~l. iade '01\! ! REPOSSESSIONS Call aflcr 5 pin. 494-8&17. Place an ad in the Daily tsT T™_E otre:red -N'pt. loan ~~. f\~yo~e quaillfes. 673-6642 67,S.:6459 Call 66:8400. ;;'or information and location Any day is the BEST DAY to Pilot \Vant Adii' Call now Blvd. 9.2% Return spend· Charles Quintartl, Res1.~r. •• OWNER, transferred. nttt!:il ZOfflCESSER\'!NGXW!fflrTl 9 of these FJIA & VA homes, !'\.Ill .an ~ad! Don't delay, · • .:. 'G42-5G7S. · able Income. Realtor 6'ffi.6700 642·2991. (P.S. We wi)l -f'll e • -DUPl:EX -... sacrifice intmed.-IlJ ,,..c·J·y ,---· -v.~-~ ::. :::-'--'& Co.-. 1 cor:t:ict.. .call today 612:-5618. -· -your home tor '4 % fee.).•' . ' . I • l • I· ' • Tu.0 l·BR. Walk to beach 3BR, 2BA, fnn1 nn, f:rplc, !: ~"e"' KASABIAN ·· · · BEAtn"IFUL ocean v)eW $."19,500 /I.gent ltt3-8500 ~~Yw~~;~:~t~~.'~b}~ Real Estate 962.16644 $@\l~}\-/Ji"f.,fjvS • LAG UNA R-1 lot. cloae:w CAMEO SHORES THE RANCISCAN • city. Sacrifire $16,900. covered pntioo, I us h F * ALLEY ENTRY 4!).l-f;iOS, 496-2218 ~ By cn.·111'1" .'I br, :l!.~ ba, fnm lndscplng, ~i acre. Sad· A 11 th d ri<'s iJ G h Ch l/ r1n. pool. $1:15.000. 67(">-1(197. dleba.ck VU, nr schls. Jmmed ree::rs R UChan1~ag:!~tyle Has big parking, pad for Tliat Intriguing Wor ame wit a UC«. e C-2 LOT, xlnt Joe., apptdt, occup. El Toro Rd to pool. Attached to th e extra vehicles -Fresh & . lllit.J ._., CLAY •· POI.LAN 50X'_OO on Harbor BlW .. BUYING 3 UNITS? _c_o_st_a_M_ ... ______ l\IuirJands, North West . to dra""ries is a 2600 "".ft. clean! 4 BR, 2 BA home. 0 ' 1 f th C.l\t. must sell, ownm-. "" -• Close to beach, schls & oarronge otter.s c . e (213) 792-10'l8 .. Before you do look at ttie 11.d· lfURR'f! th~ , New p 0 rt Estrados, Right to 24572 home ""/gre n shag carpel, ti::n four xromblod word• b. vantages of this Ulvl'lfll'nent Heights area, newly redcc '3 Corta O'eista Dr. Open form\ din, a huge fain rnt. shops. Best buy at szs.";:;..,, low to form four simp!o wordL In oorr1parlso n' to A triplex br, 2 ba, PV stone' firplc, 1~ !Aici!kend s. 586-4344 Re<lucecl lo $55,900. ~~ARP.E."l'. REALTORS, I R E T Y S E I in terms of reduced n1ttin-Anthony Pool, Boat abees.\ F t I V 11 For PERFORMANCE · lenance ru1d cJo\\•n. \V~ hnve & storngc yd. l\1ur.h more.\ _o.;.u_n_•_n __ a_•_Y'---· ~~=,..,.96""3-~562=-1===..-I BY Owncr-Pre!ltigc ~lode! l I J I I 1• 3 Condos tn nn adult area, $37;950. Fly 0\\1lCr, 'Prine. TRADE 2 Bit TOWNl lOUSE PARK HUNTINGTON 1800. 4 br. exh'fl \\•ide lot. ea.ch priced \\'t'll lwlow whl\t only, 646-6428 ~22 trun nn. xlnt cond.: A Sp._tnls.b beouty • Great side gales for boat 01· the .rnodclS &ell for. 'Ench ~N"'E"W.;,;L°"Y""'D='=E~C~O=RA=~T~E=o= located in prime Fountnln hon1e for U1e young exccu· ca.niper, Nkr.t~~~s, !'11 cf8'i I 0 A T R I ~j ru·c: 2 Sf>droo111, l ~g Baths, Valley area, ln1n1ed oc· Uve who cntc1·tains t• 101, bch, pur · reen ea Y . l Elect B/J Kitchen, Cll.l'JXlll'ld, 3 Bft , 1 ~ ba. $21,500 CUN\tlC)', aSl!umable 7"9% Jrg t111n rm, a formal dining Lane, S46-6<147· I' I [ I Prlvat.e Pai-los. OwnPr 1na.y BALBOA BAY PROP. lonn. $.'lSOO et1Uity. f'OR hoat rm. Only $46,950. CALI, -WINNER'S CIRCLE corry 2nd T.f). Ol' 10% Fi· * 55'"'8800 * or l°'orsche of equal value. 846-1351 or R-17-8531 This one Is No. 1. at $37,500. I nancing available. Owner FOR sale by owners, GI loan SoutJi Bay Realty, 962-24<10, -This larg~ siµgle story 3 SR I·· W A H L S I i mui;J &ell, $18.00! cnch. Call at 6%, will tnke 2nd . Mesa hgent/OWner. is extremely sharp. l.Dvcly _ . • F I TL I f t nnytlme. &I()+~. clel f\1ar corne~ lot. 3 BR A · , • · Jdscpg front & buck. If , I J I Is O(u ty: ~ie peop 8 w IO ge WANT 3 BEDROOM? 2 BA, beautUully tndllCp'd at REPO . y 0 u • re fussy, c a 11 • _ _ _ what's left, ofter the football R-2 P¥J'Ccl? l:..1cthh.l'tge your $35,5000. After 6 Pt.I, 557·40il $750 DOWN. PEJ.lFORANCE on this one 41DQch receives his -. ""'1 4 LOl'S near Lake Elsi~ - $50 down. $25 mo, ea. 328Ql Central, Wildernor, et . 678-3267 Mobile Home/ Tr•ll•r P•rkt 172 5 * MOBILE Home Porl(a. So. CnUf. Bier (213) 686-1743 or 646--0<!04 artc.r 5 Mount1Jn, D...n Resort 1,4 LARGE Cl\btn 2\ii •crw. View. Orchard, Pa Ii o , Sundeck. Box 35, Pinon Hills, Ca 92372 I 71 {) 249-3647 2 nMl'()()m \vllh Doohle COLLEGE Park • /l.s1~ume l or 3 BR Townhou~. hge CLOSE TO BEACH 847..J594 I I Caraae for tlila Rcniodcled 7% VA loon. $3000 totl\l dn. nimpuit room dblt1 aar, 4 BR, 3 ha. Z.8ty. home. Big PRESTIGE 3 br, 2 bl!.., boat I-· -,;Uo...:F,....;W;.,..A'--iL;....:L;.,..~ 0 Complete the th1.1t~le q1.1oted Home \Vi!h As11un1ed VA Sharp 3 BR 2 BA fAtnlly swim pool, few ltfl. lh1rry! film rn1 $4>1950 door. Nr. public & Clltholic I' j I I j by lill irij In fho ml~siriQ word~ nF.,\C•I tn;1.ilf!r l~u1to l\1ax. Lot111. SZl.900. Coll 6-16-05.75. nn, frplc. $.13,900. •Owner. 557 .. 9144 or 842-4421 BALBOA BAY PROP. Schl8, high & college. 514 ~; -. -• -yo1.1 dtivelop rom step No. 3 b1low. 28' ()(•e11n vu ()l\tlo UR lli\ &1~1 51·1 or (213) 685--97".il. First PlonHr Realty * SS6 MOO * nsmb. tn. $36,300. Owne r, f\it. II\• rn1, $1'i00, 64&.~ BY ov.Ttcr-Fully llP!P'8.ded 3 846-6.tl.'J. .:\ P~tNT NU.V.BEREO LETTERS IN or &1~344&. BR home, 5un'fJ\U\ded by CONDO 3 BR + den, 2% ba, 3 BR., nr. beach, firepic., BY Q\\-1ler -Iii 6/18, save ~ THESE SQUARES \,t;-',""kc~• °"G°'N"'g"o"'"y,-;;C'°ha"'l"'ct'".-:t.a=k lush gTeCnery. H urry! Tiburon 20 mos new. Mt\llY pat\o, w/w 5hug, <:rpt, $3400 fee. 4 SR, basement \'l~· 2 Ult 1.'.-RA trtpl $.13,9ricl. s~s ~226by owner. $.~.5JXI. W3~1~b:1~14f~~~ game rm. +=x900tras. :Fs2~ci2 () u~~Rt~e~N~~~E LETTERS I I I I I I I ~~1r11l~hed $26,SOO 811-4142. :1 BR, 569 llamJlton, ~Jle ' ""·'1 Munot•r, P11c!Jlc Sandi. ft. Now $....,, • . - . - - -• BEAIJT, itt-<:ludcd Mt. J UR R°"' $19 ooo Oo t botner 5 BR ZIOO *I ft 2% ha !»'I '-Worcester Ln. 9Gz..oo.sG d 1 I tcn,;nl. C.11' Art :/'2-0091 or ' bltn•: DIV. cni11. d.,,s, !pie; "~fake Room ~·or Daddy" Cl•,.lfled Ads , • • fll2·5618 _ _:S:.C:.RA~;:.M;:.·_L:.ET __ S_A_N_S_W_E_R_S_l_N_C_LA_S_S_lf1_C_A_T_l_O_N_8_1_8_, ~{'.;'~ ::~~:,,d:g~9?'J6 °"· 536-4558 Broker. 2 atory, $42,000. 96S-Ql6 Oa.11slticd Ads ••.••• 64WJ678. 'I I I ' - Wtd11Hd17, Juite lJ, 1973 ~-~I ---]~1 1 --- 1 .... ....:~ -""• P•nm. ....,._ F""'ltMcl JOO Hou-Unfum. J05 H..,... Ullfllm. Ill Apts. Fum. U0 Apt. Uolum. 1 •-I• Ntwi-t Beoch lrvlno Son Juan CeplllrenoC ·""-.. "','",---'------' Co!lstrono -ch ~OST bcautll\d T&nCh in --c. lc~r Valley jUll a IOfl& s cx:EAN front -l br, gar, + 4 BR. CU.lveniaJe •.•••. $375 ol BR. 2 BA, lam rm, w/cpll LOW WEEKLY RATES 3 Br, 2 ba. bllinl. ocean NEWLY DEXXlkATED roa lid ~ Roy l\ogen' extras. $325. mo. \Vlnttt - 3 BR., 2~ bL •••.•• $350/475 &: drpl, fncd yd. No pets. Executive Suites view, $250/mo. Ca 11 2 BR w/rar • filed yd: ~· Thrff parcel deed• or Oct. lit-June. 6t6-6713. 2 BR., den, 2 be. .•••••• $315 Con1m lllke, park & pool. 2MO Newport Blvd &U-ll55 or 493-6228 w/paUo -water pcl. Call ff ... 2'i and 17 oc~1. Two Meuu1 Unfvrn. 305 33 BBRR.. 22,~aB ......... SJ'i'S/3151385 Reh. $290. ":· 495--1029. C0tt• Mei• • Coron1 .. Mir .,~}·.,lA~P~la. ~d• •· •• $1IO. ~~ 1tocktd la.Jee l ar & e >11 a. ·••·•··••• NU 3 Br. -1,1 &. -view -_....2 2611 ~ "A" --=-la ... 11_ §rftuon building 3 BR Gener•I 3 BR, 2% be.. bonus nn. $425 Carpet.a, drapes. -"' . -....... ..,.,.." ..., ....iaker house, 3 BR own-2 BR .. 2 baths ........ 1325 036-0029 STUDIOS & I BR'S ** 38R .. Ill BA *'I house fenced l\Ylm \\re HAve Sumn1er Renta.Ls e FREE Linens Larp 1 d I 1, a:as 0cooled. ~cl0&~d V"isi"on-Sundt Beich e FREE UUlit1e1 pailo: ~tni. :::: ::;.: ~tio, fenced, iITl.gnted aJ. 3 BR, 1% ba, bltins, only • Full Kitchen Ooae to evHY(hing. ,170 ~tleld1. ?..fa,v be sold steps to beach &: puk •Heated Pool mo. 868 No. 1 C!enter"St._ l!OOteOOly .... T~I~~ I cl e Apmbn•D I rec1-11·11 wKler constructlo'n. $350. mo ! ~,u'!.~ .. ~.!'cllltle1 .. n ON TEN ACRES 2 BR, den, 2 ba.; carp/dri». , · .-'7.anu.,_,,,...•~ n· ..._ DJs!'& fl I ~y1·ly. West--l ndu.1-tr-le,1-,!llL•....LA...i•!lt!)I "-~~"'-·r.=:pt-t. ~;-==i''"ua=-1-blt-lns.-Uke new, ahup A ment Properties, Inc., -713/592-3161 •Phone ~Ce 4'l1 iw-u •. 1,wn.11n. I ' Adult ~ -"107 H 18 A pl Vall Fireplace I prtv. ...Uos. c ean. 1 ,no ....,.s • ..,_,, ii-" wy. • P e ey, 1 Condomlnluma Caso-de Oro Pools Tennis Contnt'l Bktst. 277 Apt 7, 16th Pl. A.gt ~7. 242-3651 or 245-8527. 43.1 W, l9th SL, Costa A-fesa REALTY 646-2414. jEAUTIFUL lo-acre VaJen-l8:54 S. Coaat Hwy., l..ag\!na A .Company Whh Vl&ion , Furn. 315 ALL UTILITIES PAJD 900 Sea Lan, CdM W.·26ll ~;,.:.;::..::,~----- tia crove. Lovely home site Univ. Parle Center, lrvlne Comp&re before you rent (MacArthur nr <:out Hwy) SMAU. 1 BR, Eaataidt, util & retirement Inc 0 111 e , COSTA ?.1.ESA OFFICE Cail Anytlm~ 552-7500 Huntl!'!!on f1•rbour Cwitorn desl&ned, fea~ pd, 1 adult, no pet,, Yr~ !Sacrifice at S 2 5, 0 0 0 . Slat • Bach, tum, all utllJ. OUlce hours 8 M lo 8 PM STUDIO condo, Must lff, Be • ~~~en with 3 BR So. of hwy, frplc, 1ar., ~~;~Ope~, 336 · 1!4-T~. 496-2Zl8 pd., w/pool. Avail 7/6. lat tenant. rent from owner, •Separate dln'a: area =~~~· !~.$28S 67l-1418 3 '::BR::::..;e;+'-"pa'.!'.tlo"'-,"1ra""'.'-qulet.~-., ltNI Est1te Wanted 114 Sl35tll ·pdBachtv gar. ,!pt., all 5 Or 6 Bdnns ..•.••• _ .... $375 $225. MT-9444 aft 5. e llome·like -........ Baker I; Bri&tol. Immed oe-u s ., s ., reu1g, cpts, 3 BR bonus room $400 .. .__ NEW 2 BDRM, family rm, M • · -I WILL-1:. drps. 2 people ok. ·• ·••• Condominiums • Private patios t drps bltn $350 cup. ng. lOtO A Valenda, GUARANTEE TO SELL $~."~.Bf~~ &w~: 4 BR., 2~ baths ••••..•• $425 Unfurn. 320 : ~=e =:n w/storaae c~c.~.=ail",,"Se"p"t'--.'rn=~-"fui"· ,__·_mo_. ~~7'l66unfum, crpts. drpc, • Y~UR H0Pt1E . $210 . 3 BR house w/gar. s.n Clement• • Kingogz Bdrms Coat• Mew range, oven, refrl.g, DO peta, t •' rN 30 DAYS. encl. yd. for kids & pebl, • Pool • Barbecues • sur-$145. 96&-1455 Cn811 advanced. CALL 6-6-0lll 2 BR, 2 BA new, Pres rounded with plusb land-LRG 3 Agont ............ ·• 847.fi612 lielghts, 3.11 Adobe. Lse scaplng. bltns bri 2 tba, ~dil85 1 ' DUPLEX LAGUNA BEACil OFFICE $275. mo. day,;, 213 : Adults. No Pets. S:.,~.Jf • nr · 9(ach comniunity duplex $175 . 2 BR, nr. bcti., gar., "SINCE 1946" 863-5727, 213: 691-5346 eyes, LARGE 1 BR $185 _,moe:;;·__::°"''°"'-' ----- •, ... ,anted to b\.I". Must be crpta. & drpg., ...,.. ck. ht Western Bank Bldg. 213 : 691-5346 365 \V, Wilson 642.1971 $1Ctp15tLa/~rge 3 bd•ul, ;_ ba. Oe~. r ' $195 R ~· U I rslty P-~ Irv! l!I, a ..,, no pe ... :einpty by 1nid AuiWil. Can -1 B , above aar., ocean n ve ""'"• nc Condo. Furn; or Huntington Buch 765 Sha lmar. 547-USS. :view Sat JwlC 17th. Prefer view, 1tv, retrig, child ok. D1y1 552-7000 Nights Unfurn. 3251:..:.:;;;.;c;.;:.;;;;;...;:.::;.:;o... __ 1Cdl\1, call (805) 648-1900 $250 -2BR'furnw/pool,D/\V, ""~~!'!'!!~~!"!"!'~!!!! _ _;;=;;:.;.;;... ___ ..:;:: $1454165 UNF. 2 BR, 1% BA. Adultl I mature adlts. IRVINE-VACANT Meta Verde BACf.IELOR & 1 BR., PINECREEK only, $!50/mo. 610-C Joann .·.. -II •I $330 • 4 BR, 3 BA home, gar., Immaculate condo, afr, 2 BR pallos, frplc's prlv. g•'"IO• LIVES UP ,. St. 548-9573. yd. for kids, pets. + rlen, end-unit, on green-COUNTRY Club Villa. 3 br, -Divided •bath & Jots or ., BEAM ceillnp 2 BR, crptl, ALSO SUMl\fER RENTALS belt, near pool &: park. $240 2% ba, pool, jacuzzi, ad-closets. ReC. hall, pool & TO ITS NAME • • • drpa, re.frl&, child ok, $140 CAU.. 494-9491 per mo. year 1L-a.se. Child/ jacent l\fesa Verde Country pool tables, sauna baths. Over 500 tall trees nlO. 642-4462 or 646-2627. lutfneai * LANDLORDS * pets ok. Red Carpet Real· Cub. Adults. 545-5868 See for yourself. 17301 and 10 streams with 2 BR SlSf>..etoYe, relrig, l Opportunity 200 FREE RENTAL SERVICE tors 833-3380. Townhouse Unfvm. 33S ~e:.~~.n1 ~I~ N~lofb~at~::), of w~!:i;:a;is ~ate a cpla/dqla, htd pool. Adults, '--'-'----'-----I LANDLORDS! 4 Bil, 2 BA, n" Culv" & 84>-7848 re-% setting for no pets. 645-8965 ~Arel Re-eMnt•tlve '''• s~lal•'•e In Newpo... Walnut. frplc, bltns, cpts & SPACIOUS 2 Br, refrlg & your spacious new 1-or * E-slde 1 BR. cpt11, drps, A r· .... ~ ,-,. d ...... s. 011\dren & pets ok. stv, crpt/drps, frplc, fncd $140 -ULTRA NICE Apt. 6 2-bedroom apartment. Small slov·e a•-·e s•= mo "'e need {1) person to Beach e Corona del Mr.r e sJOO. 586-lon patio. $190. 962-8781. Pools. 4 Garde111. Sauna. pets ok. From $170. Furniture 64S-4in -~o· tvY:J.8.i..w • present us this area. & Le.guna.. Our Rental Ser-·Tennis. Private pat Io. available. Mode.ls open 9:00 ~~~·c.0~'~~~:=:~-- re is nothing to buy. vice is FREE 10 You! Tr)' Legun1 Be•ch Notwport Beach Adults. Ph: 846-a259. to 6:00. 2300 Fairview Rd., NEW 2 Br, 2 ha. drps, crpta, me money ""rticipaflon Nu-View•. .. OCE Coota "esa ~--•-2300 pool bbq aar Ad""" no •-·•~ y ~ $16.5 1 BR 4-plex stv re ADULTS • LE••E ANFRONT sun d k., "l • r11U11e: '1'lir" • • • • wuo, ,.-~ ...... ou are your own NU-VIEW RENTALS . ' " . ~ be h 2BR El pets. 376 W. Bay. ibou. f1ig., cpts., drps., 2 blks. 2-BR, 2 ba; pool $250 ac 'newer, . eg~t, DELUXE r INVESTIGATE 8734030 or 494-3248 bch. .R.=EAL:.::;:TO=Rc:....,~--'612-~5.133~1 tum. nu. cptl!I, lndry, patK>, APARTMENTS AU. elec. !2 BR, 1 BA. 1 ... -, BR, h $225 "'BR oceanv·•-v np'--= BBQ, gar, nr shops & pier. child ok. $175 per. mo. 120 In· confidence. Write P.O. ;i 11 .lll'p, exec. · ' ... ''" D I U f 350 Al"--~-1 •~ ~ horn /ma --n. t compl-ely red-aJk "·h up exes n urn. $245. Marrd adlts baby ok. Alr ~-• • Frplc's • 3 ............ _ ....,.,, ... n """ ~ :Box 2695 Capistrano Beach. es, w ny ""=· ~""'n "' ..... , \\' ""' • 536--2131 o..uuu. »wmr $350-$390.• No fees. (1) deck. C I ••··· 1,:c:;..:=~-~---rn1na: Poob • Health Spa . $140 up. 2 Br., 3 Br., 2 Ba. f{.ESJDENTIAL C 1 ea n in g 828-5671 or 828-5200 $350 • Lrg. 4 BR, 2~~ BA, all OS a m... Lagun• S.ach Tennis Courts • Galne and Pool, blt-lns, play yard. !Service, (Clll'P.tts, windows, featur~. Laguna Niguel. ;:;;::::;:;.;:--:;:-::;:::-;-::;:--:::: J~~'.!!~~~---Billiard Room. 1996 Maple. 642-3813 ~floon) does $1500 mo. Will Coll~ P•rk NU-VIEW RENTALS FRONT duplex: 2 BR, un-LAGUNA ESfATE LIVING 1 Bednn. From $165 3 BR. 2 Ba. no pets. '!train. Van, equip., accounts furn. gar., quiet, no dogs, 0 f -~ wld 2 Bed ~ •-etc., $6500. 97'9-2984, 6 to 9 3 BR, den, new crpts/drps, 6734030 or 494-3248 cats or m 0 t 0 r cycle 1 • n acre1 o .,a.. ... ens, e rm. :r lu•u .,_ $115/mo, $100. deposit, 1016 PM. pool/set'v.' No Pets. Avail CHARMING 3 BR. 2 811. nr. 548-2nl ocean views. Close to beach El Camino St. 827-:6296 7/10. Shown by appt only. "·h 1 / t $500 / & shopping. Heated pool MEDITERRANEAN 2 BR. 1 ~ ·-, r·-, yd, ~. ---I~ I -... -1~ I ---I~ I •·-· ... - MS "9t· Uftfurn. Cott•- ~'QUI DATING VW pa-· & $325 "" • s e. o P • · mo. LRG Sttluded 1 BR '°"n Lge custom ,_, .-.... ..,. ,,. ,1• , .., p@l" mo. 1st, last + sec. Now Dec ~---A 1 · ' · ·• VILLAGE I l I ;rep.a.Ir shop due to QWnets depos. 646-6835 alt Gpm. 4~51 · vwnt:r g · Ea!t11lde, pvt. fncd yd, utils decorator apt. 2 BR, 2 ba. Y eue. $150 mo. Call rMRth. Seal bids by ap.. Co de Ma pd, SlBO. Avail 7/1 645-6456 Dishwasher, self. cleaning 2«>0 Harbor Blvd., C.?\f. :~:l~.i ... 2 Br d kpointment before June 15th. ron• I r La9un1 Niguel Din• Point oven, ref. & freezer. $450 (714) 557-8020 • "...... • cpt, rps, ~ti:all 557-M!IO . CllARMING 1 b f ......... _ Mo. Furn. or untum., incl. RENTAL OFFICE fncd rev yrd, gar. 20f.S..B lnvntment . r" un • ,.......,,., $330 · 4 BR, 2 BA, blt-ins, LRG 3 Br, bltn kit. 2 ba. utll. & garage. Mature OPEN 10 t~ 6 DAILY Garden Ln. 5'&-3763 tn CdM $200 ·!angle, $225. patio, super deluxe crpt Panoramic oeean view . adull!I:. Opportunity 220 Couple. Lease, No child or thru-out, 1 yr new. Lease. Close to bch & harbor. Bld&' 494-465.1 or your broker H C.P'!frano llueh peta, Ref. 640-8078 1st & last. Dep. Ref's """''d. 1 th 1 Id $300 ARBOR GREENS · R Dlrt Oieap Dollan 2 BR, 1 BA, -i. -• -~n. 2i482 Vla DeAnui, 1 :::..~ .. ft eu nn yr o · mo. BACHELOR, ocean front, all 3 BR upper duplex. Ocean l tor that InOation Htdge. patio, dbl gaurv, 4 rb1-._·•-bea"'ch. Niguel. Ph: 831 .. ~ . .._....... ~2895. utilltin, cable. Yr. be. $175 From $l30 ~ $215 u_ Vu. $250 mo. Open \Vkndl, n ,200 acres, good desert ":s Huntington Belich mo. Pref. m Id d I e ·age. •v ....,. 10-2. 3"43 Vla Esplmza, earth; stri.dllng Hwy 395. $300 lse. 494-8566 ext. 300. BEAUTIFULLY deconlted 494-3148. Bachek>r, 1'. 2 or 3 Ir. Capistrano Bch. 871~ Natural ••• & po'l\-er. Just Costa MeSI and landscaped, 4 Br, fami· $145-2 BR bltns cp•• •-N port •-··h ·•;.:•,, .. ::_ __ ""o. of Hwy 58 in San ly rm, 3 car garage, tennis ' ' ..., .... .,.,, •w -Beam ceillngS. Flrpic. Eo.cl. -· "l patk>, trplc, carport, & tio. Se 1 .. .-. 2 ~rnardlno O>unty. The Prime location, 4 BR, 2 BA. courts, pool. beach, assoc. lndry facll. Couple &: l in-$J5 Ir up. 1 BR, 2 BR ·& pa p. ..KM; area. )!ear'• truly great CASH bltns, walk to schools & dues p11.id. Lease $650. per fant OK. No pets. Call Bachelors. Color TV, ma.id Pools. Sauna. Rec. fadl. !~ BARGAIN at $90 11hopping. $200 mo. Call month. 493-6655 842-4664 !leIV, pool. The lifesa., 415 N. Securiu.an1.~ts. !per acre. 1 For d IM e ct 551-f!t aft S::rt. Anytime TERRACE Garden Home, 4 Newport BI., NB. 646-9681. , I _,....., I. w~~a l Mr. one, v•ee e 8. ~i-riifnh &: pool, $495. Ir. ~ BEAOON Bay 2 Bdrm 2 BA 10 til 7 pm • VI v 11 Real 3-2 BR homes avail., $140, I Ap1rtmenuforRent r ~ pvt beach, teruU1, yriy $395: 2700 Pet.rson W•y, CM ctor a ey ty $145, $150 Allll, 1 BR house, Mission Vl11·o T SU -( H bo & Ad ) ~I: · mmer ~· wk. Adults. nr ar r •m• :"!J' to LOln 240 HB $125.. walk to u•ater. 675-1748 01" 642-1329. 546-0370 Kida, pet. on all. Agt. lee. 2 BR. den, &lr condition, Apts. Furn. 360 OCEAN · ''!!!'""!!!!!!'""""""""""""""I a 979-8430 ter -~Id vi bad FRONT -Open J une I~ It t TD L · wa 'v<U ' ew, · crt, & July. Former O\vners Mo R L Mone ;ii oans REALLY 11harp Eastside, 2 10 min to bc:h. Avail 7n, B•lbo1 lsl•nd Unit. $200 & $225 wkly. N ~ e11 Y ' BR, 1 ba, home. Shag crpt, 49$--0740 er 837-1430 after YEARLY 2 B•., furn o-U"-67>-8531. COME,, Llseek Ji•'! .. ,!'!,"' gardho on • UP TO 95% gar, patio, yd. $225. mo. 7:30 pm. • , ... I~"-'="'-~~~---ap . e ... '6 n a me 64&-1456 N t 8 h ~fu~rn~·_:S~t~ep~s.,,t~o:..ba~y:'. ~Fem!'!£:.~or.::j;:N~tw;:po;.";r';t:H~o~l~gtt~tl:;;::;;:-:; for $162.50/MO. 2 BR, 1~1 2nd TD loans · ewPor HC :epic. $250/ino. 675-5666 BA. 2 prk'g places, prlv 3 BR, crpb;, dras, lndry rm. CUST built home, overlook-Balbo1 Penlntul• CLEAN 1 or 2 BR. Adulta:, no patios A: rec areas. Wilson l owest retes Orenge Co. f~ yd, enclosed gar, on Ing Back Bay In older sec----------pets. Lie kit. $135 -$150. Gardens, on Wilson St., W. ~ new bus line, ideal for child. tion of Blu.Us. Beaut dee • $35 WEEK & UP 2421E.16th st NB 646-1801 of Harbor. No dilld./pet. ' S•ttler Mtf. Co. $210. 642-3289 mirrol'P.d walls -cryst&I e Sleeping Rooms 1 Apt. Unfum. 365 2283 Fountain Way East 642-21n 545-0611 * SHARP 2 BR, 1 BA chllndeliars -lge terr e Housekeeping Rooms ~==~64&-~c=2846=--- ervini HaTbor area 21 yrs. Townhouse. Pool · Garage • w/vs lites, Cannel & Olaf-e Ocean View Apts Gener•I •FRESHLY Pa Int e d • CASH'!' $1,000 or up to Dlsh,vasher. $225 MO fin draperies, etc., etc., $600 BALBOA INN carpeted • 2 Bedroom apt. S3 000 110 000 nd =m=,..897.,.•..,·,.,..~----.--= ~~-.,.!:ar lea.se. 642-4096 , 1~ M·•· s~i LONG Beach - 1 Br. duplex. with builtins:, refrig. and • , • a 11'10f't. O't'f'""IOOU ..., ...... "'""' New w/w crpt & paint. plenty of room for ...... ..t... •• Remembeor Avco Thrift for 3' BR, 1 BA, den, vacant. 1929 ·"'"'=~c--=,-,,---~-61:>-8740 St -- 1 a Real Estate Loan. Upon Republic, $210. mo. HARBOR Vu Homes, 3 br, ----'-~=----1 ove,Sl25re~5-~~ult•, no living. Now vacant. immed. J spproval, use the money ~-~•~m._5_7'6-'--*---fam, 2 ha. Xln't home, loca Cost• Meu peti. · ~. poss. Call 545-8424, SouthCo. I however you like. A!!IO uk D.na Point & yard w-water pd. No ,_;.;..$30---Wc.E_E_K_&_U_P_ a.11 •• l•l•ncl Realtors. about our u nae cured pets. $460-mo. "'-depos. 213: 1.;;..;;c.;..;.;;_c.;.;.;;.;:_____ $165-2 BR. l l/1 BA. Studio on ~nal. loans. AV c O FABULOUS ocean barb w . 4 867-3505 wkdays. 644-618S e Studio k 1 BR Apts. BAYFRO?fl' new 2 Br. cul-de-sac. Prl•. patio, pool, B- 3 ba. fam rm frplc wlmd. • TV & lifald Service Avail Bea.med ceillnp, built-ins, crpts, drps, bltinA. Nr. 620 Newport Center Dr. cn;t/drps. $445 mo. 6?S-7414A __ V_AI_L~,-,-.-.-,s-t-h.-<;ust--om-• Phone Senolce-Htd. Pool yearly, Inquire 400 S. ahop'g. Children ok, No The DAILY PILOT ORANGE Suite 101 ULO 4BR & tam rm, 00 1rg e Olildren & Pet Section Bayfront No. 5. pets. 'l35 Joann St. Cl\I Jllewport Beach 833-3440 FAB US ocean h8rb vu. 4 cul-de-ssa.c lot, rm for boat 2376 Newport Blvd., CM NU 2 BR crpta drpg 646-1450 ! CA$H tN A HURRY! · ~,jr:.·J.:1 mo:1167s-°flf4 or trlr. Gardner pd. 548·975.5 or 645-3967 "'Sh/dry, dshl'Nllb.'. frplc: OCEAN Breeze Apt& COAST'S ~rrow on your home, pald ~~~-;~~-~-$425./mo lse. S56-886S or * SUS CASITAS pier, yrly, ~Grand Canal, Spacious 3 Br , sep lndry 1for or not. Use funds to con-Fount•ln V•lley 642-4387 · Furn Bachelor & 1 BR'S. l ,.'61,;;3-3328~~~~---.---rm, $180. No pets •• Max. 2 leading Marketplace l ~idate blll1, lmprow your 3 BR 2 Ba 2 bltn 1 BLK trom beach. "A" ~fodels Open Daily. ELEGANT 2 Br Vt:/•r."'• nr. cltildren to 6 yrs; 2286 Can.- ho b ' • Clll' gar.. S, 2ll0 N lvd ,... is~ .,,.. Dr &12 2222 j me, uy n•w property, or D!Ji1:~· kids OK. only frame 3 br, 2 'ha, fncd yd, ewport B ., ... nf shops/bch, Yrly. 835-3437, c'=-·~~·...o..c.·='°'''---- ,for any good purpose. Con· $ •-1 ••• "21 pool nrlv, Yrly lease. $375. * * STUNNING 1 BR eve/wknds 548J/398. • BEAUTIFUL 3 BR, 2 BA, indentlal, faat service ln H t::+ "6'"~_...h mo. 'im, laat $D). sec. garden apt. pool, rec area, Fat Profit 1~ attained when apt located nr. So Cst. '!'your home or our oUlce. un ==ron C 642-3S18. 710 w. 18th st. $165. you aell through result-get· Plaza. Avail 6/10. See resi· SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO. LJOO ISLE NEAR BAY LARGE, quiet adult 2 BR. ting Daily Pilot Classified dent ?\tgr at Z731 Juniper, ~ (714) 556-m06. 2 BEDROOM, 1 Nth, $600/mo. yearly, 3 or 4 BR, Refrlg. Pool. Be au t. Ads. 642-56'78 Apt l, Santa Ana, 557-1044. bu 11tin1. $210 per ;~~t. 2s:.1'263~· Carpets lndscp'g. $155. ~974 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 2ND Trust Deeds RIVA TE FUNDS AV AIL. Any Amount : * Coll 675-44'4 BKR. ~O points, no penalties, tree I ~ppnisal, low rates, fut. ~rift 63Uill. I ' \ Trust Deeds 260 '11111' YOUR MDNIY tO WORK PDR YOUI ~am 10% Interest on well· I 11;ecured 2hd Tru11t~D'Qd1 on 1 Oranie <'.ounty real e1tat~. I' SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO. : r • {114) 558--0106 '1 -4500 Campus Dr., N.B. Fumlohad 300 ... .BR bouM HB SlOO utll pd, ,\Mio walk to water 1 SR. I ..... $1Z. Al>o, 1 BR"°'""' i>t Col1&.MeN, CdM I< Lq. Bch. ..... .... "19-M30. r BR. I Ba. SlrclCI', QUJdftn -. lmmed. occup, '215. -1.lllHm I I month. Chlld,.n & pets ,,::::c::::::~=-==--~ HOLIDAY PLAZA I -'--------'------.;;.;..L;,.:.;.=c_c;;=.c:.;;. __ ~ ok. Cill D•Je, 962-4471 IRVINE TetT. 3 br, 2 Im. 1 DELUXE Spa.cloua 1 BR. l.1gun1 Nlguel L•9un1 Nlguel •1un1 Niguel blk from bay. No pets. rels fum. apt $140. Heated poo1.l"'°"::==========================::::;-4 BR Glenmar, dog run & req. G75-3354. Ample parldng. Adults, no lrg. bk. yd. All xtras. Avail HARBOR Vu Hms, Carmel, pets. July 1st, family $ 28 5, Sharp. 3 BR. tam, nr pool, 1965 Pomona Ave., C.M. 963-4029 in c gardener, $475. ~1'19t NICE Studio $140. or 1 br. NR. ocean. 3 BR, 2 BA, 3 BR. din. rm., Jrg, kit. & $175 cloee to bus & atore1. D/W, CJD. patio. $275 be, liv, rm .. lovely area w/pool Yard, In c Id. u t 11 Agt. 962-0.¥.5 priv. mo. 833-3894 _ 642-5494 I 962-6435. nz; 1 BR house, gar., also 2 5 BR f&m. rm. w/wet bar &: 1 BR, bachelor, $100 w/util. BR $163, u.W. pd., kids, pets frplc, Newly dee. Enjoy pool 2110 C Orange Ave, on both. Agt. fee. 979-8430. prlv. $525. m.3894. Costa Mesa LEASE ~ 4BR. $l8(). CGrpets, 3 BR, at 316 Cedar St * SM:At.J.. trailer, ·$80 -per d r a p e s , CLE AN ! Newport S~1. S 3 7 5 . month. 642-ll65, 133' E. 16th KATELLi_\, -~:'Ofilc:::;~--';,;M::o=n::lh=ly::.;;;';9HJ761;-:;::,===.;:.;:;St=.;;;Cot;::ta:OM;=ces:;a':-;:;:;::;;:=;- The Sea Terrace Apartrrients- luxurious, new adult living in California's newe8t coast town An ldeol locole, booch -b7. ocean climate and gnat...;.. tlon brfnr you La..,.. Nlruel'• clloiu r;;/dential apar<,....I living. AvaUable with ocean or p1;rk view.. Completel1 c&f'-o peted with betun eetlfnp Jn upatatn unJta or paneled lfvlnl' rooma in down1tain unJte. Endoled paUoe or balconiea. New General Electric kitchen With lelf-dunlnf oven and dl•h· waaher. AM a Recreation Buildinr with Anelde Jounae, pool, Jacuui A: rame rooma. Choice of I&: I bedroonq with J, t~. 2 batb&Come rriake 11ourcboice.bom POStoPJSper...._ Directions: From Im Anrel~ go IOI.1th on the San Diego Fwy. to CTown Valler Pkwy. exit.l 'l'llm right (approx. 8 ml.) t.o Paclfte Cout Hwy. Lett l mila to Nl_suel ltd. Lett on Nltuel Bd. to Tlie s.a ~rrace .Apartmtnt.a. Na nyQ.rlfe-~oometo Laguna Niguel •the choice community ® ~ ..,...... ... vui...Paitr. ..... ttet ... ,,.,._ e •1A'•"-... Doi l1•rw;M(T1414 ...... 1 ... PILOT-ADVERTISER Buy a to·- Border Bargain Every clessified w1nt od ' in tho DAILY PILOT 1ppeors in every edition ••"'Y day. That me1ns your ed wiR be - in pipers delivered to homes end sold from newsr1cb from border to border an along the Or1ngo Co11t .•• 1N the way from Seal Beach to -San Clemente You Get It All Huntington Beach Fountain Valley Costa Mesa Newport Beach Laguna Beach Irvine Saddlehack San Clemente Capistrano (Plus the daffy newsrack edition) • -F-.rlhle-Price With A ' DAILY PILOT Classiff.-1 Ad Phone 642-5678 YOU CAN C!IARGE IT, TOO • ' . - ~!IL!O!T!-A!D!VE!R!TI!S~ER:~~~~~W~<d~nt~sda~,,~J~une~lJ~,~1~9~7J~~~~~~~ ·-------Wfdntsd11, Junt ll, 1973 DAJLY PILOT Iii t -, .. -lltl, ,... b--l!tl .__I _-_1~ t -I~ I -!~I ._[ --iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~1~~[--_.__,,.~1~e 1 l:-1r5J --~, -._-, .. -~,ITTJ ;·! °"""Point ht,•~~ . ._••-------· I-c t ctor~iiiiilii l ;;;;;;;;;._~~' = ....._ -"-·-400 Office Rent•I 4IO au.i-. Rentol 445 Schools & Schools & on r• Help Wonted, M&, 710 OCEAN views, wlk to bcn. 2 N•r rt .... h _....,.;...... ____ ..;.;;.;: lnmuctlons 575 ln111'uctlon1 575 JACK Taulane -Ropalr -;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;=:;;;;;;! I BR, f\lrn or u n tu r n •por LR.G. Bdrm tor ft'nth.;clOllC tu BAY VIEW l--'=;..:;.=::.;;:;.... __ :;c;_..::.;;.;;..::.:...;::.;;. __ ...;:...;:1 od ddl ~ • -·~ -----------" /kit • PRESTIGE rem ·• 8 t. 4N >'" exp. A Bettft' Temp. _,lion H~tl . lnt). .... Bla.h496-5m. NEW Baytrom-priv Bch & laulldryigpriv.wMat~ nadulr OFFICES .. br, 2 ba., upper. Compt. Lic'd. ti1y W.11.y Co. 547-oo36 un ntton P~r 3BR, 2BA, ~mo,,... $100 ""· :IOI Wakolorut, !um. e..deo, 2 blkl toncean. ORANGE COUNTY D_ro.~.lng Summer ly. S7'!Hl631 or GW"-4510. CM FountaJn Valley, Beautt. -4-1lh SI. Yrs lae. Avail. _ ·------ WAITING lul new building fl%VWld 6·2'. day• S43·5il2D, eveo. VOCATIONAL DESIGN/drat!. plan• hom< LIST Sen Ju•n Cepistr•no LOVELY Townhou.¥, prl rm floor, 3,000 squore feet, 832-9478. & conunl. uddl t ton~, OPEN BRAND new 1 SR••'· -1. & ho, lnund ''"· kttch ,..rv!. will divide Into 'smaller 145 E. 18th St., ~M. Suitable TRAINING SCHOOL ""''"" any ,;,,. Job ' Employment I : ..__ _.. Qr OC.'C. rem only. Days ottice1. OOc per square for &tores or ofc. 362 ~.Ft. IWZ-3400 •ur pl~t:y parkt:ng, Rent $240., ~1627, aft 6~ 557-6621 foot tn•lud •· ·~ I 1• 20!t3t~~ Apt ~739.$224. CaU Pa 1 nQOMS $18 w1t up w/klt iso draPes, ~J u~nu:.)a;;i: ~~:1~0548-13.~·s. Re a 1 LEAR·N Electrical mttle & female l VILLA YORBA F u f wk 1o"" a23pts. N(.'hlldren "'1 pet ~':'wataervl c''n•,·)Call lofarilyn OFFICE? or Corrunerei.al f:t~ECTRlCIAN. llCCt\)C{!(~. Looking for Summ er ! urn. or n urn. 370 sect n. 76 cwport B vd., , •.. 832-5441), buslneliS? Res•. rental, bu~ AUTO TUNE-Up bonded. S111all jobs, iualnt & · fluntington Beach Apts., , CM. 548-9755, 645-3967. shopping center. Call Toni • repairs. 548-5203. employmcnl? Come register ' (714) 142-9622 D · I'·-I , nd 2 ROOMS w/ba.th, furnished, ORANGE CO. Anrlrem 546-9556. ___ _,i,f.;~~......,.,...:... Floort ;_t~:r;or-=~~t~ l~e"!; l' * DOG RONS"'jf -"'""'-L ••• -f.~fOO~~~cr --AIRPOR';.:-: 1 '---DOUBLE --36X38 ft . Nr, =..,____ larga va11ety of Industry: IA Spa , 2 & 3 BR. $149 & $199. LAR. modern 3 hr, 2 ba, G EACH 3 m~ Jaw finn has Sf)at.'e N'pt Post Ofc. & Mariners * s WIEll * MODllN fJ&S Floor main, (a.st, re11, Orangr County. No COD· 1 Kid1t ok. Poql. Xcclson Ln. shag crnts dl"ll!I bltin.s LA AUNA B , Furn. avwl in Its new, attractive Mi. $225 Mo. agt 646-2414 INTINllYI COUHI DIA•Nomc rel. Ask about spec rates. lrncts lo sign. \\'e Need (1 blk W. of Beach Blvd., y~nrly 'J, " '~158 roorn, pvt entr, pct porch, 11ulle for ecooomy mmded lndu1triol Rontol 450 19UIPMIHT ?.I.I.A. call 541-931!9 You! A11k about or bonu1 off ffinler l. 963-4029 or · ' J~ own bath. $1<1; mo. 494-82611 young altortK'y. Furn/un-* rumoN FINANCrN• Gardening plnn. 847-7786. Corona dtl M-r Guest Home 415 furn, all se1vices avail. AYAIL..41LI 2 BEDROOM, l b•th *** VIEW a-.nent 1 833-3622. NOW LEASING * MOININO * PllPAIATION FOl CLASS .. ,._ .. SMOG LICINSI INCLUDID bulttlns, fully carn.attd. BR. %">30 ~a~, CdM.' t_'OMFOFuRtl!_.ABLEf ""' lhod m1•I ~~~~!!!!!!!""""""""" Huntlntton h•ch •n"••"••"2"c~ !'5515 ,..... ,,,.,..,,....,, 1n .. ~.on or e er Y NEWPORT Center 2 lux-NEW u1 • ~ Children OK. $145, per 'v I b-e au t . surroundings. urious offices overlooking '"" month C • 11 OALE1 Cost1 Melli Pvt. rm. 1 Xlnt food & nt· Big Canyon. Now available 9-10 Sq. Ft. &. UP 962-4471 . 1 ._jjjiljiiijjjjiijjiiijijjiiijjiiij tenUon. Please caU 525-5816 in full ser\'ice law firm, ..:l!!~~97ton 0&r f!~1!5nd19 (1 l library & re<.'eption in---._ 2 BR. nu carp. fXXll, no Summer Rentals 420 cludt.>d, xerox available. ~""'""""!!!!!!!!!!!""""""!!!!I * Job Placement Assistance Available * Classes Forming Now * Special Courses for Mech1nlc1 who need Class ''A" License EXPERIENCED Japaner.;e Gardener co1nplete yard rnaintenance, Sc:hrubbery, tree11. F'ree estimates . 61.>-0347 * Creative Gardening Cleanup, ~1aint, LandscAplng, :-)p1i11kle1'S installed/repair Comn1en:ial, Resid. 6:16-1072 children $15.'>. New ----------Call TI4: 644-4610 2-1800 sq. n. M-l space15. with * IS<l7-&426 * WAREHOUSE * W front ottices, large rear •---· FOR INFORMATION ----UNFURN .. 2 BR •pt, Olr. ATERFRONT * door. Ideal !or taboratocy I CALL 714/646-5065 I EXPER. Japru>e"' Gan!ener. beach, :~2-'FJ'l9 . Newport Village \~~~~ :~~c'71nc1~1~= ~~~11.1cr~:~ ~ueil:.Pdc!J ~~: eaDa~~75 =rr .s~; ' ~::~~:.\\'.s~:i1i )~~!~:~ small office space, $400./ parking. $325 Mo. "A" ""ol •v••· 2120 PLACENTIA AVE -COSTA MES I ing 968-3-186. N.wport •--ch nion. Contact Mr. JohnHOn. Bill Grundy, Realtor ,,.........,.,, ' · A c 0•1 p LET ~ • Choice of locntion .,,,2 720 Share API' or HOUSE " • E landscape e 'l'ennis, Volleyball, Pool .,... ·3 · 341 Bayside, ~'pt. Beach Call 'HOME-PARTNER' main!. serv. Coninl'I, ind, "ofRo0ntPAoloPc10•~• •A 9rts1111_~,,""'"' BbAY2~?NT Bkn~~ Co~Jcs _4 * 675-6 61 * 836-1194. or S48-lA79 1 ~ ~~~i~98. 7sprinklrs, cleanup. ~u r. ~: dnc ='boat uly OFFICE SPACE I i[g) I ~ • Giant Rec Room with a $300 two wk mln: Aug also Newport "---h b .101 Rentals Wanted 460 !Mt...., -lolt Md Found EXP ER . A mer i can Oc -·-' pl ' -anfronl 4 br 2 •-"~k U\.-ul: • UJ n" EAN and ... .,... ayer piano "'-"' . ...... ....... 1 k Bal ·~ ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;~;::1 Ga rd en er. r.talntenance, e Alh\etic program 6/16$250-6-14-4340 opv~roos boa Bay. WANT SOMEONE 1'01•••••••••• Clt>anu11 & Lru1clscap;ng. HARBOR Y EW nine area. Various size TAKE TEN'DER LOVING 11 I e r Bachelor&. l &. 2 Bedroom 2BR • BA furn Ne a ... & •ult--nt or I 3700 F d I , -:cC~al'"'I ;&t:e>-~1':0930=:;_. ---c-' " ' ' • ~ "'"• ,,. ease. CARE OF YOUR HOME? oun ( :rff adt) 550 Lott 5551: Elegant apartments designed Furn or Un.turn avail ~n, across from ~rk. Nt!Wport Blvd., NB. Mgr. RESPONSIBLE COUPLE, ;.c;..;.;.. ______ ..:.;;.:, YARD Cleun-up, 111 a i n t • wilh a Master's touch, su-Adults, no pets 67~1n . Bch $200 w ly. =615-=='1220='.-------no children desire to Jeue 2 FND. Short white haired HELP Conun. -l'tes. Opening ney,· perb house securily, exclu-Newport Fwy at Baker St. OF'J:>iCE space _ #1 Old or 3 bedroom. 2 be.th un-German Shepherd male. rom-e. "'Exp. J a P a-n es e slve Versailles Club and LIDO Tsle, comp!. furn, 2 Nrwport Blvd. 3 blks No. of fumished home in Laguna, Placentia & 19th st., c.t.1. Gnrdener. 534-1622 pool with unique Aquabar, 714-557-0075 BR. 2 BA, frplc, patio, all C-«lst Hwy 1. 3 dratting rms Corona de! Mar, or Newport Very friendly. Before 5. _ REWARD _ EXPER. Japanese Gardener. rounlain.s and formal · gar· eleet kltch, dsh/wsh. Avail & 1 recept. nn. Al l tor Beach. Need Immediately, 548-06n ext. 352 alt 5: CompJete yurd sr.1• Relia. & Interim Personnel Service 17581 l rvlM Blvd., 115 Tustin 131-5460 Saddleback Plar.a. Bldg Equal Oppor. Employer ACCOUNT Renior c I e r k . payroll $61~$7M mo n • Mlnln1um ot 3 yrs e)(· pcrien.L'C in public scOOol payroll, 10 key, ca:lculator, adding machine, electric lypc1vriler. Deadline Juqe 17th, send written resunM? to. l\.1r. Shinkle. Saddleback Val ley Unllied Sc h of# Di11trlct, 24618 Chrisanla, Mis.<;;lon Viejo, Cnllf. 92615 Acclng Clerk $650 CosUng experience ~ • Split fee/Also F'ee Jobi ·weslcllff --I Personnel Agency / 1651 E. Edhlger, S.A. (r.lark III Center) 542--8836 dens. All pnrt of the SOuU1 June, July, Aug. 675-13&>. $.100/ino. Ut.il incl. 2nd fir bv July 15th is a must. Phone 645-6956. ILK. MALE CAT nf'at. f'ree esL M2-4.l89. Coast's finest apartment TliE EXCITING LIDO ISLE BAYFRONT w/ocean vie\Y, 548-5300 494-4.901 CHIHUAHUA, female . NEEDS Gardenln~ & <'lean-ups ACCOUNTANT, exper. in ~ con1n1unity. PALM MESA APTS. 4 BR. Pier & Slip. June evl'S. BACH apt, yearly. Beach Joe Found Vic. lffediternnean 554-0657 budget & cost for growing ~ l Bedroom/studios Crom $195 ltUNUTES TO NPI'. BCJ-1. $2500: July S3lXXl, Aug. NEW bldg., be. au ti f u 11 Y pref. Mon-Wed. 2 1 3: Apts. C.J\I.) black w/tan MEDICATION local co. Send resume I 2 Bedroom fl'Onl $280 FURN. OR UNFURN. $3500. Realtor, 64<Hnlt. decorated. Lgc. office, heart 626-8250 or Thurs-Sun 714: forefeet & white rear feet). Gardening/Landscaping Plastoniun1 l nc, Suite 460, Models open 9 A.?11. UI dU$k UnbeUevably l&TEe apts, SAN CLEMENTE luxury, ol Laguna Beach. For in· 673-6840 979--6621. DAILY Expert, reliable, local, free "'"/salary required to 1 hoge pool, Jacuz=i elect bit· mOOern, view home, walk to formation oontact 2 BDRJ\I. crpt., stove, relrig. FOUND beautiful bla~· & Lost 616 vie. Beach & esl. Takata Nursery 548-3878 Plastonlwn Inc, Suite 400, ~-1 b I k RIVIERA REALTY ..-... 18552 MacArthur B I yd. · ins, shag crpts, cl.rps, sauna ""'"""' 1, Y mont 1 or wee · duplex. 3 adults. $170 per 'Ailite kitten. with Oea col-Slater. Veiy shy, 847-8618 Hauling fnrlne, ca 92707. etc. Adults, no pets. 492--0177 4M-56'i8 4~2800 nw. 646-4431. Joan lar. Vic. or Myrtle St., $200. ru:::wARD • for any in-32, r~URNITURE Van for cc=co=uc;NT""AN'-"T~'----'1 1 ON THE BLUFFS SINGLES From $150 NEWPORT Beach . Big Can· FULL SERVICE $25 RE\VARD lor exceptable Laguna Bch. Call 494-7346 Jormat1on I ea d Ing to local furn ha 1 & n'l A Full Ch111 Bookkffn.ar •,' 1 BEDRr.1. From Sl65 yon, beaut furn Conte.mp Wettcliff Building rental, at coast area, 1 Br. or 494-5286 recovery of male St . . us ge • r- AT NEWPORT 2 BEDRM. From $185 home. All con~n. 4 BR, 21,2 Corner Westciiff Drive & House, yard, aft. 5. 642-9169 I...ARGE blk m La.b, part Bernard lost from Legion hauling. 548-1862. Required for No. Long B6ach • Unlum Apts Avail From $10 BA, August. $1700. 644-0553. IIVine Blvd., N 'w P ort whit on chest. Vic. Grove Pl St. area, Laguna Beach, SKJPLOADER & dump tn.ick CPA . firm to Y.'Ork on From NewPQrt Blvd., turn at to $15 LESS. , LIDO Isle \Vaterfront 3 JJ,cnch. Mr. How ard & State -CM Out of state 1fon. nite·June 4th. Qog has y,urk. Concrete, asphalt various gen'I ledger ac• llO!ipilnl rtoad <1 block You're right, they're under-BR/2 BA .• Tune/July $1250 ~101 I : 11•1 tags_ MG-4587 partlA.lly shaved M. front sa\ving, breaking. 846-IDO. count!I • 11alary open. (213} :~r:i~:.c~l ~~:L~"i!n': (~i'lk!!do5!1 ~!!8;o~Blvd.) mo. Aug. $1500. 673-8886. "THE -·Faclory" shopping '9noMll F·No 'f.: ~ocker ~3 ! ~Id :~u11si;&'• about 150 lbs. LOCAL n1oving & hauling by ::-~~~CE llcpair Mtm; Newport Beach, Ca. 92660. 546-9860 _ LIDO Isle, 4 BR, 3BA, home mall consisting or 22 unique ~ y,ilh ~hite face markmgs, -· student Large truck. Reas. Must be exper. Apply, The I Telephone: (7141 645-6'142 $135 & UP ti:J:1~·~~~· days ~~·sutofmo~1f:sc=ryll. Person1ls 530 ~~~n gss.Bu3786shard & I l~y~~~ ;:a~216:1eanups. Earl's Plwnblng, 1528 J PARK NEWPORT ~ R d" . Nev.·port Blvd .. CM .• GIGANTIC 1 & 2 BR. CORONA del Mar, 2 br, tam Vntage, 425 "1th St., N.B. COUPLES ll-3S + ...,..,,,.. I~ emove """"· •rt ovy. APARTMENTS You Bet fJ's underpriced! nn, l blk fmn ocean, $300. 673-9606. Part' FND. Brown/Blk male Pro-~-;;m;;miiiii~~~I Drivcwys, grading. 847-2666. A ~I PRENTI~ part me.~c, ' Th1 at1·s whyCrpthese apts. y,oo't "~k. 675-3."l)S. CUST. DESIGN llOO sq.ft . eai:e11.,,~:,~t 21 0t0 ~I dlade, long tail,1 wht -on chest. GEN Hali.ling. Tree / Sirub :Ti~e to i:ces & ~!'f I Oft fhe bay ast ong. Is, drps stove SUB-LEASE N rt pt 2 corner. Suitable store/of. • , H run a ong time. In· tri1n. Gar .. t:. Yd cleanup. phone. Pd benefits, 5 daya, Luxury aparunent livlng f refC:·cr!:ts of' gr'e('n BR, 2 BA. te!'ii.° fXXl~ ft.c. fi-ces. Fronts on \Vestclill 638-1511. =~ic. MacDonald Sc~oc;lt ~ion 575 Est. 531-6.TI7. 557~1._ 7:30 to 5:30. $2.50 hr. Apply O\'erlooking Uie water.· En· ::::Iis, ~ peti>.g;m aF~:r: fncil. 64()-®l , ~g. ~815 ~~3~~~~ F1JLLY LICENSED ~1885 --Int rue s Housecluning In person, 1747 Anaheim joy $750,IXXI health spe., 7 ton Ave. (i blk E. of Ne'I\'-NR ocean, &: channel, 3BR, . '!t SP1R~A1JST * FND: male puppy, blonde SUMMER Ceramic classes. Ave., Costa Mesa. - 11wimming pools, 7 lighted port Blvd & 1 blk .so or 2BA, $m-$275 wkly. Days AIRPORT CENTER Spintual readings 10 am~O shepherd-type. Med size. Learn handbu:ildlng, throw· Carpet Cleaning A/P CLERK · teruilil courls, plus mile!! of Bay, c.~1:; 642-8600.' • 6T:r5.166, aft 5. 548-3226 Deluxe l, 2" 3 room offices pm. Advice on all matters. Vic· Harbor High NB ing on ix>tter's whecl & glaz. Floor Car• & Windows Beautiful new modem omce II bicycle trails, putting, 11huf-* CASA VICI'ORIA * Vacation Rentalt 425 adjacent Airporter Hotel 312 N, El Canlino Real. San ' 645-6378 ing .. 1 students per class. 3 Dutch Malnt Serv. 537.~ located in the Irvine O:mi-Oeboard, croquet. Junior 1'1 1 &: 2 BR. Furn & Unfum, Lowest rates, full services. CI em en t e. '4 9 2-9136, DOG lk . openings, 6 hrs a wk 9-12 or . plex. Great chance 1t:r ad· , from $189.50 monUily; alBo l Ca!'pE'ts, drapes, D/W, TV RENT condominium In 833-3Zn (9-12 weekdays) 492-9034. : B w/White chest, 1-4 Tues & Thurs. 9 wks SUPER efficient Cal student vancement due to rapid I and 2-bedroom plllfll and l:lnl. Pool, etc. Come by in· J\la.ntm?lh, beauL .qe:nery & DESX space available S50 PROBLE'r.I Pregnancy. Con-pe.bodyws) & VP of i:; C~Jv:: $85.00. Starts June 19th. s=in<>Nsf··ph ~\&n house-growth o! co. &art ~-1 2-story town houses. Elec-quire about our Move-in Al· relaxa.t100. $80 a ~·~· for 2. mo. \VIII provide furniture fident, s y mp a t he tic G75-5850 ic. 8 Philip Freeman ~1488. c -~-:' ~ .... ' eves Call Kay Wing, ~ : tric kitchens, private patbl lowance, 525 Victorin St. at 962-9798 er 963-3340 at S5 mo. Answering service pregnancy t.-ounseling. Abor-· MATH TUTOR D.utcat.u Cle•ning Coastal Pft'sonnel Agmcy, ' or balconie11, carpeting, dra· Harbor, C.M. 642-8970 RESf & Recreation .. \Vknds available. 17875 Beach Blvd. tion & adoptions ref MOM: Meet me for barbeque Olli d ill" he! * WE DO EVERYTHING * 2790 Harlxlr Blvd., CM. ;~ , peries. SUbterranean park-kl al I ..,_ Huntington Beach. &12-4321 A.PCARE -642-4436 dinner at the. While Horse ege gra V.' lng to _P Reis. Free est. 616-2839 i ing wiUi elevaton. Optional • 2 Br, cpUs, drps, stv, d/w, or w Y rent s, B g ocar Inn Newport Beach Grad 4 -ooUege your house """"""--'~""'~'='"°'~'" / maid service. J ust :10rth ot utils pd, sep. gar. $250 mo. Lake -Ba I d win Lodge. 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB m'OP Crime! Automatic Love Sonny • ' • or mine day/night $2.fn per EXP. HOUSECLEANING ASSEMBLY 1 I 1 Fashion Island at Jamboree No children. 642-6453 att 6 Rcserv. 714: 58rr4709 1980 1294 756 & 540 sq ft. Burglar Alarm $2.50 for a pt. ' hr. John Martin 536-8480. Own trans. N.B. area only. E • I 1•- and San Joaquin Hills Road. Dana Point BALBOA Peninsula house or A~ PI e' prk g . U i 11. dwellers. Send to Topseller PRESCRIPTION glasses, * PIANO LESSONS* * 673-2918 * 1per1men 8 1 Telephone (714) 644-1900 -· ·-...... -~~-··----apt, slet>ps 8. $UO. week u1>. Baumgantner. Ml-5032. ~~~ta~e~C~· 9= ~{:!~herf ~r8-:a!e~1 ~=~~ 548-~ lrontng for rental lnlormallon 11YO large 2 BP.S, ocean 962-8600 CORONA del JI.Jar, Coast PREGNANT•. Th l n k I n g C.lof. &-10 Aft 4, 646-lB19 L nd • Assem ble'rs; 1 r, THE NEW vie"'·· $200 & $225 mo., Rentalt to Share 430 llY.'Y-Store or office for rent. hi ma! a tc•p•ng • 25081-C &:. 25091-B La Street level. $150 month. abortion? Know all the facts ~~· 'v te e short I ](5J • BAYWOOD APARTI1ENTS cresta. Inquire 1000 s. 675-0062 lint! Call LIFE LINE-24 'ld.J.I"'"' cal, bl1;1e eyes. ,_.. • .,.,. LANDSCAPE Garden in Newport Beach llN' Const IJv.•y, Lngunu Beach. WANT lady to share , nice hrs, 541-552'l. Leather collar Y.'lth studs. . main, cle~·up, $prinklrs. Will perform •• ready. TI1e sales oUJce l!t Ph <°' ="s Huntington Beach tXMne-, BRAND new stores, oUices, B:n-2998 after 5 pm L" ,,_ "'" ~• 1ombly "'o r k of " . ~. .. BA -·~ ·~1 h ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. . IC • ......,,.,.,, ~ ~ open daily from IO Al\-f to ~H~~--~----P''•· • ..,,.., • ....,.........., or lndlv. air & eat, elevators. FND H bor & Ad Cl\t h"'hl kill-' 6:30 Pr.I. 1\tacAnhur Blvd. untlngton 8Nc:h 5.li-1796 17301 Beach Blvd. H.B. ~~~~x~~boJ!" M=~e r~m1'. :lack/brown arn~PY: Babysitting M•sonry . tu-:e !, :.,,.;rm::: , & San Joaquin Hills Road. LA QUINTA HERMOSA A.Pr to share, 2 BR, pvt BA, _842-~~2834~·------Short legs _ long body. Flea B i'ck Block-SI .c ••• 644-5555 big liv. rm., terrace ocean HUNTINGTON Bch, immac. FAJiffi.Y COUNSELING collar. 646-5683 · RELIABLE older mother r --;,,," ,.,...... one •I prototype a....-' DUPLEX-Brand llf>\V dlx, l Seit ? .. u~ ~t~e f'!~ vu, $135 mo. Incl. utils. Call 2 room, cpt'd, pvt bath, """~.:;_pro[Jt Found:~'!..... V.'ill babysit FREE for 1!1u1n·:l i<==c:-~:;'-=-::....---met•I components I blk 00.)' 3 hr '>I~ -·.. P · aft. 6 PM 494-8841 prkg, util pd. 350'. $90. Mr. ~ or ~iN"I" 1'"'ND: Blk & tan fml mixed mer mos. 4-6 yr. old . as P1lnting & and close tolerance " ba. ~an i!'. 2 ~tory ~·iiiv B8~ u=lieva~Tivi~~ FD.lALE over 25, share 2 Lang 540-1301 wkdays. CRISIS COUNSELING shepherd. Vic Brookhum companion to 5 yr. old. Nice Piperhansing •t••mbly 1 t r u c .. rms up..t-beam~. frplc, pe.tio. l BR. UNFURN $165 BR, Newpon Beach. $112.50 F1JRNISHED & Unfumisfl. Non-Profit Foundation 11.B. 962-4388 ~ Brookhurst & Adan1s -'-"'=.:;.;;;!C:.:C"----tu res. High school See at ira \V. Balboa Bl. l BR. 1'1JRN $185 per mo. Sununer/yearl.y. ed on Coast Hwy Corona 636-5060 or 548-3643 2 George Painting & Decor'ng eel tion -ulM 213/<176-6783. 2 BR. 1'~RN $?i5 6-i>~ de! Mar. 545-3165.' GAY Social Club forming FND: Cock·~·poo Blk & TRANSPORTATION ;to Dr. Interior & Exte:rior vu r .... , 2 BR 1 bo. Frplc Steps to ALL t..ml.ITJES PAID Share APT or HOUSE OFFICE space available in Sat. June 16, 8 PM. 1441 S. grey. Fnd. Vic. 10th St. N.B. or Hosp. &: return, also Guaranteed Top Quality, plus five yeart IX .. oce~. Yrlf. $3:i5 ~-Adults, No Pets Call 'HOME-PARTNER' downto\llll Hunting 1 on Sycamore, Santa Ana. 675-7316 babysit nights my home. \Vorkmansbip & Mate.rials perlence. Ask for J\11kc (4 blk.s S. of San Diego fn.1)' 83fr.ll94 or ~1479 Beach. 838-7016. SWINGING SINGLES FOUND portable radio. Vic 894-5465 Free e.stiH~7~ic. & INS. JONES REALTI' 673-6210 on Beach, l blk \V, on Hott FEI\fALE roommate wanted S!\tALL OUice. Air con-Call "Leah" 241 pm 530-l250. ~H1.e1Mle:.,!',arckallo~.J6,.~,.,.St., MATURE woman will care No w·~ng EAST Bl !f Be 2 b to 16211 Parkside Lane.} for 3 hr Park Newport '-"" ....... ~ for your home & childl't'n aa11 u · aut. r, (TI4J 847-5441 toy,·nhouse. 640-l6TJ ~~io=·. ~',!:....,.~St. CM. Soci1I Clubs 535 FOUND: yellow "'"'"""eet. while you vacation. Xln 't * WALLPAPER * 2ba, $230. Adults, no pets. N •--.,..,.......,"" O'fQ-~ .,.......... ref Dr! 545--0574 fl 6 · Call &»-0349 for Appl. to _•.,_,_po_ri_-__ c_h ____ 1 2 BR apl, furn, on Seashore B • R I ,.5 'PARTNER' YNTROD Vic. Westcliff. Week of June s. vcs. a .. · When you call "Mac" see. .. Dr. NB 2"U-38rll60 or a.ft u11ness enta -Penional Service. Low Fee 4th. 548-8505. BABYSITTING any age. 548-1444 eves. BEAUTIFUL 2 br, deluxe Lots of TLC 6 to 6 1700 WESTCLIFF DR. apt, over looking harbor & 6, &'6-68JO Ask ror Lnnce. STORES 548-1'179 or 836-1271 LONG haired Blonde Male . • . · PAINTING &: repair, 35 yrs 1 & 2 BR, Bltn appliances. ocean. F'urn or Unfum. Will "White Elephants" over· r.fain Street, Couctyard and I ~ dog. Vic ~~~ur & Birch. ~9IT1~r ~4~ 1 t e 5 ' ::~:;~!hip of gu~Y ~~~ Poof. &1U274". lease for 6 mos or longer. l'IMing your house! Turn O<:eanfront Stores available I i[g) PROF. teacher wUI care for 53&-7056, NEWLY df'cor. 2 BR. close (G<IG-4987 til fri l or 548-1742. them into "Cash" , •• sell at modest rents. l.oltlftdfound FEM Dog, aJt., Collie mix -.::::::...:""~===--- lo bch. Ne"-Shores. sm SUMf.1ER Wint y 1 them tloru • Daily Pilot BALBOA INN . . 16th & Orange Ave. 646-1993 your child tun time, days, PAINTING mo. \'rly I~~ No pets. 21R Anita;s Rentals, e~kr. ~ 105 1\1ain St. ni~ts, Y.tknds. 645-la>7 It pays to call profes.!ionals. coonr, 642-5745. Balboa Blvd. 673-2058. classified nd! 675-8740 Found (free adt) 550 Lost 555 Bus1nett Service For free est. ~5178. Aptl Ap Apts COMMERCIAL APT. LOST black & white, 6 mo. TYPING BUY W.P./hanging contrac1 fu ts • ON COAST HWY CRISIS COUNSELING old male Husky, nr. \Valnut, '-'b 01 0 _,1 ., • ., ...,.,,. by home appt. IOOO's smpls. Furn. or Un rn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 • Non-Profit Foundation NB 8/9. 2 distinctive white ....., ra c . .;JCI v ces. ll"W'~ The Hangmen 547-5846 1-...;...:......;...;......;.._;,._.;_....;..;__.;..;;c.;.;.;....:.:....:.:...;;::.:.:...::.:_....;..:;.:..;..:... CclM, 673-3345 636-5000 or 548-3643 dots, one above each eye. Carpet S.rvtce PROF. painter, honest ~-ork, Costa Mesa Costa Mes. Cot ta Mesa The fastest dray,· in the west. COCK-A·POO type • 5 mos. Please return. No questions reas Int/ext fr 1 . • . a Oa.Uy Pilot Classifial Vic. Rea School o n asked. RE\VARD! Ca I I JOf-!N'S Carpet &: Upholstery Reh: ~2759.' ce es · Ad 00-5618 Hamilton, C.M 5.@-lli'5. Gt2-0'l54 or 979-<HSf Dn Shampoo free Scotch-, . LADIES Dexible bracelet, guard <Soil Retardants). Pl••l•r, P•tdl, Repair 'tic Fashion Isle o r Degreasers & all color Ne.wporter. Extreme sen-brighteners & 10 minute * PATCI{ PLASTERING * timental value. Gift from bleach for white carpets. All types. Free estimates Precision Mechanical Assemblers Will perform clOH tolerance assembly work on mlstll• r• , lotod h•"""oro. - Mu1t be •blo to work from blu.- prlnts, sk~tche1 •nd ... 1poclflcotlon1 • Apply In Poroon 3l33 Horbor Blvd. Cott• Mesa, Calif. Trader's Paradise departed husband. Generous Save your money by uving Call ~ reward. TI4: 493-2518. me extrH lrlps. \Vil! clean.,P:...;;lu:;m.:;::b::;ing~------• . I 1cii:;):.f - , \ '!/I, \~ Eape with us to the m.19lc:tl waterland of Vista del Lago, where 1he emphasis is on 1he nautlcal, end the way of life It as tranqull or excltinn as you car1 to make it. laknlde living makes tha difference for those t0joylng boating, cascading fount;lins 11nd swimming es close as your patio-deck. Lend lo\ltrs will opprtciatt ec:ras of 81CQUi1itely landtcaPlld grounds and watkw11ys. .~ Each lPtrtmtnt·homa lncluda every conceivable h,11C· LCl.l ury appointmont, like oir-conditiontng ind speciol fOUnd proofing to Insure your tnmfort and Drivacy. The Yacht Club offers handball, gym and saunas, game and toclal rooms. Livin g anywhnre ft1s• is out of the quflsUon after 111Jng Vista del Lago, Efflclenclts, 1, 2, 2'pluc den, from $190. Fu1nlshl!d and unfvrnlshed "modols open daily" nine 'tll dark. From '"' San Oii:tgo Freewav tsko Harbor Blvd. 10 Ad•mc end Mtsa Verde Drive. 540.1800. • ,, l ··~==========================::! lines times dollars living r1n .. diuing rn1 , &1 ~ l..DST: Box-er· Brindle with hall $15. Any rm. $7.50, L:R. OTIS PLU"r.1BrNG white, male, name BUtt, coucb $10. Chair $5. 15 yrs. Remodels & Re.pairs. Water since Thur. Vic, Linh:rook, exp. Is what counts, not heaters, disposals, furnaces, Brookhurst. Ol8in collar, lie lhod I J k d h h 64 No. lO'lSO. Please call me · < o wor myself. s was rs. ~2G3 r.t/C & 847_2464 Good ref. r131-0101. B/A. Complete Plu1nbing STEAM cleaning ca r p e t 1 -"S.:=rv~lc;o•,_. ~===~~ Blk poodle, male, nt>eds clip. spec. ~% !his \11k. Ref. TOTAL SERVICES CO. Vic 191h & Fullerton, C.M. Free estt \Vest, be.f 6 pm, ~linor Plumbing & Repairs Tues. Alli. Needs medlca-4M-70l8 646-0977 or 646-1809 tlon. J\fr11. Johnson, 646--0424 ,;::-;,+::.::;,--.,,-----/-.,C::;::::==.~:--":~~~ ' _________________ ,.,,~ .. ~-~921~21_ ____ Cabinetmaking PLUMBING REPAIR No job too small J8100. 1st T.O. 7~)%, $82. L031' friendly short.hair~-CABrNETS & F\1mlture ** 642-.1128 ** nt.EE & clear commclal Inc fJ'l'OPC'l"lies next to Sean Covlni:t., for units cornmcrc. or indust. soo.cm eqt)'. + lrftde up. Owner 6'J5.6259. TRADE 2 BR Twnhse, 20x22 rant rm. xlnt cond., F.V., assume 'T1iii'di tn, S3500 eq. F'OR 'boo.I or Por9che of eq. vi.I. •Agen t/Owner 962-2440. l{A VE lot 8l Ca.eyoo Lake will tntdt for :mme at Lake ll(lVIL<ru Cit)'. ·J\1&11 to P.O. Box 187, Costa Mewa, CaUL pm. •n 'n'>YOT A !..AN 0 Cl\Ulli' EB. 25.00l miles. Lf.t's tmdc~ ?11?.138 E. 18th St., Cnst:a 1Mtra, or caJJ; ' 543-4485 Like to tl'llde? Our Tr&dN '!I Parit.dlse column ls lar you! !5 lines 5 days for 5 bucks. mo, $131. mo 4 yrs. Due 9 brown fem. puppy, wearing Rcrnodellng & Boatv.'Ot"k. Sewi.....,/Afterotl•n• yrs, doob\y Guaran. For '7:1 tan collar, vie. Cd l\f. ---~646-521~~~9'-... ___ j;:.;;~:,;"•:.:.;..::.;:::.:.;;;;.:;.:;':,__ El Dorado Mark IV Jowi ,,:C673--0363C:C.::0:::=~----~ priced hm,'01, NB 673.nu PEKINGFSE, light tan, May C1rpenter Alt1r1tlont-642·5'45 3L Will give reward tor NE"" mod I l!N~•~R~l,~a~ocur~~a~te~. ~:l()~ye~an~~"'P~· F'REE It clear comm'! inc tum vi Coll Pk :.n-, rt e , frllme & properth."S next. to Sean re · c ege • flnilih, stores, olllce11 &: Cov1na, for units ooinmerc. 919-9039. homes etc. (."'u.,lom \\-"Ork. I 111 • 1 _., hldo:s. sm.ewx> !'qty. + 2~~ YR old. SAMOYED lo.st ~U~ce~nse<1~~·~962-~~196~l~~giJ~;;;";;' ... ~';"*~'t;;~;~; 1 cash .Owner 6~. Saturday night 341h St. Npt. WOOD\\--ORK, c a b I n e l s • rnEE & cleo.r JO acres Beach. REWARD. 6754790· paneling, l;:'.l':n repo..lrs, Duke producing orange ~. on SlAMESE cat, 13 Y1'11 old, Da Durk<t, 64&-759!1, 846-S4S5 Job Wanted, Male 700 off nunp (Of: un111 commer. female. Loi!it 6/5. Vic. of 1\11NOR home ropaln. Plum-1:::.:.....:.:.:;;.;.::::...;:.;:::_~:.; dat or le $7'9,500. Pius trade Irvine Terr, Cdlol. 673-~. b Ing -Call>t'-niry...Palntlre-COLLECE student, v et up. Owner ~.. LOST, male lri!h Setter, 1 T11c. Call ~ w/constr. f'xp. desires part. 8 Units Inglewood. 6 -2 Sr. yr, weru'ing Silvt>r chain. Cement. Concrete tln1e bau.llng, maint. etc. & 2. 1 Br. untunt, tor boat. Call 673-2010 or fi'73o.ftil.O. ___ .;.. ___ ;..... __ I I lave lruck. Frtt est. Shop. cmter, hoP$e ranch, FEM German Short ha Ir PATIOS, y,•alks, dr1vcs. &tw,1.,:M.:;8-3:.,;::1::.77:....-:-::--:-- or T ........ 000 c=ty trade up. Pointer pup, Vic: Redlands bN!Rk, ""'1nove A rcphtL-e J b Wont-' F I 702 ~ ron .. -1F. "0 0 0'° for -,1. 0 ....,, ema • Q\\'flcr & 16th St., CM, $48,..$()12 ........ " ~ · c 1-IAVE 20 It. Santa Fe travel I.OST 2 white Parakeets. Child Care NEED help Al home? We trafter $3495. valuo. Tr8de Vic. of 0Akwood A p t • hav1.1 aides, n u r 1 e ' • for car, duplnx, 1n<.'Ome \\lestclitt l!lrca. 64l-Ual LICENSED 01\ldcaN' fn my ho u A ckpn, companion.~. properly or T1 American MALE Hlacki & whil• ~. hotnc 111 Hllrbor & "Baker. llomcml\kcn Up Job n , Travtt Trailen, 839-9911. )011~ with short legs, white 55i~1ffi7 1"°;4"7...,.Q;Sl'i""'-----~ ••••••••••••••••••••'~cur~l!J'.Y_llA!_l~l,~64H986!!'?:~!!L---'W1nt ftd rtlUll' .•••• 64Ui678: Sell Idle ltcllUI ...... &U....iGT8 ' c -I Equn.I Oppor. Employer m/f !1 Plet\MI Apply In PmlOn ~lon-Frt 8: 30em-4pm · To The l'tl"IOnool Dept Or Cont•ct B. Kr•fk• 27l2 Mlchol1on Dr. Irvine '3!1-2400, ... U6 Equal ()ppor. Employer; Oas!tt\ed Ads , . • 6G5611 I I I ' I I • O,l!LY PILOT ,~_mJ .__1 ;;;;;;;;;:rm~11 ~~mi:;.• 1 ·a' s • ••• , 111 1 01! I • , -Hele Wen!M. M & P 711 Help W•ntod, M A I' 710 Mola W...,..., MAP 710Ho -;;";;;W;;.;••;;;•lell;;;;, ;;M;;A;;P;;;;;7l;;l J••;lf!;;;;tp::W:;.,;;n;::i~ .. ;;·;;M;;;;A;;P;:7l=I Help w-. M & I' 710 Help went..i, Mli' 710HelpWonted,MA,71-lpWent..i,MA1'710 = _• .u..mbl.,. T•11>P0"8JY CARRIERS NEEDED 0.:.~~NJl~r~•c.~1~ ami~~lh $e> MAaUNISI'S M..VW..,.. * PRODUCE WORK NOW! FOR DAIL y PILOT ..... App\y l'tzla Man oft, rn • bl&~ -... INSURANCE SALES Experimental Interested In ~ Groomers, t..ar. Hilla. ~'Ui~ ~~No exp nee. eam wblle }'Ou Self CLERKS ASSEMBLER TRNIEI MALE OR FEMALE Som• .,...r. or.ra. s.nc1 .,...,.1. cau u. l!lak•, 1earn, .,...; um•, .... • Mach•"ni"sts • NEYIR A ,.. • RIUnle or can. ~107. ~2700, l~lA: ~ =· wkndJ, lull tlnie when quall- HEL DllAT ~S MUST BE 10 VIARS OF AGE OR OLDIR ~.-1386 ' °'""' MeA ~~;:. .... "f,';., ' i~ .... 1nsurance Group ...... , yNra ,_,.. D vel pment' ~="-=!:'&:~1~~ , 1 ~ .. H"'VE A Dll'I NDABLE BIKE DRIVER for pre-ocbnol. GENERAL ow ... Cl•an Ed Lani * 540-1834 •• ·:;~chino•~... e 0 • •tore. FUlL and PART 135-1176 Clean drivinl record. Pa· machine lhop need.I ln· .. _,.. I be f TIME. I ;' ;t a , ;I·- WI E. 171h, SUite u~, SIA. GOOD PROFITS ! !lent I< mature. Days telllgent flexible penno for INSURANCE, .......,.i JWa r.:::.-"I 1,n,::i.::; o~l"I, ':!'inl"I, * ALSO WfflfRS ASSEMIL!RS ' 548-2550.l E Yes/wk n d 1 P6.r1. tlme. Lite t)'pin,,1 mu.at undenvrtter, N.B. apncy, r:.J-~I Id I ___ ,__,6 1 pnn id atailt-_ ...,_. .._.,~, 'aJ? le,\._ nftl St. " -It--.. 675-169Ui -· ._dr.l.vt, S2 br. 543-01 • sg..JlB9 prtltotype-eppll.ch..-.o .,,. V U. ---'ALSO BOXBOYSA ' ~ 4x~haull "'lrinl• ap-CALL 642-4321, Ext. 21 , Ask for Gary Jarrett DOG Groomers, . expert GIRL Frlday, Realty/&n;tr Vis• ¥o sa W•"' 4 tion) parts and tool· Improvement through * t p\y tn p e .. on . Com· Holp Wentod, M a I' 710 Holp W•ntod, M a I' 710 U'alnlna· Laa Hilh. Somo Oo. Rotated"""" la bkkN/ l"I "'Aul red. Muoi on duty lr•lnl"I ond off ' m un i caOons/Components-· exper. prerd. Send ruume Jh>neL Salary DPRl 6'15-G900 llll&IC ncn~.,.ICI M abie to operate d"'Y eduut~. Catt tor Appolntmmt Co<'po<'atiO•>, 300 Airway IOYS COOKS or call, 646:<l0'1. P.O. Box, GROCERY Cl•rk, lllll • "' ....... "'""""'""" D•Vllllt Jltl "no. 4 It'• •v•ll•ble In (2U) anu AVf!., Costa 1'1eaa. Equal (1) ht Oau brolln-man A 1366, Costa Mesa. SU. p/ttme, eve thifl. Neat ap-~~ Clnalnnattl horizon.. Today's Volunteer l i Opportunlty Employer. __ . 12 • 16 . Ill dlnneJ' cook w/exper ln DOMESTIC Help George pear. Mu.t be 18 or over. Cbmm'l Artilt/Adv to $1.21\ l•I mllll"I ma.. Army-IF vau qualify-P r oduction Centnl t As S 1 s T \NT mana.pr \\'anted 111 the Hunnnatoa heaV)' food pre~tion. Ca11 Allen Byland Aat:ney, 106-B Apply betwn 7am-2pm, 7-11 F 'C ,--I To 11ehedule manufacture r ~•~.. ~e-r '"iris, try Beaeh area for part time Oler Fred, S«-1700. E. 16th St., 8.A. 547-0395 Food Store, 1515 GI.lier, CM Ind/,. ~r 1 __ n-.. to ~ chine. Wiii perform find ovt, ... your loca & thlppblr ot aaffboatl. u....-""", ~· ' jobs thla swnmer I need '•""'111m ......... , ~~"""" _..... the I ncl U S A my Ma G Y chi o;JOkl, 11 or ovtr. Appl~ to al boy who &re ~Uing to COOK-Ralei&h Hillt Sl5K HAVE lmm@dlate openlne Ina Rate/\Vrtte $700 ayout a m• R:U:r.!.ntati~t C r ... r a Cerp , . rnanqer, Jack In The x, ..wrk 4 hrs per day ttUa Hospital, Im E. 16th St, ~Jn~ to S650 for good .ecretary. Typ~. Acctng Clerk/EDP to sroo chlnl"I of compll.. ...,.. 1631 -Placentia, C.1\1. 385 E. 17th St., Coela Me11a. summer le would like to Newport Beach, 645-6707. Keypunch to $600 shorthand, bkkpln&, 1 pr! Legal/COl'P Sec'y to $700 catecl perts from dJ.. lltted below. ATl"RACTIVE OlRL: St9d)' make s2o to $30 per wk See Dottie. • ...... _ """rk S500 arch 1tectura 1 office. Secretary/CPA to S625 men1fonal prlnta or' PROOll OPIRATOR "-'<>n, short hours. Gen'l Also enJoY trips ~· COOKS • f1'8vt!yard ahlrt, 6 '""'" ..... .,...., $550 979-3040 Secretarlca/TmeJ to $550 sketches. 542 W. ltth St., l dMnfn&, m heavy v.utc, min1ature golf 'etc u thti daya a wk. Apply In pel'llOn, ~~t Sf.60 HEALTH food store dtaires Payroll Construction Open Co:st• M@se ~:-1is:~: ~~~Y 11-1, 569 ~. _llk81e49 ~~an4 ~.· ~~~c~~t~he Box, mi Baker Aaa~t. B~--.. ~ •~+ fo':"~i~e =:~~~~-~~an J: Apply In Person 64S.1 163 .....,., ir•~ ~"'!:" ...... ..,l ......... ,..... ~ ..._:1 1718 N. M<tin St., I A\Tl'O BOYS 1~16 to 1ell c~&--enl RN hrwk toS600 HELP Pen.nl~nesUndwr to$600 3333Harborllvd. Santa Ana LESMAN • • -· -~~ ~ Secretanes to 1625 · SA FLOWERS, Hunt. Bch, CM, Mmt have co.t: A inventory Recept, ~,.t"st to"""" Needed tmmediateJ,y for \1.-et. Sec' Stat Typ $675 Cotta Meta, Calif. 542-2435 Npt Bch, Santa A n a. a~ in manutactur-Stat Typist S500 suit manufacturer. R~il'yping 10 $550 I No Exper. Ntca1ary Apply In pehon 1'o i\lni. Baker S.curlty Pecfflc N•lllln•I ••nk t P S S S $1.50/hr + bonus. John, q. Salary :to $13,WJ. Call Sales Secretary $f!(IO "* GL~RS . w1U train. l\lall. Clerk/Type --S43.3 Non prior service To 497-1295.. Gloria Gl'Q, 5'()..6(M,, Coalf.. ~ DrattsmEqul an. El= •"-EXP~~cn>, INDUS. CAIL TRISH HOPKINS I~.:::,.~,. •ppllcants mutt be 17-34 30~2 Crow11 Valley Prk\\'y al Ptttonnel Agency 2790 n p. TRIAL SEWING l\fA· J ERRI W1tl1TEP.fORE _ aefe..._ .. I... mal•, 1&..34, female. Lagwia N~I [ Expandina new car dealer. Career Secrataries Harbor Blvd., CM. ' =el~ ~~~ ~~E OPERATORS, line 488 E.17th St. Cat Irvine) 01 I !'!lEq'!1!l1a!!l '!'O!lppor~,l!!En!l!!!l1!lploy~'l!!'~1 ship needs 6 men to round COUNSELOR wanted for F/C Bkkpr 1650 * SHIPP. ING CLERK, •x· Suite 224 '42-1470 W Today's Army W•nts I' th Ir prot..ional aal., Giorta J,t.,..ball Fl T• J 1 y REAL l!STATI SALIS I :a. ~rlence hel~ ... Alve~e ~ ~J750ciop Control Salon NewpoJ.~~1li Sec'y, S.A. S62S perieneed or .will train. • ••• •IW-7 1f-Equal Oppor. Eniployei· ni/I 0 0 n OU pt'Rll LICINIE but we will thorouchlY train . . . " ' " train Muat be attractive NEWPORT Apply: TRAINING I --~lth-(t()Od'""'pot.endal-If _lrvinl!', Q,__rt!llge_&: ... S.A. c~ have. trim tlaure an<t'enJoY Ptrsonnel-Apncy-.EA S.UIT_S JANrro~ -team .... __!'aii M6Wl'EN~CE_ ]!.Ian for MOTEL IWJ\lse~eeplne maids, I youmen !.d direct or door. h> Immedi.atelyp. p $ u'Ol'klng with 'people. 133 Dover Dr. N.B. 825 \V. 18th St., OMrta l\1esa. ~ill••-t ..,,,,.., 2. exclusive, own youro\vn -.,r2-tuU:T'"flll"._.,ttmGoode;-~11~1-t FatnUIP Real Eltale--Lietm-. bl"'-and 1-f tu 1 tted ' H I ••--h I I pany, v. 1w~ a earn o wiit baytront apt ?alust be \\'Ol11.1ng 001.... uoun ng lni Coun;e now available I doot and are am uuus • • • a re V.'Oman pre e · 642-3170 e per~ an ca janitors to v.-ork up to 15 hrs ho t d d bi & will-in a joh u·hcre demand for thru Tarbell Realtors. :tree , want to earn . top dollan, Hours 2-9 pm. Call 6U-3&tl Must have exper. w/hand A per wk to provide cleaning ing~~ 'do ~pe~ ;'b \\'ilhout trained personnel Is con· Placem11nt Service. 1'rft t~ere ts DO limit,~ be!! Pacific Personnel for appo!n,ment. Employment CounMllor l>O"'tt tools. Capable of ac-& maintenance services. super ... ision. i tust li\;e 011 staul. C'nlJ ~(,}-8:171 \'URll-Training Prozram, Zan\ fita include free • S.rvictt, Inc, COUNTER Girl for dry Due to the expansion of our curate v.-ork. Topatron, Inc. Husband & wile tetu.n pref. preniises In beaut. apt pro-bond Alotor 1-fotel. 3151 \\'hile .),,:.t learn. C&ll Al cations, bonus JJl;an•, ho&-500 Newport Center Dr. cleane!'-, will train. Apply office v.·e v.ill train sharp ~~1178, Send letter des c r 1 bing \1ded free w/utU. 1>ci·i " _1-_!:"U~r Bl\'d, C.l\I. Sloan {714) llJ2.6640: ~!~zawhtlonil•' vno~ le::i~Y· Suite 900, N.B. KN"'""'rt' 81C.:~anec"•i' 15 3 4 career oriented penon to HI-Fl baPOc~nd ~'!!ref1erenoes1 to future, rood salary, :.:111·: :\IO TE L mllid, neat. £.Alu :1-~ ' w-64()..1970 ewpo \y,, · · interview &: screen appli· COMPONENT SALES """x 'U;>l;I r v 11 e • v.'Orking oonds. I) hon l' encrgelic, l..quna Beach ~5 penori '(;;1~an~ 24 Central Tower, Orange · CREATIVE, brilht Young cants for nationally known Salary~ Col~ ~Iesa area, Call Cal!ruon: ~ Equal Op-673-8711 or 675-3366 'til rcso11, 6 day u-eek. 494-1196. Merc~'~6soo Beadl Blvd., 547..&MG ~-ome.n to auitt educational companies. Call Jean Brown, i\'fr. Rann 12 to 2 pm only, po • Poyer 9PM. i\ITST Opet'ato"r, e:"'~. 4:45- Huntingt.on Beach, Equal Oppor. Employer film . producer, part time. 54().0lJ5, Coutal. Pel'llOMel (213) ~-Janitor Wanted i\IACHINE Shop Help , drill 9P:\t, lrvine Complex area. AUTO 64+-22'l3 J\g1!ncy, '27'00Harbor Blvd., HOUSEl<EEPER Udo Isle 3:30pni-12pn1, e:"'per. pref'd. prell8 & lathe opel'ator or Call Charles Davison, 1 * CASHIER. full time for Cl\1. ~half days 1ocitl rel'• $00 but \\'ill train. X In' t pet-son \\'{111achinc )lhov ~&--01i0 SALESMAN ~!: c:i18Znd~be= Dial-A-Job! ~= ~11!~-e~~d~ w;;k. 67~189. f/tl . ~a~~i~ ~~11t:,,.,'xtJ~ ~~~:~Ill be~~~: USS~~ ~N~c=R~O~P~E~RA~T~o=R- Need I s a I e 1 ma n , ex· 9-5, Mon-Fri. 642-8686 NOW Orange County's most 36.J> E. Coast Hwy,-Cd'.M. OUM ffP1r, me Delaware, H.B. Productloo Plaee, C:\I. ~~~~~COl~~~~f~ee!uirn:ndl~ perlenced, Sell BMC, Fer· I , lnno ti 549-3001 JANl'!'ORAL ........ time/full ?\-JAJD for LAGUNA RF:EF ,,.,,~ e·.-·-•·. Salaiy to ~~. rarl, J .. ,..... Inventory of used CHECK HERE Pf"Oll'ffll VI:! oc: Vil ve ~ ... , "!~EL -~ S. ~--··( .JAN ..... ~ """"' •·-, Fr; demo, excellent temporary help service does time, e\'enings, local, exper. H,. v• 'r·n~, B ~1 CWI Kay \Vlng, 5-10-6000, -· B d ll .. aln. Tempo otten a tru-E•NGINEER Hmpltal adults only. $2.40 per hr. \\'!t'.. ~ .. na e u c 1 · Cojlstul Personnel A."l!llC)'. R;d~co~~t~~:inS:~ u FOR JOBS ly unique & time 111avlng ()(>' MISSION 979-3923 ••xm. :!7:)0 lhu'bo1· Bl\'d., C~I . NEWPORT port""lly !or skllled JUNIOR SALESMAN: MAKE IT A NICE gM to hd p d oo n SECRETARIES Five years ex-r• Earn 1~S40 per "" ... k 1 ......... tc\\' ho"" a u•cek IMPORTS IN THIS AREA SECRETARIES ionce with elodri· working dter ochod ;;;d Cd'.'! area. Own h'an~ 3100. w ~--~ H NB SECRITARIES cel/moch•nlcel d.. on Saturday• ••ttln& new GREEN ttt SUMMER 67fN013 nE}\L ESTATE SALES SUCCESS CAREER New or experienced. Jolll the \Vo1·ld'1 la.rgctt and futett lfO\\"lng 1'elale orpnlatton wlUt a net\l.'Ol'k or over 300 otflcet ·and become a n1ember er our Mllllc:lnaire Club. h1u1U·mllllon dollar ad\•ertislna: procram. Free 1 guaranteed llcenalnr achool. • Excellent sale• training, \Vhat ls your llcenae worth to you?' Check OJJ' monthly b.>nus program which means $$$ to you! Pleue call Vhyini11. Jones ~48ll. RED CARPIT Rullora • ~· wY·· • • want dlgnifled & Commun"1ty ""'tom= for the Dally .,.,., ,,,,-"....,..==-----60-MOS Vending Rte Man Sl.30 wk \\Ji° uI tin& Iona or ahort sign and software Pilot. This is not a Jlllper RN-LVN-AIDE BABYSll'IER iMonday tbru Screener, J:tloc to S3.00 hr ~e.:! :ssignments . 1 or 2 •nalyslt with d.. route and does not include WITH FrldaY 1: •5: 30, my home, ~fat' I. hand en to $2.50 hr days, couple w~ks or fe\\• sire to Hvance Into dellveties or collectin&. U. 7 & other shifts. Top po,·t own tran•. 3 children. $3), l\fachme ()pn St. S2.5J hr months • you decide. Now project I program HOSPITAL We have openings in South-I duly pay, lnuned. pay for REAL ISTATI SALIS MANAGER Resale otnce need!: manqrer with 2 .)"e&n of Real Estate experience. Newport llftdllo H.tetl.. Expandlna: comPM)'. ~Uent opportunity prof.-Onal &rQWth, AJIPb' In confidence. Send resume to Cl....Wed ad no. a, c/ 0.1\y Pllot, P. O. Box -· Costa Mesa, Callt 92la. ';iii'""·ll121:;.;;;o;~;;;v;;i;-.. s:g::,s.::hool;:;;-are::::a:l~~~nr!!reigr:Is~ frC: ! ~ppLnY. BY PHONE management. Will H:= M~a~ =r .J<.~r, !~~:.~ly. 'i?on~~~Y \\~i-~~ 1 ~ Painten to $5.00 hr. have r1spon1lbillty ppl 968-9&11 Lescoulle Nurses Registry, MBYSITI'ER wanted, care P/time DriY'Cl'I to $2.25 ht APPLY BY PHONE for the direction. r.. Z1S02 PueMa Real A Y now! • :'..'.l Ilosplttl! Rd., NB lJ..ob. for 3 children ages 13, llnll: 011...er, Ship Ork to $2.25 hr APPLY BY PHONE I nd I I ifission Viejo I.I; J>urk Lido ll Id g ) lMO: _ _.Mbay home ::;, 0w~ Elec. Aaemblers St. SL80 hr Call TEMPO'S Ottlce at v tw • ana ys 1 (East of San Oieao Frwy KEYPUNCH 6"2·!1000, 541).995!. ~, ve own t · Rml!·Paint Sal., to S275 hr M().4450 & t..t "' know of both space •nd Crown Valley Parkway) DAY SHIFT " ... __ ._, consider mature ttnqer. Factory Trainees to $450 mo what yolll' skill• are. No need mls•lle syshmt. I"" ~es NunJe RN Su-rvlsor 968-lli02. Tu. Mounter $2.75 hr to com< In ..,..nal\y , "ntil l•rf•cleg reapon1i-(714) 495-4400 " Typists r- BABYSl'rt"ER, ~-· my Printer Open we have the 'Juat right' !!pot blllty with tlectri-6 l\fo 's actual \1.-ork exper. .,,, ~e~~ u!1'fl~ -·· Coeta ¥•••. vw Uno M..i.anic Open .fo' '""'' c•l/-c'enlc•I d.. onkeypunch,keyta .. orkey Accntnn Clerks Con,, c ~REAL ESTATI SALIS '1'ueo/Thun noon til 6. s._1. _ y t' · I bl .. _ n (714) 831 2300 dis~ device. " v~escent onter, -Rnaalea In Newport a. all d"ay. Own traDI ~. Comm'l Armt: to $700 mo o ur ime IS va ua e. sign groups, menu-• 1 In The Don't spend your u-hole Sum· t""lagi.iiip kd., NB. area. 545-1335. Receptionists to $500 mo Don't waste it. Invest facturlng •nd field Perso>:!~1Y Department mer lo an ottice. Just pai1. NURSF.S Aide -Orderly, exp HARBOR. VllW sABYSITI'ER my home, 1 Clerk Typists to SS~ mo • I . h T SIArsonntl, Prior .RN'S ?tt nd Fri 9 12 Noon ot It lvlth Kell)" Top pay for not nee. Openings on days HOMl!S cblld Tr u 11 t worth y & Auembiirs St. S2.00 hr it wise Y wit em po :;ilitary customer 0 RY· • &m· your skilla. work where you 7-3; mldnlte 11-7. Good , reliable. 96.l-2128 eves. Factory Trainees 1 ~ hr at hi hourly rates $$ llatlon exposure is PACIFIC MUTUAL want, v.•hen you v.1nnt. benefits. i\'Inke appllcaNtlonB N!:C,~0~e~~fifld ~ ABYSITI'ER wanted Sun-Retail Sale& o .,.,.,,., mo 700 Newport Center Dr. at 1,1-t.i Superior Ave., i .. tlOWtt .• Fairview: s.'A. ~~~~nget Oerk ~.!° ~~ mmoo NEVER A FEE AT TE~fPO dltlrH. Send re1u-• SURG. Newport Beach__ Call Or Visit or call 642-2410 wk-days on\)' Sf.6.8498 ~·-· w -T mo with 1eluy his· SUPERVISOR · N-U RS E A I DE s & APEX Tompo~~!°y H•lp tory to Keypunch Trainee // AA q. I ORDERLIES Experienced- l!ANK , "Something 1 ·Special" • For · Secretaries Tellers Proof Oprs : New Accts Cllcs ' .. The .. po1ltlon1 •r• : avall•blt at varlou1 Joc•tlon1 In t h • CNst•I • r e • of ' : Orange; County. : A v•ri.ty of skills could q.,.111y you for thtM potitions. ~ We would prefor l1>s • d lvid.,.11 with •I • IH1t 6 months I X• peritnff In • bank, ~ savings and kMln or flnenc• company. Wo olfor flno alert· ing 1alarlt1, an ex· • celleni new .,..,... • fit• progr •m , pllle1oiff' cont•"'P' orary working •n- v lronment • n d plonly of oppor tun- : lty f o r advance- : mint. . • • • . ' ' p1 .. 111 c.11 P:or Appointment '44°Cll ll, us 257 SECURITY PACIFIC BANK • MED. SURG. U?am & F.arn in tnls fan· -/\•{{&'J irl all shifts. Park .. Lido Professional 3 to 11, 11 to 7 tutic spot. Eager indiv. will FI a gs h Ip Convalescent REAL :rn'l'ATE -SALES ~ \Vhy not work In the hltta1 area Huntln1ton Beach/Fountain Valley C&JI Phil ].fcNamee, VILLAGE REAL ESTATE, "'""61 EMPLOYMENT AGENCY .,D_l_A_l_A __ J_O~B-.J ApplEmypllonymenP•r•lon • MED. SURG. AIDES =;• c:1 N=ts~ 2061 lualnou Ct r. Dr. o';'.';;~·;;~[~ag>hlp Rd. NB l to 11, 11 lo 7 8J3-Z700, Dennlo " DennLt ·lrvlM ll3:1441 F'ULL OIARGE OFF1CE 1810-C Nev.-port Blvd. Penonne1 Agmcy of IMnc, AcnM!I! from O.C. Airport ].IGR for New Car ._iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;o""f Cnst& l'ifesa 645-43XI Lit Relndeon Agency 3333 Harbor Blvd. e ICU-CCU 2082 Mk:belson Dr. Dea1enhlp. You know the • 4500 Campus Dr., N.B. Costa Mas•; Calif. 92626 3 to 11 ~ 11 to 7 experience )'OU must have. 557-3401 LADY with management ltfAN with sales ablllt;y to· Pleue apply in penon, OT ~ e ER ability to ovenee office make &: Install ahades. Good phon~ ~7170. Ha r b 0 r ~ 11 to 7 building. Apply rm. 3l:XJ Lido opportunity tor enthuslaatic, Ainerlcan Motors. CLERKS Material Control N.21.."~~bl~ ~Ntime lnlnff, ~ ~=·a.~ .. ~Lido, ~';":b~i;;·s.~~. OFFICE CLEANING Permanent Openings non-student, permanent de· . .,. ~ • PEDIATRICS LADIES E. C.oa.st Hwy, Cd ~I . Couple, man I wife exper-Becaun We Atk Previous experience euentla.1 livery man to deUver ottl.~ W 11 to 7 P/. work Costa M 6T.r7830 ienced only. Approximately A L ittle Mor~ & typing abtllty an 8.S!tet. furniture. Prefer manied ~ ation' house = .u..aNA""ER TRAINEE 3 hrs evenings, N.B. or C.M. W Can Give A CLERK man, complete preliminary &. OB, RN & LYN pu c 1 operat """' "' IU'C:lS. $350 month. Call • application at 1931 Newport Equal Oppor. Employer m/f 11 to 7 24 hrs a day. Needs ladles Outttandlne opportunity to (213) 9'l7-0ll5. Little Mere Bl.~ c M 1500 1 to help at all hours on nll'lh advance to managerial posi-2 OFFICE HIRLS Receptionist" Acco'"'NTJNG ••·· . . . mo. mrt· ENGINE INSTALLER e CENTRAL SUPPLY Joh<> Can we <all you to Uon In :io..ro d.,,.. Our cur· · v UI Ing Wary. work p/tlme at hours we rent ma n a i' er a ean1 NEEDED summer opening accounts Delivery of DAILY Pll.OT, l\;{:~~e 1 yr recent exper. TECHN~CIAN can ammge? \Ve \\ril:I train $1000--$1500 mo. !\lust have Radkl telephone di1patch payable experlerice w /good S U N D A Y 0 NL Y , to I sl•ftcler ya ch ts 7-you. If you are interested direct sales experlence. ~l\'lutt be 25, able to drive & Marketi• typing. ne~'l'!paper carriers in SAN please call. 540-9172. Call ?..Ir. Newman 979-5222 Appll'.~!1 Person ''• IS EY ND CLEMENTE.,.... l\equlft• m w. 17th St., C.M. MEl>ICAL LEGAL TRAINEE MAR IN E M •ch . & YELLOW CAB CO. :D N LA use ot Station Wagon or EXPER. l\.1ech. -Exper. TRANSCRIBER Fee Paid. Fantastic oppor. 10 mechanically 0 r I en t e d 186 E. 16th, Cnsta :r.te-sa Call l\.ton-Sat JO M-f..f Pi\1 Van. Contact Mr. Harry aervtce station attend. Im-M :30 Tues thr u Sat start a legal career. Beauti· Personnel. _ OPERATORS. ex.per. only. n4: 5.tl-4456 ext. 678 3:~?M!:'.. =~ St., med. empl., inteI'\deYr''I noon ful ofc. Good skills 'vill * 645-3861 * single needle &: overlock. An Equal Opportunity to 4• 1500 w. Balboa Blvd, Laboratory start you on a real career. ].lATURE baby sitter lt.B., Top rates. Rolf's l\.tanuf., Employer DELIVERY Man, p/tlme Newport Bd'I. Salary to $560. A1llo Fee own car refer. required 885 Production Pl, NB. CLERK ""-1st, t ra In e e • for tumiture store ''urk. EXPERIENCED mechanic, e MEDICAL TECH Jobs. Call Sally . Hart. ~536--4"'-""121"'-------_646--0:~~306~·,..,.,.,,,:-:-:-:-:--• :11' • Ove.r 18 A must be ~at a: o••n tnol•, __ ,. benefits. :.ui.~. ,.. __ _._, n..-~• -f/tlme. Must have aome ex"· vn-l 1 lO .................. \..Ualiiiu ~"'~""'una MECH/ILECTRICAL OPTOMETRIST clean. Martin F\imJture, 50% labor. Apply In penon. to 1 : A.rency, 2790 llarbor Blvd .. b"'.2. ~~a~~ ~Harbor Blvd, CM ll!!a Anaheim Aw, Costa Excellent Benefits CM. ~~~~~~tuat have 1 yr COCKTAIL Y.llitresse• & DELIVERY MAN, exp'd, FULL time handyman cap. & Working Conclltlon1 L .. •I Secretary lalander Yachts i\luat be mature. This 11 a coolts. lnter.1ew Thursday, over 2.5, ~deliver & lruitaU abl.e at replacing molding&: r::lpa~ •. ~ •. ~., """ot::. T11 \V, L7th St., Ci\I !.':~<%~~ ~~1~' r\~~j at 1700 Placentia. CM, major appliances, fringe hanging doors in San Juan An equal Opportunity •v .. .,. ... ,1 ~ uUlw ... o -~ .. JI.lust be pobed, well aroom--1 ed. low PreNW'e Jobi. Start lnunediately. Excellent op- p o rt u n It le s . :run 11..sslgnments Come in A • register today. c.au or Visit ..J<.tt, (jJ Lucky Lion. benefits. Exp. in thla field a Caplstram. ·$ll28. Employer Start Sfn), Also Ftt Jobi. 1noney tnaker for 11teady COFFEE Shop G' 1 1 I C&ll Sally Hart 54<><050 MEDICAL mru. on • n>0ntl• •o month 2061 1t'•lne11 Ctr Dr d - "· exkp!'_ m""'· Dunap'o, 1815 •GAL FRIDAY with Qoasllol Peno...;. Agen<.~.· TRANSCRllEI l•ase, Send re'"me ID P.O. Irvine ll3:1441 nee. 5 ays w . As •u. Neu'flOrt, CM, 648-7789. bus/know-how for t & It HOSPITAL -I ·:1 Box 'll14 Co5ta M Calif.. Carol, 846-1186 RY .,,""'Harbor B V<l., CM, • esa, • Am>u from O.C. Airport DELIVE . Boy wanted. ap. lf'OW'lng mail crdtt co's -NEW LEGAL SEC S am-4:30 pm 1\1cr lt Sat ~. - COLUMBIA YACHTS ply in penon, Llo)'ds new plant. Growth oppt;y. Xln't bcric[its & "-'Orkin& =P"°AR'°T"·=T"t1'-"'IE".-Ear=-7iy_m_orn...,..lno-RECEPTIOfrllST 275 McComtick, C.1'1. ~h!;16t 2038 New P 0 rt ~1098 A E~, *°°! lldllss;:;.1 office, condltlooii,. S ON route delivery, L.A. Tltne1. Rapidly ll'O"Ni~ nrrn needl • =::!1Bf~~r~:;.0, D1ELIVERY, 5 d1•Y11• moNrn8-GENERAL LABOR ~IMmyGmmrl Hospital t:ii~J::te~;~1~bl.Jt~';. cO:M~NITY ~Ca1~ ~Ti2~; ~:1~ h~~~t~:kw) e Holluc Weldor ng poper rou e, n · · NOW OPEN LE~AL TRAINEE HOSPITAL 96M9l5 , .... Muot be ace""~ , 5:30-7:30 a.m. $1Wmo., v al lst Call Lind n .... e Touc~p pi.-efer mo.rried man, w/ 2701 So. Brlstal A-will ·-•n w/~ ~.1.... 27'802 Puerta Re POLICI Ol'PICIR . a ·~· ~-... td I ~7516 Newport ·-•ch •y ........ ll""" ':11' ... M1 .. 1on Vlc)O' Coas!nl Penionnel c1f.n<Yi ~per. on~ ney •PP Y ,....my car ... ~ · -S.nlo Ana (714) f1'45GO A lhrthnd oklll•. Sal•~ I<> ... 7 $105• p ~-~-M th Th Cost• MeH -, (Eost Of San Diogo Fr.'Y ... to • or .-. 2'1111 Han~ Blvd,. · on NE uts. DELIVERY ?.tan, 9 a r I y Apply Be1"•een 9 am & 4 pm $000. Call Elly Ellis 55G-8505 Cro~rn Valleoy Parkway) F4u.iOppor. mploy<rmll mornlno. 2\1 bra, $2lO per S•nl• An• ·RN'S Conlrol Career Empt. 17141 4'5:440I Requirem<tlle· High ocl>OOI llC•-ONIST Controllor CPA to $251< mo. + bonuo. Call L.A. Or•"I• A lrvlno !CU/CCU k LVN 11_1 ~NBenc:y, . :WOO lrvlne Blvd., fO'lldu&llon ,.· 60 unlll ot ...i. """11 Xln't opportUnity tor qulctl)' Times, 6f2..-MOO, (714) 131-UOI fere level work. Hel.ght min. Day or maht. no exp. nee, 8"8"""'"" nn .. cial man to DELIVERY boy. part tlm•. No F ... • w .. ldj< P-01 DEPT. Legal Sectttaey Eq"al Oppor. F;mplo)<er ~·w· wlthotll -·· max. •::r,· fun Job. WUI tnln. no jolrl 11 young mgrnt team. momlnp It: early &ftcmoon. 6 AM sbltt, ~ lhlll.I, 2nd LABOR & OEUVER.Y R.e11et S/H net. 18.1\t: Executive, 6'5". \Vf!iaht pmpotdonate ~Ill or .shorthand, etc. Prefer live Orange co. Big exp, prof. Bulhard Phcy, lhlhi and graveyard. MED SURG uae ot mlclvtl torma. S,lary f\~:e~CAJ'P',"':~1~~1 • ~ ~ 'f:tv1~, 1:!cl;-.: e!!.~t ~e'!t 'd:t ff!.,.,, 8 CPA u per. & recent con-244 Foreat, Lq Sch. • p p s c ommensun.te w/e.l)l;lll;y. with phone A haficUJna pa.· •!30: uncorrected n 0 t N.B. troller ex;per. Re11Umes onb' Dental A11l1tant Ri'l u -7 Newport Beach, 615-15!0 tlent1. Emphuhl on back lf"'iller than ~no. Mr'Olal ~!'!'!~'!!!"'1"'~1!!!!'!'!--1 Aa mu Exec. S.arc h \\'antf.d · Belt ch&ln:lde .,. • • • SURGERY RN S.ll IJV&..lN Compa.nioo t.o care ortlce, will &:Ive mme color v181c>n. f"lle applfca· RELl'ABLE b & bys It t • . . . 600 No. Euclkl., Anahi!i m Al~ant. av&ilabit'. W~llnr to PKlflc PWIONMI PEDIATRICS 'tor elderly lady tn :t training. Mlulon VI e j o tlon btb'e -Frid&y June w1thlo \1.-"alldna dlttance al. Em..i...-/f Cal·Fcd Bldg 776-8 L20 \\'Ol'k hard tor eood pay for Services, Inc. Rl'i 11.7 \\'orid, Mil.It cook. area. alter 5:30, 61$-.5218. ls.th 1913 ' Perey School, Ref. 1'-5: ()ppol'. ~,~ 11' COOi< >""'1' -In very buoy DIETAJtY car, llahl houle•m. Call MEDICAL tranocribor " Clty'..i c .. 1. Me•• d5m.90"i1Um-n>lt' ·--.• -·.1c1'" practke. ?.luat bave eXPtr· 500 Newport center Dr. 548-Mf1, f front ottlce leCT'etfu'y need· 77 F I D I ~·~ 0 •· pAR ].fAJO -over 2i, part F'ull or p/tlme. No Iona h&Jr. lence c2 )Tl), take TMX, Suite 900 Newpcct 8ch Cook, llospttal exp. prerd. LYN ed for radJok>ay office • r r ve Boy 988-66.13 afters. ·time tor col.lep beet bftr, Carl's Jr. Rt•t havo'extenliv~ kncwJled&e or H).1910 5:30 AM·l PM Charge . full time part time' b:l.11ed Jn NB. Ex P . COit• Me11, Callf. t2'26 111itiii'iiiiiiiiiilllliiim••ll :83Wl91 alter 5 pm, uk tor No Ellpor. Necou e•oond«I dull ... MUlt be '4 Centro! 1\>wft', 0raop "'~~.~~ ~{!}!.., all ohlri., Satary'neaot!Abl•'. •Mrlln' pnl•rred. Call 17141 H4 SUO REPRO TYl'llT •-.ner. ApPly in peraon, bctwn 3 A 5 neitt. depehdaNe, enttm> !MT""48 ............. vnu UllJq; Parle 'Udo i"1e.phl'p Conva.. !tlG~l!!ISC~Jor~•!.!\>P~·:!;t.c,,. ___ , ,"l.'!~~iT,!"\jif:~F,~IIMMEDlATE OPEN'INOS tn 11111 ... Cl•rk $IOO wkdyo at Carl'•, 1101 New-la1tto, h•althy & lI).lS yn. Equal Oppor. Employ.. 1_.t c.nt.,, 4ii6 fucohlp >iEN ,i. women ttWl&Pr PORTIRS WANTID NOWJ)Ol't Bndl A ""'"""!\( • Govt O>ntnct Expt.r. port Blvd., N.B. 5:)2-8339. Equ&1 Oppor. Employwr llOSl'ESS/CocktaJI G 1 r 1 Rd. NB. tral.nte'•, A attend & n t 1 Must be cxper. F/tlme. areas. $3.TS Sitt hour ~ ~ }"'ee Paid/ A.180 Fee Jobr COOKS, cxper. Broiler ~tnn, D E N T A L A I I l • la n t • Wed..Sun ex.'d uk for MAOIINisr experienced, ""1nttd for auoline IQIH See Personnel Mrr. benellt•. Weetcliff ' lull &: p/tlme. Apply Jn chal.nlde exJ> pref, call bet. Oener•I Ofc $UO Carol 846-.1U6 • IOl"""P and operat. !Lathe, only, Ideal opportunity 10t" lelho• Bay Ch.tll Design Service C.. 1 Ptt'IOflnti Afl!tlCY pert0n, Newport Beach Ten· lOl.m A 3pm. S1M1581 Fee Paid MUI, Service D"fndtt, etc. runblttout peqple. Must •be 1221 W. Cout Hwy., N.B. 101'.! E. 1-:lmJ I 8.,!'U~ UlSl E. f.:dlnger, S.A. nJs Club, 2601 Eutblutt Dr. Ground n-appor, Jor rn. Insurance Clork Opportunity I<> 1um Dental abl• to n>locai•. Expet1enee PRI SSMANr Ol'l'SIT Ask for •ck• ·~ !Muk !.'1..S,enterl Ii.II. Dr's Assistant div "1lo ...ic. hlJI> rl9e po. BeauliM mod m holpltal A Orthodontic ,....,.""'""· not ....,....ry, S.n<I """""' ~p'd oo A t.i.t or A.B. Dick ~,.~~~only sr~ O)()K .. pttlmo. Coach t • • a:1o0n. &rper beneftts A Jo. otfM"I outstandlna oppor, tor ~I E.A. Beck A Co. A: picture to P.O. Box ~. ~ . on· pm KK.EEPE:R girt trlda)I, OJrntr JUostaun..nt. so . Younc lady (lWI) to umt. ct.le. Call !Cm Ctarlt, ,.the Individual .who tlkeii _6Cl>-4912 tor lnter•t~.w , LcmonCrove,CA92045 equ(p., w1.ll train on auto..,,..,..,..,.,.,,..,.,.. .... mu.t -haw • x c • l J • n I Corult Plllll, 0.f s.a&-'7955. In health •PB· Will tn.ln, no 133-27001 Aiao F~ Jobi., ,..otng lhtlt. Salary to $450. 8-4:30. 1-IEN or women add to your .Pf"ltlllH· 2nd 6 3rd Shift Ukit to Trade? Our Tl'9der' tek1Jbor.e Ditf'IOilWitY. sood Don't Jdvt u1 the lhl 1 exp. nee. Apply In pemn Dennis It Dennia PU1C.-mel Call Kay \Vlnr, Ml)..6055, It'• a bretzie ••• aen YoUr fa mily Income ln 11tll'• openlnp. O_ppty for advan ., Pu.dlM column la for you! oa1ary and'bonotlll, 5.17-11112 "Llll"lt In ctauitl<d, S/S '"" on or eve. 2910 ·W, AJl'llCY ot !!'Vino, lil82 OoutaJ ~-.......,., lleml with-. lllO Dolly ""'"'ltlnr " .ln.lntnr. W• mmL Mr. Hewitt 540-9112. 5 II-5 duo lor 15. \\'ldieDepha.nt l>'rne-A-Llne to Shore Rel\Ullal 60-5678. p Cout Hwy., N.S. J.ti<.'helton Or. n90 JlftJ'bcJr BIW!.1 01, . Piiot OM81fted. 64)-5678. trat11 YoU· $42-0528. CLASSO'lED will .eJI ltJ .;;lodq=c....:.'"°'"°'= ~c.=.o""--- -1 • 27 ·•ILOT·AOVERTISU DAILY PILOT I~ ~[ _ ..... _-·"..::I ~~I Help Wont ... M & F no HolpWOlftcl,M & F 710 HolpWontod, M & F 711HelpWont..i,M & f 710 MUc.1.._ 111Ml,..111neout 111 Ml-II•-Ill Mu1ltef lnttrumont1m TV, Rodlo, HIFI, •m•u••NT s1cR11TARv-11xec. •·•• --··-·-••••••••••••••••••SCRAM-LETS ·~=!...TT.'J.~ .... ~1 -;:5;;*;;•;;;;;=;;;;;~ " "" To marl<ettn& v.P. A Chol· RETAIL •· I• OWN MANAGEMENT :~:·~1ur'l"'~ri=~~~ ~~~~ $511 -REWARD -$5m ANSWERS ~·;£~: s~ua.o~ RWs &T&l!Rl!D Inttteated In &n opportunity ~~r:in~lai:i"i:~. ~~·~~'. Yeater -TanfY -Shawl -SUNN Concert PA HEAD, 5 s· 10 ~ for crowu1 with a tut mov-tlvc 11a1ary & benefits. AJ)J)ly We are the Southern CalifonJia division of a For the recovery of all Lawlul -SALA.RY ch. monltor jack, mlkes, ~ re.taurant cha.In. Good tn person. betwn s am &. 12 majQr national retail chain, if you have re-INDIAN JEWELRY Fac:ully: TI1e people who $350. Apt 4, 173 Lower Cliff, N Credit Qi k*N De~ noon. L.M. Cox A-tanutaclur-cently been involved in a sales or a sales act v.ilat's left, alter the foot· Laguna Fo Dell ec ~ • .,. tnsurahce, vacation, &. profit lng Co Inc l50S E Warner service tfcpe work and are business oriented ball ooach receives his Olfl f Mree thly vRery ·• •B A = 4bariog plan. Send resume S.A. !:Quirl Qppor. :Employe; easily i'd.entlflable-stolen from Navai·o SALARY. ct urniturt/ o11 enta,.. va '? looking or a competitive fast paced busi· . E ulp. 824 Dpon Ei"••· 5544:3~4414.,.~11ir. ]~[ l~I [ ][ffi I • I I I fill I ........ llilll I '1'1'••• '-~~~~-L~~--~~ = l~I l[IlJ I llwd'lr •• ........ -- ar apply In person at 110-12 SECRETARY for cost a ness where performance counts and respons~ \ TracJing, ~11 Ne~port . Blvd., ~osta MOVIN?w~st se Giiiette, JMne. Mc!" C.P.A .. !lnn. Excellent ibillty-comes early. WE WANT TO TALK Mesa. All informallon strictly confiden· 8br ~.t..:.....w, athl/tl • w/hu;:. PRO IONAL draft Ing * Summo~ Speelel * lyplSt · Stenorette • ... ..., ,.,~ board Jo'rieden D L •• 111-"!J r ~ RES"I'AURANT help needed. -~llfi&f''-(h general Offici! TO YOU. -, . -~er;-metal-office-tabl.e; eatcluator.-'l"'tr;-rnro f1a -"'-1--.:s;. dut.""'~u ...-... --- Experiencea waiU'eSies, ex-duties -must be flexible, & If , bee In I d tailin' ................... BIW TV king bedspre(f, Copier, 1' 10 key adding $87.50-21'' or 25'' Color ' Jlfrienced cook:9. Libera! pel'90tUl.ble. \Vrlte ClassUied you ve n vo ve in re 1g or siin· ' Sunbeam 'mist hair setter! machines. call anytime, • 2 YEAR WA~ . · pay company benertts Ap-ad no. 695, Dally Pilot, P.O. il~r work, and you know the disadvantages furniture 810 car hlk~ nick, many nu gift 642-2563. • Installation Av9..1Jable pi,y 'Denny's, !600 s. Coast ~1560, Costa Mesa, Calif. and still loVe it then WE WANT TO TAl,.K II I I ! items. 552-9284, or 675-3159, EXEC swvl chrs $15-2S Sec. Rice's Television Service . Hwy,. Laguna Beach. , TO YOU." . fmfls>11•il f ~~r:;;rpho~~:dg:. ta~~ ?/roe~~ I~~'.135 Acacia cShrsl 86$87/24W D19eooCM !~f903Ano0tt f~'W1~~ys.l\~~~~ s: RN-LVN l'IH!ded for p/time. SEC' Y-BOOKh'EEPER up ~ """ open 9-6 (6 days) ' Attractive conv. hosp. Open· Xlnt opportunity w/gtJowlng If you want early responsibility in a rapidly coffee table. Table ll~ns. 1• SUPER SM Movie camera & * 5 WOODEN oUice desks & ====~"°'~-':-::--:"-I tngs for all Ahlfts. Plea~ Costa Mesa co. for c ·ai Fri-expanding company Where there is enormous tl•lp Wanted, M & F 710 :.:!s •. ~.?gs,twi~=,t: -~· li~e ~w. $45. ~larold 6 chairs, good condition. SHACRIFICEKardSALE! 119 7 3 ~!!~d 642-2410 It aak for Mr. day w/stroug typing, sh & opportunity for career growth WE WANT Chest free;~;~2 garden chrs land camera with flash at-* 673-3850 * c2~ 4.way :~r::. ~ u.v er. bkkpng. exper. Cole Instru-T~ TALK TO YOU. \VIG SlyllstJ -l!!xper. $2 -wtcushloi1s. Ceramic patio tachment like n~w S45. MtF FILES, office machines, {dual) turntable, oriJ~ ~::~~":try into i!!'t~-~E;:!~~~qJ:1laoepn:r: Intfrviews are now being cotlducted for the ~~~: :U1nt~ :b~us. 7 &XJ =:::~~~lamps, garden ~g ~::(= ~~ ~~Wt a~~4~1~~ore. ~~3~i.Never ~ tional sale1t awaits sharp ag. remaining openings in our Management De-WOMEN needed for part DOUBLE beds, 1 at $25, 1 at times) Ulitt,pew. Men's size PHILCO console color TV gresslve individual seeking SECRETARY velopment Program. ~~ice~~I f~o b~~ $15. Comp. twin BR set' $!ll. 91h:M Phone 644-4681 Plinos/Org•ns 826 Zl" need• picture tube $50. Careet'. caJI Burt Long, 1 t 1 "' ~ Co •--a~~. ,_.,,., "'"" T\Vin bed $10. Refrig. $~. ~ Call after 5 962-6713. !!_3·2700, Dennis & Dcnnl' ~,:;1•;t1i.'c~ · For personal interview appointment call Mr. ·--... _, ··~~ Sofa $25. Chair $5. Kitchen * AUCTION * O~GAN SALE :~~~~~~~~] r~t'llOflnel Agency of Irvine, Santa Ana 979-5MO Nichols. table & chrs $15. Small Fine :rumiture \Vurlltzer Factory Authori7.ed 2082 Michelson Dr. 1 '~ cabine~ table $5. Lamp $3. & Appllances Sale on n1any models. Other [ I(' ' SALESLADIES SECRETARY 774-0330 * THURSDAY & FRIDAY llerc:hwdse l'!i.r,. 3029 Fillmore Way, CM. Apt Aucttr41s Friday, 7:30 e.m. brands also on sale, priced '""to You LEGAL TRAINEE . . V 138. 9AM-7PM w· d • A f B Imm $295. • . . ExJ)'d dreues & sportswear, Dream position in fine legal QUEEN size sofa bed , In y s UC ion· arn w 11· h M . c·ty apply Gloria, 54~24• office ~waits sharp 1ndlvid· Help Wlntff, M&F 710 Help Wantff, M&F 710 Scotchguarded, green & 2075% Newport, CM 646-8686 a IC s ustc !. 3 Lints, 2 Times, $2.00 Gene's, 2300 Harbor Blvd., ual who desires to learn. To Antiques 800 \vheat covering, very good Behind Tony's Bldg Mat'l. South eoast Plaza 540.2830 ••••••••••I CM. $606. Cull Barbara Mac, TIRE sales & servlce, Brake VDM CHIPPENDALE . cond. $175/best offer . CARPET sale. Carpet -----SALES r e prescntative, 833·2700, Dennis & Dennis It Alignment sel'Vlce, Full executive 968·2337. layer's wife has all sizes STEINWAY YOUNG male ml'<ed dog. 1ha~, M/F, to sell office Personnel Agency of Irvine, or part time. Salary plus ~s546~ x 36, $1600, Cf COUCH & love seat almost remnants. Selling for low, For piano connoisseur. ?o.1odel llsebrkn, Welt trained · : supples In Costa Mesa 2082 Michelson Or. commission. Call 644-8022, new, sootchguarded'. yellow low prices. Wed. & Thurs., "B" Grand. 7 Ft. 85-nole. · Prefer teenage girl or young • area. Full time. Sal. + Sec'y =-Private-$700 €oast-Auto-8ervice Center.-VarJan Data-Machines OON'.'.I' be out of It! Antiques plaid pattern, $200. takes 11:3:30. 33023 Calle Perfecto l.'fahogany, painted black. v:oman. 548-8372 · com. BeacH-StifiOnefs, 1807 Purrfectly Lovely TOOL & DIE MAKER are in! At 1550 South Coast both. 64&-8679 St. in back of Rayne Soft Highest offer, starting at FREE to dos: lover 10 J1lO$ Newport Blvd. CM A leader in the mini com-Hwy, Laguna Beach. Water, near Sau Juan $3000. By appoinfJnent only. old, med. sz., 'b lack SALESGIRL w a n t e d ' at-Prestige ~:'~~~or pleasant Top ~~~~~ c;~nefits. puter ~ndustry _has severa1 * WESfERN PAINTINGS, T~50 loc;;>~~e:J:~:. ~4~.:77and ~aip}s~~~ ' , 81:1.n Juan 644.·5620. -Lab/Setter pup. D a Y s tractive enthusiastic girl indiv. w/·"-'t ·-•. G•·eat . unmedmte operungs. bought and sold at 1550 So. GULBRANSEN spinet. Top 540-3036; Eves. 642-2820 needed for boutique. Must benefits ,ti j~ale~" Call Liz ')vertime. A. L. lndustnes, Drafttman C Coast Hwy, Laguna Beach. Gar•ge Sale 812 SM. WAL. & fonnica din. cond. Reasonable 552-7315 If A BEAUTIFUL chocolate be 18 or over. Expe1·. pref'd. Blake, S33-2700, Also fo'ce 164.l E. St. Gertrude, S.A. A . 1 . d. * OLD BRASS ca Ii h set, drp-leaf · table & recording ans Iv number point w/3 little kittens, kit· ~~a$e!r ~.;ii aW~~j. Jobs. Dennis & Dennis Per. * 979-5940 * so~~·1ogrc-d~=;~uh~~~ Register at 1550 South Coast SO~EmrN~ for ev:l'Y'?.~· ~~~' 6 ft. dresser & SPINE:f-Console-\Valnut tens must go ~·/mama, sonnet Agency of Irvine, 2082 TYPIST an interest In learning PC Hwy, Laguna Beach some an q, an co· mll'l'llr $70. Dlnette/4 chrs $450. Like new. Will trnde 962-an7 A\'e, H.B. MieheJson Dr. k lectables, some junk, some $40. 4 match. end & cof. tbls for Baby Grand. 646-524(} ~BO::EO-IG°'E""-_m_al~e-cockapoo-,--,-,3 SALE:S rep for Ooral rental RE PRO wor . Appliancn 802 gd. furn. & lamps, baby . $A0 set. Singer port $35. 2 •-service, no investment. Full Sec'y Trainee $475 Production Control clothes & furn, sharp sew. cab $10 ea. 2 metal bk. STUDIO Piano, m<ll. old, bad puppy sbo,., or Pa.ft ttme. Make An About Face ln Lite , Schffuler HOT Point Re.big. xln't, clothes maternity & regular, cues $4 ea. 642-m2 best offer. Good personality. 979>-ltt"j. THE TWO OF US w/new start 'in this f'Stab-TYPIST Some college prefe~ed. 1·2 :i:f.·· El~lr~r ~~~ several famllys lnvolv~. 6-STEREO: Quadrasonic 200 * 673-8457 * * PREM'Y Calleo female ( 646-2612 or 642-2516 lis~ecl bank •. Pt'o1notions & Yrs exper. production con· Schwinn 10 spd. $ 45 ., 1~ · s.t7 8681 Shannon River watt receiver, Garra rd PIANO, Haines Spinet, like cat, must find home 900n. I raises on n1cr1t. No regimen· trol scheduhn~: You must Cabinet Stereo $50. Twin Cir. F.V. Green Br 0 0 k mode I . System ii ed new. Beaut walnut $395. Call 645-7132. l Secretan"es 1ation here. Call Lynn have the ability to deal Beds Call &15-5iso or Homes. turntable, tape deck, 4 675-0367 or 675-3300 FML. DANE. Nds room to l\farsh 833·2700 Dennis &: An immediate opening exists w/all levels of personnel 646-758& GARAGE Sa.le -Lady Ken-spea k ers. New & S I M h' 121· run. Xtra love. 1 mos. Denni~ Personn~I Agen<:y of for a rep~ typist. Experi-within other departments. more washer, elec dryer, xuaranteed (slight 1 y ew "9 •c IMS Gentle, hie. broke o . TYPl'sts Irvine, 2'082 Micttel'°'1 Dr. ence requlred. Repro Typist AUTOMATIC wlllhers: GE, like new. Garden tools, scratched), Compare $400. BARGAIN HUNTERS 586-1869 ' Must be . late model, xlnt cond., $65. tables. tamps, clothing si. Now $190. Terms. 893-0501. GERMAN She...._,. I H .. ~. I SECRETARY Apply In Ptrton . an excellent typist Frig, goOO cond. $35. Ken· 10, dishes, lrg elec fan, PICASSO L'th •« 0 1. SEE THESE FIRST! t"'M'"'" Free-to I Earn Your Pay Tho Kelly Olrl Woy Work directly wi the coo· w/a nun. of 1 ~ exper. more, xlnt cond. $65. Free hairdryer, etc. 10165 Oriole, Et h' 17•5 ° '!iro"'.""" L'Ua 1 White Zg Zag in waJ cab. Mgoodix. 00F•mmle.· C3all ~~ ......... 1' '1• II I 'dl . 3333 Harbor Blvd. w/1:1 computer assu~ted text delivery/guar. "'" oo72 or F t V1 ....,.. """" c mg " .,. ' io o•tly $19 95 --tro e1· o rapt Y gro"'lng ed ti st h rsr..t ;.HQ-OV oun · y. ;;JUV"VMolU. $150 Re b ndt Et I. ' .......... "..... . FREE Klnl!NS ' firm. No !>11 req'd. Good Coste MeN, Calif: 1 ng sy enl sue RI> • 847-8115 , , ·• m ra cling Singer Touch & Sew .• $89.50 j innth aptitude helpful. Sal. . ... :!"~~!:rs or ITEL Dura O'KEEF~ & MelTitt Con· Delux Gar ... Sale '7Y ~thers. Pvt P ~ Y Singe1· 221 Feather W. l59.95 * ~ * i Dno Time P /Tlmo ·Or All Tho Time "'"" to ti'.NI, Cali K,.., \Ving. /dbl Everyt:hmg A·Z Singer Portable $9 95 · 1 540.6oos~Coastal ?;nonnel Clerk Typist tempo gas range w ov. 2682 Club Mesa Pl., C.M. MOBILE car phone, can in· I ALL cuARAfITEEO! ' NINE yr. ol<t M Samoyed i Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd., Filing & processing o.f olfice ~~= ~l ~'oi.: June 14-17 stall re11110nably prit.-ed. NO GIMMICKS! (dog) to id. home w/lots , CM. . ~upply purchases. Lite t~ love seat $2'5, ·847-6942 Household Goodl 814 968-1797 Repair all Se~ing Machines of yd. 979-9939 ,_ j in;::. R W -L /D M' tlla u & Vacuwns, in Costa Mesa •• KITTENS•• SECURITY OFFICERS ent aaners ryers 143' YDS. of gd. shag carpet •; t.-"_.'° 1 over 11 years. Sincere Sew. 9 wks old, sort i&: loving You'll \\'Ork for us on our payroll In our cu1>ton1ers of- fices. Just see Kelly Girl, then pick the hrs, days, length of employment that fits your needs. 0 u r customers get the skill~ they need. Not w h a t ' s available. Weekend 3 shifts open. Own If you meet any of these $2. Wk. Full maint. reduction, Wrong c 0 I 0 r . ar -820 ing Machine &: Vacuum, 1878 -• • • 4oo:.6739 • • • car & phone req'tl. Prefer J;",..ual Or.nnr. Employer m/t crualilicatlons & are looldng * 639-1202 * $1 .25 per yrd. 646-8679 Harbor, 646-9742. PUPPIES . ' ~ p ~ ._,,,.... (or a position w/a growing ACT NOW!! men over"-'· lant in Irvine Orl\nge County co. that of-FREE Pick Up, Re.trig & 0 0 ENT GS NEW home console se\\·ing Dobennan-U\bradOr ., 1 complex. U . Warr e n ' TYPIST fers xlnt pay & benefits Appl. Running or not, old lewelry 115 LO RI AL RU ·machine. Good condition. 6 v.1<s. * * \ 833-3000, ext 191, 10 am·2 pm car Batts or scrap metal. urgently needed! Any size. $40 * 673-2864 ~-2 old I Mon lhru Thurs. l\fatured individual w/min. Please Apply In Person GTa-525S DIAMOND Wedding set, (714) 635-1825 FREE to good home yr 1 typing skill of 65 w.p.m. on Or Contact new, Flawless pert. Have OLD ORIENTAL. RUGS. Sporting Goocf1 830 white poodle. MS-$914, ~ • SE!\11 or retired n1an for golf IBl\1 exec. Lite sh desirable. B KRA FREIGHT Damage Sale on appraised SUSO cost, .1 ct-. 6. range, Inside or outside. Will be responsible for all • FKA new Hotpoint & Whirlpool Setviceman goingoverseas, W1I pay ~10 )/tl more cash '72-'73 KNE,ISSL Super c•::.FREE---,-0-Spe-cl~al~~--.-,: Also mechnnlcn11y inclined typing, correspondence, tiles 2722 Michelson Dr r err i g I v.•a shers/dryen must sacrifice $575. Ca.II than top $ payers. Eves. Shorts 180's w/Geze step Labrador retriever. . • Call or Visit for Go-Kart track, inquire & telephone. Small ore by 545--0780. 548-9514 545-5070 masters. Good cond. New 838-9577 FIOOatrgroF' . undo' CGolf Range. O.C. Airport, lfrs. 84:30. Irvine e DISHWASHERS, washers, Miscell1neous 818 ORIENTAL RUGS $100. Now $.la!. '72-'73 Ka.a-TTENS 3 .. ~ all' r., .1'1. · Good tartl•"• sal"'"" + paid UJ.2400, ext m d bit ,,~ ·ue CPM 70 19 5' s 5 Kl • .....ate. > s ''el ~,, ryers, re ' guarn ~ WANTED. Pay top cash, . w/Solomon sos·s: New $210. black/arey stripe. 6 ~)Qi I S~lf!~CEsalcSstam.cneedn w1'1u4be.pun,•,~ '"1'· vAac 1" MprofiFr't .m,_~rin30g EqunJ Oppor. Employer delv'd. 8.19-7620; 546-5218. 2 PC. corner couch; 12,600 644-2800, ext 377. Now $125. 9= "'I aft 6 pm.· old, real cute! ~ 2061 Business Ctr Dr lrvlne 133-1441 Acro&I from QC. Airport .... "" Pan. PP Y OO· J ... : • ELECTRIC dryer Penncrest', BTU air cond: V\V 'trailer ,........,.. per. Full or p/Ume. Also Communicatioru. Co n1. top col'ldJtion $7S. hitch, floor wa."l(er; 2 • 9xl2 WAN'.fED to buy, Ilk~ new GOLF clu bs w/bag $50. 2 KITTENS 8 wk!;. n1an w/smog Ile. & some ponents Corp., 3CXX> Air.vay Vet Assistant Trainee 640-04TI carpets; Craftsman 18" dial· furniture & lamps, ruce & wh/lifl set $15., bikes 2 for 1 blk & 1 blk & white -Ute mech. exper. Apply Ave., Costa Mesa, (Near Cut. As A Kitten adjust moo'et; reel edger reasonable 644-4681 $30., n1otorcycle bumper 96:8-0530- SECRETARY. p/tlme for Arco Station at 17th & Baker & R·edhUI). Purrfect spot lor animal RECOND. APPUANCES mower: 40" table lamp. BUYING gold & silver US rack $10. 644-8741 FREE to special home, law office in Fas:hion Island, Irvine, C.M. lover w/wonderful doctor Dellver-ed · i'IW'• Dunlap:s, 968-0052; coina.-€aH-for-appralsal 6 ")fake Room For Oti.ddy" male Pedigree Poodles. N.B. Call 644-5040. SERVICE station salesman. * TYPISTS * "''ho seeks. kind indiv. to 1815 Newport, CM 548-77!K) FOR Sa.le: One upright 19 cu. pick up. 673--03)7, pri pt)', , , • clean out the garap 5.,19:-.lS«l SECRETARIES $50C4700 Full time eves Min 2 yrs. Register for assist in animal care. Call AUTOMATIC washer, elec-ft. freezer $60. Good con· WANTED to buy ladies 3 ... turn that junk Into c_.b Any day ia the DESI' DAY t.e..et Stt'ys $550-$675 experience. Lite mechanical a 1emporary job 'Marion ~fann, 833·2700 Den· trlc dryer. Excellent con-dition, also one refri--tor wheel bicycle with a Daily Pilot Claasl.fled rUn an ad! Don't delay. a~k Typists $400 knowledge, Neat , ~ today nis & Dennis Penonnei dition. S90. 646-SMS. $30. One blue shag "g~'x"' l2 493-1307 ad. Call 642-5678. ... .call-today ~ 100010 ,...EE f,°ewpoaran~. ~ply morns, t ntervv.•s: 9-12 :tf~cr n °~ Irvine. 2082 GAFFERS & Sattler gas n1g, used less than a year'.li'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.;iiiii;i;;;..,..,-.,:,,iiiiiiii&iO;iiiiiiliiiilliia,i,;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiioiii-;.~1• 11 rft • \\'e Need All e 80 r. stove. Good condidon $50. $50. 1929-B Anaheim St, LOOK Liz ntb1der'1 Agency SERVICE Station Salesman bttice Skills \VA ITER over 21, full & • 548-9535 • Costa Jl,fesa. 45(1() Campus Dr. full or p/time. Over 18. Equal Oppor. Employer p/tin1c. Tu·o Guys F1-om FRIGIDAffiE auto ~'asher,;;r c~E°'R°"E"'o", =Sa~cn~.,~;c-,-~5a1-,1·11 ~2118 Newport Beach Neat appear. Will train. Ap-l\fale S: F cnlale Italy. 2267 Fairview Rd, CM 1972 model \.\'S-4. SlSO. Gan-ard model, systemized SJ=~_..EJc~.Ru~c(u!"o:pi.j t'.1t. 2500 Newport Blvd ., ,:~s~::v:~~ ~~~: \\'AITR.ESSit ~neephoShop,at~· 968-5296. changer, stereo receiver, air .......... • Re I tn Se I t . h nd N<.'\\•port Beach per over. . o ne c s. Auction 804 speakers, tape deck jacks. kr seU starter. p y 2rv1 s !J.·hrug t atte ant -540-0325 Kona Lanes, 2699 Harbor, Still in box, compare $190. cord. to . Pt'ttnonnelDr, ~~~ Sh~i'1. t¥t~ is J~~n:. ~ at ~ .... al Oppor. Employer Co.sta ?.lesa. KENMORE washer & dryer, Now $85. Or termit. 893-{)5(11. 300, 2360 Hun ngton • .,.,, """'u \VAITRESSES, Housekeepers G.E. TV, E"I'C. REALSILK. Inc. Now in the Marino, Ce.. 9U08 SERVICE Sta. Attendant. & Laundry Help, Apply i.11 * 548-7126 * Harbor Area. Men's, S.Cretary/Recept. r:pe~rsoi:,atixJlt~~ci7t~p~r. UNSKILLED person. on~y. Newport Villa, Bulldln9 Materials 806 Women's and Children'11 Ap. lmmed. opening. Tustin area. Costa l\lesa. 4000 H1lana Way, N.B. _ pare! brought to your home. for sharp young typist Sh S e 5 I B 'Id " Since 1920. Te I e phone prefd 832-6293 . SEWING Machine orrators, ASSEMBLERS WAITRES EXPER. urp UI. UI 1119 979-0067 to see our line. ' ' heavy duty. Wil traJn. Full & p/lime. 1.fust be over MATERIAL • lOOO's Of NEW SECRETARY Califomla Koko :P..Iats, Call . 21. Xln't hours. Surf ,f.:. Sir-ITEMS! Doors, lumber. ply. \VE consign and sell used Admlnl1tr•tlveinA~1~'t 1 betwn 9-S, ~2278. Femolo loi n, 5930 w. Coast Hwy, NB. 1wooc1! ... ~~. sheeting, mold· ~~o~~~totfj~sA,B<>ii~ris 1: Caretr oppty for te en , WANTED t ng, wu KNW!,r etc. ' motivated, organlied i· SHIPPING CLERK No FH•-Top e:e: ma ure women to BUILDER:. SURPLUS us! rd ..-'" care for 5 chlldttn ages 5-~~--------11 vidual with proven reco 20 Hr wk. $2,fJO hr. Ask for 15, 5 days a week g,.5 p.m. 2406 So. Main st., S.A. PRIVATE conecuon paint. or succen. Require business Jan. 642-341'J. C.M. Call Immediately Summer o!lly, to Start 6118. Mon thru Sat 10.5 ings and various items · writing . and typlnr skills SHOE aal h 11 , Weekends Included t Atl k c n4: 5*-1D32 phone mornings for appl plu1 ability to nleet deari· bootery, esF, ; ...... :~ dr,~,nand'. <fMV· a \\'ee · .M. area. Call 644-7220 -~· ~ p p s 546-8456 alter 5:30. Camer11 & -""'-"=------lines. Excellent compensn· Part or full time exp • WH E . BOS 'N'TN matll'C'SS & springs, ~· benefits, and chall~ge preferred. Excel ~nefits • • 0 WAN'J'S TO \VORK? qu1pm1nt S20.00; hand la"'11 edger, m an exceptional environ· plus profit sharing. Mr. DRIVE A CAB! . $6.00; pink girl's lamp, m.ent. Please. submit yoUl' Milter 644-2464 Pacific Ptrtonnel CHfor~~u-'.:'11"'behours, work TINIKJDN ID4-alEMI Od • $3.00. 646-1287 resume and history of eam-Services, Inc, ,,u '""" • your own 1urs-une ay. ings lf )'OU qulll(y. Your SHORT order cook, 6 day!I' a bo6s. iten or "-omen. Can See latest equipment! i todelg \VALNUr triangle end table letter or transmittl\I should week, Monarch Bay Beach 500 Newport Center Dr. be &lightly handicapped. to photograph! "ith sheU $15 Gold and list and describe how yoor Ou.b. Mus.I be. fast, ap-Suite 900, N.B. Ne a t-tlean Appearance. PHOTO MODELS ,cry!J!al chandelier $ 4 0 most valuable aklllll would phcants 1nterv1ewed 6/12 640-.1970 ·Vts, retired. Age 25 to 70. Fri A Sat June 15 &: 16 897-8178 contribute to the success or le 6/13 at El Niguel Coun· ·~ SU~plenaent your incon1e. Factory .fepresentatlvi:il'I WANTED . USED a dynamic orpniiadon. Re-try Club. 23700 Club House 24 Central Tower, Orange Drive a. cab 6 hrs o• more a Harboi' Photo, 3121 E. est. ORIENTAL RUGS · ply in confidence to: class!-Dr., L.N. Mr. Russo. r -547"'6446 day. Aptly in person, Hwy, CdM, (Parking behind Will pay cuh. Pleue ca 11 tJ,ed ad •61'6, Daily Pilot, SUMMER Work. H . S . Equal Oppor; Employer Yellow Ca Co., 186 E. 16th .~U:cC~Baill)~.,·~---~ ~lc;:21oo3.:,.l .;:8;.;7'-:.:284"'-'2..:co::;:::llec=t. __ P.O. Box UEK>, COlfa,..Mesa~, Bo Ya Ip l r I I . Le a r 11 St., Cost. Mesa. _ _ HANIMl:X_ .Praktica w/thni SONY TC-353. Super· scope Ca. 9'826., -Marketlne tn your own UTILITY MAN .t: Finl!•hers. Wholesale Nur11ry lens focutmg, intern'-1 light ste!'eo, tape record .... , brand neishborhood. Work your S I t nd t t 50m I ,.. own houn. 557-8321) between Exper. nee. Top wage1, uper n • en me er, in ens, case, ne"" 1 on T.V. Retail value, SECRETARY 5-8PM good working l'Ondl. Xln't Large wholesale nursery In ·$100. 546-0037 $400. Sac $250. 962-1464 benefits. Apply In person, So. Orange Co. Is expanding Furniture 810 4" TV & radiQ, Runs on bat· Pormo-1 openings TE L EPHONE Anawerlng """""I .n.lnirnuID 60 A Service, Beach area. Prefer ·~ minimum 80 over 3/JJ::i,, of a&e. Varied. ~ay week A able to work ho\U'!I. eekends, 673-U66. Sat A SUn. TELEPHONE Sales. Work DIS_,,, •ND from your own home . . ft5 • .,... Highest commlssloM. Ex· Call ?don-&\t lOA.M....fPM perlence not nec:elW')'. 714:~' ext. 678 892-5184 An F.qua1 O p port u n l t y ~TELEPll-~..,...O-NE~-,.-11-cl_to_n_ betwn 9arn & 3Pm, Levitt & needs gen'l nunery•I-;.;.:...;.;.;.::._ ___ ...;..;.;; I tery or elect. Aid tape, Clonstruction Co, 10800 liuperlntendant. Must hnve 3 WANTEP 10 buy Uke-new rec, boob, records. 536-8539 Kalama River Rd, F.V. yrs supervisory ex per., furniture & lumps, nice & v At.ET park! art time knowledgable in all phases reuonable. 644-4687 HA VE you lost your Shaklee Good drivin;'°~. Alk or nut!IC!ry pi:oJuctlon. Xlnt THREE aolid teak low-line diatrlbutor? Call Marilyn, for Carol, ~ll.86 salary & t;em;flts. Send chairs wtth cushions $22 ,8<16-=:::24=94:.:.·c_------ll resume to Callssifled ad m . each. 646-58()4 SHAG carpets, drapes. hang· 879 c/o Dally Pilot, P.O. Ing and floor lamps, diottte, Box 1560 Costa Mesa Ca, FULL din. rm & br liU\le, misc .. all rsnbl. 586-1261 92626 ' ' washer & dryer & several IRVINE Coast Country Club • • • IT'S GARBENSTANGEL-TIME! USED GARBENSTANGEL Must have ritllt-hlndfll, zoen1Wt with power dlp- poleck. Would accept W"" !y model with batter:r op. e r a t e d lllddlebottom. Wrl~: Ouslfled ad No.. 174, DAILY PILOT, P.O. ox 1~ Celt& Mtsa. CA ' If you truly understand garbenstangels it's time to garben • If you don't understand it may already be too late but, what the heck, send in the coupon anyway EmpJoyer needed. • SotretorlH e Typists Calls:tt;..2593 URGENTLY NEEDED . antiques. 96&-67'72 If be hi to l STROLL-0-Chair complete ~11 :;s..~':' p r aa e. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I r:o ~;,';~~~,22 Call alter ~w=.=-."1ec1:::.,::.o:;r::,1ent-..:.1..:R~ ... -, -II : yes, I will build a 9arben1tan9el =or -1.unch • : TIME FOR • Unllrllled AMmblrt ~'ifJEs TIRE Sl!RV • e O.n'I Laborers Rafa Jmmed. Exw. • VDL T · • Tiro Service Mon · ln1tonl Por-1 • Retell Selosmon Temporary SttV:lce • Brake Mtch•nlcs 38'8 campus Dr., Suite 106 Sat I 0mun1 co pd btnetltis N~Jttt Belich 546-4741 Apply n Permn Equal Oppor. Employer ,. ~ C:~ Blvd. : slcRl!TARY-SALl!S ... rnteresttn1 secretarial porl· I tlon In Mitt:' depl:rtment of Electnnk:1 tlnn. LoCated in ll'Ytne lndustrill compl,., I MUii be Independent work· ·l'I',' (IOl>d t:ypl1"11 tklU11 Aixlnt. phone ~tty. Age 25- tf;. Stattine salary range Is ~~lb. TIME FOR D,AIL Y· PILOT . CLASSIFIED ADS CALL 642-5678 -GENERAL LABORERS -UNSKILLED PACKERS Int.rim P-nnel S.l'Ylce 17511 lrvlne Blvd., •115 Tl(llln . 13"5460 &ddteback PlR!U\ Bldg. Equal ()ppor. Employer ·. DAILY PILOT Selling .tJo~r:;,m,.,,.,ances ~.ty&iZ'iS'a'l. :=. Ulied • search for one I can put in shape for exhibition at • •mi ... 644-1530. MUST .. n ; 6-18, Antq. chr. • the DAILY PILOT-South Coast Plaxa Build A Better • WANT AD &42-5678 Daily Pilot Classified ~~:~.~lni~~, ... ~bl:;,,,11 ~;.;.~:~~·:ti: 61~,;2:" : Garbenstan9el Contest and International Reily.. • cabinet, de•k. ~ DECORATOR clock black $8. • Please tell me more. ' : ~ev~rF:~. ~~orEAJss~ ~~e:rs ':hll~$1to ~~~~d, • 1 NAME -···-····-... -... ~ .................................. : ............................ -....... -............... -.-• 961r7910, .uauauy l.:.me. LAWN VACUU'M. • • -·oMASVlLLE d 1 n t n" sas.. • ADDRESS • 'i.:ble, with 6 Ctlln back 536-Zlii!I • .. ·· ··· ···· ··· ·· ········ ···•··· ........................ . 4cha~::· ::,12 dlntng 1~n ':!~::~ uw, + cltlien • CITY ... _, .. ,_ ............................................... --.. -................. ZIP -···-···-............. -: =:1:::.~: ~mw, 21> IJl. ~-=.: llceplng : PHONE ··-·-··· . .... .... . -· ... AGE --·-··--·-• You don't netm a gun to bag, used twlct, $ 3 0 . • 497 •-• Mllll•t9: • ''Draw Fut'' when. }'O\I. ,c:;.:,,-•o;•~=-~--~--1 plt(.'e a.n •d In Ulc Oa.lly FRENCl l I~"· \\'hlle chest • "••ettt.1 M.....,, DAILY PILOT. P.O .... 1560, e ... MeMt C•. tW6 PU<)t Want Adil! Cllll rcw of dM'ITS. 9 drnT, w/mlrror • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • -&12-567t $50, 138 E. 18th Clll 54Hl85 • • I ' ·' I -· • . . "" • I .r .•"" • • I • PILOT-ADVERTISER .za WtdntSdai, Junr 13, 1973 DAILY Pl~OT ---IM I _ ...... I~ 1 '~ ;;-;;;;;;·;;-~~ 915 Motor Hornft Y.:.;o::n:::;•:::::-:::::-:::--"963,;;;;J'A~utos~~·!lm:!Jpoo~r1~od!__:.97_::0~J Autos, im....,... 970 Autos, lm!'!'fel! 970 s.10/Ront 940 . RC ES B S.\VE A HOMELESS PET 2 G<mlle Ckldt..,., approx. 8 ·oo CESS!IA tlfl, ..;;.=="'---~;1 ~':to~= ~re;-. DATSUN ME ED ENZ VOLKSWAGIN MOVING to apt. btt to good home, Thorooahbffi! beagle I nl!lle 2'~• yn old. 548-6jGg FREE KrI"I'ENS male &: female .. after 5:00; 646-3572 • PRETTY Siamese cat, 4 )T. F1.xed, declawed, 11trictly in· dde.548-8970 FREE 2 male fhif(y white kittens. Call 536-1?338 6 FREE klttens. 2 Siamese, 2 Bi:wctt puppys, Oachshwld, yn. old, S250 ea. One l'Cg. E(fuipped. Rea90nabl,e price. SAVE 642-2120. Bia.ck Lab, Ktiim 1'enicr x, Appy Gelding ~ yrs, L6l-l.1,97"!).'-1162=::.·_______ $ SALE $ Cknnan .s.Ju:n.JLcu:,dJ.., __ JIJ!t!!!!!llon, _well Compo•• Solo/.Ront920. Autos W~tod 968 ~ Samoyed, m"''Y r""' mixes. •iill1fll. ii003 PI • a'" re1----'--''--'----$1000 DA:TSUNS 534.3228 or ·I~. ho~. good potential shO\\' CAMPER. ~~ cabOYer. s·. TOP o EDIENCE ass to s1.a11 horse. $800. AllK> 8 yr old BuUt.ne ice box. 3 burner NEW DEMOS 1973 JB 20 ·", 1·30 1110robred Jumptr, good In stove. O\'eO. Electric & 510'& unc , · pnt. the O•t • slnt jr ho,.,. hoOk S 4 • O 20' p A Plc·k"p Nev.'J)()rf Beac /Irvine area 16 I J-land TA I L y HO '''ater ..ups. " . ace now - 546-4928 ,. . !!:..." N , h 968·2"°4. After 6 Pl\! tln.ys DOLLAR 610'a · arms. ,1.ru.1. e w o p e, 530-li3J Lot DC!mo All l\1odels & Colorii 10 l\tOVL~G nlust nd hon1e for fountain Valley, 979-!}.175. · t-(Ser •3012'!!'00S3029l Clloose Frool, dogs. 1964 Ford for 1ra,rhs, 'TI I. T 0 N i; or d . MANY EXTRAS new motor u('CdJI. \"lllve11 chaqis-1nount, camper. 17' ARM RESTS 963-0376 i---...=...-j{-~} .custo(Jl 1JJ1. Ml~inedt.. ·u·~BA-E'.,..,___-11-~~pAID· L--10 ntil, like -hew. $7SO:I. -"" "'-· ·, -,-. ..., _ • -• 1- BEAUTJFUL mi ni at urc 213-442--4450 or 600-5743 6' REF RIG ·-·· :\!'u1pnrl D.1h1111 ; " " ' " ' ' I '"' ,. , , '" , ' • l' ' 4 " 50 USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY Sharp New Car '69 VW Bug w/'70 hi performance enttne, En\pl equipped,.. VWS ahiftct, ex· lnui. Must 00 driven. fll.56. 642--6JXI days, 645-7675 eves. * * * * '70 BUG, .unrf., AIR, r/h, 36M mi., belt ott. * 847...st60 * Trade-Ins Coming In ~vary Doy Ask Aboul ur Unique VOLVO Used Mere 1 Lus• 1---------·1 Pl~n• u,Olu House-of-Imports --" ""' 1 -- Pedigreed C e rni an TINTED G S Shepherd, n1ale, 3i,~ n105-* CAMPER Shells for sale LA S Had 2 shots $10. ;>m-.'illI> Boats/f.iarln• or renl. All makes & 8 PLY TIRES IMMEDI• 6862 Manchester, s-.na Park 17th Anniversary ,71 Datsun on the Santa Ana Frwy 523. 7250 , SALE gt'a)' & 2 black, I Ca.II 64&-9280 PLEASE SA VE US! P!aytW kittens looking for home. Litter tmd. ~65. FREE KITTENS, ~fixed co- lors. URGENT-Moving must SC'.'\I 904 nlodl'.'/s. 2941 Grace Lane, 413 ENGINE brother & sister Trish setter Equip. ..:8::1"""'-.::G,,, .::C'".M:::·c.._-~--UNI LOUNGE · Pickup '72, 450 SL. Ivory. Lo w/P•rris Vall•y·Campe:r mileage. all xtrrut 492-9667 pups-kept for rebreeding. M'Afl1NE JoUel Tanks . new, ~ER Shell -fits 1'\lrd FLIP SEAT AKC l'f'g. 546-2969 never used, 2·Tempo BIA 18 Courier, Toyota, Datsun, SEAT BELTS-ATE LY HJ'J5CXJ ) ~•oov.:;'";:;i"ng"'.:.· ------ mgm or 545-1~ 3 ?tfO. old F. Coeker/terrier, hse. broken. 8152 Opal No. A, H.B. 842-9274 COLLIES AKC Olampion bloodlines • * 491-0807 * • * 3 Puppies 1r to good homes 5B6-0081 after 5 Pl\f (2) Bl.AO. kittens 8 v.1ks. l M, 1 F, weaned & hsebrkn. Mother Russ Blu 642-7768. ,_ ... _ l!B Pets, General 850 AITENTION PETS! Home away from home, 'built just for you! Boarding/Grooming 546-2848 Dot• 854 IRISH Settf'r puppies. 7 \\'ks gal. saddle-tanks, height 14 Mazda 1?.U. SlSO. 96S-2404. $7399 old -;\KC registt>red . 5/8", length 58" -$65 each. alter 6 PM days 53().1233. Champion s1ock. 6 malr, 2 l-Mirax BlA 18 gal. bow \VE rent cabovers campers $2699 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA (emales. $100 efich. 554-0361 tank, height 8'.4 ", lenftth 38" fox· import & 8' trucks. Mesa CREVIER BMW FOR ALL GER.NIAN Shep. pup female x 23" x 8 .;;JMJ. 833--ll7l or Camper Sales, ~JG Harbor, 18881 BE1\CH BL. JH7-8555 5 mo top hlood line, xlnt 6-10-ll68 C.M. G46-4002. Sales -Service -Leasing HUNTINGTON BEACH temp. $50. 842.-2348 Boats, Powei: 906 REALLY clean '65 V\V Cant-208 W. 1st St., Santa Ana per ·van. New engi ne. 835-)171 FOREIGN 1973 DATSUNS GOLDEN Relrlever pupe;, male & female, 7 \vks old. AKC $75. 5:524178 BLACK n1ale Poodle. t ~.~ yrs, AKC reg. Xlnt \\'itil children. Call 96,S..8731 '72 24' SKIPJACK. THE 642-7985 or 55Z-8862 after 5. cN~E~W~~E~7J--'-~247'-7f-ll • xo orer, • " ALL MODELS S!pEWINDER, _ llybridge, * 8 'h • EL o OR Ao o equip Sips 8, air/gen, 2'l5 hp. OMC, 135 gal. fu~I , CABOVER "'Ith jacks, loY.'e!>t rates, no ntileage, IN STOCK full canvas _covers, Bimini clean make ofier. 548-1559 ·"="::.2-ll.::29=2-----~-CARS top & curtains. extra ba1-1-=="-' ==-="'-'=="-:c BARWICK IMPORTS tery, ADF, J\11.'I, VIIT, CB, Cycles, Bikes, 2r' TR~~· B am s~ _ 33375 Camino caplstram sea temp, sum log, trim Scooters 925 ;,m$l(XU~;0 +~til~. Tfi~ _ San Juiin Capiltrano tabs, broadbill chair, rOO' _.::..;;.:;:.;.:;.;;_ ___ ...;.;:: 64,,, '-'""" AN> 337" 331 •-l~lders, outrig~ers. deck1• John's Racing Cycles -c:o-~-=~::..,.~~-~--We Are In ...,,,. "'or ·wi" AKC Iri•h Seiter P"P" 76 Hgh~~ etc. Bnstol rooo. * BULTACO * Rent A Motor Homo Desperate Need '71 Datsun 510 Champion Pedigree, from $12.500. 54()-2715 or fM.-1379. HEADQUARTERS FOR for your Vacation 4 Dr SCOTTIE Puppy. female, AKC reg. all shots. $7:>. >l5-73Gl $75. 968-2971 1966 20· FISHING BOAT . * 531 6800 * Of Good Clean ~'='°:::,:::.:..:..---~ Gla'1ron w I Trailer. 150 DESERT, MOTO X TT • ' 4 Sod. only >;,IXJO mHes (363- POOpLE646--0-1 yr.1 dark hp Chevy motor Mer-crulser. Acces~r1es. 25· EXECUTIVE motor Foreign Cars CDV}. apncot. 142 01· a ter 5, Deep-V hull . Depth finder, Harbor !It \\II.son, C.M. home for renl. Fully self $'1399 548-l022 live bait tank. $3,500. can 646-4655 or 646-2428 eon!. 642-Zl50 Top Dollar-Paid ADORABLE mixed P"P•. 6 83().1710. After 6 oall 633-9264 * BICYCLES * LANDAU '72. sl"P' 6, 20·, For Or. Not! BITLLOYMOAXTAEY weeks. $5. To good home, SKIPJACK 20 .. 72 cruise or Raleigh & P•ugot 4L'r Doclge, lntmac. dual \\1.th lots of love. 837-4548. skt lo hours, Slee"" 4. head. NEWPORT CYCLERY roof air, $t3:995. 673-TI23. .. -CaU or come in to see us. l88.3l BEACH BL. 847-8555 ~EAtIT. Cocker puppies, 01;f;.;o;or.;cse;;.•c.._ ____ .....c8;;;.;56 Ne\v $9500. Now-$7500.; s· 2116 'Newport Blvd. REl\'1' our ne'v Luxury AKC, w/pa.pers. Call after -\\1haler type, for kids or On The 'Peninsula Jn NB LIFETlME! sips 6, air, im-NEWPORT HUNTING'l'ON BEACH 1 PM, 714: 826-829S. TAU.Y Ho Farms, offers ~lOrerl boat, 6 h1sp 1~vinru$450~e. 61>1700 mac. Pvt. owner.~ IMPORTS ·~~ATSUN11 sla' wag ne\\' REGIS. 3 mo old fem. Pit finest in hunter & jumper 67~19~: oaroc .... , · BICYCLE SALE Triilers, Travel 945 .,...,"". Sc S1995 am/hn 8 n .. 0 T . Sho training & lessons by E NEW SP 3100 \V. Coast H"'Y·. N.B. track stereo, auto trans, uu emer. ts Paid. Marcy . (Approved AHSA) 17, CABIN cruiser, newly 10 E~D ITALI,AN xlnl cnnd. ~1()..4349 or $Dl. Sell noo. 644-7011 judge. We have beaut new built, 0...ner must sacrifice B~CY_C~S $59.95. Beach ·~5 ~~~a~:.ve~~~r, g;~ -;=-;;-;:-.64;-i2,,·9"40°"'5"'°'-;-;:---l "9"79-"73~20'..,.-~-~-- OPEL ·n OPEL. Perfect condition. 22,000 n1i. Asking i2000 . 4~37. PORSCHE l\tUST sell '63 S. new tires, clutch. pa.inl, gas valve, R"a.s k e ls & more . s:r,oo. .ig.t-5834 '73 PORSHE 914 2.0. load· ed, immaculate, moving causes sale. 6115--3517 aft 6 pm. 1964 PORSCHE , red w/brougham, nu t i re s , 6#.1621 or 644-0027. 1968 PORSCHE 911 like new w/5 speed. Call aft. 6 (l ) 62·1-5600 '70. 911 E. Cpe, Sig Ornge, xlnt cond ., 33 M miles, atler 5:30, 847-7073 '72 914, Xlnt. Must sell. S3i:i0. 536-4<162 ·g7· PORSCHE 912. A!r-cond., xlnt cond. 5 Speed. $3000. * 493-3817 • RENAULT Huge Savings ! Prices Sturt At $4260 ~fode-i 144ES (1446344-385166) \Ve n1ake overseas deliveries See It • You'll Buy It ~Wl l.flDi& -YOLYD 19fii llarbor, C.M. Autos, UHd . 990 AMC ~ '10 AMERICAN HORNET Landau top, power steering, power brakes. automatic transm'iS!lion. (76-IAUK). $1889 GUSTAFSON Lincoln-Mercury JRISH SE:ITER PUPS 12x12 box stalls. Visit us at du!'.! to injury. Best o(fer. Bicycle!i, 800 £. Bal_boa 545-8424; Eves: 6424:1179, \\'E PAY TOP OOU.AR '72 240 Z, air cond, mag AKC, shots ln:i2 Newt)C)pe So. ·of 2002 S Greenville, Santa BNllvSdH .. IKl675-d72Sl2. ,\uthorized Mr. Day. FOR TOP USED CAil.S \\·his, lease for $126 mo. or '65 R-8 over 30 n1pg. • 962.2768 1r Warner. Fountain Valley or .A~n";a':.·.;'·~··1!'.484'!'.!_~=-~~7.l-;iif.C';;j;tiieai,'i'=i''·:.,.CD"o.;o I ·-'-"~=''==,....~-~-II O"" c"" · tr I ··•II•. =•5008. Runs .....M, "'>"::i(). ":' .....,... 16' TRAILER, sleeps 6 Y "' .... ts ex a c ean, ""' ""',..... _,..,...... .,_ AKC Sprin<>"<>i-Spaniel pup. call 979-9475. AS is 18' Deep v Classic. All 1972 HONDA CB 350 R frig see us first. 1 --=~~----, ----"""l--''.i-1'-"29=---- 16-')00 &•ach al \\lar11er llun1 ingto11 Br.ach 842-8844 * 1213) 592.5544 ''Home of th• Viking'' ·~-· 4 e erator, oven, toilet BAUER BillCK FIAT '· pies. Cham.. stk. hunt/pet. REG. Arab-Morgan, 4 yr mahog. T\\1.n 35's, tandem cyl. Custom headers. 1,600 $795 e e e 831 1'~ fi I E II · -.,..., 2925 Harbor Blvd. TOYOTA BUICK B. 1rfay 10th~ 6T.J..2445. lly. Beautltull dapp e grey, trailer. SS.SZ Larkport, l:IB, m~. xce cnt cond. $900. ,70 AIRSTREAM 1 cl••s A show pro-ot. Sat o Sam 8 o."·2342 aft 5 30 or "'"0038 . nterna-Costa ~Iesa 979-2500 '68 F1"at 850 Cpe AKC Old English Sheepdog ...., -,,--Qun -pm. trs..r ' :. """" tiona\ 27', air, All extras, pups, $1.00. & up. 836-4476 or 842-5945· '72 COBALT 18' 100 Mere. 57 bt\vn 12·3 John. ~2-0574 or 492-8209. 11\JPORTS \VM"i:ED Low Miles, A Real Nice Car. 893-0293 2 HORSES both 10 years old, hrs. fu lly equipt, brake trlr, '70 HONDA 350 SL $550. '61 &. TENT Trailer. N i m r 0 d . Orange County s (X DA224) GOLDEN Retriever Pups, one Fen1ale, one lilale. spare. Immac. Asking $4750. '68 i·amaha 100 Trail S.100. sleeps 6, $200. BILL ~f;.,~,Y~~OTA .$899 champ sired, AKC, O.f'.A. 962-8510 alter 5 p.m. 49:f-1015 ~3)k 5 HP Mini bike s , Call S49-0084 l88Sl B h Bl • IJ35.!;lfi7 5 YEAR old Sorrel Mare, 17' FIBERGLASS over wood, Ja~ shaft $lTS .. all 10 mi. =~.,,.::::::,=..::::"----eac · vd. BILL MAXEY = good disposition. ~2449 50 Horse Evinrude, 20 gl. Mint 962-392'l '65 SCOTSMAN Tr a v e l H. Brach Ph. 847-8555 ST. m;RNARD. male, AKC, , TrailC'.'r, 14', xlnt cond., sips TOYOTA 1~ yrs, Good natured. $150. WANTED Engtish saddle, gas tank, bait tank, con-73 WOMBAT Ma v rick 6 1550 =0 309~ Autos, Import.cl 970 -or trade. 842-5039 forward seat, used. 846-7426 trols, etc. $450. fi.IG-1401. shocks cus1om chamber ?.c' C'-:cc·o:-=~"'~~~-1 18881. BEACH BL. 547..:8555 1;-,i,~· GLA.'ITRON bo\\'l·ider, PP . .'s fast and n;llable xlnt 14 ~'' SCOTSJ\-1AN t t'a i I er e THE FINEST IN J-fUNTINGTON BE.\CH A CONVtNIENT SHOPPING ANO SEWING CUrDE FOR THE CAL ON THE GO. ,For an ad In Woman·~ World Coll Mory Both 642·5678, oxt. 330 quickie Wrap! l11stant Crochet • 7339 50 hp. l\ferc. Extras! Nev.' cond., must sell S:1fr.2irn ~-=c.•.:53&-::::c2::•'°'59'-=E'-ve='::.· ---USED IMPORTS e !-.10VING, 1nust sell. Fial 'TI Vanson trailer, bristol cond. USED BICYCLES Auto Service, Parts 949 e--rHE FINEST IN • 12~ Sporl Coupe 24,!XXI ti.1i, ;1500. 540-2TI5 or 544-1379. AU Types * 642-1272 IMPORT SERVICE e good cond. MI/Fr.if, air 14' FISH, ski, or runabout. 10 SPD bike ve-ry good cond ALL Chevy parts. Complete 1..'0nd , 586-6208 40hJ.> Evinrude elect, comp! 1t1.1i:;: or be•t 'o~•er. • 396 special hi perf engine, Do yourself a favor and come MUST 11 ;69 Fl ••• $685 540-009 .,.,.. " needs crank kit. '70 .Chevelle see us first. Open Tues. st' • at U'f equip. · 3· 646-6760 big block headers. 'TI . 350 and Thurs. ti! 9, Sat-Sun Spyder. Top shape many ex~ 14' Outbrcl 30hp Johnson f'OR sale, Ka\vasaki 90 block. 327 heads _ have new tH 5. ti-as. $1650. or Best oiler. elect. st. Water skis, trlr. Best offer. valve job. S42-ll50 or 494-8&17 after 5. Only $300. 968-0159. 536-9613 542-3843. (B 'R(WEAN AIJTD) ·n 850, 2 dr, \\'hite, stereo, Boats, Rent/Chart'r 908 '72 KAWASAKI, 2.10cc, xlnt WANTED: Chevy 2.83 com· .s... (wt!Rt<e) ~ 1'4,000 mi. 3.'i mpg, like new. cond. ;fro. plete engine in good coo-2100.-...,.c--eu-!440 $1175. ~16-2774. CHARTER 57' KETCH 836-0730 call aft 5 dltlon. Call 548-:ru2 '65 R~ over 30 mpg. Runs 1968 FIAT 850 Sport Cpe-. ''TIOGA." '69 HONDA 175 CL good cond good, $250. Gd. n1ileage. lo mi. Sac. No\v booking for spring & street or dirt $350 67l-3457 494-3429 * 8-16-5793 * sunlmer c.ruises 673-7139 AutosforS. l(;;l BMW HONDA Chet Sal!shury II ··~n"'°'HO'o"nd~a~SOO~~cc~.~B-,"OWn-~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;~~ ---------1--------- 675-8344 or Tioga, Box 316, Stock, perfect, $&45. or ot'. LEASE A 1973 'Tl HONDA,· 600 car, S/Shift Balboa Island 92662. fer. 646-4998 NE\V '57 diesel motor yacht. --"*"-''7l~H'-o"N~D-A_CB_l_75-.-Antiques/Classics 953' BAVARIA ~745.ml. $600. Aft. 5· for charter. Part day or Reasonable offer. trip, vel'y reasonable . Call 545--0879 aft. 6:30PM. Yachting Assoc., 646-0551. ,72 SUZUKI TS 90 Boats, Sail 909 250 miles $300 REAU. 35' Trimaran. fi1ultl-, Like New! 8.3S-l9l2 alt 6 pie· race \\•inner. Ri~ for 70 SUZUKI 250 Savage, good p errormance. £.'(tensively cond., many extras. ~ cruised. 1,;c!l6::3-:,.l::G:>;=,.=~---- (7l4) ~roJ.5 '71 ~ YAHAMA End:ro, ex. 19..18 CTIEVY Coupe, body and rrame good condition, 642-2156, RKreational Vehicles 956 '73 BLAZER, 4 \Vhl drive, 7000 n1i. Xlnt cond., must sell, 646--66.ll 1t SEAQUEST 1r eel CQnd, low miles, extras, Sips 5, g:al.ley, head. motor $600/offer. 642-TI48 after 5. 'l!,1B1fZ~ V8& 4 :WD, ~tra cushions. hinged mast. Xlilt. HONDA 350/4 1972. lmmac. 49z-9.ws 4~1397 tires. t. $5500. 846-2439 • $825. l\lr. Lang, 540-1301 ,,:::.~=·...:::.:...:::'.'---~~ GOOD SELECTION OF USED BMW's 1973 BAVARIA 1972 BAVARIA 1971 BAVARIA 1969 2500 1969 1600 CREVIER BMW Sales • Se.rvice -Leasing 208 W. 1st St., Santa Ana 83>3171 JAGUAR '7f JAGUAR XJ-6 SABLE Local L'1ll', low mileage, IOad- ed, (actory equipped, (SQr. #3154). PlllCED TO SELL $6789.llO ~}.l.!~,1 ·~~,:~'J ~~l t11t u1~1 . •. . 21' Cal, xlnt c.'Ond. 6 hp out· weekdays Trucks 962 ORANGE COUNTY'S brd, complete sail in· TRAIL bike street legal f75 1971 FORD Ran~er XLT. OLDEST '70 XJ..S Sedan. P/S, A/T, ventory. $.">j()(). 5 4 6-4 9 9 0 536-2459 * ton truck and ll1h If. Q disc brakes, air, AM:/f'M, 1vkdvs. Mo Amerigo fiberglass and Low ml. good oond. $5600. ~--.-~-----~. lrlr. :xlnt cond. Sail No. Sale/Rent 940 1vith exlras, fully sel!·con-1960 J AGUAR XK150S, not 2737. Sll95. 5 4 o -5 5 5 o , e SAL ES e tained. Like new condition _ old English -junk. $1200. 497-1007 e SERVICE and mu•t be ,,.,.,n lo he ap. SALES.SERVICE-LEASING 673-I644. 12' KITE, No. 706, xlnt. • preciated. 23,000 miles, OVERSEAS DELIVERY J_oA.cGo,U::Ac,R::._~XJ~.,~-.7~1-, ~i-m- eond, r,n rove,., 2 ,.,;1,, • RENTALS • • Phone 54"'4348 • ROY CARVER, Inc. maowale white/blaok in· yrd. dolly, $5$. 962-6772 or '68 CHEV. J,2 Ton with ...,A E 17th St. terior, Priced for quick 673-4432 camper shell. V-8, stick shift, Costa M':sa · 54s-.w44 sale. 642-3121. HOBIE Cat 14'. 2 sails. 2 sets EXPLORER radio. Camper shell fully ':'."'~~~~--~~~1-'-~-"';M:-;'AZ~;;D~;---- Halliards, trlr/cxll'a 11·hc.>el. OF paneled & insulated. Very 1967 Bl\l\V, aJOCI CS ClaMic A 4M-2982 HUNTINGTON BEACH good condition, has only 28,000 orig mi. Beautitull--------- '72 CORONA MARK 111 1968 SKYLARK 2 dr. spor1 Cpt'. Y·8, nil·. J)~T. XJnt. ro'nd. Orig. 01,·11er. l\1ust sell in1med. S.%-104B. 4 Dr SedRl1, Auto Trans, Alr Cond, {Ser •ITJ56 ). DEMO $2899 ll\,11 ·q111?• 11\nt Lll~· ll' lw..:JI "'111 ' \li.0' . "'-" ., ' . . . TOYOTA 17th Anniversary SALE Prit·es S1an Al $2399 '73 COROLU (KE2007l2S54J nm Lt.WU -TOYOTA 19El6 J.[arbor, C.i\f. 646·9.?.03 '71 TOYOTA MARK II WAGON 1\uto Trans. (903CQQI $1999 ~ll\.in1111•; ll\11hll'• rooun , .ici.., .Ail>~ ~,.. 1 .. .. ' '72 Toyota Cerica 4 Spd, '}'actory Air Cond, 175:~El\Rl. $2699 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 BEACH BL. 847-8555 HUNTINGTON BEACll '69 TOYOTA LILUX PICKUP (ZVE522J $1499 ~l!J.trq llE• 11\nt!ll'• l(lm l l W;o.,:q _:,,,I ~l\Xl . . . . '68 RIVIERA. Lo mi. full po\\·er, 1tlr , bank rmanctnr. 6n.3700. '63 BUICK LaSahre, fair body, runs good. $140 cash. :>16-0S'lO CADILLAC - '.~ -~- EL DORADOS 14 TO CHOOSE COUPES-C.'ONVERT IBLES • DE VILLES 38 TO CHOOSI! COUPES SEDANS C.'ONVE:R'l'IBLES l\1any exc.-eUent colors Choice or interiors •Cl<>th & lea1her) f'a('tory air conditioning f'ull po\\'er -Oioice of: Stt•reo AM /1''"1\1 radio Crui11e cont rol Trunk opener & more AU in immaculllte 1..'00dition Largest sclec.1ion in Orange County Nabers Cadillac AlITlfORJZ ED DEALER 2000 liARBOR BL., -CXlSTA li-IESA 540-9100 Open Sunday 1971 Eldorado, The bNf. Cadillac rolor combo ever, coco w/tan landau top, 29,000mJ, brand nu 11U belted tires, till whl, ant/fm, a/c. p/w, only $5600. 545-9119 days R:30-6.00. '72 EIOORAOO, brown ~/leather. xlnl., every op- tion, private party. $8895. 646-4'1!18 '68 CAD. Conv. white w/Red leather interior. Ex c . Cond. 979-UI07 '70 CADILLAC Conv. E:<· ceptlonal-eoml. All xtras. Price reduced 673-5507 '73 Cpe DeVille 'b1 TOYOTA Corona 4 tlr. Call Aft 5, 557.9271 Well-kept, 545-1693 or '5fl CADlLLAC gd eng needs . ' 42 000 il . auto, $3000. S32-5990 or BOB LONGPRE SANT ANA 22. Fleet cham· lBSOl Beaeh Blvd, J!42.Jl81)3 · m " ong. owner. 54S-9IOO. pion. Owner anxious. $3500. HUNTINGTON BEACH S44-8874. ' 549-3T;i6. Ask for Gary lrllns $100 or make otter r 9301 SIZES 2-8 Call 534-5321. '72 FORD Rangec XLT Cam-CAPRI MAZDA' CAL 25, r acing sails. MOTOR HOMES per Special, % ton, auto. Many xtras. Sleeps 5. Apollo, Pacesetter, Bar 0 n p/s, p/disc/b, split win. "I ·~ 243 J • dow. dbl tanks, $100 & take ~ NOW OPEN ·' nt con<!. '"'1"" l. amboree, Robinhood • over payments. Must sell! . 14' Sunfish sailboat We've got 'em at ~2676 aft. 4 PM '!" Pick garden-gay pastels for and trailer. $550 KENDON u1ese cuddly, l\ghl tops. * n4 963-5406 * M . (2) 6' Utility tool boxes S60 ' All Models Ready INSTANT TOPS! Cmcbd OTOR HOMES ea. Maooal lift gale $15. NOW OWN THE vest of wo,.,ted or n,u, FL I PPER.8' flbergl..,. Will fit °""""" '546-8672. FABULOUS 1973 For IMMEDIATE !lynllwtic Crochet cape with Fully equip, clean. $250. 707 N. Harbor, S.A. S-17-8U5. . D I' j,Osy m.,,ia111on yoke in lhree call b'?'.l-1933. • 554-0033 CAPRI e tvery! QUICKIE \V r a P for colors of worsted. Patten1 KITE No. 313, boat covt'r, 27' 'fRAVt"() ·~e"' B~~~~~~· s~!· With 2,000 4, cylinder o; V-6 2CJ01E.1st SANTA ANA ',wo""!h, ,i1n,,~la,.0Y~,.. \•Vhllm·ep '"tia't~!1en·; 7339: child's s~es,.,-?-12CEJncNJT8. good cond ., needs paint, 2? 25' UtJt:OVERER 645-8382 edng!ne, with or '."'t'1uiout 558--7$71 "" 11f ,..;..., 1fT ... 1" ... .. ~ "" -.. u SEVENTl'·c••._; '$325. Da.y!I 642-3776. '-22' CONTINENTALS ecor group, smne WI ~sun "Easy to Reach" bind oU brightly. Costs pen· for each pattern_ add,25 14, CATAMARAN + trailer 20· Pltll)E ~JOYS '63 CORVAlR P. Up, xln't roof or landau top, power * M d ,73 R * 'TI TOYOTA land .. 4 wheel 642-2$9 evenings dr., $2700, clean, Jlunt. Bch. 1009 CAO. Sedan De ville. 968-3474 l..01v mi. xlnt. cond. piiv. TRIUMPH ~· 64<-2614 1------------1 '71 CPE de Ville. Showroom TRTUMPH TR4A. '66, Super llC\\', 20,00J' mi. Every Csd clean. Ne1v top, uphol, 0"1 ion. $4500. 675-5232 radial!f, lrans, c 1 u t ch, CAMARO. valves, brakes; radiatbr, -----------1 $795. pwner. 540-1055 '70 TRIUMPH Spitfire, ne\v radials, lo n1i's. $1595. Call ~9280 VOLKSWAGEN C'°'i\tJ\RO '68 SS, 350, 4 speed, $1~, ntusl sell. 5.57-5633, cnl\ between 12-7 am. '70 CAMARO SS 396, AJr, .C spd, mags, radio, & ht:altr. af1cr 5 pm. 6ia-39l>. nies to 1nake. No fillin g p~ cents for each pattern for + extras. Exctllent COi\· • VAN CON~t;fiSl:>NS cond, New tires. $495 or best disc brakes, style steel •1 • otary lems, opens tin! for lronini:;. Air Mail and Special Handl-dition. 8.tT-3111 -1<1 e SelVice e Rentals of.fer. 646--1~7 aft 6. wheel, radial tires, buckel $66 MONTH Pl:inted Pattum 9 3 01 : ing; olhenvisc third-<:18.'IS * D I * '68 CJ-fEVY % ton truck, with seats. ORDER YOURS ?.6 l\lO NTHS o;'EN LEASE •71 V\V Sta. Wgn. Radio, air Children·~ S\ze11 2, 4, 6, 8. delivery will take three RHODES 10. mah o g n n y anmar ftC. gem shell 8i cabinet. $13SO. NOW. Will accept trade-ins cond. Very clean. Less than Sl%e 6 takes l ·l/S yards 39-weeks or more. send_ to , foredeck, riberglass -hull, 1330.' llarbor Blvd., G.G. 6~57 GUSTAFSON 1 CALL MR. f'RY 842-6600 20,000 ini, S2500. 673-M45 '67 OIEV lmpalft Sta Wagon, CHEVROLET lnd1. Alice Brooks, the DAILY mainsail, $350. 962-3922 531-6&00 H t B h '64 VW Sedn.n, gutted for off xlnt cond. inside &: out. 1 6f;V£NT\·FIVI': CENT~ PILOT. 105, Needlecraft LIOO 14, Fully equipped, Next to G.G. Datsun ''!~.w$.~.Je:: ~~k·o~ Uncoln-Mercury un • eac road 1'8Cing tow equip. $400. Rack, 1)W'l', air cond .. low ~t:afohr ~~~~m pa'tt:i,~d l;: Des1a~:: BcxNe16.1, 8 1drkCheNlseya cover & tr~ llPr, $1000. or '69 Pa~ Arrow motor home. 644-6342, Ray. , 16800 Beach at WaQicr 642--4747 11ir1. 5 ml. SU50. 496-0708 I AJr Mall and Special Handl· lOOil.nPrint ~an~~ .A•dd,..;,.; best offer. 968-4562 43,000 mi 's. SIJ)11 6, fully self Vans 963 irunllngton Bea'r.fi• MAZDA 1970 VW, dn.rk green, blade SALE/trackl '&I J mp a I a, 1 _ UC; otherwise third-class Zii>. l*nttern Number. 16' HOBlE Cat w/trailcr, cont'd, Stere<i tape dk, dual 1.:.::;;.;;_ __ ~--~= 1142""44 * (213) 592.5544 interior , good cond. $900 or astro-supremes 6 cyl. Runs, delivery will take three ' Xlnt cond. Reasonable. be.Ucrics & gns tanks, air '71 DODGE Tradesn1an 100, ''Hom• Of tho Vlkln•'' 1~"""-"'t,_o,,r,;le;;,r:.. :;49<~-l\~90~---1 looks -'Cd. '&l Le.M.aru!. weeks or more. SeM to N EE 0 L ECRAIT '721 * 640--0165 '* i cood, hvy dty transn1. V-8 rear n1ag. wheels, • VWs '58 & '64 675--7124 I .Me.rlan Martin, the DAll.-Y Crochet, knit, etc. Free cooler, hvy dty tow & hitch. 1912 YELLO\V Capri, vinyl 17331 Beach BJ. 842-6666 PILO!: 442. Pattern Dept.. tllrections, 50c. 17' SallbOat : Xlnt cond. trlr, Good cond. $4500. 551-arT, ~pt'dl.ed' iold i~wn ~xa'r .!",ttsly, top extras 20((I cc eng MERCEDES BENZ ~lm..~ AI~COC!INEVD.· NS~~'ll'~ 2l2 west JBth St., Ne\V l.n~tanl M11crame Book. 2 i;e!s &ail!I. ~ 'Sf;il}, OcnnJs Irvine ru<ea, ,,.. S2'Jbo. 55~ ' --.a,qoi "'" i~ Yortr, N.Y. l OOll. Print Basic, fancy knolt. pal· 213: s.<J3..J693, .,.57-2298. 1973 DiSCO\'eM' and Sundial $2995. * ~~74 * 1..:=::...::::..:='----1---------'70 VW 7-psgr BUS, rebull1 & BRAKES $700. 675-6190 NAM£. ADDRESll with ·~~::;,:,i-00c...,het •-• _ GLEN L 10', tun for 2 pro-Molor Homes lor rcnl. make '"" !~RD v DATSUN JIM SLEMONS ~ 4 !11~ orcl~~._$, 18 9 5 · '~APRlCE .station wqon, ZIP, SIZE and 8ftlX Learn b~ ptctun;J' Pat· pie. New trbgls carry on car rescrvAtiOns tor Sun1mer \hi cv nn, smoe e:.'.e-mpt. IMPORTS .,.,_oMVll ~"' •"""' cond., 1660. NVMlll!:R. roof. $500. 826-8164. now. Phone h-1in Bennet at $600. New llra.kes, 11lr -'72 240Z. '66 Bui, xlnt engine & trans. * 540-3'238 * SEE MORE Qu I e k tern.•· II· · S Bob •. I shocka, runa good/good •I spd, air con<I. $4:195. Call MERCEDES BENZ Iced r1 ht Mll-7558 all · 6 '72 CHEV Ca J'utdont n.nd ctioose one COmplete 1.w.1 Olfl Book Boats, Speed & ki 911 ......,ngpre Pon; a c. mileage 642-4521 aft S; 816--644T pr g · er All -• prl, xlnt ecnd. . • E tem ..free trom our -more than JOO aiftA -892-6651 or 636·2500. 6'l4-1.13Ldaya • AUTHORIZED pm. extras. ng-SummEl'r CataJog •. AU $1.00. J\1ARK 1WAIN 18' deep v MUST SELL . •71 Dodge FOR -'73 240-7.; A/C;--'mags, SALES &-SERVICE 1970 Bug, em/rm, N\dlal .~~...:*::..,::541'-::;_;;13:::1::5...;*:__' --I ! Only SOc. sl""oo'plele Aflh•n Book -hhupll.T~!,o,rl• Mmerelrlreogiveryne,2!:? Siih!K'er 25' fully self-con· ·~~000 orobc~~~tf~~i§f! ~~~ Am. M, '!:~95· l~m1,0·21•"'1'1cn, 19,000 Jim $lemons 64ti~~nt cond. $1200 llrm. ·~~Caprld~· Brown. 1~ 4 JNSl'ANT SEWING BOOK . ' · · " "" ' ~.....,._, ta.lned, .sle-eJ>!I 6, SU,700 nu. &-Ice box 645-2297 ' · """' · "..,-'· <r"l;POO . ..-• .-v. group -· 1'lfW today, wear tomorrow. 18 Jiffy Rue 8ook11 • 50c. cood. $2800. 546-3465, after& l\sking $tl,000 or best offer. , · •n DATSUN 1200. $/Shift lniports '69 VW Sedan, 1auto, must ,;.:~c:;9:.------ $1. J:ft, or tt Prl1e At1hartil. p~1 ~28 642--'>158/646-1323. 65 Ctt.yy V•n $300 _ 48.00> ml. SUOO. Aft. 5, l30l Quail tell. Xlnt rontl. $1025. aft 5 W~: Chevy 283 com· INSTANT FAS JI I 0 N Q.llt Book 1 _ l6 patlem!:. 18 TROJAN 185 hp, lnbrd Nd '71 EXPLORER •. 26, air, u. Must ~JI 673-8111:> 5.16-6745. N:ewport Seacl\ pm, 494--0527 plete cnglnt Jn ROOC1-a:in- BOOK -Hl1Nlredt of SOt.. pnat. a oo.u t l tu I. Call cont'd + t\fnple storage. • '72 fo"ORD van. 30,000 mi.; '71 240.Z. blue, uuto, mag --833-9300 '67 VW Ca!llP('r, poptop, dltlon. Call 548---31.fi i lultlon b ets. P. _!!u, .• seum Qollt Boote 1 • ;>·18-0223, 645-4325 $195 wk + 6c ml. Avt1.ll. mags, pane,!~, $3000 fimt. wheel!;, exocllent rondllion. ENTER FROM MacARTHUR Rcbtl eng/ltMlfbrkl, '71. CHEV. Caprice, alt, Arri do.>' \f the BESl' DAY to --. t~· CJl.~PtON Ski boal 50 !une only-stllli1g so o,n . 8.'i8-l9u afl. 6PM 5'i7-91>13. l!l67 SEDAN white, be"-utifo.I $1495. 640-1419 J'Qy(er, .A= $2500. ~~~ ~dclaY· • • ~::_ 'Ufu1T::•Y't Uvtnr • h'.p. ~'~deJ>riB ·<>tB--2886. '67 fo'"ORO SUperVan. Mags. '72 610 STATION Wgn, cond. Recent eng ovdrhaul. '70 VW. 30.<XX> ml., white. • * ·-.••••••••••••"•••tt•erng.••!Oc•,• 4-5 1lne•1,5da.yg for 5 bucka. Run11 gn!all ~IU. 613--4091 or·<lng-e w/whilc int.~ apd, New radlnl tlre!'l. $1995. Jo~scellent condJOon. Make F1UJt.l'esuJ.U1nre1u1t•PhOnel • Need ll "Padl'? Pl•ct an ad! Id. Cau fU2..6678, daya, nights 496--1801 !!:tick, $2100 ftrtn . fr:>-256.1 492.--~lf*, after 6 PM 1 _,,o:::lf::;er.:.· .;:<i»-1297==::.· ----call Awa.y 642-5618. . . • • • • - • :lll PJLOT·AOVERTISER Wtdnesday, June lJ, 1973 DAILV PILOT j r _..... 1§1 I _,,,.... 1r~11 .......... 1§1 I ---1§1 I ............ I~ I ---l§J I -"'.. 1§1 [ ~....... I~ I ---1§1 Auto1, UHd 990 A"'°', UHcl 990 Autei, U.... CHEVROLET =::..;:;;F~O-RD-...:..:.::1 MERCURY "°A"'°', UHd MUSTANG 990 A ... 1, UHd 990 Autos, UHCll 990 Autos, UMCI 990 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, Used =:::..;=--...:..:..: "11 CONTL. 2 dr, all elect, air, 1 ownr, xlnt cond., Jo ml. $4295. 492-4001 , (2-1 hrs. I * 'I» LINC. convertible, good condition. $-150 or best olfcr. 64&-6215 aft. 5PM CORVmE '68 VET Fsbk., pwr. aulo, $ZSCI .. 'bst. ofr. 64&-ID11 days. 18881 BEACI-1 BL. 847.SSSS str. HUNTINGTON BEACH COUGAR * Stalion "'agon * 1970 f'ord LTD ~ pass. coun- try squire. Full pwr, fiiC air, very clean, priced for COUGAR X.R-7: Look at quick sale. $1900. Call what it's got: Delu.~ in-673-5494 or 546-4155 lerlor, console and cockpit '69 FORD Country Squire dashboo.rd w/overhead <.'O n-"'ag. Clean, 1 owner, air, trols; factory air, ra1tio, roof rack, stereo, 10 pass. 1>"\ving-away stt?ering 11.•hl'el, Need fast sale. $159 5. excellent engine and body 4!H-2217. condition. It's a '68, but only o.65o-'-,oo'O:CR:CD~L"T"D,.-_-,,.-con-.11 ha.~ 26,IXXJ miles! The low s .......... price will shock you, and a dition, good body. Must sell! personal Inspection w I 11 $400. &l:M764 a fter 5:00 swa'y you. l\1ust sell. Call p.ni . original owner, 524-5655 '69 F.ORD LTD Squire \Vag. '10 COUGAR XR-7, -dhi:, 10 pas., fact. aJr, power, 1oad<d o · \Vhsl rack, xlnt cond. in ti.res & · ng. owner. brakes. Best ofter 64" ,_, •. BB + $100. 536-2455. ~ DODGE '69 POLARA 9 pass. \l'ag., xlnt <."Ond., l~· 1ni., radial tires, P/S, radio, A/C. lug-A"ti rack. $1350. 8'12-8-15-1 ' &JACO sta. wgn. 3.113. disc. brks. ii.Ir, clean, xlnt cond. $.qg:), 644-.i83'1 '63 OODGE 9 pass sta \l'&g. Orig 011.•ner, 76,000 n1i. m. phone 646-'TR&t NOT Ga_s.AhoJic, 6 cyl '66 ~ Dart, $185. Divorce. Call 557--6TI6. Autos, New 980 '70 F'ORD Convert. XL. air cone!, bucket seats, AM/FM radio, p/windows, must 1ee 10 appreciate:54>7386 eves. '59 FORD Runs good. $100. 541Hl62 '67 f'ORD Convertible. XL 500. J>o\l•er, auto. Top con- dition. 846-1323. '66 FORD Wagon, 9 pas.o;cngl.'r air, p/s, $495. .. 549--0465 * '69 FORD Country Sedan, 10 pass: a/c dlc/hks, rack, $1500/make oft 84&-7648 JEEP ·n Jr:EP CJ5 350 auto winch a1n/fm immac. many xtras 979-~51 weekdays; &0406 eves & weekends. '66 JEEP PU. 4 wh1 drtw, V8. 7' bed. Very clean. $1005. 548-3735, en 5 '6.1\ J•'ORD Bronco, I o milt!n.ite. extras, S 21 9 5. 21:"(/442-1450 or 693-5743. LINCOLN '6it '66 LINCOLN 4 door. V.S, power windows & seats, radio with tape sys1en1, tilt wheel, power steering & brakes, white sidewall. tires. (!65EBE). $889 GUSTAFSON Lincoln-Mercury 16800 Beach at Warner Huntington Beach 842..1844 * 1213) 592.5544 ''Home of the Viking'' MAVERICK 19TI ~lAVERICK, orig owner, auto powr steering, 19,500 mi. 4 new tires, $1950., 831-1383. Want ad resulls ••••• 642--."!678 Cycles, BikH, I Cycles, Bikes Scooters 925 Scooters 925 WAREHOUSE SALE WAllHOUSE SALE JUST ARRIVED FROM ITALY SOLD ONLY IN THE CRATE Easy To Auembl• -S.per_ Lltlmnltht ' . 10 SPEED BICYCLE ALL COLORS • ALL SIZES ... utlfully ,.1nted a 1trlptd with chrome fork1 ~ ONLY 0 1 ~~!:95 ~ $140.00 1'I Xi . ¥•• g ~ e Campanola Dcratler • Aluminum Cha.In Protec-~ ; ton • Alum"'lnum Center Pull Brake • Aluminum M Gear Protector • Alum.inum Ktck Stand • Safety ; .: Reflector Side a: Rear • Aluminum Handle Bars > e High Grade Gum Tires • AJumlnum Wide FIMgc ~ I! Hubl • Quick ltelea.se Hubs • Factory Wra1iped 4 i A Plugged Ilandle Bars. . 4il 0 ~ c ~ ~ _,~!!i!~!wy.~~!!RTs__f . 642-9405 !I WAllHOUSI SALE WAREHOUSE SALi CL YOE JOHNSON .• PRESIDENT 50 Years of Automotive Management 20 Years in the Harbor Area DICK JOHNSON ••• VICE PRESIDENT Originator of the "Golden Touch" Oedic•ted to Con,tant Improvements OLDSMOBILE PLYMOUTH PLYMOUTH PLYMOUTH PONTIAC 1972 340 DUSTER. 4 spd, Gd '&I GR.AA'D Prix, loaded, tires, Ul mlleag~. Must see! $300. Oveneu orden, must S.1500 ~ ~ymnts. gr ~t sell, 968-G896 aft 5. ~u.;;'.· can: "'2-!iln 8Jl s T ·llRD 20th ANNIVERSARY During o u r •nnivers•ry celebration, we're going to put all of our new •nd used cars on sale for the firs t store-wide sale of the year. Every cer in stock is marked for sale and will be ready to drive home immediately. If you or any of your friends are lookin9 for a new or used car, this is your best chance to buy a "Golden Touch" new Lincoln, Mercury or Capri, and completely re- conditi~ned used cer at subst•ntial dis- counts. As you are probably a.ware, we don't throw sales events very often here at Johnson and Son. However, when we do, you'll find it's a good one. I SALE MERCURYS LINCOLNS· CAPRIS -HUGE SAVINGS - Choose From OVER 150 New 1973 Lincoln & Mercurys -SPECIAL- ~ J MldOR ,,t.::,"' /Ill HOMES UP TO -. '4 OFF SUGGESTED MFG. PRICE! '> J!om• Of The New Car , , , "Golden Tnch" SOME EXAMPLES: 1973 Colony Park Wagon ................ 55295 •2066. Air, reek, power windows, etc. Regular price $6260 1973 , Mercury Montego . ················-·=- 53797 • 3486. MX coupe. Air, r•dio, power, etc. 1973 Mercury Cougar .................... 54195 •4961 . Air, power, console, AM-FM, decor. Regular price $4706 1973 Mercury Comet -········ ....... ________ 52796 •7186: Autometic, power steering, radio, etc . 1973 Mercury Capri --·--··-···-.. ··---·-·····--········ -··--··· 53181 •6834. R1dio1 di1c brakes, r•dial tires. 1973 LINCOLN & MARK HUCH SILICnON HUGI SAYINGS! HURRY FOR YOUR BEST CHOICE!! l ,\\' H, I .Rome Of Thf! New Car , .. • "Golde• To11ch" .. 2626 COSTA MESA'S HARBOR BLVD OF CARS e 54G-5630 I . -' .. ' . ' -. " • , .. •• • •• .. ' . . . . ~ • 71 DAIL"'f PILOT Wr<lot!d11, Juot U , 1973 PILOT·AOVERTISER 30 • . The Biggest Merketplece on the Orange C04st DAILY PILOT C L.ASSIFllD ..... ,,,_ l§J I ADI . ' • Diel 6_.2.5678 for Fest Results . . ....... ;!: •;· • •• r ~f' ;.r- .1•! ~; ---1§11 ~-----l§l '--1 _ ..... _ ... _-_,J§J ~- 1"!""--~ ..... ~ ... ~----~'!"!"!"'--~ .... llf!l!l!"!"'"llllllf! ....... ~ ... lllf!ll .... ~~--"!'"ml .... ~ ..................................... 1 ~ Autos, ,..._ 9IOAutos, New 9IOAutos, N9w 980Autos, New 9'0Autos, New 980Autot, New 910AUfol, New MOAvtot New 9IOAutoi, New ,ea r: ' CADILLAC • • • .NINETEEN SEYENTY-TllBEE 1973 COUPE DE VILLE LEASE ~~~T $159:: •. Vinyl top. Full leather interior. Full po\ver incl. 6 \VRY scat, door locks, remote control trunk, power antenna, factory air condition- ing. AM/FM stereo with tape player, tinted glass, right side mir- ror, tilt & telescopic steering, l\1tllight Sl'ntiru:J. ere. (6D47R3Q· 103437). LDw miles. Bl!Y OB LEASE Lease a '73 Coupe De Ville LEASE FOR ONLY $]6999 ... l, _,., ... ~ ..... ................. c...rlt Vinyl top. '"II IN lh•r lnltrlor. F11ll pow. tr lrtcl. i w1y Mal, door kKll:9, remolt control lr111111:,. lllWtr 1nttfllll , llCIOry 1lr condftioni119. AMl'M 11 Ir •• with l•PI pl1~or, linltd 11.111, rl9'1! 11d• mirror, IHI & l•ltKopic 11"1"1, fWillfh! Nllfintl, II(, IS~ck 4HI LEASE FOR ONLY SJ4444 MO ,,_._ ..... -"-...... !! ON D,SP1AY. RIADY ro GO 1973 SEDAN DE VII.IE LIASE ~~~T $1671~0. FUU.Y EQUIPPED WITH vinyl roof, climate control, air condl· ttonlng. Full power Incl. 6 v.1a.y seat, AM/FM stereo, power door locks, tilt le telescopic steering, simply loaded with all the deluxe extras. <Ser. 6D49R3Qm353J FULL PRICE BIJY OB LEASE Nabers Leasing ••• Lease Direct ••• Immediate Delivery EXCELLENT SELECTION . FREE PICKUP AND DELIVERY • nn LOAN CAR WHILE LEASE CAR SERVICED. WE WILL BUY YOUI. PRESENT CAR FOR IMMEDIATE CASH. Four and oae-h.U acnt ef total etllleriad C.dill10 fffilitiee dniped to better Kil i nd ttl'Yict. CM. lllae 1111omobUe1. (80 work 1t1ll• ind t5 factory tr1ined tech.uc'iam), LARGEST SELECTION OF CADILLACS IN ORANGE -COUNTY • BROUGHAMS • COUPES • COUPE DE VILLES • CONVERTIBLES • EL DO RADOS • SEDAN DE VILLES I -We Sell Over 190 l,l~ed Cars Every Month Because of Quality Value & After Sales Service • Over 75 Quality Cadillacs & Other Select Trade-Ins to Ch0ose From. Wide Selection of Models and Colors Avallable for Immediate Delivery. 1968 COUPE DE VILLE Che1tn11t brow11, .,inyl top, 1tddl1 l11th1t i11t1rior. Full pow11 111d f1ctorv oir conditioning, tilt 1t11rin9 wh11I, AM/FM 1ter10 multiple•, pow•r d•or lock1. IXRF9t61 1970 COUGAR XR7 Vinyl buck1t ''"' int1rior, .,jnyl roof, f1ctory eir co11dition in9 , 1utom1tic, power 1t11rin9, pow1r br1k11, AM/FM 1t1 r10 multipl111. Ab1olut1ly imm.1cul1t1. (526ESDI 1969 Continental Mar·k Ill Full power end f1ctory oir condi1Jonin9, vinyl roof, full l11th· 1r int1r ior, tilt 1t••rin9 wh11I, AM/FM 1tereo multipl1.1t, pow· •r door loc•1. IXX MOlll 1970 ELDORADO Gor91ou1 po lmetto 9re1n with bleck vinyl top, m1tchin9 full l11th1r interior, foctory air, f11ll pow1r, 1t•rto, door lock1, 1e11tin1I th1t turn1 your li9ht1 off I 011. A p•mp•t•d JJ,000 mil1 D11uty. 161580EI 1969 EL DORADO Vi11yl roof, full le1lhtr int1rior, f11ll power, f•clory 1ir condi· lionin9, tiff 1+••rin9 wh•el, power door lock1. 811utiful Top11 9old firtrni1t fi11i1h. Truly outtl•11din9. 1161EYCI 1971 COUPE DE VILLE Corinthi1n whit• with Dloclr vinyl lop ind bl1cli 111ther in · t•rior. Full power f1 ctory eir, t ilt wli1el, AM/FM 1te1eo multi. pl11, pow•r door loc•1, 111c1ption1lly clt•n. ( 277CPHl 1969 CHRYSLER 308 H1tdtop coupt. Mint 9r1tn 111t1rior. vit1yl top 111d m·1tchi~9 l•p11try inl•riot. F1clory oir conditioninq, outometic lr1n1., powor 1t11ri119·br1"1111·6 wey p•w•r •••I, r•dio, h•olor, WSW, low mile191 e•c•ptionolly clt1n. 11165111 1970 T-BIRD LANDAU L111 !hon ]2,000 mil11, Adri1tic turquoite with whif1 l111d1u roof ond crttl white vinyl interior. Full pow1r, f1ctory 1ir conditiol'lin9, tilt wh11I, powtr door loc•s, r•di•I WSW tir•1. lmp1cc1Dl1111tomobilt. 14711ZOJ I I ' ' JUST A FEW EXAMPLES LISTED BELOW · $3555 $1999 ' 1966 TORONADO CUSTOM •umt .,,..,. llllhh, llWllchlnt Ylnyl int•rllr, llC!Clry olr, full powtr, till wflltl. AM/,M. SujlV CINn. {TRTJ02) 1968 BUICK CALIF. HARDTOP CPE. 5kYllftl, fMhlry olr, ..-.......... brOllM. G.IOt mllll, ¥111'(1 ..,, .... llloltk, rMlle, llultl'" W/l/w. IWYQIM) 1972 SEDAN DE VILLE '-.c:Mry 11r, low mlllf. 1•11 ,._,, ltwlo, Hor ltcb, crvl .. c1111m, 1111 wllloll. tS.r. ::1111.UJ · 1'71 CONTINENTAL MARK 111 Only U,toO mll•1, vinyl lOp, 111111.r Jnllrlor, 11111 pilWlr, IKtwy •Ir, du•I comMrt Hlb, "'· 111iOIZl 1969 EL DORADO • ._ ,.,., lllldr "'' 111.0: IHrtlor, lull ,._, loctffy 1lr, tilt a ,._.pie wllll!. ,.., lkk., .roreo. (.l:LSMl) 1971 TOYOTA CRN. CUST. WGN. a.tr 1• '°611, IKt•ry olr, owtemotlc ..,-., ,._ s111er1111 a .,._, AMl,M, J ... ,., Mt 6 cy1., ••11tttry & llrlUM lllJerter. L-._ .... ml*. 1as•L•1 1971 EL DORADO CONVEITllLE O•tly H,OM mn-. vinyl top, ...,.ltttr, Ml ,...., IKIWy 11f, ,..,_, fill ......, cniilM c.nr.-.1. (U2LHI 1970 COUPE DE VILLE Mlelllr• P111m wllll m1ttlllnt1 11.-.code 1""'11f, Slc!#y 1lr c«llll., hlU ,....,., ...,..., cMw IMl!t, 1111 1t1tr. WftHI. LOW mnn. 1113.1.0CI 196' CONYEITllLE 'Ktery 1lr coM., full po-, oU ......... fitter. Slerw AM/flM, ...._., Vflf'( ""' mll11. (0511FYYI 1971 EL DOIADO CAlllOLn ,Kt. •••• t.11 .....,, cltttl & INttllr ill"'· Tiit a .....,,,c ·~ ···-'""' & leW 11111-. ffUDSLI 1971 OLDS TORONADO Fectory eir, full ~. 24,000 mil11, tilt wh11I, 1t1r10, door locln, t1,.1h'y lnt1rior, tplit 1t1t. 1•7215401 1969 CORVETTE Sting . Ray 4'27 4 ljHecl with oflly 17,000 ll'lil11. F1ctory 1ir cond., fu ll pow1r, AM/FM r1cUo, b1111fl ful Ebony bl1ck witfl b11ck 'lillyl i11t1rior, bl1ck top, wid1 ovol tir•t A tl:nolut1ly co11cou"'· 1721ETZI 1970 SEDAN DE VILLE Adrletic turciv•i•• with wh it• vinyl +op •nd 1xqu i1ite top••ffv I l••fh1r i11t.rior. Full power, foctory •ir, tilt·t•I• wh•1I, p•w•r door loc•1, Ahl/FM rodio, new WSW fu11, low ll'llle1, exceptio111lly cl1e11. 1214COUI 1971 CHRYSLER NEWPORT Cu1tom coup•. f •c+ory oir conditio11i119, tutom•tic, pew1r 1t11rin9, power br1li11, vi11yl top, r•dio, he•ter, whit• will tire1. Le11 thtin 27,000 mil11. 1472EICTI 1969 COUPE DE · VILLE Foctery eir coMlltionilMJ, full pow1r, tilt I tel11copic 1leer· in9, f11ll le1th•r lnt.rJe;, .loot locll1, •inyl t.p. An e•c1pti111•I velue. IZLY1 6J ), IXTVI021 , IYYl7t-41. Y•ur choico. I 1971 ELDORADO .·.·K_._ .. _ .. _._._,_ .. _._._ .. _._._ .. _ .. _ ..... K_._ ... _-_._ ... _ .... _._··.· _ •• _._ .. _._ .. _. ----· ---• 1968 · EL DORA no' ltc:l:s, IHI WllNI. LOW """'-1k. !Sor. QUM) 1968 CADILLAC CONYEITllLI Or1eie11 t'N llllft "'9t. twll !Mihor, loctwy olf, hlll ...,., tilt t'-tlll .,...,, AMl'M r1cu1. (llHCICI) 1971 SEDAN DI YIW Awhlmn 90lcl, wllllt vl11yl "'' 1114'11 lel"'9r, M ,...., tMltty 1lr, '*""• ""° lkb, rrtillse cllllrwl ,till ..tl•I, LOW 11\llel. CJllCXV) • ' 1'69 COUPE DI YILU! Diiiy a.IN "''"'· 'octery t lr. ,V(I POWlt, ¥111yl ,.,, AMl'M rMlt, 1111 & tel• .apic .._..... IXll,11) 1968 COUPE DE VILLE s .. 11111.., "'"'" 11!1c11 with 1>11e11 vlnyl ~ .. & llelllllflill blKll IMffltr 1111w11r, 1oe1. air '*"'·• tull ,......., dMt locks, AM/,M, llll·fel..aijlic 1't1rl11f & Just ""utlfvl. IX•\ll70 1962 COUllll l"kll-. wllll ''"'"" 11111/. L•tl ll'tM 1 .... MIM. 4 ...... li-1111111, , ..... wtltt1 1We wtU ltr.. 1•14Hl"MI Prlc" in offeci 48 hours after Doto of Publication ' ' ' Fvll pow•r, foctory elr co""" vinyl t09, plu1h full l11ther l11t.rlor, cloor locks, stereo, recU•I tir11. tilt I t.le1copic 1t11r· in9, 1tc, fXWY2-411 1967 .COUPE DE. VILLE f•ctory t lr ce11d ., f111l· le1th1r lnt.rier, full pow1r, vinyl to,, AM /FM, tilt I teleKopic 1le•rl119. Me11y otfi•r dlr. 1xfr••· INOS667l . 1868 SEDAN DE VILLE Fectory elr, full ,ew1t, vinyl top, le•th•r h1hrior, tllt I Mio· •copic ttoerlot, AM/FM tt•tto. IWIK0651. Sh•w• ut111111t l cere, .. COSTA MllA $3999 $3666 51999 . ::. •• .. •• •• :· lt .. i.; '• • :· . ·: • . •• •• • • • . :~ ·: l ' . • .. • • • • • • • . • . • • . • • . . . • • • • . • • I ; t • . . • I Wtdnesday, J1111t 13, 1973 '67 T·lllD H.T. lo1cl•cl, 1ir cone!., lo mil•1, 11lnt cone!. IFIF5141. ONLY '70 T·llRD LANDAU '1152 I F~'.' pow",'"''" •i• ,,.. •2752-cl1honlng, good rnilt1. (547. BEVJ ••••••••• ,,,, ONLY . R -.D '67 T-llRD 4 DOOR l1rtd111, vinyl fop, air, m1ny 11dr11, IWAY42ll •• ONLY '69 T·llRD LANDAU Load1cl, lik1 n•w, 9ood !'"ii ••· l969CPAI •••••••• ONLY '1152 '1752 S '71 T·llRD LANDAU Lo••••, lo mil.,, ••'Y ... '3652 tr11. lfl40CHI • ,, • ONLY '71 FORDS Cu1t. 500 4 df1., VI, auto., PS. l•••• r1turn1, <good mJl11, IS1r. ll90l- '66 GALAXIE HARDTOP VI, r1di1, lie1t1r, 1uto., P.S., good mll11, IRRYll21 '1452 '552 71 FORD FlOO PICKUP V-1, r1cllo, h11ftr, 1t1ncl1rcl 1hiff, Ip· '2352 proalm1t1ly 15,000 milt1. I 214I1Hl '72 FORD 1/J TON P.U. . V·I, r1clio ind h1tt•r, 111torn1tic. Good '2852 rn ll11. I 19l02Ll '71 FOID F250 'I• TON VI, 1uto,. r1cl io, h11l1r, 1ir, split ri1T11, 9oocl rn il1s, lll474HI '2852 71 GALAXIE 500 2 DR. H.T. 2252 VI, r1dio, h11t1r, 111tom1tic, p-•r • 1t••rin9, 1ir cone!., loW mil••• (074- COS J '71 LTD 2 DOOR HAIDTOP •'2 4 2 VI, Rl:H, 1utorn1tic, pow1r 1t1erin9, 1ir tond., vi nyl roof, low mi/e1. 10/]. 5 - FZO I '71 GMC Yi ton VI, RIH, P/S., 111p1r t1nlom -c••p1r 1p1ti1I, lo mil1s, ll711lHI '68 FORD ~ ton V.I . RIH, 4 •Pie~ ... C1rnp1r Sp1clal, good mil11. 11166711 '67 FORD CLUI WAGON With 111 1e1t1 I wi11dow1, good mil11, IZCKlOll '71 TORINO HARDTOP 4 Door. VI, RIH, 1utom1tic, P.S., 1ir cond., 1ow mi111. L40tlYSI '72 FOID Fl DO' PICKUP MAKE OFFER '1852" '1252 '1952 HARD TO R1clio, h11ter, 111!0., 1ir cond., •port1F.IND USED cus tom. 011.., 14000 1nll11., 120145NI ;1~ .. CH~T~. ~t~I~''" "'°·· P. '2352 S., 1ir •oMlltionhtf, low mil 11. 1251· CUDI '71 COMn R10io, h11t.r, 111tM1tit , l'.S., on ly 23,000 miln, v I n y I roof, I own1r, 15l 71SXI '1952 TAX REFUND DUE? WHY WArJ?-BUY NOW! PAY LATER!-TRADES ACCEmD PAID FOR 01~-NOT '68 CHRYSLER New Yorkor '1052 4 Door h1rcltop, full pow1r, 1ir con· clitionlng, goocl mll•1. I YCN511 l ''8 OLDS Cutlass Supreme '1252 2 cloo r h1rcltop, r1dio, h•1f••, 1uto., power 1t1erin9, vinyl roof, 9oocl mil•I, 1ir. fYX N159) '70 CAMARO H.T. '1952 VI, r1clio, h11ter, ••c•ll•nt fflru·out, good mil1s. I 0 I JCKX I '72 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX '38 2 Riclio, h•1l•r, 1uto., poW•r 1t•1ri11g, 5 power window1, vi11yl roof, i.Jiir, low mil11. 14S2EAEI '70 FORD STA. WAGON Country S1cl1n. R&H, 1utom1tic, P.s.;· roof rick, 1lr cone!,, good mil••· IOOl- AIRI '66 "PLYMOUTH'2 DR~H'-.' '"· -- R1cllo, he1t1r, 111to., pow1r 1t1tring, VI, 1ir conclitionln9, goocl mll••· IFCJ 1051 '69 PONTIAC 4 cir., H.T., r1dio, ha•l1r, 111to., vinyl top, 1ir conditioni!!l! lo mi11t. IZDV-172) . '69 PONTIAC LEMANS 2 ci r. H.T., r•dio, h11t•r, pwr, 1taer., 1uto., 1ir conclitionin9, lo mile1, IZVL· 142 ) '67 MUSTANG CONVERT. VI, RIH, 1utom1tic, P.S., 1ir cond., n•w p1int, 9ood mil11. 100626) '2152. '15S2 '1652 '1152 '69 GALAXIE 500 '1552 2 Dr. H.T. VI, r1cllo, h11t•r, 111to., pow•r 1t1erin9, vlnyl roof, 9oocl 1nil11. 1XSR92ll '67 MUSTANG H.T. . '1052 R1cl io, h•1t.r, euto., pow1r 1+••rin9, vinyl roof, VI, goocl mil11. CVHC99?) '68 DODGI CHARGER RT '1252 R1clio, he1t1r, 111fom1t!c, 1ir co11cl., vi11yl roof, pow1r ·1t•erin9, good mil11, f4l4FYWJ '69 DODGE CHARGER R1clio, h11t.r, pow•r •*••rin9, vinyl '1552 roof, 1ir concl., 9oocl rnil•s. 119lBHJ) '68 COUGAR HARDTOP -· RIH, 111fom1tic, pow•r ••••ring, 1ir '1352 cone!., 9oocl mil•1, n1w p1int. !YUP. 19] I -'7-1-COUGAR XR7 -,29.52 R1clio, h11ter, 1utorn1tic, pow•r 1t•1r. in9, 1ir cone!., vinyl roof, goocl mil1s. 1271DJDJ -- '65 MUSTANG HARDTOP VI, r1cl io, h~1ter, •11tom1tic, good mil11. INGNl4ll '66 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 Dr., R1dio, h11t•r, 111tom1tic, P.S., 1ir conclitioning, good rnil11. ISHEl621 '67 PONT. FIREllRD R•dio, h1at1r, 1utom1tic, P:OWlr 1t1•r• ing, 1ir cone!., low mile1, (UTil66) '852 '652 '1352 Record 52nd Anniversary New Car Sales Are FLOOD I NG Our Used Car Department With Fine Trade Ins. COME IN TODAY And See For Yourself How Far We Are Willing To Go To Reduce Our Tremendous Used Car lnv1 entory! '68 IUICK SPEC. WAGON R1dio, h11t1r, 111fom1tic, pow1r 1f••r• Ing, 1ir, roof rick, good mil11, lllO· EXX I '67 MUST"NG 390 VB H1rOtop. RIH, 1utorn1tic, P.S., ti lt wh11I, vinyl roof, 1peci1I wh11l1, good miles. 1421 ELVJ '66 MUSTANG HARDTOP VI, r1clio, h11t1r, 1utorn1tic, pow•r •te1rin9, good mil1s, rid. ISVG679 ) '125-2 '1152 '952 '70 RANCHERO GT low mil11g•. R1dio, h11f1r, tic, P.S., 1ir conO, 157071FI .,,,,;,,. HARD TO FIND '70 TOYOTA RT83 4 Door. Autorn1tic 1hift, only 27,000 rnil11. f 24085Yl '1352 MK II W19011, r10io, he1t1r, 111torn1 -• '72 TOYOTA 2 tic tr1n1mi11ion, gooO mil11. {71 lEOJI 5 52 '70 TOYOTA LANDCRUISER l1nclcrui11r, 4 wh11I drive, h1rcltop, rid, h1rd to find 1111d, ( 1241QDJ '69 YW R1cl io, he•f•r, 1utorn1tic tran1rnl11ion, good rnile1. fYQll751 '72 YAMAHA MMwcyclo 250tt. Only 2600 mil1s, 11cld l• b•g•, wincl1hJ1lcl, IUOV075) 1 ' SAVE '952 '452-- ' '68 CHRYSLER NEWPORT C111fotn 2 Dr. H.T. RIH, 1utorn1tic, P.S., 1ir conditioning, 9ood rn il11. IVHRllll '1352 '70 MERC. Marquis Brougham ,2552 R&H, 111torn1 tic, pow1r 1t••rin9, 1ir conditioning, vinyl roof, low mil11. 1415AGCI '70 CYCLONE HARDTOP M1rtury 2 Dr. R I: H, 1utom1tic, 1ir conditioning , good rnil1s. {B94BSY) '1852 '71 COUGAR ,2552 R I H. 111tom1tic, pow1r 1f11rin9, AM- FM r1dio, 1ir con., good mit1s. (841 · BSWJ '69 COUGAR HARDTOP R1d io, h11t1r, 1utornatic, pow1r 1t11r. ing, Vinyl roof, 1ir, low mil11. IZSG- 75]1 '69 COUGAR XR7 Hardtop. R1d io, h11t1r, pow1r 1t•1r- ing, 1ulo., 1ir cond., vinyl roof, AM. FM, good mil11. IXOL170} '68 FALCON 4 DOOR 6 cylinder, r•clio, h11t.r, 1utornttic, P.S., •ir cond., good mi111. IWIEl771 '69 MERC. MONTEREY H.T. Cu1torn. R1dio; h11t1r, 111torn1tlc, pow1r 1t11ri11f, riiiyl fo~f, good 111ile1. (547465) '1952 '2152 '952 '1452 W!dntsdit~ June 13, 1973 WIN A FREE PINTO REGISTER -TODAY. Al Y°" •Hd k a ...W dtlY•'• lie-to M oot lff shople prlu do•wlot llcket --. you ellg1ble to will • ••"f 1973 Plllto or •• of 151 other ........... prizes. It's neoc1or. lobl•s' way of saylot "Tllaok Yao" fo< 52 woodoml y-. of Hnl'"J O.-.e Caooty ,uadU-th•-Mlllt I ond llKl~etneet, '68 PONTIAC GTO 2 Dr. R1dio, "••fir, 1utornatic tr1n1 ,. vinyl roof, 9ood mllas. I XOAl5 I) '70 FORD GALAXIE 500 H1rdtop. RIH, •11tom1tic, P.S,, •ir conditioning, 9ood mila1. 1511 ASG ) '68 V.W. SCjlUAREIACK R1cl io, hatter: 4 1p11cl tT1n1mi11ion, good rn il11. Rid. I 175HPCJ ll 5 I '71 LTD'• & GALAXIES _Ex1mpl1: '71 Ford Gal1ri1 !500 2 Dr. RIH, 1ulo., P.S., 1ir cone!., good rnil•1. 1117161 I '69 FORD LTD HARDTOP R&H, 1utom1tic, power 1t1•ring and window1, vinyl roof, 1ir cone!., good mll•r:-1-101 FWA t '69 FORD XL HARDTOP RIH, 1ulorn1tic, pow1r 1t.•ring, vinyl roof, air cond., good rnil11. 1747E IAI '70 MAVERICK 6 cylinder, r1dio, h1at1r, chrorne trim. low' mil11, IZU299 ) '-1652 '1052 '1952 '1452 '1452 '1252 '72 FORD GALAXIE 500 ,2752 4 Dr. H.T. R I H, 1utom1tic, pow1r st1aring, 1ir cond., vinyl roof, good rnil11. t BSOEIA ) '66 CHRYSLER NEWPORT 4 Dr. H.T. RIH, 1utorn1lic, P.S .. 1ir cone!., ori9in1I thru-ou t. low rnil•1. ITElSBJ l '61 FORD LTD 2· Dr. H.T. R1cl io, h•1f1r, 1utom1lic, P.S., 1ir cond., vinyl roof, low rnil•1. fXSR97ll '66 MUSTANG HARDTOP VI, recliO, he1!1r, eutom1tic, pow1r 1t1ering , 9oocl mi111. ITPS612) '71 MAZDA RXlOO R'Of1ry, R1dio incl h11t.r, 4 1pe1d tr1nsmi11ion, low, tnil11, ( 91 iEOWJ '852 '1252 '952 '1752 '73 MUSTANG R1dio, h11t.r, 111tom1tic, pow1r 1t11r0 '2852 ing VI •ngin1, 9oocl mil11. ( 1119615 ) '65 MUSTANG HARDTOP R1clio ind h1•ter, •utom1tic tr1n1· mi11lon, good mil••· (NGA1!4l '852 '73 LTD 4 DOOR HARDTOP · Pow1r. 1t11rin9°br1k1s -winclow1.v1nt1, '42 5 2 AM.FM 1!1r10, 1ir conditioning, vlnyl roof. 1172GIUI '70 LTD BROUGHAM 2 Dr. H.T. RIH, 1utom1tic, P.S., vinyl roof, 1ir conclitioni11g, good mil11, (46SABOI '66 MUSTANG CONYERTllLE VI, rtdio, h11ter, 1utomatic, pow1r '1852 '852 1!11rln9, good ,mil11. ITFFSIOI '~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- '71 GALAXIE 4 DOOi R1cl io, heifer, 1utomatlc, P.S., 1ir con• ditioning, good 1nil11. 1219DITl '1852 WAGONS-WAGONS OVERSTOCKED-UNDER PiRICED 1965's To 1973'1 fAR TOO MANY TO MENTIQN IN THIS AD ! ~ ____ ,_,_., --19:' . -blllb(IUn - IAL_IS_Q_IJ•T. HOURS: I •m-t"" Mon.•Pr1.; I am-6 pm l•t.; 10 ... pm Svft, PA.ITS SllVl~I HOURI: 7 •"""pm Men.; 7 •'""pm T"91.-•rl. PA.ITS DIPT. bN~Y : I am-1 pm lat . . ~ \ - I ' ' ~ i • " • " - \ 1J DAILY PILOT w,~y, Junt ll, 1973 '68 CHRYSLER NfW YOltKE• 4 Dlt. SED. \II, •u+om•lic. R&H, power 0 1leerin9 • br .. ~•1 • 1e.st • win· dow1 • door loc~•. WSW, •ir conditioning. I \IRTI 81) $895 '70 DATSUN 2 DOOR SEDAN , Aulom•lic tr<1n1mi•1ion, r•dio, 0 heater, WSW, buck•t 1•ah, ¥inyl top. ! 144'CEOI $1 195 '67 PONTIAC LE MANS 2 DI. H.T. VB, 1utom1tic, r11dio, he1t1r, pow1r 1t11rin9, WSW, ditio nin9. !SZW92'41 $895 ·- SER. NO. CPU-TlO·tltt74 OFP WGGESTED RETAIL PRICE RED ~G 1173 PLYMOUTH GRAN-SEDAN 4 DR. HDTP. P\!'llty el 1dr11 lnthldlng l lr canditlonlnt .BRAND NEW 1973 LEBARON ,4 DR. HARDTOP . . '68 DODGE DAltT 2 DOOR Autom•tic, r•dio, h••t•r. pow•r 1h1erin9, WSW, •ir condition· 0 ing, ¥inyl top. IXOL7911 $895 COUPE DE VILLE Full pow••, f•clory •ir condi· 0 tioning, tiH-tel••eopie 1t••rin9 wheel. 1i•r•o with t•p• pl•v•r, leath1r, ¥inyl top. llSOEL\1 1 $5895 '66 CADILLAC SEDAN DE VILLE Autom1tlc, radio, h111t1r, power sl11rin9 ind br1k11, vinyl top, pow1r tt1f & window1, air con· dilionin9. fVUF7-4)l $795 RED tAG '66 PLYMOUTH VALIANT " d oor 1ed an. Eeonomic"I 6 0 C¥linder engine, r1dio and he1f· ''· fYNA580l $595 '69 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill FORMAL 2 DR. H.T. VI , automatic, radio, he~ler, power 1ieerin9 & br•ke1, WSW, a ir eond., ¥invl top. !ZRl-497 1' $1095 RIYllRA va. 1ulo., radio, healer, power 1!11rin9 & br1k11, w/1/w lir11, Q 1ir, vinyl top, crui11.control, pwr. 111h, pwr. wind ow1, tilt wh11I, chrome wh11l1, !TFB8 I 8' $1295 Wedntsday, June 13, 1973 VACATION TIME- SPECIAL RED TAG SAVINGS ON ATLAS ENTIRE INVENTORY OF INTERNATIONAL RECREATIONAL VEHICLES. NEW 1/2 TON PICK-UP NEW 1973 T RAVELA l,.,.....__---...:::: BEAUTIFULLY EQUIPPED SER. NO. l H1COCHl61UO PILOT-ADVERTISER 3! Ser. No. 3Q2HOCHB75090 OFF SUGGESTED RETAIL PRICE "GET 'EM UP SCOUT" ' go.anywhere Scout. Sir. No. JS 8S6CGDl0412 .. , 33 PILOT-ADVERTISER . , $58 DOWN ~-.. --.. -- $58AMONTH 1 •ti It i.tel ... ,,-it. UI l1 i.i.! N . ,.,...,, i11tl. t.1, lict11M & •II <•rryi"I che<JK.,._,,,, ct'Mlit ltr42-IM. ci.1 .. .- P'f"'I. ,..W. $2M4 l0<L I•• I I~. ANNUAl PllClNTAGl UU t.lO'!'o. .. 92188 '64DOWN $64AMONTK • ·-- 'f'RDER YOURS $ Now ·· < $199DOWN _, ........ - $107 A MONTH Wednnday, June 13, 1q73 DAILY PILOT 75 ~~~~~~~~~~~ '73· CHARGER $64DOWN • COUPE fUlLY FACTORY lQUIPMINT .--::;:~ ~ · -LOW Mll(S, USED. (596HDI) $64AMONTH SM ;, -I~ ... ,,.,,.. S4o4 i1NT.i 11111. ''""'incl. la•, lktllM ~.all ca1ryi"fchor1.i t nappr. tr ... jf '-r 42.....,rlll., Dtf.n't4 fl)'ml. ,.ic. $11;1 111et 1a1 & 11,.., ... ANNUAi. nKltflAGf UH t.J2'0, , '73 CORONET $85 DOWN WAGON fUll Y FACTOIY EQUIPPED. OIDEI YOURS NOW FOR FREE . PHONE '69 FORD .......... Y-1, radio, heater, ·power steering, •vto. trans ., (tl2ACQ) '68 COUGAR ' 1117 • , VI, auto. tran1., :power steering, 1 radio, heater, vinyl , top, factory air (Wfl9'13) ,I •866 I I l'ULL ... c. •766 --- '70 ROADIUNNIR V-8, ntdlo, heat,,, 4 1peell trons ., (RM21W06 2454) '69 DART SWIHll •Va , auto. tron1., :radio, heat.er . (7941MU) • '68 FORD fAlllLANI J 2·Dao• Hanhop, VI, auto. trans., factory ·, •ir cond., power stHrlng (405CYZ) ;• SPffd trans., rodjo •nd h•ater, full foe · 'tery equipped. . (TYl500) •96A • 5 766 PULL NICI I .,466 ....NHI EDIT CHECK 5 ·57-9220 ( GAS SAYERS TAKE YOUR CHOICE '71 DART OIMON. Y-1, radio, Mater, auto. trans., mags. (LN29Hll14023l) '71 VEGA futly foctory ~uipped plus much mo,. {169ERK) '71 DART SWINGER 6 cyl., radio, Mater, foctoiy equipped (16~CTO) '71 COLT 'J Dr., radio, heater, factory equipped. (6H28Kl505846) $ $31.so· DOWN. $31 .• 50 A 'MONTH $31.fO is totol dn. payment S31 .50 is hltal rno. pymt. incf. "tax I llcenM and all carrying charges on opp. cr.dit for 36 mo~. o.tened payment pt"i<e $1 176.66 im:I. tax I licente. ANNUAL PERJENTAGI RATE 17.91 %. '70 PLYM. FUIT Ill 2 Dr, H.T., V-8, auto. trans., power ~twr· lq, rodio, heoter, t.ctory mr; wlnyl top. (9934VK) ,. ''61 MUSTANG Radio, heater, de- luxe exterior, plus m u c h mo r.e , (9FDITI 77-2401) •••• ~1MICI '68 FllEllRD VI, auto. · trans., power steering, radio, heater, vinyl top, factory a ir, (035CPf) '70 CHARGER . , . V·I: auto: ,,;;.,., , . s911 · ••d•o, hea~•-.IW!YI , top, factory 'CR\4i!JI (467ASZ) PllU ICI '72 PLYM. flllT V-8, auto. trans., power steering,. radio, heater, fac- tory air (Plo\1C2D- 134157) •1266 ..... _ , ••• I , -. -• . -. --. ·: . ----. . . -. . . . . , . ' '. t . ': .. I 1 .. r r~--,-•• • ( . . DAILY PILOT Wednesdat, Jwae 13, 1~73 GAS SAVERS ··-··· -··- . 69 !~~~! e:,,,, 149C6491 $888 I '65· ~~~.!~~w!,.,,.;,,, nd;o, '"''" $57 9 Lie •n1• No. ZIR 120. '67 !~!,?!~; .. +.,,LI""" No. UED·l70. $ 666 '71 -MAZDA ._, • .,,.. .... $2297 . '4 tp••~· r •~i'o, ~11t1r, whit1w11.1 tir11, tint•~ gl111, vinyl 111t1rior. Comp1r1 th11 v1lu1. Lle1n11 No. 22t0W. I 70 . !,gr.~!,~ .. ~~2~ .. No. 8)5 BU9 ' $888 - 1 71, ~~~J.o~~~~·••~'~~!,~~.m ~o• .. · $888 '67 FORD DNCH vi~GON ;~ (., -: VI, 1uto. ff•ns., f1ctciry 1ir conl:litloning, power 1h 1ri1tf, t•~llo, h1t1r, Lic1nr1'No1 UZW-631. ' '68 PL ~MOUTH · WA.ON- CWtom SUtlurbon. v.._ mto. fr(N.., foctorv olr! C01Yitlonlna, -11Mrlfllll, rodlo, fleaftr, tlnltd 1111oM. LletnM Humblt VCM1•. • • ~'~0.H'lo 'll~CE'' VI, auto. tra111., factory air conditioning, powa>i..+.ering, radio, h1~t1r., l ican1• No. ZCDIS 7. · '68 CADILL"C Coupe de Villa, VI, auto. tr1n1., factory air conclitioning, power 1taarin9, power br1ka1, power window1, powar 1e1ts, radio, h11t.r, wilitawall tir11, vinyl roof. Lic1n1e No. XSE-166. '69 DODGE Monaco 5'. Wgil. V-1, auto. tr1n1,. factory air conditioning, full power, powar 1te1rlng, power wlnclowt, radio, h1at1r, whitewtll tire._ Lie. No, YWT 718, '68 CHEV. 1/2 TON PICKUP Factory air comlltio11i1t9, radio, haeter. Lic1n1e No. 944671. $ '69 PONTIAC flonnrtllle v.a. .m. traN., ractarv olr evndlllonlno, .....-1tw'lflo. DOWt'I' brakn. tQCh, '*"'• tinted otau, ..._ ~ LicenM NV!llbtr ZLHtSl. ·'69 IMPALA Hanltoo. Aulo. "'°"'-· fai:fory olr conc1111on1na. -1f9erl1111, radio, hfGler, wtlttewoU ttres, tlnttd OIDa. L.kenH N~ ZMZ"9. '$JOJ~8 __ · $J188 . . . . GAS 'SAVERS. ~ :.' ··12 YW . , . . 1 , . , ,:• ·' SUP& llll'U. $1987 ' .Stick thift, r1dio~ h11t1r,.wMt.w1n tlr11.".Ju!f · ~ · li.:1 .ftlw. Uc1M1 Nuft!!Mr 196ESJ, ~ ' ·' ~ •1 • '68 '70 • . ' ' } !. ' ' , ( \ ' .f1 DATSUN ~... $1·0~· . ·-;, '"' 1pe.cl. r~io, r .atar,.Ucan1• No. WFZ' .. 90. '' i :~ :.," .1 MAVERICK DILUll 6 cyl., tticlt 1hift, r•dio, haat.r, whitewall tire1, very claen. Ucen1e No. 022A YC. ~ 7.0 ~~~~ .. :;~~~ ... ~.,.. p/• .... dlo. $1397 haater, low ·rnile1, Uca111e No. 735AHX, . . ! , ' '70 TOYOTA MAU II Radio, haater, 'Real nica 011a. Uce111a No. 692·B~. . '71 FORD GALAXll 100 V8, •utclo. tra111., factory air c~lldition· i119, pow•r 1taa,rin9, r•dio, heater, Serial No. 161946. \ 71 IMPALA " . Auto. tra111., factory air ce11dlffo11i"f, powar •t.•ring, r•dio, h•at.r, Llce111a No. "''"'CHY. • • '69 CHRYSLER '69 CHRYSLER '71 FORD '72 DODGE '72 DGDGE ·'72 MERCURY WAM>N PICIUP Town & t.outttrt, Alllo. tr-.. fOdotV lllr c:andillon-'.tffOml YAM PICIUP ·-lnv • ..-11.-11111. _. tltlr~n. _.... w1n0ows. V4 allr Olldtttmllw. I ft. bef. radio. he!11w, whlt....oll tlr-. ~ rock. ~ \ QtflH NumOor 735HNP. $1888 - :~ND '73 FORD COURIER '12 TON PICKUP WITH A N£W CAMPEI SHRL I I COMPLETE PACKAGE • ----.-- ·-- SGT AMT 55651 lnt•rior, li9ht, complat•ly ·pan•l.d, 1lidin9 1id• windows, 1tor•9• comp•rf· ment, locking dootl. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY CAMPE·R CLOS E-OU TS BRAND NEW 1972's AT SPECTACULAR PRICES! EL DORADO EL DORADO MOHAWK fl/2' PAWNEE COMPLnn y SELi' CONTAINfD (;onldad, 9Cll .. lec. reh'loenrtor, of burntr stovt • .-i.· tali.t, Mower, 1ltet1 " or 6, llorooe l.POC9. dllltfi., king 111• bed, Looi:Nd wll!I eiclrat., WE HAVE 5 TO CHOOSE MOM ••• ~2 088 11MT · TUii.ER ONI ONLY I' CAIOYll Coroe1ftl, • burnot llO~ & -"· '" ball, $'13' 88 1lnlt, toilet room. sleeos ' • M ,, "~"'' "'"'~ 51or_, 1tc. ~· ·l' ' COMPACT CAMPERS P:lfl Courier, Tovoto, Dabl.ln, ~c. s""°' "' R«i11¥ o nit• uni!. -"'llm. SA .E 1973 1973 PINTOS PINTOS 63 PINTOS ON SALE! COUPES • RUNABOUTS •WAGONS • $QUIRES ALL COLORS AVAILABLE ·IRAND NEW 1973 FORD F-250 " ~ND '72 FORD CAMPER VAN IMMEDIATE DEUYERY - SAVE •1700 ' NOM· IUM!S'llD llJAIL NICI FORD I l $298·8 LARGE SELECTION OF NEW 1973 s:~ THUNDl!RBIRDS 5:~ IMMEDIAft DEUYERYI :D '73 LTD BROUGHAM V-1, •wfo. fr•11"... factory •ir .-dffiOt1l111, ,..., """"'' •,..... , ... ,, .......... , ,..... window•, pow•r ... n. AM/fM ' ... ,.. red lo, heat..., ~~It t'-, vM!yl rMf, tlt1tM 91••.•· ..ti•el cO'f'era. #JJUhl11ZDl7. IMMEDIATE\ 5-A. vE . ,-1:400, DELIVERY \\ · ::; 0 ·~972 EL DORADO 20' Sf Thomas Motor Home Completely Self.contained v.1, auto. trans., po.wer •te•r· Ing, I: bra'kes, · luxUri~s in· terior, includes 1h•g c•rpe+, . ges-elec:. refrigeretor, show. er, ••nity, tone+, kint.,.i• bod, .1.,p. 6 .. 'comlorf, ' Joads of storage. A real .=~t&IO-EHi\1;4.97:111,...·~. ------ I ' / 7 San Clemente Capi~!.~ano EDITION l ' . - Today's Final N.Y. Stooks VOL: 66, ~O. 16'1, 5 SECTIONS, 100 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, <!:A~.f\ WEDNESDAY. JUNE 13, 1973 TEN CENTS By CANDACE PEARSON Of .... Dell)' "" , .... Afore parkJng was again the key to ap- proval of two" Sail Clemente coastal prD- jecls tjlis week by th.e South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Commission. A 99-unit con:dominlwn c o mp le x between Camino Capistrano and Calle Grande in Salt Clemente received a. con- 1tructlOn permit . after the developer agreed to add 10 off.street parking spaces for guest!. Shoreelllfs DeveW.,ment Company Citizen Unit Seeks High Rise Delay The head or 8 coalition of South Coast citizen groups said Tuesday his organiza- tlon will seek a delay on AVCO plans for hi,tu;jle <Olldomioiuma on the Laguna Niguel OCOl!'lroot. already bad propoaed 11111 apocea, or the twe>-to-one raUo the commlasion favon . But Conunission Executive Director Melvin Carpenter said he is working toward an overall ~rd ol two spaces for1 e'{ery o n e dwelling unit plus one guest space for every 10 unit!. Gary Taylor, Shorecllffs attorney, said 10 spaces could be provided and added the two and three-bedroom complex is about 55 percent open space and con- forms with the city's 11eneral plan. A much smaller, eglht-unit apartment er Bottomless Act In. Laguna Bar Prompt.s Arres_t A 27-year-old Corona del Mar man was arrested in Laguna Beach after he allegedly dropped his pants in a bar and gyrated 1n front of a table of women Tueaday. Robert Lewis lies, 71, or 631 Dahlia St., was taken Into custody by police called to the Surf.and Sand Towers, 1555 S. Cout Highway, -..a.guns Beach. He was booked on alleged inde<ent ··-· PoUce Capt. David Brown said a building also was passed by the t'OOS!line commission after the partl.ng ratio was upped from 1,1 to z,t. The colllDllssion, which deals with con- struction in Orange and Los Angeles cowlly coastal wne, laid iLwQ!lld ~pt tandem parking' to meet the r<qulrement. Frank Morris, own<r of the property at Buena Vista and Avenida Aragon, aaked the 12 commi.Y~ to consider "My dilemma as a small penon," referTing to the size ol the building. MorTis complained that the entire area • Ie 2 Carloads Of Marines Hit; 2 Die An unexplained headon a>Uilion in- volving two carloads of El Toro Marine Corps enllstM men near the base killed two and left four hospitalized with m1jor injwies early today. The accident occurred on Trabuco Rood west of Sand Canyon Rood, ..,. cording to the Calilomia Highway Patrol. Paul Sayre, president ol the United South Orange Coast Com m unitie s, (USOCC) said the 30-<lay pootpontment oought be!°"' the. high-rise matter comes befott the Sooth Coast Cooservalion c...,mi.;:,, ,lime Z5 _... allow I""'" ~ ._. time fill< lluilYinc' the 'At "8iue la a prapoul for development al' &eW!i\ IDd 12-lt«y -.......... tbi beach side ol Pildllc Coast Highway betjreen Crown Vlllq Porkway 111'! Dana Nlnt. man reportedly Walked to a table of women who bad be<n asking !or service. capt. Brown said the man asked them: "How would you like a topless waiter," and with that allowed . his -· to fall down -1ila ---IJl'8t.d Ill front al the table. · Capt. Bmmoald the--plcked up bll "°"'"' 811 nm• to the bar wheR he WU 'IP' prohended by police. B-.i Yid Iles did not appear. to be ln- tolicated. "For· same ~ reason. the eut· ' boiind -..,.,.,Ille ... _ lwo and ••• bliil!," mnarked..., CllP of. fleer tbil ---I • . Coroner;• d<potl8s idontUllil Ille de~ men, -In ucb al the can in-vOlved, .. Jllllld A. ~· 2$, and !livid II:. :MJtdlell, 11, 11<1 ' of -bomttownl Werf an.flable. "'Ille CClliunluion bas not lood enough lime to •tudJ the data -not all the data his been avallable," Sayre said. ··u the conunismon does hear this case June .25, we will protest it, II Sayre Sald. lie added that -Ung ol bomoowners willl AVCO ,.,.......,tattves last week (lloi"80TIBT, Pqe I) Clemente Police Arrest Alien In. Sexual Atmck Tickets on Sale .For Stan Herring Testimoiiial Fete By JOHN V ALTEl\ZA Of ... D-'IY "9t ..... Tickets went on sale this week for • unique testimonial dirUler to raise funds Cot surgery to help longtime pier-area A 4~-old Mexican alien wu ar-h11sinessm,an Stan Herring, w b·o & c rested 'by lion Clem<nle detecti,.,, Tues-reputaUon in youth work along the South day· m 'charges stemming 1rom an Coast bas be<n ledgendary. assauJt and sexual molestation ol 8 San He,rring, who for 23 years h~ operated Cltmente man last weekend _ an attack Stan s Snack Shack at the aty beach wlildi aent the victim to the hospital near the pier, will be honored by hun- S.lvador Lopez Rodriguez was pi~ked • dreds of well When at the banquet June up In the eerly afternoon at a San 23 at ~he San Clemente. lrm in a ~m Oemente w~ldng yard and booked into ~rJs~ b~~r!~al oomm1ttee of U)e city ja on charges of ~vated nie dinner, offering an evening of assault and felony aexual molestation. tribute, <11tertairunent and dancing to the Police.. allege that ~I hid been music of Sam nberl'I Orcbeltra, will drinking last Sunday Wlth a 6-year-old start at 7 p.m. and all proceeds from the ~ CJemente man and late in the even-$25-per·pel'80l'I donation will go to help mg . Rodriguez allegedly suggested a meet Herring's medical and recuperative homolexual encounter. eipenses. . 1be companion re:(Used and subse-Couodbnan Paul Presley, a leader in q-1Jy was kicked scverely and then a the project said that the motivation for f""'1Jn object -!X>'Sibly a bottl<, police the banquet "ls slmpl<." ~fiifili>ed liito hjif rectum. -"fu view of many lhhip that Stan has The VJctlm sought medical be)p and done for the communjty, especially for was 8'Clmltted to San Clemente ~ our young people, we would like to show Hoopllol for treatment, repo!U said. our appreciation by doing aom<thlng In Police saJd 1that a woman companion of retWl\~' he said . , RodrlqUH was also arrested" at the AmoDg Herring's ••many ac- wrecking yard on Los Mollnos. She was compliahmen.ts in San Clemente over tbe identified a.s the .wspect's wife, in the put 23 years," Presley said, are: oOuntry illegally. • ~ganlzliig and chartering ol the San Detectives turned the woman over to Clemente 1.Jttle League. border palroJen for deportation to Mex. -Aiding the OrganizaUon and serviJlc lco. (See DINNER, Pap I) Sia~~oo · Fool? ·Clwck Ft.itters Away-Forever REDWOOD CITY (AP) L A ,15,000 check was perhaps lost forever Tuesday when It fluttered Into an escalator at the Hall of Justice and Records here. The escalator was turned olt for 15 minuU!s while a mechanic crawled Inside to look for the check. But part of the machinery la In· acceaslble and the mechanic was unable to locaU! the check. The .check was made out to a man as part of a court property sa le. • "l feel like a loo~" he said, too embarrassed to Identify hlmselC. • Investigators uid the two Marines are in transit and DOI perm-Uy stationed at the base. Investigators said the other victims, all taken to Tustin Community li<lopltal with major injwies, were Daniel M. Kirkman, 22. driver of one car, Leonard W. Walke, 21, the second mOtorist, and George E. Smith, 19 and Charles G. J ones, 23, all residents of El Toro base housing. Medical persoond at the hospital were 11111 worttng on the injured men and compl<linc dlagnooes this morning. Coast Unit Hits Caspers Choi~e Of 'Inlander' Appointment of an "inlander" to the Orange C<>unty Planning Commission has rankled reprei.entatives of the United South Orange Coast Communities (USOCC), a cluster of leaden from cilhions' groups In Laguna Niguel. Firth district supervisor R o n a I d Ca1piers asked Roo. Yeo 1o resign last week and appointed Bart Spendlove, Jl""ident of the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council (SACC) to tak• his place. Speodlove is-a -resident of Mlssion Viejo. Caspers said his reason was to achieve better communications with homeowners groups In the S.ddleback and Dana Point ...... "We were shocked and amazed," Paul Sayre, president of USCKX:, said 1\Jes- ·day. "W• find Cupen' acilon thoro<!ghly reprehensible." "We know· of no organh.ation in Dana Point that baa any complaints about Yeo," Sayre aaid. "Caspen' new ap- pointment is far afield from being repreeentatJve or coastal interests." S.yr< also said USOCC Is investigating the poaiblllty of oetting up a separat• municipal adviaory council for !OU.th coast unincorporated areas including LagUna Ntruel and Dana Point. A municlpol advJsory council, or •l<Cted body which serves as an advisory voice to the aapervlaon' olDce, has been pro- 'pooed by the Saddleback A r • a CoordlnatinC Coonci l. '!be SACC: proposal would include Laguna.Ntruel In a llJO.lquarc·mlle MAC .... lnclUd~ El Toro, t.ke Forest, Milllon Viejo, arid Laguna HUis. But coastal area spokesmen have pro- tested that the btt•rests of cout residents are dlllerent from inland tn- terem and should not be repm<nted by the same group. .. \ ------------------------~ . ' Proj-ects bad 1, I Parking, bu\ admitted that many two-car families.live .there. By increasing ~ reqtlirements, the coastline COllU!liPlon feels it !Ynl pre- vent more residents from parking on streets that can then be used by beach· goers. , . In actions Monday on other Sooth Orange County projects, the commisson created by Prop. zo, -Approvf!'.d, an exemptiori from re-- quirements of the1new law for a 72-wtjt condori\inium at 423 Avenida Granada, San Clemen'fe, by Victor Klein. ac ·~.. . - ' ·" • r ·•., 1 The developer had a loc_al building permit Aug. 17, 1972, months before Prop. 20 became law Nov. 8, and ex- pended $400,000· m on-site work by then . -Denied an exemption requested by Aries Developiuent C<>mpany for a 45- Wlit condominium at 406-410 Pasadena Court; San Clemente. It had only a ten· tative·trQ;ct msp approval by Nov. 8. -Again continued action on 213 toY{llhouse units by Robert H. Grant Company in a recently a1IDexed portion or • San Clemente ~long Camino No't'P*iutiS:,... t • ~ • • • We're•all brothers ti~der •\l.>e· skbi. At' least that's the way tms !Jober· man.pinsche~ n~med:P!'i!le feels.abOut it The pedigreed dog, motlier of ~e of b~r my~ •. tQ;Ok on three kittens who were orphaned, when 1i1etr moth•~· was lfilled l/Y'. a, car. T~e Robert Suttons of Detroit say Pride adopted . th<!-kittens 1mmed1ately after hearing their hungry m~w.s. ~ · ... · · . · ·,, · • .} S9Vlet .Systems .Installed "" .. . . F~··e:rezlmev ·t:oast Visit ' ' , • v I • I ' I ' . . ., .. I f: •' • • 4', Ii'. ~~,:~·.,,39 · ~ com-'"cOlnmuni.st leader LeO.itd Brezfui<v. Il\Wllga!~ns. tecnnicians 'fOl'Jin~ to··irh · ~ts from tffe tJ~R and ~'ha-- 6~11 CQtnm.lDljcations ,·systems at the tiOn'a·C3J1ital point to ·a major ·dtlve ·to Westenl, White House, the Sov!et preu isi herald the leader's v1sit to the U.S. as an pumping, out the · propaganda' about 'tht: attempt to re8ch an uitimate detente vbit to Washington and San Cl8men~ by with the United stii.tes. · CLASSIFIED AD ' .. MAK.ES A S,UCCESS At'le8st one of our.readers is a success -thanU lo a Doily Pilol claasllied waht ad. Major tnde ancf arms limitation deals are the goal> fw. the visit and round of suJl\1lllt meetings with President Nl.xon sf!t t0 start Monday in Washington, D.C. Capistrano. The proposed f.1ira Costa Villas site is in southeast Capistrano Beach. It was scheduled for voting June 25 a1 the commission 's meeting in Torrance. Grant o£ficials a week ago asked ror a delay because three commissioners were absent. lessening the chance for seven afflrn1ative votes. Those members couldn 't read by ~londay the transcript or the public hear- . ing at that meeting because the minutes \\•eren't available. Thieu Hits Document In Saigon PARIS (UPI) -The lour parties to tho Vietnam war sign~ a pocument today pledging themselves to new measures to shore the Vietnam cease-fire agreement through "strict and scrupulous im- plementation" of the Jan. 27 document. The measures include a U.S. resump- tion of economic aid talks and rempvinc mines from North Vietnamese waten., . an end to U.S. reconnaissance flights, a • return of Saigon and Viet, Cong troops to , their'• original 1ltuattons Mel a pledge from them strictly to observe the cease- fire. • Saigon signed reluctantly and rePorted· ly under U.S. economic. pressure, and a dlspatch tOnigt)t from Saigon said Presi· dent Nguyen Van Thieu wss disappointed that the new weiement dld not restore the ·Demilitarized 1.one or require the· North Vietnamese army to leave South Vietnam. · Official 'sources in Saigon said the document gives even greater concessions tG the C<>mmunists than the Jan. Z1 doc~ents, and little at all to Saigon. A Jomt statement issued after Henry A. Kissinger and U: Due Tho of Hanoi wound up negotiations by initialing the 14-article · document. described• officially as a '.;~Wliq._ue," said i.t provides for strict and scrupulous implementation'" ol the Jan. rt pact. A full four-party signing ceremony' then took place at the Kleber Avenue ron- ference center in the same room \\:here the original pact was signed. A second signing ceren1011 v was scheduled involving only Kissinier and Tho. The same procedure was used in tbe Jan. rr signing to pennit South Vietnam and the Viet Cong to disregard each other's claim for oflic!ial status. The document brbke little new ground, for the most part demanding ne~· com- ~it.ments to the original pact and p~ vi.ding fresh dates for implementation. It had nothing fresh to say about either the fighting in Cambodia or Saigon's re~ated claims of North Vietnamese ln- Ciltr'atiohs into the south. In each ease, it reiterated the Jan. 27 position .!....... that foreign troops should leave Cambodia and Laos and should not (See VIEl'N.UI, Page_ II Oraai(e Wetti.th,er A1ore of the same gloo1ny 101\' clouds are on the agenda Thurs- day,-with partial clearing in the afternoon hours. llighs. in the mid- &Os at the .beaches. rising to the -k>w 70s inland. INSIDE TODAY llECEPTIONJST 1\'ll]ted for N.B. !4w !Inn. Typhill r<q'd. 1:30-6 .• Call (l'lione No). '!"' aJ>pt. Slie auswtred U..t ad' ind wal.• hired. II you're· looking fer a job, try loo~ al the cla11l!l<d ads in '~.Dally Pllcl to- day. 'l'm>ol'row YQ\1 could he -ully . •mP!<>)'ed, And to, plac< an ad al •your own, dial direct -111e line lo auece11 - Soi>n. afler the initial dlscU11ions tllOre lhe ICtlle will shift to San Clem<n~ Wher< a major acidr<as to the cltbens of tile U.S. and USSR may be given by tbe Soviet Communist Pany head. Lending strength to the yet-Uholllcial • repcrts of the two-!'liloo address ;., the fact thet 50 Ru• -smen will be on bond aloog the South Orang• Coast early next week to joln ·the communicatk)ns stall already here. · Abortion is lii11 b11si11ess iu Califor11ia. Tltere are doctors. hospitals and n1iddlc1ne11 tlta' specialize 11~ ir. See f irs' article hl serie& begin11i110 toda11 Oil FciiJe l 2. at """' St"k• ) A1111 L1nlllen 4' L.M. t11111 1 M1llM1 l hlllM II Mr.riff •O C•llfltOll I M~W•I l'lll'llllt JI C1rMf' C1r11•r '1 N .. kw\11 Ntwt t 84W878. ~ ' J • r For more than t. week the teehniclans have been working II hours a day, &e· cording to their spokesmen, in&lalllng the equlpm<nt which coold broadcast a televised mem11e to the Soviet Unloll. So far White l!ouse 'ld<:s IIlve sald lit· IS. llUSSIANS, Pip I)· ' ' Cl•tlllltd 4)>1• Clfnllct .. C,.uw...-.0 Dtalfl Ht!ICff 10 ldlflrjll 1'111 • l11!1rl1""".nl •U l'l1111t« • JI.ff ,.,.. lfllr llKtrlll II Mt,,.MHt tJ Ill flf'YIC.t H • Or~ C"'°'IW t•lt l'TA .. SHrls »·M Dt. s1~1"< .. l!n ti Sl'Kk Mtrtlth 1f.Jt T ... Yl-.!111 • TMtflrt ~t·•I w .. ....,. • w-.,.•, ,.....,. •J.'' Werllll NtwJ t !_ DAIL V t'll O I His Secu rity· W c1s1t't Sec ure A bur~lur alarrn s y s t e m salcsnlan tus1 il su1tt·aSt' l'Qnlnlning sa1nples ol the Ncv.•port Beach con1pany'.s wares to 11; c:1r burglar Tuesd.ly, "hilc his ~IXlrl roadster was parked near his office. • \\'llhain R. Stc\\·art . nr Hurst Security Systc111s. 4500 Can11>us Drive, <.'Omplalnt<l 10 Polic,:e Officer !\likr McI>o11ough that the $225 kit wns snatched rij.(tht out of his Ul\lockcd crir Pupil-built House Now U11 For Biddi11g· Thl' boa rd serving the Capistrano- Lngw1a Regiona l Occupational Program tonight will <lC'I un the nnal and major phase or a long construction class project \\hich yie lded a two.bedroom house in San Ju an Capistrano. The board \\Iii! try 10 sell it. The house res ts 011 a pad at the end of Acj<1che ma Stree t and within a few more days ii will be complete. The board made up of delegates from the (\'IO school districts is expected to authorize bid advertisements for the dv•cll ing constructed under a grant of funds from Laguna Federal Savings of Loan of about $12,000. 'Ille minimum bid, aceording to a :;ug- ~csted resolution. would be $12 ,500. Officials have hinted candidly that the selling phase "'ill be full of uncertainty, because the potential buyer must be able to meet the intracacics of moving a house to anot her site. Because of regulation s restricting Ule transporting of the house on freeways or stale highways, lhe ROP structure would have to be relocated at a si te somewhere ln San .Juan. Capistrano Beach, Dana Point or San Clemente. ROP spokesman Gerald CopeJand said that the only way a freeway route oouJd be attempted would be by seeking a state ~rmit and chopping the dwelling into :\ffiUIJ seclions. • "It's too nice a· house to do something like that to ii," he said. • 1'1oving costs ha ve-been estimated at n1ore than $2.000. he said. Nonetheless. ROP officials regard the struclure as a potential good buy for some investor. The product of hundreds of hours of toil by more than a score of construction students. 1he d\\'elling has t"·o bedrooms. and a modern "'ooden exterior and forced-air heat . South Coast contractor Dean Whittaker served as instructor !or the project. "He's given up some very ll}Srative contracts in his own business to find the time to do the teaching this year,'' Copeland said. The bid process will begin with a three- "'eek ad for potential buyers. Among the conditions of the sale are : -Payment mus t be made wilh a cashier 's or certiflCd cheek made payable to the ROP. -Any oral bid offered at the deadline +::is yet unset by the boardl would have to be 5 percent higher than the best V.Tit- tl·n bid submitted. -The buyer Y.'ill pay all the charges for removing the house and "'OU\d have .lo move it before Sept. 10 of this year. -The ROP board reserves the right to reject bids or v.·ithdraY: the item from sAle if it "'ishes. f'rom Page J VIETNAM ... be introdu ced into South Vietnam . The communique called South Viet- OOmcse and Viet Cong commanders to roeet v.•ithin 24 hours to agree to tempor- ary measures to avert conflict . • It urged rormation of a National Coun- tjl of National Concord as soon as possi- ble, but did not specify that the council \Vould ha\·e organization of elections as ilS main task. OIAN•I COAST tc: DAILY PILOT ': "Tht ()t1t19t CHU DAILY PILOT, Wllfl ~ 11 ~-t"t N,,_Prnt.-w """'....,. 'Y" - Ille Ortnvt CO.OH P\lblh.111"11 Col'nC>lnf, SIC!'* r•le M lllont 1r1 wtrlltl\fd, Mond•r th'"°"91h l'•lcltr, lat COlll Mtt.tl, N-pOtl 8Hdl, Hunl!t>QI°" l!lt~h/F-llltl Valltl!r, Ll~\11'11 8Neh, ••~IM/Saddlltlecll .,., l•n Clernftoltl Sift Jt,111\ Capl1!•-· A ..ine11 •"lllONll tdUiol'I 11 1lllbll1fllll lell1nltl'1 IM'ld '41r"'1•Y•· fht pr!llCIN I Pllllllthillt P'eflt " .. IJO Wnl lay ~trtt1, Ct•I• MtM, C.lllomlt , n62'. Aoh•rt N, W1e4 1>r1110tn1 •nil P'Vblllllltr J1ck ti.. Curlty Vk:t Prnldtnt ..... 0..tl Mt ....... Tho1r101 ICttl'll Edllw Thomas A. Mvrphi111 -.... 1111111 l!dltor Cll11l1t H. Loot Aidri tr9 I'. Nttl Ai1l•lll'll MIMOlnt l:dllwl ... _ ...... lOS N•rth El Ca1r1l110 Aetl, t2471 Co1t1 Mn•; ,.. Wtll •• , lttttt N•lll'Jllll•t •""'= aau M....,.,.i ...., .. .,.,, tW!llllltlDfl 811(111 "'" •lldl .......... I'll ... ,._ •tt<t1: m ,-., .. , ..,_ , .. .,.._ 17141 &4Jo4JJ1 Cl-"114 A"'9nteht &4J.1671 ~ C.......,. Aft O.,e:1w•t1 T•I•••••• 4t1-44JO C1111fr1911', lf1l. 011110t Cotti •lllllllfill:f ""'1p.tft~. ~ ntWt tlOtlet ltlut1rt111N, H l!Orftl Mll!Tr or <llcl._..,,kttnefl!J lltrtlli ""'• '·-" • t...,..Utttd W/"'°"I tHClft .... ..,, 1_.. _. eopy11fr11 ownt r. ~ r ltu .. .,.,. Pflcl 11 c..11 Mew, C:.ll•ftla, llltllletl.,loft .-, cafT1tr UM l!IOl\1111¥1 llr '"Ill ».U lf'IOtlllllVl rl'llllh"' Cltttitf!""' U.t.I '"°"lfll1. WrdnMOo1J, Jline J.J, 1 ,, .. 3 Oeanup Efforts Set Along Coast Three major cleanup flforL3 were set to take plact along the South Orange Coast late this ~·eek -starting this aftemoon with a student effort at a unique Ji!!tlch of beach. ~ The rpresununer period <i antllltttr and beautification campaigns began this afternoon as dot.ens of San Clemente High School students fron1 the con- temporary world problems class bent the ir bac~ to clean the old Capistrano Beach Club strand where no regular trash services are available. That heavily used beach is in private o"·nership, but in recent years has bad unlimited public use. Services however are nonexistent. Besides the beach.cleaning today, other projects set for Saturday will result in ln1provements throughout San Clemente and at Pines Park in the Palisades: Several hundred high school pupils aid- ed by adull volunteers will devote all day Saturday in an effort to clean Ssan Clemente's trouble areas. At about the same time, the Capistrano B e a ch Community Association will sponsor yet another weed~learing and planting foray at Pines Park. Volunteers with spades, rakes and spare ground cover are wekx>rne, starting at 9 a.m. The high school e£fort will combine a hard day's work with an evening street dance. Organizer Linda Castillo said that hun- dreds of pupils "and anyone else who wants to help" \\'ill assemble at 9 a.m. at the San Clemente High School perking lot. There, they will pick up trash bags donated by the South Coast Jay.-and then will be dispatched to one of nlile spots in San Clemeite. The locations where the volunteen will -...'Ork will be the entire city beechfrom from North Beadl to tile Stat. Park; El Camino Reel from Shorecllffi to Avenlda Pico: El Camino from Ptco to Portal; El Portal to Del Mar: Del Mar to East San Juan; Magadalena to the !\1argarita overpass: Del Mar through its enUre l<ngth and public parking lob at Linda Lane, T Street and North Beach. At day's end and the vohmteers and the public in ienel'al will be welcome to a .free street dance at the North Beach parl<ing lot wilb music irovlded bY tile rock group "Max." Miss Ca!tillo said that fund! for the band and the otbe!' expo~ fur tile day's activities, $100, has been donated by the San Clemente Exchange Club. 'lbe club also has donated tnds which will pick up the day's tra!h and haul it to the county dump. "We have lob of sU1d<W plamlng to work on Saturday but we Still couJd use some adult volunteen from the com- munity, too," saJd Miss Castillo. "All they have to do ti .show up •t the school at 9 o'clock and be willing to Wlll'k with us," she added. Schmitz Says He'll Probably Run in .1974 From Wire Services SACRAMENTO -John G. Sclunitz. former Orange County congressman and presidential candidate, has said he will "most probably'' run for some statewide office in 1974. The Newport Beach resident recently re-registered as a Republican, after run- ning ror president in 1972 on the American Party ticket. "11le major issue is going to be restor- ing the people's confidence in govern~ ment." said Schmitz Tuesday, referring to Watergate. "Right now the country Is in a real crisis." Schmitz' Tustin campaign office Is still open. Although the conservative ex-con- gres.sman \\"Ouldn't say v.·hat office he "·ould seek, some Sacramento sources sa id he will run for secretary of state. That post is currently held by Democrat EdmW1d G. Brown Jr., who has expressed interest in I h ~ governorship. From Page J RUSSIANS ... lie aOOut the San Clemente ph.ase of the visit. It is expected to take place early next week after Nixon and Brezhnev make 1 5topover at the Houston Space Center ln Texas. As for the substance of tlle major 1alks, sources say the two leader1 will discuss major, long-term trade agreements: and the sources add that Brezhnev plans to negotiate "u Jf Watergate never happened." The mrces. spokesmen "who ref1ect current Kremlin policy," aald the Sovlel leader Is mo.st anx ious to make the t.alks a success and achieve posJUve suetess. BreUmev reportedly does not plan to exploit the current precarious position of the President. Mounting economic problems In the Soviet Union -as evidenced last year after the major U.S.-Sovlet graln sale wa1 announced -art: reported to be the prtme motlvatlng factor In Brezhnev's predicted attempt& to hammer out new economic deals with Nixon. \... Tliese Victims Won't Follow DAu.AS (AP) -Bandlts who mshed • nel&bl>orilood party "'" had a method to guarantee the vic- tims didn't gl•e.chue. They forced the six women and elght men to take off their cLothe:.s and tb<n ltelped tbemaelve1 to $400 In jewelry and cash be!ott ntaklng a getaway. The men we-re locked in a closet and the women herded Into a ' bedroom. When the bandits made their escape, the women dressed Jm..d tti~ let ~the men out of the closet. Battin Names Valley Man As Planner Clarence G. Casper, 53. a Fountain Valley private land use planning con- sultant, has been named' to the Orange CoWlty Planning Commission b y SupefiiSOr Robert B~ttin. Casper wi ll take the seat vacated by Adolph Molina, 41, a Santa Ana attorney. Battin said Molina, who has served on the commission since last January, quit because of demands of a new job he had taken. Molina became the seeood planning commlsslooer to resign in the past fe\v days. La.st week Supervisor Ronald Caspers riamed Bart Spendlove, presi- dent of the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council to succeed Ron Yeo, Corona del A1ar architect. a.1olina said Tuesday he "'as taking vacation time from his new job as a referee with the State \Vork.men's Compensation Insurance Fund in Loog Beach to stay with the comml!slon until June 30. "I felt a moral obligaUon to stay until the general plan work is finished off," Molina said. 'Ibe county planning com- mission and board of supervisors are in the midst of meeting state requirement for open space and conservation elemmts by June 30. Casper, a private land use planning conaultant, has participated on , UC Irvine's Project .21 Open Space team. He ran unsucct!SSfully !or ·Fountain · Valley city council during the last elec- tion and helped in Supervisor Battin's re- election campaign. F,....P .. eJ DINNER •.. a.s charter member or the board of the South Coast Area Boys Club. -Heedini the Elks Lodge Youth Com- mittee for many years. -Wimlnc the Cltt.en of the Year •<> colade in 1966 tor out.standlng ~ tributioos to the.comm~ty- In earlier days Herring also had one co!orful .annual task -serving as San Clemente's Santa Claus, donning a cos- twne and handing out candy to youn11ters each Christmas season. "He always was on hand to deliver quistmas packages to the needy, a lot of which came at his own expense," Presley added. Yet another annual event involving Hening has endeared him to youngsters. Al the end of each summer beach season Herring bas employed a simple technique to cut down on the perishable inventory of the snack shack. He opens up the place and giv• tlll food and candy away to yow1~sl~1'll _ut loe beach. Tickets, Presley said , are available at the chamber of commerce offices. the Police information desk at city hall ; the Elks Lodge; Kay's Beauty Shop; Sam'.s Shoe Store ; the San Clemente Inn; Na uman 's Electric and South Coa st Glass company. • Fretn Page J PROTEST •.. "sho"·ed us tne tip of the iceberg -but we don't reel they (AVCO) were being en- tirely honest." ~ Sayre said he felt the comments of Jim Thompson, president of the Laguna NigUel Horneo"'ners and Community Associatioo~ on the meeting were not representative of the residents of Laguna Niguel . 'nwlmJ>S<l(I, it was reported in a news story earlier this week, said it seemed little could be done to stop the towerl!, and that the proposed location was the least detrimental. "We are far from feeling that little can be done, and we are just sick about these towen," Hope Luedeke, another resident who attended last week's meeting, uid. Nixo1t to Slioiv Economic Plan WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pre•l· dent Nixon will dJsclose new pro- posals for fighllng Inflation ln a na- tloowtde broadcast tonight at 5:30 PDT, the White House announced. 6etalls of the plM were kept secret, but It is e"l!pecttd to include some selective price freezes af- fecting 50me lndustrles while-omit· ting a specific wage freeze. Nixon has been concentrating tor a week on various proposal1 of economic advisers and Cabinet members for stemming the wont inllalloo to hil the nation In 20 Y'""'· (Details, Page 38.) DARs Fly the Flag L~guna Member Rela~ History7 '?f BfJ.:.nne.r By JACK alAPPELL till'!' ol i!S private ownersl11p. technology. In W"-'hlngton. • °'.,.. °""' ""'•• 'Ibe Smlt:Monlan stltchedjbe old fabric "T6rough the special lii!andeacent The history ol the Amerioln flag is the on a new back..ing, and to show visitors lighting which guards agaln&t fading, the history of America and .preservation oC what the full length Oag looked like flag's many perforations und tattered both is the aim ot the Laguna Beach reprodue<!d a duplicate length and 91· ends are bathed in a soft 9low, mute chapter of the Daughters or the taclted It behind the old. ev ldenco of its travail during that Arnerlcan Revolution (DAR). ''Today the old banner hangs vert ically perilous battle 159 years ago," Mrs. Ross In recognition of Flag Day Thursday, in the new tttuseum of hifflory and said. Emily Ross, an active DAR member and ~~~:~~Joi'Y!i~ ~t..,~-PI Ad . B :w . fo~:la:~rlcans know that in Sep-anners vise oaru tember 1814, Franc.ls SCott Key, attorney, poet and patriot, while watching the British bon1bardment of Fon McHenry over which flew the lkta", JS.stripe flag was inspired to draft the words o! 'The Star-Spangled Baruler,' which in 1931 was made our National Anthem," Mrs. Ross sald. To ·OK Conservation Plan Mrs. R06:5 said that not many people are aware ol background behind the famous banner. "I guess lam what pet>- ple now call a 'history buff'," she said. "The flag was 42 feet long and so feet wide. It weighed almoSt 200 pounds and 1 crew of two dozen men was required to handle it. Believed to be the largest flag ever flown in battle, its eight-red and seven white stripes were two feet wide, as were each or its 15 white stars. "Hand4l'QVCn and hand-dyed and con- taining almost a half million stitches, it was !IOWQ. from a stafi '11 feet high," Mr.;. Ross said. Th.e banner was m a d e by ltfary Pic~ersgill, a Baltimore flag maker. "This huge flag made its single and supremely dramatic appearance in American hi.story. Jt v.·as never flown again," ~{rs. Ross said. "Following the t"'O<tay battle, the great flag was taken down and as far as the American public was concerned for generations Jost. The officer who com· manded the fort tool< the flag and kept it. "The story goes that whenever he wished to make a gift to a friend, he would cut off a strip of the immortal nag and present it with his compliments," she said. Heirs of lhe family asked the Smif.hso. nian Institute to take custody of the tat· tered flag some SO years later. Eight reet of its stripes had been cut during the Brezhnev's Wife Won't Visit U.S. WASHINGTON (UPI) -It was learn· ed Tuesday that Mrs. Leonid I. Brezhnev, wife of the Soviet Communist leader, will not come to the United States with her husband on bis state vi.sit next week. No reason was given !or her decision. President Nixon Invited Mrs. Brezhnev to the United States during his meeting wilh BreUmev in MOIOOW 1n May, lm. Brezhnev will anive with his otticlal party in Washington this weekend and be officially welcomed to the White House on Monday. Later, he will visit the Western White House at San Clemente. By JAN WORTH ot tht Dt!IY 'llM Slaff The Orange County Planning Com- m i s s I o n unanimously recommended Tuesday th.at a conservation cleme'Ot of the general plan, the prOOuct o! months of hearings and revisions, be passed by the county Board or Supervisors. State law requires that a plan to con- serve, develop, and ut ilize water. forest , soil, river. fish, wildlife. mineral and oU\el' resources be adopted by June 30. The l~page element divides Ct>unty resources into seven categories. A management plan was prepared for each category with. recommerxiations for future actions and discus:sk>n of probable problems. Five recon1mendalioos \.\'ere added by the Commissioners to 1he plan. "'hich was delivered lo supervisors this morn- ing. They include: -Adopt basic Open. Space Zone and Open Space District Regulations. -Adopt resource m a n a g e m e n t guidelines by August 15. -Develop a l'C50Urce management ordinance from the non -bi nd i ng guidelines by July 1, 1974. -DlreCt the County Administrative Of- fice (CAO ) to develop an organization to implement the resource managen1cnl ordinance, and -Begin a complete review and restructuring of the county zoning code . the subdivisX>o ordinance, the grading ordinance, building code. and county ad- ministrative p r o c e d u re s, to be developed into a comprehensive land management and development code. The open space zone ordinance "Titten by deputy County Counsel Ralph Benson was judged by the county staff and com- missioners as. "by itself not enough to implement the open space ordinance." But they said it meets the state re- quirement for an ordinance lo begin put- Jury Reaches 11-1 Impasse in Tri.Bl An Orange CoWlty Superior Court jury that recently deadlocked on perjury and bribery charges aired against Newport Beach attoniey Everett Elwood Stone reached an impasse at 11 to one in favor D• Fl • F• of acquittal, the Daily Pllot has learned. 1 11~8 e~mg Ire Prosecutor Pat Brian, the source of a statement to the effect that the jury was ling teeth into open space plans by June . 30. The commission passed an open space element of the general plan last week. The ordinance provides the capablllty to zone lands both privately and county- owned inlo a "holding zone" which Is not necessarily permanent but can be chang· ed through existing wne change pro- cesse.s. Public 11earings ~·ill be held on each acreage proposed for inclusion in open space zones before the new-tag ii ap- plied. After resource manage1nent guidelines are adopted, they would be implemented bY,. requiring all existing and future plan· ned communities to prepare a plan .show- ing how the guidelines would be met in their territory. For lands not in a planned community but in unincorporated or non city areas, a use permit or cnvironn1cntal impact report will be the regulatory devices until an ordinance is passed. Grand Jury's County Jail Report Told The Orange County Grand Jury releas. ed a JG-page report today on conditions and inmate treatment at the Orange County Jail. The report, signed by Foreman Marcia 1'1. Bents of Newport Beach, made no comment on alleged mistreatment of in- mates in the jail in Santa Ana. l\1rs. Bents did acknowledge that the jury has received numerous letters from inmates or their families concemlng alleged mistreatment. "The jury has had continual vislll to the jail inspecting both the men's and women's aectk>na. Tbe jury commiueea have lnlervlewed compl1lnanll in the jatl, dl.scussed jail procedures wlt.ll Ital( members, eaten in the cafeteria BntHn-- spected record& and facilities," the repcirt states. Mrs. Bents said the jury ln conjunction witfl the district attorney's staff held a full panel hearlng in which evidence wu heard from inmates and the jail staff_ NEW YORK (UPI ) -Four per300S deadlocked at 11 to one in favor of con· trapped by fire jumped from the top \'iction has confinned that he was 1nisln-- floor of a blazing three-story apartment fonned when the jury returned from it.s The jury report includes a list of recommendations concerning rules, pro- cedures and tacll\tles at the jail. The report did not criticize the present opera· tion of the facili ty. building in the Bronx ealy today. One deliberations. was killed and the others were injured . The Daily Pilot regrets the error. ~~"--~~~~~ , .. ~ ' ' j.. I OrlN ' ... Duck Feet Fins Blemish 6.95 Ii 7.95 Replars 7.95 to 10.95 Masks Ii Sliiltles Water Winder Kick Boards 4.95 Wllso~~raft-Dms-Yoneyama- DunlGp Tennis Rackets Wilson-Penn lllmlop Tennis Balls ~ack Parcells Trltam Tiiiis Sllaes Basketbal Slloes Baselld Sllaes Al hl')ISI Shaes Open 9 to 6 -CloHcl Sundays • Champion Handball Gloves Racquetball Racquets 6.95 to 37 .95 Racquetballs 1.25 ea. Badminton Rackets 'Ping Pong Paddles Ii Balls Ping Pong Sets-4.95 to 14.95 Yoll8yballH:25 to 17.95 Volleyball Nets 11.95 to 21.95 Colored Sleeve BasebaH CLOSID IUNDAY Undershirts Boys 1.95 Mens 2.75 Baseball Caps-Mitts-Balls-Bits Raleigh Bikes-Parts fhls-Tubes-Repairinl Racket Restr11111111 646-1919-538 Center, Cotta Meta I I I' Irvine Dinghy Sailors Fourth Yale University took the early lead in the North American Intercollegiate sailing champion· s hips in the dinghy competition held on Eagle Lake near Ft. Worth, Tex., Tuesdoy. UC! the defending champion; was fourth be- hind Tul~ne and New York 1r1aritirTie Academy and UCLA was fifth after 12 races of the 32 race series. Wrdntsd1y, June 13, 1973 * DAILY PILOT J I ) Dana Har bor • Catalina Fleet 4 Racing Saturday The second in ;1 summer on the island whre directors series ol races wiU be con-and members will discuss a 'lf. ducted by Catalina 27 Fleet l>icnic scheduled ror lhe next BOATING Four or Dana Point ~!arbor Saturday, according to race day ul adjacent Doheny Park . director Bill Murray. Also on the agenda is pr&- Murray said that a racing planning for the Catalina 27 The dinghy competition among the top ~6 in· tercollegiate sailing tenn1s in the country continued tod~>8cor1ng -aftert1ie first day1s competiflOri'Was - Yale. 61 ; Tulane, 65i New York li1aritirne, 66; UCI, chart and starling Instructions natjona\ races to be · held at _ _ -iin,-e trierer---;t ·wiH--be issUed "at a 1 0 a:m.-DITTl!-P01l1 aft 1flSep---1\t the pr~~nl 74 ; UCLA, 80. meeting Saturday of a 11 tcmber . Skippers are expected arc 31 Catalina 21. sloops Catalina 27 owners whose from all coas1al parts of the bert~~ at D~~a ~01nt. All boats are anchored at Dann United States to compete in arc 1nv1ted to }Qin Fleet Foor. Point Harbor. the event. Some Y.'ill come. Such ~rrangements can be ~· Newport, Europe Firms Join to Market Yachts Getting Away Fro11a It All The meeting wiU take place a lso, from the Great Lakes com~lished a t ~turday s in the Dana Point Yacht Club are:i. meeting, h-1urray said. Boating Law Enforce1ne11t Training Program Started The R a n k Organization Limited, one of Europe 's largest entertainment a n d leisure co mpanie s, and American Marine, Ltd. of Newport Beach, the world's largest· builder or d i es e I yachts', have formed a joint venture aimed initially at marketing Ameri can Marine products in the United Kingdom and Eire. In a joint announcement, Rank Deputy Chief Executive Graham R. Dowson and American Marine Chairman John R. Ne)Yton said intilial plans call for the L'OOStruction of one o( the largest and most modem yacht sales a nd service facilities in Europe, to be located on the Hamble ruver near Southampton. The Hamble River is one of the principal yachting centers in England. The planned racillty is to be built. subject to plaMing com- mission approval. at the Mercury Yactt Harbor, a development on the Hamble River operated by 8 subsidiary of The Rank Organizilion. Completion is scheduled for the spring of 1974. Immediately prior to form - ing th e joint venture , American Marine completed the purchase or Solent Yachts, which has been the company's dealer for the United Kingdom and the largest sales outlet for American ·~tarine yachts in 'SAILS' MANAGER Roy Cundiff ' North Post To Cundiff Roy Cundiff has joined the North Sails loft in Seal Beach, accordiQg to manager Dick Deaver: Cundiff, in the capacity of saU corwultant for customer relatkms, will di rect the loft's increasing effort along the West CA>ast from Oceanside to Vancouver and including the HawaUan Islands. Cundiff brings eight years of sailboat rigging, preparation and sales expertise to the North lofl along with his im· pressive tacbig record . He has a string of victories to his credit among which are two successive Little W h I t n e y c h a mplon shlpsandlhe prestigious Balboa Cup. Kids Like To __ Ask Andy llT'S BE FRIENDLY If you have ne'v nelghho~ or know o( •nyonr moving to our IU'ea, pleasc lcll us ao that "'" may extend a friendly "'elcome and heh1 them to bccom~ acquainted In their new gurroundlngs. So. Coast flSitor 4M-OS7t 4M-t3'1 Harbor Visitor 646-0174 Scenes like this will be r epeated in many areas this summer as families seek Europe. The dealership and all solitude in island coves and mountain lakes. Trailerable "yachts" such a!' this present personnel will even· Coronado-23 I\-1ark II are gaining in pop ularity as they can be trailered to vari· tually be relocated to the 1 f Mercury Yacht Harbor, where ous launching spots. The boat has interna l ballast an4 all systems are se. ·con- the joint venture will be _1_a_i_n_ed_,c_m_a_k_in-'g'-it_su __ i_l_ab_l_e_r_o_r_i_n_la_n_d_w_a_1_e_rw_ay:._s_a_s_w_e_l-'l,,_a_s_t_h_e_o_p_e_n_o_c_ea_P_. __ _ operated under the name Solent Yachts. The Department or Na\'iga-distressed vessels and first regulations 'to obtain a copy or tion and Ocean Development aid. Di'iOD estin1ate.s that ap-!he free paenphlet entitled (DNODJ has launched an in-proxi1nately 200 of ricers \viii "ABCs of the Ca I I r or n I a American Marine also has recenUY, es tablished a dealership on the French Riviera. Costa Mesa Boat Firm Expanding Boat Supply Firni Moving to Irvine Boating Law ." tensive boating I a \Y en-be trained before the boating, ;;;;;;;;;;;;oi:.;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'I forcement training progra1n season is over. 11 Dowson and Newton said that both The Rank Organiza- tion and American Marine ex- pect further expansion in the United Kingdom and are look- in g forward to a continuing association through Europe. Products to be marketed in- clude the Grand B a n k s , Alaskan and Laguna lines of diesel yachts, built b y American Marine at plants In Singapore and Hong Koog and marketed internationally, throughout California . John E. Betmett. depart- The program is designed to ment director, said: "Our aim assist peace officers involved is not on1v to achieve en· with enforcement of state forcement Or our boating laws boating Jaws In every aspect but to prevent violations and sales forces have been in-o! waterway safety. hence promote safety through Newport Supply Company Following a recent training 1lhe boating educational efforts president, Robert McCurdy, creased to provide f u 11 school for boating law en-or our waterborne patrols." Will ard &at \Vorks. Inc .. or has announced the relocation coverage of the west coat. forcement officers in Modesto, "TI1e patrols will be looking Costa Mesa has doubled pro-or the corporate offices and In addition to the 300 per· the department is di.spatching first for unsafe practices such duction facilities foi:_ ' the central warehouse to the cent increase in warehouse personnel throughout the st.ate as reckless operation, manufacture of its new line of Irvine Industrial Coqlplex. space the new facility will be ,to provide additional w1-overloading and lack of re. Vega 30 fiberglass diesel off. The move, to be completed der way training, quired s are t y equipment," convenient to two major p I r · B u dded shore cruising yachts, ac· June 25, coincides with the an-e·ace o 1 c e r s are enne a . cording to vice president Jack nouncement of e :i pan d e d freeways and rlght in the familiarized with p rop e r Bennett encouraged a I FATHER'S DAY . •• JACK llDWlLL - MAKES IT GOOD Acali Raft On Course To Mexico Hochadel. service to the marine in· center of the boatbuilding boarding tactics, water search California boat owne r s ln addition to Its mai n plant 1 _.:du~s~lry~. Bo~th~ins~id~e':and~~ou~tsi~'d~e:_~c3ap~i~ta~l_<of"._'.Sou~l~he~m~C~al~il~o:'m~i~a.~":an~d'__.':re;:s~cu~e:,__:•'.:ss':':·is:1a101n'<:ce:__<t<>_o_'d~ou""'_bl".fu'."l~o"_f_st~a'.'.te:.._:al01n'.'.d__"loc><O".al~~~~~~~~~~~~ in Costa Mesa, the new 25,000. square.toot production area 3467 VM U.. • N...,,.,..._. ..... : 67)-4110 encompasses a two-acre site at 11200 Condor Avenue in Fountain Valley containing more than '250,000 worth of leasehold Improvements for fiberglass lamination, bulk un- derground storage of polyester LAS PALMAS, Canary Islands (APJ -The Aeall, a raft with a crew of six women and five men, has sailed 1,043 miles on ils trip to MeXico, an amateur radiO opera tor reported Tuesday. resins and acetone, and a filter system to process fresh air at 1100 cubic feet per minute. Three Tries And Out The SO-too raft left Las Pallnas on May 12 for the Yucatan coast ol. Mexico. The purpose of the trip, financed with $180,000 from a Mexican govenunent television station, is to record human behavior under strtss, SCOTI'S HILL, N.C. (UPI) -Shirley Haycock packed her I canoe In the Volkswagen and headed home fOr Helper, Utah, today, having abandoned+her third effort to sail her canoe to Portugal. The Mexican anthropologist in charge of the expedition, Santiago Genoves. told the amateur radio operator the raft had covered 212 miles in the past week. "I'd like to try it again sometime when conditions are right," she said. He said the Acali was l ,800 miles rrom Barbados, where the travelers are expected to arrive in about 43 days if the raft's speed is maintained. The conditions inc I u de d ocean currents which were too strong for her canoe, dubbed the "Senior Citizens Ark," and adverse sailing conditions. She turned back 30 miles from the Carolina coast. The Spanish Canary Islands are orf the Atlantic ocast. ~'') SAPPHIRES \\~~~ FIRE OPALS f}ur ~/ts foR E~E~y8~c~~SiON OUR CUARANTE.E. }'1111 rrf111ul 11( m""'·' H .,.~ ilrm of ;.-.. ·,·Ir~· l11 il• In •rpn1i•,. f,,, .JI l.t. l.,·r .;i)I;; """"' 1h11n ~'"' 1111~·! foR ANNiV£RSARiES l1d1es ' Black Stir S.pphif'e & lhiby 170 lt1n1. 6 ltub1e' [nl'l1nce Siii' in YC ........... . t.bn's D••mond So11 1111e lt1n1, '255 l1ntd11.l/)Ct.onsohdlll( ...... , .... , ... ~fr~e~ :::~·~:~~'. ~··~'.. . .......... 129 SOiid Cold B1n111 9r1ctltt. • S85 H1rrow. ch11n twisl des11n YC ........... ., , .. · Cllltured Pt1rl Pendant, LuU101Js Sl 4 pe1rl in man, llyles, llK YC ............. , Culllll'ed Ptwl Tit Tak, Lustrous s5 !me qu1tity Ptltl 7MM :.".,,,., ..... ,.,,, ... -. Man's Ol1mond Cluster ltin1, SJ68 9 bliill. d11monds .60 Ct1. TW, l IK , , ••.. , . , , rire Op1I Tie T1k Ctn. Ausl. s17 ()ptl in many sly/es llK YC .••••• , .. , , , ..... , , Cultuhd Pearls, Strand ol 7MM line quality, lustre & colot! ...... , .. Diamond B11dal Set. Sw11I of 1h1s. sunounds center .63 Cts. Tw ..... ,. .. · .... ,.191 Malched Wedd1n1 Bands, Modern SJ 01 Heawy Hu111t 1n solid llK Gold, the set, •••• .. ... 1460 O•amond Brodi! Stl ~n rree s210 '°'m Hu11tt, Antiqued, l/J Ct .. . . ...... , . l1d1es· carnet & Di•lllOfld 11in1. ~9 Pe1r Shipe Carnet. Cold Twist YC . , , , , , •• , , • , rg - lldles' lrople Pt11I & Ol•mond Sl 60 Rm1, J IUSllOIJs pe11ts, l Oi11. YC .. , ..•..• , , OillTIOflcl Heart Ptlld1nt. 11 OittnOndt s395 in bfilli1ttl Pltl!'t ,7S Ct1. TW .•••.•••••• , • , • Diamond Wtddlnl $flt, 01idiled "70 fi111sh In ltavts, . 2 Ct1. TW, llK , ...... , ...... 1r.re OCltl DfOP [1rrill(S, lon1 s79 OJOPS,lf1t1y091ls inllKYG ... ,. ....... .. SOS ClfDIT PIAN• IAT·A·WAT STAR IA•AlflllllCUO. MAJTfl <HUGI 0 f • lONG "AO<. •313 •-•~. S • SANTA ANA, 1015 N. Moin I a M . '""'•NCI. ''"n"·""'~ ""'· ... • WHTTIU, 1~19 ~SI. ~ /J. /.,".,,, • .SHHMAN OAKS, .t515 't'on Nlilyt ... d. ]"'"" 7t#e.,.., • TOlltANCI, Doi •-'""""' -· r-:-:-:-:-:-:-;-HOW Of'l.N ~ l IUCll f 1sMlll luH. tl.0.H llAC Sttlt I CNltf • .. , \ .. ". • Jovan introduces Musk oil after shave/cologne for inen. JCPenney We know what you're looking for. • Shop Sunday noon to 5 P .M. at the following stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach (714) 6'44-231_3. HUNTINGTON CENTER. Hunlin9lon Beach (714) 8~2·7771. I ,\ • .. ' ' • ' • • ' -. 'i j DAlLV Pl\DT Wtdrtesd.t)', Junt 13, J.'173 Abortion Business 1 Big in By JO\N BREWER-AMM:~_. l"rtU Wrlftr l Abortion has become big business in caUfornia . There are doctors, hospitals and middlemen that specialize in -ll. In California , "'hich in 1967 became the first major state l---:.~;;;egatiZeJl;--::f'1l'"tl amounts to more than $20 million annually. It is more than that in New York. which legalized abortion in 1970. PARTltULARLY IN California , changed laws ha ve spawned practices I a b e I e d rootrastingly as "a tragedy" and "the best thing that could happen to women." (Firs t tn a Series) This series will explore how women obtain aOOrtions, who performs them, who profits from them. It will examine developments that could be crucial in the futu re, such as mensirual ex traction and the trend toward abortion in of- fices or clinics. \Vith the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in January holding that ~'om~n have the right to abortion 1n the first si x months of pregnancy, California's ex- perience may provide an ex- ample for other states. FOR J'ttOST women in the Golden SU!te, a:Dortlon"is quick and simple. It can be arranged by telephone without talking with a doctor and usually re- quires only a few hours in .a hospital. TilC average cost 1s SlSO, which MediCal, state medical insurance program. pays if a woman doesn't have the money. In 1972 a record 138,584 abortions Were . done i n California, less than half the number of births. Recently, a counselor named Patty took a telephone call from a UCLA ·student , Eileen, 19, at Proble1n Pregnancy Information Service in El Segundo, a Los Angele s suburb. Here is how both remember it: oHEU.O, DO you have a moment?" Eileen lvas trying to sound casual but stumbled-nervously over the words. '.'Sure," answered Patty. "I'm afraid I'm pregnant." "HW'ray!" said Patty. Eileen laughed, breaking the tension. Eileen was sure she \.\'anted an abortioo. She \\'as eight weeks ·pregnant. well un- der UK! 12-wee k deadline for a simple suction abortion. IN LATER stages of pregnancy, the abortion is done by inducing a miscar- riage. It usually requires an overnight stay in the hospital, can be dangerous and costs California ''The type or procedure you 'll get is three tim.es safe~ than having your tonsi ls out,' Patty said, "NEXT DAY I'll be ready lo go_?" "You'll be in and out of the hospital in about four hours. You'll feel like you're getting over the flu." "Couldn't be any worse than the way I feel now." Problem _Pr eg nancy Information Service is one of about 20 abortion referral agencies that work w i t h California d o c t o r s and hospitals. Three out of e~ery five women who get abortions in California go through these middlemen, the age n c i es themselves estimate. THOUGH SOrtlE agencies are just a -Pfrson al a telephone, a month -lon g Associated Press study into abortion found most of the agencies to be private groups . operatin5 as n o nprof it organizations. Their s taff s often include women who have had abortions. Referral age11· chis take 820 to S60 of the average S150 o 1c '' 1n a 11 pays. They handle hospital ad- missions and do varying degrees of counseling, in- cluding usually talking about the alternatives to abortion. -1r nee/Jed, they a r r a n g e transportation to the lm;pital. For this, most take $20 to $60 of the average $150 a '\\'Oman pays. A woman may never See a doctor un til she gets to the hospital. THE REFERRAL agencies 'have been ~iled as "patient hustler" by critics and been ! examined by state authorities for tegaJ. violations. The.re have been no court cases in- volving their financial prae· tices. They say they are simp- ly helping women. Patty made a Saturday aJ>- pointment for Eileen a t Avalon Hospital in Lo s Angeles. It is one of about 20 small. private hospitals that !he AP study found to be SATURDAY IS the most popular day fo.r women to get abortions. At Avalon, more than a hundred are often done from 8. a.m. to 5 p.m., Allred says. Sitting with an AP reporter, Eileen looked at the others in the waiting room. Everyone was solemn, but the at- mosphere \\'as far f r o n1 gloomy. Everyone was a fellow sufferer. There \Vas cof- fee and Muzak. The only thing that Eileen talked about was t~;e waiting. There were 35 girls ahead of her. •i 1 DIDN'T think there would be any waiting, but there was," she recalled later. "I started to get scared. but a counselor calmed me down." The lines for the pre-op urine and blood test looked to Eileen like those to a movie. \\7hite-gowned "'01nen o n · \Vhecled carts \Vere backed up outside the opraling roo1n. On one of them \\'as a girl listed as an 11-year-old. Parental consent is un- needed in California. An II or 12-ye·ar-old shows up \Vith her parents about once a week, Allred says. The doctor adds t h a t sometimes in the cru1ih a woman who isn't pregnant is aborted because of inadequate testing. He says it has never happened to him. mERE HAVE been malpractice suits over this and the opposite situation. A Fresno woman filed a still- undecided $150,000 suit against a surgeon, claiming she was sti ll pregnant after the abor- tion. She gave birth to a girl. Dr. Morton Barke. part o\vner of Inglewood Hospital (See ABORTION, PAGE 13) GRAND OPENING! June 14, 9 a.m.-9 p.m. HUNTINGTON BEACH • Sting lh• l•mlly lo lh• NEWEST D1I T1co ol lh•m •JI-now Opet! In Huntington 8e1ch • Win "c11h dl1count1" lrom the D•I T1co Grab 81g-Ev1ryone'• • wlnnetl • For TASTY TACOS, 8urr!to1 1nd To1t•do1. •nd DELICIOUS HAMBURGER S. Fries 1nd Sh1k11 • FAST SERVICE 1t •llher our Drive Th•u or lnsldt Pillo Room •• , •nd Every Order Mldti lo Ord•rl NOW OPEN-2852 Warner near Springdale-Huntington Beach Linda Lovela~e a Hit Sale. 203 o~ all our wom~~·'s s·wimwear: Figure the savings. • ' \ . . • ' . •Doesnot include price mainta ined Playtexauits. Who could ask for a more timely sale. Now, at the height of the ~eason, Penneys slashes a whopping 20% off our entire line• of swimsuits. You can select from dozens of styles that include print bikinis, solid bikinis, one piece figure flatterers, popular swimdr~ss styling, • and many, many more: All in the smartest easiest-of-care fabncs, in colors to rival the rainbow. See them all now, at these savings prices, you'll want more tha!l on.e. ·I 8111prlcH11fecllv1 thru Sund1y. JCPenney We know what you're looking for. Sho~ Sunday noon to 5 P .M. at the followlng,_,,a~to=re=•==~~~- FASHION ISL-AND, Newport Beach (714) 644-1313. HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Brn:h-{714) 892-7771. HARBO~.CENTER, Coot• Me .. (714) 646-5021 .' /. I ,I I ' I' ""' ... -· ...... . WASHINGTON (AP) -Pmld«lt Nix- CD will dJJCbe bis major new program to ficbt tnnatlon tn a naUoowide radio and i.lovillCll -at 1:30 p.m. PDT tonl&bt, the White Houae sold. 'Ille White Houae aatd Nboa will speak for about 10 to II mtnutos and IMOU!l<e the plan be bu been worklnc ao with bis -c1ooe...._c advisers lor,the put several weeks. 'Ille presld«lt will meet wtth hi• cabinet at 4:30 p.m. and an hour later, with btpartl11n leaders from Congress, Deputy Press Secretary C.rald 'L, War- nn said. ' 1DETAWI or the new plan, deecribed v~y by admWstnUon aources u a 11major operation," a "flnn b u t moderate approach," and "more than coimetic this tbne," were bard to come by. Most ~ expected a 1ianificant tiKhteolna or· wage-price cootrols along wlth aeverat other ~nti-inflation measures. Although there was no confinnatlon, It's tlae Tallest Wedrwsday, Jutlf l.J, l'to. Ul"IT ....... • Boston's Logan International Airport officials dedicated a 285-foot airport con- •· trol tower-the largest in the world-Tuesday. The $7 million tower, built by the Massachusetts Port Authority, will be rompleled this fall. At right is old ron- trol tower. Nixon Talk SwwsTrade In Europe LONDON (UPI) 'Ille value of the dollar seesawed marginally at the outset of trading across E u r o p e Wednesday and gold prices i!Jpped s1Jcbt1Y u dealers walled !or President Nboo's announcement ol. anti·inflatloo measures. 'nle dollar rose marginally In Zurich and Frankfurt, and pined some around in Paris and Laodon. inllation and Olber domestic mooey woes -and the Watergate affair -touch- ed off wild dealing last week that sent gold prices to record bl&ha in London and sent Ule dolJar plummeting to all-time lows OD lour big European -.. WEDNESDAY, BOWEVE~ dealers pr.dieted t r a d i n g wwld remain light throughout !lie day becauae Nbon's ll>eech•wH nol-es~ed to be alred until after the European U-y markei. -· 0 1'r'adera are cautious," one aald. "Tbey don't want to do 'anything unW they bear what Nbon bu to say.'' INYISTll41NT OPPORTUNITY , ......... c.... ,, .......... ....... ..,,...c-........... . .... -· N.N.N. Sf11,IH --... ... c ...... ... •..... .... ..... '''· u, ............ . ta,qallw I HAYASHI RIAL TY ,._., .. _ General Motors Ups Prices on Some '73s DETROIT (UPI J Although refusing to call ii. actkln a price hlte, General Motors has confirmed Jt raised prices on several 1973 model cars by making JOme former~ ly optlooal equlpment stand- ard. Both GM and Ford Motor Co. this year pledged to hold the line on across-the-board price hikes, but Ford later decided to make '880 worth of optional equipment standard on Thunderbird!. GM TUESDAY conllrmed Ford Recall Of 12,089 Cars Told its action, wb1cb went Jnto ef- fect June 1, and said lt has been approved by the Cost of Living Council. It also said the equipment being standardized w a s already being purchased by moat of the buyers of the mode.Ls involved. Specificall y, the in- tennediate-size Buick Century Coupe was increased by $252 and t1'e Oldsmobile Cutlass Coupe' $336 as automatic transmission, power steering and roof drip moldings were made standard. Rubber Im· pact strips to protect bumpers were made standard on Cen- tury models, and will be<oole standard July l on CUUass models. ·-i-rm-lcing toolwd, and probablyldlling nrylfll, but' rm making .0 lfWJCh ""1l>rf I CM .tford Ir ... ' • ,. lteplblic Federal Sa\1ng1' Laguna Niguel olfice will open Jooe 15 with two female managers. P9ulls.e M. Garcia hal been named assistant vice president and ma1'Jaier of the new bank and Martt Drumm joins the branch as as,,istant secretary and a ss i sta nt manager. The bank has regional of· floes tn four other cilles and is •dquart.red In Altadena. * Fram W. Carr has been blllled vice president of con· stroction for Kendall Devetop. meot Co. He will be responsi· ble for all building operations in Orange CoWlly. He was previously general manager for the W.J. Burke eoostruction Company. Carr ' . and hls ramUy. reside In lr· \lne . * George Olsen has been nam- ed director of corpor1tle com· 1nunlcations for Es l e r I i n e Corporation. lie will be responsible for communications a n d ad· verlising of Esterline, which constsis---or-a-number-o teehnology-orlented operating companies, including Babcock Elect.ronlcs in Costa Mesa . * David II. Drinkwater has been appointed president of the new Bank of Irvine. lie "'as form· crly COrJ> orate \'ice president and corp- orate bank· ing officer of the San Diego re- gion head· quarters of Dt1NKWATE• United Ca lifornia Bank. The Bank of Irvine recei ved Its charter ..fron1 the state in April and a new facility will be built near the Walnut Village Shopping Center in Irvine. HUGH MYNATT 25 Yeors with Richord's Lido Markets QUALITY -COURTESY -SERVICE Now Representing . . . LINCOLN-CONTINENTAL & MAR~ IV Johnson & Son LINCOLN. MERCURY "Home Of the new-car "Golden Touch" '540-5630 2626 H•rbor Blvd. Costa Mesa ' GM Backs Antismog Devices Texaco, Refiner SACRAMENTO !AP\ -The most reoont crop of antlscnog devices ror new cars wlll litlp \VASHINGTQN (AP ) -The ovcf'(."Ome so1ne of i he Justice Department has filed drawbacks of t"WTCnt devk.-es an antitrust 6Uit agalmt Tex· -•uch as low mUeage and FINANCE aco, Inc. and an Independent poor perfomuuK:e, a General refiner, claiming they entered ~1otorLE~tiYe_s!!)'s. ~~===-===--==~ ~ an agreemm. to restrain In li speech 1'1onday, !Urold ---t1le ·sale------OC'giS>line--"to-in- G. \\'amer, G1'f execullve vice c l J _ dependents. president, said the automobUe a. CUmtOr The Ju s ti c e Department industry will be , able "to described Texaco as the na- rcstore some of lhe driveabili-F:rm Opens ,tjon's leading oil refinel" anc1 ty arx.I ruel ecooomy to our ., marketeer. products" ..-i th help from A .,.,,,)Ilic coov•rt•rs. t Irvine San Diego Bank Gets These mechanisms spark chc1nic:.il changes in extiaust fumes, producing s u c h relati vely harmless substances as carbon dioxide and water. They are stated to lbe Wtalled on 1975 model cars in Calirornia and nationwide in 1976. Using t'Ollver:ters, the ~ dustry will be table to "modify son1e or the things we have done previously Ito the eegine ·lo achieve lower emissions - ,fhings ·that have cost us in both driveability and gas mileage," Warner said. Louisiana I OKs Funds For Clothes BATON ROUGE. La. "(UPI) -Sheriffs may buy depuUes clothes for und ercover assignments as :Jong as they aren't made by Hart Schaffner and Marx or Hickey-Free· man, Wlder a bill approved by the Louisiana Senate. The Senate approved the bill Monday ,night after adopting an amendment by Sen . Ted Hickey of New Orlean s stipulating funds oould oot be used to buy suits from either of the exclusive men's brands. "Adopt.Ing it (the amend- ment) will ridicule the bi ll as it should be ridiculed,'' Hickey said . Sen. B.B. Rayburn o I Bogalusa contended it is necessary. hffo\v are you godng to catch a dope peddW wearing a uniform and a .45 on your side?" Rayburn said. A large manufacturer of desk·top electronic calculators with printers, the Ricoh Co .• Ltd. of Japan, will open a California subsidiary in the Irvine Industrial Complex Fri- day. 'Ille Calllomia firm, Richoh Electronics, Inc., hopes to · employ some 200 Americans by June, 1974. Its desk-top printer calculator is expected to be the first such Japanese product fabricated in the U.S., according to Dr. Hirosuke Yamashita, president of the Irvine firm . Yamashita said the Irvine operation, \i:ith an authorized capital of $4 million. includes a 40,QOO.square foot plant with additional space for future ex- pansion . Jte said that in ad- dition to assembly, t h e Cali fornia company will con- duct research and develop- ment and will utilize U.S-made <:0.mponents for its products as much as possible. New Chief Speclal to the Dally Pilot SAN DIEGO -Richard P. Wolt ma n has been elected chairman or the board of directors of United States Na- tional Bank, it was announced Tuesday. Woltman, who has been vice chairman. succeeds C. Arnholt Smith, who resigned May 25. U.S. National a I s o an· nbunced election of Harold Jurgensen as chairman or the excecutive committee. Jurgensen. who has been a member or the bank 's board of directors for 17 years, is founder and board chairman of Jurgensen's M arket s , Pasadena. Channel Tunnel Cost Continues to Climb LONDON (AP) Cost estimates are rising by the minute as supporters work to m o v e a much-discussed English 01annel tunnel from •the dream ro the construction stage. AN ENGINEERING report due for debate in P'all"liament later rthis week .says it will cost $2.125 billion to have the planned t~~n railway tut>es in operation by 1980. The tunnel would enable trains to whisk passengers. autos and .freight between London -and ,Paris in 2 hours. 40 minutes. less than half the present time by rail and ferry. In 1963, experts tiad talked of completing the t wmel in the 1960s, al a cost of $470 million. Ironically, high costs were one reason the British govern· ment delayed construction then. The same argumem is being heard oow against the 1lubes. But ~port~ argue that. if Britain and France continue to hesitate, it will a;>St. still more. A PARLIAMEITTARY gn,en light is needed lor the proj<d to move forward. even itboug'h the British and Frenc h governments last August an· oounccd an agreement on final preparations for construction to start this year. New Bank 'Alliance' OAILY PILOT V OVER THE COUNTER NASO Lllllnp for Tuotdoy, June 12. 1973 MUTUAL FUNDS The TALBOTT Tie ... The nex_t phase is building o( tunnelheads and short pilot tubes near Folkesto n e, England, and at Sangatte, near Calais, France. During preparation or the latest $24 million report by one British and one French con- sulti ng firm. aU the tradi· lional agrumenls were raised against linking the rt:wo' coun- tries by undersea tuber;. J\nd some critics came up with a new reason reflecting the ·times: The tunnel, carrying most of Britain's trade v.·ith Europe, ~wld ibecome a target for llerrorist.s, ranging rrom the Black September PalestiniaM to the I r i s h Republican Army. Ntw Ycwll -Fal· emi Gr '·" 7.S4 ...... Fllnd •. n '·" It.,_.. F 7.flf 7.1J io...111111• b • 1151 of l'A o" • J p Gwt!I !·'° ··1 ··rr"I lt31 • bid •I'll •.itlld •l· AltO: J•n"'1 Fd 1 .(1:211, •r 1). I 1 Special to the Dally Piiot ces on Muf.r,, a 11n Fa t.6.3 10.ij JH•n !" '·!! •· ~"' Fd \.~·~.!, '""" !' qUOlt(I l!Y G"''" F ll .60 ''· Jiin lo •. '·fS Sehl.II Sp .... .,, ... SAN FRANCISCO -The t~ NA 0 UK. Ill("'* 1.ll 6.1 J sin U.111'. 'KUDOtrlt flOSr. . • • --11 F 6. 7,J.4 I( YSTON•: n! Inv 11..13 .tJ creation of an intemahonal Jurw 12, itn ~ck Fa 12.'111.tt 1u• a 1 11.t1 it.ll !•f•nc ,,.Jsi" . 44 fllShlon island, newport center 644-5070 OVER THE DECADES var· ious proposals were shelved, mainly out of strategic coo- siderations. The British always felt sarer behind the large moat they can the English Channel. But this is illogical now that Britain has joined 1he Common Market, tunnel ;id vocates say. bank. Jli IHI Ailll E"-"JIO t.7• 10.M 111! 81 2111.10 22. om 10.6$ 11 mg a ance was an-aDM11tALTY : , E~1e S11 20.41'0... us1 a' •:i• t,06 Cit(•• 2'.lt . ed Tu--•-b Ch I Grwt1'I '·" '·l t: c MGMT OltP: 1111 Kl 1. • '-'' s~ Lw ·~s. nounc ~y y ares 1n«m J.n '· Qtv Gr 1. s .. vi K1 ,-_.. Al s cu•1n" • De Brettevilte Cha.lnnan or l"'U"' t.0. I .... ~ ~al¥ Pr 1·'' . vii SI 22 ... 21.1t aurt7 3. ,t..P • AdviWI" ,.24 ' nd ""' ... • 1111 !l 'J·ll 12.1' .... •.1'11 .'4 the board of Banca! Tri-Slate Attna Fd •lZ ,',"• •, rllf G1 12.1• 1:u:t •nt ..sa 1.JO '""lW •.~ 1.11 At1"'11 lft • .0 f\lfl TrT 11.:tl vit 5' ._03 ~I S L •D "~' Corp and Edmond D. Afutur. . t.IN. mM'9 l" !·" DOllo •.S3 '·" Am 1.i. .•• ·• . #\GE Fd '·" ._ Ml'V'f' I ,4 1 .4 6t• 3. J.tl Fd t.JI '. , . , Rothschild in the form of an Al1t111t '!·M ll.ft au!tot F t .J1 li~1tr 6.~ •.4.1 'i::r '"'' 12.u • , ' ADM Fd l .1tU~ •lrlld 1m l.t1ll:t1ltr Gth 7.l• 7.S2 Stti!lnel .... lO t• au thorization to sell 400 000 Arnc•P _F •.st ! ~"' B1tr. t .65 •~ Lndmrlt ).J.s '·'' s.tti1,.., "" IJ~ 1.;.. ' Am "'~ t.Jf 1 . ed RR• t.24 .. Lt11~ Fd ,0 5.17 SMAlll8MUI Ill' 1 shares d. Bancat Trt State Am EQ' •.u ,_., ~t:LtTY L•x O•OtJ : ~-' J. 1 J.Sl · AM p 111.ISS I.II": ~C-'l·ffU.02 titror 1.60~6'2 common stock to De Fl.lllDS: _ nc1 • • •.• t11 • '·" 1tt Fd .n ,:12 , 1.i 7..ff I-_,!al 11, Hr 13.3114.Sl a . Rothschild as a personal 1n-·'I~ I"' ' °"''' ,f 11.fl L1oiv '?:c1 s.t!O •.12 ..m-L ,,ff l:l: • throu h hoJJ IMl'm .10 l·lj ¥ SStc 1'.l1 '/.je ~'9 lt1I Y 7.at 1•1 Pke Fd 1~~ vesbnent g 8-W Y '$1)e(I 7.U . f:!' !.14 . llC Ca11 ).IS .11 SHIAlttolt " i. -·-~ ., __ to be I s1oc1r 7..66 1.3 nn 1 ~,, ljf Ftld Ill zl Apprc lj-" 'I UWIJCU corpor8uun orm· Am GrTh 5 .. 7 j·'lO .,..,.,, jO,tO l;:l t! MIS lnc:om 1 .JO .t d Am lntlft '·'' ·a Furtd 5.6$ I • IS• ltlftSI t,tO l n e . ...m lt1Yll '·'° 4. Pvrlltl t.4' 10.U Cap bv U.U 12.811 S Ntl t.tl 011 Banc.I Tr·1 State Corp a Am Mui !.,. t.1 s11""' F '·°' .... ·M~U11 1,.1, i..7' 1rc11PFd 1.ll 1:11 • · ·• AmN! Gr .2' 1.50 Trelld 1.1.63 U.ll LO D A••: IOM,A 'l.INOI• San Francisco-based holding ANCHO• FINANCIAL All lal 6.SI 1.01 c ... $Plr 7.47 i .11 OllOUI": l"lllOCJtAMS1 Am Bus l .Ool j.311 lt1¥ 10AS11 '2 .............. v owns the Bank of Capl1I A.S2 '·'' Fin D¥tl •• ,. •.16 llnd cltb '·''I ... Tr1t 7.fl 1:1:1 '"""'"t-"l,/t Ftld lnY 1.65 I.JI Fin Ind A.39 •.39 t""""' 10.SS 11,5,J Yftllvr 1.71 t ~2 California National Assocla-Gnottn 'j!' I·"' Fin 11'1( l" j·n "'h" 1n t.73 10.63 ilh 1 t.M 1:M 1 • • jl'l(Qm 1 .10 "'""' ·'' ·'' MAGftA FUMOS: II IA.Gr 11.11f J ·" tion The negotiation sales v..itur 1. •-'° 111Fc1 "' 10.111 .n c a111.i 1~ I· ,..,_,. 11.1 lj • WI Nan 11.f<l 13.0I ••r.•"Oltl: l'l(Otl'I 1.7• .s ....... In¥ I.JI~ pri ce is $21 per share. A1t .6 1. K Fd s. • J11t1tm t .OI 1 w 1nv G l.2t' · De B tt ·11 ·1 Id th t A= F J:3 •. n RrTh Fd 1.~ 111 Maf!lltn A.DO ,M r lft "11•!:· re ev1 e a so sa a .1.x1 l1ock F 7.7t 1.s.1 Mitt Gwt LH ,,. 0terra '· • .3f . . HOl.IOMTOM : I•! MUtll . IS CO; &P lnD 6.6 ,61 negotiations are .undenvay (or Futld A '~J f05 ,, Shtrr it f1f' °11e""" '·'° •·tt ~AT• •ND •i~· the purchase b;: De Rothschild r,u:i 8 i 7 ,:fl "t1:urnc1°,o 17~~ n M":~s FF ,f·U 1~·1, 1':11~d t+f \lll • A !.cl ._ 1 •A2 101 Fnd . . MASS FMCL: tOQrs t~: '11 or an additional 200,000 shares 81:(;e Gth 'j·~ lj·'1 cl'llum I.II I.it Mlg 11...,-17 s1 !! Fr Gr ·~ l:JI Of Banca! Tri-State stock from BaMGn 1 .t7 t1 2.S Fund 5.14 S.M Ml ll..JS 1•.Jf ,., Inc ' ~ e1vr« .2' ·lf ~n Gr •.SO 4 tt M ll 7615.0. I"'-Str "6.t the executors of the estale of B••rk 11r s.ao • UNDllllS MFg ll.2' 1•.n TIADMAll • 811cn HI .:0 0 OUI": MC 1( U.1'0 Am ft11f ·-· • the late Ralph K Davies e-.cOt1 1TJ 1l:Jl GrwTl'I s.1• s.1s Matts 1w lf, j·'' A"" 1d iJ :H: e&rl<.shr • '· F Mlvll t .00 i• Mid A ,ti T I •ott f'I I ' . 11..-r K 11 11,ll ll'l(Ol'll ll.tl lj.02 Mathllf 1 ,17 I .11 ~II 131 'JI Bondlllt •.76 l·ll "SPKll 11 ,Jjl1,1S MOfl¥ ~ 1::nlf.ct ar.nc !ijJ ... 8061 Fdrl t .. 11 Fu F I . 9.Jt MS& Fd lJ,tj 1·n 111111 . ., C d 0 Pl Off d •~ 3.a '-" • H LIN M" BoG 1.» .o "'' 1 •.. ~ . IULl.OCIC 0 u I MIF Fd 7.11 .•• I HOU,.· FU OS.: NTC 7.e7 , M F Gro •.32 '· G'Wlll re it an ere .,i, ... 1 ........ s ... " '·" 1.1l M"""' .. '"'l I·~ ,M_ 1r..1:1a1 ~ " 2 ~ n" '' OMm "' t,' M"°"' " •.I . ""m" '" i Sftr . '-°' US GY 5 10. 1 .t MUI Shrt 1•.6S 14. Ttchnl 6'.!9 twt 1 .0 11111• f. . ~H Tt1 I.t i 1, I ff I • NY VIII .I n::& wft ~all ··* ·= H•I lndu '·'' '·'' ~.... .:a ~ tflhm t R E IV 4. .6( NAT SEC "011 111'1111 :: To Ease Dental Pa .. n ~G '""" 1~·1t.1tfl<~O .. :li.t .. '"'M rm ·i-~ 1-ll 1 " IO Trln I ... 1 ·" m' dO t.33 t.SJ Blllld Sr l·'' s ra" c~ e:.G .I ..,1 $lit M 1 ... lllC,. ~'ffl!tl .67 A. rawl Eq 1·" 10. CMANNlff • u : ,.. $1k i .ll ' " ID'" -"UMD11 omm •ff t .50 tlCl)f'ft ._ 7 . O .61 Speclal ro the Dally Pilot card accou nt. :~1'1('1:-d 1f: l'· ~::;e ,, 1~·U 1~·M 'ril<ti '' !J f ~ : SAN FRANC1SCO -You !£the persoo doesn't have a &::,~" ,! tH ~/::,~ 1'~ 1·~'1 1,,,:••1•1' "·~ ~·~ '"" "' • • _, 12,..,Lo.t-.orl---..I a-•nt be or 1-!'5 ·tt IE S< P ! i rwlll 1 11,04 Ill 1 can get yourcavities fi lled aoo--•"""?'•""' ~-\!.-~• J '*' l:i ·t1 . ' 1 . 1 r '"' the credit to pay !OI' It on-lbe-she completes a aoedit ap.. ·"'" , 6 '" ;:~ ,.s•1'fl 6.1 ~..;'~\ l ,. '" 111v•t 1 :ft spot under a program unveiled pllcaUon. U approved, again %1J,11 1·n •.o. com "lit 11:,11,:li ~ 1l I~ ~ttf.T" 11(! i:.. he~. Via 8 quick telephone call F+, if 7:f' J:'~ Ff: 1..2.u~) ~w ~'l'J l ;ff ~ UMITID 11 The plan, introduced by from dentist to . bank, the r~~d 1\·.~ 11·.~ "~1LTOt4;J ~·" ~~""""" I :: lj::i ~~"'"'d 1. : B·mk or Amerlea oflers· amowtt of !he btll wlll be 1M'.;'t;:•• . -~~ •. ,. ·" i E~t I'.:: ':!: . -~holder Ba kAm . -i QVllY .7t ' Httlwfl I 1 ~ wm-f; •• c -dental bllls from~ to $300. lt Ccu-u , n enca1u und .t11 . ~~r Lv 1. , INMM " 1 1v : · • bank a-~ ~ Is ._ .. ..._ _ ... ......, Grwtl'I '· 1 • Alm 10. s n.ot u SI 1 • is a supplement to the 's ............ wua.."I• w..:u ......,po• Jtl(''" · 1 1 f· net '· 1. ii'l · regular dental loan program, lo the same chorg., and ~°'J:l:'o ,~ ,11! :::i':, ·~· .!:ff ,:IQ jB 1!ff! vo ,.""i'iJffl~, and will be available here this repeymeot terms Bl • regular lft:f.WM. I:::: Gr " 1: 1t·i :f'W.., l:H ~ 1 ~ ~ '· , month,-Partictpettna ts the BankAtiiericard acoount. t' ' 1:!J I •nc: '\~": 1 . 1': , Mu': 1: f i:ll vtf a. ' Callfornla Oent1l Msoctatlon In both cases, the transac-c:::: ~ t : ~"" fJ' · ~ it ti :Q :/1 13 which has '"°I" than 1,000 uon ls completed by lllllng out ::::g ~l ~ : ~ I ~I J .. ,f: !::! !:" vr -j:1 h member dentists In San Fran-a simple, tear-away sales .. ., ,1. 1 ~. "i:g •l~I,! ~ ••• ~ ,., J~, " IR ol . I -tn• l. ~lf 11w 011 d . 1 ;JOll E" ! 'f 7,)1 V..ctN l ft cisco draft at the top a ipec1a '"'" rsw •· .at 11v • c l· !Oii Fd 1 .4 'i·" ""'f '°'° : · · onMt In 1. .11 tf'f 1 . 12.' lotit 11 .IS 5' arled work: form ii • .iandard derttal It> :;:~, : 1'; ~i) · 1·1! ~~lcii.P,J, "" l:!" '¥. Jfl' 1!. f'atlcnts wil~ be able to ltallment sales contr.ct which ~~"' · l'ao "' · :ii ::'1 • il'H lj~I • !ClJS.TOt.7716• receive up to P.>O of revolving may be ueed should the PQ· ~C;f•• 'I G •• "1 w 11r ·• .'6 °1 ~· credit In leltS than five.-llcnt desire &o finance ~ntal :1 J ;" ,,~'B !; • ~=1 J: 1 t 1 ~ ,. j minutes vi• a vcrlficatton blll• exceeding !300. Credit •t> rl''-~ ~~~. i~· "I'' ;I; lfl ~or.1~ ,jff ,tJ '~ tJ"~ telephone call ftqm }he dentist plle1~ ror amounts a~ve n ~11 I ; I . .r~ • ., : f · ~u:~1 'I "I ~k J i1 to the bank. ff the petlent has iJOO w1U be acted upon within ··~~ .. 51 ~ 111 ,.. . _. :.Tf, ~ · :r'ft : ,. : , BankAmerlcard account, the 24 houri. If approved, the ~ r. I ·I! ff:'i ii~ ::n ·~ i. I!~ ll~. !!!!~l!'IJ : amount or the bUI will be benk wUI pLl'Cha3e I.he sales $0·rl'I(,; 1J.t ~°"'u1 .i:~ '·"r ~: · 411' , ~ · I· charged to hll or her crtdit contrtct. i!i cz:i~ 11' 1 . 111fl' F= k:.1 :t:n v::.. '" 1 ~ 11'.~ , :!:.~11a : · • l Wall Street Off; Moves Awaited Wedntsd~, Junt lJ, 1973 SC DAIL~ PILOT 18 LOS ANGELES (AP) - A neutral ' fact finder" has recommended t h a t M 000 Southern Callfom1a retail food industry workers be offered and accept pay raises of 33 cents an hour, or 6 2 percent. The unu s ua l recom- mendatioo was made Tuesday by Wayne L. Horvitz, a veteran labor relations co1r sultant, m an attempt to head off a reg10nal mdustry stnke. Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange List S~lts Net P E (hd1) High l ow l&tl Chlil • Finance t Briefs .1 I ' • •• eMazdaSued LOS ANGELES (AP) - An auto alt conditiooer maoofac- turez bas !tied a $15 million swt here iagain.5t the Japanese makel'Ei of the Maid a automobile and tbeir U S. distributor, clamung Mazda conspll'ed with a rival air con-- d1t1oner manufactW'er to steal sales ' Allan Air Ltd., Inc., of Ven- tura County, alleges lhat representatives of Toyo Kogyo Co , Ltd , ii! wholly owtled dJStnbutor, Ma.zda Motors or America,_ Inc , and-a ttl'lrd- delendant, John E. lllikhell ol Dallas, met to • ' e x e r t presmu-eu on Mazda dealers lhrooghout tile United St*' not IO buy air c:ondilkDlll; other than the Mark """111facluroo by 'Mltclien. , eRullngSoug LOS ANG&LES (AP) ::_ Slate off1clals are "°'11DB ~ a ruling 10 the trial ol 1'111< and Calb In<. o~ Oaks, a .comJllOllily finn DOW being under the b.mkruptcy Ja will determine 1or:-tbe ' lime lD cautonua w;a commodity are JegaU securltles a:eby SUb. to state securities laws t Jn a civil cue which opeDC4 Tueoc1ay before &Ji>erlor eoua Ju<!ge John L. Cole, the stat ., seeking ao order restrain.in the firm Crom .. llln« optlOlll on -the -grolllld$ lbat coni modlty options are eocurtUea governed by I b t regis~tiop provl!lons lo C a 111 o r n I ' securlUea laws. I. • . . DAILY PILOT TONIGIIT'S TV IDGHLIGIITS • KHJ o 7:30 -"Night and Day." Cole Porter's usic highlights this 1946 movie with Cary Grant, exls Smith and Eve Arden. NBC o 8:00 -Adam-12. Officers Malloy and Reed catch a killer with the aid or an unlikely wit· ;ness whose tale almost costs him his ure. • ABC o 8:00 -"Thicker Than Water." A broth· er and·sister (Richard Long and Julie Harris) are reunited by~ their wiley father's promise of an in· en ance irtbey rufl Dis pickle factorrtogether. TV DAILY LOG .. ,: Wednesday Evening JUNEll ''°" IJ 0 O ID !D a;> ti!! News (j)[g)Newi O 9oft1nz1 C!)Courbhlp Gf Eddie'• r1ttier fJ W11!ttd DtlCI or Aliff m Tiit Aillbloll11 CD Stir Trtt U)ln Torm tE Heclppod11 ltdat m Thl'H Stooaes 1:30 (jJ tltpn'1 H1MS ~ a Morie: (C) (90) "lor llt I ; Dolpklft" Part I (dr1) '57 -Alan • Ladd, Cliflnn Webb, Sophi• lotell. ~ (j) C8S Nns Walter Cronkit1 .. fJ Hm C1111 Will Trl'ftt • I @l Mm Crltfll1 Show mAndy Crilfltti I -llna~ "No Sien of the Cf'OS$" (R) .t.n ancient religious ttO$$, beln1 tr1nsported by ear Imm Mexico to lhe U.S., is stolen ind Banacek be· gins tl'le t1sk of lindlng the valued otlject, 0 rnoo m•. c w .. nniar Movie: (C) (90) "Sly &oldbyt M•1· &i• Cale" (R) (dra) 71 -sinan Hayward, Dairen McGavin, Mlch1el Con5tantine, Mkl'lele Nickols. A 1e- centl1·wiclowed research doctor, in· tent on 1ebuilding her life, returns 10 1eneral practice only ti ltct new heartbrea~. m Merv lliiritfln Show CI:) Novtl1 !:00 O Cl) Din Aurust (R) Th• sister of a cit)' councilman is found dead arid Dan's leading suspect is th• leader of 1 militant citizen's 1roup, m Dr1pet EE Nino (f) J1p1ntse Lan1u1p P10111• t :JD O American Adttlltm Climbln1 Sdlool" ONtw• ''Glacitf B11rt's Back "Dan Au gust." a police series which had a bric( run a few years back, is being aired again each \Ved· nesday at 8 o'clock on CBS, Channel 2. Starring are (rlock\vi se, from top left) Burt Reynolds, Norman Fell, Ned Romero, Ena Hartmann and Richard Anderson. UCI's Juda Superb In Piano Concerto Listening to Dr. Arnold Juda 's superb interpretation of Stravinsky's m3$Sive cooce'rto for piano and winds last weekend, this critic could not help w•shing that the Universi- ty of California, Irvine, pro- fessor could--ttave--a--top--flighL orchestra at his eJbow in any future rendition. No slight to a \•aliant and hard working UC l r v i n e orchestra is intended or im· plied by that observation: they gave o! their best and Dr. Juda was the first to recognize their efforts and those of guest conductor N~·ell Jenkins. But it would be fascinating to have Juda at the keyboard before. say, the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra with Mehta on the podium lo ensure the full backing and \Jaisorr that 1hi.s Stravinsky most Wldoubtedly deserved. THERE WAS nothing about the opening largo-allegro to suggest that we could expect TOM BARLEY Music Box anything out of the ordinary, at least frorn this criLic's seat. But the ensuing largo and the concluding allegro-agitato put this perfonnance up there am:mg the most memorable of the 1972-73 season. Juda simply reveled in the largo-scored second move- ment, a portion or Stravinsky tbat is regarded by this critic and many others 1 as most representative of the com- poser at the high water mark of his career. Jenkins en- countered a problein or two at this point but it in no way detracted from it.he delights of this magnificerrt. moveq'lent. l\1aestro J enkins and his orchestra wer~ ,much more critic's ·presence, mWed the target. Joe has a splendid board to work with him: treasurer J\.1arilyn Armstrong of Dana l)oint, secretary George CUn- ningham of Souttl Laguna. vice president PauJ Hance and ,tv:o publicity co-chairmen - Kris King .J\.feyers of Laguna Beach and Barrie Stannan of Laguna Niguel. Tragically, the June concert will be the last with JaCk Kre!tlng as 1lhe chorale's director. Jack and the lovely J udy are relocating -in the East and this column, with happy men1or·ies o[ memorable performances in Laguna Beach, wishes them all the very be.st in the v.·orld. Watergate W ar111up comfortable in D v o r a k ' s Symphony in F major, a work that can not offer us anything of tremendous significance un- •til .the final t\\·o movements of the four scored by the great Czech. -We have seen very little credit go to a man v.•ho played a valuable part in •UC Irvine's fantastic ··Tue Fantasticks." l\1aurice Allard. v.tio else. stepped in to sho\v son1e of the guys and gals hew to use their vocal chords and the results rated •the same as the show - superb. Su1tio1i Slio·ws Old McCartliy Tapes Jenkins and his orchestra splendidly caught the spirit or Herflld Tribune dtifir>g the the allegro scherzando and ·the McCarthy Era, Meyer said. final allegro moJto to close By JAY SflARB U'IT f'..'E\V YORK (AP) -Kcrs, a public TV station ~n Seattle. \\1ash., is airing a warmup show each night· it broadcasts a videotape of that day's Senate \\'atergate hearings. quarter cf a century to be censured by his Senate col- leagues. ..WE'RE No T spending their season on a triumphant much time talking -just a lit-note. It has been a good l\10 'T a11go' ·tie bit at the start and a little season, we might add. but this bit at the end to pot 1t into concert. with the exception or For Perl.L Dr. Juda 's ste llar perspective," Meyer said. performance, can not go ~nto I ENTERTAINMENT Censorship ··~ Law Costly -~ For Ohio ·~ COLUMBUS, Ohlo (UPI) - An old Ohio movie censorship 1 law, thro\l.n out 1by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1954, is cost-1 ing rthe state S323,22R. , State Auditor Jo s c p ~ ' Ferguson says he has ''relUC· tantly" agreed to send the sum to 10 Hollywood mOvie companies rfor fees they pEiid ·the state bet"•een 1951 and 1954. l\1ovies were screened prior to poblic showing in Ohio by ft Atovie Censorship B o a rd established in 1913. The com- panies paid $3 for each reel.of film submitted lo the board. l\Ietro-Go ldwyn--Mayer is to receive $72 ,9M ; Universa1. $64 ,805: Twentieth Century F<>:<. $ 4 4 . 3 9 5 : Paramount, $39,874; Columbia, S44,425: · United Artists, 21,292 ; RKO Telcradio. $19,TTO; Warner Brothers. $18,69'J: J arlyn Pic- tures. $5.742. and Imperial Pictures, $2.272. I EID~ Y1n1 Yin1 Yu m Junn1 C1no11 Slltw CI:) Novtl1 ED The Frint People m Uttle R1sta l1 ID llii•t Smart ttl Much1U11 ll1li1n1 CI:) EJ Cafe de Mi Barrit It precedes the \Vatergate shO\\/ with reruns of selections front the Senate's Army- l\.tcCarlhy hearings in 1954, with a throo-1Tian panel on hand to contrast those hear· ings wiUi the one currently un· der v.•ay. "We're reaching a new au- dience which has never seen the McCarthy hearings," says Richard Meyer. genera I manager of KCTS. ''The young people who have caUed up are just completely fascinated. He said the kinescopes of this critic's record as their Llf\1A, Peru (UP ) the Army-McCarthy hearings best Offering. Because of possible censorship 11':"'7'1"' were supplied by station problerns. the film ·'Last fl&M;l:f!~fl • ' • ' ,aoa mom" ... O lowllnc IOJ Dollars (I) Trvtll Of Coltseq11t11Ct1 (I) UnbrMd WOIW fJ Wh1t'1 Mr Untl m I lwt LLKr m I DnaM of 1e .. 1ie flJ S1•111t11t1 Mlrla JO:OD IJ 00 Cannon (R) Arlene Colonka 1uests 15 an 1sp!rin1 actress who becomes the tool in a plot to takt over 1 vast real-est1te empire. 0 ®) @D SEARCH "A Honeymootl !o Kill" (R) When 1n heiress v•n· ishes atter an attempt is made Ofl her life on he1 weddint: day, htr bridegroom hirts t_,R. Grav« to find her. om m-o 00@ al OWtJI M111t11U "Who The 1954 hearings were televised live and lasted 36 1urbulent days, many of them bitter and tense. A few months after they ended, the late Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.) became the first senator in a • fl) I SBC@; I 'Miii De Yn Thill\, Ctottt? "lost Puppy" Second film on 1itu1tional ethics tor childrtn M· slrntd to be vtewtd by tht whole family. Saw Him Dier' (R) A min acquitttd '-------------• Fl) Mu11«1 GE Aflcionldol dt II CMlllMM m~ch1~ EE Sptd Ricer in the d,ath of Vincent Th•ye(s ~n is s/lbt while in the courtroom and Thayer is ch1rged wi!h his murder. · 1~ 0 W1Uy World of JOt11tti1n WI• ten steve Allen 1uests. I l O Morie: (thr) ""* SI•" (com) 'Ul-Gary Cooper, Ann $htr\dal\. f2I LI MoAnera CI!) Vlriety l (j) Ho11n's Heroe1 lD:JO 0 Talk Back 0 W•it Till Tour f1ther Ceb Home Q) M1lone's H1n111ut "Mama's Identity" (R) Irma libtr· ttJ Kippy Cosas C<lmedy Mrles ates herself and becomes 1 •01kin1 woman. CI:) News/Sports 0 Movie: (21tt') "Tr11J •I the lollt-11:00 0 0 0 ii) m (I) Nm 1111111 Pine" (dra) '3&-fred Mac-rn@ ~News .Murray, tllnry Fonda. O One Step leyond 11) Tt Ten thl Trutti 00 M1nll1I Dillon Cl)T~11.Aske4 tOf It mTruth If ConstqUID«S 0 M1lhon $ Movie: (C) (Zhr) ID M . • "Tl! ir.illef I loose-' "Nlcht l D•J" (mus) '46 -C.ry om. e s C11nt, Alexis Smith, Eve Arden. tmys) '5&-Josepll .Cotten, Wendell ®.!Wild IU•&h Corey, Rhonda Fleming. m Thlt lliiirt 11:15 Fl) Ci11eJ1111 34 m Dr1111et m Tounc Dr. Ki1dat1 11 :30 I.I@ CBS late Movie: (C) "otity'" (E) This Is Tour Litt (com) '69-Tom Courtenay, Romy EE Addams r1cni1y Schneider. 1:00 IJ (j) Son"' and Clltr Jim~ 0 ®} m Johnny Canon Dura nt• and Gilbert D'Sull"'an Q Ben C.sey guest. 0 @ @ m Did Cavett Belle 0 ~ €D Adam 12 "Harry NG-Davis is Dicfs only guest body" (R) Ollic•n Ma!loy and Reed 0 Movie: (C) "Nearly • Nice lliiirl" u1ch 1 klller wit~ the aid of 1n (dra) '60--List!otte Pulver, Marlin unlikely •ltness whose ta le 1lmost Held. 1------------- cosls him his lilt. m To Tell ttlt Truth 0 New Comedy Series lZ:OO m Alfred Hitcbcoc); Prnenb * THICKER THAN WATER , 0 (})Ci) GD PREMIERE Tltlcket lZ:30 O "'~.:.Patrol . " ThM Waltr Proper Nellie P1ine ind m MOV!f. Acfi1111 In Arabil (adv) her 1on1 ibsent pliJboy brother, '4~eorge Sarlders, Virginia Bruce , Ernie, are reunited by their wily old m BIH CMllJ dld's promise of 1n inhe1ila11t:e ii l:OO OO O O O {j) News they Nn his pic kle lactOI}' tocether. · Julie Harris and Rich1rd lon1 star. 1:•5 U Movie: (C) ''Quintet" (dra) '57 G) TniUI " C.nseq11t1ttn -Fred MacMurray, Dorothy Malone, llJ TM Untouchables John Gavin. EE Ktnlanos C01"1!e ED W1ter11te He11in1s a> a...pio11sll lp Wrestlilll 2:00 m All·Nlpt Sllor. "Ptinn ff Foxes." "Retum ot IK• Sllllt" m •• ,..... l•nrM•I• PIOlflM 3:10 II Movlt: 4M Steel Cln" (dra) 1:30 O lli.m Nae Wldnesc11, Mpttry '61-Georee Montgo,mery. Thursday DAYTIME MOVIES t:JO 0 (C) HDamn the Oefl1n1" (dr1) '62-Alec Guinness, Dirk Bogarde. 10:00 rn (C) "The C.pilln's Teblt" (com) ''$0-John Grerson. Pe111 Cummins. O .. Jtt Atl.1<k" (dra) '58 -John Ar.ar, Al.ldr11 Tollei. 12:00 D '-0,.radon C1mel" (l<'v) '61- louis Reyn11d. (C) "Hilwllha" (adv) '52-Vince Cdw11ds. 1:00 m "Pa11dist Alie,.. (com) '61 - Huao Haas, Marie Windsor. 1:30 fJ "Johnny Cool" (mys) '63-Jltn· ry Silva , [llzabeth Montgomery. l:OO (f) "Oetectiw1 S1aty" Concl. (dra) '51-Ki~ Doualas, Ele1nor P1rker. ltj (C) "WoR Is 1 four·lrtter Word" (com) '68-D~id W1rn1r. 3:30 fJ "s.o.s. Cots! C11anr (ldY) '42 -R1lph Byrd, Bel1 lu1ost. 4:00 f) (C) .. MobJ Did:" (tdv) '5&- Grerol)' Peck, Orson Willes. 4:30 @ $1111 H lOAM llsti111 KOCE, Cll1\NNEL 50 Orange County's UllF television station, KOCE-TV. has s.cheduled lhe following speeinl programs today. Detailed hsllngs of Channel 50's-progra1ns are carried in the Daily Pilot's TV Wetk each Sunda)'. t :OO Ml•i.r llOff"•' Helth""11DOd CCI l.Cluc•llonal ¥•rlt1Y tor Chltdrtn, l'lollfll by li'ted Rogtn.. .t:;!O IJMlrtc C°""tft~ (Cl ltW.1ll011 far Pl'•~!'lool"'• to 1111 """' ot llumO!' tnd mwtl(, 5iW ·--11'"1 ICI Edlll:thon11 «Ill m;n.1eat ¥1rltly lot prlm11rv KhDDI dlllClttn, 6;30 Tiit CN111..st W1y (Cl Otb\!I. 1 .. 1roductl0fl 10 bA•lC p11111110l)hy bthlncl Chlne5t c1,1ltlnt alld (!,ll!~!f, OIW lllf bask: ~'etl'I ... 7:(IO H-.w.M IC) "J11n In !tit llwnd" Swlntll'IO lrlblllt 10 Big 81n11 Ere. tio.lff Dy C:h••lts Ch11mplln, LOI An91ln Tlmtt t11lertt!"m•n1 tdl!O!'. 1:00 .IM1!trplt<0 Tl!Mttr ICI V1ftll~ fltlr -"\lanll11 V1nU•h1m" P.-r1 V -.. ~ t :OO Ain•r1Cll'I Od'l'IHY IC) Otblll. "Oft 10 lht S•• Ao11ln" Ooc\mlenitry on ,,. NOW PLAYING RESERVED SEATS On Sale Daily 12 "Iii ! MARLON BRANDO ~firL 'j>Bi1s (x " ~Ol<l UM!)tl • •I i1•00.111tu Un1ltdAf'h$l\ MO N. IHRU iHUR5. 8 P.M. fRIDAY I & g,45 SAIUROA! 1-1 I g.45 SUNDAY 1-5 I 8 Alt 5fAT5 $4.00 'WliOATI l .•S 5AT, & IUN. l·J!lN,•S "IAnl( fO• ,lAN(T or "'(S" 1.10,11 ,,G. l'T. • WH J:lO , 7·10i1 I WIOITS 1:40 llJ.T. I IUN. l:lf.J:l0·1:4J ) "Llnt1 CIOAIS" ,,G. WMOJ.ll 1·1011S J, & WM, l1»41JJ.J1IJ., "SISTl•S" I . ·' •:• S-TMC.flo·'ttl ICI IA1111tltt11111 li'l~tl AOIJ!h MCI lllldfnl1 ltMftl1'19 f"Of!'I l"Oftlsl-1 ¥4Jl.llll • r 11 f It ,...,,....., W .cvtPtorO It " ... T~ , ...... lllt-tlya or ll'lt ttrly "'-''""*'' ltlrllUlll tall9. (60 m1111 1------------ I "AND SOJ\.IE of them have never even heard a b o u t McCarthy, if you can believe it." Meyer said the A r m y - ~fcCarthy program of KC'I'S starts an hour before the videotaped Watergate hear·· ings. The 1954 hearings originaUy were recorded on kinescope but were transfer- red to tape at Kcrs, he said. The panelists on the pre- Watergate program he said . are himself, Bill Shadel and Fendall Yerxa. Shade! and Yerxa are professors oE com- munications at the University of Washington. Shadel was CBS' chief con· gressional oorrespondent at the Army-~cCarthy hearings and Yerxa the city editor of the now-defunct New York KI NG-TV in Seattle, an NBC CHORDS AT RAND0~1 _ Tango in Paris"' \\'ill not be ff.,, t h. h found the · sho\vn in Peru. a . 1ua e w IC m ll1 Hearty congratulations to Joe !he base t f ·1s st di A spokesn1<H1 for producer · men o 1 u os. Wood . ...,10 was ··-ntly Th ·d d · h " '""" Alberto Grimaldi said he was e 1 ea of broa casting t e elected president of t h ·, t h · ba k to ba k withholding the film .. f1·om \\'O earings c c Laguna Fes11·val Chorale. H• · h h. h h ' " ., countries v.· ere censors 1p came up w en I e ·Tatergate takes over \\·hile the group is problems could occur. hearing first began. Meyer putting the fin ishing touches to The filn1 \\·as banned earlier said. its final concert of the season. in Venezuela Yl'itbout censors "Everybody here was ask· Schubert's ';J\fass in G'' and even seeing it. It also \Vas ing,'ls thlsgoingtobeanother Vivaldi's "Gloria'' will be or-banned in Colombia and th"e kind or McCarthy hearing?'," fered oo a date to be an· censorship board there \l'3S he said, adding that his col-nounced by a choral group dismissed because il approved leagues also made com-th.al has always aimed for the "Tango·· without pr i or parisons of the issue of ex-stars and has never. in this government approval. ecutive privilege then and1-,:======================,I now. lie mentioned it to Eric Bre~r. KlNG's genera t manager, and said t~ began rolling when Bremner mused." 'Jt seems to me that \\'e carried this (the Army· l\1cCarthy hearings) some 20 years ago , .. " ' TOGETHER FOR THE FIRST TIME Co11th111ou $111Mkry fro111 Z PLENn PAltllNG- LID 0 Nf WPO Of BEACH lNTRANCf IO LIDO l~l l ~·1 ~)50 ALSO THIS TE••IFYING SUSPENSE D•AMA SIAMESE TWINS AT BIRTH·· Co"'l11011s Sot11rdoy and $111doy ~-2 lliili''!(ll ..... ~ McrtlflH Wod- 1 P-"'· ltrh lo NEWPORT 541·15SZ U. A-_ CITY 'AND SOUTH COA:ST CINEMAS-TUESDAY Sk !LADIES AND SENIOll: CITIZ liHSl-OPEN TIL 2:00 P.M. Neid o .... r1 Clltll lt5twoad "HIGH PLAINS Oll:IFTl!ll:" "El(TREME ClOSE·UP" NIW Otltclotr Ad .... nllWOI "Tiit 89fttll Tlttr'' t _,,.,._ "Ihle Wlt+r IOI~ In Ctlort Ill:) llMtrl 111111 "COllKY" 10111 In cerorl tPOJ \llMtnl Pr1ct "THIATllE OP 8LOOOH "Mlfi'HISTO W.t.Ln" 111n In Ctltrl crru A•I TOlflllljl11• • "LlnLt: CIGARS MDI" "llSf'llllS" ltlh In Cotof' 1111 I ' • •Two Years In lh• Making• Oneoflh• Greal••I Wllil-Anlmal-advenlure-l'llm•- of Our Tlme1• A OLDlli.stfTEAHATION"L FILM Produced.and Dlreeltd 117 i.Jefllftf Mll'tln A MAJESTIC INTEllHATIONAL A&LEAIE. STARTS TODAY CITY WIDE SPECIAL SHOWING -ONE WEEK ONLY 2ND FEATURE AT MUST THEATERS pLUS~ "BLUE WATER. WHITE DEATH" Search for the Great White Shark. 0111.t.NG• -Sl .. lvm Dtl¥t hi #2 -•Jt·7'6G COITA MISA -UA Cn111 Mtu I I -S40-0St4 POU!'ITAIN VALLIY -l'M!nltln Vlllt't' #1 -'t)f.lSOCI POUNf'AIN VALLIY -l'01111l1ln D11'Vt In -t•t.1•1 , Stll OlttO .. ,.,..., lroot!fl11rtt (Sttlllll LA MAlllA -I • hllllt" Sllllatt -ftl ... Jl OJl:ANO• -UA City Cl"*""' t:l -·SJl·'121 lf~TON -Slll'ltlfl -tf+IUI Li,,,....,,,,,., •••I •I ·-· 121-4070 .,. ___ • HtGH PLAINS DllRR 1111 "1111-'**" YOU'LL LtKl-MY-Manlll TOM llWYH IOI . ·t GEORGE THE DOG 101 lmP•"•' b•l•'r , IO•Ch 111 .. I, &. Ha•bor 11~4. ' 71·1 2 'LU'• lotltf tWll CORKY=:'":,' =::::"' Lincoln Awt' •• w••I o! llnolt ~1:1·'-213 llMOll SU TMllUU! -• • lrMUT IOIOfMill ... , NEPTUNE rACTOI •'.:i'~ cu'''''11 c.t.mE co. r.- 7 J 7 ' I ,• • Laguna Beaeh EDITION VOL 1>6, NO. 104, 5 SECTIONS, 100 PAGES By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL -Of .. Dell)< rlM INft Laguna Beach planning commissioners have agreed the city should embark on a study of a "new" fonn or air pollution : tire dust. 1bls week, the planners gave an In- formal go ahead to Bruce Jtopplng of the Kalos Kagathos Foundation to request dust studies by the state Air Resources Board and the federal Environmental Protection Agency. no Bottomless Act l 1i Laguna Bar Prompts Arrest A 27-year-old Corona del ~tar man was arrested in Laguna Beach after he allegedly dropped his pants in a bar and gyrated in front of a table of women Tuesday. Robert Lewis Ues, 27, of 631 Dahlia ·st .. was taken into ~ustody by police called to the Surf and Sand Towers, 15a5 S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. He w;is booked on alleged indecent exposure. Police Capt. David Brown said a man reportedly' walked to a table of women who had been asking for tervice. Capt. Brown said the man Nked tblm: ".How would you like a loplea waiter,'' and with that allowed his trousers to fall down around his ankles and gyrated in froot ol the table. Capt. Brown aaid the man lheo pi<ked up his panta, and returned to the bar where he · wu aP: prehende<! by police. Brown aaicl Iles did Mt appear to be in· toxicated. Scandal Figure l1i Britai1i Held On, Pot Clwrges LONDON (UPI) -Lord Lamblon, who resigned his ministerial past in a call girl scandal. pleaded guilty today to poueso- ing marijuana and pep pills:. He said he had a "fetish" about discus.sing pat with hi s prostitute friend , Norma Levy. - The wealthy, SO-year-old Lambton. whose resjgnation and that of amther minister· l'OCked Prime Minister Edward Heath 's Conservative govenunent,' was fined $750 for keeping a small quantity of marijuana and amphetamines at his Lon- don town house. Asked by prosecutor David Tudor- Price if he asked Mrs. Levy for narcotics and other drugs during visits to her 14>n- don apartment, Larnbton said they "talk- ed about them" and added : "ll was a · fetWi with me." The prosecutor told the court Lambton bad been photographed smoking mari- juana in bed with the 2fryear-old Mrs. Lev)', an Irlsh-bom ex-convent girl. Lambton's apearance in the hushed and' aowdcd court rOom at London's Marlyebone Magistrates COurt was the 111'11 time he emerged in public since ,he resigned as parliamentary u n d e r (Seo BRITAIN, Page II To make his paint about the evils of tire dust. Hopping presented the com- mission with a sample of the worn-off rubber collected near the intersection or South Coast Highway and Legion Street. Commissioner Roger Lanphear didn 't want to look at it. Larry Campbell smell· ed it, City Planner Wayne Moody rubbed the stuff between his fingen. Hopping, citing a dispatch out or Chicago about tire dust, said a Ford Motor Company . research c h e m i s t ·er • Citizen Unit Seeks High Rise Delay The head of a coalition of South Coast citizen groups said Tuesday his organiza- tion will seek a delay on AVCO plans for highrise condominiums on the Laguna Niguel oceanfront. Paul Sayre, president of lhe United South Orange Coast Communitie s, (USOCCJ said .the 30'day postponement sought before the high-rise matter comes before the Sooth Coast Cooservation f.ommissiou June 2$ .would allow com- ~ more ·tJme for lludyq the matter. Al Issue Is a propooal for development ol ltven and It.story eoodominium t~wers oo the beach side of Pacific Coa!t ffil:bway between Crown Valley Parkway and Ilana Point. "fte commission has not had enough time fo study the data becau_,e not all the data bas been available," Sayre said. «Jf the commission does hear this case June ZS, we· wiJI protest it," Sayre said. He added tbit meeting of homeowners with AVCO representatives Jast week "showed us the tip of the iceberg -but 've don't feel they {AVCO) were being en- tirely honest." Sayre said he felt the comments of Jim Thompson, president of the Laguna Niguel Homeowners and Community Association, on the \neeting were not repreaentative of the residents of LagWla (Sot PROTEST, Page 21 Nixo1t to Slio·iv Economic Plan WASHINGTON (UPI) -Presi· den t Nixon will disclose new pnr posals for fighting inflation in a na- tionwide broadcast tonight at 5:30 PDT. t.he White House announced. Details or the plan were kept secret, but ii is expected to include some selective price freezes af- fecting some industries whlle omit· ting a specific wage freeze . Nixon bas been concentrating for a week on various proposals of ecOnomic advisers and Cabinet members for stenuning the \\'Orst inflation to hit the nation in 20 years. (Details, Page ' 38.f Oceanfront Residents Ask Laguna Preserve Quality -owners or Ocean!tOOt)ffi)l)e-rty-1b0\1C Rockledge Cove have appealed to t~ Lacuna Beach Plenning Commission to helP them [Jl'<SOl'Ve the "landmark" RU1llty ol, the area. Burt Harrll, o! z Rockledge Rood , ask· ed the commlMlon to consider the "-31 . problems ol Rocklodgo" and allow only !p«Jnc plan type develop-mont. . '!be lj)<Ciflc plan Is a bulkling law which a1low3 careful control o! develop- .-on sp<clac porcels ol land. "The coves and bluffs represent one or Laguna'• moet pnclous environmental auets/' said Harris, a repr;esentative of the ROOclectse Moo<:iation. "There 11 "°' one publication on Laguna that has not rea turod Rockled&• • . .It Is almoet a landmark," he addt'd. ' Realcstateaetivily1lf1ti a, He told planners l\1ooday, i.s at an all time high, with two variRnce applications for development n~w -pending In city hall. At the suggestion or several com· mlsslooers, Rockledge representatives agreed to meet with the city planning stall to decide what aspects ol the Rockledge area need to be looked at. Commitolclne<1 wm then discuss the mat· ttr al a lludy -· One problem, Hanis pointed out, Is the geologic Instability ol the bluffs . The atudy, he said, 8hould d<al with land located between M01$ Point and the southerly boundary ol Rockledge. "We are tremendou!ly COl'ICU'ned. . . I can\ tell you bow excited we art about this." said Harris, commenting on the In- terest or the commission . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13, 1973 estimates 700.000 tons of 1he black rubber wears off of tires each year. That's about 200,000 tons more than the "particulates" generated by car engines, •lopping said. Research in the easter.11-states, be ad- ded. 1ndicates tire dust, In the form o! min ute dust particles suspended in the air. may cause cancer. The cancer producing ingredient, carbon black, is a constituent of tire rub- ber, Hopping asserted. • 1e Backed v;ith planning commission support, Hopping now plans to go before the city council seeking official backing for the studies. Ed Camarena of the Orange County Air Pollution Control District said today such studies could on!)' measure the total dust "fall" at a given location. Further studies, he said, would have to be launched to find out just what is in the dust. He noted that exteosive equipment is required to determine the amount of dust that remains airborne for any length of time. "Traffic moves pretty slow down there _ .. I don't think there would be much abrasion because lhe cars aren't going ve.ry fast,'' said Camarena. · Camarena-also V.•arned against over· reaction to the so-called carcinogenic (cancer producing) properties of tire • • I Hig~way Crackpp-" ' ' A power concrete breaker cracks through 8 inch tions., raised1two inches when a·water main ruptured thick concrete pavement of 200 block of So u th underneath the road four •eeks: ago. The area lfill Coasl Highway in Laguna Beach. The wal,er district be· repaved with asptialt: The $3,500 job should' be was required to tear out two 10 foot by OO ·foot sec-complete by Friday, officials say. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-·~·~-'-~~--~~~~~ Schmitz Says He'll Probably ,. Run in 1974 From Wire Servicts SACRAMENTO -John G. Schmitz, former Orange County congressman and presidential candidate, bas said he will "most probably" run for some statewide office in 1974. 1be Newport Beach resident recently re-registered · as a Republican. alter run- ning for president in 1972 on the American Party ticket. :'Tl\e major issue is going to be restor-, ing the people 's conDdence in govern· mcnt," said Schmitz Tuesday, ref'Crri'ng to Watergate. "Right now the cotllllry Is in a real crisis." Schmitz' Tustin campaign office is still open . Although the ronservative ex~on­ gre.ssman wouldn't say what otflce he would seek, some Sacramento sources said he "'·ill run for secretary or state. That post is currently held by Democrat Edmund G. Brown Jr .. who has expressed interest in t h e governorship. Artist ~opelul . -.. . -. i ~ ', . F outth F~~tival .S~1J-ght~ iri Lagu1ia By JACK CHAPPELL Of tM D-'IY 'li.t Sl.-t "We're rejected. but not dejected.'" said artist Guy Bevill, who descrif:>es himeelf as "a very quiet, likeable person,"0-adding bumble· as well. Bevill aims to start a fourth and possibly a fifth summer art exhibition in Laguna Beach for all the artists who have been rejected by the other three art festivals. "I think all or them should have an op- portunity to show if they are willing to put !Orth the.effort. "~t .. the public judge \Vhether they're good, bad or busted," Bevill said. He said he had been ilked by two festival! to ex~ hibit hi& own work. "I don't choose to be in any one of them. Someone has to look after the Wlderdog, II Bevill said. Bevill said he decided to start his own reject festivaJ after three rejected artists "bawled on my shoulder thi!I last weekend." He plans the first meeting for the "re- jected-rejects'' (artists and craft!men) at 7 p.m. Tbunday at his home, 417 Can· yoo Acres Drive. CLASSIFIED AD He ,.;d he ~. negotiating ror rental ol ..,,, .,., '"" "'" the old Art-A-Fair grounds along Gallery • --ROW1lilCOilFltlgttWaylnnOfthLlgunan.niic---·ORGANlZING-REJE~·-s--- MAKES .4 SUCCESS BeBeach_.11 "d he -~--· boo Guy !lo•ill v1 sru can a""'vuu11uuate a t At least one of our rea~s is a success -thanks to a Daily Pilot classified want ad. RECEPTIONIST wanted (or N.B, • law finn . Typing req'd. 8;30-5. call (Phorl< No.) for appt. • She answered that -ad and 'vas hired. If yoqjre looking •for • Job, try looklllJ at the classified ads ln the Doily l'liot l<> day. Tumorrow you could be successfully employed. And to place an ad of your · own. dial direct -The line lo success - 642·5871. 50 ·artists and will ask that· each reject bring two samplet ol work· to a meeting June 14 where ill acceptability as a re- ject will be judged by Bevill. "AU I'm aaking Is tl>at ii be·j"'l a little bit on the creative side:," BevilJ Aid ex- plaloins that this mooit·no1 a dittct &teal from a magazine. "If they took ell the ""'8llines away Laguna Beach would starve to death,'! Bevill said. And, Jf more than 50 artbts de9cend on hb'n? "I guet!I I have to locate another lot ." he S.icl. He said he didn't think he •'Ollld have any ti-oublt receiving city apProval for his festivals . "You can't turn down.a C&pricorn." .he s;>ld. Btvill said he holds a bachelors degree In art, had studied tn Munidl. Germany, and taught art ln the Unlv.el'!i\y ol Tokyo. He said he point.-In 12 diffettnl styles und er six dJfferent names through agents. "1 have some of the be.st training or anyone In Southern Callfornla, but. fratnJng doesn't all''8)'8 make you the 8enlua you think you are,•) he said. He said artist& applying for exhibition at the J.'ealival of. Arts, Sawdust Festival or Art--A-Falr, '1mUM. submit to a jury of (Seo ARTISTS, Page 21 Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS dust. noting that e\'en barbecue smoke contains carcinogens. "ll's such a ne\V field . ~·ow ... ir sounds intriguing,'' commented Com- missioner Sally Belleruc after .Hoppi n~ made his p1·esentalion. Campbell said that studie s of ti re dust, :tlong South Coast 11igh\\'ay should be- supplementl'<i '"'ith surveys of tire dust on busy arterials like Park Avenue and Thalia Street. ne Thieu Hits Document- 111 Saigoii . - PARIS (UPII -The four parties to the Vietnam war signed a docwnent today pledging themselves lo ne\\' n1easures to shore _i_he Vietnam cease-fire agreemenl through "strict and scrupulous Im· plcmentation" ot the Jan. 27 docun1ent. The measures include a U.S. resumi>- lion o( economic aid talks and removing 1nines from North Vietnamese waters. an cnOto U.S. tec<>Malssance lights. a return of Saigon and Viet Cong troops lo their original situations -and a pledge 1 from them strictly to observe the cease- fire. Saigon signed. reJuctanlly and reported· ly under U.S. economic pressure, and a dispol~h tonight f'llm Saigon said !'mi· dent Nguyen Van--Thieu was disappointed that the new ·agreement did not restort the Demil!Lartzed Zone or require the North Vietnami!se army to leave South Vietnam. Official sources in Saigon said tht. document gives even greater concessions to the Co1nmunists than the Jan. 27 documents, and little at all to Saigon. A joint statement issued after Henrv A. Kissinger and Le Due Tho or Hanoi wOund up negotiations by initialing the 14-article document. described officially as a "communique," said it provides for "strict and scrupulous implementation., ot the Jan. 21 pact. A run four-party signing ceremony then took place at the._ Kleber A \'enue con- ference center in the same room where the original pact was signed. A second signing ceremony was scheduled involving only Kissinger and Tho. The same procedure was used in the Jan. 27 signing to permit South Vietnam and the Viet Cong to disregard each other's claim for officia l status. Asked if the United States would now end bombing raids in Cambodia , Kissfn· ger told a news conference, "1be.rc i!I nothing that commits the United States to cease such operations. •·11 is our hope, and l''e will make ma- jor efforts in that direction to continue diplomatic rontacts that wiiI produce a cease-lire in Cambodia." Kissinger said. The document broke little new ground, for the most part demanding new com- mitments to the original pact and pro- viding fresh dates for implementation. It had nothing fresh to say about either the fighting in Cambodia or· Saigon'3 !See VIETNAM, Page ZI «:out Weather ~'lore o! the' same gloomy low clouds are on the agenda Thurs- day. with pa1tial clea1'ng in the afternoon hours. llighs in the mid- OOs at lhe beaches. rising to the lo"' 70s inland. INSIDE TODAY Aborlian is bi(I bl48iness i1t California. Tl~ere are doctor$, hospitnls and n1iddlen1c11 tl1a t specialize in it. See first article in series bee1i1111i11g today 01i Page !2. ... v-•-k• 1 l .M, hrl 1 ... ,"" 11 C1Uten1l1 I c1rw <•nier n Ct1tsll1M 1).P' c-1c1 '° CrtlSWOnl .. DHftl NlllCtt II ltlttrlll ''" 6 l•r.rfli-' .... \ '!NM• P4' "9r "'-IKffll I• """'"'-41 111 SK~t tt """ llMlln .. Mll .. R ' Meritt .... , Mtttv1I ,llftft '9 "''""'' ,._, ' . Or111 .. C-ty "'' ,TA .. '"'" "~ Dr. $fl/It(,.... ,, SMC\ Mlrt.111 ,..,,. Ttlt~Wfl • Tlltlllttt IMI w........ . W-W1 Nt'el t>-U W1rlf Mtw1 t • .. f OA.ILY PJLOJ --- L8 Wtdntsday, Jone U , 111/l Tliese Victirns Won't Follou1 DALLAS (AP) -Uandits who crashed a nei11:hborhood party here llad a method to guarantee the vie· Jln111 didn't give chnse. They forced the six women nnd eight men to take off U1eir clothes and then helped Lhcmsclve$ lo $400 in jewelry and cash before 1naking a getaway_ . The men were locked 1n a closet and the women he.rded into a Traffic His Security W as1&'t Secure DARs Fly the Flag • Program A burglar alarm syst e m L M b R l te u· to f B sal•sman losl a suilcast c:Oot>lning aguna em er e (.l s .is ry 0 anner 5arnplcs of tl)e _N~porl Beach "' company's wares to a car burglar 8 JACK CHAPPELL Tuesday, while his sport roadster Y ot 1111 Ollltr 1111t •• was parked near hl.s office. , n I William R. Stewart, of Hurst The history of the A.mencan ag s the Security Syslems, 4500 Campus history of America and prcservatk>n of A priority program to e11sc growlng Drive , l'<ln1plained to ~Qlice Officer both i~ the aim or the Laguoo Beach traffic problems in the Ari C<Jl-0ny '4'<111 f.1ikc McDonough thal the $225 kit ch~1>ter of t.he Daughters or the ·approved this week by lhe L~guna Renl'h "'aS snatched rigtht out or his An1cr ican Re volution (DAR ). ' Approved time of Its private ownership. technology, In Washlngtoll. 'lbe Smithsonian stitched the old fabric "Throu'gh the special Incandescent on a new backing, and to show visitors lighting which guards agalnst fading, the "'hat the Cull length Oag looked like nag's many perforations and tattered reproduced a dupli cate length and at-ends are bathed In a soft glow, mute tachcd It behind the qld. evidence of Its trava\J during that "Today the old banner hangs vertically perilous bat lie 159 ye11rs ago," Mra. Ross ---;x.ctroorrr;-\\'hen the-bandits -made- thcir escape, lhe won1en dressed aiKI then let the men out of the 111osel. L ~.. ------.unlockc.d . ..u··u:...-____ _ Plaruung omm1ss1on. --•--~1n~reC<lgnition of-FligDiY'I'fiurs<lay, _in_t'!_e_n_ew __ Museum or !!_i~y and -'"·a'-ld_. ____ _ ------ Grand Jury's County. Jail Report Told The Orange County Grand Jury ,releas· ed a -l(>.page report today on COndili<lnS and inmate treatment al the Orange C<lunty Jail. The reporl, signed by Foreman Marcia M. Bents Qr Ne~·port Beach. made no comment Qn alleged mistreatment of in- mates in the jail in Santa Ana. Mrs. Bents did acknowledge that the jufy has received numerous letters from intniites <lr their families concerning alleged mistreatment . ~"The jury has had continua\ visits to U,,, jail inspecting both the men's and Women's sections. The jury CQmmittees qave interviewed complainants in the jpil, discussed jail procedures with staff mWbers. eaten in the cafeteria and in· speCled records and facilitie s," the report states. itrs. Bents said the jury in ronjunction "'ith the district attorney's staff held a fuO panel hearing in which evidence was heard from inmates and the jail staff. the jury report Includes a list ·of reaommendations concerning rules, pro- ced ures and facilities at the jail. The report did not criticize the present opera. lion of the facility. "Sin ce several a d d i t i o n a I recom· n1endations are still under study by the Grand Jury this should be considered an interim report," the foreman said. Included in the recommendations were those of basic training personnel and management, in-service training, in· cident reports, inmate education, visiting plans, library service and exercise and recreation. Also C<lVered ln the recommendations were disciplin ary rules a n d penalties. forms of discipline and limitations on such actions. · ·-~ f arking Facility J)iscussion Set The Laguna Beach City Council ineeting with the planning C<lmmission, the board of adjustment and the traffic ii1Jd circulatiQn committee will discuss pJii.ns for the Glenneyre Street parking structure at 7:30 tonight at city hall. :rhe $970,000 structure for 349 cars has been proposed for a location on Glcn- neyre near Legion. The meetin~ was call- ed as the last fonnal discussion of the parking facility's feasibility. , The meeting will start following an ex- ecutive (closed) session called for 6:30 )?.m. and it is likey councilmen may l!iscuss federal revenue .sharing alloca· iions following parking structure talk. From Page 1 ARTISTS ... people \\1lo are probably not qualified." Once expunged frQm the cxhibiti<lns , there is no other opportun ity to show. "They 're little old ladies and little old men who paint like little <lid ladies and ijttle old men ," he said, venturing the opinion that lhere are some young artists too who pa int "like little old ladies and little old men:· OlAN4JI COAST La DAILY PILOT Tiit Or•nve to.11 IM.ILT PILOT, wJltl Wflle:ll 11 c-!nt<t 1119 ff .... 1.JtrnL, II OUOll ..... h' 1tle Or1nve CO.it f'l/llll>fl"'9 CCll'lllMll)I. s.p.. rtlt .Olllona f•t PYl>llsl'lfd, M-•r tt"DU!lft FrkltJ. f'Of Cotti M""· N""'8tl IMd!, ll11<1ll119IOI! l1acto/F011nt1/~ \lttlty, let- ll"tll, lrvlnel~ltbK-tnO kn cteme"ttl S." Ju•n C111l1lr1no. A 1!11911 tll![l~tl «11101~ II pUO!li.Mi!I illh1tlltvt tl'lll Svn<Hri. ri.. P•lfK~I 1111(11l1to1"9 11ttt11 11 •! ua wnt l t'I' l!rttt. C•"• Mn1, C.Ul9r~l1, mi. Rob1rt N. W11d l"rftlclt'!'tl 11'111 f'llllU•nto• Jtck It. CMrl1y II.Ct l"rftkl""t tM G.nfrtl Mt'Wtt• Thom11 1C11•il E•ltw The number one priority is a plan lo Emily Ross, an active DAR member and unclog South Coast lllghwa y between hi.slorical writer recount«I the pa st to Broadv.·ay and Laguna Avenue , through Arch Beach present of one of_ the nation's mos! the use of median strips and n e w left famous flags. tum pockets. "~tany An1ericans know that in Sep- The report states a median strip with Morator1·un1 tcmber 1814, Francis Scott Key, attorney, poet and patriot, while watching the planting should be built aloog the mlddle British bombardment of Fort McHenry of the highway from Broadway to over which flew the 15-star, 15-stripe flag Laguna Avenue, with left turn pockels at Hnar1·.ng Set \YllS inspired to drart the words of 'The Ocean Avenue, Laguna Avenue and '5-Star-Spangled Banner.' Vl'hich in 1931 was Broadway. The last tv.·o should be CQO-made our National Anthem," Mrs. Ross said. trolled by left tum arrows. r..tore than 900 notices advising Arch Mrs. Ross said that not many people The report proposes that the exist ing Beach !~eights properly <lwners <lf a are aware of background behind the left turn i>OCket at Forest Avenue be special Laguna Beach City C-0uncil famous banner. "l guess I am what peo- rcmoved . sessi-0n to consider a bu 11 ding pie oow call a 'history buff'," she said. On compleli<ln of parking structures in inoratoriuin for the area were posted "The flag was 42 feet long and 30 feet the downtQ\\'n area, all parking <ln C<Jast Tuesday by City Clerk [)()rothy Musfcll. 11·ide.' It weighed almost 200 pounds and a Highwa y between Aster St. and Legion crew of tWo dozen men was required to St. shoulil be removed. The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.nl . handle it.·Believed to be the largest flag Priority two calls for installati<ln of June 27 at city hal l. The sessiQn was ever flown in battle, its eight red and traffic signals at the intersection <l( l'ark ordered by Mayor Charlton Boyd after a seven white stripes were two feet wide, Avenue and Glenneyre Street, v.'ilh large number of persons protested any as were each of its 15 white stars. reaUgnment of the northwest corner of moratorium action at a reeent co u n c i I "Hand-woven and hand-dyed and con- the intersection. session. taining almost a hall million stitches, it Other pri<lrilies include realignment of The freeze, which would be the third v1as flown from a staff 97< feet high," the intersection of Glenncyre and ThaUa for the hill·top. high density e<>mmunily. Mrs. Ross said. slreets; retention Qf the four-v.·ay st<lp at was rerommended by the planning con1-The banner was made by Mary Glenneyre and Legion streets, and reten· missi<ln to allow li1ne for studies <lf the Pickersgill, a Baltimore flag maker. lion of the Cliff Drive access to area. "This huge flag made its single. and Broadv.,ay. Those studies would look into pro-supremely dramatic appearance in The rccomn1endations '''ill be forward-visions for increased access f<lr fire pro-American history. It was never flown ed to the city council for final adoption. tection service, a quota system for phas-again." ~Irs. Rt>8$ said. · Coast Unit Hits Caspers Choice Of 'Inlander' Appointment of an "inlander" to the Orange County Planning Commission has rankled representatives of the United South Orange Coast C -0 m m u n i t I e s (USOCC), a cluster Qf leaders from citizens' groups in Laguna Niguel. Fifth district supervisor R o n a I d Caspers asked Ron Yeo to resign last week and , appointed Bart Spendlove, president of the Saddlebeck Area Coordinating Council (SACC) to take his place. Spendlove is a resident of Mission ViejQ. Caspers said his reason wu to achle\fe better communications with homeowners groups in the Saddleback and Dana P-0int areas. "We were shocked and amazed,"· PauJ Sayre, president of USOCC, said Tues- day. "We find Caspers' action thoroughly reprehensible." "We know of no organization in Dana Point that has any complaints about Yro," Sayre said. "Caspers' new SJ>" pointment is far afield from being representative of coastal interests." Sayre aJSQ said USOCC is investigating the possibility Qf setting up a separate municipal adviSQry council for south coast unincorporated areas including Laguna Niguel and Dana Point. A municipal advisory council, or elected body v.•hich sen•es as an advisory voice to the superviSQrs' offi ce, has been pro- posed by the Saddleback A r e a Coordinating Council. The SACC proposa l would lnclude Laguna Niguel in a 100-square-mile MAC area. inclurling El T-0ro, l..ake Forest. Missi-0n Viejo, and Laguna Hills. But coastal area .spokesmen have pro- tested that !he interests <lf coast residents are different from inland in- terests and should not be represented by the same group. ed development, consideration of a lot-"Following the two-day baUle, the combination ordinance, potential for great flag was taken down and as far as purchase and resubdivision Qf un-the American public was concerned for developed areas and provision for ade· gene rations lost. The officer who com· quate parks and vehicle parking. manded the fort took the flag and kept it. Notices were sent tQ 537 property "The slory goes that whenever he owners living out of town, 330 property wished to make a gift to a friend, he owners living in the area, 46 property \Vould cut off a strip of the immortal flag owners living out of state, and one land I' ,, owner living Qut of the country. Mrs. and present it with his comp unents, Musfelt said. She said. Heirs of the family asked the Smithso- From Pagel BRITAIN .... secretary Qf the Roy.al Air Force ~1ay 22. His statement the following day that he quit because of his "casual ac· quaintance" with a call girl was quickly folk>wed by a similar confessk>n from Lord Jellicoe, who resigtled as leader or the House of Lon1.s and as lord privy seal. Defense attorney Edward Cazalet said the JCandaJ has -left Lambicn a humiliated man. "You will appreciate ~ agony of the mind he has gone through during the last few weeks," Cazalet said. "He has devoted a considerable part of his life to public Mrvice. The position he faces now so far as (his) public and private life is concerned is that he is subject to -total humiliation.'' The prosecutor said a small quantity of n1arijuana and amphetamine tablets \l'as seized by Scotland Yard detectives v.ilen they accompanied Lambton to his Loo· don home the day before he resigned. Cazalet said Lambton accepted "fuJI responsibility" for the drugs but had con- fiscated them from an unidentified per!OO to prevent the individual from using them. He said Lambton did not in- tend to use the drugs. Firemen Probing Cause of Blaze nian Institute to take custody of the tat· te red flag some 50 years later. Eight feet ()f its stripes had been cut during the From Pqe I PROTEST ... Niguel. Thompson, it ~·as reported in a news story earller this week, said it seemed little cou1d be done to stop the towers, and thar the proposed location was the least detrimental. "We are far from feeling that'Httle can be done, and we are just sick about these towers," Hope Luedeke. another resldent who attended last week's meeting, said. Misconduct Denied FRESNO (AP) -Fresno Oisl Atty. \\1i\llam C. Daly said Tuesday he "absolutely denies any wrongdoibg" in an investigation by the attorney general's Qffice Qf a June I incident inv<llving Daly and an unidentified youth. The in· vestigation, according to the attorney general's office, is aimed at "possible misconduct <lr criminal conduct" in- volving the district attorney. l r • Stans' Ignorance Labeled 'Inconceivable' by Prober WASH1NGTON (UPIJ -Sen. Herman E. Talmadge (l>Ga.), told Maurice H. Stans today it was "utterly in· conceivable" that Stans worried about bumper stickers and lapel pins but not $1 milli<ln in cash disbursements for COUNTIAN TELLS COVERUP ROLE-Story, Pago 4. unkn<lwn purposes in the Nixon re-elec- li<ln campaign. On his second day or testimony in the Senate Watergate hearings, Stans, the highest ranking Nixon campaign official to appear, told Talmadge and his col· leagues on the panet that he knew nothing about the \Yatergate bugging, any cover·up attempt Qr any other political espionage. Stans, fonner Co1mnerce secretary and prize.winning certified public ac· countant who is still chairman Qf the Finance Committee to Re-elect the President, portrayed his role as a fund · raiser who found himself in "t-0tal Clemente Police Arrest Alie1i I rt Sexual Attack A 43-year-Old itexican alien was ar- rested by San Clemente detectives Tues- day on charges stemming from an amuk and sexual molestation of a San Clemente man Issi ~·eekend -an attack which sent the victim to the hospital. Salvador Lopez Rodriguez was picked up ln the early artemoon at a San Clemente wrecking yard and booked into the city jail on charges of aggravated assauJt and felony sexual molestation. Police allege that Rodriguez had been driritlng last Sunday with a 45-year~ld San Clemente man and ·1ate fn the even· ing Rodriguez allegedly suggested a homoaexual encounter. The companion refused and subse- quently was kicked severely and then a foreign object -possibly a botlle, police said -was rammed into his rectum. The victim sought medical help and was admitted to San Clemente General H-0epital for treatment, t.ep<>rtl said. Police said that a woman companion of Rodriquez was also arrmted at the wrecking yard on Los Molinos. She was identified as the suspeCt's wife, in the country illegally. Detectives turned the v.'oman over to border patrolen for deportation to Mex· ico. frustration" over decisions being made by the political arm of the Nixon cam· paign organization. In his testimony, Stans: -Said President Nixon gave him a "pep talk" last Allgust and told h.im not to worry about the problems the \Vatergate break-in were <!aus\ng because "it will all be over eventually." -Answered "no" when Sen . Howard H. Baker Jr. (R-Tenn.·1, pressed him as to whether he ever discussed v.·hat haj>" pened at the Watergate bugging with former Attorney General John N. Mitchell; Frederick C. LaRue, Mitchell's assistant; Hugh W. Sloan Jr., Nixon'& campaign treasurer: former While House aides H. R. ~laldeman and John D. Ehrlichman. and G. Gordon Uddy. fQrmer finance counsel in the re-election campaigfl and convicted mastermind ol. the \Yatergate <lperation. But many of the questions this morning came from Baker and Talmadge about the control and supervision that Stans, an arkno~·ledged "stickler for details," ex· ercised over campaign fWlds. "It strikes me as being utterly in· conceivable that you clln spend a large part of your time worrying about pin labels and bumper slickers and not wor· rying about what happens to large sums of cash that are belng disbursed by peo- ple for unknown causes, particularly \Vhen the law is clear on stringent reporting on disbursements," Talmadge said. "You're telling us, Mr. Stans, that as a cerlified public accountant, a member of the accountants' Hall of Fame. a former secretary of Commerce , "'ho further bad , been pcrsona"lly selected by President 1 Dwight D. Eisenhower to be director or I the Budget, and director of lhe com· mittee to raise $50 million for his (Nix· on's) re-election campaign. intended all 1 this money to be spent without any of j your supenilsion and control?" Talmadge 1 asked. , Jury Reaches 11·1 l1npasse in T1·ial I An Orange County Superior Court jury . that recently deadlocked on perjury and bribery charges aired against Nev.·port Beach attorney Everett Elwood Stone reached an impasse at 11 to <lne in f1vor of acquitral, the Daily Pilot has learned. Prosecutor Pat Brian, the source Qf a statement to the effect that the jury was ' deadlocked at 11 to one in favor 0£ con- \'iction has confinned that he was misln- fonned when the jury returned from its deliberations. The Daily Pilot regrets the error. • Burgla1·s Smash Glass in Laguna Laguna Beach fire investigators today sifted through the charred remains Qf a S200,000 fire at a home at 1255 SkyUne Drive that occurred over the weekend . No cause for the blaze which gutted the expensive residence has been giYen by ci- ty lire QFficials. A deputy county fire marshal has been called in <ln the in- vestigation. OPIN .... 538 CENTER STREET-COSTA MESA 646-1919 CLOID SUNDAY Burglars ~·ho smashed the front win- dow of a South Laguna restaurant to gain entry Tuesday night fled frolll the premises with nearly $1.500 in taking.s, Orange County Sherirr•s officers said. Deputies said intruders entered Ben BroWn's Restaurant,.31106 Pacific Coast Highway, via the shattered window after the restaurant had been closed !or the night and Ulen fort«! their way into the locked storage area where the benk deposit was hidden. Officers estimated the full loss at $1 ,IS!.69. The restourant lost 12 .200 In cash two weeks .ago when burglars used identical methods to break into the premises and rifle the cash register. The fire roared through the interior of the Mystic Hills home owned by Timothy Caldwell. Tu·o occupants of the home, Tommy Baldosky and Douglas Keith , escaped uninjured. They declined to talk v.1ith ofricials following the rire . From Page I VIETNAM ... repeated claims or North Viet namese in- filtrations into the south. In each case, it reiterated the Jan. 27 position -that for eign troops should leave Cambodia and Laos and sbould ool be introduced into South Vietnam . Duck Feet Fins Blemish 6.95 & 7 .95 Regulars 7.95 to 10.95 Masks & Snorkles Water Winder Kick Boards 4.95 ' Wilson-Bancraft-Davis-Yoneym- Dunlop Tennis Rackets Wilson-Penn-Dunlop -Champion Handball Gloves Racquetball Racquets 6.95 to 37.95 Racquetballs 1.25 ea. Badminton Rackets Ping Pong Paddles & Balls Pill& Ponf Sets-4.95 to 14.95 ... Thom11 A. Mur phi'lt Pl D M_,.., '""' ioto F-rorn.pbi -----crtrr •• H:"""" L101 Ri,h11oi '· Ni ll The communique called S<luth Viet· na1ncse and Viet Cong commanders to meet within 24 hours to agree .lo tcme:>r- ary mffMirea . .10-avcrt..confllct_ _ _ -r ennis Balls • Yolleyballs-4.25 to 17 .95 Volleyball Nets 11.95 to 21 .95 --Colored Sleeve Baseball A11l1t1111 Mt""lng lit otw• i..t-..... Offkt p p 1 '" "'"' .... ,, roperty zis i Mtlllftt A44r1 .. :' P.O. loJ ••6-. '26-5? Conver~s-lack PllrCllls °"" Oflluo A strange thing happened to Lloyd c..11 M ... 1 m wnr a.y s1."' ~tattson. Laguna Beach police property Ntwporl t..cti; »» N.w.on ltui...1r1 j H11n11ntWM '*'" 1111119'(11 10V1, .. ,,1 officer, on the way to 1 police auct on. ••~ clffMl!i.i • Nortt111 c1111i..o -. .. , • A lot of the stuff he..was going to auc· , .. .,.. .. f714J MJ-4111 tlon off at the Saturday auction was It ur§ed formation or a National Coun- cil of National Concord as soon as po$Sl- ble, but did not specify that the council woulcf have organlzallon of elections as its maln task. Resolution Defeated , Tretam T emis Slloes BaSketllal Sllues Undersllirts Boys 1.95 Mens 2.75 Baseball Caps-Mtts-Balls-Bats Raleigh Bikes-Parts Tlres-Tubes-Repairilf Racket Restrlnrinr • ' .. ' ~ ..,.,,11111 MJ..1611 claimed after the Dally Pilot published a '-"" ..... ••••••I"""'" photo ol Mattson and some of , the ,..., .... 4f4.t4" unclaimed founrl property up for auction. C..11t111. ••1J. Of•"'" C..WI "llMlal\lflf The poll I ••• ~-pO lpon•d c-.,.11y. Ho -i""""· u'"''"'''-· cc auct on 1~ u=n s .rlfWltll ~'"' °" .. ._..1_11 "'""' to 10 a.m. June 23 behind the police sta· ct~-." M,~~:: 0~ t..ci.i ""' !Ion. Matt.son aid he still has eight ~ ~ c:i. .. ••• ...... , c ... -... bicycles, radios, car tape players, and ! ~';:.;~-... ~J"~• ':..t"~i.~11= witches, bl.It the statue he W11s pictured ! •'"'-"-u.u ._ ... ,Y. with in the news photo was claimed, as ._ ___________ ... r well a1 several blcyclet. I • FORT WORTH. Te>. (UPI) -Com- missioners at a Presbyterian conference Tuesday defeated one resolution that demanded President Nixon disclose everything he kno·ws about Watergate and another that asked evangellst Ullly Graham co n v i n c e Nixon to do so. Graham will speak to the 113th General Assembly <lf tht Presbyterian Church U.S. Thursday. Baseban Shoes All Purpose Shoes Open 9 to 6 -Closed Sundays • 646·1919-538 Center, Costa M- I I f 7 I l • --.... ..,.. . ~ Saddlehaek Today's Final I .N. Y. Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 164, 5 SECTIONS, I 00 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13, 1973 TEN CENTS ~Sena e ommittee Okays -rvine MeOical m11 - 7 I ~ By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 t!le D•llJ' f'Het II ... UC Irvine acting medical school dean Stanley van den Noori won't have to ap. pear in Sacramento tonight before lhe state Senate Educatiou~eommutee. The committee today j>assed a bill by state Senator DeMis Carpenter (R- Newport Beach ) that would provide fWlds for planning the UCJ-CaUfornia College of Medicine teaching hospital regardless or actions by the joint Evidence Lacking- Defense By TOM BARLEY Of Hit Dell¥ l"*'t Sl'lfl' • U ltfile Square Park fanner George Murai had ever been asked to make out a $5,000 check to county Supervisor Robert Battin"s campa ign fund that check would have been on view in the courtroo1n dur- ing the current trial. defendant Derck McWhlnney's lawyer today told an Orange County Superior Court jury. "We've been told a heck of a lot about something that never 1 existed,·• com- mented attorney J05ePh Ball as he neared the end of his final argument in the grand theft-bribery trial of former \Vestminster mayor ""fcWhinney, 40, and city planner Tad Fujita. 34. Neither defendant ever asked Murai to write such a check, Bait irWsted. "There is not one shred ol evidence apart from. Murai's obviously biased testimony to support that claim and the Battin check was never mentioned in all the telephone convttsation.s taped by the prosecutioo," he said. Ball described the $5,000 cash payment handed over to Fujita as "part of a deal · whereby Derek promised to help Murai try to retain his lea:le, a busioess deal and merely that. "Murai was angry because l)e could see l&nd he had fanned !or a mere $150 an acre being broken up and possibly shared out to other farmers at a possible '3%5 an acre," Ball said. "Doesn't K &1.and to reason that a man (Set McWBINNEY, Page II Scandal Figure f 11, Britai1i Held 011 Pot Charges LONDON (UPO -Lord Lambtoo, who resigned his ministerial po& in a call girl scandal, pleaded guilty today to possess· Ing marijuana and pep pills. He said he had a "fetiah" about discussing pot with his prostitute friend , Nonna Levy. The wealthy, 5().year--0ld Lambton , whose resignation and that of another .minlSter rocked Prime Minister Edward Heath's CoMervative goverrunent, was lined f750 for keeping a small quantity or marijuana and amphetamines at his l.Aln- don town house. Asked by prosecutor David Tudor- Price· If he asked Mrs. Leyy for narcotics and other drugs during visits to her Lon· don apartment. Lambton said they "talk- ed about them" and added : ''1t was a fetlsh with me." The prosecutor told the court Lambton had been photographed smoking mar~ juana ln bed with the 26-year-old Mrs. Levy, an Irish-born ex-<x>nvent girl. Lambton's apearance in the ·h'ushed and crowded court room at London 's 1'farlyebone Magistrates . COurt was the first Ume he emerged in public since be resigned as parliamentary u n d e r (See BRITAIN, Page II ' lrvin,e Seeks legislative conference committee on the budget. UC officials in Sacramento describe the Carpenler bill as a precautionary measure in lhe event the ilems are left out of the 1973-74. $9 billion plus state budget, or are deleted by Governor Reagan. To remain active In the Legislature, Carpenter's bill appropriating $9'l5,000 of voter-approved bond moneys for !he hospital working drawings had to cll!ar the co1nmittee by Friday. A companion bill by Assemblyman Robert Badham (R·Newport Beach) ls ready to go in the Assembly in the event 1 he bills are needed. Since it is more difficu lt to get such bills to the aoor or the Senate arter the rules deadline of June 15, today's education committee hearing was con- sidered "critical" by UC officials. Van den Noort was expected to outline lhc need for the teaching hospital as a -----------~------··------------ u~•r~ Not Pertiet1lar We're all brothers under the skin . At least that's the way this I>ober· man pinscher named Pride feels about it. The pedigr'eed dog, mother of nine of her O\\'n , took on three ki t.tens who were orphaned when Uteir n1othe.r v.•as killed by a car. The Robert S11ttons of Detroit say Pride acfopled Lbe kittens in1mecliately after hearing their hungry meows. Coastal Groups Ass~iling Caspers' 'h1lander' Pick AppoinlOlenl of an "inlander" lo the Orange County Planning Cotnmlssion has rankled representatives of the United South Orange Coast C o n1 m u n i t i e s (USOCC), a cluster of leaders Crom citizens' groups in Laguna Niguel. Fifth -district supervi\Qr R-o n a I d Caspers a;~ ·RQn Yeo to resign last week and appointed Bart Spendlove, pi:esident or the Saddleback Arca Coordinating Council (SACC} to take his place . Spendlove is a resident of Mission Viejo. Caspers said his reason was to ach ieve better COQ1-munications with homeowners groups ln the Saddlcback and Dana Point areas. "We were shocked and amazed," Paul Sa)rrC, president or usocc~ saia-Ti.lts- day. "We find Caspers' action thoroughly reprehensible." "We ktlow o( no orgnnization in Dana pointnicnl is for afield front being representative of coastal interests." · Sayre also said OSOCC is investigating the passlbility of setting up a separate municipal advisory council for' south colµll un.incorporated areas Jncluding Lagll{la Niguel and Dana Point{ A municipal advisory council: or elected body which serves as an adVisory voice to the supervisors' office, Ms been pro- posed by the Saddle~ck A r e a Coordinating Cooocil. ' The 'SA.CC-proposal would include Lagun a Niguel in Ji 100-iquare·mlle MAC ah:a, incl uding El Toro, Lake Forest. Mission Viejo, and· LalttJna Hills. But coastal area spokesmen have pro- tested that the interests of coast residents are di£rertnt from inlnnd in- tt!rcsfs arKI sf\Oiild nol be represented bY the same group. nla-n. Point lhal has any complainlS about CLASSJL'lED AD -F-· ri-virector--1~eo,'.:...Sayre...said.....'.'l&>•"'"-''-' ..,,,,,w~·~--====::ci;-==:..::.-.~.::;:_- A crash program leading to the hiring of a new city planning dJ.rec.. lor will be dlscuS8ed by Irvine city councilmen meeting at 6:30 tonJ8ht In city hall. Members of the planning conr mission have been Invited in- ronnally 10 atlend the adjourned portion oC Tuesday'• city council meeting. Mayor John Burton said he tx· peels the discussion to be brief. liowever, councilmen might act to provide funds Cor an executive search, or 1 fake any other acUon they desire. since the -ling lo a contlnu1tlon of Tll<Jday'o meeUIJI. • Bw·gla1·s Ransack Mission Viejo Horne A Mission Viejo home was stripped of stereo equipment, a television set. fishing equipment and camping gear valued at rnor~-111.:m 11 ,600 Tuesday night by burglars who pried open the rear bedroom window while the owner wns 8\VOy, Orange CoWlty Sheriff's orncers Shld. . Deputies Sllid the haul from the home of Thomas llllT)' Creal, 31), of 25241 Turf St. In Ille Agcan Hllls dovelopmenl In· eluded n safety deposit 'box containit11 an unstated amount of l!Qsh. f . I MAKES A SUC(:ESS At least one of oor readers is a success -thanks to1a Dally Pilot classified want ad. RECEPTIONIST wanled ror N.8. law {Inn . Typing re<fd. 8:30-5. Coll (Phooc No.) ror appl. She answered that ad and was hired. If you're looking for a job, try looking at th~ clnss iJied ads In the Dnlly Pilot t~ day, Tornotrow .you could be successfully employed. And to plDce an ad of your 0Y.1n. dial direct -The line to success - 64Z.S678, means to increasing class site of the UCI-CCM from 64 to 96 students entered each year. Further, the fWlds Senator Carpenter's bill would free "'ould provide planning mooey for the conununity clinics and the upgrading of Orange Coonty Medlcab center (OCMC). Earlier this session, a joint committee studying the spending of UC bond !Wl<b recommended that the Legislat.urt spend $15 million or UC bonds mOney on the teaching hospital (200 bedl, on campus). another $9.5 million to upgrade the present teaching facilities at OCMC (by reducing rrom 515 to 315 the nunlber of beds ther-e ) and create a county system of conununity based walk-in care clinics including transportation between them and UGI and OCMC. UC officials expect the joint conference committee on the budget to pro,•ide at least planning moneys for all the recom- mended iter:ns. The Carpenter and Badham bills. ho"'ever. "'OU ld :issure the "technical" if not "political" chances of guarunteeing the expenditures th is year. Another $6.5 million flf the $38 miJlin11 of bonds passed last fall and earmarked to improve 1nedical education at UCI. are in the budget Dills being considered behind closed doors by the joint con- ference <..'Ommittee on the budget. This expense, although related in the sense that it \\'OUld provide medicn l school (See llOSPITAL, Page 21 Viet Pact Signed Document· .Call,s for Strict Measures PARIS (UPI) -The IOU!' parties to the Vietnam war signed a docwnent today pledging themselves to new measures to shore the Vietnam cease-fire agreement through "strict ' and scrupubn im· plementation" of the Jan. 27 document. The measures include a U.S. reswnp. tion of economic aid talks and removing mines from North Vietnamese waters, .an end to U.S. reconnaissance Oighls, a· retw:n of Saigoo and Viet Cong troops to their original ~tuatioos and a pledge Consultants To Sound Out Residents At lhe '"1rlnli of Ma,;,. John Burtal, the city of lr'vlne general plan con-, sultants "ill ask residents of the new city where they , would like to 1ee city -:hall located. • The question will be JDcJuded, in a general Plan d-...,..,. lleial. pre- pared by Wilsey mid Ham, the South Pasadena finn organizing the city's general plan effort. Larry MorriSOll , Tuesday. night asked councilmen to okay a subcontract with an oPinion reaearch firm. 1be contract calls for no extra e~ by the city, but allows Wilsey and Ham to enlist polling expertise. Questions will be asked in alt :~~·~:n:;1~ ;::i:~chC:. cerm, McyThlon told councilmen. Councilfnan William Fischbach and CollneilWoman Gabrielle Pryor suggested the council might review the form the questions will take. Councilman Henry Quigley had suggested the way the ques- tion is asked might influence the out- COIJ'le. "It's one ttmlg to ask people '\Vhere would you like city hall put?' and quite another to ask them to select one of three or four locations listed in the ques· tioonaire," Quigley said. Three locations most talked about to date, be noted, are near UC Irvine, in the proposed regional triangle shopping center at the Intersection of the Santa Ana and San Diego freeways and in the "environmentlll corridor" (Oood plain ) where the San Diego Creek crosses CUiver Drive. The latter site is the one favored by Mayor Burton. Morrison indicated yet anothef site ls being considered by the general pl!!D ccn- sultants. <lJuncil actioo suggests the ques.- tiomaire will be publicly reviewed prior to its use among citizens Councilmen also okayed two consultant (See CITY HAIL, Pap I) from them strictly to ohurve the cease- fire. Saigon signed reluctantly and reported- ly under U.S. economic pressure, and a dispatch tonight from Saigon said Presi- dent Nguyen Van Thieu was disappointed that the new agreement did not restore the Demilitarized Zone or require the North Vietnamese anny to leave South Vietnam.. Official sources in Saigon said the docwnent gives even greater concessions Nixo1i to Slww Economic Plan, \VASHINGTON (UPI) -Presi- dent Nii:Oit will diaclose new pro- poals.foi ftghtlni inllallon ii! a na· tioowtde -tonight It 5;30 PDT, the White House announced. I*alls ·of tlie plan ...,.. kept secret. but it is expected to include amne eelectlve Pr\Ce freezes af- fecting ,..,.. ~ while omit- ting a specific wac• lreeze. • NIIm has -concentrating lor a week oo various pf9POSala of economic adviien and Cabinet members for stemming the worst inOation tct hit the natioo in 20 years. (Sloey, Pip II.) Irvine Bicyclist Scraped by Truck An Irvine boy escaped with fractured hand bones Tuesday when a possing truck clipped his bicycle's handlebar oo CUiver Drive and pitched him of_f onto the pavement. Anthony R. Krasco, 12, of 17412 Paine Circle, \\'~ driven. borne by the motorist after the rniahilp a quarter-m.ile'north of V alenc:ia Drive and taken from there to Tustin OJmmlmity HOlpital. He was ~ted and released from the emergency room. Police said Edouard E. Lyoo Jr., 35, of 444 Mendota. Terrace, Newport Beach, was driving south on Culver Drive and the boy was riding in the same direction on the sboul<!"r. Lithographs Stolen ANTIBES, Fronce (AP) -Thieves broke open a wirJdo:w in the ,.Picasso Mmeum in Antibcs Tuesday night and stole four amall lithographs, police reported. lbe lllhographs repn!9<llted Francolse Gllot, who lived with the painter several years. The museum director estimated their value at $18,000. Public Hearings Set On Street Closings A public 'hearing has been scheduled by the Board of Supervisors on the proposed trial closing oC three streets ln Mission Viejo. SUpcrvl>ors decided Tuesday they will hear arguments for and against the ctos· ing at 10:30 a.m. on June a. One month ago 1everal l'Midentl wbo live on Naccome Drive, San Andres Line and san Roque Drive protested to board members ttiatthe st-rnre being Uled as a speedway by driven seeking a shortcut to tile Ml>sioo Viejo Shopping Center on 4 Paz Road. They complained of opeodt up to Ill mil., per hour end1111erllJi children, pets and rt1ldent1 alike. SUperviJor Ronald Cupers ~ 'I'll<• '> ' • day that there have been several ac. cldents on the local streets recently and some near fatalities. After a traffic study or the affected area. County Road Commissioner Ted MCCOnville suggested possible closures at the inter$tctlon of Jeronimo Road with Cordillera, Montilla and C a r r a n z a Str<!els. He said lhls would divert traffic from the stttets where the complaints originate<!. McConvllle said he met wilh resident • of the area and there was far ftom total agreement on the proposal to cl<»e !JOme streets. Col. Michael Keene told supervisors that 1 C.lifornla Highway PalrOI rad•r check In the ..... rtauliod In 14 speeding citations In a thr ... hour period last week . l l>J the Communists than Lhe Jao. 27 documents, and little at all to Saigon. A joint statement issued after Henry A. Kissinger and Le Due 11lo or Hanoi \\'OUnd uµ negotiations by initialing the 14-article document. described offi cially as a ··comniunique," said it provides for "strict and scrupulous implementation" of the Jan. 27 ~ct. A full four-party signing ceren1ony then took place at the Kleber Avenue con- ference center in the same room where the original pact was signed. Two Marines Die in Crash; Four Injured An unexplained headon collision in- volving two carloads of El Toro Marble Corps enlisted men near the base killed two and left four hospitalized with-major injuries early today. The accident occurred on Trabuco Road west of Sarld Canyon Roed, ac· cording to the California Highway Patrol. "For some Wlknown reason. the east· bound car entered the westbound lanes and ... bang !," remarked one CHP of· ri~is morning. Coro!leJ''s deputies identified the dead men , passengers in each ot the cars in- volved, as James A. Thompson, 25. and David E. Mitchell, 19, neither of whose hometowns were available, Investigators said the two Marines are in transit and not pennanenUy stationed at the base. - Investigators said the other victims, all taken to Tustin Community.Hospital with majof injuries, were Daniel M. Kirkman, 22, driver of one car, Leonard W. \Valke, 21, the second motorist. and George E. Smith, 19 and Charles G. Jones, 23, all residents of El Toro base housing. Medical personnel at the hospital were still working on the injured men and completing diagnoses this morning. Horse Kills Boy, 9 • FALLBROOK tAP) -J°""ph M. Wolk. 9-year-olg son or a Marine major sta- tioned at Camp Pendleton, was kicked in the chest by a, horse while trying to put a haller on it Monday night. He was pro- nOunced dead at a bas'e · -·ia1. Oraage Cout Weadler -MGl'e of the same gloomy IO\Y cloods are on the agenda Thurs. day, with partial clearing in the afternoon hours. Highs in the mid· 60s at the beaches, rising 10 the low 70s inland. INSWE TODAY Ab0Tlic11t is big busi1ttss i n Catifornfrz. There ore doctor1, hospitals and nliddlemen tl1at special ize iii it See first article '" series begintling today Oll Page 12. "' y-hr<rlc• l L.M. leY'tl 1 '"'"" 11 C•HfenM• J C1rMr C•rritr n (lltlllltrll • ..,.,. CMk• ... Crtl_,,. Ml 0••11\ ,....,.. 111 ll•ilWlll ,IM • •lltlfll._,...I 4M1 "lllllllQ V.Jt , ... ""' ·~.... 11 HtrtKIH •I '" 11n1t1 11 • °"'" L11Mn ~ Mel... ' MeYIM ~I MUl1tll 1'111111• • NlllMll N-. I OfMI .. CWlll'f .. ,, fJTA .. ... ,,, U.16 Or, Stth1oi:rtfl• 21 ,. Stock hWfilth 'll•P T"9v!tlo11 .. Tl!Nl_,,, ~I WHrll" 4 W ....... 1 Newt U.iU WetN fMWI I % DAll V PILOT IS Industrial Park Law Get s Botu1ce His Securit y Wasn't Secure A burglar alarm !I )' s t e 1n salesman lost a sWtcase containing sample!: of the Newport Stach t'Ompany's wares lo a car burglar Tuesday, while his sport roadster was parked near his o£flce. Ylllllam R. Stev.•art, of Hurst Security Systems, 4500 Campus ·rhirteen months arter the cit y or Irvine Drive: complained to Police orncer began a review rJ the lrvine Industrial Mike i\1c0onough thflt 1he '225 kit CompleK ord inanL'C, city c...-01.111ciln1en \\'ho was snatched rigthl out of his y,·ere about to fi!!IlllY approve .the la°"··~··_,,.. unlocked car seut it back to tfielr new planning com·. mission The !Inv has bounced back and forth bel\\'een the two bodies no fev.·er than three t imes since it was fi rst revised in i\Jay. 1972 v.•hen the cit y added acrea.ge and bt'gan arguing about lhe commercial zoning of the 50-acre ~1cDonnell·Douglas property across fron1 Orange County Airport. Tuesday night, just as eounc!Imen y,·ere about to vote approval of the year's v.·ork by city sUlff. Irvine Industrial Complex President Tom \\'olff appeared for the first time before the city to ri...oquest changes in the draft. , \Volff argued the city should properly set standards for development but allow the IIC to continue its codes, covenants and restrictions (deed restrictions) con· trol of design of the .. 1nost beautiful coin· plex of its type any\Yhc1·e in the world." Councilmen agreed to refer buck to the commlssion the law. The new cOOl· missioners. most of wllOln have never seen the c:ornplex zoning ordinance, will review the ~nges sought by Wolff. Some ol the ~ges have been in the draft ordinance since as early as last November when the conunis.5ion and later lhe council re\'iewed the zoni!'lg I ext At all previous hearings, the 11C was represented by Ray Kimmey v.·ho raised ho objection to the points argued by \\'olff Tuesday night. Wolff objected to city regulation of: -Land.scape and irrigation plans, in- cluding a requirement that minimum IS gallon trees be placed on industrial pro~ erties. · -Location and design of railroad switching facilities. -Design elements or screening outdoor s torage areas including the specification of prohibited materials. The materials for fencing -sheet or corrugated iron, etc. -were banned in the November, 1972 draft of the zoning law which the city bodies have con· sidered perhaps as many as a dozen Umes since. · Wolff apologized for not having been present for the hearing on the first reading of the zoning law. While the city -which is paring for this revision of the law governing in- dustrial development in Irvine -sends --the 10th revision text to its planning com- mission, the Irvine Company is readying an 11th revision to be brought in for city approval. Irvine Company spokosmen have said the 11th revision will be filed "as soon as the 10th \s approved.'' From Pagel BRITAIN ... secretary of the Royal Air Force May 22. l·Jis statement the following day that he quit because of his "casual ~c­ quaintance" with a call girl was quickly followed by a similar confession from Lord Jellicoe. who resigned as leader of the House of Lords and as lord privy seal. Defense attorney Edward Cazalet said ·the scandal has left Lambton a humiliated man. "You will appreciate the agony of the mind he has gone through during the last few weeks," Cazalet said. "He has devoted a considerable part or his life to public service. The position he faces llO\V so far as (his) public and private life is ·concerned is that he is subject to total humiliation." The prosecutor said a sinall quantity of marijuana and amphetamine tablet.s v:as seized by Scotland Yard detectives when they acaJmpanicd Lambton to his Lon- don home the day before he resigned. Caza lcl said l.ambton accepted "full responsibility," for IJ)e drugs but had con· Hscated therTI from an unidentified person to prevl'T11 the individual from using them. He said Lambton did not Ju· tend to use the drugs. ORANG( COAST II DAILY PILOT Tiie or.....,. C~ll o ... 1LY PILOT. •11'1 whldl " cornDlneo 111, tt•vn Prrs1. II llUDl!tlltd 11'1' lfl• Or•ng• CO••I Pulllltlllr>O COf'n~llf. S..IN• ~II• odlllon1 ••• pUbH1"-1, Morwh, ,,.....,.. Frlcl1y. ,,,, Cost• Mt.... Mtw11c111 Bffd'I. 1-<U!lllnglot> llt.Kll/l'-llM> V1Uey, l.10111'11 llMdl, lrv!Ml51ddlftllck ...... S.11 Ct.monlt/ St11 Ju.., C1ci11tr11... A t ll!lll• 'i1!killl1 ~11;o,, ~ ""'bll111od S!TIITTl11• •nd Suncl11t. f,,_ ptin<:IPfl Mii.ii"" pltl'll 11 el »O w"'' 1111 Sl• .. I, Cotlll M.w. t•lllorni., '2•H. ll:o\.,t N, w .... '"""*'' 11\11 Plltlllt!Mr Joclr: R. Curl1y Ille• Prtila..,, 1n11 o-r11 M1>11ttt Tlit111111 ICotwll ---"'"'--Them11 A. Murph:n, . Mt "'9"'9 Editor Chertt 1 M. loot llich1 r,. r. Nill A•llltlll Mf"ff!"9 f dlTO•I Offk" Co••t Mat: l)O Wffl ••r Stl'ftf Ntwporl llMcltr lW HtWlllr atv1oiw1rlf L-.uM Bffelts m l'orr11 ,._ H1111linftol'I l t Kl'I: J)lfl ... (fl lfl\il""trll kt1 Cltnoftli.: :IOJ Monti 1!.I (111111>6 ltHI Toi ...... (71~) MJ-4121 Cl-'fW • ...,,.,.., '42·5,71 hll etc tnla All Do111•tM&.tt1t , ... , ••• 491-4420 C ... 1fioftf, 1'71. Or~ COUI '°11bllll'll"9 CO'l'lllfl"'· No nt..,. 1ior1ts. m....i1r•tr-. Ulllo<i-1 m•ll.-r Of .. .;trf!Mnlttll~ fltft:lri ""'• ~ r•lll'ed«fd ~ ..... , "'' l'l'lluill'I ti U11rr10111 •wW· htO!W t i.u "°''*"' Nill ol CMl1 M~. C.lollln'1-•11111K11o!foo'I .., urr'-r U.O -flllYI IW INll t.'),IJ "*'IPllrJ IMH!tl'r *'l .... lllflf Jl.t.f "*'IPllY. Ceremonies For El Toro School Set Official groundbreaking ceremonies f<?l' the new El Toro High School will take place at I I a.m. Friday on the si1e at Toledo and Baker Streets'. Although costs have risen from original estimates, the school is on schedule for completion by Septc1nber 1974, in half the usual time taken for planning and con· structioo. The Saddleback Valley Unified School District -which won't take over official operalioo or area schools until July I - adopted a ''fast-track" method to bui ld the high school. District trustees bought a ready-made set of plans and revised them slightly to fit the Saddleback area. Mission Viejo High, the district's only existing high school, is badly overcrowded. Next fall clas.5es \vill be on double sessions, with the future El Toro students in a separate session. The groundbreaking F r i d a y w i 11 feature remarks by Robert Bosanko, principal of the El Toro liigh School; William Zogg, Saddleback Va 11 e y superintendent; and Chester Briner, Sad- dleback board president. Residents a re encouraged ,to attend. Preservatioo of existing eucalyptus trees on the s.ite is planned. The hi gh school wiU have 10 buildings done in the Spanish-style architecture of the area, with tile roofs. 'They v.•iU center around a mall where a shelter for dining and school programs v.·ill be located. An outdoor amphUheater, a 300-seat auditorium in the fine arts building, air condJtionlng and carpeting are other features. The $5.5 miJJion coo.tract was awarded to Berry Construction Company of Ontario. The architects started work on redesigning the high school in J anuary. a mooth before the district's first bond election. Trustees. acting in the belief the bonds v.'Ollld pass, authorized the planning so construction on the school could begin as soon 3S possible. The financial package -$28 million in local bonds and $18 million in state aid - received an 85 percent yes vote. Zogg said if normal school design pro- ~ures were followed, the school would be delayed another year or more. From Page I McWHINNEY •• in that position is going to be resentful and make son1e pretty \vild statement:J that were eagerly seized on by the pros- ecution?" Ball a~ked the jury. The prosecution-aneges that McWhin· ney and Fujita shook dov.'TI Murai for a lotal or $10.000 with the threat that they had the pov.-er to tenninate his interest in the 215 acres of strawberry fields at ~lile Square Park. Jt is alleged that Fujita v.·as the middle man in the extortion attempt and that he \\'as as.5igncd by ~1cWhirmey lo take the SS,000 in bills in a table 101' transaction y,·itncssed by district attorney's in· ves1iga1or ;;. But Fujita·s attorney, Al Stokke. told I.he jury that his client v.·as simpty a "good Samaritan'' ¥.'ho was acting as re nlediator and was simply trying to resolve the difference existing between tY.'O good friends -Murai and ~1cWhin­ ney. Stokke stressed, llke Ball, that ~1urai knew he might lose land on which he had made nearly a mJllion dollars al a bargain price and he began expnndin'g his storv into a shakedown atteinpt once he kncW the dlstrict attorney's ofrict: w.as interl!stcd. "\Ve y,·ouldn 't bavc been here today ir It hadn't been for the poUtical campaign that 1o,•as goi ng on at the llme." Ball told Ille jury. "What \\'e really have here is an ootgrowth-or what.hag bcen..aU along_an attc1npt to destroy Derek Mc\Vhlnncy :' Ball said, From Page I CITY HALL. • • projects v.·hich vdll cost more than originally planned ror the general plan. 'l'he amounls npproved Tuc5day ni ght Y.'ill be ch:i rged to ncxr yeal''s budget. Wilsey and Ham 1n&y contract with Woodward·ti.-tcNelll lo work on a seism1c (earthquake safetyl element of t_hc general plan at a cost of $21 ,400. ~~urthcr, Boll. Bt!ranck and Ney,•n1an will prepare a 1,ity noi se element or the gcncrnl pJnn at D cost of $4 .000. New. Pollution~ Bottomless Act f'rfill Pflfle I HOSPITAL ..• Lagu11.a Group Approv es Study-In Laguria Bar Pro1npts Arrest ' dusroomt and ltborat.enet on campus, 11111 not be<D cont.,led In lbe Legblaftlr•. The build ings would be the first perma"'!'t facllltle1 II>< UCl.CCM ha! enjoyed slncO lbe 1 ...... 111 private • By FREDERICK SCJIOEMEUL .-°' .. MW I'll! lttft Laguna U..ch planning eommwionen have agreed the city should embark on a study or a "new" fonn of air wuuuon: tire dust. This week. the planners gave an in· fol'nlal go ahead to Bruce Hopping of the Kalos Kagathos Foundntion to request dust studies by the state Air Resources Board-and the.-federal....Ln.vlroI\JIWili!l Protection Agency. To make his point about the evils of tire dust. I-lopping presented the com- mission v.1ith a sample of the woru-0~f rubber collected near the intersection of South Coast Highway and Legion Street. Commissioner Roger Lanphear didn 't v.•ant to look at it. Larry Campbell smell- ed It. City Planner Wayne f\.1oody rubbed the stuff between tris·fingers. Hopping. citing a dispatch out of Chicago about tire dust, said a Ford ti.1otor Company research c h e m i s 1 estimates 700.000 tons of the black rubber wears off of tires each year. That's about 200 ,000 tons more than the "particulates" generated by car engines, Hopping said. Research in the eas1ern states, he ad- ded, indicates tire dust, in the form nf minute dust particles suspended in the air. may cause cancer. The cancer producing ingredient. carbon black, is a constituent of tire rui>- ber, Hopping asserted. Backed with plannJnc OOOUl\Wloo support, Hopping now plans to go before the city councU seeking official backing for !ht studies. Ed Clmartn• ol the Orange County Air Pollution Control District said today such studle$ could only measure the total dust •1fall '1 at a given location. Further studies, be said, would bave lO be launched to find out iust what is in the Cius.-~ - He noted that extensive equipment is required to determine the amowit of dust !hat remains airborne for any length of tiine. "Trafrtc-mmre-s pretty slow down-tbere- ... I don't think there would be much abrasion because the cars aren't going \·cry fast," said Camarena. Camarena also warned agailm over- reaction to the so-called carcinogenic (canCi!r producing) properties of tire dust, noting that even barbecue smoke contains carcinogens. "It's such a new field ... wow ... it sounds intriguing," commented Com- n1issio11er Sally Bellerue after Hopping made his presentation. Cumpbell said that studies of tire dust along-South Coast Hig hway should be supplemented with surveys of tire dust on busy arterials like Park Avenue and Thalia Street. A 27·ycar-old Corona de.l ~13r medical coUege moved to Irvine five man was arrested in La.sun3 Beach after he allegedly dropped his pants years a.go from Its downtown Los in a bar and gyrated in front or a Angeles campus nod hospital. I table of womep Tuesday. The fate ol the ,9.5 m111lon suggested Robert Lewis Iles, 27, of 631 for improvement of OCMC ls Jess cer-• Dahlia St., wns taken Into cumody tain Assemblyman Willie Brown Jr. (O-by police called to the Surf :ind Sand · .. Towers, 1555 s. Coast llii.:hway, San Francisco) headed the hospital s1t1~s i..aguna Beactrtte-was"'bocik~-liri-I jil'trirlt'·g1·s1atlve-commlttee--and-al.-a1ts1--- alleged indecent exposure. on th& conference .committee on the Police Capt. David Brown said a budget. man reporttdly \\•alked to a table or Brown's hospital ~lting committee women v.·ho had been asking for stipulated ft long tenn agree.men! service. Capt. Brown said the man between UC! and the County of Orange asked then1 : "I-low would you like a be reached before the bond moneys could topless waiter." and with that be spent. allowed his trousers to fall down Su~isors are meeting with UCI or· around his ankles and gyrated in ficfuls to arrive at such an agreement. front of the table. While OCMC is licensed for more lhan Capt. Brown said the man then 600 beds , only 515 beds there are picked up his pants, and returned presently used. and the legislative study to the bar where he \Vas a~ committee suggests 200 of these be prehended by police. Brown___said eliminated, so the county hospital is left l ies did not appear to be in-with 315 "teaching hospital quality" beds. toxlcated. The requirement does two things. ll County Pla11 Board Backs assures a centrally located Unproved quality health cart facility servlng the medicnlly indigent or Or8nge County. Also. it ilnproves tl1e level of training iivailable to UC I.CCfi.>1 students, most of \vhom presently learn patient care in a facilit y even county officials agree is ,;inadequate." Battin-Appoi1at11aent Conservation Finally. by deleting 200 substandard beds from the OCMC and creating the new teaching hospital on c~mpus, UCI iii given a "hub" for its medical school pro- gram. Even \\•ith the new hospital and improvements at OCMC the university figures nearly l,000 other hospital beds 1\·ill be needed to complete training o~ portunilies for medical students, interns and residents. Lru1d Consultant Named By JAN WORTH Of 1111 Dolly l"lltl lllH The Orange County Planning Com,. m i s s I o n unanimously recommended TUesday that a conservation element of the general plan. the product of months of hearings and revisions, be pnssed by the county Board of Supervisors. To Cou11ty Plan Board Burglar Si1spect Gets Trial Date Clart:nce G. Caspl!r. 53. a Fountain Valley private land us e planning con- sultant. has been named to the Orange County Planning Com1nission b Y Supervisor Robert BattiJL Casper will take the seat vacated b:Y Adolph Molina. 41, a Santa Ana attorney. Battin said Molina, who has served on !he commission since last January, quit because of demands of a new job he had taken. El Toro Da1icers To Stage Revue At Viejo Scliool The fi rst annual dance revue of the Saddleback Dance Center of El Toro will be held in two performances Saturday a t La Paz Intermediate School in Mission Viejo. A matinee is scheduled for 2 p.m. and an evening performance is set for 7:30 p.m. Dancers ranging in age from four. to 74 \vi ii be featured in a variety or numbers, including an excerpt from "Alice in Wonderland," a gymnastics exhibition. and demonstrations of ballet, tap, jazz, Tahitian, and belly dancing. Dancers with leading roles will be Juli Mizar, Ada Ptlizar, ifichael Hudson, Don- na Rexford. r..1adalyn Magedanz. Lori Sims. Charmain l\Iohrsch1adt and Kristin Langman. Tickets are free. More infonnalion may be obtained from Fredericka Mohr. director, 586-5422. ¥iejo Student Art Show Slated The armual student art show of Sullivan Pre-School Center in Mission Viejo is scheduled for 4 to 6 p.m. June 17, Fathers Day. Artwork by 225 children from two and a half to seven will be featured. Included \\'ill be paintings, collages, a n d sculptures. Mrs. Thomas Pole, director of the school. said the s how is open lo the public with refreshments served. African masks , 50 feet of batik ceiling drapes. and a giant can structure are lhree of the most imposing kinds of v.·orks, Linda Schwartz, art coordinator, said. Acrylics Show Slated in Viejo A demonstration in aeryllcs wl!I be featured at the meeting of the Miss ion Viejo Art Association at 7:30 p.m. Thurs- day ut De Portola Elementary School. B.J. Wilson Shylfer of MJraleste wlll ilo an abSlracliotlO f O'il.'ers s ai=Hni;: from a drawing by projecting a slide on her canvas. She has worked as a Cashion illustrator, art director, painter, and aulhor. SlK! studled at UCLA and Choulnard and recently earned a Ma ster or Arts degrtt at Cal State Los Angeles. Sile has exhlb~ed at the Downey Mu· .oreum of Art, the Jo~rye Museum ln Scat· tie, Roberts OaOery In Sanla Monica, I Dies F.lceing ·Fire NEW YORK (UPI) -Fo11r per!OOS trapped by Dre jumped from the top floor of a blazing three-story apartment building In the Bronx ealy today. One was killed and the others were Injured. l\'tolina became the second pl.i!.nning State law requires that a plan to con- commissioner to resign in the past few serve, develop, and utilize water, forest, days. Last week Supervisor Ronald soolheril, river. fish, widldlife. mineral and Caspers named Bart Spendlove. presi-resources be a opted by June 30. dent of the Saddleback Area Coordinating The 100-pege element divides county Council to succeed Ron Yeo, Corona del resources into seven categories. A J\lar architect. management plan was prepared for each categ«Y with r ecomm-endalions for Molina said Tuesday he was taking future actions and diseussion of probable vacation time from his new-job-as a problems. referee with the State Workmen's Five recommendations v.·ere aQded by Compensation lnsurance Fund in Long the Commissioners 10 the plan, which' ~~~ch~~ stay with the conunission until was detivered lo supervisors this mom· I · I .1. . .1 ing. They include: "I fe t a mora ob 1gahon' to stay unu -Adopt be.sic Open Space 1.one and the general plan work is finished off," Open-.Spaoe-Di&tr.ict Regu]ations. 11.lolina said. The county planning com---Adopc. resource m a n a g e m e n t mission and board of supervisors are in be ·d I f 1 · t gui<k!llnes by August 15. f JTU st o mee 1ng sate reqwref!len -Develop a resource management for open space and conse r vation ordinance from the non-binding elements by J~e 30. . --.Widellnes by J_uly l, 1974. Casper. a private I~~ use planrung --Direct the C.OUnty Administrative Of· consultant, has part1c1p1ted on UC fice (CAO) lo develop an organization to Irvine's Pro;ect 21 Open Space team. , implemeat the resource management He ran wwuccessfully for Fountain ordinance and Valley city council during the last elec· -Begin' 8 com~ete review and tion :Wd helped in Supervisor Battin's re-restructuring of the county zoning code, clectton campaign. the subdlvlaion ordinance, the grading Bids Being Called Bids a re being called for the con- struction of Jeronimo Road between Cherry A venue and El Toro Road. Estimated --cost of the widening and consti11ction of the four-Jane roadway is $70.000. \Vhen completed the road will become part of the arterial highway system in the El Toro-Mission Viejo a rea. ,. ,. OPl!N ' to • ordlnanct, building code, and coonly ad· ministrative procedure s. lo be developed into a comprehensive laOO management and development code. The open space zone ordinance written by deputy County Counsel Ralph Benson was judged by the county staff and com- missioners as "by itself not enough to implement the open space ordinance:" But they said it meets the stale re- quiremenl for an ordinance to begin put· ting teeth in to open space plans by June 30. Louis E. ~1oritz Jr. was ordered· Tues· day to face trial July 25 In Orange Cotm- ty Superior Court on burglary charges filed by sheriff's officers who tabbed him on arrest as the long sought "piggy bank burglar.'' Judge James Tumtr set the lrial' date for Moritz, 38. of 26682 Granvla Drive. on five counts of burglary and three counts of forging checks. Moritz is free on his promise to appear for trial. Deputies who arrested Pttorilz in ri.tarch said !he booking ended a seven· month hunt for an elusive intruder who specialized in rining piggy banks and 1 picking up blank checks that 11,·ere later · pas.sed In Pt1~ion Viejo area supennar- kets. He is from ~1ission Viejo. Jury Reaches 11-1 Impasse in Trial An Orange County Superior Court jury ' that recently deadlocked on perjury and bribery charges olred against Newport Beach attorney Everett Elv.·ood Stone reached an impasse at 11 lo one in favor or acquittal, the Daily Pilot has learned. Prosecutor Pat Brian. the source of a 1 statement to the effect that the jury was deadlocked at ll to one In fa vor of con- viction has confirmed that he \llas misin- formed when the jury returned fronl its deliberations. The Daily Pilot regrets the error. • ClOSIO SUNDAY Duck Feet Fins Blemish 6.95 & 7.95 Regulars 7 .95 to 10.95 Masks & Snorkles Champion Handball Gloves Racquetball Racquets 6.95 to 37 .95 Racquetball~ 1.25 ea. " Water Winde{ Kick Boards 4.95 Wilson-Banc111ft-Davis-Yoneyama- l'a111lop Temis Rackets WUson-fen11-llunlop Tennis Balls Canterse-Adldas-lack hrcells Tretam tllllis Shoes Bask$1 Shoes BasebaR Shees All Purpose Shoes ----------Open 9 to 6 -CIOHd Sundays Badminton Rackets Pi111 Pong Paddles & Balls Ping Pong Sets-4.95 to 14.95 YOlleyballs-4.25 to 17 .95 YolleybaiLNets 11.95_to 21.95_ Colored Sleeve Baseball Undershirts Boys 1.95 Mens Z.75 BasebaU &aps-Mtts-Balls-Bats Rale~h Bikes-Parts Tires-Tubes-Repairing Racket Restr1111ing 646·1919-538 Center, Costa Mna 1 I I l • 8 DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE Choosing With a general plan underway and an Incredible schedule of zoning and tract map considerallons about \0 press the city staff, Irvine bas to feel the loss of plan-ner Bruce Warren. Warren resigned last week. In mid-July he'll take over the 56-man planning staff of the County of San -----Diego,-11!.s a P'OStifiiour-place-jn.Qillfornla-pl>nning_, circles and an opportunity Warren Indicated he is reluc- tant to turn down. Nevertheless, it would seem his tenure in the new city of Irvine -potenUally a similarly presUglous plan- ning spot -is too brief not to raise questions about the resignation. To obser1·ers of the fledgling city council's public dealings with \·\'"arren, it is clear councilmen found com- munications diff ic ult. Frequently, after demanding de- tailed informat'on from Warren on a planning matter. councilmen re fuc;ed to hear his expert recommendation, particularly in !10Jitically charged situations. The lec;c:on c:eems plain that in hiring its next plan- ning director. lhe council had better make it clear from the outset w''e·~er they want the best planning counsel possible, or pJ1nnin -: council that will be compatible with the coun,..;•· · "Y: u~e Well Earned Considering the logistics involved -coordinating 3,000 young student singers and artists -it's a wonder the third annual San Joaquin School District Music and Art Festival happened at all. But it did more than that -it was a success. Obviously one ingredient in the rousing affair was a packed audience of understandably prejudiced parents and teachers at the Anaheim Convention ~enter. But the recipe fared well because of heaping doses of energy, enthusiasm and talent from students and a Planner teachers. San Joaquin's last music festival wa• a fine send-oU for the district. It also should provide an Inspiring foundation for hopefully ambitious music programs in the new Irvine and Saddleback Valley Unified Districts, which take over operation of area schools July I. _ __filudent! at th!_ recent fesUval demonstra.ted they are often more esponsive to sCliool lf offered more than "just the basics." All participants In the concert -including prime funders, The Jrvine Company and parents' Music Boost· ers group -deserve a second round of applause. Double Session Answer Earlier this year when the Saddleback Unified School Board decided double sessions would be needed next fall at Mission· Viejo High School, it pledged itself to take steps to conteract the educational problems that double sessions often cause. Last week Superintendent William Zogg followed through on that pledge, offering trustees a sort of "triple session" plan for fighting the problems of double ses· sions. The main thrust of his recommendation was that the Mission Viejo High School library be opened at night for Individual student tutoring. This is more important than it might sound. Some of the most important high school learning takes place between classes and after school when a student meets Privately. with his teacher. The student may have some· thing be didn't understand in class, or he may want more information than the class as a whole wanted . Either way, it's difficult for a student to get this kind of help on the tight scheduling of double sessions. Zogg's proposal for an evening triple session -entire- ly voluntary, of course -looks like a realistic attempt to deal with this problem. SB How Reason , Like Passion Economy-minded Driver Leaves Car at Honae Can Enslave ~YDNEY J. HARRI~ Thoughts at l,.arge: 1bere are two kinds of "reasonable" people: those who guide their instinctual drives toward legitimate satisfactions, and the far larger number who use reason to repress their instinctual drives; and the latter sort are just as much the slaves of reason as lhe libertines are the slaves of passion. • • • 1be unknown, oo matter how bann1-, is always more feared than a known danger; and since our age has plunged into the unknown, on all fronts, faster than any other, it is scarcely surpr ising that we show more public fear and priv· ate anxiety than any past era. • • • l wonder how many persons who abhor ''drugs" i>OP a couple of aspirins in their mouth lhe n1oment Ibey feel a headache coming on, jnstead of taking 1a brisk walk in the fresh air. a short snooze, or some other form ~non.chemical therapy. • • • Beethov~ would rewrite a musical phrase a dozen tim~s ; ~1oz.art would dash off 21 page without a second thought ; how hard or long or con· Dear Gloomy Gus The Senatorial barns are having a fine time as they wreck the buck. -R.E.D. scientiously you labor over a creative proj~t has nothing to do vmb talent, on- ly with temperament • • • We complain tbol the young are overturning our values -.ad. inatitutlou; yet since the beginning of recorded Ume, the young have WlCOmplainingly gone out to be slaughtered in combat to satWy the pride, vanity, greed and ''honor" of the old in every generation. • • • People who use foul language _,,, It doesn't belong should be more rebuked for having an impoverished vocabulary than a "filthy mlnd ." (In most cases, the words have no "dirty" referent, bi.it are simply verbal exclamation points to stress .inarticulate feelings .) • • • As soon a we learn Vie cannot gt something we wanted, it becomes far dearer to us in imaginattion than it would have been in possesion. Watergate Hush. Money .. Eyed for Tax Liability WASHINGTON -Those responsible for the Watergate crime may have to pay taxes on the $1 milllon in campaign funds that were laid out for break·ins, hush money, legal fees and political sab- otage. Tax experts tell us President Nixon former Attorney <;;eoeral John Mltchell, himself Is liable il he had knowledge of White Hoose staff chief, H. R. Haldeman, the disbursemeq.t§. Even If hls aides kept presidential adviser John Ehrlichman him In the dark. he may still he lield and campaign alde7eb Magruder. legally responsible for the tax obligation. Our tax advisers say the President This is the imPQrt g_f a stW.secret may also be in tax b'ouble over .the fbum· ('.eneraJ Accounting Office study oa the cia1 help he accepted f~ aerosol king Nixon campaign cemmitteea. Quoting tu R<>berl Abplanalp to buy the San rules, the study 4eclares that "the ex· Clemente retreat. pondllure of political funds for other than THE NIXONS •-ed al not campaign or similar purpc>Sel will be . 5"'" pel'IOl1 cs. considered ll diversion of such funds ~ ~ -whif:tl • Abplanalp later tore up, for quirt•• lnc!U1ioo u Income." $62$,000. In return, Abplanalp Is supposed •-e to own most of the 26-acre tract around 11llS DRY language explains how the the presidential compound. Internal Revenue Service is supposed to 'nit First Famlly got the deal ap- treat campaign funds that aren't s~t proved by the local lnternal Revenue of. for campaign purposes. The new re. fict, but our tax experts 1.nstst the Nb:ons qu·rer;1ent was adopted in 1968 after we should pay taxes on th! '62$,000. AJ they ea eirtliifl001ate5en. Tolft"Dodd\o;-!nt<rpreH!le-1aw;the-tearlng"tl\l-1'1-tbe Conn.) had diverted tens of thousands or penonal notes -in other words, the can. dollars from his campaign coffers into cellaUon of the debt -makes the his owil pockets. Dodd was censured, aiid $625,000 taxable lnccme. ' ml.Urected campaign funds were made They point out that the Nix.ans are taxable. using the eoUre 2S. acres, that property N0tr NI.ion's campaign collections have rtcords ahow no evidence the acreaae been diverted Into Improper pockots and bu been legally divided and that the spenl r... lllqal purposes. Our ts1 od-whole deal appears to be a gimmick to vlwa say tomeane must pay taxes .on benefit tbe..Nlxons. the '4!0,000 ot IOU\ that WU pold to the Waterbuggers to buy their silence and to compeDlllA! their lawyers. In • 11 llkollhood, the hundredl of thousands spmt on tllegal~campalgn activities are also taxable. IF 'l1IE President can't bo stuck with the IOI obligation, Oien the campaign aides who made the pey~ts are clearly liable. They would Include l'lnance Oialrman Maurtce Stans, the President's personal lawyer Herbert Kalmba ch, I A S"°KESMAN for the President assured II!, on the other band, that Abplanalp Is the legal owner of the land around Ille Nl1on compound, that tho land is going up ln value and that ltja a profitable lnvHtment for Abplanalp. II anyone but the President were Jn. volved, lntemal Revenue surely would be lnvcsilgatlng. A spokesman refused to tell us , however. whether IRS Is in· vestlgatlng the Presiden t or any of hi• aJdcs on tu matters. ~Two-hit Bus -Line Wins Applause To the Editor: Hooray for the two-bit bu!! line! In these times when governments are being so roundly criticized by citizens for not doing things, I think that loud applause should be heard for the Orange County Transit District. The buses are clean, run on time and the drivers are all courteous. They are scheduled frequenUy and the intersect ion of two or more lines is tim~ ed so persona: do not have to wait for a transfer very long. WE HEAR-much these days about a fuel shortage and an energy crisis. It seems to me that a lot of people do not care. l have ridden the OCTD buses ex· -vely and the majorlly ol passenger> are those who either do not -have automobiles for ecooornic reasons or cannot drive (either too yoi,mg or too old). I do have a car and am able to drive, but for two-bits (25 cents ), I can't afford to take my car out of the driveway! So, I use the OCl'D whenever I can. l urge other citizens of the area to do the same. If Ibey need information or schedules they can call 547-60(M or write to the OCTD, 1126 E. Washington, Santa Ana 92701. Try the bus, you'll like it; and save some money !. WALTER J. GRfESMEYER Who Rutu Cit y ? To the Editor: Several years ago, upon my retirement from the Air Force, I returned to residence on Balboa island just in time to read about a freeway to be built along the coast highway. It upset me enough to write you a letter whlch apparently found some merit in your eyes, as you wrote it up unqer a .front page harmer entitled "Retired Colone.I says Bah to-progress" or something similar. l RA VE NOT changed my views and what is more there are thousands just . ( __ MAIL __ , B_o_x_ ..... ) Letters from readers are we!come. Nonnally writers should convey theiT messages i11 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fi t space or eliminate libel is reserved. All ltters must include signature and mailitl.(1 address, but TMm1es may be withheld on request if sufficient reason. is apparent. Poetry will not be published. chooses to circumvent. IF 111E couocil were responsive; our master plan, if, as and when it does come to be, should be designed to provide for zero growth the minimum, and at lhe optimum, designed to attempt to return us to what we had 20 years ago. Unfortunately mosl of our elected of- ficials feel that they must do what they think their people should want. I feel that if the majority of the people want somethlng, even if the city fathers think it is wrong -the people should have it. After all they are elected, presumably to do the bidding of the volers. You recently quoted the Mayor Gt: Newport Beach as saying ''who is run- ning the city" or words to that effect. This was because good thinking people like Judy Rosener were upholding the precepts oC the people as promuJgated by proposition 20. Thank goodness for Judy Rosener and people like her. We need more of them. Who indeed is nnming the city -cer· talnly not the representatives of the peo- ple. ALAN L. BLUM F ine the Slolu like me and we are all being sold down To the Editor: the river. Read with interest your editorial, Sun· Just yesterday l read in the Daily Pilot day, June 3, 1973 -"Inland Papers, where a "Citizens Committee" is about Please Copy ." to ask that a new eight·lanc highway be My husband and I are from the East. built from the Arches across the baclr' We took a walk on Huntington Beach, bay. We all know it.bat the ~ajority of Mond ay, May 28, about si:r o'clock in the voters not too long ago voted that we _evening. We couldn't believe our eyes . would not have a freeway ~g the coast Shai;ne, shame on every one of you who ·and further that the NewPGri·Clly Coun· enjoy -the beach but walk away leaving it ell could not sanctiOh one without the looking like a garbage dump. consent of the public. This means to me that it must be put to a vote. Yet our ci ty I SUGGEST, to keep the taxpayer falhen are apparently trying to circum·-·-rrom being rthe fall guy for these slobs, vent the wishes of the public through the you post $100 littering signs on the means of a "Citizens Committee" wllich beaches just like they do on the no doub\ is hand picked to produce their highways: The lifeguards sit high enough desired result. To me an eight·lane so that they could call the slobs' &ttention hJghway Is a freeway. The City Cotincil is to where the trash cans are located. rr well aware of public sentiment but this fails. prohibit food or drink or any ' .:--" I ~, kind to be carried onto the beaches. It's early in the season -let's do something now to keep our beaches beautiful. Next time, "Stop, Think Trash Cans." MRS. L. KENNEDY 'Bi lly Jark' To the Editor : I'm writing in answer to what a Mr. James B. Wood had to say about the movie "Billy Jack.'' Obviously, Mr. Wood didn't get any meaning out of Uli!!I movie, but he seems to be so close-minded be · v.·ouldn't understand it anyway. HE SAYS Billy Jack is full o£ violence, which is totally ridicul'115. There is a lltUe, but if be paid any •ent1on at all be would have noticed that "Billy Jack never carried a gun and In a couple of in· stances wa5 fighting in self-defense. "Billy Jack" also has a little anti· establishment in it so Mr. Wood pro~ ably reacted without thinking. MR. WOOD says that humans cannot be that evil and the human experience cannot be that hopeless. Billy Jack did all he could to protect the Indian and put hls Ille on the line doing tt. This movie brings out truth whlch Mr. Wood evidently is afraid to hear. 1 suggest he see it a few more limes and open up his mind a little and face reality. STEVE DELANEY Carcl!Joard Drama To the Editor: I have just read the letter James B. Wood wrote that describes "Billy Jack" as revolting. I would have to agree, although it is not so much the violence in this PG-rated picture that revolts me (1bere is violence, but l think Mr. Wood exaggerates: one rape, one seduction, woulcfbe more fair, for example). For its trivia, chlldishness and the insult of its petty moralism, "Billy Jack" ranks as one of the three worst pictures I've ever seen -the other two, more offensive, being "Getting Straight" and "Castle Keep." In all fairness, "Billy Jack" at least had some very clever -and tunny -psychodrama scenes (although I've heard IMt most of that material was ~rrowed). l CAN'T agr~ that the advertising was misleading. Especially the TV ads made this movie look like a combination Gidget Goes Hippie and Clint Eastwood Goes Indian. I went to see it out of curiosity, despite I.he ads, and later had to conclude, What you see (in the ads) is what you get! Whether the 1novie d~rves the amount ol publicity lt has been given isn't the question; those full page ads were paid for, I presume. The question is, why are so many people talk· Ing about what a great motion picture this is? _ ..YJolence_or..not., 1 can sometil\leS~Y­ good commercial ent ertnlnment as much as a "thinking person's" movie. All J ask is that the cardboard drama not be presented in the guise 9f social com· mentary, For me, the most depressing pnrt of this movie cxperlc.nce. v.·as ha\llng to sit in a Costa Mc!a theater llterally packed with ~pie (nol all of them under 1$ either ), wtio were wUd ly apprecia tive evcrylimc one of the good pitnks scored o Quotes "r don~ care tf me1t gott to M 1 pOUnd, I woaldD't 10 tbroa1tt this 1galn." -Pat F\1thau of Saginaw, Mich.. who wll h her husband and three chlldren ral~ ed two steers In the backyard after gel· ting mad about rl1lng meat price~ \ point against one of the hateful Establishment. l'm beginning to think that if you used an emotional enough tone, you could stand up in front of an audienct anywhere and be applauded for saying just about anything. ALICE VANVLEET 'Ob•renlty' To the Editor: Please convey my thanks to Russ Walton on "Obscenity" in the June 7 Daily Pilot. My wife and I were recently in San 1 Francisco and were unable io find the localion of the Museum or Erotic Art. We' inquired ol-taxi drivers, c.ur-botel, • checked the phone book and vislton lri.· formation 90Urces -aU withou t success. With Mr. Walton's column1 J'm sw:e we would have found it. I have seen "Deep Throat", but bl.Ye not seen either the "Last Tango in Paris" or the Museum of Erotic Art. 1 trust you will continue running his col· WM, as I will continue to look for further recommendations. F. M. WHITE Llberal Dfr tat or• To the Editor: It is now happening in our great city of Newport Beach. ULTRA·LIBERAL outsider & or ''nouveau " residents and other misguided beings in the oome of ecology and« peoples' .rights ar~ dictating the llSe" to whi ch we uUlize our properly rights. All __ of lhis Irrespective -of city ordinancel or zoning. Their sole purpose ls to destroy our · way o! Ille here and elsewhere, and to bring all people down to one level - theirs. IT IS TIME these people were expooed once and for all. To reveal to the unsuspecting the socialist and communist doctrines which these people embrace, while using Ult shield of the Coost.ltutlon and our Bill of Rights In the atlempt to destroy us. ROBERT W. GOOSSKN .. To the Editor :-_ • _ May 1 express my feelings aboul Dale Hale's "Figments?'' My family and-I get ·a-1oror pleaaure from this comic. It is so true to life, meaning th e imaginations of all. I hope this contlnuea to be in our Daily Pilot. The Daily Pilot is a fine paper. MRS. MILDRED BINTLIFF DAILY PILOT -Rob<n-N~W••d;-Puf>U,her­ Thoma.s Ktavti, Editor Bar(>am Krtibic:ll Editorial Page Editor ~ edttor1al ~pa~ oC ~ Da!Jy Pilot .lffQ: to Worm an<l t:llmW&te retder, • by prrtendrc on this pece divel'9e •tmnmtntary' on topics "ot lft.. l~lt by i).tndkated cohunnlsts and Cartoonists. by Pt"O'\lidina a forum fol' ~11.dmi' Vlt'wt and by ~ting ftils I nCWIPJPtt'I opinion.I and '6eu on C\lrTtnt topiCI. The C!d\tori.aJ oPktlonl Of the Dally Plklt tpt>ear only tn the editorial t'Oluml\ at the top ot 1he Pl«'· Opinions exprtlltd by 1he -.. , uniid1ts . aid ca~ and Wtw wrttm ltt thtlr OWft am no~ mtnt of their vlft'I by 1be DtJtr Pllo< -Id be w..- Wednesday, June 13, 1978 Girl;15, Stabbed ' To Death SAN DIEGO (AP) -A If>. year--0ld girl "'as stabbed to death Tuesday 100 yards from her high school campus, sheriff 's deputies said. Officers said t w o con- 1----struction workers grabbed--a- man they saw running from the area and heJd him for an arriving hi~way patrolman. ( BRIEFS ) They said the man. Jlrry R. Ii"' Schnick, 24, of San Diego, was .later booked for investigation of murder. Carol Valkooen was at-• tacked as she walked to Monte Vista High School, Spring Valley southeast of San Diego. 11le coroner's office said her body had more than 10 stab wound9; and her throat was cut. A hunting knife was found in a nearby fleld, officers said. Aequittal Toast A 21-year-old sailor accused of wartime sabotage, which. delayed th.e sailing Qf the carrier Ranger for Vietnam last sumrder, wa s found innocent by a Navy court martial board. Fireman Patrick D. Chen- oweth of Puyallup, Wash., (right) had a victory cele- • lm...,achment bration in Oakland at which his civilian attorney, .... --Eric Seitz, poured him a glass of champagne. SAN DIEGO (AP) -The ----C..:...-----"------'-.cc..--- San Diego County Democratic Central Committee ha!I called for the impeachment of Presi- dent Nixon, saying he seeks to establm. "an absolute tyranny over the people of the United States." The commlltee passed a resolution Tuesday night ac- cusing Nixon of obstructing . justice in the Watergate case "by wilfully and deliberately obfuscating the involvement of his a:ldes 'in crime and cor- ruption." e E•capee Reid RIVERSIDE (AP) -One of 10 men who escaped Sunday from a Tijuana, Mex .• prison has been captured, Riverside police say. Clyde P . Evans, 33, was ar- rested early Tuesday and held on U.S. charges of conspiring to import ooca~ police_sald. U.S. Commissioner Robert "nmlin ordered him taken for bial to San Diego, where he was indicted by a federal grand jury In ApMI. Seven other persoM were arcested for investigation of harboring a fugitive, police said. Thu111h Card? Panel Views Hitcliliiking SACRAMENTO (AP) Those thumbing a ride on Califomia highways could car- ry a state-issued identification Senate OKs Instrument P1·otection card aimed at reducing crimes involving hitchhik~rs under Jegislation approved in its first committee test. Tuesday, the Assembly T r a nsportation Connnittee voted 9-1 to send the measure to lite Assembly Ways and Means Committee after hear- ing one backer say: "Hit- chhiking is here to stay." That comment came fro1n _Richard Vega, spokesman for SACRAMENTO (AP) -The the California Hitchhikers Electric Guitar Protection Act tabby. He added the FBI and of 1973 has cleared the state other groups have failed over Senate on a 2-3 vote. the ye.ars to stamp out hJt· State Sen. James Whet.-chhiking. more's bill would require IN RELATED action, the owners ol night spots who committee voted 6-2 to kill a employ musicians to take bill that ?tould outlaw hit- • St•H Stay• "reasonable means" to guard chhiklng except In cases RIVERSIDE (AP) -Tl1e · chancellor or the University of the instruments ~ainst theft where someone's car has California at Riverside says he or damage. broken down, the person needs will not send dismissal notices Whetmore, ra La Habra help, Or the hitchhiking takes to 20 faculty members by July Republican who is himself a place in an area designated by 1 after all. ..., Ivan Hinderaker said Tues-musician, 'S3.id Tuesday that in the local government entity. -day ·be was withdrawing his the Age of Amplified instru-'1be bill that died three votes decfsion of last week and the mmts such as the electric gili-short of passage was authored not.ices will not be sent until a tar. musict311! frequently by Assemblyman J o h n thorough review of academic leave them In the chtb Thurman (().Modesto). programs with f a c u l t Y overnight instead ol lugging Assemblyman Jobn Dunlap participation. Hinderaker had all the electronic equipmrot CD-Napa ). authored the suc- announced the P e nd i n g home. cessful bill which he said was dismissals in the face of a Whetmore sakl some in-aimed at giving motorists facu.Jty cutback of 30 due to stnunents left overnight have some assurance th3t card~ar­ enrollment drops. been damaged v.'hen imbibing rying hitchhikers had been patrons decide to hold an im-checked out by authorities. e Route Kl/led promptu coooert. '.!be state would not be liable - Reinecke Says Aide Pointed Out Error, • SAN DIEGO (AP) -Lt. Rlchanl!on to ask . special because "in April this wh>le Gov. Ed Reinecke says a W a t e r g a t e pro secutor idea of bringing the conveot\on phone call from ther>ABllt. At-Archibald Co• this week I<> in-I<> San Diego bad not come ty. Gen. RobertMard.lancaus-vestigate the possibility of up." ed him to change bis mind perjury. The coovention was awarded about.the date~ol.a conlerence-e--&aid Tueoclay the_to San Diego·ill J,.,....1r11- -he had with former Atty. Gen. meedng wilh Mitd!ell actually late< switched.to Miami Beach John Mitohell, a meeting took place 1n April 1971 . He in the wake of the rrr allega· which has been linked with the Said he received not only an lions and reported disputes I'M' b>Dtroversy. anonymous phone call but a1so about rental of facilities here. Reinecke named Maniian a call from Mardian, then Mardian left the Justice Tuesday to reporters asking head of , the J u st i c e Department In May 1972 Md him about a federal in-De~t s InternaJ Securi-became a political ooordinator vestigation s e e k in g to ty D1visM>rt. for the Nixon campaign. He determine whether Reinecke Ma:dlan told . him . th~ returned to his Pboeni.x, Arlz., or ~titchell committed perjury meeting had been m April, and' construction cunpjny l a a t before a Senate oommittee suggested a check .of trav:el Novmber. -He ~·t be last year. records, w~ch coof~ed the reached for comment Tue. It was tile second time ~nge, Re~e said. day. Reinecke had changed his n ";~s 8 differe~ of three Reinecke sald he hasn't story about· meetlng with w~, be ~id. 1 got mr, been cmtaoted by ·an yo n e Mitchell. lnps to Washington confused. from Cox's investigatioo. "I've FIRST HE told reporters and Sen. John V. Tunney (D- Ca!il.), that he and Mitchell met in May 1971 and talked about San Diego's. bid for the 1972 Republican Convention. Reinecke said then he may have discussed an offer by International Telephone and Telegraph to underwrite the. convention. HE SAID he couldn't have nothing to hide," he sa1d. "I'll talked to Mitchell then about be more than willing to tum the Republican Convention over my files." Accused 'Draws,' wo1 .. .i.,, Ju .. 13, 1973 UPIT ....... A First Freshman Assembly- man Frank Holoman (D-Los Angeles) had girls whistling at . him all day when he ap- peared before legisla- tive committees in walking shorts. It was a first at a public hear- ing, according to Capi- . tol observers. DAil Y PllOT § Priest, Woman Hostages NOVATO (AP) -An Oakland man took a C.thoUc- priest and one of h I s parishl.ooers ho&tage at ~ point Tuesday In an attempt I<> rob the Central Valls' Bank , r repor ea. 1,he hostages were releued unharmed when police seized the gWl after being called.1 tit the scene by bank employes, authorities said. Eugene I.oois Gray, 23, entered Our Lady of Loreto church annect with a .38- caliber pistol, forcing the Rev. Leonard Calegari and Mrs. I..ooise White, 52, into the preisls' car, police said. They said Gray asked to be taken to the downtown bank "''here he sent Father Calegart 1<> ask le< monoy and kept the woman in the car at gunpoint. The priest alerted bank employes who called police to. the scene. Police said they ap- proached the vehicle and. diverted G ray 's attention, enabling officers to seize his weapon. Gray was booked for in- ""8tigation of lddnaping witll attempt to conunit robbery. After the Justice Depart- ment dropped an antitrust suit against TIT last June, a memo allegedly written by a com- pany lobbyist was published linking the action to the o[fer to underwrite the convention. Fakes Wounding 1r--WANTED- Reiiiecke was then called before a Senate investigating committee and said he hadn't met-with Mitchell the previous May. He said that after his statement about the May meeting was publ'ished, an anonymous caller told his of- fice to recheck li i s travel records, and the recheck showed no meeting had taken place in May. ~ THE CHAN<fE of story prompted Atty. Gen. Elliot Floor Gets Hair Bill SACRAME~'l'O (AP) Longhaired males coulcin~ be blocked from ente rin g restaurants or bars under a ·bill sent to the Assembly floor. Tuesday, the Assembly Judiciary C o m ·m i t t e e ~P· proved the measure b y A.s.5emblyman John Burton (D-San Francisco) whose own hair is modishly long. Burton introdllCed t h c measure after he was asked to )eave the RedwoOO Room of the Clift Hotel in San Fran- cisco because his hair was too long to suit management. As s embl y man Frank Lantennan, a b a 1 d i n g Republican from La canada, is a coauthor of the measure. SACRAMENTO iAP ) -A defendant in a murder case pulled a simulated gun in a courtroom and then acted as if he were shot by a bailiff. The incident Tuesday delayed the arraignment of Neil Darrow, 2.5, for the Shoot!niJune 8 of his estrang- ed wife, Margaret, in the cor- ridor of Sacramento Medical Center. His arnigrunent was rescheduled for today in Sacramento MuniCi·pal Court. Witnesses said Darrow pull- ed out several pieces or a. ·magazine wadded together in ·the shape of a gun from under a yellow piece of paper shortly after he entered t h e courtroom. '4BE SAID, 'everybody get down,' and everybody did. We all got down. Then he squatted down . . • and the bailiff shot," said Gladys G. Cook_, a court interpreter who u•as seated in the first row of Municipal Court Ju d g e Edward Garcia's courtroom. 01AMoNOs • GEMSTONES J•w•I• by io••ph i1 •••rchi119 for di•monch •nd g•mston•I from ptiv•t• individu•l1 •nd ••t•t••· c.r.ful •••miii"ition •nd .... 1u.tio11 by our ••,.,-i•. High•st pric•s p•id. C•ll 540-9066 10·9 dtily, -S•turd•v 10-6, Sund•y clos.d, ••k for Mr, Dt11ni1 Folii or Mr. Jos•ph. A shot fired by a bailiff struck the floor near Darrow. but he feU I<> the ground as U :idhad been shot, witnesses iewels by ioseph Asked by reporters U the pieces of paper DaITow stuf-llF.-~~c~-~~,,~-~~·~l~l~ll~-~~L~C-~~M~-~~·~·~·~o.~-~-~~ fed together really looked-like a gun, Dep. Dist. Atty. Bart Bleuel said, "lt looked real. I thought it was real." Deputies overpowered Dar· row after he fell to the floor and returned him to bis jail ceU. He was arrested at the Vallejo bus depot six hours after a man fitting his description shot Darrow's wife at the hospital. Officers said DaITOW "''"35 armed \lt'hen he was captured. --..CONGRATULATION1s-S - MOTHll -41 SON GUDUATH JESSIE ELINORE LOUGH u,... ........... ,,_ T,.. T.WClll eoa..-. Lei ......... ...... MICHAEL GILBERT LOUGH u,.. .,... ...... ff'llll Ed .... Htfti w-1. Hw....,_ .._. , THE WOR1 H OIDl8T WHISKEY PRESENIS THE WOR•P'B OLDEST MArt. I'VE BEEN ASKED TO LIST SOME OF THE BEST THINGS THAT EVER HAPPENED ID ME. HERE GOES ••• BIKINIS, Dl<l\/E·IN MOVIES, THE WHEEL, DEVILED EGGS, MEDICATED POWDER (DID I SUFFER FROM TOGA CHAFING) ! SACRAMENTO ~ (AP) The bill now goes to the for any hitchhiker crimes, South Pasadena resident s Assembly. however, Dunlap said. ICE Sil ! 'TI NG have won a preliminary vie-ftj\ tory In l!!eir battle"' reroute i--------.1 lESSONS AND BUSHMILLS. WHEN THEY MADE IT IN 1608, >HEY DIDN'T REALIZE WHAT THEY WERE DOING FOR MY LEISURE. HOURS! the proposed Long Beach Freeway aroundtheircity. FANS GO APE FOR A DAY The Assembly Trans- portation Com mi ttee vot- ed 12-6 Tuesday for a bill sponsored by Assemblyman John L. E. Collier (R·Los Angeles) to wipe out the cur- rent alignment or the freeway through portions of Alhambra , Sou~ Pasa d ena and Pasadena. GoodDeecl make the scene Sundays in tt-e l1Mlijijl!1ll SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -"Go Ape for a Day," suggested the Warfield theater marquee as some 2,200 people formed a block-long line for a seat at the one-day showing of all five "Planet of the Apes" films. The complete showing, which included the latest and supposedly final "Battle for the Planet of the Apes," ran a total of nine hours Tuesday - longer than a back-to-back playing of "Ben Hur" and "Gone With the Wind." "It's reaUy something," said James Sutton, distric~ manager for National General Theaters, as he watched the fans pour into the theater for $1 a tickeL "We ought to sell a lot of hot dogs." New Clinics Now Open COSTA MESA-HUNTINGTON BEACH medical • Enhance your child's poJae and posture. A planned Lindoro's unique program is o sofe and practical e • h method for the entire family to lose weight and ........ ·1 --leorn-tlow"to-mointoin-proper weight..........-under--1·+ ..... •:;,. the strict supervision of Medical Doctors. program of leuons with the exoluslve--lce-GepedetLeuy learning method gives you or your child hMHtiy exercise Coll lo t information reduction Monday 1hru fndoy 8 A.M. to 6 P .M. UNDORA+ · MEDICAL cuN1ct · :::~:~~~••ACH 557-1893 ~ lllWPOIT IEACH GAROlll.GROVE LOllG llACH PASADlllA 645-)740 5)4-2051 426-6549 196-26 f 4 ,_ ,,.,.llltMI ...... u ,.., .... """ . ~· "•fMW1111l ll11t. -IMOt. ORAllGI 5)1.2)95 WOODLAND HILLS SHERMAN OAKS Wli'f COVINA FULUITDll LA HADA )47-5641 789-710) 962-)4)1 170-9501 694-1029 .... _ .... I In pleasant supervised 1urroundlngs. REGISTER NOW ICE_ 'f I \l'\111 I~ ~/i(,\\.~ MUA Yl•DI SHOPPIN• CINTll 2701 H•rbor llvd. •t Ad•nu Cott• M•1•, C•Uf. •2626 Toi. 1714) t7'..ao LIKE A BUSHMILLS SOUR, REALLY S/\IOOTH ! A BUSHMILLS MIST, COOL AND MILO! A BUSHMILLS LONG AND TALL. A BUSHMILLS ROB RO'/, AS LIGHT .;-~~ AS ANY SCOTCH CAN MAKE IT l BU811MIU8 - GEE, I HOPE WE HAVE A LOT OF LEISURE HOURS ! ., • ' .. ,. • . ' .. . ' •· . • • • ' 7 I 17 ~ . J I Huntington Beaeh Tetlay's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 06, NO. 164, 5 SECT10NS, 100 PAGES TEN CENTS Mc Whinney Lawy¢rDenies Any $5,000 Check By TOM BARLEV Of flit; o.Jty '~ SWI It ?\-1lle Square Park fanner George MUrai hid ever been asked to make out a $5,000 check to county Supervisor Robtrt. Battln's campaign fund that check would have been on view in the courtroom dur- ing the current trial, defendant Derek McWhinney's lawyer today told an Orange Qiuqty Superior Court jury. "We've~been·toid. a heck of a lot about .900lething that never existctd i'' com- ' menled ottorney • J,oseph Ball a!' he , neared the end. or his final argument in lhe grand theft«tbery trial -Of former , W~ins\er maycr·McWhinney, 40, aQd city• p\anDer T~ 'Ji)ijit'a; ·3f. . ~ , '" Neither d(!fend,811! °rier w.ct Mdrai tp write1such a ct*t. Ball mai.ted. '"lbere is nOt one, lhreil1 ~ evidence appt'. lnim ~'l -GbvloUsly biiaell te9tlmoo to .!hit clalin 'ind. the Y . r • Battin ~k was never _meDtO>Qecl 1n all the,lelephpne-wnalioos ~ bY ·lhe. rosecuuOn ,, he id p . • ' ., • ~' . Ba~-<je!Cfibed Ille $5,000 cash paym1mt h~ over to Fujita as "part of a deal ~by Derek p<Omised to help Mural try to retain his lease, a business deal and ~rely that. '.'Murai .was angry because he cOu1d see 1'!nd be, hoc! fmn.ed foe a mero $1SO an acre be~ brobn up apd pa.Ably ahared out to 91her farmers it.a ~le ·-"1laJl _,. . r~ an .acre, -.. i •• • · "OoeWC it ataDd to reaall'I that a man in that PoO;tion is """' ... .,. meiiiflil and mab """"' ;pi:etfy wild llatemints '.• that were eagerly seized on by the pros- ecution?" Ball asked the jury. 'Mle prosecution alleges that holcWhin- ney and Fujita shook down 1t1urai !or a total of fl0,000 witl1 the throat tl1at they had the 'PO"-W to terminate his interest in the 215 acres of strawberry fields at Mjle Sq .. re Park. It is ajleged that Fuj ita was the middle man in the ext<rtion attempt and that he was assigned by McWhirmey to take the $5,000 in bills in a table top transaction \Vitnessed by dist rict attorney's in- ves tigators. But Fujita's attorney, Al Stokke, told the jury that hi s client was simply a "good Samar itan" \\'ho was acting as a mediator and was simply trying to resolve the difference existing ~ttn tYlo good friends -Atural and McWhin- ney. Stokke stressed, like Ball. that Afurai knew he might lose land on v.tlich he had made nearly a million dollars at a ba~ain price and he begah ex pand ing hi.~ slory into a shakedo\.rn atl en1pt once he kne\V the district attorne) ·s office was interested. "\Ve v.·ouldri"t l\ave been here today if it hadn 't bci!n for the political campaign that was going on at the time ," BaU told the jury. "What v•e really have ha.-is an outgroYl'th of v.'hat has been all along an attempt to destroy Derek Mc\Vhinney," Ball said. • District Ac.cused Teacher Survey _Hints Serious Ills .. ' Ali police officer shoos away curioUJ yountl:'"• A-vejlqe 1111~ Loo Palos Avell}l•· Police •aid the yic- flremen ponder bow best to temOYe bOdy of ~· .tim.·~8531 Ablloit Drive, .... eulbjlund OD W~, A. Hei:nandez from her car. The 30-~ld Hun-· erl when IUlr auto fter94 •oft tM i:oad and flipped lington Beach woman died Tue.day evening when ' · over, · - her car failed to negotiate the curve . 'on Warner • Battin-Appoints Valley's Casper To Plans Post Stnns _Says !Jestroying 01 ,Files 'Coi~Wence' Clatence G. Gasper, 53. a Fountain Valley private land use planning con- sultant, has been nal]ieil to the oniire Countf Planning eoountss)on b Y Supervisor Robert Batlln. Casper will take the ..at vacated· by Adolph Molina, 41. a Santa Ana a~. Bittln said Molina, who has servl!d on the couuniasion~'since Ja!t January, qui t because of. demands ol a new job be bad taken. .COUNTIAN TILLS CO'VERUP ROL~tory, P-4. Molina became the second planning comrnis&loner to resign in the past few dayw. Lall . Wttk SupervillOI' Rooald C.spen oanied Bart Spendlove, presi- dent of lhe.Saddleback: Area C.OOrdinaUhg COUncll to succeed Ron Yeo, Corona del Mar architect. unknown•purposes in the NiJ:on re-elec· r.10Una said Tuesday he was taking tk>n campaign. vacalion time from his new job as a Oil his second day or testimooy in tbe referee with the State Workments Senate Watergate hearings, Sta'ns. the CAmpensation Insurance FWMt in ~ highest tanking· ,Nixon campaign official Bead! to atay wltl1 lbe commls!loo uritil to, a~ar, told ,Talmailge and his .cot- Jurie 30. ldguei on ,Ille; ,panel that be ....., "I felt 1 ,moral obligation. lo stey until . nothing about, .t&. 1Watergale bugging, the general plan wort is fl.Rlsbed off,": :~7.t~"'.er~~mpt or any other Molina said. The county planriing com-""" .. .,... ...... conceivable that you can spend a large • part of your time worrying about pin labelS' and bumper stickers and not WOT· . rying about What bappeM to · Jarge sums of coah tbal .,. being disbursed by peo- ple for QbfmOwn i:aUS.., porticularly when the 1-w is clear on stringent reportiqa.1oit dista&nemenls," Talmadge said. ' ~-. "You'ri: telling us, Mr. Stan1,1that as a eertified P:Jblic accountant, a member of the ac;cauntaots' Hall of Fame, a· former secretary of Commerce, who further had been personally se!lected by President DWfcbt D. Eis<Qbower to be director of the Budget, and director of the com· mittee to nise $50 mill ion for his (Nix- O(''S) re-e~ection campaign, intended _all this money to be spent without any of )11Ur supervision and control?" Talmadge . "ked. "I did exercise some supervision and CU'ltrol," Stana replied. "I got a daily ._i of all the <i<llltributlons received ..tilch I loolted onr·ev,ory day. I ..._·kl-dlc!Ited to ,the exlent that I knew -le _.tty, their ftnl names, so that !he letter of acknowledgement and ap- (S. WA'IUIGATE,,l'qo I) By TOM GORMAN Of "" D911'f , .......... A Fountain \'alley teachers group charged Tuesday night that the school district is "plagued with many serious problems" and that the administration leadership is "seriously questioned" by a majority ol its members. The accusations were based on the results of a teacher survey, in which f!l percent of the 27f respondents said they * * * V arlley Board Won't Move Neiblns Head Tr.-ol the Fountain Valley School Dlllrict ~\~ early this morning not to t-the' -1 of 'fofli!btas School. lmtead, thei\i po_...! the m for teachers to move to llloUler dlstrlcl school if they desire. 'lbeir deci•loo was reaclled about 1:30 a.m., cllm"axing a cloeed.door executive session that lasted nearlf slx J1ours. It followed ·a Similar private sessitrt last Thursday "nen trustees spent more than eight hours discussing the eooflict et the school. Specific teacher grievances against the principal, James Keizer, have not been revealed. A 1t.ltement irom trustee!!, following Tuesday night's meeting, read: "We have determined that t b e responsibility carmot be exclusively fixed in any one place but must be equally slwed by the district aclministmioo. the Pflncipol a n d the i..chlng staff at NieblasScliool. • "It is our belief that the district ad- mlnmratioD must be more sensitive and aware of ccncerns at ibe local school level , the principaLmust be more responsive to· staff needs and attitudes, and that the teaching staff mu.st ap- proach problem solving in a positive and constntctive manner ... " "It is this board's plea that an parties make a renewed and sincere effort to reconcile their personal differences. "'Mlis board directs the district ad· ministration to mate every effort to ac- commodate individual transfers if re- quested, and to insure that every aaistance Is provided to the. Pf'lnclpal, Mall. and community of Nieblas Schoo! to aid them in IOlving these problems." Board Preskleat Willimr-Crane said the IOlutkln was not a perfect one, but that "no one in the situ>tioo is perfect." "You can always sit back and (See PRINCIPAL, Page II . believe "morale is on the decline" in the district. Trustees agreed to discuss the prob- lem, and assigned Trustees Fred Voss and Sheila Meyers to meet with four members of tbe Fountain Va lley Edu· cation Association (FVEA) for further study. The survey v.•as sen t to 338 leachi11g members of the FVEA. There are 508 certilicated 1 teaching ) personnel in the district, but not all arc New Pledge assigned to in-class teachin g. according to a district spokesman . "The resulls indicate to me that very definitely there is a problem with teacher morale ,'' Voss said. "\\'e can't ignore that." ~fe said that the nature of the problem and allernatives will be discussed at the joint meeting. The date of that meeting has not been announced. "All "·e have so far are raw data and (See SURVEY, Page !) Four Parties Sig11 Pacts 'Fo,BoJster Ceas&fire PAlllS (UPI) ~The four parti~• to the Vietnam war signed a document tOday pledglnl tbe~lves tO new meaJUres to shore the Vietnam cea•flre agreement through "strict and scrupulous im- plementation" of the Jan. 27 document. 'n.e measures inclW a U.S. resump. tion of economic aid £1!ks and removing mines from North Vietnamese waters. an end to U.S. reconna1ssance flights, a ·retwn ol Saigon and Viet Cong troops to their original situations and a pledge from them strictly to observe the cease- fire. Saigon signed reluctantly and reported- ly under U.S. economic pressure, and a dispatch tonight from Saigon said Presi- dent Nguyen Van Thieu. was disappoi_nted that the ne\V agreement did not restore Nixori to Shoiv Economic Plan WASHINGTON (UPI) -Presi- dent Nixon will disclose new pro- posals for fighting innation in a na- tionwide broadcast tooight at 5:30 PDT, the \\'llite House announced. Detail'i of the plan were kept secret, but it is expected to include some selective price freezes af- fecting some industries while omit· Ung a specific wage freeze. Ni.Jon has been concentrating for a week on va rious proposals of economic adviser.a and Cabinet membtrs for stemming the wOrst inflation to hit the nation in 20 yean, (Story, Page 38.) ' the Demiliitarlzed 7.one or require tbe ) N"'Orth Vietnamese army to leave South l Vietnam. j Official sourCes in Saigon said the document gives eVen greater concessions j to the Communists than the Jan. 27 docUlfl.ents, and little at all to Saigon. _A joint statement issued after Henry A. l Kissinger and Le Due 'Ibo of. Hanoi wound up ~egot iallons by initialing the 14-article ~ document, deacrlbed officially as a 1 "Communique," said it provides for ; "strict and scrupulous implementation" j of the Jan. 27 pact. 1 A full four-party signing ce remony then , took place at the Kleber Avenue con-l ference center in the same room where 1 the original pact was signed. A second signing ceremony then followed involving only Kissinger and I Tho. The same procedure was used in the Jan. %7 signing to pennit South Vietnam ' and the Viet Cong to di sregard each other's claim for official status. Asked if the United States would now end bombing raids in cambodia, Kissin- ger told a news conference, 111bere is nothing that commits the United States to cease such operations. "It is our hope, and we will make ma- jor efforts in that direction, to continue ' diplomatic con tacts that will produce a cea~fire in Cambodia ," Kissinger said. I The document broke little new ground. for the most part demanding new com- ~lt.ments to the orlgin;al pact and pr~ vidmg fresh dates for implementation. It had nothing fresh to say about either the fighting .in Cambodia or Saigop 's repeatec,j clahnJ ol North Vietnamese in- filtritiOns into tbt soul.ti. 0r .. 1e-«:out mJSS:lon and board of S\JpefVilorl 8fe jn • Stans, I fOrmf!'r', / commerce secretary tbe midst of meeting stete requlremeftt and prite-wlnnlnil <erllfied pot>ll: ..,. for open space and con s er vat ion _ count.11.Jlt who isf ltiU chairman' of lhe elements by June 30. Fbwlce ·, Comllllttee to llHleci the Casper, a private land use planning President. portrayed 1his role al a-tund· t'On8Ultanl1 b4s participated on UC raiser who found. blrmelf Jn "total Irvine's Project 21 Open Space team. frustration" over decisions being' l!llde t He ran unsuccessfully for '1'"'ountain by the political arm of the Ntson cam-- Valley city couocll durlnc the last elec• • patg1f organizillOO. -- Trustees' • " T ~eeting Poetic Weather tion. ~d helped. in Supervbor Battln's re-In his testimot\y, Stans: , • · tlect:KIR campaign. -Said P.reitdent Nixcn . gave him 11. ===========:__;\i)!'pe~p~tal~k" laat·Aucuat and told him not lo worry~-:-'lle · ]ii'iitileiifS Watergale bnilk-Jn were ca111ing beci)l89 CLASSIFIED .AD M.A"KES .A ' SUCCESS At lcHt <ill!' of our readers ii a succesa -thanb to I Daily Pilot clasalried want ad. RECEPTIONIST wonted far N.B. law flnn. . 'l')'plnc • req 'd. 1::io:1. cau (P~ No.) for appt. "it·wiU all be over1,ventua1ly." ,~ -Ans.,ered "no" when Sen. Howard H~ Siket; •Jr. \11-T .... ), presood litm M to wM!her he ever .dllcuued 1'hal till!>' penecl at the Wattrpte IIaAing wilh former Altome1 G<oeral John. N. ~Di Frechrick ~-Le.Rue, MltchelPa usistant: Hu ... w. Sloon Jr., Nixon'• campaign trUaUter: fOl'IDOI' White Houte aid .. ff. JI. H1kle11W1 and .Jolm D. Etu:lichman, and O., Oonloo' l,ldcly, former finance .,.._, in the 01'Hiodloo She answered lhat ad and w .. hl?ed. \! campaign and 'coovlctell lll8llermlnd of you'r• looking for a job, try looltf1' at the Wa4orgate <iperalion, the cla11lfled ads In the i>•lly Pltqt le> But many II. the ~ lhla momi•g day.-Tomorrow you could bo lllCOOSlflIUy • came [Joom -~ Tilmaclp about tll)pl~ed. And' to place an ad of )'OW' 'the oojlli0l'iili1f~loo lhlt Stanl, an own. dlal direct -the line to ......,._ actmowledged "atlokler for detalls," es· MU.71. erclled ovor ~ luDdl. "rt strikes me .. belnc u11erly in· Tivo llu,riti1igton Reside1its Defen.d Arithology J lly JOANNE REYNOLDS the boanl during their pub tic mceUng. · .. ,... _."' ""'...,. At 'I'Uc9day's'meeUng, the staff rcvie\v, , Trust.., of the Hunt"'«t9n Beach lligh -whldl found the book to be "educa- " SC:hool DilUict ~ !riiied to another · Uonallf IOWld'' was bocked by board ~' readlnt Tuetdaf night. memben 1 bul not until two district -~ lime, laltead of bearjng lour.let-r..ldent> hid had their chance to defend ter ._ and -phraaes lhey """' the book. ,..,/ ~ aboo! country chun:IMil and .f!9b Moen and llutll Dorwanl both lflrU'I In limber coantry. said they dtdded to ceme to the boanl The dirty -and the poelN •boot meeting becauae of the stort .. they had country -churches all come-fn>m-a-r<od about-Ille protest over the.uae ol the dil111ul<d aotbolop keot In throe school book. 'llbnlnes. It io called "'!lie Young Moore, wllo hu a ""' &"®•ling fn>m American l'oetl." Fountain Valley High Scllool. aaid he ,.A 111411 romw of the book was onlcnid checked the book out of the library, took two weeb ago when Dorla Allen of It home and read &ame of the poems at Wmtmlnoter dramaVcally brought to the random and discuned them with his '-'<!'• attention the Ill<! tho! there are family. 10me "vulgar and obscene" puaaa:es in «We found It to be In ouLltanding book Ibo --that has a groat deal of merit," he said . Silo did It by rtadlng the dirty words to Moore sold he opposed banning the ' book for three reasons -its literary value1 its value in preparing students ror the world and because he doesn't believe in forcing censorship on people who would not want It. "My son is goljlg to be 18 and •• adult in three weeks. I shudder to !hint wMt would happen to hlm In the 'A-0r!d if tbe language In the book ahocked him." ~1oore added that he further based his vic.w-on...the.Jact tbal U he did fmd the book objectionable he could ask lhat his son not be exposed to It. "It is not 11ppropriate·tn a free land fer .. to tell my neliflbor or his children what to read." ~loorc concluded. Alrs. Dorward is a parent of 1wo student> at Mnrlna llleh School. She oJ)(..'ned. her present11tlon with some readi"I!• from the book. Mrs. Dorward's · IS.. POETRY, Page !I • i\lore of the same gloon1y tow clouds are on the agenda Thurs- day. wi th partial clearing in lhe afternoon hours. Highs in the mid· • _ SOs at t™:. beaches, risi!lB' to the lOW70S lnlaiia. - INSmE TODAY Abortiu11 f-$ big busb1ess iu Califon1Ui. There are. doctors. llospit<ll& and 1niddlemen t11ot specialize h1 it. Ste fir&& ariicle ha series begi1111i11g today on Page 12. "' 't'wt hr'WM• t ... . ...-. ..,. , tMllM II Cl "llnli• I c.,.., CH11ef n c1...i11e111 "'1' CMllc• .. Cmtwtrf .. Dtll9'1 Ht"t" lt l•lllt"lll •1M • l11t9rttillfllMtl ... u "'-• ll.Jt liltf' 1M ltKwtl 11 "'"""" '-I .,. WVk• 2t "'"' .... ....,.. .. ~,... . Me•lft .... u ...... ,,~ . Htti.tlll PQws 4 °''"" c-tv •·•• 'TA .. s...-11 "'"* Ot. Si.llllC.r.11111 11 JIKl Mffkllfl ..,, T_,..,ltltfl 41 TllMIWI ... 1 --. w_., ,._.&Ml • .,.. ...... 4 I -o DAILY PILOT .,,.-~ ·~----H Wrdnfsd•)'. June 13, 1973 School Abbreviated More Coast . Student,s Graduating Early 8\• JOllN ZALLER 0. I~• 01U~ P'llol Stiff Mid\\1ay through her junior ye.:ir. Beverly Gross decided tbere·would be no .J,oint in sticki ng around for a fourth year ot-Newport Harbor High School. ---·-''1bere-weren't--many cla~es 1-still ,wanted to take," explains the 17·year-old ·toed. "and I didn't wan t to be like some 1>eoPJe who just breeze through senior : year without putting out any effort. • "So t figured if I didn't have to stay .,round, why should I?" : Miss Gross is typical of the in creaiJlng : number or Orange Coast high school ,Students who are deciding to graduate ,bne year early. JLike hundreds of other coast graduates is year. she will meet all of her hool's formal graduation requirements -with the help of two summer tessioos -and then · be out one year ahead of schedule for .. the next thing inure." ln her case, that will mean two semesters at Saddleback Communi ty College, where she will begin studying for a d~ree in medical technology. ·rm: oor···hurrYin · pasr .... filgh-stlf(jij bec:iuse I didn't like It," she stresses. "In fact, I thought it was a blast. But I just thought It was titne to move on." School admtn lstrators are not com· pl ctely sure why more and more students are making this decision, nor are all of them sure that ea rly graduation is a l~·avs a sound idea. Bui the consensus on the Orange Coast is tha t if a student puts out lhe extra ef· fort required to graduate early, the school should permit him or her to do so . ''I don't see how we can stand in the Pollution~ ~i ' :i New ;, ... , " . ' . •. •• ~ Lagu1ia Group Approves Study •:, By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL •;; Of Hit O,lly 'lier Stilt ; !L.guna Beach planning com.missioners bii've agreed the city should embark on a study of a "new'' form of air pollution : tfrI_ du st. :rnis week the planners gave an in· formal go ahead to Bruce Ffopping of the Jt3)os Kagathos foundation to request t studies by the state Air Resources rd and the federal Environmental tecUon Agency.---:70 make his point about the ev il s or tfi'.e dust , Hopping presented the com- 'lltssion with a sample .. o~ tbe_w_~m..-off Jfibber collected hear the 1ntersect1on of 9>uth Coast Highway and Legion Street. "Commissioner-Roger Lanphear didn't fitnt to look·at it. Larry Campbell smell- «it·it, City Planner Wayne Moody rubbed ~ duff between his fingers. ··l{opping-:--citing a dispatch out of .cago about tire_ dust, said a Ford 'l:>tor Company research c h e m i s t ~ates 700,000 tons of the black rubber ' ~s off or tires each year. · .... t's about 200,000 tons more 1han the -jSarticulales'' generated by car engil1€s, ~Hopping said. · Research in the eastern states, he ad- . ·ded. indicates tire dust, in the form of ~in.ute dust particles suspended in the ·air, may cause cancer. ' The cancer producing ingredient, carbon black, Is a constituent of tire rub- ber. Hopping asserted. Barked \Vit h planning commission support. 11opping now plans to go before the city council seeking official backing for the studies. Ed Camarena of .the Orange County Air Pollution Control District said today suc h sludies could only measure the total dust •·fall'' at a given location. Further studies, he said, would have to be launched to find out just what is in the dust. He noted that extensive equipment is required to determine the amount of dust that remains airborne for any length of time. "Traffic moves pretty slow down there ... I don 't think there would be much abrasion because the cars aren't going very fa st," said Camarena. Camarena also wamed against over· reaction to the so-called carcinogenic (cancer producin~f properties of tire dust, noting that even barbecue sm,oke contains carcinogens. "It's such a ne\v fi eld ... v.•ow ... it sounds intriguing," commented Com· missioner Sally Bellerue after Hopping made hi s presentation . Campbell sald tha t studies of tire du st along South coast Highway should be supplemented with surveys of tire dust on biJsY arterials like Park Avenue and Thalia Street. ::soviet Systems Installed .r . ·For Brezl1nev Coast Visit ·. • AJ; a -squad of 30 Russian com· n1unications techn icians continues to in- Stall communications systems at the .Western White House, the Sov!et press is ·pumping .out the propaganda about the visit to Washington and San Clemente by Communist leader Leonid Brezhnev. ~ Accounts from the USSR and the na· tlon's capital point to a major drive to .he.raid the leader's visit to the U.S. as an a'ttempt to reach an ultimate detente with the United States. · · Major trade and arms limitation deals a·re the goals for the visit and round of summit meeti ng s with President Nixon set to start Monday in Washington, D.C. Soon after the initial ctiscussions there. the scene \\.'ill shift to San Clemente )"here a major address to the citii.ens of !he U.S. and USSR may be given by the SOviet Com munist Party head. Lendin g strength lo the ye t-unofficial reports of the two-nation address is the <fact that 50 Russian newsmen will be on hand along the South Orange Coast early uext \Veek to join the communications ':otaff already here. ,, .. DAILY PILOT 1~e OrllnOe Co.111 OAll'I" PtlOl wlllt Wf!IC'l! k (Oft'lbi-·flle N•Wl·P•en. I! rubll'l>e(I b't' 1ne 0 ••119'! CO.JI f>ljbllihlnQ Comptny. SllJlll· f"l!t "'lllonl .t" OUblhlted, M~y 111'911911 F•ld•v. lor C~it M•1•, N"'Pllr1 l e•clt. ~unrlnolM fle11elt/F01.111t•i11 V•lt!'(. L~OUM 8HC~. ltvlMIStldillftbfc:k •nd Stn Cltmeniet s~" J~n Co&0l1lr•1>11. A •lnOl• •tti0111I ed•tlOn " PllbliM'llld kli.ttdt» and Sllndlly1. TM Ptl!>C!iMI Pllblf"'lno , .... , II ., )JO Wnt 8•Y S!rHI, Coil• Mew. C•lllomi.. ""'· Robtrt N. Wetd l"r"'ld.-il Ind l"llblit.fltf J1cl R. Ci.rrt•v For more than a week the technician s hav e been '\li'orking IS hours a day, ac- cording to their spokesmen , installing the equipment which could broadcast a televised message to the Soviet Union. So far While House aides have said lit- tle about the San Clemente phase Qf the visi t. It is expected to take place early next week after Nixon and Brezhne v make a stopov er at the Houston Space Center in Texas. As ' for the substance (lf the major talks. sources say the tY•o leaders will discuss major, long-term trad e agreements and the sources add that Brezhnev plans to negotiate "as if Watergate never happened.'' The so urces. spokesmen "who reflect current Kremlin policy," said the Soviet leader is most anxious to make the talks a success and achieve positi ve success. Brezhnev reportedly does not plan to exploit the current precarious position of lhe Presi dent. Mounting economic problems in the Soviet Union -as evidenced last year after the major U.S.-Soviet' grain sa le v.•as announced -are reported to be the prlme motivating factor in Brezhnev's predicted attempts to hammer out new economic deals with Nix<ln. Defendant Tells How He Killed 'Harassing' Wife John Roger Ald en went Into fhe witness stand today and described for an Orange County Superior Court jury just how he put seven bullets into his wife last Aug. 5 al their Huntington Beach home. .. .. Viet l>rnllHftT fld G-••• ,.....,~, Tho"'11 Kttvil Ellll<tr Tho"''' A~urp lnt M1n111!n1 f:llf!t.r "She was screaming and shouting at -JTie,.'.-'.-h~ quietly-testified. !!.J..had--a-gun in ., . " '' ' .. ~ " . " ,, . " . ' •• • " .. ' •' ' Cht1lt1 H. Looi Ric.he rd P. Nill AMlll-111 Mtl!I01'10 EO:ltt r1 Tt n y Co .. illt Wttl Ott,.._ Counlt E•rior H•llft•• .._. Offlu 17,1$ •••Ch tou1•"••d M1 ili11f Addr.11: ~.o. 101 1to, t2•4• ...... Oflk .. t.llJUNI !INCi!: !n ll ornl Ay"""' COlll Mnaz )JO WHI •• , S!tffl N•wport a .. c11: »ii ~•""'por' 8ovlfvlfd l.on Clrfl'Mtl'lll! JOJ NOt'lll I I Ctmlnt •NI , .. .,.... f7141 64J"4J21 Cl..,.._ ~111a.1 642·1671 ll'1'9M 111"1111 Ot._. O..tt C.M"'lllllt"' ........ <'if~"!'•~I. 1t1). Or•lllt (OHi Mlltilll!O ComPtllt. No .,. •• •IO••··· Ulllilllfll""", IMlllorCtf metltf' ti' H vm lWl'ltllll hfAlfl -· .. ·~-Will!Ovt ...-Cltl Mt• ""1ulof! of '"°''lltl' -· hconll ct1t1 '"190f "'"' 11 Cot+• #MM, Cllll ... 11/t . ~~11011 "" WI'~ U.6l _.,1'111'11 W N II IQ,lf '*lftltilY1 "'111111"1' ... llfllllltm a.t.lJ '""'"'"" · my hfl nd and she followed nle to the bedroom and told me 'go aQead, shoot me'." Alden. 43, testified as the defense neared the end of its case . lie sald he then dropped lhe gun, step- ped over the body of Arlene Alden, 39, and called the police . lt Is alleged that Alden tofd the J1un- tlngton Beach officer receiving the call from his home tit 20662 Goshawk Lane "t am-,John-.Roger Alden and I have just shell my wife ." "Is she dead?" he allegedly .was asked . "I don't .know end I d<ln't give 11 damil," Aldc:o assertedly replied. 1'he de fense has pleodod not gullly by reaSQll of insanity and stressed in its phaJie of the trl3l that Alden was fre- quen tly harassed and rldJculcd "by a domineering woman.•· way," says Glen Dysinger of tht Hun- lillglon lltoeh Union High School District . .. Some stude llts arc bored he re, ::i nd If that's the case, it's often better to get thcn1 out and into a situation where thev'll feel challenged," he suys . • is yea r the "lmiilington TI aefilll'gh~ School District \Yill tum out about 175 three-year graduates, plu~ abo~t three times as many V.'ho took Just 3\.1: years. That means about 25 percent of all students are graduating early. "These student~ are not all the type-- you \.\'OUid call '\\'hiz kids'," Dysinger says. "Many of them are sluden ts who may want to graduate so they can get a rutJ,t..ime job and start eaming money," Darrel Taylo_r1 princi pal of San Clemente lligh School, agrees with Dy- singer on most points, but he expresses rnore reservations abo ut whether it is rea lly healthy for most students to gl'a du ate ahea d of schedule. ';For some reason, this generation seems to be in a hurry lo get on to the adult real world ,'' he says. · "And if they fini sh all their re· quirements by the end of three years. I don't think \\'e should stop lhem . "But frankly, it botl!_ers me somev.•hat becau se 1n leaving· early they miss the opportw1ities for exploring that we've tried to offer them in this district." he say s. Don Hout of the-Newport-Mesa Unified School District is another administrator \Vho questions the v.'isdom of early graduati<ln. though he still wouldn't op- pose it for a student who wanted it. ··People hurry enough in this world as it is,'' he says. "I'd hate to see it develop to the polnt wtfere-kids felt pressured to try to graduate in three years because everyone else was." Hout says that this June about 10 per· cent or Newport-Mesa's graduates will have taken just three years to complete high .school. Within the , foreseeable future. he believes that figure could in· elude ·25 percent of all students. And if that happens, he said, there would be pressure on schools to revise their courses or study to accommodate those wanting to pack al l their study into a shorter period. But the larger numbers of students nO\V graduating early indicates not many changes may be necessary. Take the case qf Beverly Gross. With the exception ol one semester, she took six classes a .day for three years. That worked out to 12 courses pe r year at five units per course, or 180 credits. Since she also took a band class after school for creWt. she was aJ>' proaching the 200 units n~etr (cf graduate without even going to summer school. And with four five-unit summer school classes, she e x c e e d e d re-· quirements. • "Actually I wouldn't have needed as much summo,r sehoQI as I did il I had known from the start I wanted to graduate early," she says. "But l didn 't start my planniog until pretty late." Administrators say that Miss Gross' class load was not unusually heavy, and that many student s find themselves in her position at the end of their junior year. "Most of them just take it easy through their senior ye!r," s ays Dy· singer. , "But you 've got to question whether there aren't better things a student could· be doing at that point in life than relax· ing in school ." · From Page l POETRY ... • selections, she said, were chosen to give trustees a more balanced look at the anthology. She read parts of four poems which described country churches, vegetable gardens, and wa1ks on country roads in summer. She compared efforts to clean up books in high school libraries to the V.'Ork done by Thomas Bowdler in the late 18th cen· tury in "clean ing up" Shakespeare. "I don 't like that kind of tens()rship and I don't want my children exposed to it,'' she said. Upon discussing the book wi th her children and their friends, she said. one of the teenagers suggest~ that, if the book was to blC bamed because of the language. phys ical education wou1d have to receive similar treatment because of the language beard in the locker room. Like Moore she lauded the book's li terarv excellence and the educational propriCty of exposing students to <is manv facets of life as possible. "A gem1-frcc library does not give us a ·genn-fr.ee world./' she said. 11-1.rs. Allen and Edmund Sheehan, \\'ho had both <ippeared to prof.est the use of the book, asked board membe rs to over· ride the staff dec ision. But 1rustees all indica ted that they felt the staff analysis to be sufficient and sR id the book will be kept on the library- sheJves . Jury Reaches 11·1 l1npasse in Trial An Orange COonty Superior Court jury that recently deadlocked on perjury and bribery charges aired against Newport Beach attorney Everett Elwood Stone reached an im(Xlm at 11 to one tn la vor or acqulttal , lhc Daily Pilot has lcamod . Prosecutor Pat Brian, the source of a statement to the effect that the jury was deadlocked at lJ to one in faV()r ot con- victi on has conrinned that he WAS misin- formed when the jury returned from Its de.UberaUons. I The Dally Pilot reifets the error. BLAST DESTROYS SCHOOL LOCKERS An erp1oslve device deslnlyed lwo lockers and damaged f0t.ir others Tues· !Illy afle...-at Marina High School. High Rise Law Security ofllccr Obie Moore called Hunllnglon Beach police at 1:!5 p.m. aller ""heard a muffied explosion ill lhe locker area, IXlllct: a&\d. Moore wrui in the custodian 's offioe-91. the otbu 81.dc of lhe building v.-·ben the blast oceurred . From Pagel ' ' ' .Still ·up By TERRY COVIi.LE 0t ltlt DtllY ,1111 Stall The when, where and how of high rise eonlttruction"'in Huntington Bcactrwere-P RIN CIP AL • left un&ettled by the planning commission • .!_ ,_Tu.c.sda)'._ni.ght._ IM!ead or adopling the seventh draft .of crltlcize," Crane said. '(But that won't a proposed high rise law, the commission solve the problem. You Mv~to look for a allowed staff planners time to modify it construr ti\'e solution. I don't know of further and develop 8 new concept called another solution that would not raise specific planning, son1e problems... Their action was taken over the ob- ''l'm as happy "'ilh this decision as J jection of the Citizens High Rise Com· could be with any," he saiQ. mittee, chaired by Arthur Knox . 1'rustee Sheila 11-1eyers emphasized th&-Knox challenged l'he equality or a dec ision was reached after ''much specific plan system, claiming it could deliberation." not be applied equally to several prop- "It was not. an easy decision, but I erty owners in the same area. really do believe they can solve the pr~ Staff plamers proposed a system blem," she said. "They are professional which would control the style of high rise people . I really think that, the kind of corpplexes tbrougb 8 Sl_.3ff-devcl~ plan people they a re, they will be able to work rather than a comprehensive ordinance. it out. But it won't be e;isy f9r any of Plailni.ng department pCrsonnel would us."--· ' ~ develop individual specific plans (In:Cft Trustee Fred Voss said the ultimate detailed than the city 's master plan) for solution rests with the staff and principal individual high rise location5. nt Nieblas . "I'm in no position to predict its suc- cess," he said. ' Board member Roger Belgen. said be "certainly hopes" the solution will work. Board member Mary Hix said she bt:lieved the board had come up with the best possible solution "for ill corr cemed." 1 Superb)tendent Mike Brick said 1!115 nlorni.ng he would not offer any reaction to the board's decision. Keizer was attending graduating f.ehearsals and-was not available for comment. Reports that suFfaeed during last Thursday's meeting that teachers at Nieblas wanted· Keizer fired were er· roneous, a spokesman emphasized Tues- day. .. At no time have the teachers, Foun- 1ain Valley Education Assoc i at ion ( FVEA). or the California Teachers Association (GrA) demanded that the principal be fired," said Judy Lohman, president of the FVEA . From Page l SURVEY ... teacher comments." Voss said. "We need a great deal of interpretation and ex- ploration." Survey results showed that a majority of the responding teachers agreed \\ilh a statement that read, in part: "The tranquil appearilnce or Fountain Valley is superficial. More and more. teachers are feeling the pmssure of vas\ amounts of paper work. ''They are afraid to speak out and question administrative practices out of a fear of recrimination. "The superintendent and many of his close associates are too concerned about 'public relations' and not concerned enough about teacher input and varied instructional techniqUes. "Class size is a serious problem which -must be dealt with inunediately." Nearly 77 percen t of the teachers ''totally agreed '' with the statement and 21.8 percent "generally agreed,'' said Judy Lohman. presi dent of the FVEA. Only 1.4 percent either generally disagreed or totally disagreed, she said . Scan.dal Fig1ire l1i Britai1i Held 01i ;Pot Charges LONDON (UPI) -Lord Lambton, who resigned his I'll.inis~ri.BI post ~ a call girl scandal, pleaded guilty today to posses.s- ing marijuana and pep pills. He said he had a "fetish" about discussing pot with his prostitute friend ; Norma Levy. The wealthy, 50-year.-old Lambton, whose resignation and that of another minister rocked Prime Minister Edward Heath's Conservative government. was fined $750 for keeping a small quantity of marijuana and amplietamines at his Uin- don town house. Asked by prosecutor David Tudor· Price if he asked Mrs. Levy for narcotics and other drugs during visits to her Lon. don apartment, Lambton said they "talk· ed about them" and added : "It was a fetish with me." ' The· prosecutor told the court Lambton ha<Lbeen photograph«l, smolting~marl· juana in bed with the 26-year.-old Mrs. Levy an Jrish-bom ex-convent girl. ~bton's apearance in the bushed and crowded court room at London's Marlyebone Magistrates Court was the first time be emerged in public since be resigned as parliamentary u n d e r secretary (lf the Royal Air Force ~fay 22. His statement the follo"¥i·ing day that be quit because of his "casual ac- quaintance" witlf a call girl v.·as quickly followed by a similar confessiori from Lord Jellicoe, who resigned as leader of the House of Uirds and as lord privy seal. Defense attorney Edward Ca~let sajd _ the scandal has left Lamblon a bumiliated man. "You \vill appreciate the agony of the mind he has gone through during the last few weeks," Cazalet said. "He has devoted a considerable part of his life to public service. The position he faces now so far as (hisl pubUc and private life is concerned is that he is subject to total humiliation." • ID Planning Director Ken Reynolds said a specific plan would produce develop- ments more like the cit want.-! ~~ sctCOO:e \\•hiCh oUtlliies amount! of open--- space, parking and other requli-ements based on lhe size o! property. Commissioners -agreed they liked the concept ol SRCCific planning, but disa· greed as to what detail it might be ap- plied. Commissiooet . Joreph_Bayle. said he prelerre<I t.o see the city tell developers: what the cily wants done, rather than wait ror evelopers to tell the city. Robert Bazil, siding wi!h Knox, warned however, that as commissioners, "we can't dictate what they will build. We can only suggest." AU seven commissioners agreed they liked the concept of specific planning high rise area,s. They also agreed to allow the staff to revise the seventh draft ' of the ordinance to make it compatible with specific pla~ing (written laws can't be so rigid). But they split sharply over V{here the first speeific plan should be de veloped as an example for the city council. Ed Kerins suggested the Huntington Center area, because it is a fairly simple locale, free of problems plaguing many other potential hlgh rise locations. He lost, 4-3, with Katherine Wallin and Bill Gelger his only support. Commissioners then agreed 5-2 to authorize the first specific high rise plan for the town lot area because it is the area of most concern to the cUy. Kerins and Wallin remained the only opponents. Reynolds said Ille revision ol the ordinance and the town lot specific plan could be ready for the com.mission by August. ·- ''August is baloney," replied com- mission Chairman h1ark Porter. "I don't see this thing coming until December," but he agreed wli'h the specific plan con- cept anyway. From Page l WATERG:ATE • • preciatioo would be on a first-name , basis. "I_got reJ!9r:.l§Jo>in.1ime to time. 1 had a daily staff meeting. I saw summaries of the reports that were filed with the General AccoWlting Office. so ·I did ex· ercise supervision. But J did not, semtor. have anything to do with the day_to .day work of the treasurer's orrice." This alternoon, Stam. under the toughest questioning of the three weeks of he,vlngs, testified there was no ·IJOllo. nectlon between the Watergate bugging and the destructJon of campaign finance records a lew days later. Sen. Sam J, Ervin Jr. (J).N.C.). chairman of the committee, pushed Stana again and again to explain why the records were destroyed. Stans repeated that a new law did mt require disck>sure of campaign transac- tions unlil April 7. 1912, and that he belie~d the contributors had a right to 1 confidentiaUty. "I will say to you there was no con- nection between the destruction of the summary sheet given me by Nixon re- election treasurer Hugh W. Sloan and Watergate," Stans said. lru'0 :!Ei",...,,,,""""5'""3,.8,..,C""E""N'"'T .. E.,R'°S""T""'R""EomE""T-~C·0.,.5.,.T.,.A,..M.,,,,,.,E,..SA_.,.6.46-..,.,,,19c:il .. 9 _,.,,,~Jm~: •• ·~.I ~ Duck Feet Fins Champion Handball Gloves • I ' Blemish 6.95 & 7.95 Regulars 7.95 to 10.95 Masks & Snorkles Water Winder Kick Boards 4.95 Wilson-Banc111ft-Davis-Yonayaqia- •' Racquetball Racquets 6.95 to 37 .95 Racquetballs 1.25 ea. Badminton Rackets Ping Pong Paddles & Balls Ping Pong Sets-4.95 to 14.95 Dunlop Tennis Rackets VQlleyballs-4.25 to 17.95 _WHson-Penn-D!l.!l.!!l!~nlo"====9'=~VolleybalF Nets-H;95 ;to~2·1:95--.. - T ennis Balls Colored Sleeve Baseball Converse-Adidas-Jack hrcalls Undershirts Boys 1.95 Mons 2. 75 ' Tretarn Tennis Shoes . Baseball &aps-Mitts-Balls-Bats Baslletball Shoes Raleigh Bias~arts Basebaft Shoes Tires-Tubes-Repairing All Purpose Shoes Racket Restringing Open 9 to 6 -CIOHd Sundays 646-1919-538 Center, Costa Meta \ I - \ At Your Service A Sonday, Wedoe.Uy ud Friday Fe•tUrt. or u.. Dilly Pllol Profe••ional Ad• DEAR PATo Is advertising illegal for doctors, den- tists. c_ngineers..t. l_aY.'yers and like pro- f cssionals: W.F., l\-U11ion Viejo Ul'IT ....... Each or tht1e professions bas Its own standards ~carding advertising and tbe legal as pect11 of advtrtisiog differ. Elhics of the American Medical Assodatton pro-- hiblt doctors from 1ollclttng new paticn~s by advertising in news media, or by any ' direct. meant. The CalUWaia Bu1iness a nd Professional c.ode dOes not prohibit advertising of "cllnlc1" and doctors are aUo•·ed to announce a Dew practice in the Dews media, oc inform current .))II· tients of a change lD locatJoa. Violations are examined and acted upon by the state Board of Medical E:umioers. Den· U!il'I' advertising practices ari. rqulated by the sta.te Board or Dental E:tamintrs as stated in the Dental Practice Act. The Amerh.'aD Dental Assoclat~'s code o( etbk• doe• :101 allow advertising. but ii is not necessary for a dentist to beloog to Escape to Where? I his group to pracUce in California: therefore one does see some dentisls adver1islng and this is not illegal. Ethits of the Consulting Englnt:ers Association of Califomla allow Yellow Pages listings, as do the other professions, and the publltation Of a business-card·type A Cine looking fire eScape -bu t no doors leading to it. Only if you can walk through walls do you have a chance or getting out or this Chicago building via the fire escape. Actually, doors were in tended to be cut in the wall, but renovation or th~ old building has been de- layed. ~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~ advertisement la professloaal maguines. s • 01( s • No new1paper advertlsemenll are allow-upervi·sors cemc ed. The state Bar Association's Rules of Professional Cond11ct strtCtly forbid 8.!?J...c.... . type of advertising or solicitation"-~! ) clients by la'lll'Yttl. Violations can result Hi I El f Pl ~~.: e:..uaz:.e~~u:.·i::"'.::i ::i:,fr.~1:: g 1way ement o ai1 attorneys must be members of the a ssociation to practice in tbls state. Watering Di .. ltondra Br JACK BROBACK half mile to each side of the highway. et ,._.. DM.., l"l.., ss.tt The purpose is to integrate the highway A scenic highways element or the "'ith !be surrounding environment DEAR PAT: -Orange County General Plan '"·as · A scenic highway when compJeted -r have a dichondra lawn . buLLalso_ ~ he Board f "'ould include a buffer to screen ouf havo small children who will be playing a--aopl~ Tue:.uay by I o on it all summer. I'd like 90ffie straight Superv1~rs. . unsightly features: parallel equestrian. information about ho\Y-to m:atnt.ain my ';1'he highways element 1s_but one or pedestrian and bicycle trails; vista lawn under these conditiolis 'before a~ many such segments o( the overall points. roadside rest areas and parking proaching my gardening store and being general plan which the: county must areas; and adequate right-of-way for sold a. lot of lawn aJds that ar~ not adopt, acconling to state law. Others tn-. 1· I t· d necessary. 11ve heard you 1can't hl ve a elude open ~pace! land use, conservation necessary protec 1ve pan mg an nice dlchondra lawn if it rectives heavy and recte':lion. . . landscaping. use . but I'd llke to take care ot it so the In adopt1~g the scenic highways plan. Under the adopted plan there are three children could play on it and my wife and the su~rvisors endor~ these recom· major classifications of scenic highways : 1 can still enjoy its looks. mend~tlons of the Plannmg Department. -Recreation Corrtdon. A route that N.C., Costa Mesa They mclude,: . traverses a ribbon ol parklike devel~ OkboDdra lawn should be anaged 85 . --Com"1!t the co~nty to develop see rue ment and a scenic corridor rJ high 5 m highways in the unincorporated area and esthetic or cultural value giving easy ac· 8 warm 1t:asoa 11'8~5• according to, tbe to coordinate wilb the cities such .....,..., to a van· -of recreation activities. Unlvenlty -..-e.tlfornta E x t t a 1 I o n . · . .......... """' ServJce ta Orange County Dlchoadra will highways throughout the ~ty., " -Nature Corridor. A route !hat · , -Adopt the proposed aceruc highways traver&es a defined visual corridor within develop •-· detp root system If It s as amendments to the Master Piao of which natural scenic resources, which watered deeply and Dot &oo freqaeatly. Arterial Highways. maiy be found in agricultural as well as UDCler dttp. lnfreqaellt "1 t' r I• I•• -Direct the Planning Department to wild land; are protected and enhanced. ~lseue problems are less Hrioas. Mow· develop specific pl ans for the corridors or ~rbuscape Conidor. A route mg belgh&I: can vary for dlclllOndra. Since the prop:ised scenic highways and to through an urban area with a defined YOCI want to ketp 8 tight, low dlcboadra design corridor enhancement and p~ visua1 corridor which offers a vi ew of at- wbkb looks better under traffic, the!!°.." tection plara as parts or the overaJJ open tractiVt' urban scenes. mast sacrifice some root lfl&em ~r-· space, conservation and recreation ofange Coast area scenic highway cor-:• me:'nt ~ :: ~ element& of the counb' general plan. , ridors which come under the recreation e pou Y c .W.. , ~ -Direct.-tbe Road Oepartmen~ ·io .type incllJd_e El Toro Road from Irvine b~ms. ~ ... mowtqita~I tw :___. design sceriie highway right.Mf-w11 ~ to San!iago CanyOn Road : c 11 m a su e 8ppean _a_~jtbJ_he prOposed Urban and Trabuco Parkway from the San Oiego without seriously deereasing Ute. root-Rural Paikway typical sect:iona. Freeway to O'Neill Park, and Ortega system of dlcbondr1. For tbote reader~ • -Establish a Scc?Uc Highway Design Highway and Aliso Creek Road . with lts11 of I, traffic problem, dJeboltdra Review Board, responsible to the Plan-Corridors included in the nature type 5hould be Witt~ deeply to establt•lil, • ning Commission.. 1 are the Santo Diego Parkway from El deeper ~ sralim. Elhlblldilng • dttp Two years ago the supervisors adopteq Toro Road to canada Governadora; root sy1tem requires leUhlg lbe P'U~ the scenic highway corridor plan in con-Canada Governadora from San Diego stress 11igb9y before waterlag. A depth cept. It calls for a conidor extending one County to Santo Diego Parkway; LagWla of I! incites of moisture ls a reuouble Canyon Road from the Pacific Coast depth goaJ. 41 wtUI otber lawas, II ls well Freeway corridor to Canada Road, and lo r,.iace lerUllaatloa dllrloc u.. boltest ffunt1naton Envoy·. San Joaquin Hills Road from Laguna Ca· montbl of Ute nm.mer. --e nyon to Culver Drive in Irvine. G U P Urbanscape corridors include the PMl»lidt11 Polaters iven ruguay os.t Pacific Coast Freeway corridor and the San Diego Freeway from the Los Angeles to the San Diego CoWlty line; Oso Parkway from Laguna Canyoo Road to e&nada Govemadora; Alicia Parkway from Aliso Creek Road to Paseo de VB.lenc:ia, and San Joaquin , Hills Road from MacArthur Boulevard in Newport Beach to CUiver Drive in Irvine. 1r you have volunteera:l to be publicity chainnan for your favorite organization and canlt tell a presa release from a monthly bulletin, don't despair. A free booklet, published by•the Occidental Life Insurance Company of California, is available to answer all your questions and glve Pointers on all phases of your job's duties. Request your copy or "So. You've Been Elcctt:d Pu b I i c i t y Chairman," by writing to Occidental Qenter, Olive and 12th SLt · Los Angeles. 90015. -- Sliakespeare Had Words for It WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Sam J . Ervin quoled Shakespeare Tuesday to deflno the circumstances tn which former Nixon campaign aide Herbert L. Porttt ol Laguna Niguel round bimlcll alter the Watergate burglary. 1be chairman of the Senate Watergate committee noted during the bearing that Porter wes persuaded-w--lfe-to-ln- '1,CStigator~ and at the trial or the orl.glnal Watergate defendants out or loyalty to President Nixon. I Related story. Page 4 l Notlng that Porter then had trouble gctting e govcrnrncnt jp)l, __F;rvln quol ed Cardinal \Volscy , cast out in his old age by King Henry VIII , who said'o "Had I but served my Cod with half the 1.eal I served my King. He would not in mine old nge tl'ave left me naked to _;nine enemlt1.." Ernest V. Siracusa ol Huntington Beach, oow U.S. ambassador to Bolivia, will take oo the lop diplomatic post in another Sou.lb American c o u n t r y • Urug111 y. Siracusa's new ambassadorship was announced Tuesday by President Ni:ton. G:rand Jury Probe Tells Conditions in OC Jail The Orange County Grand Jury releas- ed a IO.page report !Oday on coildii!O!l3 and Inmate treatment at lhe Orange Oowlty Jail. The report, signed by Foreman Marcia M. Bents ol Newport Beach. made no comment on alle4ed mistreatment of in- mates in the jail in Santa Ana. llir0• Bents did ackno)Vledgc that the jury tws r~eived numerous letters from inmates or their famUlea concerning alleged mistrentrrient. ''The_ jury has had continual visits to the jail inspecting both the men's a'ld women111 sections. The jury com1nlttc~s have intcrv\cwcd complainants In lhc jail. discussed Jal! procedure11 with staff members, eaten in the cnrcterio And in· sJjeC:ted rta>rds Bnd rac\Ulies ," the report states. Mr!I. Bents said the jury In conjunction wllh the district attorney·s staff held a run-panel bearingiTrwhich-evtdencc-was heard lrom inmates and the jail staff. The jury report includes a list of recommendations concerning rules, pro- cedures and facllltles at the jail. The report did not criticize the present opera- tion of the facility. "SJi1ce several • d d i t i o n a 1 recom- mendations -are still under study by the Grhnd Jury this should be considered an Interim report;°''lhe foreman said. lncluded in the recommendations were those or basic training personnel and mnnage1nent, in-serv1oo tcalnlng. In· cident reports, inmate education, visiting glans, library $CrVice and exercise and recrention. Also covered in the recommendations w re disciplinary rules a n d penalllc~. form~ or disciplloo And Hmltations on ~uch actions. NrdntsdaJ, Junt 1), l ~73 H OAIL Y PILOT 3 •• 'Gerrymander' Cited ' Reagan Brands C,oiinty District 'Worst' Jo~.rom Wirt Services both houses. pMel of three special masten -rctiml Gov. Ronald Reagan bas said he C'1n't In iiddlllon to singlin_g out C.Ory's judges -opened hearing~ on the accept an Assembly reapportionment district ror attack, Gov. Reagan ciiticli-redi.strict.ing. plan unless 18 districts are changed, In-cd a proposed new district which would The coon has said Jt wou ld still coo~ eluding one in Orange County he called stretch from Ule Orange CWnty line sider a legislative plan if one is enacted'. the "worst eiample of deliberate ger-through San Bernardino and KerD coun-before the Aug . 31 court deadline. rymandering." ties to the Santa Barbara area. Partisan disagreements ha ve bJocked,, The governru:'ll strongest blast was Other Assembly districts i:n Orange, legislative efforts to get new 'boundarlc5 ' directed a lhe-·dismet--drafted -1:.o! Angeles; S8n--Diego1 Sacl"amento.and ia.ceJ97l, when the law required-A..,.1---'! preserve t he seat of Kenneth Cory of San Mateo counties also drew ~is :wrath. l~gis\ature to redistrict itself based °"' Garden Grove. chairman of the "To utterly destroy community interest 1970 census data. Assembly Democratic caucus. to gain partisan advantage.s in even one The current compJ'Olnise is interlded td t It bas been referred to by other critics district is wrong,.obviously." be said. preserve the present 20 to 20 party vocel' as the "Corydor'' because it runs like a calling the plan "gross and indefensible .split in the Senate and the 23 to 20 corridor t h rough Democratic gerrymandering.'' Democratic edge in !ht Asse1nbly, neighborhoods. It v.•as Reagan·s first extensive state· 'f'he governor was joined in criticism The compromise bill, which is pending ment on the plan. _Qy former Pe'ace and Freedo1n Party before a Senate-Assembly conference \Vhile legislators have been conu~·n-w~·n_g_ state chairman Irv Sutley. He <!ailed \t. committee. has bipartisan support in work on the plan, a State Supreme Court .. racist. sexist and political." County Pla11 Board B<tcks Conservation By JAN WORTH Of tfte O•llJ l'il-. Sllff The Orange County Planning C.om- m I's s i o n unanimously ·recommended Tuesday that a conservation element of the general plan, the product or 1n9nths of hearings and revisions. be passed by the cOWJty Board of Supervisors. -State law requires that a plan to con- serve, develop, and utilize water, forest. soil, riv'er, fish, wildlife. mineral and other resources be adopted by June 30. The 100-page element divides county resources into seven categorie;;. A management plan was prepared for each category with recommendations for future actions and disct.issioo of probable problems. Five recommendations were added by the Commissioners to the plan, which was delivered to supervisors this morn· ing. They include : -Adopt basic Open Space-Zone and Open Space District Regulations. -Adopt tesource m a n a g e m e n t guidelines by August 15. -OeVelop--a re60W'Ce management ordinance from the non-binding F idelines by July 1, 1974. -Direct the County Administrative Of· fice (CAO} to develop an organization to implement lhe resource-management ordinance. and -Begin a complete review and restructuring of the county zoriing code, the subdivision ordinance, the grading ordinanc;;e. building code. and county_ ad· miniltrative pro c e du res, to be developed into a cor;nprehenaive land management and deveiolii'qeot code. , The open space zone ordinance written by deputy County Counsel Ralph Benson was judged by the county staff and com- missioners as "by itself not enough to implement the open space ordinance." But they said it meets the state re· quirement for an ordinance. to begin put· ting teelh into open space plans by June 30. 'Ille commission passed an open space element of the general plan last week. The ordinance provides lhe capability to wne lands both privately and county· owned into a "holding zone" which is not necessarily perm~t but can be chang· ed through existing zone change pro- cesses. Public hearings will be held on each acreage proposed for iJtclusion in open space w nes before the new tag is ap- plied. After resource management guidelines are adopted, they would be implemented by requiring all existing and future plan· ned communities to prepare a plan show· ing how the guidelines would be met in their territory. "' GEM TALK ... . f ;.'* .. "' i .. TODAY by J. C. HUMPHRIES "?"-_..,,,. ... Ji.t~"' -. a- "GEM OF THE SUN" Because agriculture preceded gemology by many centuries, it is not surprisin g that H indus Jong be- lieved that the colorless .or white, Artist Fourtli Festival Souglic -ifi Laguna By JACK CHAPPELL 01 Ill• 01!1, l'llol Slltf "We're rejected. but o o l dejected," said artist Guy Bevill, \\'ho describes himself as "a very ·qu iet. likeable person." -adding humble as well. Bevill aims to s la rt a fourth and possibly a fifth summer art exhibition in Laguna Beach for all the artists who have been rejected by the other three art festivals. "I think all or !hem should have an op- portunity to show if they are \\'illing lo put forth the e£fort . "Let the public judge whether they're good , bad or busted," Bevill said. He said he had been asked by two festivals to ex· hibi t his own y,•ork. ';I don't choose to be in any one of them. Someone has lo look after the underdog," Bevill said. Bevill said he decided to start his ov.'TI r eject festival after three rejected artists "bawled on my shoulder this last weekend." He plans the first meeting for the "re- jected-rejects" (artists ·anc1 craftsmen) at 7 p.rn. Thursday at his home, 417 Can- yon Acres Drive. He said he :s neg<Xiating for rental of the old Art·A·Fair grounds along Gilllery Row on Coast Highway in north Laguna Beach. ORGANIZING REJECTS Guy Bevill -----~- ' Schmitz Says Bevill said he can ~r 50 artists and will ask that each' reject bring two samples of y,·ork to a meeting JWle l4 where its acceptability as a re· ject will be judged by Bevill. ·'All I'm askinflli&ltllaj ii he jusl a little He'll Probably ~ bit on the creatiVe side," Bevill said ex· • :,,:~ plaining that Hli.s meant not a direct steal • , > ~ rrom a magazine. Run in 19"'4 ·•1' "ll tl!ey ,took in tht mqaztnes •l"'Y· , ~ 1'I:"' i J . .;. LaglM Beach would starve to death," • 1 1 ... "' Bevill said. Fnm Wire Services ~· 1 And, If more than 50 artists descend on SACRAMENTO -John G. Sehmii,; h~? "I ~ess I have to locate -another former Orange COunty congressman and • lot. he , said. . , . presidential candidate. has said he will He said he d1dn t think he would have , "most probably'' run for some stalewide any trouble receiving city approval for office in 1974. his festivals. The Newport Beach resident recenil); 1 ~·You can't turn down a Capricorn," he re-registered 8!11 a Republican. after NJt' said. ning for president in 1972 on the Bevill said he holds a bachelors degree American Party ticket. , ., in art, bad studied in Munich, GermanY,, "The major issue is going to be restos-.:' and taught art in the University of lng the. people's confidence in govem-~ Tokyo. He sa~ ™='paints in 12 diUerent ment," said Sctunitz Tue9day, referring ' styles under six different names through to Watergate. "Right now the country is 1 agents. in a real crisis." , · "l have some of the best training of Schmitz' Tustin campaign office is still anyone in Southern California, but. open. · · r~ training doesn't always make yoo the AJlhou gh the conservative ex-con--1 genius you think you are," be said. gressman wouldn1t -tiay what orfice he He said artists applying for exhibition would seek1 some Sacramento sou~ at the Festival of Arts, Sawdust Festival said he will run for secretary of state. or Art·A·Fair, "must submit to a jury of Thal post is currently held by people who are probably not qualified." Democrat Edmund G. Brown Jr., wtlo Once expunged from the exhibitions, bas expressed interest in t h e there is no other opportunity to show. governorship. .;;-- sapphire was really an unripened· .. '' ' ' · · · · ruby which \vould finally m a ture into that gem's rich red color . liurmese miners maintained that pa le colored rubies would, if bur- ied, ripen, like a tomato, to a deep red, and Ceylon miners actuaUy lh ougbt flawed rubies simply "over-rtpened:"-----"-'--- An early writer stated that rubies were first white, eventually ripened by the su n to deep red. These early beliefs, although completely false, were not then as foolish as they appear today, be· cause the only known, sources of rubles are such hot and steamy areas as Burma, Thailand, Ceylon and Africa. Today. we know th at the "unripe" white "n1bles" are reall y sapphires, \vhich occur geo- logi~ally 1n lhe same areas as rubies. , Regardless of the n1is taken logic or these ancient ·peoples. the ruby still deserves our admiration and Its right to th e term. "G em or th e Sun." ~-H·r~-~--il.l-~~~--=~-=-~1 1 1---1,--1 Omega inlroduces the 10101 look for chronome lerS, The· Om ego Electronic.• Constellolion Chronomete r in yellow l4k gold-filled top, 'talnesl stee l boc.k woler-rMlstont case. Doy/dote·telling gilt and brown dlol. Combination link gold -filled bracelet .. $290. J.C. 1823 NEWP.ORT BLVD., COST,4, MES,4, CONVENIENT TEAMS 11 YfARS IN THE SAM E lOCATION l•11•A,,.,•rl<•rd -M•h•• Chtrq• PHONE S41·l 4DI • • 4 DAILY PILOT WedneM!ay, Junt 1), 1973 -Astronauts F.ocus .1 on .Elorida Growth·.; SaVing-W-hat~ Left of Coas.- UPCOAST, OOWNCOAST: You have a major development to ponder today oo w}lat's happening to the last oC the virgin waterfront land along our Orange Coast. State Seo. DeMis Carpenter CR· Newport Beach) got his bill cleared unanimoUsly by the Senate Natural Resources and Wildlife C o m m i t t e e yesterday to preserve the o p e n beach!ront bet.W'~ Laguna Beach and Newport Beach. '"Mlis i~ perhaps the last natural stretch of ' coastline left in our region virtually untouched bY ·the tumbling bands of man. ' rr'!s a relatively short stretch o! coa.i Mt within it lies rocky lidetands, I headlands and Wide-open Strands or san- 1 dy, beach. The area includes places like Crystal Cove, Scotchman's Cove, and El MOITO Beach. .CARPENl'ER'S MEASURE woold ap- puipdate $'1.6 millloo for IJublic purchase 1 ol 'CJ.S miles of this stretch, including some 1,600 aa-es or Irvine ranchlands above the high tide line. ~ow all we have to hope is that the 8l>o<l senator's bill will clear !!le ~islature and gain Gov. Reagan's pture. Jt won't mean that this entire litguna.f.C)-(;orooa del Mar stretch will · rWmain iforever in its present pristine·. DUoolic at.ate. But it couJd indeed ~rve some of the best recreational .-.,.ts fer !!le publlc. ~IN ALL THE TAuc about public agen-~ striving to protect the environment ' f{lad natural resources, one small word : rrftlbt be said for the Irvine Ranch on tll!I lllortline &rel. ·:Since I was a kid along this coastline, tllt stretdl o! rancblands in question hjye remained virtually unchanged. Oh, tie Irvine Company did allow develop-rDent of Cameo smres at the Corona de! -l\iar end and Irvine Cove at the other niBr ~ But what ol the territory id between? !The horse ranch out there is new but Cfll be characterized as temporary at best. 'So can the parking lots. Laguna hiiilt El '-1orro school. Beyond this, you h&ve the same fe\V cottages dotting th e bl!ach1ine et Crystal Cove, the same or3nge juice stand, fresh fruit and vegetable place and the other little roadside vendor v.·here you can get a dale Ynalt, maybe. Thus this shoreline sector has pretty much remained the same for sevefal decades. 'The cattle graze above Pacific Coast Highway and in ·season, the mustard plants gro\v, turning the roadside and hilly places into a forest of gold. Clearly, not much has dlanged. 'The area has also 'been virtually clear or any large billboards or placards to enhance the landscape. POINT JS HERE that the Irvine Ranch people couJd have opened development on this area at almost any time in the past (eW decades. Loog before environmental impact reports or the coastline preserva- tion movement that cubninated in the passage of Pti>position 20 last November. The ranch prople waited. however, and now they are moving in rather deliberate fashioo toward 13. plan to develop the place. Reltrictions on what ,they do will be greater than they would have ex- perienced at any time in the past. And the opportunily ror preservation of some of the best of this area is also greater than ever before. How much of the area can be preserv- ed for public use by future generations now pretty \\·ell depends on the Legislature and the governor. Let's hope the opportunity doesn't slip by. 'EVERY NIGHT, THE WILY JAPANESE, SAVAGE INDIAN, IDIOT BLACK' Mlrlon Brando, With Beginnings of Beard, Appears on Cavett Show Brando Gives-Leetnre NEW YORK (UPI ) -Marlon Bran- do, graying and a little paunchy. shifted uneasily in his chair, quipped about network talk show!! and lectured on IndJan rights. In an unusual television appearance ~ Tuesday night on ABC's Dick Cavett ~ Show, Brando, his wispy, nasal tones still intact since they jolted a whole generation ol actors 25 years ago, said his career as a superstar had been a "nice liviog~fflused to discuss his rum roles. ,. Wearing a blue denim jacket and the ~ beginnings oC a beard, Brando told ~§! Cavett that the press and all the media was "big business" and that Cavett's ov.'TI talk show "asked pro- vocative questions to keep the ratings high." ~ •' • HE SAID Jl\IPORTANT events \\'ere often ignored for the sake of ''ratings !r---~ 3'l. ... ~~n~ and entertainment -to keep the beer- drinking guy in his undershirt from changing channels." When the taping session started. muffied gasps coold be heard from !he audience. Outside, perhaps I 0 0 persons, many of them teen-age girls, waited for a glimpse or Brando. As the theater emptied later, one came rushing to the fll'St group out, saying, •<J\ty God, did you see him? Isn 't he· gorgeous! Isn 't be gorgeous!" Brando, who refused to accept an Oscar for bis portrayal of a Mafia don . in "The Godfather," said be asked an Indian girl to subslitute for him at the Academy A ward s presentations because o( ''what Hollywood has done to the Indians, and to all minority groups." "RIGHT HERE~on -lhis network, nearly every night,.. said Brando, Morton Turns Down Plan ' For Power Plant in Utah WASHINGTON (AP) -Interior Secretary Rogers C.B. ~1orton Tuesday a1UJounced his refusal of permits for con- struction of a giant coal-fired power plant in southen Utah "ror en· vironmental reasons.'' l\torton offered to help utility com - panies find better locations for power (.___1_N_s_n_oR_T._ .• _. __,) plants in the Southwest to minimize adverse environmental impa cts. But he rejected construction of the pro- posed Kaiparowits plant, whi ch was to be located near Lake Powell. e Two Flreme11 Killed PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -T 'v o firemen were killed and at least 42 other firemen were injuretl Tuesday night in a spectacular eight-alann fire and ex· plosion at a South Philadelphia ink fac· toy . The bodies of the dead firemen were pulled from the debris of the block-Jong Frederick Levy CCJ. building. e l11qulr11 Proposed WASHINGTON (AP ) Contending possible "political and other crimes" cannot be ignored, Rep. Bella S. Abzug .has called for a House ·inquiry into whether Presidfnt Nixon should be lm-. peached. ;,I believe there is sufficient evidence of deliberate and illegal activities by the President to justify an inquiry to ascer- tain whether impeachable offenses have been committed," the New York Democrat told tbe House Tuesday night. e SlllfJer Goes Free NEW OIU..EANS (AP) -Singer Jaye P. Morgan has been cleared of mari- juana possession charges on grounds the drug was found through en illegal oearcb. Miss Morgan and her manager, Peter A. Donald, were arrested March 14, 1972, after an airport search turned up mari- juana in their luggage. e Integration Ordered CINCINNATI (UPI) -A federal ap- peals court ruled Tuesday th a t predominantly white suburben school districts around Detroit must integrate in one areawide plan with .Jargely black schools in the central city. The attorney tor 40 o( the 52 school districts involved said he would appeal the decision to the Supreme Court. ,;one can see silly renditions ol human behavior' -the wily Japanese, the. savage Indian. the idiot black. "Most of what we know about the Indians "'e have learned from Hollf\\'OOd, and those portrayals have been incredibily untrue." ·he sai d. "The people "'ho are hurt by thi s are not so much the adults as the Indian child.rm. T h e y are iruJtilled v.ith a negative image of themselves from a very early age." Brando said acting was a "craft, not an art," and that "anybody who thinks it's an art is deluding him.self.'' He said •·we all act·everyday in order to survive." ·•rt's been a nice living," he ~d. "like being a plumber or a cari>enter f or an ecooomist, or anything else !hat • helps you to get on and provide food ' and shelter for your family." •• lndia1is Angered As Week Named For John Wayn,e SEA'ITLE, Wash. (UPI) -An Indian group, calling actor John Wayne "the na- tion's No. 1 Indian killer," has con- demned Washington Gov. Dan Evans for proclajming JWlC 10-16 as Jolm Wayne week. "With overt racism toward lhe native American, Wayne is the nation's No. 1 Indian killer," the group s1id Tuesday. "EvanS joins Wayne by honoring him." The -condemnation came fr om Advocacy-Survival of American Indians. A spokesman said thal Wayne's Western movies "have created' the image oC the good, noble white settler who wanted to build a cabin and live at peace. And the heathen lndia,n who nped women, 9Cllped men •nd murdered children ." Crowds Angered By Band Action ITllACA, N. Y. (AP) -A one and a half hour rock and debris-throwilflg incident erupted at Cornell University Tuesday night when lhe rock group Deep Purple !ailed to show and no explanation was given to the concert crowd of 12,000, '8. university spokesrnan said. Four persons received minor injuries during the incident, the spokesman said. Heat Wave • Ill East Eases: A .number of people began throwing rocks. bottles and debri-1 ooto the universily's football field at about 9:30 p,m. when rnembe,. ot the Tycho Brake Sound Inc. began teuoving sound _equip- ment from the stage, the spokesman said. Hard Pressed Po:wer Companies Fi1ia Relief Coastal Weather PtrtlV .wnny todly. Light Ytrl•bl• windl nlollt •nd fftOtftilllt hours tleeom· Ing Wfllerly 11 'lo 1• knoll '" 1llt•· noon1 todl'f 1nd Th11rldl'f. Hlgh 1od1y "· CoMst1t t1mbtr1l11rff r1ng1 trom to to 66. tnli nd 11mper1!11r.1 r•nu• lrom '° to 70. Wiier t1mper11u,-. k. S~n, ltloo11, Tides WEONllDAY second lllol'I .......... t n• p.m. s.t S.C:ond low • . . . . . . . . . 2:01 p.m. 2.l TKUllSOAY The concert, the !int tn ·a SIJl'l'mlef ~ries or six spoosond by a student group, was to begin at a p.m. The promoters, Cmcert East ot Island Park and 1Festival East of Buffalo, said when they contacted the group's lead guitarist Richard Blackmore at a nearby motel he declined to explain w b y !the 11roup v1ould not perform, the university spokesman said. 1'he promoters said they would assume rcsponsiblily for the refunds on the $5 nnd $6 concert tickets. Jn a Wl'itten state- ment, the promoters said '3n explanation from the the group was "in order and necessary.'' "Photosensors Measure Disney World's Impact SPACE CENTEJl, Houstm (AP) -whole :United States seems clobbered In Skylab'• utrooauts aimed their eorth todoy." ' I ....,_.,_., -~ ot Cape KonMd,Yr--"',;,..,,,...,;plUMAlly t.ar1et for "the Fla., !<>day to ...... the impACI ot Walt pass was clear. '!bot wu Florida'•! Disney World cm 1he fl!VWinC area. Brevard County, home ot Cape Kennedy, After a f~ pr1m over the ckJud.. where tw01en90r-equlpped .research oovered middle leCtioo ol the .country, planes were in the ;:iir gathering data to~ tho w .. tller wu clear .,.. Flortda, compare with that collected by Skylab. p0111po111 Paul J. Weltz to exclalm: Dr. Verl. R. Willmarth, Skylab's earth '"lliere's the Cape. Coming out of .the resourtes project manager, sald Brevard I clouds J can Bee the C&pe. · County is an excellent area for land use 1 "'nlere's the ntan launcb complex analysis "because or the impact that I down tbere. f.rom this distance it loob Walt Disqey World has bad there." t like an ant."~ said. Disney World ls located 50 miles to the Weitz, Charles Conrad Jr. and Dr. west of Cape Kennedy. Brevard County. Jooeph P. Kerwin <Xllducled their liJth like the rest of Central F1orida, has felt earth resources puo m the 20th day o! the boom. 1 the planned 28-day mis.sion. "There are a lot of bird and wildlife refuges in ~ county ·and a lot of fishing BUT CLOUDS HAMPERED the study and recreation water.'' he said. "We acr.,. the heert of the United states. It should be able to get an evaluation of thoj was to have included geolot!Y 1tudieo in envlroruneotal-elfect o! the rapid popuia, .the Colorado Rockies and Wyominc's Big tion growth." Hom Mountains, water management 'lbe astronauts Tuesday conducted aaaessrnenta in the Great Plains and their first experiments in materials pro-· agricultural surveys tJroughout the cesslng, tests thal could lead to spaco Midwest. manufacturing in orbiting laboratories M. the astronauts looked for 'J\U'tle late In this century . Creek Resel'voU on the Kansas-Nebraska The unique weighUes.s and vacuum border, Weitz commented : "It doesn't properties of space coukl produce very look too good. '.Ille clouds are pretty slroog materials, pei"fectly round ball solid. Let's just try to look at a couple bearings, preciSlon optical l.,...s, pure holes in the clouds, shall ·"-e?" vaccines and other materialJ not poMible "What holes?" asked Conrad. "The to make pn earth because of gravity. ' Aide Tells How He Became ' Ensnared in Coverup (:~se : \ll ASHlNGTON (UPI) .. '-Herbert L. Porter of l.Jaguna Niguel, the former Nix- on campaign aide v."bo admitted in Senate Testimooy that he had cornm\tted perjury, said vanity, loyalty and a weakness; in his character drew him into the Watergate coverup. Porter, v.·ho was scbedulini director for the O>mmiUce to Re-elect the Presi· dent, testified last week that be \\"<LS talk· ed into mak~ false statement to the grand jury and at the Watergate trial-by deputy campaign director Jeb Stuart '-lagruder. RETIJRNING BEFORE the committee for more testimony Tuesday, Pprter was; asked what had made him do it. He replied:_ "I did not do it tor money, I did not take a bribe. II didn't do it for power, J didn't do it for position, J didn't do it to ,hide anything that I bad done because f didn't think I had dooe anything. And yet on the other hand there were rtree or four faders that probably weiglled,-.na r can't put any percentages on which weighed more or which toppled me over lo the other side. "My vanity was 'appealed to when I was: told my name had been brought up in high councib and that J was an honest man and made a good appearance and that sort o! thing. My loyalty was ap- pealed to, to !!le President ... ''I THINK AIL o! those things coupled \Vil h what J have fOWld oul to be a weakness in my character, quite frankly, to succumb to that pressure, all added up lo my tipping over to that side .•. "Sen. Baker (HO\\·ard Baker ol Ten- nessee) used ttte v.·ord atonement the other day, and perhaps that is what I'm doing. 1 don't know, I'll let o<ben iudi• that. But that's the way I feel and that'• "'hat I'm doing.'' ln Tuesday"'! testimony. former Com- merce Secrelary l\1aurice H. stam acknowledged that be provided '75,000 In cash oo, the urgent request ol Hertaert Kalmbach. cl Newport Beach, Nixon's personal lav.'Yer and "a man ol in- tegrity." The G•neral Aceounting 0 f I i c e , watchdog ·anp of eoogr..,, says that money was ll!ed to pay off the w-.. wiretappers after their arretts. Stans said 18.!ter Kalmbach as.M"ed hlm the money-\\'as vital for "a special White Ilouse pro}ect" and cleared. by '1h1gber authorities," he furnished it forthwith. , Nixon, Haig Cruise WASHING TON (AP) -Presidtnl N"a· on bad dinne!" Tuesday evenin( with Ilia new chief of staff, Anny Gen. Alexander M. Haig Jr., aboord the ~ yacht as it cruised the Potomac River. ·" -~ Fll"5t h19h ..• ,,,.,., IO:tl 1.1'!1. 3.J P::lr•I low •.•. , . • . . • 3:4' 1.m. 0.6 S«Cl'ld hlOh •••.. , . . . . 1:Jt p.,.,, s.• $.coMI IOw ••••·••••• 2:35 p.m. 2.1 1 WAIM ---""'~IHMt !lttf-1.m;-Sttrl~tro.m.-------,.----·--Princess Anne rfftrictlon1 i re no lonutr In etttcl on tl1t1 c.1r1 In Los Ano11t1, Ortll!lf, RIYtr•IClt Ind 51n 8trnt rClll'IO c.ounlftt. "rn ...... , lle1t11•n 1ml!OM<I •hOU rutr llont bt<t vst of sevtr• tmot COf'l<lfl Olll fn tht 1rt1, V .S. Summar11 "°""'' com0trilt1 Jn 1n1 No.rthe111 br1tllleCI t 11011 Of rttltf I001y 41 cooler w11!114r ettfd Int Ot"'llntl Jor t11e;1r1c11y t l•t r • ~41 1'1111 ""'"' 11111 torc111 voll1Qt rtdllct on1 In '°"" ''"'· . A lookl fll\11'1 for '"' Ntw York "°""'' "ool ttld lie 11~ttd no J>f1Wtr cutotck •Ml'f, com!>l•f'O w1111 a .;tr- ttnl tHllC'fl.,_ on N!ondlt' 111d Tllffo C11v, "Wt dorl'I 11 flltt "IOIMnt t•H<I ~~ Moon ..... 61» p.m. .... ~;"1 1.m. HIW ~lt~r-"'tfJMIAMI LICIMD-----, PJll 1t.1N (j";,!~~1 .. ow ~ .._ ... ~Mt0Wel$ ~,.ow \ Nuptials Set LONDO:i (AP) -Princess~. daughter of Queen Eliiabeth II, will 1narry Lt. Mark Phillips in \V~tminstcr Abbey Nov. 14, Buck· Ingham P~noounced today. The ma •ii• · be performed by the Archbishop f Canterbury, Dr. Michael llaiiis(y. The wedding day coincides with the 25th birthday of Anoe'• brother, Prince Charles , heir to the British throne. ' I ll~IT ...... Famllg Murders DetceUve Raymond Null examines bedroom where one ol four fam-ur members was slain Jn Wilton Manors, "FIJI. The bodies o( Mrs. Linda Smith,. Sl, and three children-Christophe:,. 11 , 1'1mothy1 9, and Karen, 7, were dillCovered by another son, Wwiam , 14. Victim• were stabbed and throals were sla.shed. • t I '· \ ' t DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Cooling 'Hot Pursuit' In police terminology, a "bot purallit" Is a high speed chase. They often make newspaper headlines aod sometimes wind up in tragic accidents. ' One Huntington Beach councilman, Jack Green, wants the city to consider eliminating hot pursuits as a police policy, beca use of their danger to oUlcers and innocent bystanders. ---ll'a-cetlatnly an Idea worth further study,.but H1111- tlngton Beach Police, according to Capt. Mlchul Burken· field, commander of the patrol dlvlBlon, already have tight regulations regarding tio puralli!s. . Burkenfleld says officers are dlBcouraged from glv· mg chase for most traffic violations and other minor cases. He prefers the use of license plates, road blocks and the police helicopter to cspture fleeing criminals. Perhaps a study will reveal areas where the hot pursuit policy might be tightened, and officers who vio- late the policy sternly warned. It would seem that hot pursuits can be cooled down with the police given more latitude not to pursue. But as Burkenlield warns, some- times the continued freedom of the person pursued J>e. comes more of a hazard to the public than the hlgh speed pursuit. Do11ble Reward Tourists of a different type will be visiting Hun· Ungton Beach this summer. Unlike many of our one- day visitors, this group ia somewhat special. • They are 40 students from Frarice -hlgh school and college students who will live in this community Ior a month under the auspices ol the Foreign S tu d y League, 8 division of Reader's Digest. Organizers face one problem, though. Housing for only about ten students has been secured -leaving about 30 without families to live with when they arrive July 16. There must be 30 more families In this city willing to open_their doors to these students. Living with an Americao family will be the m .. 1 valuable e.<perience the students cs11 gain, but It also is highly rewarding for the 601ffamily. ' The studenta will attend summer scboo~ go on tours of local tourist' altrsctlona and visit parts o( Huntington Beach that even most reSldenla have never seen. But when they return to their homeland what they probably will remember most about Huntington Beach are the families who shired their homes with. them. A <f:Jact111ion over dinner will leave-a longer 'lasting im- presslo11 than a tour of the Queen Mary. And for the family ii will add new dimension to their world. Call Mrs. Edie Bissett, (21 3) 427-3244, U you would like to help. An Unusual Clinic A serious health problem is receiving donated time and free facilities from Fountain Valley Community Hospital and its staff. For the past three montha, the hospital has been eonducting a free scoliosis clinic for the detection of curv- ature of the spine for girls in the Fountain Valley Ele· mentary School District. ScolloslB has. been blamed for a variety of hack problems, ranging from frequent backaches to hunch· back deformity and even death, Jn extreme cases when the deformity has inhlbiled the function of the lungs. Research has proven that the hack problem has affected more adolescent girls than boys. Detection is easiest during the growth period of ages IO to 14 years. and it .ll; this age group that has received the focus of the clinic's attention. · The clinic, held the first Saturday of each month, is. coordinated by Mrs. Mary Miller, R.N., who is plan- nmg other clinics, both medical and educational, for the Fountain Valley community. The scoliosis cUnic is a commendable program initiated by the hospital for the benefit of the commu- nity ii serves. H - ~ I_;, .. -~..;;::,.,,.... ~IF I 60, WE S01H 'o:' How Re ~~ .Econotn11-mlnded Driver Leaves Car at Home Lik on Can Ens!::ve Dear t:loomy l , L.S Two-hit Bus Line Wins Applause ~Yi>NEY J.HARRI~ Boagbll al Large: There are two-i;inds of "reasonable'' people: those who guide their instinctual drives toward legitimate satisfactions, and the far larger number who use rea.900 to repress their instinctual drives; and the latter sort are just as much the slaves of reason as the libertines are the slaves cf passion. • • •, The unknown, no matt.er how hannlest, i~ always more feare<I than a known danger; and since our age has plunged lnto the unknown , on all fronts_, faster th3:I!_any other, it is scarcely surprising that we show more pupnc fear and priv- ate anxiety than any past era. • • • I wonder how many persons ~·ho abhor "drugs " ;>op a couple of aspirins in their mouth the 111oment they feel a headache comlng on. instead or taking a brisk walk in the fresh air, a short snooze, or some other form · ron-c:hPmical therapy. • • • Beethoven woul d rewrite a musical phrase a dozen tin1es; Mozart would dasb of! a p;:ige wlth:ut a second thought; ho:•; ha~d or long or con- No y,·onder people dump kittens! A stray cat has kittens in your 1ard, and imtead of dumping them you take them to the powld . . • where the¥ want five dollan! So I guess we dump them and they -can have more tltteos. -M.L.D. OIMftty .... .. .. ....... w ,........ ................. ....., ... .._..•I lfle •••••r. IW ,_."' -· ,. •'-"Y ... .,..., ...... scientiously you labor over a aeative project hiis nothing to do with talent, on- ly with temperament. • • • We complain tbtl the young are overturning our va.JUes and inatltutkm; yet since the beginning of recorded time, the younc bave llllCOlllplalnlngly gone out to be slaughtered In combo! to satisfy the pride, vanity, greed and "honor" of the old in every generation. • • • People who use foul language where It doesn't belong should be more rebuked for having an impoverbhed _vocabulary than a "filthy mind." (In molt cues, the words have no "dirty" referent, but are simply verbal exclamation points to stress Inarticulate feelings.) • • • As soon a we learn we cannot gt something we wanted , it becomes far dearer to us in imaginattlon than it woold have been in pouession. Watergate Hush. Money Eyed for Tax Liability WASHINGTON -Those responsible for the Watergate ci-ime may have to pay taxes on the $1 million in campaign funds that were laid out for break-ins, hush money, legal feet and political 111>- otage. Tax experts tell us President Nixon himseU Is liable If he had knowledge ol the cUsbursements. Even if his aides kept , him In the dark, he .may still be held · legally respooslble for the tax ol>flJatloo: This Is the lmpori of a 11111-.ct C.eneral Accounting Office study on the Nixon campaign committees. Quolinl tax: rules, the study declam that "the e1- pendtture of pollllcal fuods for other than campaign or similar purpoae1 will be former Attorney General John M!tcbell, White Hou.so 1taff chief, H. R. Haldeman, pl'!sidential adviser John Ehrlldunan "1d campa!cn aide Jeb Magrude<. OUr tu advisers say the President may also be In tu trouble over the fhwl. cial help he accepted from aenisol king Robert Abplanalp to buy the San Clemente ~treat. 1 considered a dlveraloa of sUcb funds re- 1 quiring tncluslon a1. income." THE NIXONS signed pmona1 notes, which ·Abplanalp later tore up, for $625,000. fn return, Abplanalp Is suppooed to own moat of the a&-1cre tract around nus DRY language explains how the the presldenllal comPouoct. Internal Revtnu e Service is supp()led to The Flnt Family gbt ~ deal Ii' treat campaign funds that aren't apeot pn>ved by the local Internal Revenue of. I To the Editor: Hooray for the two-bit bus line! In these times when governments are beirij- so roundJy criticized by citizens for not doing things, I think that loud applause should be beard for the Orange County Transit District. Tbe buses are clean, run on time and the driven are all courteous. They are scheduled frequeoUy and the intersection or·two or more lines is tim- ed so pencm do not have to wait for a transfer very long. MAILBOX Lette.rs from readers are welcome. Normally writer.s sh.oukt convtJI their messages irt 300 word& or less. The right to condense lettert to fit space or eUminate libel is reserved. All ltters mu.st iftclude · lignature and mailing ad.d1es1, but name.r may be withheld on r<qU<st if 1ufficl<nl reason is apparent. Poetry will not be published. WE HEAR much these days about a fu el shortage and an energy crisis. It seems to me that a lot ol people do not care. I have ridden the ocrD bu.9es ex- Wllively and the majority ol passengers are those who either do not have automobiles for tCcmomk reasons or cannot drive {elther too youna or too old). I do have a c:ar and am able to drive, but for two-bit& {25 ceota), I can't afford to take my car out of the driveway! SO, I use the ocro whenever I can. I Ufle other cttizem of. the area to do the same. If they need infonnaUon or schedules they can call 547"°°4 or write to the OCTD, 1126 E. Washingtoo., Santa Ana 92701. Try the bus, you'll like it; and save some money!. WALTER J. GRIESMEYER Proud Mailman To the J;:ditor: This Is regarding the article in W-y's Dafly Pilo~ (June 6), "Charge1 Fly Over Checks". Since I work out of the Mesa Center Post Office I have oo knowledge of. the missing Social Security checks as all Incoming mail Is delivered to the main Poot Office on Adams. The article, however, quoted an aoonymous Costa Mesa maH~er. It is with him that I take exception. He is quoted as saying lhat morale among Post Office employes is at an all-time low. MY MORALE is not low. Certainly the anonymous carrier could not have been employed at lhi s Post Office 18 years ago. I well remember those rainy days on the bicycles. Only a few streets were paved all the way across. It was Ml"ftSlry to dismount the bicycle and slOllh through mud to each mailbox. It wu lmpoalble to keep yourself or the mall dry. W ··thoee Slota Ana winds! Yoo bad to get olf and push the bike ; otberwiae, you and the blke went over. You could not get a cold drink of water -you relumed from your rouU! in the he.et of. summer. We had no Coffee or vending machln... Employes did not receive a unUorm allowance. There was no local union to represent postmen, con· sequenUy there was no grievance or labor-management committee. In fact, there were no committees of any kind. Seniority meant nothing. 'lbese problems have been corTected; and today morale is much higher than it was then. 11IE ANONYMOUS postman was also quoted: "Nobody bas pride in his work anymore. Nobody gives a damn." I vigorously deny this allegation. I have pride in MY work, and I lll06t assuredly do "give a damn". I do my best to pteue. I enjoy my work and I enjoy my association wilb my patrons and co- workers. The majority of my fellow postmen alao bave pride In their jobs. I aay majority -not all. No doubt there are some who do not. Mr. Anonymous P0&tman should opeak for himself and henCeforth not Include me and rther hardworking mall-caniers when he makes false generallUIUom. I conclude thi! letter 1'ith this thought to my patrons: Your mail-carrier does ~ve pride In doing his job for yoo. When ttie time comee that I don't "give a damn", I shall quit the Post Office. JOHN C. BULL Fh1e the Slobs To the Editor: Read with interest your editorial, Sun- day, June 3, 1973 -"Inland Papers, Please Copy." My husband and I are from the East. We took a walk on Huntington Beach, Monday, May 28, a».it six o'clock In the evening. We couldn't believe our eyes. Shame, ahame on every one of you who enjoy the beach but walk away leaving it looking like a garbage dwnp. I SUGGFSr, to keep the tax pa ye r from being the fall lllY for theoe slobs, yoo post $100 littering signs 01i the beaches just like they do on the highways. The lifeguards sit high enough so that they could call the slobs' attention to where the trash cans are located. If this fails, prohibit food or drink of any kind to be canied onto the beaches. It's early m· the season -let's do something now to keep our beaches beauU!ul. Next time, "Stop, Think Tra sh cans." MRS. L. KENNEDY 'BlUy luk' To the F.ditor: I'm writing in answer to what a Atr. James B. Wood had to say about the movie 0 Billy Jack." ObviOUAly, Mr. Wood didn't get any meaning out of this movie, but he ...... to be .. dose-minded he wouldn't understand it anyway. HE SAYS Billy Jack is full of violence, which is totally ridiculous. There is a liUle, but If be paid any attention at all he would have noticed that Billy Jack never carried a gun and in a couple of in- llances was figbling In self-defeose. "Billy Jack" also bas a little anti- est.abllslunent In it so Mr. Wood prob- ably reacted without tblnklng. MR. WOOD says that humans cannot be that evil and the human experience cannot be that hopeless. Billy Jack did all he could to protect the Indian, and put his life on · the line doing it. This movie brings oot truth which Mr. Wood evidmlly Is afraid to hear. I ouggest he see it a few more times and open up bis mind a Jittle and face reality. STEVE DELANEY Cardboard Drama To the Editor: I have just read the letter James B. Wood wrote that describes "Billy Jack" as revolting. I would have to agree, although It Is not so much the violence in this PG-rated picture that revolts me {There Is violeoce, but I think Mr. Wood exaggerates: one rape, one seduction, would be more fair, for example). For its trivia, childishness and the insult of its petty moralism, "Billy Jack" ranks as one of the three worst pictures I've ever seen -the other two, more offensive, being "Gettlng Straight'' and "Caatle Keep. 11 In all fairness, "Billy Jack" at least had some very clever -and fUDDy -paychodrama scenes {although I've heard tbat most of that material wu borrowed ). I CAN'T agree. that the 1dvertlslng was misleading. Especially the TV ads made this movie look like a Cllllbination Gidget Goes Hipple anll Clint Eutwood Goes Indian. I went to see it out of curiosity, despite the ads, and laterhad to conclude, What you see (ln the.ads) is what you get! Whether the movie deserves the amount or publicity it has been given isn't the question: those full page ads \Vere paid for, J presume. The questiocfls, why are so many people talk· ing about what a great motkm picture this is? for campaign purposes .. The new re-flee, but our tu uperts lnsl1t !ht N._. -lllU r I revealed that the late Sen. Tom Dodd (D-lnU!rpret the law, the tearlnc up of !ht :/I quirement was adopted in 1968 after we should pay tues on the '825,000. Al they nwi~ i' ~ -011U1:)"lmd'dlvcrted"lenl'Of-thou8arids·of-penonal-noteo ----.tile can---- Violence or not, I cin ~omctlmes en~b ___ good~commcrclaLentertainment.as..ro 1 dollara Crom his campoign coffers Into cellaUon of the debl -makes the _ bis 01111 pockels. Dodd WIJ censured, and IGl.000 tanble -.... miodlrected campaign funds were made 'llley point out that the N-are I taul>le. uoJnc lhe entire • ....... that .,_ty I Now Nixon's campaign collectlons bave recordl lhow no evidence the -e · been diverted Into Improper pockett and has· been )eaally divided and that the spent fw llleaal purposes. OUr tu ad· whole deal appean to be a gimmick to 1 visert AJ aomeone m"'t pay tuea on benefit the NiaOllll. the MeC),000 II least that WH paid to the ' Waterbuggers to buy their silence and to A SPOKESMAN for the President compensaU! their lal')'ers. In a 11 assured us, on the other hand, that likellbood, the hundreds of lhouJands Abplonalp ts the lepl owner of the Land spent on illegal campaign aetlvttles arc around the Nixon compound, that the 8190 taxable.. land la aolng up lo vaJue ·and lhl\ it is a proflttblo Investment lot Abplanal~. IF THE President can't be stuck with , the tu obllgoUon, then the csmpalgn • aides who made the! pa)"Cllta. are clearly I liable. 'llley would Include Finance ' Dialrman Maurice Stans, the President's )lof90IUll t.awyer Herber! Kalmbochc I i If anyone but the President wtre In· volved, Internal Revtnue IW'dy would be. lnvcsu.llllng. A 1pokesman refused lo tell uS:Jhowever, whether IRS ts ln- vestlg1Ung the President or any ol his aJdes on ta1 matters. as a "thinkJng person's" movie. AU I ask is that the cardboard drama not be presented in the guise of social com- mentary. For me, the most depresslng part or this movie experience was having to sit In a Costa Mesa theater literally packed with people (not all of them wuit.r 15 either), whO ~·ere wildly 1ppreclatlve everyUme one or the good punks scored a Quotes "I don '& care U meat ion Co $C a pound, I woatda'l go throap thl1 1pln." -Pat Flathau of S4glnaw, Mich., who with her husband and three chlldren rais- ed two 1tee1> In the baclcyard after get· ting mad about rising meat prices. . . -point again!il 0·1~ or the hltefu1 Establishment . I'r1 begiMing to think that if you used an emotional enough tone. you C()UJd stand up in front ol an audience anywhere aqct ~ applauded for saying just about anything. ALICE VAN VLEET 'Ob•cenlty' To the Editor: Please convey my thanks to Russ Walton on "Obscenity" in the---.June-7- Daily Pilot. , My wile and I were recently -in San r Francisco and were wiable to flnd the location of the Museum of Erotic Art. We f ' inquired of taxi driven, our hotel, r checked the phone.book and visitors IJI· formation sources -all without success. ! With Mr. Walton's column, I'm iure we would have found it. I have seen "Deep 11troat" but bale not seen either the "ta.st 'Tango in Paris" or the MUJellin or Erotk: Art. I trust you will continue running hls col- umn, as I will conUnue to look for further recommendations. F. M. WHITE Llberfll Dictators To the Editor: It Is now happening In our great city of Newport Beach. ULTRA-LIBERAL o u t s i d er s or ''nouveau'' residents and other milguJded beings in the name of ecology and-or peoples' righta are dictating tile use to which we utilize our property righta. All o( this irrespective of.city ordinances or zoning. Their sole purpoae b to destroy our way of life here and elsewhere and to bring all people down to me '1evel - theirs. IT IS TIME these people were exposed once and for all. To reveal to the unsuspecting the socialist and communist - doctMnes which these people embrace, while using the shield of the Cmstitution and oor Bill of Righta In the atumpt to destroy us. ' ROBERT W. GOOSSEN 'F..-u'.J'•• 1 To· tJ1e Editor : , I ' May I express my lcelinp about Dole I Hale's "Figments ?" My family· and I get a lot of pleasure from this C0111ic. It ls so true to life meaning the imaginations of all. I ~ this continues to be in our Daily Pilot. The Daily Pilot ls a line paper. \ MRS. MILDRED BINTLIFF ' OUN .. COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wttd, NU.Mr -rn,,,...,· KU!ill, uiror- Barbara. Kreibiim Editorial Page Editor 'l"he editorial ~pep oC the DaUy Pilot ~ks to Wonn and lltimul&1e- l"ttlders by prt1entlna Gn tbla pap dlvtnie •Commentaey' on topjt'.'I GI tn- teftlt by c)rndlc11!d ootumn!tts •od cartOOftlsb. by provfdinc a ronim tor ttllldtn' ~land by ~ttils newspaper's opinions And ideq on current te)f»ct. The f'dttorl&l optaioi• of !ht Daily Pilot •wear only in the ~itortal column at tbc 1l>p al the pqe. Opinions iex~ by tht • l.llMlstl and c~ and 1itier .wrtlft'I are the-tr own ad no adww mtnt of ... Ir -" ,... Doll7 Pilot-be- Wednesday, June IS, 1973 • • ' • I ' ' - WtOlttSdJY, June: 13, 1973 ~ DAILY PILOT .§ • Girl, 15, Stabbed To Deat h Reinecke Says Aide Pointed /Out. ErroP f'riest, Woman ~ " ' ~.~ •, 't \ ~ ' . ·~ Hostages~ ,. NOVATO (AP) -<\:.i Dakland man took a ca~­ priest and one of hJ,s parishioners hostai" at guq- SAN DIElGO (AP) -A 1$- ~-ear-old girl was stabbed to death Tbesday 100 yards from her high school campus, sheriff's deputies said. Officers said t w o ~ structkln workers grabbed a man they saw running from the area and held him for an arrh1ng highway Jl'!lrolman. ( BRIE ES ) They said the man, Jerry R. Schnick, 24, of San Diego, was later booked for investigation or murder. Carol Valkoneii was at· : tacked as she walked to Jl.fonte Vista High School, Spring Valley southeast of San Diego. '1be coroner's office said her body had more than 10 stab wounds an'd her thro3t was cut. A hunting knife was found in a nearby field, officers said. Acquittal Toast ' A· 2l·year-old sailor accused of wartime sabotage, which delayed the sailing of the carrier Ranger for Vietnam last summer, was f.ound innocent by a Navy court martial board. Fireman Patrick D. Chen- oweth of Puyallup, Wash., (right) had a victory cele- bration in Oakland at which his civilian attorney, • f111iieacfut1e nt Eric Seitz, poured him a glass of champagne. SAN DIEGO (AP) -Tho ··-----'-"---'--"-----'----- ~ Diego County Democratic ~J!1~=~~~t ,..,h h ~ d~ :!bf~ .. 1i:i~=n~---• DID '-'ar . over the people of the United States." 'l1le commlttee passed a resolution Tuesday night ac- cusing Nixon of obstructing justice in the Watergate case "by wiliully and deliberately obfuscating the involvement of bis aides 'in crime and cor- ruption." Panel Views Hitchhiki1i g e Escapee Held RIVERSIDE (AP) -One of 10 men who escaped Sunday from a Tijuana, Mex ....... prison has been captured, Riverside police say. Clyde P. Evam, 33, was ar- resled early Tuesday and held on U.S. charges ot conspiring to import cocaine, police said. SACRAMENTO (AeJ Those thumbing a ride on California highways could car· ry a state-issued identification Senate OKs Instrument Protection U.S. C.Ommissioner Robert ~ SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Timlin ordered him taken for Electric Guitar Protection Act trial ro ~ Diego, where ho of 19'73 has cleared tho· s1ate was indicted by a federal . grand jury in April. Seven Senate on a ~ vote .. card aimed at reducing crimes involving hitchhikers under legislation approved in its first committee test. Tuesday, the· Assemb l y Tr a nsportation Committee voted 9-1 to send the measure to the Assembly Ways and Jl..fe~ Committee after hear- ing one backer say: "Hit- chhiking Is here to stay." That comment came from Richard Vega, six>kesman for t h e California Hitchhikers Lobby. He added the FBI and _other groups have failed over the years to stamp out hit· chhiking. SAN DIEGO (AP) -Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke says a phone call from then-Asst. At· ty. Gen. Robert Mardian caus- ed him to change hts: mind aboul the; date of a conference he had wiUt former Atty.~Geo. Jolm Mitchell, a meeting which has been linked with the lTI ~rovem~ , Reinecke named Mardian _Tuesday to reporters asking , him • about a federal in· vestigation seek i ng to determine whether· ~Relnecke or Mitchell conufiitted perjury before a-.Senate committee last year. Ii was the second time Reinecke had changed his story about meeting with Mitchell. FIRST HE told reporters and Sen. John V. Tunney ([}. Calif.), that he and Mitchell met in May 1971 and talked about San Diego's bid for the 1972 Republican Convention. Reinecke said then he may have discussed an offer by International Telephone and Telegraph to underwrite the convention. After the Justice Depart- ment dropped aif antitrust suit against I'IT last June, a memo allegedly written by a com· pany lobbyiSt was published linking the action to the offer to underwrite the convention . Reinecke was tlhen called before a Senate linvestigatlng comm:ittee and said he hadn't met with Mitchell the previous May. He said that 'after his statement aboUt the ?¥1ay meeting was published, an anonymous caller told his of- fice to recheck b i s travel reeords, and the recheck showed no meeting had taken place in May. THE CHANGE of story prompted Alty. Gen. Elliot Floor Gets Hair Bill other persons were arrested-State Sen. James Whet· for investigation ol harboring • more's bill would require IN RELATED action. the SACRAMENTO (AP) a fugitive, police said.. owners_of night spots who committee voted 6-2 to kilJ a Longhaired males couldn't be e Stllff SU111s RIVERSIDE (AP) -The chancellor of the University of California at Riverside says he will not send dismissal ootices ro 20 faculty membe" by July 1 after all. Ivan Hinderaker said Tues-- day he was withdrawing his decision of last week and tho notices will not be sent until a thorough review or aCademic programs with f a c u 1 t y participation. Hinderaker had announced the p e n d i n g dismissals in the face of a faculty cutback of 30 due to enrollment drops . blocked from entering employ musicians to take bill tl;lat would outlaw hit-restaurants or bars under· .. a "reasonable means" to guard chhiking except in cases L·bill sent to the Assembly fIOot. the instruments against theft where someone's car has Tuesday . the Assembly Or damage. proken down, the person needs Judiciary C o m m i t t e e ap- Wbetmore, a La. Habr@ . help, or the hitchhiking takes proved .the measure by Assemblyman John Burton Republican who la himself a-place in an area designated by (D-San Francisco) whose own musician, Siaid Tuesday that 1n the local government entity. hair is ·modishly long . the ··Age of Amplified instru-The bill that died three votes Burton introduced the ments sudt as the electric gui· short of passage was authored measure after he was asked to tar, musicians frequently by Assemblyman J 0 h n _leave the Redwood Roon1 of leave them tn the club Thurman (D-Modesto). the Clift Hqtel in San Fran- overnight instead of lugging Assemblyman John DWllap cisco beca_use his hair was too all the electronic equipment CD-Napa), authored the sue· long to sui t management. home. -cessful bill which he said was Ass e m b I y man F~ank \Vhetmore said some in· aimed at giving motorists Lante"!lan, ' a b a Id 1 n g strument.s Jeft overnight have some assurance that card-car-~epubhcan from La Canada, been damaged y,.1len imbibing rying hitchhikers had been is a coauthor of the rneasure. • R oidie Killed patroru; decid< to hold an im-checked out by authorities. promptu coocerl.. The state would not be liable SouSAthCRAMEP"~"de~ e s<f%! n t 5 The bill now goes to the for any hitchhiker crimes. ICE SKAJJ-NG ....,.. Assembly. hm\'ever, Dunlap said. have won a preliminary vie. tory in their battle to reroute .----------------------.! LESSONS ~e•=d ~cit~ach FANS GO APE FOR A DAY -E · . '111e Assem bl y Tran&- port.ation Com mi.t tee wt- ed 12-0 Tuesday !OT a bill sponsored _by · Assemblyman John L. E. C.Ollier CR-Los Angeles) to wipe out the cur· rent alignment of the freeway through portions of Alhambra. South Pasaden a and P~sadena. Good Deed SAN FRANCISCO (AP)= "Go Ape for a Day," suggested the \Varfield theater marquee as some 2.200 people formed a·block-long line for a seat at the one-day showing of all five "Planet of the Apes" films. The complete sho\ving, which included the latest and supposedly final "Battle for the Plano! of the Apes," ran a total of nine hours Tuesday - longer than a back-to-back playing of "Ben Hur" and HGone With the Wind." "It's really something," said James Sutton, district manlJ.ger for Nation~l General Theaters, as he 'vatched the fans pour into the theater for $1 a tickel "We ought to sell a lot of bot dogs." New Clinics Now Open 'COST A MESA-HUNTINGTON BEACH medical • En hance your child's poise Lindora1s unique progra m is a safe and practical" a nd posture. A p lan ned RJChardson to ask special becouae "Ui-xpt11 oo-Wllo1e W a i er g a t e pro -idell o( bringing the coovention Archibald C.Os this week to in-ro San Diego had not come vestigate the possibllit.y of up.11 - perjury. The convention wa~ awarded Reinecke said Tuesday the lo San Diego in JunoJ!171 b\lt meet1n(! with Mltcbell aetuany · later switched to Miami BUch . toolt place in April 19'71. He in the wake of the !Tl' allega- said he nceived not· only an tions 11inct reported disputes anoo.ynwus phone call ~ also about rental of facilities here. point Tuesday In an attempt to• rob lho Central Valley B"'*' per'"~.h.P.2'lk!,~""'~ec1.,.._..,..-_.,...._c_,__~ The hostages were released unharmed when police 5eize4, the gun after, being called ti: the scene by bank employ'"e!; authorities said. a call from Mardian, !hen UluLJusli~ head 1 of the J,U"! tn Department in May 1972 and Department's Internal Securi-became a political coordinator ty DiVWOn. f6rtfieNiXOO campaign. -xi"" Mardian told him the turned •-his ~--•-Ar. re w r-u1.~nu., IZ., meeting had been In April, aod construction-COmpal))' I a s I suggested a check or tra~l ~ovmber. He couldn't be, records, which confirmed the reached for comment Tues. change, Reiiled<e·said. 1t-.day. , "It was a difference of three Reinecke said ~ hasn't Eugene l.(!llis Gray, 23,, __ Our Lo!b'. of Loreti>. -di~ with a .33- caliber pistol. forcing the Rev.' Leonard Calegari and M,rs. LoWse White, · 52, inro lhO · preists' car. police said. '·,' . -They said Gray asked ro b<i ." Uf'I T.......,. taken to the downtown b&it A.First . weeks, II he .;iaid. "I ~ ·~-been-contacted by a n y () n e trips to Washington eomtl~· · from Cox's inv.e!t.igation. "I've HE SAID he couldn't have nothing to h"kie;" he Said. "I'll talked to Mitchell then aOOUt be mo're ·than willing to tum the Republican Convention over my files.''. Accused 'Draws,' .Freshman Assembly· man Frank Holoman (D-Los Angeles) had girls whistling at him · all day when he ap- peared before legisla- t i v e committees in walking shorts. It was a first at a pilblic hear- ing, accoi'ding to Capi· tol observers. where he sent Father Calegari' to .ask for mooey and kept tl10 woman in the car at gunpoint. The priest alerted bank · employes who called J>Qlice t'q the scene. Police said they ar>:; ·· proached· the vehicle ~d .. : diverted Gray 1 s attention. , enabling officers to seize bis • weapon. Gray was booked for in- vestigation of "kidnaping With attempt to commit robbery. · Fakes Wounding 1-WANTED- DIAMoNns • GEMSTONES SACRAMENTO (AP ) A court interJJt:eter who _,vas defendant in a murder case seated in the first row of J•wel• bv jo••ph i1 ••arching for diall'londt •nd pulled a simulated gun in a Municipal Court J u dge 9ern,tona1 from privet• i11dividual1 and •1t1t•1. courtroom and.then aotedas if Edward Garcia's courtrooni. C1r•ful ••emin•tion errd a11al11atio" b't cur arparh. he were shot by a bailifr. A shot fired by a bailiff Hi9~•1t price• p1id, Call 540-9066 10·9 dally, k th fl Da Seturday 10·6, Su"d•y clo1ed, e1k for Mr. Den11i1 The me. ident T u e s d a y struc e oor near rrow, folir<it M-r. Jose ph. delayed the arraignment of but he fell to the ground as if Neil DaITOW, 25, for the he had been shot, witnesses 1·ewels by ·10· seph _shooting June 8 or his estrang-said. ed wife, Margaret, in the tor-Asked by reporters if the ridor of Sacramento Medical piece.s of paper Darrow stuf· Solltlt Comt Pkaa • l JJJ t.;tst-1. C.... ,... • 540ot06' Center.' His arraignment was fed together really looked like I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ rescheduled for today in a gun, Dep. Dist. AW. Bart II Sacramento holunicipal Court. Bleuel said, "It looked real. I Witnes.ses said Darrow pull-,thought it was real." ed out several pieces of a -Deputies overpowered Dar- magazine wadded together in row after he fell to the floor ,the shape of a gun from Wlder and retW1led him to his jail a yellow pie<!e of paper shortly cell. after he entered t b e courtroom. "HE SAID, •everybody get do.,..n,' and everybody did. We all got down. Then he squatted down • . • and the bailiff shot," said Gladys G. Cook, a He · was arrested at the V'allejo b~ depot six hours after a man _fitting--hi description shot Qarrow's wife at the hoSpital. Officers said Darrow was armed when he was captured. -coNGRATULATIONll-5 - MOTHll _. SON GIADUATIS JESSIE WNORE LOUGH u,.. .... ~.-.. ftOfll ,, .... , ••• k .. Col ..... a.. ....... .... ,. --1MICHAEL GILBERT LOUGH u,.. .......... ,.... ..._Hl .. _H __ THE woa•n OIDl8T WHISKEY - PRESENIS THE WOR•Dll OIDEST MAIL I'VE BEEN ASKED 10 LIST SOM E OF THE BEST THINGS THAT EVER HAPPENED TO ME. HERE GOES ••• BIK INIS, DRIVE-JN MOVIES, THE WHEEL, DEVILED EGGS, MEDICATED POWDER (DID I SUFFER FROM TOGA CHAFING)! AND BUSMMILLS. WHEN T!iEY MADE IT IN 1608, "THEY DIDN'T REALIZE WHAT THEY wt':RE DOINGFOR.MY LEISUREHOURS! _ GEE, -.t.MOl>E-WE-HAV&A bGT OF LEISURE ><OURS ! .I ,' I " _ • method for the entire family to lose weight and program of lessons with the Wei . ht--learn..ho.w...to..ma intoin-pr_oper_w.eight ........... u.nde"--+-H""''"cl"'-u:1ivejg_o~C..•.o.ad.ea:..eaay_ ~ the striCt supervision of Medic.Q.l Doctors. learn ing method gives yo u • or your child hu llhy exercise r·n ple11ant euperv l11d re~uc1·1on Coll for informorion aurroundlnga. " Monday ih,. Fcidoy 8 A.M. to 6 P.M. REGISTER NOW UNDORA+ -. MEDICAL cuN1c'f ~:~~~~;~~ •• ACN . 557-1893 ICE_ ~I \l '\111 1 ~ IEWPOIT IEACH GARDEN GROVE LONG BEACH PASADENA v---<1--64J-3.l'<t0 34.2051 426-6549 7-96°2614 oiAllCE 531-2395 0. "~ 'r(, . -IJIU8llMIUS r-,..,."'""" "el •• ~ ..... -.n: •• -...... ,,..r.._.,Jft, twf. .."k~lclt. WOODLAID HIUS SHEIMAI OAKS ~~ COVlllA FULUITOI LA HAUA 3<t7-564/ 719-7103 962-3431 170-9501 69<t-1029 w ... -vi...y OfrlMA.'I'" Dy4 """..... St•I• (...... Hillc~t MfflctillWf. ,. .... .i.11e1•1ttt. •i.lil· Mt4ic•IMit. "'"' ........ MISA t l lDI Sf10,,IN• CIMTll 2701 H•tbor lh•d. et -'d•l'llJ Co1•• Me••· c.1u. •2626 Ttl. 17141 '79-1110 ' I I ' I I ,. Orange Coast EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 164, 5 SECTIONS, 100 PAGEf . ~ ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13, 191-3-N TEN CENTS S-enate eommit ee tl~ays Irvine Medical Bill By GEORGE LEIDAL . Ot ™' o.llY """ '''" UC Irvine, acting med ical school dean Stanley van den Noort. won't have to ap- pear in ,Sacramento tonight before ijle state Senate Education Committee. The committee today passed a bill by sl;ate Senator Dennis Carpenter ( R· NJ!wport Beach) that \vould provide fWlds for planning the UCI-Califomia Col\ege of Medicine teaching hospital regardless Ol actions by the joint . legislative conference committee en the budget. UC officials in Sacramento describe the Carpenter bill as a precautionary measure in the event the items arc left out Of the 1973-74, $9 billion plus state budget. or are deleted by Governor Reagan. To remain active in the Legislature. 1 Carpenter's ,bill appropriating J825,000 of vot.er·approved-bond moneys for the hospital . working· drawings had to clear the committee_py rhctay. -- A companion bill by Assemblym-an Robert Badh8m (R:Newport Beach) is ready to go in the Asseml:!ly in_the event the bills are needed. Since it is more difficult to get such bills1 to the floor ·of the Senate af~ the rules deadline cf June-15, today's Cducation co1nmittee hearing was con· sidered ''critical" by UC officials. Van den Noort was expected to outline the need for the teaching hospital. as a means to increasing class size of the uc1.cer-.1 from 64 to !Hi students entered each year. Further, the funds Senator Carpenter's bUI would free would provide planning money for the community clinics and the upgrading of Orange County l\1edical Center (QCMC). Earlier this session, a joint committee studying the spending of UC bond funds recorrunended that the Legislature spend $15 million of UC bonds money on .the -teaching hospita l (200 beds, on campus ), anotlier $9.5 million to upgrade the pl'escnt teaching facilities at OCMC (by rt'<lucing from 515 to 315 the nwnber cf beds there) and create a county system of co1nmunity based waUc:·in ca re clinics including transportation between them and UCI and OCMC. UC officials expect the joint conference C<1mmittee on the budget tO provide at lcast_J&anning moneys for all the recom- mended items. The Carpenter and No Chee~ Irvine Ranch Land Evidence-Beach Bill Defense By TO&! BARLEY Of .. DlllY PllM St•fl lf Mile Square Park farmer George Murai had ever been asked to make out a ~.000 check to county Supervisor Robert Battin's campaign fund that check would have been on view in the courtroom dur- ing the current trial, defendant Derek ?i.1cWhinney's lawyer today told an Orange County Superior Court jury. 0 We've been told -a heck"ota lot about !Omething iha.t never existed," com· meoted attorney Joseph Ball as he neared the end of his final argument in the erand theft-bribery trial of fonner Westminster mayor McWhinney, 40, and oily planner Tad Fujita. 34. Neither defendant ever asked ~1urai t-0 write' auch a ~. Ball Wisted, __ "Th«e is not one shred of evidence apart-from Murai's obviously biased testimony t-0 s.upport that claim ~ the Battin check was never mentioned in all the telephone conversations taped by the. prooeoutioo," he said. ~ BaU -.ilie<I the 15,000 I hande4, over to Jo~ujita as " . Ota deal .. ber'96y Derek promlsed to helj> Murai try to retain his lease, a business deal and merely that. "MUrJI was angry beCause. be could see Jand be had farmed for a mere $150 an acre being broken up and possibly shared out to other fanners at a possible $3%5an acre," Ball said. "Doesn't it stand to reason that a man in that position is going to be resentful and make some pretty wild statements that were eagvly seized on by the pros- ecution?" Balf asked the jury. The prosecution alleges that 1'-1cWhin·_ ney and Fujita shook down Murai for a total of·f10;000 witll the threat tllat they h-1 the power to terminate his interest in the 215 acres of strawberr'y fields at Mile Square P..ark. It is alleged that Fujita was the middle man in the extortion attempt and that he \\-as assigned by McWhinney to take the $5,000 in bills in a table 1oi-transaction witnesied by district attorney's in· vestlgators. But Fujita's attorney, Al Stokke. told the jury that his client wu simply a "~ Samaritan'' who was acting as a medl8tof and was simply trying to "'°Ive the difference exfsting between two g'ood friends -Murai and ~cWhifi.. ney. Stokke stressed, like Ball, that ~turai !mew he might lose land on which he had (See McWBINNEV, Pa&e %1 Jury Reaches 11-1 Not Particular \Ve.'fe all brothers under t11e skilt. At.least that's the way this l>ober· " man ,.PinsC&et namea Pride feel.S about it. The pedigreed do g, mother of mne ... oJ her own, Look on threlo/kittens who were orphaned when their mother was killed by a car. The, Robert Su_ttons of Detroit say Pride adopted the kittens iminediately after hearing their hungry meows. Qoai.·dAsks Qig~w.ay Unit To. Delay Property Actio11 I --Orange q>unty supervisors voted Tues· day to urge the State Highway Com- mis.soo to delay dispOsal of property p(Jrchased for 1the DO\v~efunct Pacific Coast freeway . Ne\vport Beach has been pushing a bill through the legislature to have the State Division or High \vays declare surplus and · sell parcels within the City. The city \\'ants some oC them for park and opeo space IMd . A bill authorizing the state to pay $7.6 million for 3.s.tniles of Irvine Ranch beach and 1,600 acres of coastal sector lancls between Newport Beach and Laguna Beach cleared the state Senate natural resources and wildlife committee Tuesday. The vote was unanimous. state Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter lR· Newport Beach ) authored the measure which is expected to clear the senate finance committee by July 1, according to a CaJ'l)enter aide in Sacramento. If approved by the Senate and later the Stans Claims He Destroyed GOP Records ... WASHINGTON (AP) -Maurice H • Staas 1est1fled Ilda alte.,.... tliit he destniyed records of campaign transac~ tions later discovered.to have financed the Watergate wiretapping, but called it "pore and Innocent cOlacldence." \VASHJNGTON (UPI) -Se11. Herman E. Talmadge ·([)..Ga.), told Maurice H. Stans today it was "utterly in· conceivable" that Stans worried about bumper stickers and lapel pins but not $1 million in cash --disbursements for COUNTIAN TELLS COVERUP ROLE-Story, P•ge 4. unknown purposes in the Nixon re-ele<:· tion campaign. On his second day cf testimony in the Senate \Vaterga te 'bearings, Stans, the highest ranking Nixon campaign offici al to appear, told Talmadge and his col~ leagues on the panel that he knew nothing about the Watergate bugging, any -cover·up attempt or any other political espionage. Stans. fonner Commerce .secretary and prize..wirming certified public ac· countant who is sti U chairman of the Finance Committee to Re-elect the President. portrayed hls role as a fund· raiser who found himseU in "total frustration" over decisions being n1ade by the political amt ol the Nixon can1- paign organization. In his testimony, Stans: -Said President Nixon gave him a (S.. WATERGATE, Page ZI Assembly, SB 1089 \\·ould authorize state parks director William Penn ~1ott to buy lhe ocean front property valued at $15 million from the Irvine Company. The purchase would permanently assure public access to the prime beach land and proposed canyon parks. · " Included in the purchase price is land for: -Five beach parks, including two acres of"rock and tide pools. -3.s;miles cf beach fro nt, including 44 acres cf sandy beach. Ul"IT ....... RARE LIGHT MOMENT Stani •f Hurln91 Small--Stretclr. Of Ne·wport Free·way to Open . ~fotorlsts he"adiog for the Harbor Area will be able to stay on the fr~way a lit- tle_ longer. ·next week with the oPening a three-tenths mile stretch of the Newport Freeway into Costa Mesa. A Spokesman for the state Division cf Highways said the southbound section to Bristol Street would open on Monday and lhe northb-OWld section on Tuesday. The project includes six Janes each way and was completed at a cost of _$2.4 million which includes the Bristol Street (See Fl)EEWAV, Page%) • Impasse in Trial Supervisor Ralph Clark said the com· mission was scheduled to act on deelar • ing·sucti'Property1surplus witWn the ~t few days a6d a wire should be sent re. An Orange._County Superior Court jury queating the delaf. that recenlly deadlocked on perjury and The holdui) lo getting rid of the forn,ter, Coast Maid Gets Break •I ..... bribery charges aired against Newport free~ay parcel& was requested ·so that • , Beach attorney Everett Elwood Stone the SIOte Parks and ~ation Deport, S lf Z d W k C ' N 'H ' readied an impasse at tt lo one tn favor ment can study possible recreation uses e -emp oye or er ites e·wport arass1nent <i acquittal the Daily Pilot has learned. Jo• t•• ~rti<> , , ·Pro&ecuto~ Pat Brlan. the souree of· a -"'Cit:r~s3d 'tiis'"~ p·pi1"~if''' .. .,...,._,..,.,...,,-. ... 1"> ...... o1 ...... statement to'the effect that the jury was particularly io a strip cf land purchased E.astcr stepge is a ~aid at l~*': homes Sledge told councilmen he not only he said, "and they 've cost me ... dea<liocked at 11 to one In favor of con-for the freeway between the Santa Ana of Judges Wkf other-fine people m New-coulcbft afford U1e $70 annual fee, he Sledge said, "If I had signs all over victton has confirmed that he was mis!n-R\ve' and Beach Boulevard in Hun· port Beach. Or that's the way he secs it. couldn't afford the $100 tine he'd posted n1y truck$ and trucks all over the county, fonned when the jury returned from its ti.ngton Beach. He said Utis PfOperty, But the Laguna Beach man is-still when he was arrested for the second time <See MAIO, Page !) dehberat'?M. . some' 90 acres, could be used for .• eX'" going to have to get a business license, a month ago. · 'The J>ady Pilot re vets the ~rror • ~,of the Huntington Beach State even thoagh as 11 ' rule maids don't need Sledge also c h a r g e d harassment. • P•~' er for a travel trailer campin~ them in Newport Beach. , claiming he was picked up while at a His Security · W'~n't Secure A burglar alarm s y s-t e m salesman 'lost a aultcase containing samples of Ille Newport Beach company's ware~ to a car burgla'r Tuesday, whlle his 1porl-"l"Olldsl<r wu parl<ed near his office. wµuam R. Stewart, of, Hurst Sectlrity System~. 4600' 1.;amp41 Drive, complained to Police Offl<'<r Mlke McOonouvh !hat the $225 kit wa iilatched rlgtht out of hlS unlocked car. • sroun<nilana4J~ til"lliif . -s!Mge-liiffiefiei!1o cry 'IO\iP,'DuCli-e -cu...,.,..,.'S-im. . Although the ~ion of the su,pervi~rs, .exhausted his appeals this week. ''.A plainclothesn:ian ~ame up to me as Jar as Clark waa concerned, applied After twice being hauled into court for while r was at a Judges house and ar· only to ~ ·HUntington ~a~ 'strip, it ls worklnJ( in the city wt~i__a_ license, he ~ted me while. a polic:e car .cruised the obvklus that the Highway Comrofssion "'ent bclorc city councilmen ~1onday ~c1g~borhood wnh its . red lights flash- adopted-pollcy holding up Sll le( o! such nigllt ing . Sledge told oounc1lmcn. parce}a wwld apply to other land. ''I 'am the same as a female maid." '"lbat's harassment~· he ~a id, "it Sledge insisted. "and t know maids do damages my reputation. Neighbors sec __ DOL need business license!." that and they wouldn"t hire me. Jt 5. ()() Alt d M • I " HC-fOimd out clty officials consider doesn't look good." -en erttOl'lll him an independent conttactor. not a Sledge said be ha.'l an excellent rcputa · <SM/ RAFAEL (AP) -More than 500 penoos attended a memorial service 'l\Je>day !or-William PeM ~alrick. ·the cosmetics tnllllonalr.e whose fortune began het-e. Polrlck, 4.1, and one of his top business executives were killed &iturday w!t<n the vin\ag<1 military plan• Patrick WM piloting crru;hed near his ranch north. or here in Lake Oounty . " maid . Uon and gets alJ his \\'Ork by personal "ll yc,u work as a ·maid, -not an tn~ tererence. ' dependent contractor, you subject your--He &aiCi the lnct he doesn't do any ad- selr to rns .mandatory employer deduc-verti;sing n1eans he's not in competition tions .,, potnled out Cbuncilman John Ydth any othel'""businesses a'nd a further s~. · rcnson he doesn't need to be llcensect. Sledge who said he didn't advcrtlse "I have keys 10 halr·mllllon dollar nnd couldn't afford t-he $70 for a liCt>Dse, houses.'' Sledge said1 "I -.in a house- admitted that employers djd not take cltancr. All I'm trying to do is make an dcducUotl!I from his wages. honest living. J1ve lried \her \vt1y8," 1. CLA .. S..SlElED_AD__~ MAKES A SUCCESS I At least one or our rqaders is a success -thanks to a Daily Pilot classified \\'ant ad. RECEPTIONIST wanted for .N .B. law firm. Typing req'd. 8:30-$. can (l'hone No.) !or appl. She ans"·ered that ad and wa.s· hired. rr you're looking for a job, try looking at the classi/Jed ads in the Uaily PUot t~ day. Ton1orrow you could be succ:icssfullv employed . And to place an ad of your own, ctlal direct -The line to success - 642·~18. ' Badha1n bill s. however .. ~'Ould :issure t.he- "tcchnical" if not "political" chances of guaranteeing the expenditures this year. Another $6.5 million flf the $33 1nillion of bonds passed last fall and ea rmarked to ilnprove medical education at UCI. are in th e llud get Dills being considered behind closed d~rs by the joint con· fercnce co1nrnittee on the budget. Thi~ expense. although related in the sense that it \\'OUld provide 1nedical schoo l (See HOSPITAL. Page 2! Gains -A total of 1,6oo acres of coastal land of "'hich 1,200 acres is planned to be devoted to regional parks. -Inland parking areas serving the beaches and the regional park facilities. Carpenter's bill cleared the committee unchanged. Jts,draft form agrees with plans o~ the Irvine Company for the public dcvelop1nent of portions of its 10.000 acre coastal sector ocean view ranch property between the beach and the city at Irvine boundary in the San Joaquin Hills. Meat Hijack -. Suspeets Eace Commissioner A quartet of men accused of one of ~iie largest meat hijacking incidents in r~ cent history have beef! arrp.igoed befW'e a U.S. Commissioner in hos Angeles. roJJO\ving their capture Monday in Newport Beach. One er the suspects accused or engineering the attempted heist of 40,000 pounds of prime steaks worth $120,000 gained limited local fame this year as a campaigner for lower 1neat prices. Aridre "Bill" Harvey. 29. of 1020 , Cabrillo Park Drive, Santa Ana , \Yas af. ftllatm with a consumer organization called Mafia as .sales manager. The recently fired executive, now charged among the four who allegedly tried to sell the refrigerated truckload of nreat for $1.SO per pound, half the going commercial rate, explained the Mafia group's concern with me~t costs at a press conference in Ma.y. Harvey said it would see what could be done about the rising price of meat. in addition to auto repairs and other ron- sumer concerns. He and co-defendant Jeffrey Gilchrist . QLQrruigg,__are still held at Los Angele.' County Jail io lieu of $10.000 bail. FBI Agent Joe Powell said today. They are charged along with truck driver Henr-y-Quintana, 40, and his nephew and t1·ucking assistant, George Saldana, 20, with theft fron1 an interstate shipment. Quintana and Saldana. bolh or Garden Grove, were released on their own prom- ise to appear for a Jwte. 22 hearing in U.S. District Court , "'ithoot posl.ing $5,00IL. cash bail. Agent PowelJ, 8:n FBI Supervisor in the (See "MEAT, Page l) .. Orange Coast We!ltller ~fore of the same gloomy Jo1v ~louds are on the agenda Thurs· day, with partial clearing in the afternooo hours. H.ighs iri the mid· 60s st I.he beaches, rising to the lo\\' 70s inland. INSIDE TODAY -Abortia1t is big bt!si1u:s.s 111 Cul ifur1tta. The re <11·e doctors. llO$pi!al! und 1nidd!rn1e1~ tllaL Jpecialli?e i11 ft See •first artic le h~ series begh111i11g today uti Page 12. ---- •t Yeur Strvlft 3 l ,M, 8eY11 1 lottlftt 11 C1Ht.l'fllt J c1rMr Ctmer n Clt•1llltc1 6J.1l COf'l\IC.$ _ 6ol Crtuwerd 60 Dtfl!ll Htllctn 1f E4i,,.tfll "'''~ 4 11111er1•!~-• •a·•• ll'INll(fl ~JJt """ "" lttffl1'41 ·1• "'"ICIPI I' Ill S.r.ict '' Alll'I lllHlll'• •• MlllilelC 4 Mtwl• 41-41 Mtltlli1 ,Vllft '9 Hii~ lolt'lfl I Orlllltt e11111ht t-1• ll'TA oM 1"4'11 l).M Dr. 6t1fll("1111 '' S!etlt M•rlittl •. )t Ttl'evt,lt'I • Tlltl..,, IMI W1t!lltf' • W~• l'f....,, ,,.., WIW'Mll "*wt I • J I ( I . ---' __ • _____ w::_:::rdntsdaf, Junt U , J.ltl~ 4 Parties Sign New Viet Pact PARIS (UPI) -n1e four parties to the );'letnam war signed a document today Pledging them.selves to ncv,o measures to shore the Vietnam ctase-rire agreemenl Jliough •istrict and scrupulous lm- plementatk>n" of the Jan. 27 document . ~: The measures include a U.S. resump. tkm of economic ald talks and removing mln es from North Vietnamese \.\•aters, P end to U.S. reconnaissance fl ights. a r eturn or Saigon and Viet~Cong troops-to heir original situations and a pledge rom them strictly to ob6erve the cease- Jire. !• Saigon signed reluctantly and reported- under U.S. economic pressure, and a spatch tonight from Saigon said Presi- nt Nguyen Van Thieu was disappointed ~t the new agreement did not restore the Demilitarized Zone or require the -North Vietnamese army to leave South fietnam. ; Official sources in Saigon said the document gives even greater concessions fo the C.Ommunists than the Jan. 27 documents, and little at all to Saigon . ·A joint statement issued after l~enry A. Kissinger and Le Due Tho of Hanoi wound up negotiations by initialing the It-article dpcwnent. described o[ficially as a •1convnunique," said it provides for ·•strict .Jlnd scrupulous implementation" ol the Jan. 27 pact. A full four-party signing ceremony then 1.ook place at· the Kleber Avenue oon- ference center in the same room where tbe original pact was signed. )\. second signing ceremony then followed involving only Kissinger and 1'K>· The same procedure was used in the Jan. 'l:l signing to permit South Vietnam and the Viet Cong to disregard each olher's claim for official status. ..Asked if the United States would now ---,.,d bombing raids in Cambodi a, Kissin- ~ told a news conference, "There is nothing that commits the United States tO• cease such operations. :~·It is our hope, and we will make ma- jOI' efforts in that Direction , to coolintie ~atic contacts that will produce a cease-fire in Cambodia," Kissinger said. ~The document broke little new grou nd , l!f the most part demanding new com- nlltmenls to the original pact and pro- vlding fresh datei for implementation. It had·nothlng fresh to say about either the fighting in Cambodia or Saigon's repeated claim s of North Vietnamese in- filtrations ilito the sout h. In each case, it reiterated the Jan. 27 Position -that foreign troops should leave Cambodia and Laos and should not be introduced into South Vietnam. Trio Snatch Big Frozen Salmon ' A boisterous. balding burglar \\'ith a Fu ~fancbu mustache and his accomplice are sought today afte r fleeing a Newport Beach cafe with a v.i>ole frazen, 20-pound Chinook salmon a n d escaping in a \\'ailing gel.a\\'ay car. Delbert R. Allen. manager of The Crab Cooker. 2200 Newport Blvd .. and employe Frank Zeitler spot ted the daring daylight heist too late to intervene . Investigators said the two men slipped into the rear of the popular seafood restaurant and engineered the $33 salmon snatch from the walk-in freezer \vhile a third man kept the car running. Witnesses told police the burglars l\·ere laughing triumphantly as tbey fled v.ith the big frozen fish. From Pagel FREEWAY • • • overpass . · Also announced by the Oi\•ision or llighways was the closure .l\tonday of the soulhbound Baker Slrefl onramp. The ramp will be closed for rccon.struc.1ion .until JWJe 22 . · Motorists-·are advised to take Bristol Street south to the Bristol ooramp. ORANGI COAST • DAILY PILOT TIM Ot'"'' COiii! OAIL Y l"ILOT, wl*' ,..,.ldl J1 ton\lllned ltMl Newi.Pr~, II Pllbll'll'ltol b'I' 1111 Ot•,... CH1t PW!i"11ntr C"'-"'1'· hpt- ,..1, lllllllom •rt ~11111«1, M.-.N'I' lllNIVlll Fr~•'I'-tor Cotl• ~. Ntwflrf<I ··~· 11untl11911111 fl1•tllfFo...nri11n Y•111r. ~""• BMcll, lrvlt\t1$1ddltblek 1na S..n Cltm1n111 Si n Jvtn C1Pilt~1no A 1Jnet1 rec;ikln1t edl!IOll " P1ill!l,111C1 S1t11'111r1 !Ind l11ms1r•. Tiit Prlr>C11MI Olll)ll.i'llllO Dl•nt It 11 no w11! ll1r Sl!fft, Co111 M151, C1lllornl1, •11H. kob1rt N. We14 Pr•ldttll Ind Pllbl!tnll' Jeck J:, C11rley Vi(1 Pr9tkltnl lfld 0.-.... 1 Ml11ott9r Them•• IC1•vil Clieck Flutters Atvay-Forever REDWOOD CITY (AP) -A $15,000 check was perhaps Jost forever Tuesday when It fluttered Into an escalator it the Hall of JusUce and Records here. The escalator was turned off for IS minutes wtwe a mechanic crawled Inside \o look for the check. But part of the-machlnery-i$ in- accessible and the mechanic was unable to locate the check. The check was made out to a man as part of a court property sale. ;,I feel like a fool ," he sai d, too embarrassed to identify hin1 self. - Laguna Panel to Srudy Air Pollution-Tire Dust ·By ffiEDERJCK SCROEMEHL 01 l'fM 01Ur l'lllt lt•tf Laguna Beach planning commissioners ha,•e agreed the city should embark on a study nf a "new" ronn of air pollution : tire dust. This week, the planners gave an in- formal go ahead to Bruce Hopping of the Kalos Kagathos Foundation to request dust studies by the state Air Resources Board and the federal Environmental Protection Agency. To make-his point about the evils of tire dust. Hopping presented the com· mission with a sa mple of the worn-off rubber collected nea r the intersection of South Coast Highway and Legion Street . Commissioner Roger Lanphear didn't want to look at it. Larfy Campbell smell- ~it, City Planner Wayne Mood y rubbed the stuff between his finge rs. Hopping, citing a dispatch out of Chicago about tire dust. said a Ford 1.1otor Comp8ny resea rch c h e m i s t estimates 700,000 tons of the black rubber wears of( of tires each year. That's about 200,000 ton.s more than the "particulates" generated by car engines, Hopping said. From Page I WATERGATE •• "pep talk" Jast August and told him not to worry about the problems the \Vatergate break-in were causing because "it will all be over eventually." -Answered "no '' '\•then Sen. Hou'ard J-t. B8ker Jr. (R-TeM.), pressed him as to whether he ever discussed what hap- pened at the Watergate bugging with former Attorney General JQhn N. Mitchell: Frederick C. LaRue, Mitchell's assistant ; Hugh W. Sloan Jr .. Nixon's campaign treasurer: former White House aides H. R. Hakieman and John D. Ehrlichman. and G. Gordon Liddy, former finance counsel in the re-el~ion campaign and convicted mastmnind of the Watergate operation. · But many of the questions this morning came from Baker and Talmadge about the control and supervision that Stans, an acknowledged "stickler for details," ex- ercised over campaign fUnds . "It strikes me as being utterly in· conceivable that you ca n spend a large part d. your time worrying about pin labels and bumper stickers and 'fiot wor- rying about what happens lo large smns of cash that are being disbursed by peo- ple for unknown causes, particularly when the law is clear on stringenl reporting on di sbursements," Talmadge said. ... You're telling us, ?\1.r. Stans, that as a certified public accowitant, a member of the accountants' Hall of Fame. a fonner secretary of Commerce. who further had been personally selected by President l)y,·ight D. Eisenhower to be director of the Budget. and director of the com- mittee 10 raise $50 million for his (Nix- on's) re-election campaign, intended all this money to be spent \\'ithout any or your supervision and control?" Tahnadgc asked. Research in the eastern states, he ad- ded, indicates tire dust, in the form of minule dust particles suspended in the air, may cause cancer. .The cancer producing ingredient, carbon black, is a constituent or tire rul>- bcr, Hopping asserted. Backed with planning commis!'ion support. Hopp ing now plans to go before the eitY council ·seeking officia l backing for the studies. Ed Camarena of the Orange County Air Pollution Cont rol District said tod ay such studies could only measure the total d1:3st "fall" at a given location. Further studies. he sa id, would have to be launched to find out just what is in the dust. He noted that extensive equipment is required to determine the amount of dust that remains airborne for any length of time. "Traffic moves pretty slow do wn there . . . I don't think there would be much abrasion because the cars aren't going very fast," said Camarena. Camarena also warned against over- reaction to the so-called carcinogenic (cancer producing ) properties of "lire dust. noting that even barbecue smoke contains carcinogens. "It's such a new field ... wow ... it sounds intriguing," commented Com- missioner Sally Bellerue after Hopping made his presentation. C~mpbell said that studies of tire dust along South Coast Highway should be supplemented \l:ith surveys of lire dust on busy arterials like Park A venue and Thalia Street. From Pagel MEAT ... Los Angeles office. said the session Is the equ.ivalent of preliminary hearing in the state criminal court system . Ju.st as in the state systen1. it "'ill also be cancelled if a Federal Grand Jury should indict the four defendants in the n1eantime, PoweU explained. l~arvey and Gilchrist met at Harbor Food Locker, 30th Street and Villa \Vay. by Newport Beach detectives Ref!d Gloshen and Tom Shearn who entered the case after receiving a tip. FeUow detectives and FBI agents stak- ed oot the ~a as the parties negotiated the meat sale and Quintana and Saldana rolled up shorUy thereafter in the refrigerator truck. The big rig had been stolen over the 'veekend from a parking place near the Burbank home of ils intended recipient after a long baul trip from Greeley, Colo .. \11here the meat was processed. Organizers disclosed after Harvey's ar- rest that the novel consumer group tllled Mafia closed its Garden Grove offices after the manager, a federal parolee. dropped oot of sight. From Pagel HOSPITAL ... Sex Scandal Minister Admits Pot LONDON (UP I) -l«d Lambton. who resigned his ministerial post in a call girl scandal, Pfeaded guilty today to posse~­ ing marijuana and pep pills. He-'8id-he--had a-"fetish'.!_ about dis.cussing...pot with his prostitute friend , Norma Levy. The wealthy, 50-year~ld 1 Lambton, u•hose_ resignation and that of another n1inister rocked Prime Minister Edward 11eath's Conservative govenunent, was fined $750 tor keeping a smaJI quantity of marijuana and amphetamines at his Lon- don town house. Asked by prosecutor David Tudor- Price if he asked Mrs. Levy for narcotics and other drugs during visits to her Lon- don apartment , Lambton said they ''talk- ed aboul them" and added : •rft was a fetish with me." The prosecutor told the court Lambton had been photographed smoking mari- juana in bed with the 26-year-old Mrs. Levy, an Irish-born ex-convent girl. Lambton's apearance in the hushed and crowded court room at London's tl.1arlyebone Magistrates Court was the first time be emerged in public since he resigned as parliamentary u n d e r secretary of the Royal Air Foree May 22. His statement the following day that he qui t because of his "casual <1c-quaiJitance'~ with a call girl was' quickly followed by a similar confession from Lord Jellicoe. who resigned as leader of the House of Lords and as lord piivy seal. Defense attorney Edward Cazalet said the scandal has left Lambton a humiliated man. "You will appreciate the agony or the mind he has gone through during t.he last rew weeks." Cazalet said. "He has devoted a considera ble part of his life to public service. The position he faces now so far as (his) public and private life is concerned is that he is subject to total humiliation." The prosecutor said a small quantity of n1arijuana and amphetamine tablets was seized by Scotland Yard detectives v.·hen they accompanied Lambton to his Lon- don home the day before he resigned. ~azalel said Lambtgn accepted "full l'esponsibility" for the drugs but had con- fiscated them from an unidentified person to prevent the individual from using them. He said Lambton did not in- tend to use the drugs. Plant Employe Hurt in Accident A young Newport Beach industrial plant employe suffered painful but not serious Injuries Tuesday "''hen her face and feet were splashed with sulfuric acid in a job accident. Rhonda Newton, 19. of 2986 Babb St .. Costa Mesa, was rushed from Hughes Se1niconductor Division at 500 Ne\\'port Bh·d., 10 nearby l;loag l\lemorial Hospital a[!er receiving first aid. She \l;as treated in the emergency room and released following the mishap. These Victims W 01i't Follow DALLAS iAP I -Banclils who creshed a neighborhood party here had a. 1nethod to guarantee the vic- tbns didn't glve chase. They forced the six women and eight 1nen to take of! their clothes (lnd.then helped thcmselvee to $400 in jewelry and CDsh before n1aklng a getaway. The 1nen \\'ere locked l n a closet and the women herded into a betlroom . When the bandits made the ir escape, the women dressed nnd therr let the-mtn out-of-the closet. Battin Names Valley Man As Plannet Clardlce G. Casper, 53. a Fountain Valley ptivate land use planning con- sultant. has been named to the Orange County Planning Commission ' b y Supervisor Robert Battin. Casper wiU take the seat vacated by Adolph f\.1olina, 41 . a Santa Ana attorney. Battin said Molina, "''ho has served on the commission since last January, quit because of demandS' of a new jo~ he had take n. Molina became the second planning commissioner to resign in the past few days. Last week Supervisor RooaJd Caspers named Bart Spendlove, pres i· dent of the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council to succeed Ron Yeo, Corona del Mar architect . "'Jolina said Tuesday he "''as taking vacation time~ from his new job as a referee with the State Workmen's Compensation In surance Fund in Long Beach to stay with the commission W1til June 30. "'I felt a mpral obligation to stay until the general plan v.·ork is fini shed ott," Molina said. The county planning com- mission and board of supervisors an in the fil:id st of meeting state requirement for open space and conservati on elements by June 30. Casper, a private land use planning consultant. has participated on UC Irvine's Project 21 Open Space team. He ran unsuccessfully for Fountain Valley city council during the last elec- tion and helped in Supervisor Battin's re- election campaign. _ ' From Page l McWHINNEY. • • made nearly a million dollars at a bargain price and he began expanding hf! story into a ahakedown attempt once .he knew the district attorney's office was interested. "We wouldn't have been here today if it hadn't been for the political campaign that v.·as going on al the time," Ball told the jury. ' "\Vhat we really have here if'"an outgrowth of what ha s been all ;ilong an attempt to destroy Derek McWhinney," Ball said . Russians Installing Syst~ms-. As II &quad o( 30 6u.nian com- munications technicians conti,nues to ln· st.nil com1nunications systems at the \Vestem White House. the Soviet press ts _pwnp.ing._ouLibe.._µropaganda about visit to Washington and San _Clemente 'by Communist leader l.<eooid Brezhnev. Accounts i='om lhe USSR and the na- tion's capital point to a major drive to htlrald the lead('r's visit to the U.S. 8s an :ittempl to reach an .ultimate detente \\•Ith the United States. Major trade and arms limitation deals are the goals for the visit and round ot summit meetings with President Nixon set to start Monday in Washington, D.C. Soon after the initial discussions the re, the scene will shirt to San Clemente where a major address to the citizens of the U.S. and USSR 1nay be given by I.he Soviet Communist Party head. Lending strength to the yet-unoffiel~I reports or the two-nation address ls the fact that 50 Russian newsmen will be on hand along the South Orange Coast early next week lo join the communications stare already here. For more than a \\'eek the technicians have been working 16 hours a day, ac- cording to their spokesmen, installing the equipment which L'Ould broadcast a televised message to the Soviet Union. So far White House aides have said lit- tle about the San Clemente phase of the visit. - Jt is expecte<! to take place early next \reek alter Nixon and Brezhnev-make-a stopover at the Houston Space Center in Tei.as. As for the substance of the. major talks, sources say the two leaderS' will discuss major, long-tern1 Ir ad e agreements and the sources add that Brezhnev plans to negotiate "as if Watergate never happened." The sources, spokesmen ''who reflect current Kremlin policy," said the Soviet leader is most anxious lo make the talks a success and achie\·e. positive suec68. Brezhnev reportedly does not plan to e1.ploit the current_m:ecarious position of the President. Mounting economic iroblems in the ...Sov iet Union -as evidenced last year ' after the maj<lr U.S.-SOviet grain sale was announced -are repqrttd to be the prime molivatlng-ractor ·in Brezhnev's predicted attempts to hammer out new economic deals :ovllh Nllon. RENO COUNCIL NIXES RICKSHAW RENO. Nev. (UP!) -The Reno City Council has told William H. Myers to forget about buying a rickshaw . The council unanimously denied Myers' request -ror a license 10 operate a rickshaw service along "casino row" here. He planned to pull a single-seat car· ri11ge himself, either on the. sidewalk. or , street. I •••• • 11d_,," .~==:5~3~a ":c~E::N::T:ER:-:S::TR~E::E~T~-~C!,miO~S~T~A~~ME~SA~;;;;,;;;46-;;1;9~1,-1111~""'.·:·:~·1 ~ Duck Feel Fins L Champion Handball Gloves "I did exe rcise some su pervision and control," Stans replied. "I got a daily report of all the contributions received "''hich I looked ove r every day. 1 even in- dicated to the extent that I knew people personally. their first names , so that the letter of ackno""·ledgement and ap- preciation "''ould be on a £irst-namc basis. "[ got reports from time to time. I harl a daily staff meeting. I saw summaries of the reports that were filed_.with lht General Accounting Office. so I did ex- ercise supervision. But I did not. senator. have anything to do with the day to day \\'Ork of the treasurer's office." classrooms and laboratories on campus, has not been contested in the Legislature. The buildings would be the first permanent fa cilities the UCI-CCJl.1 has enjoyed siJice the formerl y private rne<llcal college moved to Irvine five ~ vcars ago from-i!s downtown Los r. Blemish 6.95 & 7.95 Racquetball Racquets 6.95 to 37.95 From Page 1. MAID .. ~ I should pay. But J 'm just working by myself and for myself." Sledge brough o n e customer. a woman who identified herself as rttrs . rt1oulton._3l7 ~ Ba)'froot . Sbe said .she didn't think it fair that Angeles campus and hospital. I ' The fate of the $9.5 mtllion suggested for improvement of OCMC is less ccr· , 1 tal n. Assembl yman \Villie Brown Jr. 1[).. '9: San Francisco) headed the hospital siling jolnt legislative committee and also sits on the conference_ committee on the bu dget. Rro1\1n's hospita l siting commiUee stipulated a loog ternl agreement bet \l.'een UCI and the County of Orange he reached bcrore the bond moneys cou ld be spent. Supervisors are meeting with UC l ol- ficlal s to arrive at such An agrttmcnt. ' - Regulars 7.95 to 10.95 Masks & Snorkles Water Winder Kick Boards 4.95 Wilson-Bancroft-Davis-Yoneyama- • Dunlop Tennis Rackets ' Racquetballs 1.25 ea. Badminton Rackets Ping Pong Paddles & Balls Ping Pong Sets-4.95 to 14.95 (d110r -no-;11 A. Mwrpllin1 MIMOl!lt fdlfof ·-Stedge-be-aingled.out-___ _ She suggested if anything needs ln- \'estlgatlng It's the use of Mexican maids that cost people about $ta-O a month and \\'ho pay no taxes. While OCMC is licensed. for more than &00 beds, only 515 beds the:re are presently used. and the legislative stud y committee ~uggests 200 of these be ·eliminated.-so-the eot.mty-1lospltal.Jg-lelt 'vlth 315 "teaching hospital quality" beds. Wilson-Penn-Dunlop Tennis Balls Converse-Adidas-Jack Purcells Tretom Tennis Shoes _Basllelban Shaes Baseball ,Shoes Volleybaffs-4.25 to 17.95 VolleyllaU-Nets-ll ;95 -to-2-1.9-a---• L. P1t 1r Kri•t H~ •·~" cnv Ed1111t N .. pett .._. Otnc. JJJ) N1w,ort lo11lt Y1r4 M111111t A4dr1111 P.O. lo• 1171, t211J _ ....... Cotll M1111 »O w .. 1 l•f Sff"' L1911M flff(ll: m ,.-.,._, A- 1'1/!11<"910n ltlUI; 1711J flHdl ltivlfYI .. Wi1 CltfN111t: »J Nfrfh Cl CllfllM •Ml , .. .,.... 11141 '42""4121 c-..., •'"'.w., ... 2o1•n C,..Vflfht. 1'71. Or~"f• c..u ,,,.lltlllrot '"""""· Ho ""'' 1totlt:f.. 1n111tr111orot. -·~ l'N,,..,.... ... -Hnrt'"""'11' ,,., .... 11\o!Y k twed\IC.ed wit,_,,.! IM1411 ,,_, miulll'I ., c-lt't'flli!t _,_ ~ Ci41Jt ....... Mloll II (9"fl '"""'· t.llltom141. '*"""tloll Irr Urrllf 12.U -l!lyj "" -II t.J,IJ '"""1111'1'/ l'lllllf-oetllAlllMt. .,_ .. lllll'ltllb .. O>uncllmcn fifJEllly decided )to give Sledge a break. They bont the rules and allowed his firs t an1u1al license to be covered by the 1100 !ine h<!'d poicl. But that, suggested by Councilman r.tilan Dostal. was crttldzed by A1ayor DonaJd A. MclM is, .who was afraid it might .set precedent. "It ls also incon.slstept wtth other coun- cil ·actk>ns," MclMIS said. Dostal's motion passed, 5-I, however. II Included Instructions to the <tty star! to rtvfew lht' llc:ense ordinance a.s 1t pcrliiins to maids. He suggested It might be amondecl to require any m11kl who v.'Orks for more than three people to 'obtain a llC'tn.Se. The requirement does two things. It assures a centrally located improved qunllty health care facility serving the medically indigent of Orange Qlunty. A!SQ. It improves tlle level of training a\·oiiable to UCI-CCM !ltudents. moat or \Vhom presently leam patient care in a facilit y even county officials agree is "inadequate." Finally. b;: dcletlng 200 !\lbstandard beds from the OCMC and creating the: ne""' teaching h08pital on campu11, UCI is given a "hub" for.its medicnl school pro-- gram. Even with the new ho.-tpltal and improvements at OCMC the \lnlverslty figures nea rly 1,000 other hospital beds will be needed to co1npletc traln.lng op- portunities for mOOical st udent.s, 1nten1s and rcsldcnu. AD Purpose Shoes ' ... ~--...... tl..;;tllfl-·---Open 9 to 6 -Closad Sundays l Colored Sleeve Baseball Undershirts Boys 1.95 Mens 2.75 BasebaU &apS-Mltts-Balls-Bats Raleigh Bikes-Parts Tires-Tubes-Repalril( Racket Restringing 646°1919-538 Clllter, Costa M- ' ' I I I ! \ - • . I • I • -ti ' DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Parents Mo"' than a quarter· of Newport-Mesa school di.s- trict parents spoke their minds on the quality of educa· lion in the Harbor A"'a last week. Some didn't llke what they a"' getting. Air Views trustees. It is a positive thing when the people who run the schools and the people who pay for them can communi- cate coMtructlJely. The administrators have taken th~ responsibility of correcting the problem fuUy in hand. They say they will do all they can to further improve the system and communicate more closely with the public. ·I • • • • I • ' . . ' . , I The "'suits of a parent opinion survey released by district officials showed that nearly half of the high school parents who responded don't think the schools are a equa elyprepann their teenagers for a career or any other future contact with the real world. Only 27 percent of the district's parents returned their questionnaires. District oflicials say the survey is not statistically pure and was ne;>er meant to he. They just wanted a general feeling to work with. -rerhap the-best-assura!J"ce-ot-actlon 15-that they ·have taken the survey results to heart rather than try- ing to play them down or sweep them under the rug. \ I , I -·mou·gh~ ir ·wasn't "pqre·";i:he survey-does ·point out some clear-cut strengths a.nd weaknesses in the· district's programs. For the most part, parents of elementary school students overwhelmingly support the teachers, admin- istrators and instructional programs in the schools. But ~arents of high school students responding to the questionnaire seemed more divided. More than 42 percent of those parents think preparation -for future life is inadequate and 50 percent say counseling is inade- quate. More than 60 percent of the respondents think more emphasis should be put on preparing students for their future roles in the real world. Written comments on the questionnaires also re- vealed surprising support-for some form of all-year school -a concept the district has put on a back burner at least for the next school year. Parents blasted the "new math"· and asked for more concentration on the basics like reading, writing and arithmetic. Though most of the-responses tended to he favor· able toward district operations, a strong undercurrent of discontent was clear. District officials made a point of that discontent when they presented the survey to ·-Huw-Reason ' Like Passion Can Enslave (SYDNEY J.HARRI~ Tlloucbts at Large: There are two kinds or "reasonable" people: those who guide their instinctual drives toward legitimate satisfactions .... and the far larger number who use reason to repress their instinctual drives ; and the latter sort are just as much the slaves of ' reason as the libertines are tbe slaves of passion. • • • The unknOwn , m m1tter bow hlrmlels, Is always more feared than -a known dang.,.; and since our age ha plunged into the unknown, on all fronts, faster than any other, it is scarcely surprising that we show more public fear and priv- ate alWety than any past era. • • • I wonder how many persons ¥.'ho abhor "drugs" jXlp a couple of aspirins in their mouth the moment they feel a headache comJng on, instead of taking a brisk walk in the fresh air, a short snooze, or some other fonn .f non<hemical tberapy. • • • Beethoven would rewrite a musical phrase a doz.en times; J\.fozart v.·ouJd dash off a page without a second thought; how bard or long or con- Dear Gloomy Gus A golt course the adulfs in Santa Ana Heights do not need! 1be .children are still park-less! W.J. OIMl!n' 0.. '*"'" ... " ............ 1W ......,. ........ _....,., f'tfllct "'- Vltwl of trltl -....... '-' ,.., Hf ..-. " oio.n-, o-. DeflJ .. -.. scientiously you labor over a creative project has nothing lo do with talent, on· ly with temperament. . • • • We complain that the young are overturning our values and instituUons; yet sine< the beginning ol recorded lime, the young have uncomPJalningly gone out to be slaughtered in combat to satisfy the pride, vanity, greed and "OOnor" of the old in every generation. • • • People ¥.'ho use foul langu8ge where it doesn't belong should be more rebu ked for having an impoverished vocabulary than a "filthy mind." (In most cases, the worm have no "dirty" referent, but are simply verbal exclamation points to stress inarticulate feelings .) • • • As soon a ¥.'e learn we cannot gt something we wanted, it becomes far dearer to us in imaginattion than it would have been in possession. Watergate Hush . Money Eyed for Tax Liability WASHINGTON -,,,... responsible for the Watergate crime may have to pay lases on the $1 million in campaign funds that were laid out for break-ins, hush mooey, legal f ... and political aal> otage. Tax experts tell us President Nlxon hlmoell Is liable il he had knowledge ol the dilbunements. Even if bis aides kept him in the dark, he may still be held legally ""ponsibte for the tax olJIJgaUon. This Is the Import of a stW-teeret General Accounting Office study on the Nllm campaign commlt-. Quotloc tax rules, the study dectar.s that "the e1· pendtture or political funds !O< other than campaign or slmUar purpoeea will be ci>nstd<red a diversion ol 8lld! fundt ,.: qu!rtna -.. _ .. former Attorney General John Mitchell, White House staff thief, H. R. Haldeman, presidential adviser John Ehrlldunan and campaign.aide Jeb Magruder. Our tas advisers-say the President may also be In tax trouble over the finan- ' clal help he accepted from aeroeol king Robert Abplanalp to blzy the San Clemente retreat. THE NIXONS signed pef!Ollal notes, which Abplanalp later tore up, for $62$,000. In return, Abplanalp Is supposed to own most of the 26-acre tract around THIS liRY language elplalns how the the pmldenUal compound. Internal Revenue Service is suppoled to The First Family Bot the deal ap- treat campaign fundt that aren't 1pe11t prqved by the local lntenal Revenue of· for campaign purpoecs. The new re-nd,, but our tar experts lnsist the Nlxons _ 'l!!!!oment was adopled in 1968 alter we should pay tues on tbe $f2S,OllO. A> they revOaleiltfiiii1Jielii!eSOO.-Tomllii<!~ (o;-lHlfrpnrthe-law;-the-tearing·up-ol-tbe Qinn.) had diverted tens ol thousands of personal nqtes -in other words. the can· dollan from his. campelgn coffers into cellatlon or the debt -makes the his own pockets. Dodd was censured, ilHI 1825,000 taxable lncOme. mlsd.lrected campaign funds were , made ~Y point out that the Nixona are tuabte. ualng the entire 2S acm, lhat property Now Nlzon'a campaign collections have records show no evidence the acreage been diverted Into Improper pockets and has been ·legally divided and that the spent f<r. illegal purposes. Our tax ad· whole deal appears to be a gimmick to viten 11y 10111eone must pay tues on benefit the Nlsons. , the $4(0,000 at leut that was paid to the WaterbuQen to buy their sllence and to A SPOKESMAN for the President compemate their lawyers. in a i r assured ~· on the other band, that Ukellhood, the buncl~ of thousands Abplanalp II the legal .owner of the land IW!I .., mecal campaign actlvltles are around the Nix'!" compound, that tbe a!Jlo tauble land ls gomg up in value and lhat It Is a · profitable inv.,,tment for Abplanalp. IF THE President can~ be stuck with ti anyoae but thO President were in- the tu obligation, then the campaign valved, Internal Revenue surely would be aides who 'made thery-outs are clearly lnvcstlgaUng. A spokesman rerused to II able. 'Ibey woul include Finance tell us, however, whet.her IRS 18 ifl* Chairman Maurice Stans, the President's vestlgaUng the President or any or his Pff&Onal lawyer Herbert Kalmbach, aides on tax matter!. Saf eg11ards Essential Newport Beach city councilmen this week too-k steps to make sure no more dynamite blasts rock the city unless strict controls are in force. The council ordered a halt to all use of dynamite in the city until the fire department and building de- partment can come up with some way of restricting blasting and enacting safety requirements. The move was an outgrowth of an early morning blast la st week by crews digging sewer tr'flches for the extension of the Bren Tract in Harbor View Hills. One home was damaged and many people were shaken by the shock wave. The city currenUy can't take legal action in such cases because it has no regulations limiting blasting near populated areas. The danger of fiyin~ rocks and debris heavily dam- aging private property 1s very real That was demon· strated by the incident last weei. The danger of a small child wandering too close to an unposted blasting area is apparently very possible as well. The council action is well advised in the face or the potential for damage to people and property from un- regulated blasting. N • • • .. Eeonomy-Jninded Driver Leaves Car at Honie Two-bit Bus Line Win~ Applause To the Editor: Hooray for the two-bit bus line! In these times when governments are being so roundly criticized by citizens for not doing things, I think that loud applause should be heard for the Orange County Transit District. T:he buSes are clean, run on time and the drivers are all courteous. They are sCheduled frequently and the intersection of two or more lines is tim· ed so persons do not have to wait for a transfer very long. WE HEAR much these days about a fuel :shortage and an energy crisis. It seems to me that a lot of people do hot ~care. I have ridden the OC'I'D buses ex- lenslvely and the majority of passengers are those who' either do not have automobiles for economJc reasons or cannot drive (either too young or too old). I do have a car and am able to drive, but for two-bits (25 cents), I can't afi9rd to take my car out of the driveway! So, I use the OCTD whenever I can. I urge other citizens of the area to do the same. If they need infonnation or schedules . they can call 547-&0IM or v.'r:ite to the OCTD, 1126 E. 'Yashington, Santa Ana 92701. Try the bus, you'll like ii; and save some mon ey!. WALTER J. GRIESMEYER Who Run• Cii11? To the Editor: Several years ago, upon my retirement from the Air Force, I returned to residence on Balboa Island just in time to read about a freeway to be built along the coast highway. It upset me enough to write you a letter which apparently foWld some merit in your eyes, as you wrote it up under a front page harmer entitled "Retired Colonel says Bah to progress" or something similar. I HA VE NOT changed my views and what i.s more there are thousands just like me and we are all being sold down the rlver. J'1St yesterday I read in the Dally Pilot where a "Citizens Commit tee" is about to ask that a new eight-lane highway be built from the Arches across the back_ bay. We all know that the majority of voten not too long ago voted that we would not have a freeway along the coast and !urther lhat the Newport City Coun· ell could oot sanction one without the consent of the public. This means to me that It must be put to a vote. Yet our city fathers are apparently trying to cireum- vent the wishes of the public through the mea11.1 of a "Citizens Committee" which no doubt ls band picked to produce their [ MAILBOX ) Letters from reade,·s are welcome. Norn1ally writers should convey their tne ssages in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit space or eli1ninate libel is reserved. All letters must include signature and mailing address, but names may be withheld on request if sufficient reaso1i is apparent. Pottry will not be published. desired result. To me an eight-Jane highway is a freeway. The City Council is well aware of public sentiment-but chooses to circumvent. IF THE council "·ere responsive, oor master plan, if, as and wben it does come to be, should be designed to provide for zero growth the minimum, and at the optimum, designed to attempt to return I.IS to what \ii'e had 20 years ago. Unfortunately most of our elected of- ficials· feel that tt\ey must do what they think their people Should wafl( I feel that if the majority of the people want something, even if the city fathers think it is wrong -the people should have it. After a11 they are elected, presumably to do the bidding of the voters. You recently quoted the Mayor of Newport Beach as saying "who is run. ning the ci ty" or words to that effect. This was because good thinking people like Judy Rosener were upholding the precepts of the people as promuJgated by proposition 20. Thank goodness f0< Judy Rosener and people like her. We need more ol them. Who indeed is running the city -cer- tainly not the representatives of the pe<>- ple. ALAN L. BLUM Fh1e the Slobs To the Editor: Read with interest your editorial, Sun- day, June 3, 1973 -"Inland Papers, Please Copy.'' My husband an<i I are from the East. We took a walk on Huntington Beach, Monday, May 28, a!.>out six o'clock in the evening. We couldn't belleve our eyes. Shame, shame on every one of you who enjoy the beach but walk away leaving it looking like a garbage dump. I SUGGEST, to keep the ta :ii: payer from being the fall gu y ror these slobs, YOU. post '100 littering signs on the beaches just like they do on the • highway s. The lifeguards sit high enough ~that they could call the slobs' attention to where the trash cans are located. If this fails, prohibit food or drink of any kind to be carried onto the beaches. It's early in the season -let's do something now to keep our beaches beautiful. Nest time, "Stop, Think Trash Cans." ~IRS. L. KENNEDY 'BIH11 lack' To the Editor: I'm writing in answer to what a Mr. James B. Wood had . to say about the movie "Billy Jack.'' Obviously, Mr. Wood didn't get any meaning out of this movie, but he seems to be so close-minded he wouldn't understand il anyway. HE SAYS Billy Jack is full of violence. which is totally ridiculous. There is a 1liltle, but lf be paid any attentioo at all he would have noticed that Billy Jack never carried a gwi and in a couple of in- stances was fighting in self-defense. "Billy Jack" also has a little anU- establisbment in it so Mr. Wood prob-i ably reacted without thinking. MR. WOOD says that humans cannot be that evil and tbe hwnan esperience cannot be that hopeless. Billy Jack did all he could to protect the Indian and put his life on the line doing it. 'Mlis movie brings out truth which Mr. Wood evidenUy is afraid to bear. I suggest he see it a few more times and open up his mind a Utile and face reality. STEVE DELANEY Cardboard Drama To the Editor: I have j1.1St read the letter James B. with people (not all ol them under 15 either). who were wildly appreciative everytime one of the good-punks scored.a, ___ 1 point against one of the hateful Establishment. I'm begiMhtg to think that if you used an emotional enough tone, yoo could stand up in front d. an audience anywhere and be applauded for saying just about anything. ALICE VANVLEET •or. • .,_u.,• To the Editor: Please convey my thanks to Rus.s Walton on "Obecenity'• in tbl Jum 7 ~ Daily ~ot. , , ' My wife and I were rec;ently In San t Francisco and were unable to find die f location of the Museum 'of Erotic Art. We inquired of taxi driven, our hotel,.- checked the phone book and. vislton in· formation sources -all without suettSs. With Mr. Walton's column, I'm sure we would have round it. I have seen "Deep Throat", but ha'e not seen either the "Last Tango in Paris" or the Museum, of Erotic Art. I trust you will conttnue noning hia col· umn, as I will continue to look for further recommendations. F. M. WHITE Liberal Dictators To the Editor: It is now happening in our great city of Newport Beach. VLTRA·LIBERAL outs Ider 1 or "nouveau" residents and other mjsgukled beings in the name of eoologj and« peoples' rights are dictating the \lie to which we utilize our property rigbts. All of this irrespective of city ordinances or wrung. Their sole JQrPOSe ls to destroy our way of life here and ei.:where, and to bring all people down· to one level - theirs. IT JS TIME these people w°"' ex_.i once and for all. To reveal to the UJUUSpecting the socialiat and communist · doctrines wl!ich these people embrace, wpile using the shield or the Constitution al\d oor BIU of Rights In the atUmpt to destroy us. Wood wrote that describes "Billy Jack" aa revolting. I wouJd have to agree, although it is not so much the violence In Lhis PG-rated picture that revolts me (There Is violence, but I think Mr. Wood exaggerates: one rape, one seduction, would be more fair, for example). For Its trivia, childishness al\d the inlult ol Ila petty moralism, "Billy Jack" nob aa one of the three worst pictures I've eV& seen -the other two .. more offensive, ROBERT W. GOOSSEN being "Getting Straight" and "Castle Keep." tn all fairness , "Billy Jack" 1t 'F'9ate11ts' P- least had some very clever -and funny To the Editor: -psychodrama scenes (although I've -May t expreu ·my feeling! about Dale heard that most of that material was Hale's "Figment$?" borrowed). My family and J get a lot ol pleaaure I CAN'T agree that the advertising from lhis. comic. It i.s so true to llfe, was misleading. Especially the 1V ads meaning the imaginations of all. I hope made this movie look like a combination this continues to be in our Dally Pilot. Gidget Goes Hippie and Cllnt Eastwood The Daily Piiot ls a fine ·paper. Goes Indian. [ went to see it out of MRS. MILDRED BINTLlFF curiosity, despite the ads , and later had to conclude, What you see (ln the ads ) is what you get! Whether the movie deserves the amount of publicity it has been given isn't the question; those full page ads were pald for. I presume. 'nle question Is, why are so many people-talk~ Ing about what a great motion picture· this Is? Violence or not , t can somellmcs enjoy good commercial entertainment as much as a "thinking person's" movie. All 1 ask is that the cardboard drama not be presented In the guise or social com· rnentary. For me, the most depressing part of this movie exper ience was having to sit in a Costa J\.fesa theater literally packed Quotes 411 don't car~ If meat goe1 to $4 a pound, I wouldn't go lbrou1ll thl1 again." -Pat Flathau O( Saginaw, Mich., who with her husband and three children rnls-. ed two steers ln the backyard after get· ti ng mad about rising meat prices . ' \ OU.NM COAST DAILY PILOT J!ol>erl N. Weed, PubU.Mt Thomas Keevlt, Editor Barbara Kr1JbicPl Editorial Page Edi!Cr The editor!-.! ,pap of 1M Dally Pilot ·M!eka to in(Orm and r.Umulate f'Mdtta by prnmtilw on thts N• divtne<Commenta.ry' on topics ·of in- tm!st by i.Ynd~t!d t'O!wnnlstl and cartoonists, by providing • forum for readm' vkws and by pNllll:n11rtt "111 ncwspaptt't opinions and ldeu on """"'" ....... The edltotlal -of the Daily Pilot tippcar only In the editorial oolwnn at the-top or the pqe. Opinloms expretlltd by the col- umnfc1s and canoon.lsta: and ltttft- wrtten ue thtlr own and no~ ment 0( """ .,.... t.,. 1he Dolly Pila! -Id be lnttmd. Wednesday, June 13, 1973 • • ' ' DAILY PILOT jJ Girl, 15, Stnbbed To Death Reinecke Says Aide Pointed Out Error Priest; Woman Hostage ~~~ ' ·~ • . SAN DIEGO (AP) -A 15- year-old girl was slal>llod to death Tuellday 100 yards from her hlgh school campus, sheriff's deputies said. Officers said two ~ SAN DIEGO (AP) -U . Gov. Ed Reinecke says a phone call from then-Asst. At· ty. Gen. Ro-~ caus- ed him to change his mind about the date of a conference 9--_J!!J!<1~-w~o~rkers grabbed a man tley saw "1nn1ng ffom the area and held him for an arriving highway patrolman. H te-bMI-with ro.mer Ally .JJeo. John Mitchell, a meeting which has been linked with the lTI' eooiroversy. ( BRIEFS They said the man, Jerry R. Schnick, 24, of San Diego. was later booked for investigation of murder. $ Carol Valkooen was at· ""' tacked as she walked to Monte Viola High School, Spring Valley southeast of San Diego. The coroner's office said her body had more than 10 stab 'll!>Wlds and her throat was cut. A bunting knil'e was found Arquittal Toast Reinecke named Mardian Tuesday to reporters asking him about a federal in- vestigation seeki ng to detennine whether Reinecke ..-Mitchell committed perjury before a Senate committee last year. It was the second time Reinecke had changed his story about meeting with Mitchell. FIRST BE told reporters and Sen. Jmn v. Tunney co. Calif.), that he and Mitchell met in May 1971 !ind talked in a nearby field , officers said. A 21-year-old sailor accused of wartime sabotage, which delayed the sailing of the Carrier Ranger for Vietnam _last summer, was found innocent by a Navy court martial board. Fireman Patrick D. Chen- oweth of Puyallup, Wash., (right) had a victory cele--about San Diego's bid for the • fm-arhment bration in Oakland at which his civilian attorney, ........ Eric Seitz, poured him a glass of champagne. SAN DIEGO (AP) -The -'--'--'--'-=-------"-----'--=----- San Diego County Democratic C..tral Committee has called for the impeachment ol Presi- dent Nixon, saying he seeks to establish uan absolute tyranny •-the people ol the United States." The committee passed a resolution Tuesday nigtt ac- cusing N1.1on of obstructine' justice in the Watergate case ''by willully and deliberately obfuscating the involvement of his aides 'in crime and cor· ruption." e Es-pee Reid RIVERSIDE (AP) -One of 10 men who escaped Sunday from a Tijuana, Mex .• prison bas been oaptured, Riverside police say. Clyde P. Evans, 33, was ar- restod early Tuesday and held Oii U.S. charges of conspir111g -p;./\ to import cocaine, police said. { ~ \J U.S. Commissioner Robert ,.. 'nmHn ordered him taken for trial to San ·Diego; -re he was indicted by a federal grand jury in April. Seven other persons w~ arrested for investigation ol harboring a fugitive, police said. • • Thu1nb Card~ Panel -Views Hitchhiki11g SACRAMENTO (AP) - Those thwnbing a ·ride on Califomia highways could car- ry a state-issued identification Senate OKs Instrument Protection SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Electric Guitar Protection Act ol 1973 has cleared the state Senate on ·a 2-3 vote. SOiie Sen. James Whet- card aimed at reducing crimes involving hitchhikers under legislation approved in Its first committee test. · Tuesday, the Assembly Tr a nsportation Committee voted 9-1 to send the measure to the Assembly Ways and Means Committee after hear· ing one backer say: "Hit- cbhilcing is here lo stay." ,. That comment came from Richard Vega. spokesman for t ·he California Hitchhikers LolJ6Y. He added the FBI and other groups have failed over the yeara lo stamp out hit- chhiking. . more's bill woo.Id require JN RELATED action, the owners of nigh£ 8JlOl8 who committee voted 6-2 to till a ~y musk:iaM fo take bill that wouJd outlaw bit- • SU.ff SUl'll• """'sooable means" to guard chbiking ex""pt in ca..es RIVERSIDE (AP) -The lbe ,~-__.... -~ ~--• ha chancellor ol. the Unjversity of ... .., ..... UCU>A> ~-u:Jl;;i.• wuca; c: someone s car s Califomia at Riverside says he or damage. broken down, the persoo needs will not ,.nd dimni...t notices Whetmore. • l.& Habra help, or the hitchhiking takes to 20-facuity members by July Re]:xlblican who ls bim9elf a place in an area designated by 1 after all. · · ... ,..~ .. Tuesda --· in the local government entity. ' Ivan Hinderaker said Tues-mustcian, ~ Y i.nm. · day he was withdrawing his the Age of Amplifred instru-The bill that died three votes decision of last week and the merits such as the eledric gui-short ol passage was authoced notioes will not be sent until a tar, mUSIClan5 frequently by Assemblyman Job n tboniugh review of academic leave them ln the club Thurman (D-Modesto). programs with · f a c u I t Y overnight instead fl lugging A!semblyman John Dunlap participation. Hinderaker had all the electrmic equipment (D-Napa), authored the suc- amounced the pen d in g home. cessful bill which he said was dismissals in the face of a Whetmore ' said sune in-aimed at giving motorists faculty rut.back of 30 due lo struments left overnight have some assurance that card-ear- 1972 Republican Convention. Reinecke said then he may have discussed an offer by International Telephone and Telegraph to Wlderwrlte the convention. After the Justice Depart- ment dropped an antitrust suit against m last June, a memo allegedly written by a com- pany lollbyist was published linking the action to the offer to underwrite the convention. ReMlecke was tiben called before a senate !investigating comnu'ttee and said he hadn't' met with Mitdlell the previous ?.1ay. · He said that after his statement about the May meeting was published, an anonymous caller told bis of-rtee to femeck his travel records, and the recheck sMwed no meeting had taken place in t.1ay. THE CHANGE of story prompted Atty. Gen. Elliot F..loor Gets Hair Bill SACRAMENTO (AP) Longhaired males couldn't be blocked from e n t e r i n g rest.atrants or bars urtter a bill sent to the Assembly Door. Tuesday, tile Assembly Judiciary Co n1 mitt e e ap. proved the measure b y Assemblyman John Burton ([).San Francisco) whose own 'hair is modishly long. . Burton introduced t h e measure after he "'as asked to leave the Redwood Room of the Clift Hotel in San Fran- cisco because his hair was too long to suit management. As se mblyman Frank Lantennan, a b a 1 ding Republican from La Canada, is a coauthor of the measure. eorollrnent drops. • been damaged when imbibq rying bitchhiliers 113d been • --~-Kiiled patrons decide to hold an Im-checked out by authorities. --------- ....,.. .. ~ promptu concert. nie state would not be liable SACRAMENTO CAP) The bill now goes to the for any hitchhiker crimes, CE s South Pasadena re side nt s Assembly. however, Dunlap said. I If ! 'JI NG have woo a preliminary vie· J\1l ~ ~·t~ 'B!"'~..-----------------.I LESSONS Freewayaroundtheircity. FA.NS GO A.PE FOR A. DA.Y 1be Assembly Ttans- pc:rtatioll Co m m f. t t e e vot· elf 12--0 Tueoday for \! bill sponsored by AssembJyman John L. E. Collier (R·Los Angeles) to wipe out the cur- rent alignment of the freewa y through portions of Alhambra, Soufu Pasad e na and Pasadena. Good Deed it the .• SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -"Go Ape for a Day," suggested the Warfield theater marquee as some 2,200 people fonned a block-long line for a seat at the onl>day showing of all five "Planet of the Apes" films. · The complete showing, which Included the latest and supposedly final ''Batlle for the Planet of the Apes," ran a tot~ of nine hours Tuesday - longer than a back·to-back playing of "Ben Hur" and "Gone With the Wind." "ltts really something," said James Sutton, district manager for N·ational General Theaters, as he watclled the fans pour into the theater for $1 a ticket "We ought to sell a lot of hot dogs." - ·New Clinics Now Open COST A MESA-HUNTINGTON BEACH • Enhance your child's poise end posture. A planned program of tesaons with the exclusive Ice Capades' easy llichlnl5on to ask sptdal because "in AprU Cills whole W • t er g a t e pro secutor Idea of brllcing the convention An:liibald Co• this week to Jn. to San Diego had not come vestlgllle the pooslbility of up-" perJW'Y· 1be convenUon was awarded Reinecke said Tueoday the to San Diego In June 1971 but DJHtirC wi1b 0MHdiell adually latM.awitclled to Miami Beach tool< place In April 197L He in the wake of the IT!' allega- sald he received not ooly an lions and reported disputes anooymous prone call but also aboot rental of racilities here. a call from Mantian, then , Mardian left the Justi~ head of the J u st i c .e Department in May 1972 and Deportment'• Internal Securi-became a political coordinator ty Dlvision. --for the Nixon campaign. He Ma£dian told . him . th e returned to Dis Phoenix, Ariz., meeting had been ln April, and (.'()Mtructioo company I a s t suggested a check .of travel Novmber. He couldn't be records .• which confmned the reached for conunent TUes- cllange, Reinecke said. day. "It was a difference of three Reinecke said he hasn't w~," he ~d. 111 got mri been contacted by anyone trips to Washington confu9ed, from Cox's invesligatioo. "I've BE SAID he cooldn't have nothin& to hide," he said. "I'll talked to Mitchell then about be more than willing to turn the Republican Convention over my files." UPIT .......... A First Freshman Assembly· man Frank Holoman (O.Los Angeles) had girls whistling at him all day when he ap· peared before legisla- t i v e committees in walking shorts: It was a first at a public hear- ing. according to Capi- tol observers. NOVATO (AP) -J.'n Oakland man toolc a Catholic priest and one ol h\h parisbionero hoolagl! at . point Tuesday in an attemif: rob the Oentral Valley ~ here, police reported. ll&-ho&tages were-releued unharmed when po!lce seized the gun after being called If !he scene by bank employeJ, authorities said. Eugene Louis Gray, 23, -Our Lady ol loretl> church anned with a .31- callber pistol, forcin g Jhe R8Y. Leonard CaJegari and Mrs. Louise White, 52, into the preists' car, police said. · They said Gray a!Jk,ed to bl! taken lo the downtown bank where he sept Father Calegari lo ask for money and kept thO woman in the car at gunpoint. The priest alerted bank employes who called poJice to the scene. Police said they aJ>-· proached the vehicle and diverted G r a y ' s attention. enabling officers to seize his weapon. Gray was booked for In- vestigation of lcidnaping Wilh attempt to commit robbery. _ Accused 'Draws,' Fakes Wounding 1-WANTED- SACRAMENTO (APl - A defendant in a murder case pulled a simulated gun in a courtroom and then acted as if he were shot by a bailiff. The incident T u e s d a y delayed the arraignment of Neil i>arrow, 25, for the shooting June 8 of his estrang· ed wile, Margaret, In the tor- ridor of Sacramento Medical Center. His arraignment was rescheduled for today in Sacramento MWlici.pal Court. \Vitnesses said Dan'ow pull- ed oot several pieces of a ,magazine wadded together in !he shape of a gun from under a yellow piece ol paper shortly after he entered t h e coortroom. "BE SAID, 'everybody get down,• and everybody did. We all got down. Then he squatted dov.n . . . and the bailiff shot," said Gladys G. Cook, a court interpreter \\'ho v.>as seated in the first row of ~Junicipal Qiurt J u d g e Edward Gax:c.@'s_qoortroom. A shot fired by a bailiff struck the floor near Darrow, but he fell to the groundas-il he had been shot, witnesses said. Asked by reporters if the pieces of paper Darrow stuf- fed together really looked like a gun, Dep. Dist. Atty. Bart Bleuel said, "It looked real. I ,thought it was real." Deputies overpov.·ered Dar- row after he fell to the floor and returned him to his jail ceU . . He was arrested at the Vallejo bus depot six hours after 'a man fitting his description shot Darrow's wife at the h0&pital. Officers said Darrow was armed when he was captured. ' - l\IE BEEN ASKED TO LIST SOME OF THE BEST THINGS THAT EVER HAPPENED TO ME. HERE, Goes ••• DIA.•oNns • GEMSTONES J•w•lt b., jo1•ph i5 •••rc:hi11g for cl i•inond1 •nd 9•m1ton•1 from ptiv•*• · indi11idu•l1 •ncl •1t•t••· C•r•ful •X•min1tion •nd •v•lu•tion by our •xp•rtt. Hi9h.•1t -pri~•• pa id. C•ll 540-9066 10-9 cl•ily, S•turday I 0-6, Sund•'f c:lo1ocl, •1k for Mr. D•nni~ Folii or Mr. Jo1•ph. iewels by ioseph S.... C._, ,.._ e JJJJ Mlhtl. C... M-e J40oto61 ~CONGRATULATION1:1i-S - MOTHll .... SON •RADUATIS JESSIE ELINORE LOUGH u,.. ......... ,,... T,..,_ TocW.tll C ...... , 1M ....... AH To MICHAEL GU.BERT LOUGH u,.. ., ...... , .. ,.,.. W.0.Htpk ...... H• ...... IMc• BIKINIS, DRIVE-IN MOll!ES, THE WHEEL, DEVILED EGGS, MEDICATED POWDER (DID I SUFFER FROM 10GA CHAFING)! AND BUSHMILLS-WHEN THEY MADE IT IN 1608, THEY DIDN'T REALIZE WHAT THEY WERE DOING FOR MY LEISURE HOURS! LIKE A BUSHMILLS SOUR, REALLY SMOOTH! A BUSHMILLS MIST, COOL AND MILO! A BUSHMILLS LONG AND TALL A BUSHMILLS ROB ROY, AS LIGHT ,;--~ AS ANY SCOTCH CAN MAKE IT! GEE, I HOPE WE HAVE A LOT OF LEISURE HOURS! " • ~ '. • lin doro's unique program is o safe and practical method for the entire family to lose weight and learn how to-mointoin_pr.oper_weighl ...... _under the strict supervisio~ of Medical Doctors. medical '~eight reduction learn ng me hOOGlves you--- Coll for infotmotion M~ndoy thru Fridoy 8 A.M. 10 6 P ~ llWPOIT IEACH GARDEN GROVE LONG IEACH PASADENA 645.)740 S34-20S 1 426-6549 796-2614 OIAIGE S3l·239S f'w• ~•...i ,..,. K• ,,.,.,.;.Ml c-•"' Tv1tlft.c:....._11 ...... " ........... 11cft. "4,. a-11..... ,,.,. ........... _ WDODUID lllUS SHERMAN OAKS WEST COVIil FULLllTOI LA HADA 347-5647 ' 719-7103 962-3431 170-9501 694-1029 ••-vie...,., o.~v"" o.,t ~·-1tMec.htot Iii...,.. ....,..., ...... ,,.,......... ..... IWt. ..... ...... M.4ir ......... I or your chlld healthy exercl1e In pleaaant 1upervl1ed aurroundlnga. REGISTER NOW ICE °f I \l'\111 I ~ /. ,;::, //\(,\\~ Mn.A OlDI • __ J SNOPPIN• CINTll 2701 H•tbot ll11d. •t M•'"' Coit• Mi•••· c,111, f2626 Tel. 17141 '79-lllO .. • • .. ~ . • BUSHMIWI • ,I •' • Orange -Coast • EDITION - Today's Final N.Y. Stocks l ' VOL 66, NO. 164, 6 SECTIONS, 106 PAGES ORANG~ s:;ouNTY. CALIFORNIA -WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13, 1973 c TEN CENTS Charge-s -With Mesa _Jly RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of HM CMllr ~Llot STiii Jim Port erfleld, manager of the Orange Cot>nly Fair, today denied that fair olficinls had en1barkcd on a policy of "non-cooperation" \Vith Costa Mesa city government !f'he charge \1•as made Monday by members of the Costa Mesa City Council who, angered-over certain commercial ventures on the foirgrowuts , said they might have to sue the fair to determine who has zoning jurisdiction over the fairgrounds . ' . Porterfield, bo~'ever, maintains that lhe city's advice and consent had been 1 sought on virtually eve,Y business presently localed on the fairgrounds. ''Everything was -previously 11pproved by the city -the vehicle storage, ~ swap meets and the motorcycle races," he said. "The only time we didn't do this \vas for a \Vholesale nursery. In every other case we have gone to the city first." ' "I don't understand what this all~ ga tion of ·lack of cooperatiOn is," he con- tinued. "Anyone .who wants to lease our property is first sent~_the city. We will cooperate-in every respect." 'Mle major objection of the city council is that some of the fairgrounds leases - the sWap meet and new car storage yard in particular -are purely commercial and therefore in violation of. the in- stitutiooal -recreatioo (l&R) mie of tne fairgrounds. A ....ndary objection-is that the fairgrounds are becoming b I i g h t e d through the attractim of low.grade lease~, such as the swap meet and -the newly-opened g~rt track on fair Dri \•e, just across from city hall: Porterfield said that the fair board is willing to COOP,Crate with the city council on matters pertaining to zoning and uses even though it legally does not have lo. A state Attorney General's opinion recently declared that no I e s s e r governmental ~gency has zoning po'ver over a state agency, according to Porteriield. Since the Orange County Fair is o"·ned and o~rated by the state, Porterfield believes it does oot come under the. legal jurisdiction of the city of Costa l\.tesa. "This has been a question for a long time. If there is a lawsuit , it could be in the courts for yea rs,'' he said. "But slnce it 's come up agai!!, maybe \Ve should discu.ss it and see if we can come lo a mutual understanding." Leases are actively sought by the fair board as a means of generating revenue during the 50 weeks out of the year "'hen the fair is not in progress. · ''ll's a way to help us become self...sus- taining so \Ve do not re1y at all on, the tax dollar,'' Porter!ieJd said. ln addit ion to the already·mentioned businesses. the fair leases J>roperty 10 t\VO privnte schools, lhc Costa ~ft·~a Recreation Department , horse stables and operators of a feed barn. To finance .the impro\'en1ent of i1 s faci Li1ies. the fair board recently nn- nounced its in tention of disposing iJS surplus 33 ucrcs of unnecdl'd pro perty. The land , valued at approximati:ly St.Ii million; is being sought by the city as open space and fonns part of a :i::-1.5 nt i 11 ion bond e I e c I i on h·n tative_!y scheduled for September. Peace Pact Signed " . Reds Still in South, D}IZ Not ,Restored-Thieu .· ' PARIS (UP I) -The rou:-parties to the Vietnam \Var signed a docume11t today pledging themselves to new measures to shore the Vietnam cease-fire agreement lhrougb "strict and scrupulou. im· plementation" of the Jan. tT document. The measures include a U.S. resump- tion of economic aid talks and removing mines from North Vietnamese waten, an end to u_s_ reoonnaissalla! flights, a return of Saigon and Viet Cong troops to their original situatioos and a pledge from them strictly to observe the cease- fire. Saigon signed reluctantly and rePorted- ly under U.S. economic pressure, and a dispatch tonight from Saigon said Presi- dent Nguyen Van Thieu was disappointed that the new agreement did not restore the Demilitarized Zone or require the North Vietnamese army to leave South Vietnam.- Official sources in Saigon said the document gives even greater concessions to the Communists than the Jan. 27 documents, and little at all to Saigon. A joint statement issued after Henry A. Kissinger and Le Due Tho of Hanoi wound up negotiations by initialing the 14-article document, described officially as a "communique," said. it provides for "strict and scrupulous implementation" . His Security /. of the Jan. 27 pact. A full four-party signing cere1nony then took place at the Kleber Avenue con- ference center in the san1e room ''·here the original pact was signed. A second signing ceremony then followed involving only Kissinger and Tho. The same procedure was used in the Jan. 'l:1 signing to pennit South Vietnam and the Viet Cong to disreg3rd each other's claim for orficial status. Asked if the United States would now end bombing raids in Cambodia. Kissin· ger told a news conference. "There is nothing that commits the United States to .cease. such operations. 'Where's Cheek?~ ''lt is our hope, an<I we Will make ma- jor efforts in that direction. to contipue diplomatic contacts that will produce a cease-fire in Cambodia.'' Kissinger said. The document broke little.new ground, for the most part dem anding new com- mitn1ents to the original pact and pro- viding fresh dates for impleinentation. It had nolhing fresh to say about either lhe fighting in Cambodia or Saigon's repealed claims of North Vietnamese in- filtrations into the south. In each case. it reiterated the Jan. 27 JJOflition -that foreign troops should leav e cambodia ind Laos and should 1'101 be introduced into South Vietnam. Mesa ·Fires Ai Pier 11 J With Lawsuit ' ' Wcun't Sec~ A burglar alarm,,,. ~ y stem salesman lost a suit~ rontaining samples of the Newport Beach company's waN!fi to a car burglar Tue!day, while his sport roadster waa. parlc~1ieer his· ofllce. Willian R. Stewart, of Hurst Securit Systems, 4500 Campus Driyf, complained to Police Officer Mile McDonough that the $225 kit Was snatched rigtht out of his unJocked car. Mile Sqriare Def e11dartt Called 'Good Samaritm1' Not Part·iru 'The city 61. co.ta Mesa is l1Jlllling for Pier 11 • with a dou-<d lawsuit aimed at running the Newport Boulevard rock club out ol town. The Su~rior Court action f.iled by City Attorney Roy E. June in behalf of the Costa Mesa City Council requests that Pier 11 be enjoined from cootinuing business. . By TOM BARLEY Of ... DallY .......... tr ~tile Square Park farmer George Murai had ever been asked to make out a $5,000 check to cou11ty Supervisor Robert \Ve 're all brothers under the skin. At least tbars the way this' Dober- man pinscher Jtamed;Bride fee ls about it. The pedigreed dogj mother or nine of her own,li:ook on three kittens wb'o were orphanitd when their mother was ·killed by a car. The Robert Suttons of Detroit say Pride adopted• the 'kittens in1medi8tely aft~r heal'.ing their hungry meows. The contplaint is based on allegations that Pier 11 ownership ha.s violated city wning Jaws and that the bar has become a public nuiunce. The beer bar on 1976 Newport Boulevard bas 1-1 the object ol --- troveny s!Dce July 11171 wheo the city council granted a zone exception. M~sa Council Appoints 1st Half of Sign Panel •' City Zoning lmpector . ;JM Weir disclosed Jut March Iha! the im- provements required as a eondttiori or the exceptioa had nol1>een fulftlled . City COlincllmen subseqpenUy reVoked the ex- ception. • The first dozen of a 24-member com· mil.tee to study a propased sign ordinance for Costa Mesa have been ap- pointed by the Costa A>te.sa City C:OUncil. Davis-Brown Company; Dave Roberts, Dave's Camera Exchange : Al Mathe"-'S, Plaza Dry Cleaners; otto Schroder, Automobile Club of Southern Calif<>q1ia; Lew Kidder, Coast Music; Of Fi .les 'Coincidenee' ! Nearby residents, meanwhile, have fil· eel a barrage ol complaints agalmt the oper11iUOn of tbe bar and Pier 11 patrons. • The9e form the· fCIUDdatlon of June's nuisance· abatement request. Represented on the list are 12 local businessmen who will be joined later by an equal number of representativesJrom eight Costa Mesa homeowners organiza- tions. Tbe sign committee became involved in controversy last month when City Councilman Dominic Raciti alleged it was being slacked 14-7 in favor of the businessmen. Also, Ru ss Newburg. Don Quixote Motel ; Al Hollister, Hollister Nursery; Ernest Jones, Jones Tire Service; Joe Metcalf. Sears Roebuck; Tom DeForest, Follow Olarlle Car Wash; Claire Gonser, Baker Plywood Company, and Antl)Ony Beringer, Baker Equipment Rentals. •'-' WASHINCiTON (AP) -l\faurice H. Stans te1l1Ued this afternoon tllat be destroyed records of campaign transac- tions later dtScovered to have financed the Watergate wiretapping, but called It ''pure and ln~nl coincidence." \\1AStlJNGTON tUPI) -Sen. tlcrn1an E. Talmadge (D-Ga.), .told ~1aurice H. SI.ans today it was "utterly in· conceivable" that St.ans worried about bl.fnper stickers and la~I pins but not Sl million in cash disbursements for unknown purposes in the Nixon · re-elec- Uon campaign. On his Sel'Ond day or testimony in the Senate Watergate hearings, Stans, the highest ranking Nixon campaign official to appear, told Ta)madge and hi s col- ·' leag~ on the panel that he, .Jcbew nothing ~bout the Watergate )ltlgging, any cover-up attempt or any other po~tlcal esp}onage . Stans, former Co'mmerce secretary and prize-.winning certifieQ public ac- COIJNTIAN TELLS COVERUP ROLE-Story, Page 4. countant who is: still c;hairman of~'tbe Finance Committee to Re-elect the President, portrayed Ibis role as a fund· raiser WhG found himself in .''t&al frustration'' over decisions being made by the political arm of the Nixon cam- paign organization. AlllCIDg the activlti., alleged in the slllt are unreasonable auto and motorcycle nolse, use of oblceoiUes1 throwing of li· quor containers on private property, blocking publie streets, vandalism, paint- ing of obscenities on fences and autos, urinating and defecating on lawns, threats ol violence, and ha rassment of neighbors. Namea in the complaint are Jerry Owena, Pier 11 president; Gary Chaban, vice pn;&ident; Gris c . cm, secretary. treasurer, and a num ber ol other per- 90DS said lo· have interest in Pier JI. Raciti today said be is now satisfied with the constitution of the commi ttee because It gives equal representation to businessmen and other residents. Purpose or the panel is to study the newlt~rafted Costa l\.tesa sign-ordinance and to make suggestions for im- provement to the city council. . 1bt committee memlii..S-appoint.cd_ Monday night were : Chisholm Brown, OrganimUons whJCh have been asked to submit nominalioll\ for the other U committee members are the North Costa Mesa Homeowners Association, M'esa Verde-Homeowners Association, Mesa del Mar Homeowners As soc i at ion . . Co11cge Park 'J.iomeowners Association. ~lalecrest Homcownen Association, East Side Property Owners ASsoi:iation, l\.fesa West Homeowners Association and arina HJ hlands Homeowners Associa- tion. New Kind of Pollution? • Ul In his testimony, stans: R f T' D S d Ok d Lagu11a -Said President Nixon gave him a equest Or tre USt tU Y a.ye .:!' ·w ~7> "Pi:P talk" last. August And JJ>ld hlm not -GLAS.,lF-1~.D=-rt.-uC..,.. --1to-'--worr1'__.bou 11>e problems-.th<,_-'-o:::--."'""""'1,__ -...,r--==n Waterga~ break-in were causing becAuse By FRED CK S:CJIOEl\i t e s u ierweetllUITngcrs. -Ecr-Camarena-oHhe-Orange -€ounty ~f AKES A SUCCESS "It will all be oyer eventually." • °'"' """ '"' "'" "Hopping, citing a dispatch out of Air Pollution Control District said toda y -Answered "no" when Sen. Howatd H. Laguna Beach planning comnlissionen Chicago about tire dust, said a Ford such studies could only measure the total At least (Ile of our readers is a success , Baier Jr. (R-Tenn.)1 preaed hlJn .as· to have 1gr.eed the city should embark on a Motor Company research eh em is t dust "fall" at a given location. _thanks to a Daily Pilot classified want -whether he, ever discUS8eid what hap-ttudy-of a~"riew'~form ol air pollution: eltlmates 700,000 tons of the black rubber Further studies, he said, wouJd have to .........1 at the Watergate bugging iJ'th t d wears Olf of tires each year. ---De 18.uilC!lOO to find ouf]ust what is in tile ad. ,..,_ , • t re ust. d t former Attorney General John . nus week, the planners gave an m. That's •bout 200,000 tons more than the us · llECEP'l'!ONIST wanted IOI' N.8_ Jaw firm . Typing roq'd. 8:30-5. Coll (Phone ·H ----i<ia:rtornoot:------ Shc answered that ad and was hired. tr yruUe looking .for a job, try lookJng at tho cfa,.illed ads In the vatly Pilot to- day. Tomorro\v you could be successfully employed. And to p14'ce an ed of your own. dial direet -1be line to success - 642-5671. Mifcfiell:-yreaerlck'C:"ta:R~. Mitchell's f<ii'mAI go ahead lo Bruce ... Hopptng-of the 'particulates" generated by car. engines, He..noted that eittnsive equlpmebLil a.ssistAnt: HUgh W. Sloan Jr., Nixon's Kalos Kagatbol Foundation to request Hopping said. required to determine the amount of dust campaign tftasurerj f_ormer ·While dust studies by the state-Air Resources • Research in the eastern states. he ad· that remains airborne for any length of Hoose·ald<s-H~R,-Haldlman-0nd.John-D.--Board-'and-the-federal-Environmental-de(I, indicates-tire-dusl, 111--the-form-Ol-Ume EhrUchman. and G. Gordon Lltkly, Protection Agency. • minute dust particles suspended in the "Trl;a;if'iific;;-;;m;;o;;:ve;;s:-;pre;;;;;;l;;ty;-;;to;;;w;;-;o;;;w;;;n"'°'r"'• former finance counsel in the re-election To make his point about the evils of air. may cause cancer. . . . 1. don 't lhink U~re would ~ m~ch campaign and convicted mastermind of Ure dust, Hopping ,presented the com· . Tbe cancer prod~clng ingredient, abrasion ~~ the cars arcn t going the Watergate operation. mission with a sample of the worn-off carbon black, la a constituent of tire rub-very fa st, said camarena. Bul many of the questions this morning n1bber collected near the lnterwction of her, Hopping asserted. ·Camarena also warned against over- came from Baker ind Talmadae a&ut South Coast Highway and Legion Street. Backed with planning commission rcac Uon to the so-called carcinogenic t~ control and sur:rvlstQ!'l_thal St.ans, an ·. Commissioner Roger Lanphear didn't support, Hopping now plans to go before I cancer producing) properties of tire eckoowledged "sbcklcr ·for details," ex-want to look at it. Larry C.mpbell ameU· the city council seeking official backing dust, noting !hat even barbecue smoke ercistd over campaign funds. ed .It, City Planner Wayne Moody rubbed fC?r the studies. fStt OUST, Pa1te ti • • • " • Battln's campaigri fund that check would I have been on view in !he courtroom dur- ing the current trial. defendant. Derek Mc\\'hinney's lawyer today told an 1 Orange County Superior Court jury. "\\'e've been told a heck of a lot about something that never e~isted .. , com- mented atlomey .Joseph Ball as he neared the end of his final argument in • the grand theft-bribery trial of former [ \Vestminster mayor ~1c\Vhinney, 40, and city planner Tad Fujita, 34. ' Neither defendant ever asked ~1urai to I write such a check, Ball insisted. ''There Is not one shred. of evidence , apart from Murai's obviously biased : lestimony .to supporUb.at claim and the ! Ballin check. was never mentioned in all the telephone COO\'er:;:ations taped by !he prosecution,'' he said. Ball describl>d the $5.000 cash payment. handed over lo Fujita as "part of a decil whereby Derek promised to help l\furai try lo retain hls lease, a business deal and merely that. "~1ura\ was angry because he could see land he had farmed for a mere $150 an acre being broken up 11nd possibly shared out to other farmers al a possible $325 an acre," Ball said. "Doesn't it stand to reason thal a man in that position is going to be resentful and make some pretty wild statements that were eagerly seized on by the pros-' tSee McWHINNEV, Page t1 Coast Weatller ?.lore of the same gloo1ny \o\v clouds are on the agenda Thurs- day. with partial~ clearing in the afternoon hours. Highs in the mid- SOs at the-beaches, ri sil)g to the loY.1 70s Inland. INSIDE TODA y I Abortion is big b1tSi11ess 111 California. There ore docto rs, hospital! alld middleme1' tl1ot t specialize i1t it See fir.st article .... in strie.s btgin11i11g today on Pag• 2. -. '' "l'eur S1r'lk1 l Ann l..l"*r' L .M. 111• 1 M~llltJ. " • 9'i•tl ''r.---'1-l'::Mfvltl "--'""~-l>---1 C1Ultr111 •tv.il,U"Mt '"'"' ,_ Tl !olllllntl "... • ci...11lM °''' 0r111 .. c_,., to11 C-1<11 61 ,TA 46 c""'"" • s..m ~ ONlll M1tlc11 11 Dt . St-111trefl1 ti li:•itHlll ''" ' St.ell Mlll'ltlft ._,. l111ett1111-1 ~I Teltvltl" • 'IMMI JP4t TllM11'1 ...... , , ... lttt It~ If Wtlltt« I Mirlle... 4J .W~' Mtwl .46t ... l•rvk• 11 'l'lltlf Ntwi • • Wednesday, June U , lq7) Senate Vnit Bill for Irvine Hospital Gains By GEORGI-; LElllAL ,. 01 lllt D•ll1 ,lltl Si.fl LJC Irvine uctlng medical sc hool dea n Stanley van dl•n ~ocu1 v.·on 'i have 10 ap- pear in Sacr111nl't1to to11lght before the .state Senate Education Committee. 1----,;..'llie COilfriii1 ce f008y--pa5sed a bill by state Senator Dennis Carpenter IR· Newport Beach) that \vou\d pro vide fllJld S for planning the UCl·CaU£orni3 ~liege ot Medicine teaching hospital .regardless or actions by the joint ·legislative conference oommittl-e on the budget. ' ~UC officials In Sacramento desc ribe ~ Carpenter bill as a precautionary ~easure in the event the items are left ~t of the 1973·74, $9 billion plus state jidget. or are deleted by Governor· .(t~agan. .. To remain active in the Legi slature. ,Carpenter's bill appropriating $925,000 of Yoter·approved bond moneys for the Meat Hijack Suspects Face Commissioner A quartet of men accused or one of the l{ll'gi!st meat hijacking incidents in re- cent history ·have been arra,ig:ned beCore a U.S. Commls8ioner in Los Angeles. iollowing-·thelr captllre ri.fonday in .Newport Beach. , One of the suspects accused of epgiQeering the attell)pted heist of 40,000 pounds of prime steaks worth $120,000 gained limited local fame this year as a campaigner for lower meat prices. 'Andre "Bill" Harvey, 29, of 1020 Cablillo Park Drive. Santa Ana , was af. fili lted with a consumer organization c8Ued Mafia as sa les manager. ,'Ibe·· recently fired executive, ncxv cbarged a;mong the four who all egedly tried to sell the refrigerated truckload of nleat for $1.50 per pound, half the going commercial rate, explained the Mafia group's concern with meat costs at a press conference in May. Har vey said it ~·ou\d see what could be done about the rising price of meat. in addition_ to_airto_repairs and othe r con- sumer concerns. He and c«><lefendant Jeffrey Gilchrist. of Orange, are still held at Los Angeles County Jail in lieu of $10,000 bail, fi'BI ;Agent Joe Powell said today. They are charged along with truck driver Henry Quintana , 40. and his ·nephew and trucking assistant. George. 'Saldana, 20, v;ith theft from an int~rstate shipment. ·- ; Quintana and Saldana, both of Garden Grove, were released on their O'il.'tl prom- ise to appear for a June 22 hearing in U.S. District Court , without posting $5,000 cash bail. Agent PoY;ell, an FBI supervisor in the Los Angeles office. said the session is the equivalent of preliminary hearing in the slate criminal court -system. Just as in the state system, it will also be cancelled if a Federal ,Grand Jury should indict the four defendants in the meantime. Pow ell explained. Harvey and Gilchrist met at Harbor Food Locker. 30th Street and Villa Way. by Newport Beach detectives Reed Gloshen and Tom Shearn who entered the case after receiving a tip. Fellow detectives and FBI agents stak· ed oot the area as the parties negotiated th e meat sale and Quintana and Saldana rolled tip shortly thereafter in the refrigerator truck. The big rig had been stolen over the weekend from a parkJng place near the Burbank home of its intended recipient after a long haul trip from Greeley, Colo .. where the meat was processed. Organizers di sclosed after Harvey's ar- rest that the novel consumer group titled Mafia closed its Garden Grove offices after the managei", a federal parolee, dropped out of sight. OIAN•I COAST CM DAILY PILOT Tll• Q<anp C0.11 DAILY PlL(IT, •lrll ..... oefl ~ _.,,.., lh• ,.. ..... prq1, k PVb!lll'led k" Ille Or1rioe CO.II Pu111l•illr>Q (OfnPilllY, ~ t•te edUio..1 er1 P\lbl/llled, MOl'ICl•f Ill~ Friday, k>r (0111 Mew, Newport lltKll, Hllftllr'IOIOll lltatll/Feuftltln V•lley, LI~ 119«:11, lrvlnt/hOdi.tMldt •rid $tn (;lemoenll/ $111 JV111 C::.1>11tre,., A 1i1111I• reg~I tcl!Uon 11 M iit,,_. '-!lll'Olf1 •1'111 S\Wldty1. , .... 111lnclpel pllbllt~lnll Pil"' 11 I I 3l0 Wal lllY Str•e!, C.0.!1 Mtw, Ctlllet11l1, •U:Mo. R.ob•rt N. w,.d ,.f"lltent '""' Pullll1"-r Je1;lr R. Curley Vit• Pretli:ltnl Ind G'"''" Mtlll .. r , Thom11 K•e~u ~ Edj!O< hospital \\'Orkjng dra\\•ings had to clear the con1miuce by Friday. A con1panion bill by Assemblyman flo~rt BtirihHni (R·Ne wport Beach) is ready to go in the Assembly in tht event the bills are needed. -since rr is morT difflcUl t to get such bills to the floor of the Senate after the rules deadline of June LS, today's education ('()mmittee hearing was con- sidered "critical'' by U<;; officials. Van den Noort was expected to outline lhe need for the teaching hospital as a means to increasffig class size of the UCI-CC1.1 from 64 to 96 students entered each year. Further. the funds Senator Carpenter's bill 1\•ould free would provide plann ing n1ooey for the community, clinics and the upgrading of Orange County Medical Center (001CI. Earlier th is session, a joint committee studying the spending of UC bond funds recommended tha t the Legislature spend $15 million of UC bonds money' on the teaching hospital (200 beds, on campusi. another $9.5 million to upgrade the present teaching facilities at OCMC (by reducing from 515 to 315 the number of beds the re) and create a county system of community based walk·in care clinics including transportation between them and UCI and OCMC. UC officials expect the joint conference committee on the budget to provide at least planning moneys for all the recom- mended ite1ns. The Carpenter and Badham bills. however . would assure the "!echnical" if not "political" chances of &uaranteei11g the expenditures this year. Another $6.5 million of the $38 million of bonds passed last fa ll and earmarked to improve medical education at lJCI are. in the budget llliJJS being considered behind closed doors by the joint con· ference committee on the budget. This expense, although related in the sense that it would provide medical schoo l classrooms and laboratories on campus, has not ~~ contested in the Legislature. The bu1ld1ngs would be the first permanent facilities the UCJ-CCM has enjoyed since the formerly private medical college moved to Irvine five years ago from its downtown Los Angeles campus and hospital. The fate or the $9.5 mtll ion suggested for improvement ol OCMC"i~ less cer· lain . Assembly1nan Willie Brown Jr. (D· San Francisco) headed the hospital siting joint legislative committee and also sits on the conference committee on the budget. From Pagel McWHINNEY .. ecution?" Ball asked the jury. The prosecution alleges that ll1CWhin· ney and Fujita shook down Murai for a total of $10.000 with the threat that they had the power to terminate his interest in the 215 acres of strawberry fields at Mile Square Park. It ts alleged that Fuji.ta was the middle man in the extortion attempt and that he ~·as assigned by Mc\Vhi nney to take the $5.000 in bills in .a table toy transaction \\1itnessed by district attorney's in- vestigators. But Fujita's attorney. Al Stokke. told 1he jury that his client '\l.'as si mply a "good Samaritan" who wa s acting as a mediator and was si mply trying to resolve the difference existing between l"-'O good friends -Murai and McWhin· ney. Stokke st ressed, like Ball, that Murai knew he might lose land on which he had made nearly a million dollars at a bargain price and he began expanding his story into a shakedown attempt once he kne\',r the di strict attorney·s office was interested. "\Ve v.•ouldn't ha ve been here today if it hadn't been for the political ca mpaign that was going on at the time," Ball told the jury. "\\'ha t \ve really have here is an outgro"-'th or ~\·hat has been all along an attempt to destroy Derek ~tcWhinney,"' Dall said. TONIGHT COSTA MESA HIGH GRADIJATION - t.e Bard Stadium. 7:.30 p.m. NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH GRAOUA- TfQN -O;iridso n P'icld, 7:30 p.m. Tho1111t A. M11rphi11e Ml11&9lllQ Elll!Ot cJi,, ., . 001 -1HCli1rd P. -.;;rr-"'"1"'"' Mll>eQlno ldll0r1 'fllUltSDAY, .IUNE II --tilc!il A[.l,'{"scHOOL GRA1lUATION 10 a.m. · c-M-°""' ESTANCI A HIGH GRAOUATION -J)O W11t •• , Shttl LcBard Stadiwn, 1 p.m. M1/li119 Addret1:'P.O. l ol 1560, •2626 ~1ESA VERDE HOMEOWNERS Nixon to Show Economic Plaii WASlllNG10N (UPI) -Presi- dent Nlxoo will dJtclose new pro- pouls for figbilJli lnllatlon In a !Ul- tlonwlde broOdcaat tonight at 5:!0 POT, th< 'Wblte House announced. Details ,21 tbe plllt were kept secret, but,t Js expected to Include some seleCli\'e price freezea af- fecting some industries ~·hile omit· Ung a specific wnge freeze. Nixon has been concentrating for <t week on various proposals of economic advise rs and Cabint•t rnembers for stemming the ~·orst Inflation· t<> hit the nation in 20 years. (Story, Page 38.) Battin Names Valley Mein As Planner Clart!nce G. Casper. 53. u Fountain Valley private land use planning con· sultant, has ~n named to the Orange County Planning Co1nmis'sion b y Supervisor Robert Batt in. Casper \.Viii take the scat vacated by Adolph l\folina . 41 . a San ta Ana attorney. Battin said l\Iolina, who has served · on the commission since last January, quit because of demands of a new job he had taken,_ l\>Iolina becaine the second pla nning commissioner to resign in the past few days. Last week Supervisor Ronald Caspers named Bart Spendl ove, presi- dent of the Saddleback Area COOrdinating Council to succeed Ron Yeo, COrona d(.\ ~far architect. Molina said vacation time referee with Tuesday he ~·as taking from his new job . a:i a the State Workmen's Compensation Insurance Fund in Long Beach to stay with the con'l.mission until June 30. "I felt a moral obligation to stay until lhe general plan work is finished of f," ~lolina said. The county planning com· mission and board of supervisors are in the midst of meeting state requirement for open space and c on servat i on elements by June 30. Casper, a private land use planning consultant, has partici pated nn UC Irvine's Project 21 Open Space team. He ran unsuccessfully for Fountain Valley city council during the last elec- tion and helped in Supervisor Battin's re- election campaign. Sca1idal Figure Iii Britai1i Held Ori Pot Charges LONDON (UPI) -Lord Lambton, who resigned his ministerial post in a call girl scandal, pleaded guilty today to possess· ing marijuana and pep pills. He said he had a. "fetish" about discussing pot with hi s prostitute friend, Nornia Levy. The wealthy, 50-year~ld Lambton. whose resignation and that of another minister rocked Prime Minister Edward He ath's Conservative government. was fined $750 for keeping a small quantity of marijuana and amphe tamines at his Lon- don tow n house. Asked by prosecutor David Tudor· Price if he.asked Mrs. Levy for narcotics and other drugs during visits to her Lon- don apartment, Lambton said they "talk- ed about them" and added: "It was a fetish with me."' The prosecutor told the court Lambton had beeri photngraphed smoking ma ri· juana in bed with the 26-year-old Mrs. Levy, an Irish-born ex-co nvent girl. Lambt on's apearance in the hushed and crowded court room at London'.:: ~farlyebone Magistrates C.ourt was the I first time he emerged in publi c since he resigned ""'as parliamt!ntary u n cl e ... I sec retary of the Royal Air Force ~1ay 22. l·lis statement the following day that he quit because Or his "casual PC· quaintance" with.a .call girl was quickly •I followed by a similar confession fl"91n J.;ord Jellicoe. who resigned as leader of ~·-1 the House of Lords and as lord privy , S(':al. Defense attorney Edward Cazalet said the scandal has left La mbton a humiliated mnn . I "You "'ill appreciate Ule agony or the l 111 ind he has gone through during the last few weeks... Cauilet said. · Ju1·y Reaches 11"1 In1passe in Tri_al °'"' OMc.I ASSOCIATI ON -General meeting, Fred "~~1:~11~~;,:::,1 t~"".J:.:1'' SQrsabal. City i tooagcr. wiU $Rea~ on An Or~ge Countf Superior Court J~ry1. Mli1111na1on "'*'~: 01u '*" '°"''"'•rd "oi>en sJ)ace'' bond Issue. Costa Mesa 1fiat recently deadlocktd on perjbry an< Stn tlfn)en1t: )Os Nortti El ~·1111no 11. .. 1 Country Club. 7:30 p.m. bribery charges aired against Newport Supe1·viso1·s Ask Land Sale Delay • Orange County supervisors voted Tue!- day to urge the State Highway Com- mi.$S()fl to delay disposal of property i;urcha&:.'<i ror the now-defunct Pacific Coast freeway. ' I $15.,000 Fool? CTieck Flritt.ers Away-Forever REDWOOD Cl1"l (AP) -A ,16,000 check wu perhaps lost forever Tuesday when it fluttered Into ' an esl:alato t at the Hall of Justice and Records here. '£ho escalator was turned off for 15 n1i11utes while a mechanic crawled inside to look for tlte check. But part of U1e n1achinery is in- accessible and the mechanic was unable to locate the check. The check was made out to a inan as part of a courtr property sale. . . "I feel like a fool,'1 he said, too embarrassed to-identify himself. Supervlaor -Ralph~€lark-aaid be CC11n·--r-~---.0,--s -ID llecd mission was scheduled_to_act Oil declar-ov1et ystems sta e ing such property surplus wtt!Un tlieneit . fe w days and a wire should be sent re-- questing the delay. The holdup in getting rid of the fonner freeway parcels was requested so that the State Parks and Recreation Depart- ment can study possible recreation uses for !he properties. Clark said his request a p p I i e d partirolarly to a strip of land purchased for the freeway between the Santa Ana River and Beach Boulevard in Hun- tington Beach. He said this property, wme 90 acres, cou),d be used for ex- pansion of the Huntlngton Beach State Park or for a travel trailer camping ground as an adjWlCt to the park. Although the action of the supervisors, as far as Clark was concerned, applied only to the Huntington Beach strip, it is obvious that the Highway Commission adopted.policy holding up Sales Of such parcels "-"Ould apply to other land. Newport Beach has been pushing a bill through the legislature to have the State Division of High\\'ays declare SIJll>lus and sell parcels within the city. The city wants some of th!!r.1 for park and open space land. S1nall Stretc1i Of Ne ,wport Free'tvay to Open Motorists heading for the Harbor Area 'viii be able to stay on the freewa y a lit· ti e longer next week with the opeQing a three-tenths mile stretch of the Newport Freeway into Costa ~1esa. A spokesman for the state Division of lUghways said the southbound section to Bristol Streft would open on Monday and lhe northbound section on Tuesday. The project includes six lanes each \\'ay and was completed at a cost o( $1.4 million which incluctes the Bristol Street overpass. Also annowiced by the Division of fligh\\·ays was the closure Monday of the southbound Baker Street onramp. 1'he ramp will be closed for re«lDStruction wltil J une 22. Motorists are advised to take Bristol Street south to the Bristol onramp. H.eagan Assures Vote SACRAMEN'l'.O (AP ) -Californiafll! definitely will get to vote on a con- troversial tax limitation plan. Gov. Ronald Reagan said Tuesday. "If we should by any chance ·miss" se<.'Uring enough petition signatures by a June 17 deadline, "~·e·u just con1inue Until we get enough,'' Reagan told a symposium of the California Stale Etnployes As~ia· tion. For Brezhnev-Coast Visit As a squad or 30 Russian cOJ'lt· nlunlcatlons technicians continues to in· stall communications systems at the Western White House, the So\'!et inss is pumping out the propaganda about the 'visit to Washington and San Clemente by Communist leader Leonid Brezhnev. Accounts from the USSR and the na· tion's capital point to a major drive to herald the leader's visit to the U.S. as an atte.mpt to reach an ulti mate deteritc with the United States. · Major ~de and arms limitation deals are the goals· for the--visit and round of summit meetings_ with President Nixon set to start Monday in Washington, D.C. Soon after the initiat discussions there , the scene will shift to San Clemente v.·here a major address to the citizens of the U.S. and USSR may be given by the Soviet .. Communist Party head . Trio Snatch Big Frozen Salmo11 A boisterous, balding burglar v.'ith a Fu l\1anchu mustache and his accomplice are sought today after fleeing a Newport Beach cafe \\'ith a whole frozen , 20-pound Chinook salmon a iJ d escaping in a \vaiting geta"'ay car. Delbert R. Allen, manager of The Crab Cooker. 2200 Newport Blvd .• and employe F'rank 1.eitler spotted the daring daylight heist too late to intervene. Investigators said the two ~ slipped into-the rear of the popular seafood restaurant Jllld engineered the $33 salmon snatch from the walk-in freezer whJle a third man kept the car running. WltJlesses told pollce the burglars were Jaugtiing triumpbanUy as they fled with the big fro<en fish. Fro'" Pagel DUST ... con tains carcinogens. "Jt's such a new field ... wow ... it sounds intrigllitlg:•• -commented Com· missioner Sally Bellerue after Hopping made bis presentation. Campbell said . that studies of tfre dust along South Coast Highv.•ay should be supplemented wilh survey s of tire dust on busy arterials like Park Avenue and Thalia Street. Lending strenglh to the yet-unofficial reports of the two-nation address Is Che fact that 50 Russian 'newsmen wiJI -be on hand along the South Orange t'oast early next week lo joln the communications staff already here. For more than a week tlle technic ians ha ve been workj ng 16 hours a day, ac- cording to their spokesmen, installing the equipment \\'hich could broadcast a televised message to the Soviet Union. So far WhJte House aides have said lit· tie about the San Clemente pha.se of the visit. It is expected to take place early next week after Nixon and Brezhnev make a stopover at the Houston Space Center in Texas. As for the substance of the major talks, sources say the two leaden will d~cuss major, long-tenn trad e agreements and the sources add that Breihnev _plans to negotiate "as if Watergate never ha ppened." The sources, spokesmen "who reflect current Kremlin policy," said the Soviet leader is most anxious to make the talks a succees and achieve positive success. Brezhnev reportedly does not plan to exploit the current precarious position of the President. Mounting economic JrOblems in the Soviet Union -as evidenced last year after the major U.S.-Sovlet grain sale was announced - are reported to be the prime motivating factor in Brezhnev's . predicted attempts to hammer out new economic deals with Nixon. Bar Owner Sued For Divorce I Fire House bar Operator Raymond Renn W&S sued for divorce Tuesday in an Orange-CowWy-Syperior Court action that charges ''irTeconcilable differences" exist between him and his wife, Linne1 • C. Rohm. Mrs. Rohm seeks a court disposition of a list of property that includes three cocktail lounges -the Fire House, 177 E. 11th St .. c..ta 1,1 ... , the Shangri-La in Ga rden Grove-and The Jail in Padfic Beach . She also demands a share of stock-held by Rohm in Golden Nugget, Inc .. Harbor Boulevard Corp. and Panasonic Corp. , The action seek,, a court award to her of spousal and child support, attorney's fees and custody of the children. The Rotwns ma rried Sept. 7, 1963, in St. Louis. Mo. They have t1vo children, Ra y. mood Jr .. 9, and \Veody t .. 6. • ''"' OPEN ... -a j + _,....,.,..-,, ... , ,... ......... d-t· ... --. • to. l <' 538 CENTER STREET-COSTA MESA 646-1919 Duck Feet Fins Blemish 6.95 & 7.95 Regulars 7.95 to 10.95 Masks· & Snorkles Water Winder Kick Boards 4.95 ' l Champion Handball Gloves Racquetball Racquets I 6.95 to 37.95 Racquetballs 1.25 ea., · Badminton Rackets Ping Pong Paddles & Balls Ping Pong Sets-4.95 to 14.95 CLOSID (; SUNDAY f' Wilson-Bancroft-Davis-Yoneyama- Dunlop Tennis Rackets Wilson-Penn-Dunlop ---lennis.-BaU1~==~-4 Converse-Adidas-Jack Purcell$ ... .. ,.,.. ... _... ........ ,. __ .,._, . ., ··-"""' Yolleyball!-4.25 to 17.95 Volleyball Nets 11.95 to 21.95 Colorelt"Sleeve-Baseball- !l Undershirts Boys 1.95-Mens 2.75 Tretom Tennis Shoes Baseball Caps-Mitts-Balls-Bats -. lask'etball Sllaes Raleigh BikerParts • -Baseball Shoes----fl----,yrr.:;ire"s--1rnuliii;;;:s-.:=u;;;;epaor.1r'™mgr---ir-l , .. .,..._. 17141 64Jo4JJI COSTA MESA \VA'fBR DI STRICT _ Beach attoi:ney Everett Elwood Stone Cl ·,.......u ... rrl ... 641-1671 . µ . . ___te~e:d...anJJUJW.Sse..aU1Jo_oneJn lav.0>'-4-"i----- c.i.,,.ltflt, un. 0 • .,. eu ... ~~'-,.--+-Hegular meetmg,-7 Ftur-Orive,-'haO ~f acquittal. the Dally Pilot has Je"arncd . J .................................... .......-: .... , Costa Mna All Pu Shoes Racket Restringing Open 9 to 6 -Closed Sundays ~. Ne -•tori... 1111111r11-. p.m. _ Prosecutor Pat Brian, the source or a --=~1:!,. ':".;~-;, ':r,::i·":i.,11er;~ REGISTRATION FOR SUM ME.a statement to the effect that the jury was ~· M1t 1 • tt _,..,., ""'""· • B.ECREATJON -Community Recrea-deadlocked at 11 to one In favor of con-~~~=~tw 1tt J:i: M.ti; lion Center, 6·8 p.m. June 15-18, 9 a.m. -vlcUon has conflnned that he was mlsln-1, -"'"' "' mttt u,11 '""'"'iv' 111111,...., l p,m. romied when the Jury retum~d from IL~ • 11 11t 1 .,.. ,.,,. IMMfl1 ' 1 " COSTA MESA SENIOR CITIZENS -deJlberatlons. 646-1919-538 Center, Community Recreation .Center, 12·3 p.m. The Daily Pilot regrets the error . • • I • DAU.Y PILOT EDITOBIAJ, PA.GE Parents More than a quarter of Newport·Meu school dis- trict parents spoke thalr minds on the quallt7 of educa- tion In the Harbor Area last week. SOmo didn't like what Ibey are.getUng. . '!be results of a parent opinion survey released by district octicials showed Iba[ nearly ·half ot the high school parents who responded don't think the schools are adequately preparing their teenagers for a career or any other future contact with the real world. nly 27 J"!rcent or the dlstrict'~nts returned --••=r"iq;;;u'esttonnalfeS.DliUictoffiaw ny tho aurvey'ls not statlsticsUy pure and waa never meant to be. They just wanted a general feeling to work with. Though it wasn't 0 pure0 , the survey does point out ·soMe-clea~:cuntrengtbs and weaknesses In the district's programs. For the most J,>art. parents or elementary school students overwhelmmgly aupport the teachers, admin- istrators and Instructional programs tn the schools. But parents of high school students re!pondtng to the questionnaire seemed more divi<led . More than 42 percent of those parents think preparation for future life is inadequate and 50 percent say counseling ls toad .. .quate. More than 60 percent of the respondents think more emphasis. should be put on preparing students for their future roles in the real world. Written comments on the questionnaires also re- ·vealed surprising support for some form of all-year school -a concept the district has put on a back burner at least for the next school year. Parents blasted the 11new math" and asked for more concentration on the basics like reading, writing and arithmetic. ' Though most of the responses tended to be favor- able toward district operations, a strong undercurrent of discontent was clear. District officials made a point of that discontent when they presented the survey to trustees. It is a positive thing when the people who run the Air Views schools and the people who pay for them can communi- cate constructively. The administrJton have taken the responsibility ot co~g the problem fully in band. They aay they will do all they can to further improve the system and c0mmunlcate more closely with the public. Perhaps the best assurance of action Is that they have taken tho aurvey results to heart rather than try· ing to play them down or sweep them Wlder the rug. Police Motorcycles One' of the more controversial proposals in next year's Costa Mesa budget is the recommendation by City Manager Fred Sorsabal to add a six-man motorcycle squad to tho police force. It needn't be controversial, because policemen and motorcycles have proven to be an effective Jaw enforce- ment tool, especially in cities which have a severe traf· fie congestion prob}em, __ Motorcycles are unmatched for their ability to cut through traffic jams and to reach the scene of an emer· gency quickly. Police Chief Roger Neth _believes thlS mobility will allow bis men to do a better ]Ob in patrol· ling the city's arterials where 65 percent of all acCI· dents .occur. : . In the past four years accidents on these through J'Qads have been up 39 percent while citation~ have dropped by 30 percent. The problem is that po_lice of· ficers in cars have not been able to catch the violators because it is too risky to give chase in traffic, accord· tog to the chief. The versatility of the motorcycle does carry it.s price. Motorcycle officers are exposed to more poten- tial Injury than their four·wheeled counterparts._An out· standing tratntng program could do much to unprove their personal safety. c I • • • I I • I " . r • • · . • • • How Reason, Like Passion Eeonmn11-minded Driver Leaves ()ar at' Home !: t i , Can Enslave- Dear Gloomy Two-hit Bus Line Wins Applause· t Gus A golf course the adults in Santa Ana Heights do not need! The children are still part-leas! To the Editor: ~YDNEYJ.~ Hooray for tbe two-bit bus line! In these times when governments are being so roundly criticized by citizens for not doing things, I think that loud applause W.J. should be heard for the Orange County • .._.. ow a .. --. .,. ........... w Transit District. The buses are clean, run no.gbta at Lllrge: :" .~"" • ,.":'.~ "':' := on time and the drivers are all courteous. There are two kindls of. "reuonable" -"'!I " .,..., ._ .... DMlr ,...._ people: those who guide their lnstinclual --'l'hey--are-scbeduied-lrequently and the drivu toward leaftimate satisfactloos, inte~ion of two or more lines is tim- and the far larger number who \lie ed so penom do not have to wait for a reuon to repress their instioctual scientioosly you labor over a creative transfer very long. drives; and the latter sort are just ~~has nothinLto do with talent, on-- much the slaves of reason as Uie Jy with temperament. ~ - -WE HEAR much these days about a libertines arc the slaves of passion. • • • fuel shortage and an energy crisis. It • • • UJe NWnnlaln that the y111nwr are seems to me that a lot of people do not '---1-"' ..... ._... -care. I have ridden the OCI'D buSes ex-The unknown, oo mailer -~. overturnlng our valum ud illltltutlonl; lmlt•ely ud the majarity of pusenge"' Is always more feared than ·a known yet since tbe begbm1ng of NOarded time, are those who either do not have danger; and since OW" age bu plqed the young have unoom.plalnlngly gone out automobiles for eol)ijljmic reuons or Into the unknown. on all froall,futer to be slaughtered in oombat to lltisfy the cannot driva (either loo ,_,g or loo than any other, It is scarcely s.irprislng pride, vanity, greed and "}mor" of. the old). that we show more public fear and priv· old in every gener 0 at!on. • 1 do have 1 car and am able to drive, ate anxiety than any past era. • afford • • ·People who use foul language where it but for tw.bit.s (25 cents), I cant •--'t bel should be rebuked lo take my car out of tbe driveway ! So, I • 1 v.·onder how many persons who abhor "drugs" ;>op a couple of aspirins in their mouth the n1oment they feel a headache aiiiIDgOrt:-lilstead oftaking a brisk walk ta the fresh air, a short snoo1.e, or some other form f non-chemical therapy. \l\lt2ll . ong , . mere use the OCTD whenever I can . I urge for ha~!°.g an imfX!~eri..sbed vocabulary -· other citizens of the area to do the same. than a filthy~· .~In moet cues, the If they need infonnation . or schedules words have no dlrty referent, but are they can call 547~ or write to the • • • simply verl>al exclamation poinls lo OCTD, 1126 E . Washingtoo, Santa Aoa stress lnarti~te !~.) 9'l701. Try the bus, you'll like it; and save Beethoven v.·ould rewrite a musical phrase a dozen times: r.tozart would dash off a page without a second thought; how hard or long or con- As som a we learn we amnot gt something we wanted, it becomes far dearer to us 1n lmaginattklo than it would have been in possession. Watergate Hush. Money Eyed for Tax Liability WASHJNGTON · -1bose responsible ) (or the Watergat .. crime may have Ito ( pay taxes on the It million in campaign JACK ANDERSON funds that were laid out for break·lns, hmh money, legal fees and political salr '------------otage. Tax experts te·u us President Nixon former Attorney General John Mitchell. himself Is Liable If he had knowledge of White House staff chief, H. R. Haldeman, the disbursements. Even If his aides kept presidential adviser John Ehrllc:hman him in the dark, he may still be held and campaign aide Job Magruder. legally ftSponsible for the tu: obllptton. Our tax advisers say the President This Is the import of a lllD-.1 may also be in tax trouble over the flnan· General Accountlna Office study on the clai help be accepted from aerosol king Nixon campaign commltteee. Quoti111 tu: Robert Abplanalp to buy the San roles, the study declares that "the ex-Clemente retreat. penditure of pollUcai fw\dl for olber lbon THE NIXONS s1in0<1 peil.on.1 notes, campaign or similar -will be ••~ Ab lanai 1 •--t up f coniidend a diverlion of IUCll flmdJ ..,. •=~ P P a~ ore • or _....__ ""'°"== u ~-." ias,ooo. In return, Abplanalp ts supposed "t-..-. umm NlliNUIV to own most of the 28-acre tract around nus DRY language explaln& -the the presidential compound. Internal &venue service ts suppoeed to The Firlt Family got the deal ap- treat campoJcn funds that aren't spent nprovedce, butbouy titer ta~-'=.1'::°:'00: for campoign -· The new re--.-• quiremeol wu adopted Jn 1968 after we sbould poy tans on the-1'25,000. As they nveaied tbel the late sen. Tom Dodd (!). interpret the law, the tearing up of the Conn.) bad diverted ten> of thousands of pe,.,,...I notes -In other wmll, the can· dollan from his campaign coffers into cellaUon of tile debt -makes !he his own pockets. Dodd wu oonsured, and 1625,000 taxable Jncmte. mi9dlrecled csmpalgn funds were made They point out that the Nlzons are tuable. lllinfl the entiro :ZS acres, that property Now Ntx<m1.1 campaign collections have records abow no evJdence the acreage been dlvtr1ed Into Improper poctetl and his been legally divided and thlt the &J!Ollt for W.Cal JIUlllOOtS. Our tu: ad· whole deal appean to be a gimmick to viaen 1111 ....,...., must poy iu .. on benefit the NblOlll. • some money!. WALTER J. GRIESMEYER ProtUIMau .. - To the Editor: This Is regarding the article in Wednesday's Daily Pilot, (June 6), ''Charges Fly Over Checks". Since 1 work out of lbe Mesa Center Post Office, 1 have no knowledge-of the missing Social Security checks as all incomlllg mail i.s delivered lo the main Post Office on Adams. The article, however, quoted an anonymous Costa Mesa mail-carrier. It is with him that I take exception. He is quoted as saying that morale among Post Office employes is at an all-time low- MY MORALE is not low. Certainly tbe anonymous carrier could not have been employed at this Poet Office 18 years ago. I well remember those rainy days on the bicypes. On1y a few streets were paved all the way across. It was necessary to dismount the bicycle and slosh through mud to each mailbox. II was impossible to keep yourself or the mail dry. And those Santa Ana wiJ:tds! You hid to get off and push the bike ; otherwise, you and the bike went ovet. You could not get a cold drink of water -your-from your route in the heat of summer. We had no coffee or vending IDIChiMs. Employes did not receive a unlfonn allowance. There was llli fl1JO,OOO •t lout 1:1'8t wu·peld to the A SPOKESMAN !or the Presiden; Waterbugert to buy their aileace and to a5'ured us on tbe other hand that com-te their lawyen . .:._ln . a I. I. _ .-pWia1p.Jl..the..1qa1.owner.oL~lon lh iliiiiiilC!be~ ~.~ the Nixon .compound, thlt tbe:::--- apent on illegal campaign activlu .. are land ii l•inc up In value and that it ts a 1lao taxable. profitable iovestmeot for Abplanalp. 11' THE Prtsident can 't. be stuck with U anyone but the President were ln- lhe tax obUpUon then....tbe campaign volved, Internal Revenue surely would be r1ldes who made lhe pay-outs are clearly lnvestlgat.ing. A spokesman rcrused to Uable. 'Ibey would loclude Finance tell us, however, whether. lJtS is In- Chairman Maurice Stans, the President's vestigating the President or any of his penanal lawyer Herbert Kalmbach, aid .. on tar matters. I MAILBOX Let'ters from readers are . welcome. Normally writers should conve11 tMir messages in 300 ioord3 or Less. ·The right to condense lette1'& to fit space or eliminate libel is userved. All letters mwt include lignature and mailing addresa. b-Ut names may be withheld on request if sufficient reMon is apparent. Poet111 will not bt' pubU.hd. no local unioo to represent poolmen, ~ sequently there was no grievance or labor-management committee. In fa~t. there were no committees of any kind. Seniority meant nothing. These problema have been corTected, and today morale is much higher than It was then. THE ANONYMOUS postman was also quoied: "Nobody has pride in his work anymore. Nobody gives a damn." I Vigorously deny this allegation. I have pride in MY work, ud I moot assuredly do "give a damn". I do my best to pleue. I enjoy my wort ud I eojoy my as.oodaticn with my patrons and co-worte,.,,. The majority of my fellow postmeo also bave pride in their jobs. I say majority -not all. No doubt there are BOrne who do not. Mr. Anonymous Postman should speak for himself and henceforth not include me and <'ther hardworking mall~rriers when be mak>erfabe-generallzat!om;-- 1 cmclude this letter with this thought to my patrons: Your mail-carrier does hive pride in doing bis job for you. When tbe time ,:comes that I don't "give a damn", I shaii quit the Post Office. JOHN C. BULL Fine tlle Slobs To the Editor: Read with interest your editorial, Sun- da y, June 3, 1973 -"Inland Papers, Please Copy.'' My husband and I are from the East. We took a walk on HunUngton Beach, MoOOay, May 28, about six o'clock in the evening. We couldn't believe our eyes. Shame, shame on every one of you who enjoy the beach but walk away leaving it looking like a garbage dump. I SUGGEST, to keep the ta X.P ay er from being the fall guy for the9e slobs, you post llOO Littering signs on the beaches just like they do on the highways. The lifeguards sit high enough so that they could call the slobs' attenlion to where the trash cans are located. If this fails, proliibit food or drink of any kind to be carried onto the beaches. It's early in the season -let's do something now to keep our beaches beautiful. Next time, "Stop, Think Trash Cans." !ffiS. L. KENNEDY 'BUly lack' To the Editor: i1m writing In answer to what a Mr. James B. Wood had to say about the movie 11Billy J•ck." Obviously, Mr. Wood didn't get any meaning out of this movie, but be seema to be so close-minded be wouldn't understand it anyway. HE SAYS BIDy Jack Is full of violenc<!, which is totally rldlculou>. There ii a DtUe, bUt If he jlald any attenUoo at ail he would have noticed that Billy Jack never carried a gun and in a couple of ln- stances was flghUng in seif-<iefeose. "Billy Jack" also has a lltUe artti- establlslunent in it so Mr. Wood prob- ably reacted without thinking. MR. WOOD says thlt humans cannot be tbet evil and the human experience cannot be that hopeless. Biiiy Jack did ail he could to PrOtect the Indian ud put bi.s Ille oo the line doing it. This movie brings oot truth which Mr. Wood evidently is afraid to hear. I suggest he aee it a few more times and open up his mind a little and face reality. STEVE DELANEY C•rdhoard Dra- To the Editor : I hive just read the letter Jamea B. Wood wrote that describes "Billy Jack" u revolting. I would have to · agr<o, although it is not so much the violence in this PG-rated picture that revolts me (There is violence, bul I think Mr. Wood exaggerates: one rape, one seductlon, v.·ould be more fair, for example). For Its trivia, cbildtslmess and tbe Insult of Its petty morallsm, uBilly Jack" rank, as ooe of the three worst picturee I've ever seen -the other two, more offenslve, being "Getting straight" and "Cutle Keep." In all fairness, "Billy Jack" at least bed some Vtr'J clever -and funny -~chodrama scenes (although I've heai'il."1hat most of , that malerial was borrowed ). I CAN'T agree that the a~vert!Jlng was misleading. Esf>ecially the TV ads made thia movie look like a combination Gidget Goes Hipple and Cllot Eastwood Goes Indian. I went to see it out or curiosity, despite the ads, and later had to conclude, What you see (in the ads) Is what you get! Whether the n10vie deserves the amount of publicity It has been given Isn't the quts:tion: those full page ads were paid for; I presume. 'nle question is, why are so many people talk· ing about what a great motion picture this is? Violence or not, I can sometilTies eii'joy good commercial entertalnment as much as a "thinking person's" movie. AU Task is that the cardboard drama not be presented in the guise of social com- men ta ry. For •. me, the most deprwing _part of this movie experience was ha\ting to sit Quotes '1 doa't C!ate U ?Mat pet to $4 • pound, I woaldn"t go tbtoqlt U.11 •1ala.." -Pat Flathau of Saginaw, Mich .. who with her husband and three children rals· ed two ateera In the baclcyard after get· Ung mad about rising meat pnces. In a Costa Mesa theater literally packed with people (not all of them under 15 either), who were wildly appreciative everytime one of. the good punts acored a point against ooe of the hatefUI Establishment. I'm beginning to think that if you used an emotJonal enough tone, you could stand up in front of an audience anywhere and be applauded for saying just about anything. ALICE VAN VL!ZT 'Obscenity' To the Editor: Please convey my thanb to Russ Waltm on "Obacenity" In the J111» 7 Daily Pilot. My wife and I were recently Iii Sin Francisco and were unable to find the JocaUon of the Museum of Erotic Art. We inquired of tu! drivers, our boeel, checked the phone book and villton lit' formation sources -all without succesa. With Mr. Walton's column, I'm mre·we \VOuld have found it. I have seen "Deep Throat", but ha.Ye not seen either the "Last Tango in Paris". or the Museum of Erotic Art. t , trust you will continue runnJng his col· umn, as I will continue to look for further recommendations. F. M. wmtE Qilutiotu Sip To the Edltw: ! • ' . • • ; i i • I ' I I ' Having read the recent editorial in the Daily Pilot regarding your aims re the ,. control ol billboards, etc., 1 wish to bring to your attention the erectioo ol a framework which, \\i thout doubt, will be a very inartistic sign board OD the grounds of the Orange Count 1 Fairgrwnds. It Is adjacent to the Newport Beech Freeway (intentimal?) and Fair Drive. It Is obviously controvenial to 'f'1IJr motives and I wonder if It bas been lepJly permitted. I only submit this to you as 1 approve of. your motives. W. B. STI1DLEY 'Fifi-ts' Fan To the Editor: May I expr ... my feelinp about Dllel Hale's ''Figments?" My family and I got a lot of pleaure/ from this comic. It is so true to life,! 1 meaning the lmaglnatiom of all. I hopo'I : this continues to be in our Daily Pilot. • The Daily Pilot is a fine paper. ~ ' MRS. MILDRED BINTLJFP'c .....--------.·I ! -MCOAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wred, Pul>U.,,.,. Thoma.I KUVll, Editor Barbara Kreibich. i---:r:<11torial-PoQ11~Edltrrr-- The editorhll ,'Jlllgc ot 1be Da.lly Pilot .tee~ to infunn and fl'timlliale ttadtts by ~ Ob tbia ~ dtvene iCommt'ntar)' ·on IDp6cs ol m. llJtttt by iYnctbted colwnnln a.nd • ...-, by providlrc • "'""" ... -ttadtts' vliwl-iiid·byprt'Mnln.thfl: newiptiper'1 opinions ·and ~ on ........ ,_._ Tho""'"'"' -_ .. tho DtJ()' euot _... ont> ta tho editorial column at the 1nP 0( the pqe. OpUUons o~ by tha-. umrdltl aod car.toontsts and liltlW ,'WJ'ltft'I &retbtlrown and nodlb .... '""'' ot 1helr -by lhL.Dolbr Pilot -Id be - Wednesday, Jun~ 13, 1973 ' • r ' i • • • • ' l I I. • I ' - Girl, 15 , - Stabb ed To Death SAN DIEGO (AP) -A l5- year-0ld girl 'vas stabbed to death Tuesday 100 yards frotn her high school campus, sheriff's deputies said. I .. Reinecke Says Aide Pointed ·Out Error SAN PIEGO . (.A Pl ~ Lt. Richan!soo to ask special Gov. Ed Reinecke !.1ys a Watergate prosecutor phone call from then-Asst. At-Att.M>ald Cox this wtek to jn- ty. Gen. Robert Mardlan ca~ vest~ .lhe possibiUty of ed him to change his l)lind perj~. because "in April Ulls whole ldea of bringing the conventton to San Diego bad not come up." DAILY PILOT $ Priest, Woman Hostages NOVATO CAP) -An Oakland nliJ\ took a catboUc priest and one of b I ~ parishioners hostage at gun~ point Tuesd.'tY in an attempt to rob Ille Central Valley Bank here , police reported. • Ofricers SD.id t \Vo con- struction workers grabbed a man they saw running from area and held him for an --'.:a~rrivliigrugnway pali\j man. ( aboul the dnle of a conference Reinicke said Tuesday the he had with former Atty. G<n. rneet1ng with ·Mitd>ell actually Jolm Mitchell, a meeting toolt place In AP<il 1!171. He -w1t1clrhas·bee!ftin1ted·wttb1he-saltHle-nic<!ved"'rlorlJt1! an ITI' controversy. anonymous · J!hone call bl.X also Reinecke named Mardlan a call froni ManHan, then Tuesday to reporters e.sking head · of th~ J u st I c e him about a federal in-Department's Ihternal Securi- 'lbe convention was awarded to San Diego in June 1&71 but later switched to Miaml Beadl . in the wake of the m allega- lloos arid!'e)l0rtea<11Sp0t about rental of facilities here. Mardian left the Justice Department in May 1972 and became a political coordinator for the Nixon campaign. He returned to his Pboeni.x, Ariz., <."OOstructioo company-I a st Novmber. He couldn't be reached rOr comment Tue. dny. " The hostages were released unharmed when police seiied -llf.~gmratter-being-eelled,·l<>-­ the scene by bank employes, authorities said. --·· BRIEFS ugene Louis Gray, 23, vestigation s e e k in g to ty Division. \ determine whether' Re'inecke Mardian told ' him l he or Mitchell committed perjury meeting had been l!\.April, and before a ~ Senate committee suggested a check 'of travel last year. records, w~ch conf!~ed the >--.,-,~tered Our Lady of Loreto, church anned with a .33- caliber pistol, roreing the Rev. Leonard Calegarj and MrJJ. Louise White, 52, into the preists' car, police said. They said lhe man, Jerry R. Schnick, 24, of San Diego, was , later booked for invcStigation of murder. Carol Valkonen "''as at-• tacked as she walked to Monte Vl!ja High School. SprlnJl'· Valley southeast of San Diego. The coroner 's office said her body bad more than 10 stab wotinds and her throat was cut. A hunting knife was found in a nearby field, officers said. Acquittal Toast Jt was the second time ~e, Remc:cke said.'· Reinecke had changed his It ~?s a dif~er~ Of\three story about meeting with w~, he ~· I got\ mr, Mitchell. trips to Washington oonfuseij. Reinecke said he hasn't been contacted by anyone from Cox's investigation. "I've nothing to hide," he said. "I'll be more than willing to turn over my files ." A ·.f'irat They said Gray asked to be taken to the downtown bank where he sent Father Calegari to ask for money and kept the \voman in the car at gunpoint. A 21-year-old sailor accused of wa rtime sabotage, which delayed the sailing of the carrier Ranger for Vietnam last summer, wa s found innocent by a Navy court martial board. Fireman Patrick D. Chen- oweth of Puyaliup, Wash., (right) had a victory cele- br3.tion in OaklanQ at which his civilian attorney': e fmpeach·1nent Eric Seitz, poured him a glass of champag:ie. 'SAN DIEGO (AP) -'The ----------'-'-----"'-----'--=---- San Diego County Democratic Central Committee has called for the impeachment of Presi- dent Nixon, saying he seel<s .to establish "an absolute tyranny over the people of the United States." The committee passed a resolution Tuesday night ac~ cusing Nixon of obstructing justice in the Watergate case "by wilfully and deliberately obfuscating the involvement of his aides in crime and cor- ruption." e Eseapee Held RIVERSIDE (AP) -One of 10 men who escaped Sunday from a Tijuana, Mex., prison has been captured, Riverside police say. · Thumb Card~ Pc1nel Views Hitcliltiki1ig · SACRAMENTO (AP) 'Those thun1bing a ride on Caldomia higb\vays could car· ry a state-issued identification card aimed at reducing crimes involving hitchhikers under legislation approved in its first committee test. Tuesday, the Assembl y T r a nsportation Committee voted .9-1 to send tilt measure to the Assembly Ways and Means Committee after hear- ing one backer say: "Hit- chhiking is here to stay." That conunent came from Richard Vega , spokesman for SACRAMENTO' (1\P) _The t h e California Hitchhikers Electric Guitar Protection Act Lobby. He added the FBI and of 1973 has cleared the state other groups: have failed over the years ti> stamp out hit· Senate on a 2-3 vote. Senate OKs Instrument Protection State Sen. James Whet.· chhiking. FIRST HE told reporters and Sen. Jolm V. Tunney (0. Calif.), that he and Mitchell met ,in May 1971 and talked about San Diego's ibid for the 1972 Republican Convention. Reinecke said then he may have discussed an offer by lntematiooal Telephone and Telegraph to underwrite the convention. After the Justice Depart- ment dropped an antitrust suit against ITr last June, a memo allegedly written by a com- pany lobbyist was published linking the action to the offer to underwrite the convention. Reinecke was then called before a Senate 5.nvestigating committee and said he hadn't met with Mitchell the previolls l\1ay. He said that after his statement alx>ut the May meeting was published, an anonymous caller told his of- fice to recheck h i s travel records. and · the recheck sho\\'ed no meeting had taken place in May. THE CHANGE of story prompted Atty. Gen. Elliot Floor Gets . -~· Hair Bill Clyde P. Evans, 33, was ar- rested early Tuesday and held on U.S. charges of con.spiring to import rocaine, police said. U.S. Commissioner Robert Timlin ordered him taken fOT trial to San Diego, where he was indicted by a federal grand jury in April . Seven other persons were arrested for investigation of harboring a fugitive, police said. more's bill would require IN RELATED action. the SACRAMENTO (AP) owners of night spots who committee voted 6-Z to kill 8 Longhaired males couldn't be employ musicians to talce bill that wou1d outlaw hit-blocked from entering • St ff Sta,,. restaurants or bars under a a "rea,.,.,.ble means" lo guan! "'w.. pt · RIVERSIDE (.i\P) _ The Cu.1U!Ul'6 exce m cases bill sent to the Assembly floor. chancellor of the University of tile instruments against theft where someone's car has Tuesday, the A s s e m b I y California at Riverside says he or damage. broken down, the person needs Judi ciary Co n1 m i t t e e ap-. will not send dismissal notices \Vhetmore. 1a La Habra help, or the hitchhiking takes proved the measure b Y t 20 r II bers by July Assemblyman John Burton o acu Y mem Republican who is himself a place in an area designated by l after all. ([).San Francisco) whose own lvSJ;'I Hinderaker said Tues-musician, said Tuesday that in the local government entity. hair is ·modishly long. day he was withdrawing his the Age of Amplified instru· The bill Ulat died three votes Burton introduced t h e decision of last week and the ments such as the electric gui-short of passage was authored measure after he was asked lo notices will not be sent unlil a tar, mUSlcrans frequently by ~mblyman John leave the Redwood Room of thorough review of academic leave them 1n ·the club Thurman (D-Modesto). the Clift Hotel in San Fran- programs with f a c n 11 y overnight instead of Jugglng Assemblyman Jo}m Dun1ap cisco because his hair 'vas too participation. Hinderaker had all the electronic equtpment (l)..Napa ), ,authored the sue-long lo suit management. announced the pen d i n g home. cessful bill which he said was A s s e n1 b l y m a n Frank dismissals in 1 the face of a Whetmore said some in-aimed at giving motorists Lantennan, <I-b a I d i n g faculty cutback of 30 due to struments left overnight have some assurance that card-car-Republican froln La Canada, eorollment drops. been damaged when imbibing rying hitchhikers had been __ is_a_roa_u_l_hor_o_r_t1_1e_m_e_asur __ e. e Route Killed patrons decide to hold an irn-cheeked out by aulhorities. SACRAMENTO (AP) promptu concert. 1be state l\W ld not be liable South Pasadena re si dent s The bill now goes t.o the for any hitchhiker crimes , ICE SKATING Assembly. however, Dunlap said. have won a preliminary vic- the propooed Long Beach wry in their battle to reroute ,_ __ _, LESSONS Freewayaroundtheircity. FANS GO APE FOR A DAY The Assembl y Trans- portation Committee vot- ed 12-0 Tuesday for a bill sponsored by • Assemblyman John L. E. Coltier (R·Los Angeles ) to wipe out the cur- rent alignment ·of the freeway through portions of Alhambra, South Pa sade na and Pasadena. Good Deed make the scene Sundays in the l1f.Uijijli1ll SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -"Go Ape for a Day," suggested the Warfield theater marquee as some 2,200 people formed a block·long line for a seat at the one-day showing of all five "Planet of the Apes" films. The complete showing, \Vhich included the latest and supposedly final "Battle 'for the Planet of the Apes," ran a total of nine hours Tuesday - longer than a back-to-back playing of "Ben Hur0 and "Gone With the Wind." "It's really something," said James Sutton, district man-ager for National General Theaters, as he 'vatched the fans pour into the theater for $1 a ticket "We ought to sell a Jot of hot dogs." New Clinics ,Now Open COST A MESA-HUNTINGTON BEACH I ' • • • • • ,.., '• '~' • •' ~ , • medical· lindoro's unique program is a safe and practical method for the entire family to lo se we ight and learn how to mainloin proper weight . -• under 1he strict. supervi sio n of Medical Doctors. we.ight reducti'_o_n Coll for 1nfor11io1ion Mondoy'thru Friday 8 AM, lo 6 P.M. LINDO~j:: -MEDICl\l CLINIC -·-~::~~-:r.-:. •• acll551~l893 . • Enhance your child's polae and posture. A planned program of lessons with the exclusive Ice Capades' eaay lea rning method gives you or your child healthy exercise In pleasant aupervla-e·d surroundings. REGISTER NOW HE SAID he couldn't have talked to Mitchell then about· the Republican Convention Accused ·'Oraws,' \ Fakes W ouliding Freshman Assembly- man Frank Holoman (D·Los Angeles) had gir.Js whistling at him all day when he ap· .. peared before legisla- t iv e committees in walkiJ1g shorts. It was .a first at a public hear- ing, according to Capi· tol observers. The priest alerted bank emp\oyes who caUed police to the scene. Police said they ap- p1'Qached the yehicle ~nd diverted G ray s attention , enabllng officers to seize his v.""eapon. Gray ""as b<J?ked . for t.n- "estigation of k1dn.aprng with attempt to commit robbery. 1-WANTED- SACRAMENTO (AP ) -A court interpreter \\'ho \Vas defendant in a murder case seated in the first row of pulled a simulated gun in a Mun'icipal C:ourt Jud g c oollrtroom and then acted as if Bdv.'ard Garcia's courtroom. he were shot by a bailiff. A shot fired by a bailiff »•AMoNDs • GEMSTONES Jewel• by jo1•ph i1 1•1rc:hin9 for di•mondt end 9•m1ton•1 from pr ivet• i1tdivid1,11l1 •nd •1 t1t11. C1reful •x11min11tion 111nd •v11 l1.1•tion by our •Xptrt•. Hi9h•1t prie•1 p11id. C1ll 540.9066 10·9 d1Uy, S•turd•y 10-6, S1.1r.d11y c:lostd, ,•tk-for Mr, O•nnit Foli1 or Mr. J o1•ph. The incident Tue s da y struck the floor near Darrow. dclayed the arraign)Tlent of but he fell to the ground as if Neil Darrow, 25. for the he had been shot, witnesses shooting June 8 of his estrang-said. ed wife, Margaret. ·in the tor-Asked by reporters if the ridor of ~cram~nto Medical pieces or ·paper DaJTow st.uf- Center. His a1Ta1gnme.nt "''as fed together really looked like rescheduled for today in , a gun, Dep. Dist. Atty. Bart Sacramento ~1unicipal Court. Bleuel said, "It looked rea l. I iewels by ioseph So1rt1t Coost Pfnct e llll lrhtol, COltll w.. e 140.9066 Witnesses said ~arrow pull-,thought it was real." ed 001: several pieces of .a Deputies overp<m'ered Dar- magazme wadded together in rov.' after he fell to the floor the shape ~ a gun from tmder and returned ·him to hi s jail a yellow piece of paper shortly cell -tCONGRATULATIONa-5 - after he ente red -the H. -~-• t I" e was arrt::.:t1..t:u a ue MOTHll: •d 50N 6lADUATIS JESSIE ELINORE LOUGH Upn Gr•Hetl• Fro• TNft T.cltitlcal Co ..... , Lot Allf-4n A.ad To courtroom. 'Vallejo bus depot six hours "HE SAID, 'everybody get after a man fitting his down,' and everybody did. \Ve description shotDarrow's wife all got down. Then he squatted at the hospital. Officers said down . . . and the bailiff Darrow was armed when he shot." said Gladys G. Cook. a was captured. MICHAEL GILBERT LOUGH I'VE BEEN ASKED 10 LIST SOME OF THE BEST THINGS THAT EVER HAPPENED 10 ME. HERE GOES ••• Up~it GrodHtlo" ~o• ldho" Hltlt Schoel, H•tlllf'9• IMcll BIKINIS, DRIVE·IN MOVIES, THE WHEEL, DEVILED EGGS, MEDICATED POWDER (DID I SUFFER FROM TOGA CHAFING)! AND BUSMMILLS. WHEN THEY MADE IT IN 1608, THEY DIDN'T REALIZE WHAT THEY WERE DOING FOR MY LEISURE HOURS! LIKE A BUSHMILLS SOUR, REALLY SMOOTH! A BUSHMILLS MIST, COOL AND MILO! A BUSHMILLS LONG AND TALL. A BUSHMILLS ROB ROY, AS LIGHT ..>---~ AS ANY SCOTCH CAN MAKE IT! GEE, I HOPE WE HAVE A LOT OF LEISURE HOURS ! , -··--1wircr1ramtr'ClRDEN CROVE l'O'i'OEACH ~P'llADENA-oDNCE-1-1-- 64S·3740 S34-20S1 426-6S49 796-2614 SJ8°239S '•<• ,,.,., ...... , 1111,. "'''' "' ,,.,llllit .... 1 (1••••· '••l"\itl\lll lld,. "'•· ...... ''"· WOODLAND illllS SHERMAN OAKS WEST COVINA FllLURTON lA MAIRA 347-S647 789-71 03 961-3438 870-9S01 694-1029 W•r-•Ylcl..., ,,,...oe9fli.lt. Gtllti!t>v ... Oy1 , .. , ..... ,,., &1c1,, .... _ •• 1111,. MISA YllDI SHOPPINCl CINTIR 770-r f14rbor 81~d. l•t Ad•m1 Co•I• Mt•••. C•llf. 92626 T ti. 17141 979·1880 ' -